Ed Johnson is a systems thinker and advocate for public education. He lives in Atlanta. He has studied the work of G. Edwards Deming, an international expert on systems thinking, and knows that those who promise instant success by breaking up public schools are perpetrating a hoax. He knows the history of 50CAN, funded largely by Jonathan Sackler of the notorious family that profited by selling opioids. He knows that charter schools are distractions from the hard work of systems improvement. After more than three decades of charter schools, it should be clear that they do not produce “achievement now.”
He writes:
Part 2 of the The King Center’s Strategies for Beloved Community Education is set to be presented online on Tuesday, September 5, at 6:00 PM EST. Visit https://thekingcenter.org/for details.
As with Part 1, available for viewing on YouTube here, Part 2 will feature an “expert panel” in facilitated discussion.
One member on the “expert panel” for Part 2 will be Marc Porter Magee, CEO of 50CAN.
Thus, the simple question, asked without prejudice, is, why?
This question was presented to The King Center 24 hours ago along with requesting an immediate reply, so as to avoid assuming why. A reply has yet to come. Given that, I offer the following.
50CAN, which stands for 50-State Campaign for Achievement Now, is the umbrella organization that includes GeorgiaCAN, and we know GeorgiaCAN pushes for school choice and charter schools, do we not?
50CAN evolved from ConnCAN (Connecticut CAN). ConnCAN was funded pretty much wholly by Sackler Family fortunes earned as ill-gotten profits from over-prescribed sales of Oxycontin by the family’s Purdue Pharma. Because of such greed for profits, hundreds of thousands of people worldwide have died, and continue to die, from opioid addiction.
As with similar other organizations and their local operatives—for example, The City Fund and its local operatives, Ed Chang leading reformED Atlanta—it is fairly well-known that 50CAN and its state-level operatives aim to dismantle hence destroy public education as the common good that is foundational to sustaining democracy, so as to transform destroyed public schools into privatized and commodified schools composing competitive education marketplaces. Think Milton Friedman and the “invisible hand of the market.”
It is also fairly well-known that 50CAN, like similar other organizations, has advanced its aim to destroy public education by expressly targeting and catalyzing Black communities to demand school choice and charter schools that will magically deliver “achievement now.”
In effect, 50CAN and such others “politrick” Black communities into facilitating their own destruction and that of their own children. Again, while “It takes a village to raise a child,” it also takes a village to destroy a child.
The usual assumption is that charter schools transformed from destroyed public schools are inherently better than “failing public schools.” This is a lie, plain and simple. It is impossible for charter schools to be inherently better or worse than “failing public schools.” Because entropy is a fact of life, our public schools need improvement, have always needed improvement, and always will need improvement. Reality offers charter schools no grace from the entropy fact of life.
To assert that charter schools are inherently better than “failing public schools” is like asserting members of a certain group of human beings are inherently superior to members of other groups of human beings, based solely on expressions of variation in some few arbitrarily-chosen human physical features said to signify “race,” which is another lie.
Charter schools do, however, appeal to certain retributive justice, behaviorally emulative, and selfish consumerist mindsets for which improvement-thinking has always been meaningless, at worst, and theoretical, at best. 50CAN knows this, and so uses it to catalyze Black communities to demand “achievement now.” “Instant pudding,” the late, great systems thinker W. Edwards Deming (1900-1993) might say.
Consequently, “Our children can’t wait!” has been a decades-long handy refrain that has always begged easy, quick, learningless change but never improvement with knowledge, which requires learning and unlearning.
Unfortunately, systems thinking teaches through a nonviolence lens that the more often easy, quick, learningless change happens, the less improvement becomes possible; then, the less improvement becomes possible, the less sustainable democracy becomes; then, the less sustainable democracy becomes, the more societal dysfunctions develop and emerge, after a time, in Black communities and elsewhere; then, the more societal dysfunctions show up, the more the refrain, “Our children can’t wait!”
It is all a destructively vicious, self-reinforcing feedback loop that 50CAN and similar other destroyers of public education are happy to catalyze in Black communities, in particular, and to support its playing out, if only continually, but continuously, ideally…
Although some are quite capable to look below the performative surface, or show stage, of the proverbial iceberg and down into its greater depths to see and know Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was also a profound systems thinker, systems thinking seems generally absent in Black culture; certainly, children labeled “Black” seem never to learn about this deeper and critically important aspect of Dr. King.
All too often the children learn to conserve racism and so-called white supremacy rather than learn to help humanity relieve itself of these scourges. The children learn and internalize racial categorization, the false narrative at the heart of racial violence. It seems the children never learn to internalize an understanding of human variation, the truth at the heart of nonracial nonviolence.
It is quite puzzling that some fight and rail against racism, all the while conserving it and the “race” lie racism needs in order to exist, in truth.
Therefore, a question for The King Center must be, why is The King Center giving a platform to 50CAN?
An organization known to be about making “Beloved Community” a virtual impossibility, in all respects?
Ed Johnson
Advocate for Quality in Public Education
Atlanta GA | (404) 505-8176 | edwjohnson@aol.com

Has money hijacked this organization?
LikeLike
One of the worst corporate deformers in my area is Steve Ballmer, former Microsoft CEO and current owner of the NBA team, the Los Angeles Clippers. NBA teams are primarily Black and owned exclusively by white billionaires. I remember when the NBA forced all its players to wear sayings like “Reform Education” on the backs of their jerseys, and teams painted it on the floors. The wealthy PR campaign to convince people to believe in ideas that are directly opposed to their own good is powerful and relentless. Why did the King Center fall for 50CAN? They got fooled. It was, to be sure, an elegantly evil maneuver.
LikeLike
Steve Ballmer went to private Detroit Country Day.
Currently tuition for grades 6-8 is $34,000. And, he went to two private colleges, including Harvard- he’s the despicable rich with their lack of redeemable value.
LikeLike
The reason for what the Edelman family does?
LikeLike
Marc Porter Magee, “caught the political bug at Georgetown.” It’s a Catholic school that hired Koch’s Ilya Shapiro, who was made infamous for his quote about Jurist Ketanji Brown. Georgetown admitted its first Black student in 1953. Before that, Magee was at the private Duke University. One of Magee’s credentials is as a Gates Pahara Fellow. Magee really likes Catholic schools. 10-30-2022, he wrote at, The New Reality Roundup – Week 138, “The brightest spot …performance of Catholic schools.”
On 7- 30-2023, a bio of 50CAN’s COO, was posted on the internet. She’s a Black woman, grad of Harvard whose parents chose a Catholic school for her prior to college. She wrote that she wants to be like Dr. Howard Fuller.
The Cushwa site tells us that the Catholic Church was the first and largest corporate slaveholder in the Americas. The Catholic Church has excellent PR.
LikeLike
Dr. Fuller was raised Catholic, attended St. Boniface Parochial school. His highest degree is from Catholic Marquette University . His career before retirement was at
Marquette.
LikeLike
The 3rd sentence should be in parentheses.
LikeLike