Friday, February 10, 2017

The DeVos Apocalypse

From Daniel Henninger, at WSJ, "Charters are eroding the Democratic urban base of teachers and black parents":

The extraordinary battle over Betsy DeVos’s nomination to be secretary of education is the defining event of the Trump presidency’s early days.

As presented, the DeVos confirmation appeared to be a standard partisan conflict between Democrats and Republicans, or in the conventional update, all that’s good and all that’s Trump.

But something deeper was at stake here, which is why the Democrats raised the nomination for a second-level cabinet post to a political apocalypse.

The person who introduced Mrs. DeVos at her confirmation hearing was former Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman from Connecticut, arguably the last of the unequivocal Democratic moderates. In the confirmation vote, every Democrat opposed Mrs. DeVos, including Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota.

The issue presumably at the center of this nomination fight is the future of the education of black children who live in urban neighborhoods.

During a strike in the 1930s, a miner’s wife wrote a song that became a Democratic anthem, “Which Side Are You On?” The question remains: Which side are you on?

A standard answer is that the interests of the Democrats and the teachers unions are conjoined. Still, many of us have wondered at the party’s massive resistance to public-school alternatives and most reforms.

Beneath that resistance sits a grim reality: Many urban school systems are slowly dying. As with the decline of the industrial unions, the Democrats’ urban base of teachers is disappearing by attrition. The party is desperate to hold on to what’s left, and increasingly that includes its bedrock —black parents.

Enrollment in many urban schools has been declining for years. It’s down significantly in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, Kansas City and elsewhere. Falling alongside have been membership rolls in urban teachers unions, notably in Michigan and Wisconsin, two Trump pickups this election.

Families who could afford it have moved away. Many adult blacks stayed behind and, inexorably, the education of their children fell behind, a fact documented annually year after year. By the way, good public teachers got trapped, too. Some of the best lost heart and left, replaced by less able teachers, some grossly so.

For parents of children in the nation’s suburban public schools, none of this mattered much, so sustained political support for reform of city schools was never very deep. But in the cities, dissent rose.

The charter-school movement emerged first in Minnesota in 1991. Wisconsin passed the first school-choice legislation in 1989, authored by a Democratic black activist named Polly Williams. Some of us thought then that Polly Williams was the start of a new, bipartisan civil-rights movement. How naive we were.

The movement persisted. According to a 2016 study by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, using state databases, these are the percentages of students now enrolled in public charters only:

In now-famous Flint, Mich.: 53%. Kansas City: 40%; Philadelphia: 32%; the District of Columbia: 45%; Detroit: 53%.

In Louisiana, which essentially abandoned its failed central-administration model after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans charters are at 92%.

The steady migration of poor families to these alternatives is a historic saga of social transformation. It happened for two reasons: to escape public-school disorder and to give their kids a shot at learning.


This is one of greatest civil-rights stories since the mid-1960s. And the Democratic Party’s role in it? About zero. Other than, as in the past two weeks, resistance...
Hat Tip: RCP.

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Gold Box Deals

Thanks everybody for supporting the blog.

As you know, I don't blog for money, although I enjoy posting the Amazon book links (and so forth), and I greatly appreciate reader support.

Thanks again.

I'll be teaching all day today. More blogging tonight and throughout the weekend.

Meanwhile, Shop Today's Deals.

BONUS: Stephen Kinzer, The True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire.

'Who Can It Be Now?'

From yesterday morning's drive-time, at the Sound L.A.

Men at Work.


Give a Little Bit
Supertramp
7:59 AM

Misty Mountain Hop
Led Zeppelin
7:54 AM

Low Rider
War
7:51 AM

Synchronicity II
The Police
7:46 AM

Fame
David Bowie
7:42 AM

Rockin' In the Free World
Neil Young
7:37 AM

Imagine
John Lennon
7:34 AM

Money
Pink Floyd
7:28 AM

Who Can It Be Now?
Men At Work
7:25 AM

From the Beginning
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
7:21 AM

Take the Money and Run
Steve Miller Band
7:08 AM

Long Train Runnin'
The Doobie Brothers
7:04 AM

Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love
Van Halen
7:00 AM

Dave Rubin: Why I Left the Left (VIDEO)

Great video. Just devastating.



Big Cat P-22 Shares Griffith Park With Millions of People

I like the big cats, although I wouldn't want to meet up with one while out on a hike. They're ferocious.

At the Los Angeles Times, "A week in the life of P‑22, the big cat who shares Griffith Park with millions of people."

And click through to spot that darned lion, heh.



Tomi Lahren on Hannity's (VIDEO)

She's a sweetie.


Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Evelyn Taft's Partly Cloudy Forecast

Here's the lovely Ms. Evelyn, for CBS News 2 Los Angeles:



Santa Ana Votes to Condemn Trump's Eecutive Actions on Immigrants, Sanctuary Cities

Santa Ana's just a couple of cities over from Irvine. So lame. But what can you expect from a city that's roughly 80 percent Hispanic.

At the O.C. Register, "The Santa Ana City Council voted late Tuesday to prepare a resolution condemning President Trump’s executive orders withholding funds from sanctuary cities and barring immigrants from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the U.S."

Three Dog Night: 'One'

Flashback to 2010, at Althouse's, "Unplayable 45s I won't throw out."


Ralph Peters on U.S. Special Operations Raid in Yemen (VIDEO)

The big news yesterday was how Yemen was "denying permission" for U.S. ground operations in the country, following the raid in which Chief Special Warfare Operator William "Ryan" Owens was killed.

Well, turns out that was fake news.

See the Washington Post, plus Ralph Peters with the analysis tonight below:




Amazon's Gold Box Deals

Shop Today's Deals.

I'll have more blogging later today.

BONUS: Fritz Fischer, Germany's Aims in the First World War.

Have More Children

Hey, we wanted more, but kids aren't cheap, and we have no family nearby to help at home with the children.

But yeah, folks should have more. Environmentalists love abortion because women can murder their unborn children because climate change. (Yeah, leftists are evil like that.)

At Quillette, which is a great magazine (that I don't read enough):


Northern California Flooding (VIDEO)

Watch, at KCRA News 3 Sacramento, "Officials monitor San Joaquin River as more rain moves in."

And at KPIX 5 San Francisco, "Peninsula Communities Hit With Flooding From High Tide, Heavy Rain."

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Jackie Johnson's Slightly Clearing Forecast

There'll be some cloud-cover tomorrow, but we should get some sunshine as well.

Scattered showers expected back on Friday.

I'd say we're lucky to be getting all this rain. I hope leftist drought fear-mongering is over.

Watch, at CBS News 2 Los Angeles, "Jackie Johnson's Weather Forecast (Feb. 7)."

KC Johnson and Stuart Taylor, Jr., The Campus Rape Frenzy

*BUMPED.*

At Amazon, KC Johnson and Stuart Taylor, Jr., The Campus Rape Frenzy: The Attack on Due Process at America’s Universities.

Elizabeth Warren Cut Off from Speaking Against Jeff Sessions Because She Violated Senate Rules

Heh.

From Ed Driscoll, at Instapundit, "THE TRAIL OF (CROCODILE) TEARS FROM THIS WILL BE ENDLESS."

ADDED: At USA Today, "Why Elizabeth Warren was accused of 'impugning' Jeff Sessions."

Alexa Ray Joel for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit (VIDEO)

She looks pretty good.

At SI, ".@SeaBrinkley's daughters on body-shaming and insecurity before SI shoot: 'I grew up not loving how I looked'."

And she's on Instagram, "Twas a most humbling and rewarding HONOR to be a part of your February issue!"

Also at London's Daily Mail, "Christie Brinkley's daughters Sailor and Alexa plead for women to accept their bodies after starring in SI."

And watch, "Christie Brinkley, 63, Is Back In Her Bikini With Her Daughters | Sports Illustrated Swimsuit."

Kate Upton's 'Extravagant Demands' May Have Cost Her This Year's Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Cover

Look, she rocked the breast modeling world this last few years, so if she's got "diva-level" demands, can you blame her?

She's still pretty spectacular.

At London's Daily Mail:


Berkeley's Descent to Victimology Hothouse

From the awesome Heather Mac Donald, at the Los Angeles Times, "U.C. Berkeley’s descent from place of learning to victimology hothouse":

Even before its students rioted in the streets, distressed that right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos would dare to open his mouth in their presence, UC Berkeley presented a visual illustration of the academy’s decline from a place of learning to a victimology hothouse. Within walking distance on the Berkeley campus are emblems of both a vanished academic world and the diversity-industrial complex that ousted it.

Emblem 1: In Bauhaus-era typography, a quotation from Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Cardozo adorns the law school’s otherwise brutalist facade.

“You will study the wisdom of the past, for in a wilderness of conflicting counsels, a trail has there been blazed. You will study the life of mankind, for this is the life you must order, and, to order with wisdom, must know. You will study the precepts of justice, for these are the truths that through you shall come to their hour of triumph. Here is the high emprise, the fine endeavor, the splendid possibility of achievement, to which I summon you and bid you welcome.”

No law school today, if erecting itself from scratch, would think of parading such sentiments, first uttered in 1925, on its exterior. Cardozo’s invocation of “mankind” is alone cause for removal, but equally transgressive is his belief that there is wisdom in the past and not just discrimination. He presents learning as a heroic enterprise focused not on the self but on the vast world beyond, both past and present. Education is the search for objective knowledge that takes the learner into a grander universe of thought and achievement.

Stylistically, Cardozo’s elevated tone is as old-fashioned as his complicated syntactical cadences; his exhortation to intellectual mastery is too “masculinist” and triumphal for today’s identity-obsessed university.

His celebration of the law overlooks the teachings of critical race theory, which purports to expose the racial subtext of seemingly benign legal concepts. And he fatally omits any mention of “inclusion” and “diversity.”

There’s not a trace of the heroic on the Berkeley law school’s website today; the closest it comes to any ennobling inspiration is the statement: “We believe that a Berkeley Law degree is a tool for change, both locally and globally.”

But this bland expression of progressive ideology is positively Miltonic compared with the bromides on display just meters away from the law school .

Emblem 2: UC Berkeley’s Division of Equity and Inclusion has placed vertical banners across the main campus reminding students of the contemporary university’s paramount mission: assigning guilt and innocence within the ruthlessly competitive hierarchy of victimhood. Each banner shows a photo of a student or a member of the student-services bureaucracy, beside a purported quotation from that student or bureaucrat. No rolling cadences here, no exhortations to intellectual conquest. Instead, just whining or penitential snippets from the academic lexicon of identity politics.

“I will acknowledge how power and privilege intersect in our daily lives,” vows an Asian female member of the class of 2017. Just how crippling is that intersection? The answer comes in a banner showing a black female student in a backward baseball cap and a male Latino student, who together urge the Berkeley community to “create an environment where people other than yourself can exist.”

A naive observer of the Berkeley campus would think that lots of people “other than yourself” exist there, and would even think that Berkeley welcomes those “other” people with overflowing intellectual and material riches. Such a misperception, however, is precisely why Berkeley funds the Division of Equity and Inclusion with a cool $20 million annually and staffs it with 150 full-time functionaries: It takes that much money and personnel to drum into students’ heads how horribly Berkeley treats its “othered” students.

A member of the student-services bureaucracy reinforces the message of continual oppression on her banner. “I will be a brave and sympathetic ally,” announces Bene Gatzert of University Health Services. Cardozo saw grandeur in the mastery of the common law; today’s campus functionary sees herself in a heroic struggle against the ubiquitous forces of white-male heterosexual oppression...
Still more.

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