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Posts categorized "censorship/free speech"

Moral Turpitude and the Curious American Obsession with Morality

"I love America,"..."Everybody gets a chance in America. In England, success only inspires envy, but in America it inspires hope." ~Sebastian Horsley

The next time you have the luck to find yourself bound abroad, do take a moment to stop in Customs and cozy up to your friendly neighborhood Homeland Security Agent to ask for a copy of the brochure that explains "Section 212 (a) (2) (A) (i) (I) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended."  Oh, alright. I'll do it for you.  Click here. Scary stuff, eh?

I sincerely hope the likes of Eliot Spitzer and any other politician who has had a party in his pants with a prostitute doesn't try to leave the U.S. to visit Europe.  Because in Section 212 (a) (2) (A) (i)(l) (who the ***&&^%%^&* ever thought all of these parentheses made any sense???) of the "Classes of Aliens Ineligible for a Visa", prostitution ranks higher than terrorism.  I mean that quite literally--prostitution is item 2 (D) and Terrorism is 3 (B).  Guess philandering with whores is a bigger deal than threats to American security.  Perhaps someone ought to teach legislators the fine art of rhetorical organization.  The farther down on the list, the less important, no?

Anyway, how did I miss this story?  Self-identified London dandy & all around gleefully self-absorbed bad boy author & artist Sebastian Horsely was denied entry to the United States at Newark Liberty International Airport (get the irony?  Huh?  Huh?  Get it?  "Liberty"??? Get it???) on the basis of moral turpitude.  Translation?  He engages in activities considered offensive to the prurient & morally superior interests of the U.S. public.  Yeah.  Like Horsely is going to be a worse role model for us than our own elected politicians?  Than our own movie stars?  Than our own writers?  Than our own journalists?  Dare I continue...

Continue reading "Moral Turpitude and the Curious American Obsession with Morality" »

Civility, Community, Identity Politics & the Blogosphere: Chris Clarke

I've had a very busy spring and I have not been posting as regularly as I'd like, but I'm sure readers have noticed a more regular posting schedule now that summer is upon us and in the coming weeks, I want to catch up on some "old" blogosphere issues that are on my mind, even if they are already passe for others.

This spring has seen a number of blogosphere dust ups of both small and epic proportions.  These have ranged from the Amanda Marcotte/Melissa McEwan dust up at the Edwards campaign (read my original take on the issue here), the utter lack of civility over Jessica Valenti's new book Full Frontal Feminism (gasp!  not all feminists agree? not all feminists liked the book?), the Kathy Sierra saga, the Brittney Gilbert episode, the on-going racism that exists within the feminist community (although Nubian did not quit because of this racism, her blog is sorely missed;  she was a fierce voice in the blogosphere, and a rich contributor), and many, many, many other things I don't have the time or space to list. 

All of which has me thinking about what we mean by a "blogging" community.  Based on my writings, I suppose I "belong" to the feminist, lgbtq, environmental, writing, and generally "left" communities.  But one of the things that keeps surprising me is the assumption that if you hold a particular set of beliefs, that you are going to agree with everyone else.  A few weeks ago, I read this wonderful post by Chris Clarke who "resigned" from the progressive blogosphere.  In his "resignation," he notes that the progressive blogosphere isn't radical enough for him AND that he thinks too much conformity is a bad thing.  I think what Chris was trying to address was an actual lack of discussion in the blogosphere.  A topic comes up and everyone nails it in their own voice, but essentially, communities of like-minded writers expect that we will all say essentially the same thing.  This, of course, has been part of the blogosphere's attempt to address an increasingly monopoly over the media.  But, what if we don't all agree?  Chris is actually going to continue blogging, but his larger point in his refusal to be a "part" of the progressive blogosphere I read as a reaction to feeling like he was obligated to agree with ideas that didn't represent his politics.  In short, why should the progressive blogosphere be a blogosphere of mediocre compromise (ahem, can you say "the democratic party?")?  I think Chris makes a lot of good points worth thinking about, particularly for political bloggers. 

Within the blogosphere, Lingual Tremors exists as a very small blip on the radar.  It's a lightly trafficked blog which does a combination of politics and personal writing;  depending on what you're looking for and what I'm in the mood to write, you may or may not get the actual "flavor" of this blog unless you're a regular reader.  And, being a regular reader means putting up with moments when the screen goes blank because I'm off on some adventure or other and whilst I love blogging, sometimes, I am more drawn to my other interests, or I am compelled by my career and social justice activities, to put blogging aside during "crisis management" times.  For those readers who know me in my "real" life, my blogging habits mirror my inability to return phone calls, balance a check book, and grocery shop.  I can stay consistent for a while and then, well, life just gets in the way.  What this means is, I don't get looked at regularly, or critiqued, or trolled, in the way other, bigger blogs do.  So I often watch blogging flame wars erupt without ever really feeling the effects of them.  And, on the infrequent occasions when I get comments from trolls or readers whose opinions I feel cross a line, I rigorously follow Bitch Ph.D.'s policy:  "Comments are great; obnoxious comments get deleted.  Deal."  But because I don't "matter" as much as the big blogs, that means I don't get called to account for not agreeing with everyone else.  This gives me much more freedom to ignore the crowd and go in my own direction. 

I think Chris' post is really interesting and raises some interesting questions, particularly for those of us who are on the wilderness of the blogosphere.  What are the identity politics of the blogosphere?  Why do you blog?  Who do you identify with?  On what basis?  What does that mean?  More later...

Tim O'Reilly's Code of Conduct for Bloggers

Controversy at the Tremor: Back to Censoring American History

A recent visitor to the ol' cyber homestead critiqued my quick (and frankly, fairly sloppy) posting on the recent dust up at Celerity Nascent Charter School.  I glibly entitled my post "What Good Education Means Today" and connected the incident to the No Child Left Behind Act, one of my favorite whipping boys.  The visitor writes:

No Child Left Behind has nothing  to do with this incident. If you had even the slightest idea what this school is about you would not use the words "drill and skill" to describe them. I am a teacher, not at Celerity, but at a LAUSD charter and teachers are well aware of their "at-will" contracts. We come to charter schools well aware of the hiring and firing process. You don't like it go teach somewhere else.

Creativity at charter schools is welcomed, but when teachers decide to abuse that freedom  they should not be allowed around impressionable children. Usingthe classroom to promote one's political views is inappropriate. Students need to know how to question authority without being threatening and angry. They ned to know how to present their black istory in a positive way that celebrates the race's accomplishments. Reliving violent and ugly acts in black history in front of children ranging from 2 and up is self serving and irresponsible. The teachers got a very important lesson. The teachers lacked creativity in getting their message across. They must have not been willing to compromise...shame on them for abusing their positions!

In the spirit of academic dialogue, I am very willing to admit that I did not parse out my analysis very well in the previous post.  So, here we go.

1.  I am not against charter schools per se;  I think there are many interesting and effective examples of charter schools living up to their expectations as pedagogically innovative and intellectually vibrant centers of K-12 learning.  Among others, Frank Smith of Columbia University's Teacher's College has written abotu many of the advantages of charter schools.  I also have a number of friends who teach at very interesting and progressive charter schools.  I celebrate those schools that let teachers approach their material creatively and innovatively.  I also share many of the concerns about the ways in which charter schools weaken public schools.  I also see a direct connection between charter schools and the privatization of American public education, something I vehemently oppose.  But, this isn't really a "pro" vs. "con" charter school post.  However, I disagree with the "at will" contract system used by many charter schools specifically because of what happened in this instance:  teachers were fired for objectionable content.  In a country that espouses the free exchange of ideas, that's not okay.

2.  My main problem with the incident at Celerity centers on the comments quoted in the LA Times article by the Celerity co-founder, Vielka McFarlane. "We don't want to focus on how the history of the country has been checkered but on how do we dress for success, walk proud and celebrate all the accomplishments we've made."  To be very clear:  we don't create a better tomorrow by whitewashing yesterday's history. 

Let me begin with the absurbism of the situation:  to suggest that at risk students in a poor community can't have access to their own history is to suggest that the entire purpose of education is foppery.  McFarlane's view seems to be, it doesn't matter what young black children learn as long as they look nice.  McFarlane says, "we don't want to focus on how the history of the country has been checkered but on how do we dress for success..."  The purpose of public education should not be about dressing for success.  It should be about critical thinking, writing, reading, and access to the whole world of ideas that await in the classroom and in the world.

Education=Fashion? 

Secondly, and more seriously:  we do not adequately prepare students for the world of tomorrow by making them poor students of history.  Students need to learn the good, the bad, and the ugly so that they can also learn how to initiate change.  This kind of Pollyanna approach to American history suggests that kids don't need to learn about:  the erasure of indigenous American cultures, any of the wars in American history, slavery, the civil rights' movement and the list goes on.  Of course American history can be rewritten as the fantasy of a perfect nation.  But that fantasy invalidates the lives of everyone living and working to make the story of the United States an amazing, intricate, funny, proud, angry, and sad narrative.  School officials have no business erasing the parts of history they find objectionable.  The last time I checked, this country still held dear the idea of freedom of speech.  Connected to that is the free flow of ideas and information that support the development of ideas and arguments.  Kids don't need to learn how to parrot the "triumphs of the nation" without being able to put those triumphs in appropriate historical context.

3.  Don't use poetry for evil purposes.  The students were inspired by Marilyn Nelson's poem "A Wreath for Emmett Till."  This was a clear case of censorship and the school administration's very poor handling of a topic of interest to students.  You don't teach students how to be better students by shutting down original research and a desire to learn.  Nelson, writing in defense of the teachers, says:

I suggest, Ms. Canada and Ms. McFarlane, that your firing Ms. Alba and Mr. Strauss has taught the students of Celerity Nascent Charter School one of the most important lessons to be learned from the study of Black history: that people in power often wield that power unjustly and unwisely, and that it is our responsibility to speak truth to power and to resist injustice. Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, and Mamie Till Mobley would have been proud of your students’ passionate and clear view of your decision to cancel their program. They would have signed the students’ letters of protest, too. You have accelerated the original injustice by firing teachers who encourage your students to think. Thus you commit injustice against both teachers and students.

4.  How is this related to No Child Left Behind?  Well, my visitor is right on this one.  It's not ostensibly related;  this incident had nothing to do with high stakes testing.  I just get awfully damned agitated when it comes to the state of our public schools.  And so I would argue that at least on the surface this has nothing to do with NCLB.  But what lurks beneath?  Much of what the No Child Left Behind Act has done is to force standardized curriculum on schools.  This has led to the drill and skill mentality now prevalent in many public schools as children face batteries of tests.  Now, some charter schools, by virtue of their exemption status from particular laws guiding public schools, have a different relationship to mandated curriculum.  However, what No Child Left Behind has done is to eradicate individual teacher's abilities to make choices about their classrooms and their curriculums.  Instead, everyone follows the master plan for grade level.  In a school ostensibly set up to allow teachers greater freedom, as my visitor notes, these teachers should have had greater autonomy over their classroom curriculum.  Instead, their content was deemed inappropriate to the mission of the school;  this shares a certain intellectual connection, if not a direct connection, to mandated curriculums.

Now, I've provided some links below for further reading and listening.  I've also provided a link to an on-line petition to rehire to Marisol Alba and Sean Strauss.  I'm not sure if Alba and Strauss want to be rehired at Celerity Nascent, but the petition is at least one way to take concrete action (might I also suggest sending LOTS of books to the local library on important historical subjects so that kids have alternative access to information?):

Two local public libraries near the school, which I'm sure might appreciate donations of books on any topic, include:

  • Washington Irving Public Library
  • 4117 W. Washington Boulevard
  • Los Angeles, CA 90018

and

  • Jefferson Public Library
  • 2211 W. Jefferson Boulevard
  • Los Angeles, CA 90018

And finally, I'd like to thank my visitor for stopping by and raising some good questions.  I think it's clear, at the outset, that we don't agree, but I am always happy for well thought out critiques and comments on my posts.  Thanks!

Read On!  Celerity Nascent Charter School Controversy

Erin Aubrey Kaplan's Op Ed in the LA Times

The Cool Justice Report (with Nelson's letter)

Fire Dog Lake

Edwize and Edwize Update

Take Action!

Sign the petition

Listen!  Marilyn Nelson's "A Wreath for Emmett Till"

Read On!  Charter School Controversy

Center for Education Reform (Pro Charter Schools)

ERIC Digest:  Perspectives on Charter Schools

Charter School Debate (CNN.com)

What "Good" Education Means Today

L.A. teachers Marisol Alba and Sean Strauss, of the Celerity Nascent Charter School, were fired after supporting students who wrote a letter of protest about the school's decision not to let students read a poem about Emmett Till during a school-wide assembly for Black History Month.  In defending the decision to both censor the students and fire the two teachers, the executive director of this "school" said:

"Our whole goal is how do we get these kids to not look at all of the bad things that could happen to them and instead focus on the process of how do we become the next surgeon or the next politician," said Celerity co-founder and Executive Director Vielka McFarlane. "We don't want to focus on how the history of the country has been checkered but on how do we dress for success, walk proud and celebrate all the accomplishments we've made."

Welcome to "No Child Left Behind" schooling in the United States:  you need to drill and skill to learn information for standardized tests, creativity isn't welcome, and history, when ugly, need not be part of the curriculum.  Because nothing says "Let's Celebrate Black History Month" like erasing the ugly history of racism and deluding kids into thinking the racism they see everyday isn't in any way connected to the history of the U.S. 

Read the whole disgusting incident here.

An update to this post, on 3/26/07, is here.

Open Letter to Georgie-Pie

Darling Georgie,

Since you're going to be opening my mail anyway, I thought I'd get 2007 off to a good start.  Why keep our love letters between the two of us when the whole world deserves to know about our own version of Griffin and Sabine?

Georgie, if you wanted to read my mail, you just needed to ask me.  What exactly is it that you think I'm writing that I wouldn't tell you about?  What do you think I'm doing in my little house?  Georgie, can't you trust me?  Can't we be friends again?

I would have shown you the letters my other lovers sent me.  But now, naughty Georgie, I it's time for a little punishment.  And I'm not talking about visiting the naughty spot.

Georgie, this seems to be part of a continuing trend.  Please teel us why:  Why do you hate privacy?  Why do you hate women?  Why do you hate homosexuals?  Why do you hate due process?  Why do you hate Iraq?   Why do you let Dick talk to you that way behind closed doors?

Georgie, I think it's time for an anger management class.  You have too many issues.  From now on, I'm not sending you any more letters in the mail.  Why go to the trouble?  If I send them this way, then everyone can read them too!  I wouldn't want to trouble you with the bother of paper cuts and steam burns.  Let's just let it all hang out. 

MWAH!  Hugs and kisses,
Lips
xoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxo
Your Loving Lingual...

What I Love About the Net

Hanging out at The Fat Lady Sings this morning, I noticed some great graphics in one of her posts from The Project for the Old American Century.  Here are a few awesome images from their galleries:

Mommy_stupid

Monsanto

Safe_state

I encourage you to explore their whole site, but here's more about their project and their philosophy:

We are in danger of squandering the opportunity and failing the challenge. We are endangering not only the world, but ourselves. The right wing extremists who came to power through media manipulation and questionable elections have begun an assault on our nation from the inside. Our main points of focus are:

  • The democratic process
  • Foreign policy
  • Media
  • Civil liberties
  • Environment
  • Separation of church and state

 

It is a time to call for the way things were planned by the Founding Fathers. They way things were planned in the Old American Century.

The project for the OLD American Century represents no one political party, as they have all sold out to the highest bidder; but stands for the Bill of Rights; the Constitution; the working class, as well as all those the new religion of free market capitalism leaves behind; and the people serving in our armed forces if and when it is serving the people of this nation and not just the corporate interests it now paves the way for.

We believe the only imperial stance this great nation should take is that of peacefully encouraging freedom, equality, and civil liberty here at home and around the globe. Not just in words, but in deeds. The ideals of the OLD American Century knowing that those ideals were not then nor have they ever been achieved—but were at least, before now, strived for and what we at the Project for the Old American Century strive for now.

Perpetual war for perpetual peace and profits over people cannot be allowed to continue. The cost has been, is continuing to be and will be, much, much too high.

Criticism=Crime

President Bush emphasized in his speech tonight that he doesn't want critics second guessing his policies.  That point was made perfectly clear by invited guest Cindy Sheehan's arrest tonight because she refused to cover up an anti-war t-shirt before entering the chamber.

"She expressed her opinion; I disagree with it," Bush said in August. "I think immediate withdrawal from Iraq would be a mistake."

Shhh...criticism=crime.

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