The
NEA Representative Assembly of 2010: A Longer View of Crisis and Consciousness
Workplace November
2010
by Dr. Rich Gibson October 2010
When I left the 2009 NEA Representative Assembly (RA) in San Diego, new NEA president Dennis Van Roekel was hugging Arne Duncan, fawning over new President Obama, and hustling the slogan, “Hope Starts Here!” but calling the No Child Left Behind Act a “crappy law.”
At the very close of the 2009 RA, delegates were treated to a video of themselves chanting, “Hope starts Here!” and “Hope Starts with Obama and Duncan!” and “He gives us hope!” while red, white, and blue bunting flashed in the background.
NEA poured untold millions of dollars, and hundreds of thousands of volunteer hours, into the Obama campaign. 219 NEA officials were on the floor of the Democratic nominating convention, more than any other organized group.
In 2009, Van Roekel promised to tighten NEA-Obama ties. “I feel very good about how they want to direct education,” despite Obama’s clear support for merit pay, attacks on tenure, high stakes exams, and his promise to extend the Afghan wars.
What happened in the year’s interim? What was the social context of the 2010 RA?
On Background–The Lay of the Land
Reports of the death of the third, 2008, Great Depression held no water for the mass of unemployed workers and laid-off school workers in the US. An official jobless rate of 9.5% reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on July 2, 2010, probably means real unemployment at 15% or more as discouraged workers fall off unemployment benefits and go uncounted. Congress chose a July 4th recess, allowing hundreds of thousands of more jobless people to lose benefits. By official count, at least15.3 million people were unemployed on the eve of the RA, despite millions in stimulus spending.
Depending on your source, up to 300,000 education workers were scheduled for lay-off in the fall of 2010.
Unemployment is still color-coded, as is inherited wealth, a huge leg up.
Black unemployment is officially at 15.4% but in Detroit it is over 50% and for black youth, far beyond even that. Official hispanic unemployment is at 12.4% while 8.6 million people are counted as “involuntary.” The total unemployment picture will only grow worse as 700,000 census workers are cut loose (NYTimes July 12, 10). In 2009 alone, 3.9 million people lost work (CNS, January 25, 10). More–wages continued a steady decline. Inequality in the US and around the world grew at unprecedented rates. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities released a report on June 25, 2010, saying that the gap between rich and working class Americans more than tripled in the last 30 years.
No major formation or union organized the unemployed. The professional Quisling, Bob King, president of the United Auto Workers union who assisted in organizing the wreckage of that union as well as its members lives, for three decades, announced on July 12 that he and the poverty hustler, Jesse Jackson, would start a campaign. Jobless–hide your wallets and cover your ears. King then bargained at deal at the General Motors Orion, Michigan plant that cut younger workers’ wages by half. The entire plant picketed the UAW’s Solidarity House when the members were not allowed to vote on the sellout.
The US was busy being fought to a standstill in Afghanistan, forced to fire its top general, McChrystal, for speaking his reactionary mind, yet the Obama regime clung to the Vietnam-like corrupt Karzai regime and the silly counter-insurgency scheme, written by McChrystal along with his boss and mentor (that connection is important), Petreus, a plan which seeks to make friends of the Afghan people–an impossible task as the Afghans rightly know the US is there to rob and kill them for reasons of imperial muscle-flexing, regional control, and pipelines.
In Iraq, the US asserted withdrawal falsely. The Sunni “Friendship Alliance” began to unravel as Shiites drove them out of power positions in the oil rich country. Given the presence of the seven largest US bases in the world, staged neatly by oil fields and in the capital, the pretense of withdrawal was clearly hollow, even as the Chinese, Brits, and others were quietly hiding behind the US military with syphons of their own, as is the case of Afghanistan too.
Imperial challengers looked on as the US military appeared more and more exhausted, led by incompetents who order troops, forced to do four and five tours, riddled with PTSD, into poorly planned battles, using them as bait for, later, air attacks–while urging the troops to be nice to the locals; a confusing proposition for trained killers, a problem the British had in the Great Game of 150 years ago. Nevertheless, the necessity to chase capital coupled with imperial hubris kept the US playing worn old cards.
The concept of perpetual war became an acceptable part of daily discourse. National socialism, evidenced by the mergers of corporate and government life in finance and industry (auto) as well as 1.7 million troops engaged in nine years of warfare, with no end remotely in sight, settled fairly peacefully on the land.
The BP oil gusher relentlessly poured into the Gulf of Mexico, not only demonstrating the rule of profits over care for the earth itself, but also showing how enmeshed the US working class, and others, are within the capitalist economy. Oil workers joined oil bosses in demanding the ban on deep sea drilling be lifted, fast.
The unemployed (and some prisoners) poured into the Gulf region, offering or being forced to risk their lives on clean-up while fishermen and women vied to get hired by BP (the Feds dodged the engagement). The interlocking nature of US government and the corporate world, a deepening corporate state, became clearer as government relied on BP science and (largely censored) knowledge to control the spill while BP relied on government, profitably, to obfuscate the issue. The public, not BP, will pay. Obama, after all, was the top recipient of oil money in the last campaign.
The thousands of armed people in the US south, so far, failed to act.
Banksters who, according to Bloomberg, made off with $12.9 trillion from the public trough as Obama engineered the final steps of merging the corporate with government worlds, continued to dodge repaying what was called “loans,” but in fact was the most massive robbery in the history of the country. Then they gave themselves bonuses, again, as the stock market bounced between 9400 and 10,400; a worrisome indicator of instability. Banks refused to loan, or even modify mortgages, to people who were more and more jobless. Foreclosure crises leapfrogged from one moment of respite to another report of disaster. Bank failures continued apace.
Trust, a cornerstone of finance capital, was fully contradicted, overturned, by its other motivators: greed and fear–combined in panic.
The banks were bailed out on the grounds that the 2008 market crash could demolish capitalism itself and, worse, “our” economy.
J.P Morgan’s Jamie Dimon made the limits of his patriotism, his sense of “we’re all in this together,” when he said, “I would do anything for...this country, but not if it’s going to jeopardize J. P. Morgan. (“Too Big To Fail”, Sorkin, 2009 p478).
Inequality boomed in the US and throughout the world as, everywhere, governments functioned as executive committees and armed weapons of the rich. Inside those committees, elites worked out, or fight out, their real differences (industrial vs finance capital as we saw in the auto vs bank bailouts), then turned on the masses of people with a vengeance. Children of the poor, everywhere, fought and killed other children of the poor, on behalf of the rich in the homelands, proud under colorful nationalist flags.
The joint ruling classes’ determination to appear to deal with un-credentialed immigration, while not dealing with it, led to Obama regime raids throughout the country, reportedly even more workplace raids than initiated in Bush’s last year–making the emerging police state more and more acceptable to many citizens on both sides of the debate.
A labor boss backed health care bill passed with support from health profiteers, promising a step toward universal health care, but the Obama administration had nixed a single-payer plan from the outset. Even progressive doctors warned the plan would fall apart in time. Chris Hedges at Truthdig wrote on July 12th that the bill will leave 23 million people without health care and will permit prices to climb so that many will need to pay 10% of their annual income to get coverage. “$447 billion in tax subsidies will be handed to insurance firms.”
NEA mailed every delegate a 18x24 cardboard color poster touting that “victory.”
NEA, however, said nothing about labor’s abject failure to get what had been seen as a “must have;” the Employee Free Choice Act, an effort to ease labor bosses’ access to check-off, even out of committee.
Labor union membership languished at 12.4% in 2009. Private sector membership is at 7%.
Arizona passed a draconian law that Obama pretended to fight while he, at the same time, employed the San Diego fascist, Alan Bersin (who made a lifetime career of dividing people by class, race, and nation in schools and out–employing violence in the workplace and in the streets) as “Border Czar,” the fist-in-the-face of immigrant communities whose votes Obama covets.
The Patriot Act remained in full effect.
At Southwestern College, on the Mexican border in San Diego county, four professors were arrested at their homes for having appeared to support a student demonstration against cutbacks on their campus. Suspended briefly, they were restored to work, but no more demonstrations popped up that semester. They accepted reprimands in their files while touting the power of the union.
Superfluous superstars fascinated much of the nation. Lindsay Lohan’s “F...you” fingernails took up prime time news as a country, whose citizens rooted two-thirds of the economy in consumption, shopping, learned they could not shop. What to do?
Hysteria centered on the demagogue, Obama, ebbed, as, strangely, he did what he promised: extended war, attacked education through his warrior and pal, Arne Duncan. But the demagogue was replaced by—nothing. Who is the next demi-god? Or what?
This is the setting that NEA rejects. Worse, does not want to consider. The idea that schools sit inside society is dangerous to NEA leadership.
Ruling Class Attacks on Material Life and Reason Itself in Schools and Out
In education, the Race to the Top played out–fast–as states competed for the paltry dollars attached from the federal government. The RaTT reflected the marriage of romantic nationalism to social Darwinism that forms the crux of national socialist ideology. The RaTT is: *Regimented national curricula promoting nationalism, ending free inquiry; *Racist, anti-working class high stakes exams in an already segregated school system; *Merit pay, wage and benefit cuts, layoffs, and attacks on tenure with full time positions becoming temp jobs–-school workers are among the last people in the US with benefits, fairly predictable jobs, and pay–an injury to other workers now becomes an injury to all; *Dramatic fee and tuition hikes, driving students out of school or into perpetual debt based, mainly, on inherited wealth--building segregation; *Militarization in poor and working class districts and “national service” created to syphon off resistance in middle class and upper class districts. *Routinization of college and university curricula and methods as the disciplines are aligned with the k-12 world, a result already largely in place; *Limited forms of charters and privatization but the fundamental effort, not-public but tax funded mis-education, will persist in the main. *Tamping down student hopes, abolishing the vision and abilities it takes to win and run a just, equitable, society.
Both school unions were deeply involved in creating and selling the RaTT and its little brother: NCLB.
The two unions fit neatly into the emergence of the harsh rule of the U.S. corporate state. As with every major U.S. labor leader, the presidents of the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association reject the reason most people believe they join unions for: the contradictory interests of employees and employers. Rather, the union bosses believe in what former NEA top, Bob Chase, called, “New Unionism,” that is, the unity of corporate heads, government officials, and labor mis-leaders, “in the national interest.” In effect, that means labor bosses will sacrifice the needs of their members in favor of corporate desires, as, for example, the demise of the United Auto Workers’ union, down from 1.5 million members to around 333,000, illustrates.
Moreover, both unions are involved with the overseas adventures of the US through groups like the National Endowment for Democracy and Education International (which NEA funds to the tune of $4.5 million). The fruits of empire help pay for the remarkable salaries and lifestyles of the labor tops. NEA boss Reg Weaver picked up a tidy $686,949 in 2008. Jack Scott’s and George Schmidt’s early work on labor imperialism, followed by Bill Blum, Kim Scipes, Paul Buhle and myself, linked to Lenin’s Imperialism the Highest Stage of Capitalism, Rosa Luxemburg’s riposte, and Al Szymanski’s Imperialism, add up to weighty evidence of the result of support for capitalism inside the empire, and imperialism out–each relying on violence to whipsaw workers at the end of the day.
Logically following union tops’ complicity, an entire school work force in Central Falls, Rhode Island, was fired for not matching the RaTT; making insufficient concessions. They were later hired back when their American Federation of Teachers (AFT) local made every concession earlier on the table.
The American Federation of Teachers, in the lead for selling out their members for a decade and more, negotiated contracts hinting at a dreaded future. In Washington DC, AFT behind its dissembling boss Randi Weingarten, rammed through a contract that gave up tenure and merit pay. In order to do so, AFT tops had to intervene to prevent an election of local leaders, staving that off to the fall. Michelle Rhee, Czar of DC schools, wrote paeans to Weingarten, suggested she take that contract to the bellwether AFT local in New York. Weingarten demurred.
In Detroit, the DFT gave up $500 per member paycheck, merit pay, tenure, gutted health insurance, and offered surcease to a takeover of the district by the Broad Foundation’s Bob Bobb and suburbanite basketball player, ex-Piston, Dave Bing.
Weingarten intervened forcefully in Detroit, insisting that anything less than these concessions would cost many jobs–in a city where at least one lesson is clear: concessions do not save jobs, but like giving blood to sharks, bosses only want more. Weingarten routed her members. 63% voted in favor of the sellout as covered in Substance in January (http://www.substancenews.net/articles.php?page=1063§ion=Article).
Shortly after ratification, the district issued more dire warnings about the budget, and more layoff notices. With what is likely to be a tsunami of retirements given the upcoming working conditions, it may be that jobs in Detroit will be saved, but decades of teacher militancy which won vital job protections, including the protections that make it somewhat possible for one to keep his/her ideals and still teach, are gone–this generation spitting on the small victories won in hundreds of battles of the past.
In AFT’s top local, New York City, Weingarten stage-managed a pay-for-performance contract and supported Mayoral control–leading to school closings. Then she popped in “value added assessments,” ground zero for sharper merit pay.
In California, NEA teacher contract after teacher contract reflected concessions of one form or another: furlough days, layoffs, benefit cuts, higher class size, more assaults on academic freedom. joblessness for substitute educators bumped by colleagues, while recent teacher education grads waited on tables.
In universities, students faced dramatic tuition and fee hikes, driving people out of school with razor sharp precision based, for the most part, on parental income, race, and nationality. The bellwether California higher education system is a good example. Community colleges enrolled 21,000 fewer students in the 2009 school year, enrolled students found classes closed, untenured faculty laid off by the thousands. Mount Sac college East of LA cut 800 sections, 10 percent of its load (NYTimes, June 23, 10).
The workhorse California State University system, with the cooperation of the NEA-affiliated California Faculty Association, cut faculty pay 10% via furlough days, raised fees (tuition is illegal in California where k-university education was once nearly free of charge) 195% since 2002. The pay cut was ratified by a narrow CSU faculty vote when the Executive Board issued a “no recommendation,” statement, rather than building a base of resistance. Fees were raised 32% in 2009, another 5% in 2010. The racehorse, elite, University of California system, fully segregated as its San Diego branch illustrates with a black enrollment of less than 1%, raised fees 32 percent in the 2009-10 school year.
In Texas, the Christian-mystic dominated school board re-wrote history to praise Joseph McCarthy in textbooks and to, Soviet-style, wipe out hispanics altogether while they also moved to tear down the wall between church and state. As in the Third Reich, the school board wants history read as through white American, mystical, eyes.
Then, Arizona moved to abolish ethnic studies programs.
On the whole, school workers continued in their role as missionaries for the system of capital and schools as its houses of worship as they bowed to regimented curricula, high-stakes racist exams, militarization in working class and disenfranchised areas, and the entire Obama Race to the Top (RaTT) project.
A few fought back.
They Say Cut Back! We Say Fight Back!
Teacher-led resistance did appear on email lists, like Epata initiated by California’s Joe Lucido, while Susan Ohanian’s web site drew attention from middle-of-the-roaders and radicals alike. Substance News upgraded its work to a modern online edition while retaining the hard-copy. The leftish Rouge Forum continued its weekly updates and held its yearly conference, helped provide intellectual and material leadership to the March 4th actions (below).
In 2010, school workers are the most unionized people in the US. They sit in the central organizing point of de-industrialized America. Their task, ostensibly constructing reason, gives them more freedom than nearly any other workers and, hence, they hold phenomenal potential power.
A society writhing in inequality and recruiting youth for endless war will make peculiar demands on its schools. “The psychological preparation for and acceptance of war was a conscious aim of National Socialist education...” (Blackburn, “Education in the Third Reich, 1985 p69).
While there is little history of masses of teachers taking progressive or revolutionary paths (today’s Oaxaca and revolutionary Russia aside) there is much more history to worry they would be willing fascists as in Germany and Japan–it remains that even a few school workers can have a notable, decisive in some instances, impact. When hope in schools vanishes, uprisings happen: France 1968. And, as in that instance, students can and do often take the lead in forging social change.
Resistance in 2009-10 rose as people began to recognize that they must resist in order to live. At issue was whether or not people made sense of why they must fight back, that is, capitalism and its birth partner, imperialism, and launched their attacks at the core, or if they would only address the appearances of oppression, hence recreating their own subservience in slightly new ways.
In September, 2009, faculty at suburban Detroit Oakland University went on strike at the start of the school year, a smart move that lets students and community people prepare, overcomes the need to call people out of an ongoing semester. They claimed a modest victory.
The high point of resistance began in California with a student-initiated call for a state-wide school strike on March 4th. Spreading through the elite University of California system, into the workhorse California State University system, and into the community colleges and high schools, the idea leaped beyond the state’s borders and, eventually, involved tens of thousands of educators, community people, and students, not only in strikes and demonstrations, but also, in a few instances, freedom schooling where people actually gathered, using the inspiration of the strike, to gain and test knowledge about why, really, things are as they are.
The Oakland, California, Education Association led a one-day strike in response to unlawful bargaining practices on April 29, 2010, involving the community and the local labor council as well. That strike, along with the M4 actions demonstrated the greater militancy and deeper consciousness of Northern California workers, perhaps because of the long history of dockworker and related action.
However, SoCal constituents need to be reminded that the presence of the massive military complexes are actually double edged swords. In San Diego, it was Navy personnel who, responding to civilian and military anti-war appeals alike, kept three ships at the docks for two years with mutiny upon mutiny. Military personnel were a significant force in the old antiwar movement.
Following the March 4th, M4 committees met in Northern, Central, and Southern California, agreeing to a second call for strikes and action October 7th. Despite what seems to be growing splits along leftist party lines, the idea for that action looked like it had a life of its own. A national draft of a call circulated in early July, 2010. However, within the M4 movement, backward elements attempted to break the crisis in education from imperialism and the system of capital, mirroring the union tops’ desires to ignore, divert, demolish, and if necessary, take credit for, what came on October 7th–as they did on March 4th.
In Chicago, the once-mighty CFT upended its authoritarian leadership and elected a patchwork coalition of reformers who, one can only hope, will grasp the necessity of a direct action fight-back rooted in the community, students, parents, and education workers, united. Since Arne Duncan was Chicago’s school boss, the relentless closures of dozens of schools has led to a spiral of tragic youth violence and death–such is the barrel of the gun pointed at the appearance of safe schools.
Wham Bamn Thank You–Oh Damn!
In Detroit, resistance rose and ebbed around the peculiar moves of the By Any Means Necessary group led by Steve Conn. As Bamn appears at the 2010 RA, its path is worth more than a moment’s attention.
Bamn, many RA delegates told me, ratifying my own background knowledge, is a front for the Trotskyist Revolutionary Workers’ League. It’s led by a former friend and attorney of mine in Detroit, as well as teacher Conn, his wife Heather Miller, and others.
Bamn’s distinguishing claim: “we are the new civil rights movement.” Preposterous.
Steve Conn teaches math in Detroit’s premier high school: Cass Tech. He made his stripes in the DFT about ten years ago when his courageous actions sparked a wildcat strike that lasted nearly two weeks. http://clogic.eserver.org/2-2/gibson.html
He suffered a setback when he was fired, later, for leading a group of students who sought to initiate a walkout at another Detroit school. That action, reckless to many DFT members, cost him credibility and a base–as did the isolation of being discharged.
His dismissal, however, was reversed by an arbitrator, and mutual acquaintance, who ordered him restored to work and be made whole. The historically outlandish, corrupt, and incompetent elected Detroit school board refused to return him to work but the Bamn attorney quickly won a court case. Conn returned to work, reputation enhanced–slightly enriched.
Then came DFT president Keith Johnson and AFT president Randi Weingarten, united with city bosses and the press, to beat through the sellout contract of 2009 which included a $500 cut per paycheck from every teacher.
Conn and Bamn led the resistance to that deal, obtaining a petition against Johnson that included more than 1200 signatures, building a caucus of more than 100 people that met regularly, and leading open opposition in DFT meetings.
Johnson apparently decided to rid himself of Conn, charged him with attempting to wreck the DFT, and actually held a trial that lasted nearly until midnight in early 2010. Conn used the ludicrous trial as an organizing centerpiece and, given the quality of his legal representation, most surely would have won.
Conn and the Bamn led caucus were at the height of their popularity.
Then Conn moved, again, to overturn his own hard work. He appears to have made a deal with Johnson. The trade-off: Johnson would drop the charges in exchange for Conn backing off his criticism. Conn would get DFT support for a Bamn demonstration in Washington DC (the Detroit bus never made it) and the DFT would support a demand to the Detroit school board to retain Bamn’s legal team to represent the board in a suit against Bob Bobb, the Broad funded appointee who is serving as the Boss of the Detroit Public Schools (DPS), through his title as Financial Director.
Bobb’s effort in Detroit is, against his critics’ claims, not so much privatization, but to fashion false hope and social control via the schools. Profiteering via privatization is well down his list even if he did move fast to steer DPS contracts to cronies and former employers.
For example, Bobb cobbled together an agreement with three Detroit high schools, including the once-great Henry Ford High, to turn their curricula and instruction over to Walmart. This is not privatization, but a reflection of the context of a corporate state.
The principal boasted to me that a percentage of grads would “actually get Walmart jobs.” Queried about where the Walmart was in Detroit (there isn’t one) he responded, “Yes indeed! Our students will get a multi-cultural experience by leaving the city!” How they will get there will be a lesson in itself. Detroit/suburb public transportation is notorious.
Bamn, then, tied their stars to the DFT leadership and the Detroit school board, abandoning the progressive oppositional stance that won its reputation as a nerve center against both bosses and sellout union mis-leaders. The Bamn attorney became the school board’s attorney.
Not surprisingly, the caucus began to shrink until, according to one member, it could muster less than ten people at its meetings.
DFT hack Keith Johnson could now tout the sellout contract as an achievement, not having to shy away from organized complaints, nor worrying about impeachment.
The Detroit School Board could claim Bamn support and vice versa, a toxic marriage.
The school board, as noted above, is to say the least, a nerve center of weirdness, an object of scorn from most Detroiters despite the fact that the current elected board was seen as preferable to a state-appointed Takeover Board that looted the system from 2000-2005 for its own, suburban, desires. Now, the total Detroit school debt is well over $330 million, the official figure which cannot be trusted as no figures from DPS can be trusted. About 2/3 of that debt belongs to the headless actions of the Takeover Board which spent millions building new schools in a district that has lost 10,000 students a year for a decade and more. Now, many of the new schools sit empty, stripped (even protective fences are stolen) and DPS spends a million a year guarding them.
The most glaring example of current school board outlandishness came in June, 2010, when the appointed superintendent, Teresa Gueyser, filed a complaint against board president, Otis Mathis, who, not incidentally, cannot read and write. Gueyser complained that Mathis, in meetings with her, masturbated. Oddly, this was not the first time. “On many occasions, I have asked him not to touch himself,” Gueyser wrote in her complaint. Mathis resigned, then sought to reverse the resignation on the grounds that he has a “disability.” Days later he was charged and arraigned.
He was supported by board member Reverend David Murray (he’s not a Reverend, he had his name changed) who suggested that since the 55 year old Mathis is a “young man,” such a habit might come naturally. Murray said in the Detroit News, “Some women are more sensitive about this than others.” Much earlier, Murray’s six children had been removed from his care by Child Protective Services.
In early July 2010, the DPS board had two vacancies up for election. Who registered to run? Nobody.
Detroit is a growing tragedy waiting to happen, dying a death by a thousand cuts. 50% of the city is illiterate and unemployed. It’s a 90% plus black city, a ghetto in the real sense. The schools are in near collapse. Detroit has a long history of urban rebellions. Racism would make it more than possible for state and federal forces to use fearsome violence. There is nothing much in Detroit for rebels to hold hostage, or defend. Rebels are completely unprepared. An uprising would be a disaster. But, given the absence of press (two Detroit papers only irregularly publish daily print editions–as in 1967), arbitrary police violence and repression (as in ‘67), massive unemployment (‘67 again), the daily insults of prejudice, and hopelessness–a rebellion is possible if an organized, reasoned, counter-force, cannot be reconstructed.
The only organized group with the background, potential power, and material interest to restore some semblance of real hope, reason, democracy, social justice, and equality in Detroit was the DFT which, like every AFT local, was and is led by Quislings. Within DFT, the best hope people had was the Bamn led caucus. Tragically, that hope is nearly extinguished by Bamn’s peculiar decisions about who good allies are–and its failure to openly address why things are as they are.
Now, the citizenry is faced with a dismaying choice: Bamn and its lawyers-plus-youth-wing united with the corrupt DFT leadership and the looney school board or the city elites, led by the Piston, Dave Bing, and Broad’s Bobb.
The citizen’s choice was made clear even before the Mathis exposures. They voted by a 2/3 majority to back Bobb’s plan for massive construction expenditures in the city–while hundreds of teachers will be laid off. Now, after the Bamn maneuvers, it is unlikely they have changed their minds.
Shortly after the Bamn caucus largely evaporated, Bobb announced he would turn over the terrible contract the DFT signed, upping any limits on class size. DFT’s Johnson swore, this time, he would fight. He will not, cannot.
The question to Detroit today, community or barbarism, remains unanswered. Such is the social context, the class war, that serves as the platform for the NEA RA, and such is the limited, but growing, state of resistance.
New Orleans? Shmoo Orleans and the RA
Before taking up the NEA Representative Assembly, a note on New Orleans the city.
Katrina’s impact of 2005 is well known. New Orleans has not begun to truly recover. But the locals aren’t talking, not even the locals hosting the RA, clearly because of the disease that infects most tourist towns: the secrets must be kept as we cannot let the rubes know the troubles they dance past–and we need the tips.
No one underlined the wreckage of New Orleans’s schools before or during the RA, nor did they even discuss the rate of charterization, the end of so many teaching careers, the role of Chicago’s former thug Superintendent, Paul Vallas, not even the rote curricula New Orleans’ teachers are expected to follow. At the close of the 2009 RA in San Diego, the leader of the New Orleans host committee merely urged delegates to come to town, party, and gamble. All is forgotten.
Hosts in hotels and restaurants were more than reluctant to discuss the fact that tourism is way, way, down in New Orleans–add in BP to Katrina. They poo-pooed the idea that the fish, or bottom feeders, might be contaminated. They praised the importance of NEA’s RA (what local host delegations get as a reward from other locals for drawing in the RA to their city goes, politely, unasked in NEA).
The infamous Ninth Ward, ruined by Katrina, is still in ruins. I rode the route in a car. About 60 months on, houses are still in ruins. A Fema trailer sits in a front yard. Don’t take the tour. Rent a car.
The New Orleans Louis Armstrong Airport is an aging dump. The old Morial convention center, which housed 20,000+ live people who broke in during Katrina, and some dead decomposing bodies, was stressed by the presence of the black music Essence conference (50,000 people) at the same time as the RA (15,000 people with guests included). The deteriorated center isn’t properly ventilated, leaving delegates to complain from the floor, time and again, about the temperature.
NEA California delegates, busing the 4 blocks to their hotel, were trapped in a huge Essence traffic jam, spending an hour on the bus in one instance, being trapped in a tunnel under the center for another hour when their drive sought to elude the back-up. They stayed on the bus, but for four of us who had to overcome the bus driver’s “You cannot exit this bus!” We exited, but the rest sat, obediently.
Bill Sammons posted online; ‘..the city didn’t..care about how long it took me to get from point A to point B or how long (bus) lines were, it just cared about my money...I hope NEA considers not returning to New Orleans if it means we are there at the same time as the Essence festival.”
The French Quarter, as in the past, still smells like a Tijuana bar’s latrine.
Now, on to the New Orleans RA itself:
NEA politics, culture, and class war
Who comes to RA’s? By far, it’s k12 teachers and related school workers. There are education support personnel (ESP’s), college and community college profs. While dozens of NEA staff attend, they are ostensibly not allowed on the floor of the RA. In the past, NEA discouraged staff attendance at the RA.
NEA staff, though, are a proud lot, and rightly so. Highly educated, honest within the confines of NEA’s vision (I’ve never known them to cheat on vote counts, for example), offered high-power training throughout their careers, very well paid (NEA long ago deliberately put staff on a Cadillac plan–the Uniserv budget), NEA staff produces, each day of the convention, the “RA Today,” typically a 16 page broadside carefully listing past and present business. That alone has to be seen as an achievement, expensive as it may be.
NEA has, unlike other unions, for years drawn a clear line between staff and members, called “governance,” but that line blurs as members vie for lucrative, often fun, staff jobs. Many members bring spouses, kids, and guests, combining the trip to the RA with extended vacations.
Other delegates include some administrators, substitute teachers, and retirees.
8,174 delegates came this year, far down from the 8,925 in 2009. 5,290 non-delegates registered. NEA claims 39% of the delegates listed themselves as minorities (NEA is one of the few US unions that has and enforces affirmative action policies). That near-40% number was not what I saw, but in a room that big, seeing is not believing.
Delegate/school workers are: polite, usually staid, very hard-working, persevering, fairly well-spoken. They sit relatively still for hours on end and pay attention–14 hours a day and more. They are disciplined in the sense that, given a state-adopted t-shirt (as in California: “Education–It’s a Right: Not a Race”), they’ll wear it–but they will vote their own minds even if the state caucus takes a formal position.
They nurture novices (“I’m a first time delegate, first time at the microphone...” supportive applause). They respect military vets–the “support our troops means support the wars,” mantra worked: trapped them. Some perseverate over parliamentary procedure.
For good reason. NEA has its own culture of parliamentary procedure that allows leadership to silence debate about items they don’t like, using a maneuver called “object to consideration,” which, in Robert’s Rules, means something so contentious, irrelevant, repugnant, or unprofitable that nobody should discuss it. In NEA’s case, the cultural Robert’s Rules means the leadership shuts down debate on war, bank bailouts, and direct action–as we shall see.
Even so, in the spirit of “we’re all in this together in the education family,” delegates forgive president Van Roekel and Secretary Treasure Lily Eskelsen for repeated errors about what’s on the agenda, an outright insult from Eskelsen (“a call to divide the body, you gotta be kidding!”), and dubious calls about vote counts.
Delegates are more suburban than their counterparts in the much smaller American Federation of Teachers–even if some of the delegates are from LA. That means the attacks on NEA schools have come later, weren’t as harsh, not at the outset. Urban districts got hit first, worst, parental income and race being deciding factors on test scores–and everything in school. But the attacks came after NEA let AFT, as in Detroit, swing in the wind–proof that an injury to one only precedes an injury to all, that racism is one of many Achilles’ heels of the movement for equality.
They are educated, of course, but in America’s shabby public schools. Were they the good students? They liked school, and stayed.
The vast majority of delegates believe, religiously, in the US political system, capitalist democracy, rejecting evidence that it is an executive committee and armed weapon of the rich, seeing bankster bailouts and endless war as anomalies, just as smorgasbord Catholics tithe. They make the same fetish of unionism itself, religiously.
They’re pro-choice, but back the incarceration of juvenile criminals, for life. Like most people, they hold profoundly contradictory notions. They are older–young members look like children in RA crowds, and they need to watch their pounds, as do I.
Delegates arrive early to stake out and mark seats for the entire RA although the best spots are already reserved for “leaders.” Nobody complains. Moving to a new spot draws, “Say, you’re in my chair.” Politely. One moves along, in good cheer.
Day One
The RA opened on July 3rd (most delegates arrive a day or two early for state and interest-group caucus meetings).
It seems to have become a modern tradition; the RA began with loud rock music, flashing lights, dancing delegates, trumpet calls, and, on the big screens (from two hundred yards, my seat in the nose bleed section, they’re not all that big) red, white, and blue bunting as background to, “Turning Hope into Action! We are America’s Future!” followed by a standing ovation for the arrival of President Dennis Van Roekel (affectionately: “DVR,” “Dennis” or, formally, “President Van Roekel”). Then the day-after-day school opener drill–the Pledge of Allegiance–followed by a room-full-of-heads-bowed invocation fronted by an armed color guard. “Prayer to God who is known by many names (hey, what about no other God before me?)...everything that we have comes from you (BP, unemployment, endless wars, the plague?)...bless our country, our president, our city, bless the NEA, but in all things–we’re for you.” Massive chorus: “Amen.”
DVR introduced a line up of past NEA presidents–he didn’t mention most of whom went on to work for Education International, the inheritor of the CIA sponsored cold war unions: Mary Hatwood Futrell. Michigan’s John Ryor (who went to the Carter administration, then on to run what is now Florida EA, and who was one of the architects of the originally secret, then failed merger, with the AFT-AFL-CIO). Keith Geiger from Michigan. Don Cameron of Michigan, a former Executive Director. (back in the day, the “Michigan Mafia” really did run NEA). Reg Weaver (who, remember, took home a cool $686,949 in his last year but couldn’t memorize one page press releases staff wrote for him). Standing applause for “great NEA leaders.”
DVR followed with his opening speech, and fell flat. A football allegory to the New Orleans champeen Saints? Yes. “Like the Saints, we need to play offense and defense. We face tough challenges but we must remain hopeful about public education.” A bomb of a blastoff.
He fobbed the mike off to Lily (pronounced Lilly) Eskelsen, NEA Secretary Treasurer.
Eskelsen is the person who signed Reg Weaver’s $686,949 paycheck, at least $230 thousand more than any NEA leader before or since. On May 19, 2010, I began asking the NEA press office how that could be explained. No response ever came back, despite repeated calls.
Eskelsen is a smart, tough woman. You don’t get to the top of NEA being otherwise. But she hides behind a perky, even snarky, yet lovely, Sandra Bullock imitation that demeans her. Catching her in passing, I said, “Lily, you paid Reg Weaver $686,949. Why? That was wrong.” She gave me a grin and a flash of perfectly manicured nails, and quickly moved on.
Bullock, no, Eskelsen, engaged DVR with what was meant to be a series of funny jokes about his age, and her chocolate appetites. Once a joke, this becomes, three times in, tiresome. I lost count of the repeated banal repartee.
On to the DVR gusher: “he’s strong, dedicated, strategic, competent, a man of undeniable character, a father and grandfather, he has my deepest respect and he is teaching me everything I need to know (the NEA pecking order sets her up as the next president), our brother, our friend, our president, Dennis Van Roekel!” Eskelsen seems to have been hanging out at too many fat-white boy AFL-CIO conferences. This reads like one of theirs.
DVR, now introduced twice: “I was inspired by all the change Obama’s election promised. We were ready to fight for change, poised for 4 years of collaboration. Things got in the way. The economy....who could have anticipated the free fall of confidence in governments or the politics of anger (I did, and so did many others)? The very fabric of our public education is at risk (NEA loves to tout the “public” education myth)...California faces $4 billion in cuts, 20,000 layoffs....congress still hasn’t passed an education jobs bill...they bailed out the banks (who is “they”?) and auto, and gave themselves bonuses...We’ve seen too many members unemployed...class size will boom...children will lose ground (NEA loves the Kiddie Card)...pensions are under attack....Is the middle class the rich?....Our members are angry...is this the change you hoped for (loud “NO, No, No!”).
“This is the most anti-education environment I have ever seen...we had hope and we got the Race to the Top...Too many states restructure yet get nothing...the National Council of Churches (sic) is ‘deeply’ concerned about the RaTT and demonization of teachers...look at those Central Falls Rhode Island firings....Who will be next?...Obama ‘advisors’ are to blame for Rhode Island....and bubble students....I have had enough of standardized tests....the status quo is not acceptable....I want more...I DEMAND more...We are the people who make all public schools great....
“Our union is strong....Let’s fight for the students of America...we can turn hope into action...we will host a national education summit....We must not allow another bad ESEA...I’d use TNT to blow that apart...(ooh the Homeland Security lights should go on)....We are going to take ACTION, that is, write POSTCARDS to Arne Duncan! And have a day of action between now and September! We outnumber Congress 6000-1 (but they don’t stay bribed)....
“Some of us are disappointed and angry with the politicians and feel betrayed...they want us to stop political work....sit out the election....but we will be the victims if we are not activists..we simply cannot sit it out....
“Let us embrace a new course....be the ones in charge...question our own status quo...more than being at the table, running the meeting (or, as delegate Craig Gordon later quipped, ‘on the menu’)...You have the ability to create a whole new system of public education....Come with me into the bright sunshine (sic)...support public education!....Seize the moment (Huey Newton, DVR is not)....You are never alone...YOU are a NEA MEMBER! Now is the time to turn HOPE into ACTION! We ARE NEA!”
Colored lights flashing. Rap music (!). Dancing in the hall, projected onto the Big Screens. HooBoy. Not a humdinger. Lane Kirkland, the cerebral, corrupt, AFL-CIO boss of old, could have read this script. A better start than last year’s flop, but not a tub-thumper. Woo hoo or boo and phooey?
Candidates for NEA Executive Board dutifully spoke in turn, beginning with the Oakland Bamnsters (By Any Means Necessary).
Bamn’s peculiar stands have made them something of a pariah among the commonplace left and the middlers as well. Their “radical” group hides behind rhetoric from the civil rights movement, “education is a civil right,” claims to be inheritors of the pacifist Martin Luther King, files expert lawsuits, became known to smear anyone who opposes them, and, at times, employees youth to launch quasi-violent attacks.
Bamn may become a poster-child for the linkage of sectarianism and opportunism. Sectarians drive off people and arrive with no one. Opportunists may or may not arrive with a base, probably not (see the vanished anti-war movement), but that base of people know little of import.
Bamnster candidates Tania Kappner, Mark Airgood, (who had repeatedly lost elections in the Oakland, Ca, EA but were elected as delegates), and Cereste Smith, made some fine and courageous speeches (“not another dollar to the billionaire boys club...”) as Kappner has for a decade at RA’s, but rather than radically expose “public” schooling as capitalist mis-education, they stuck to their ostensibly more appealing lines about defending “professionalism.” So appealing, indeed, that libertarian education blogger, Mike Antonucci endorsed them, in hopes they would “subject NEA to ‘divisive mischief,’ and ‘tiresome tirades.’” They lost, handily.
Treasurer Becky Pringle, second in line for the presidency behind Eskelsen, reported a budget increase this year of 6%, to $357,739,880. However, Pringle warned of coming membership losses, maybe 18,000 joining the lost legion of unemployed school workers. NEA rarely loses members, making up for teacher losses in the Education Support Personnel ranks. We shall see if education workers actually do feel that setback, or if NEA tops do, given the enormity of the budget. There was no mention of belt-tightening coming from the NEA brass.
Day Two
State caucuses typically meet from 7-9 a.m, and people arrive (they take attendance, no kidding) early. In the caucuses, dissidents and entrenched leaders alike practice, work out, what is likely to happen on the conference floor.
Little debate took place early on, but for a motion which would have inserted the names, Arne Duncan and/or Obama in this New Business item, #2:
“While the National Education Association Representative Assembly supports and appreciates the significant increase in federal funding for education, the NEA takes a position of no confidence in the US Department of Education's Race to the Top competitive grant policies and guidelines, the use of competitive grant policies and guidelines as a basis for the reauthorization of ESEA, and similar initiatives and policies that undermine public education.”
It was more than abundantly clear that NEA leadership had orchestrated state leaders to defeat that move in the caucuses, then finish it off in the assembled RA. One delegate from Illinois, Eric Brown, took a mike and said, “this could put Dennis in a terrible position...press will say we are at odds with the Obama administration. We will offend our friends.” Another Illinois delegate working a blog called Brown a “surrender monkey.”
New Business Item 6 referred to the fact that the AFT continues to raid NEA locals throughout the south, despite a no-raid deal the NEA signed with the AFT and AFL-CIO years ago. Leadership sought to duck a direct confrontation with AFT. This resulted:
NEA leaders will seek communication with AFT leadership reaffirming the Jurisdictional Agreement between NEA and AFT which states (in section: D. Membership 1): "with or without a state-level Jurisdictional Agreement" neither organization will promote "reduced dues to members of the other organization as an inducement to join and will not provide any forms or instruction for withdrawing membership from the other organization. The NEA message shall include a recommendation that AFT communicate with the Alabama AFT affiliates to respect and obey the terms of the NEA/AFT Jurisdictional Agreement.
Merger with the AFT and AFL-CIO lingers as a core, if somewhat secret, NEA bosses’ effort even though, hidden deep in the thick NEA delegate handbook is a line stating the NEA-AFT partnership is no longer in effect, no longer will be funded. The handbook says “new mechanisms are in place but DVR dodged the question of what they might be. Nothing is said about the NEA-AFL-CIO partnership that the bulbous former NEA president, Reg Weaver, and the equally portly John Sweeney, signed in San Diego in 2006, covered in Substance: http://www.substancenews.com/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=352
NEA leaders were certain a merger would pass the 1999 RA. It did not, an indicator that NEA does count the votes, when they are actually counted, as they are cast.
Even though the AFL-CIO is bankrupt, really at least $2 million in debt, lost 800,000 people in 2008, and is only good at fighting its own members, jobs for tops and plenty of cash exchanged means both sides would like the simulation of a merger to happen, soon. The upshot would probably be that NEA would adopt many of the AFT-AFL-CIO’s patently undemocratic structural problems, and NEA rank and filers would have a new layer of enemies not only on the floor, but also on the picket line–and picking their pockets. Private sector AFL-CIO unions would lobby against tax plans for public schools.
(They’re already blowing bubbles in the California delegation. I have a swell view, four rows from the back. To the side, some delegates are already working on back exercises on the floor, a good plan).
NEA Executive Director John Wilson took the mike to issue an hour long drooling sonata for dead President Lyndon Johnson and his “Great Society,” without ever directly mentioning two million Vietnamese deaths, nearly 60,000 US dead, hundreds of thousands of lives ruined, and the utter destruction of the US economy and military. This dishonest divide of homeland and world, like school and society, played throughout the assembly
Wilson shared the podium with the “All NEA Choir,” singing praises of America, and a series of NEA executive board members who outlined the phantasmagoric achievements of the Great Society, like Head Start. Wilson’s transparent design was to convince delegates that endless war has nothing to do with domestic policies, that capitalism can be made to work, the poor can vote the rich out of their riches. From the vacillating middle class, or most of it, Wilson got a standing O.
The delegates rejected Amendment 15, proposed by Bamn’s Mark Airgood which would have added this to NEA’s concerns about the Federal relationship to education: “The Association opposes the disbursement of federal funds based on competition between districts and states.”
That mild piece went down via a commonplace NEA tops’ blocking move: using the “Issues Committee,” made up mostly of rank and file members, to attack it. “This would place NEA in opposition to numerous competitive grant programs.”
In fact, Tennessee, Delaware, Illinois, Ohio, and Florida are all serious contenders for RaTT money, with other state NEA’s also fighting it out, if eliminated from the race earlier, for competitive dollars. That makes it hard, embarrassing, to dig out why it is the RaTT exists, who it serves, and what should be done about it. And, again, the narrowest interests are served; opportunism, attending to the interests of a few at the expense of all, wins.
At the close of the day, NEA Pac gave Jeff Tyrell $7500 from a drawing. Quasi-merit pay for sitting.
Day Three
The day began with yet another tedious exchange between Eskelsen (Bullock), and Van Roekel: “You’re old.” “You eat chocolate.”
We’ll skip to NBI 24: NEA will encourage and assist state affiliates in passing state laws which promote parental consent and student privacy on the Armed Services Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) through the selection of Option 8.
Defeated by comments like, “we need our best and brightest to protect our freedom,” and... “I am a guidance counselor and these exams help students determine what they can do. It’s the best exam there is...”
Enough said.
Another move to obstruct serious consideration of motions related to banksters, war, or the environment (“focus, focus, focus, this is not about education” “this is a side issue”) is to attach outrageous cost estimates to New Business and other items.
For example, Jack Gerson, a long-time activist from Oakland, and the requisite 50 others, submitted NBI 28 which, in part, reads: “NEA shall take the lead in organizing a campaign of...groups...to demand the federal government compel banks to repay their loans with full interest and those loans will be used to reverse cuts to the public sector by restoring jobs and programs that were cut.”
NEA attached a “cost implication” to that of $52,872,500. Scary, eh? San Diego EA president Camille Zombro moved to shut down debate in the California caucus which opposed the motion.
On the RA floor, a Washington state delegate: “The war and bank bailouts are tangential issues.”
Chris Gordon of California: “We need to get out of our seats and into the streets!”
The motion failed, overwhelmingly.
NEA gave an award to Governor O’Malley of Maryland, calling him the “best education governor in the country,” plus–big hug from DVR. Nobody mentioned O’Malley’s plans to gut the state workers’ pay on the grounds that “we must all share in the pain,” demonstrating the limits of Solidarity Unionism. “Save Public Education,” can mean, “Lay them off, not us,” and, “Tax the workers to pay the teachers.” All that is history on the books already.
Indeed, San Diego delegates returned home to find their local SDEA president, Zombro, allied with the school board in a scheme to institute a “parcel tax” to pay for schools. Zombro was a key player in the California RA. While playing the electoral game with considerable expertise, she too made concession after concession in San Diego, selling organized retreats, decay, as a way to save jobs. Then the San Diego board, a majority elected by teachers, threatened layoffs while SDEA bowed to furlough days.
John Stocks, PAC staff for NEA responded to an inquiry: “NEA is on par with other political PACs in money spent.” Actually, NEA ranks near the top of the list in PAC spending, year after year, steering people into voting booths, like pews.
Stock made the case for the continuing effort to out-bribe the banks, industrial capitalists and others by sticking fast to the political arena as the centerpiece of NEA action.
“The political context of the ESEA (NCLB)...we now face a wave election involving three factors (1) mass unemployment, (2) perceptions of Obama vis a vis war and the oil spill, (3) the enthusiasm gap...Republicans are enthused and Democrats are not. If the election were held today, Democrats would lose the house. Pelosi would lose her speakership.
“Our campaign objectives are to (1) save education jobs under the Obama veto threat on the war/education funding bill, (2) ensure the health of state affiliates, (3) get as much federal money to the states as possible, (4) erase, re-write, and re-authorize ESEA.
“We accomplished a $10 billion education-jobs bill....Senator Feinstein is key. She’s a challenge. Secondly, we need to fund the community colleges, pension funds, and $36 billion in Pell grants.
“Our strategy...we have to focus on secondary targets, surround George Miller, Feinstein, and others with people who agree with NEA. “Grassroots power is the new currency (sic) in Washington, D.C.
“We have to have an entire electoral structure to address ESEA. That only happens when we sing from the same song sheet. ..we also need an offensive campaign..an example would be our Priority Schools campaign...
“WE MUST HAVE YOU AS LOBBYISTS. IT IS UP TO US!”
Stock got a lukewarm reception.
Delegates then rejected, by a big standing vote, New Business Initiate 42 which urged NEA to “call on the US government to end the war in Afghanistan...” with no particular end-date, worse than the Obama make-believe July 2011 deadline.
NBI 44, demanding that Obama replace Duncan with someone aligned to NEA’s goals, failed.
A New Jersey delegate blew a vuvuzuela. Awful. Blow anything but that. It’s what RA’s are for.
One delegate said, “he’s the devil we know over the devil we don’t.”
Another, “if we are unhappy with Obama, we need to talk about Obama..but we already made it clear we need to work with Obama...the main thing is not Arne Duncan but ESEA...that should be our focus...”
Bamn’s Airgood, “If we get rid of Duncan, the next person will be on notice...”
George Sheridan, a rural California delegate and Abe Lincoln imitator, who most assuredly is not a Lincoln but is quaintly backward nevertheless, “This says DVR should call for Duncan’s resignation. That could wreck our relationship with Obama.”
An interlude: The NEA RA is the key moment of any year for NEA’s tops at both the state and national levels. There, they must prove themselves to lower levels of the hierarchy, demonstrating the efficacy, competency, of the union’s highest officers who, ostensibly, are “just like other educators,” while their salaries, hotel suits, limos, related perks and expense accounts hover at $300,000 and far more.
The RA offers intermediate leadership in the states the
chance to work their own, narrower, and often trivial issues, appearing to
respond to the rank and file while gaining some measure of fame on the big screen
and in print/online editions of “RA Today.” It’s appearance of “democracy,”
which simply places a smothering warm blanket over real dissent, masks a very
real, firmly fixed, hierarchy, which mirrors the hierarchies within the
education system itself, as with most unions.
Like the Church, NEA tolerates many forms of dissension,
but one cannot say, “there is no God” (“this is one of capital’s unions, mainly
serving capital’s desires) and one cannot say, “Don’t tithe,” (“don’t pay dues
extorted in trade for pacifying your ability to open and close your work
place).
This kind of democracy is not designed to work out real differences around a common project that would address what really is the whole source of educator (and all disenfranchised) oppression, that is, capital and empire, but rather it’s a form of democracy used to pit constricted interests against each other, perverse pluralism creating a cycloptic view driving delegates to middling concerns, and restricted issues, aiming with one sight, nibbling around the edges of bull’s-eye, never hitting the real target, set up for loss after loss on, even, simple reforms.
NBI 54 attacked the National Reading Panel’s summary report, which inverts the substance of the longer document published by researchers, passed. This item’s passage, coming at no cost, means the NEA will create a link to a web site showing that the lengthier piece by researchers indicates opposition to one-size-fits-all education, from it: “it seems...that teachers will be most effective when they are enthusiastic in their teaching and enjoy what they are doing in the classroom.”
Day Four–The Last
In the California caucus, college leader Dean Vogel gave a tribute to termed out CTA and UTLA president David Sanchez, near tears. “He’s always stood strong. Every time we asked him to go to war for us, he has done that.
Sanchez: “My main goal is to elect Jerry Brown as governor. We cannot do this without you. I never expected we’d have an economic downturn, nor elect a President who would disappoint us. But, at least we are dealing with him–we are at the table.”
Kisses all around. Hugs. Standing O.
In the conference hall, delegates started the day dancing to, among other rock classics, “Taking care of business.
The usual mundane announcements about who had raised what for the NEA pac took some time. New Jersey is up over $600,000. Whew.
Ravitch: Vote. Sell Bumperstickers. Hope! Action?
Then came the fishhook from the ruling class, Diane Ravitch, to demonstrate that one could be a former warrior for NCLB, in favor of war, fight for all the elements of what is now the RaTT, destroy others careers along the way, and vacillate, create an appearance of shifting sides, and get the Friend of Education Award from the tops at NEA, as well as the innocent the rubes who follow them and fawn on Ravitch.
Perhaps it is because she floats around in the really thin
air that is the field of education that the unsettled reactionary, Diane Ravitch,
gets cheers from those who condemned her in her No Child Left Behind days. I
have to remind myself that there are also bad historians at Harvard.
At issue is the method, form, which seems to fascinate and
distract education workers. Will it be the iron fist or velvet glove, ensuring
oppression one way or another?
Ravitch, however, witlessly claims she’s not on any side.
She is: Exploitation.
Third: massive demonstrations of students, school workers, and community people on March 4th show terrific unrest. But those participants represent less that 1/ of the combined student/faculty bodies. A meeting of about 800 people decided on March 4th, the demands, and the substance of the demonstrations, declaring itself “democratic.” True? In a sense, yes, in much the same way that about 1/3 of the people in the American colonies sided with the 1776 revolutionaries. Democracy is a problem.
The “Public Schooling’ she touts? Another fantasy.
Education, leading out, is what everyone must have from birth, to live. It is always social, collective, interrogative, curious, combining theory with practice–something of a natural dialectical materialism offered to newborns.
Schooling is what capitalism does to people to make them marginally clever, but not wise, loyal, and obedient. Schooling is a fetish for education.
Schooling in
the US has never been truly public, but fully segregated by class and race.
Kids from different social classes get taught differing facts, under varying
methods; mis-education fashioned through a tax system that favors the wealthy.
The point is not to preserve public schooling but to rescue education from the
ruling classes, to truly transform education.
From the RA bully pulpit, Ravitch denounced merit pay, high-stakes exams, charters, privatization, and layoffs–all the issues that spin off from the society she supports, one devoted to capitalism and war, which she does not mention.
What’s her proposal? Two things.
1) “Vote!”
2) Buy 4 million bumper stickers with the slogan: “I am a public school teacher. I vote.”
The end of her. Wild music. Hugs from DVR. Photo ops for all. A plaque.
Even NEA delegates, later, voted that bumper sticker imbecility down. Was it the cost implication?
Delegates followed that elevated moment for hysterics with an equally significant debate: whether, in the middle of a written motion, to use the term, “Staph,” or “Staphylococcus.” Unlike the non-existent debates about the war, or banksters, this battle went on for 24 minutes.
Presidents from the 50 states then marched their dangerous, intimidating, postcards to Obama to the front of the podium facade where they lay in one, small, lifeless pile. DVR shouted that he would mail them!
One delegate said to me, “What this RA has done is ratify my belief that we are all in the same boat, as educators, as Americans, as NEA.”
On July 10th, Joyce O’Neal posted this on the “Dennis2Delegates” on-line discussion board: “I was a first time delegate and was absolutely blown away....Dennis and Lilly (sic) did a superb job....keeping up with every parliamentary procedure and making sure the procedures went smoothly....I learned a lot about how we must continue to fight the fight for public education...I don’t want to miss another one. I can’t wait for Chicago.”
Two weeks earlier, I was banned from that discussion group for posting my question about Reg Weaver’s salary; reinstated when other delegates protested the ban online.
Most of the post-RA debate on the Dennis2Delegates list was about the quality of New Orleans hospitality.
No one noted that San Diego keeps its poor in Mexico, while the poorest of the poor are stuck in New Orleans.
|