Here the Reverend John Thomas eloquently refutes the Chicago Tribune’s editorial support for Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s heartless decision to close dozens of neighborhood schools.
The Tribune on one hand praises the teachers who saved the lives of their students. But then condemns the teachers of Chicago for refusing to accept the closure of their schools and just leave quietly.
Here is an excerpt:
“Unlike the teachers in Moore, Chicago teachers’ schools are not gone because of some capricious act of nature. They are gone because of decades of very deliberate decisions by public officials, corporate interests and ordinary citizens that have eviscerated the neighborhoods of Chicago, displacing people with the demolition of public housing, gutting communities with foreclosures and the elimination of jobs. The schools are gone because they have been replaced by charter schools, the darlings of politically well-connected school reformers making a profit on tax money while public officials eliminate the inconvenience of teachers unions. The schools are gone because poor African Americans and Hispanics in Chicago are disenfranchised by school governance that is appointed by the mayor with limited accountability to the communities. The schools are gone because public funding in this country remains tied to real estate taxes that benefit wealthy suburbs at the expense of the urban core. The schools are gone because years of school reforms imposed from the latest outside savior have left front line teachers abused and demoralized and their students underachieving. And the schools are gone because white flight that began decades ago has left the cities brown and black and poor.”

The media no longer cares about community concerns. Emanuel doesn’t care about his polls either. He set out to destroy public ed and Karen Lewis in particular. And if he has to send in tanks to do it, he will. And like the character in the original BBC production “House of Cards”, he can get the media to do whatever he wants.
Yesterday’s NYTimes editorial once again hailed the new evaluation system and CC when just a few weeks ago they seem to be against the overuse of testing. And, interestingly enough, this editorial didn’t come with an opportunity to comment. To me that’s just another way to silence the people.
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Good for Rev. John Thomas for speaking out on this. This is a voice that makes sense, from someone who has stepped back and looked at the whole picture.
Where to go from here? That’s the question.
I would take it all the way back to the Roosevelts. Maybe there was a better way to have provided public housing in that era that involved those who were to live in it more (sort of a Habitat for Humanity approach). Then organizations like ACORN would have/could have gotten a stronger start and made more progress than what we are seeing today. Since that is not how it happened, I like to consider how the same outcome I dream up when I propose this could be attained now. Again, where to go from here? Lawsuits? Did we start a bad precedent by having a court decide our Presidential election results in 2000. . .and now a court will have to decide everything?
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The cities won’t be poor and black and brown for long, all that vacated real estate will go to more gentrification. I wonder when the elite will build moats and walls around their city? I apologize for the cynicism, but everything Rahm et al do just leaves me gobsmacked.
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Well said.
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