Archives for category: Resistance

Yohuru Williams is dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Fairfield University and a member of the board of the Network for Public Education.

“Friends and allies let’s be clear: We anticipated this outcome but much good has come from our organizing efforts. If you wrote or called an elected official, joined an organization like the BATS or The Network for Public Education, stood with teacher activists like the Caucus of WE or MORE, supported our phenomenal teacher unions like the CTU, rallied parents and students to fight against this nomination or symbolically wore black, at least you took action.

“Now is not a time for mourning and retreat. It is time to ratchet up the resistance. If you did none of those things it’s not too late, the fight to save public education has just begun anew and this is day one. The Network for Public Education and the BadassTeachersA will be engaged as will activists across the country. Remember this moment and let it inspire you as it has us to continue this fight. Our children and public schools deserve the best of our efforts even in the shadow of this small setback. Victory goes not to the swift but the dedicated. Make a pledge by joining an organization or participating in an action today to continue this fight. We will win because we are on the side of justice and equity. #DumpDevos #savepubliceducation

A message from the BadAss Teachers Association:

Dear BATs and BAT Supporters,

First of all, thank you so much for your historic advocacy. Despite the confirmation of DeVos, we have made history. We will continue to double down our efforts and BATs is working on our Phase 2 plan – stay tuned and keep up to date with our movements.

Here is the BATs press release on the DeVos confirmation – please share it out https://www.facebook.com/BadassTeachersAssociation/posts/1202553633146843

Here is a strongly worded letter campaign to the Senate demanding they now protect our schools from Betsy DeVos https://actionnetwork.org/letters/tell-the-us-senate-protect-our-public-schools?source=direct_link&referrer=badass-teachers-association

You have a strong commitment from BATs that we will not back down and we will continue to fight until Public Education, our children, their families, our communities, and our profession is afforded the respect it deserves!

In Solidarity

Marla Kilfoyle, Executive Director BATs

Melissa Tomlinson, Asst. Executive Director BATs

BAT Board of Directors and Steering Committee Directors

The Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) issued the following statement in response to the Senate confirmation of billionaire public education novice Betsy DeVos as U.S. Secretary of Education:

“Choosing Betsy DeVos to lead the Department of Education was one of the first in what will surely be a series of horrific decisions made by the Trump administration. Throughout the confirmation hearings, she proved to be completely unqualified for the position due to her lack of experience in public schools—which she has called a ‘dead end’—and through her support of charter schools, which have weakened districts like Chicago Public Schools (CPS) throughout the country.

“Now that she has been confirmed, the groundswell of opposition to her appointment—evident by the first-ever deciding vote cast by a U.S. vice president—will continue to grow, especially in Chicago, where she shares much in common with Mayor Rahm Emanuel, as both cater to billionaires who dabble in destroying public education in areas of high poverty inhabited by Black and brown people. No matter how much he tries to convince the public otherwise, Emanuel’s insistence on refusing to force his wealthy campaign donors to equitably fund CPS and neglect of the communities where hundreds of thousands of CPS students and educators live and work is a page right out of the billionaire education ‘reform’ playbook co-written by his mentor, Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner.

“While our public schools crave revenue, democracy and an end to privatization, the policies that Emanuel has rolled out in Chicago, and Rauner and Illinois Senate President John Cullerton are working to expand statewide, helped pave the way for the nightmare that is ‘U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’ and the damage she will do nationally. Said CTU President Karen Lewis:

“‘The only reason Betsy DeVos is in this position is because her family has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to the Republican Party, and not because of any sincere commitment to public education, because she has none. It’s no surprise that [Illinois Governor] Bruce Rauner was among those who endorsed her, because they have a lot in common—such as using their extreme wealth to buy their positions.

“‘Our union will continue to stand united in opposition to them and anyone else who is a threat to public education,’ Lewis added.”

Chicago Teachers Union | 1901 West Carroll Avenue | Chicago | IL | 60612

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I hope you will make plans to join me and many other advocates of real reform when the Network for Public Education holds its annual meeting in Oakland in 2017. The dates are October 14 and 15, 2017.

Become a member of the resistance!

NPE meetings are always exciting. We have wonderful and inspiring speakers; great panels; and a spirit of camaraderie that you are not likely to find anywhere else. You will meet the parent leaders and bloggers that you have read about. And you will make new friends, while finding out about how to keep public education alive during these next four years–and beyond.

Previous conferences have been held in Austin; Chicago; and Raleigh. It is time for a West Coast gathering.

Save the date. And watch the website of the Network for Public Education for updates.

npe-save-the-date-draft-2

While other Republican senators and congressman cower, Senator John McCain will not bow and scrape to Trump.

The Wall Street Journal writes today (sorry, can’t find the link–if you do, send it):

Sen. McCain has served notice he is the Republican lawmaker most willing to defy the new Republican president

The maverick is unleashed.

Sen. John McCain, famously independent-minded and fresh from his own resounding re-election victory, has served notice that he is the Republican lawmaker most willing to defy the new Republican president.

Some fret over how to handle their disagreements with Donald Trump; Mr. McCain exhibits no such uncertainty.

In just over a week’s time, Mr. McCain has called the new Trump ban on immigration from a set of Muslim-majority countries a recruiting boon for Islamic State radicals; threatened to codify Russian economic sanctions into law to prevent Mr. Trump from lifting them; called the president’s decision to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership “a serious mistake”; and called the idea of imposing a 20% tariff on imports from Mexico to pay for a border wall “insane.”

The senator also served noticed that he will fight any effort to reinstate waterboarding or other forms of torture in interrogation of terror suspects; and declared he may oppose the Trump nominee for budget director because of his past opposition to military spending and troop deployments in Afghanistan.

In short, frenetic as the new president has been, Mr. McCain is matching him step for step. Thus is a president willing to go rogue being matched by a powerful lawmaker—head of the Armed Services Committee and former GOP presidential nominee—prepared to do the same.

“The main thing is, do the right thing,” Mr. McCain said in an interview. “I feel, frankly, a greater burden of responsibility. The world’s on fire, we have more challenges than any time in the last 70 years and, with the chairmanship of the Armed Services Committee and whatever influence I have, I need to exercise it because the responsibilities are so great.”

Mr. McCain said he is willing to work with Mr. Trump: “I believe there are areas where we certainly can.” In fact, he will be crucial to the president’s desire to ramp up military spending and overhaul defense procurement practices, areas where they are almost entirely in sync.

Plus, he said he has good relations with key Trump security nominees: Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and national security adviser Michael Kelly. White House chief of staff Reince Priebus, he noted, was Wisconsin chairman of his 2008 presidential bid, and he has traveled abroad on congressional delegations with Vice President Mike Pence.
But, he said, he has no communication going with the president himself.

This is a potentially serious long-term problem for Mr. Trump. The president is not especially susceptible to criticism from Democrats, which is predictable and easily dismissed, but opposition from Republicans, who control both chambers and every committee of Congress, and thereby the Trump agenda, is far more important.

Republicans hold only a two-seat majority in the Senate, so the White House has little margin for error within the party there. Though Mr. McCain’s ability to unite Republicans behind him has long been questionable, Mr. Trump could ill afford it if Republican misgivings coalesced around a highly visible leader.

The bad blood isn’t surprising. Early in the 2016 presidential campaign, Mr. Trump belittled Mr. McCain’s horrific Vietnam War experience, during which his Navy attack jet was shot down and, while seriously injured, he spent more than five years in a North Vietnamese prison.

“He’s not a war hero,” Mr. Trump said. “He’s a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren’t captured.”

The comment came early in the Trump campaign, and many thought it would derail it. The fact it didn’t was a key initial sign of how much the GOP had changed.

Mr. McCain also noted that Breitbart News, the site previously overseen by top Trump adviser Stephen Bannon, has “attacked me incessantly for years.”

All that leaves lots of room for bad blood. Some of the disagreements are local. Mr. McCain argues that the North American Free Trade Agreement, which Mr. Trump wants to renegotiate, has benefited his home state of Arizona, and that the tariff on Mexican imports floated by the White House clearly would hurt it.

His own war experience with brutal treatment during incarceration leaves him starkly at odds with Mr. Trump’s belief that waterboarding and other forms of harsh interrogation are acceptable.

But the area that seems to most bother Mr. McCain isn’t personal; it is a seemingly deep disagreement with the new president over his desire to strengthen ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The last two American administrations, of George W. Bush and Barack Obama, similarly started “with the mistaken belief there would be improved relations with a hardened KGB colonel,” Mr. Putin, only to be disappointed, he said.

“The difference now versus before is he’s invaded a country”—Ukraine—and, he added, has tried to influence an American election.

The beginning of resistance. The National Park Service tweets. Now there is a twitter account called “AltNPS.”

Read here.

It all started with those inauguration crowd shots.

President Trump, a man who has never indicated that he is fixated on the size of things, was none too thrilled when the National Park Service retweeted photos that showed the crowds on the National Mall at President Obama’s 2009 inauguration side-by-side with those of his inauguration last Friday.

The NPS followed that post with a tweet pointing out that the pages dedicated to climate change, civil rights, and health care were missing from the new White House website.

By the end of the day on Friday, according to an internal email obtained by Gizmodo, the NPS was ordered by its Washington support office “to immediately cease use of government Twitter accounts until further notice.”

Living up to its name, Badlands National Park defied the order. From its official Twitter account, the park tweeted facts about climate change. The first of these rebellious one-liners — “Today, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is higher than at any time int he last 650,000 years. #climate.” — went up Tuesday morning. It was retweeted over 9,000 times before it was deleted. Another tweet, about ocean acidification, followed an hour later, and was retweeted over 1,000 times. Within hours, Badlands’ follower count skyrocketed from 7,000 to 69,100.

This bout of defiance lasted only hours. By late afternoon, the tweets disappeared, and the official word on the matter was that a they were sent by a former employee at the park in Interior, S.D., who still had access to the account. An anonymous NPS official told the Washington Post that “the park was not told to remove the tweets but chose to do so when they realized their account had been compromised.”

Here is the petition

Here are articles about growing protests.

CNN

The Washington Post.

BBC World News: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-38781420

The Guardian: Green cards holders included in ban: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2017/jan/28/world-digests-donald-trumps-order-to-ban-refugees-from-muslim-countries?CMP=share_btn_tw&page=with%3Ablock-588c89d3e4b0b3e971af3c71#block-588c89d3e4b0b3e971af3c71

Dana Milbank covers politics for the Washington Post. Here are his favorite signs observed at the Women’s March on Washington. By the way, more people –women and men–showed up for the March than for the presidential inauguration the previous day. There were marches all over the nation and in cities around the world, all protesting Trump’s hateful words about women and others.

 

Milbank wrote:

 

“Some were vulgar, others were angry. Most were earnest. These were my favorite signs at Saturday’s Women’s March on Washington:

 

#FreeMelania
No Country for Dirty Old Men
Sad!
Resistance is Fertile
Too Worried to be Funny
If Mom’s Not Happy, Nobody’s Happy
I Have a Vagenda
Manchurine Candidate
Orange Is the New Fascism
There Is So Much Wrong It Cannot Fit on This Sign
Super Callous Fragile Ego, Trump You Are Atrocious
Super Callous Fascist Racist Extra Braggadocious
Actuaries Against Repeal and Delay
Leave it to the Beavers
Viva la Vulva
(Older woman’s sign:) I Can’t Believe I’m Still Protesting This S—
J Edgar Comey
(On image of President Trump as a scarecrow:) If He Only Had a Brain
(On a drawing of ovaries:) Grow a Pair
This P—- Grabs Back
Donald You Ignorant Slut
Melania, Blink Twice if You Need Help
Impeach Trump, Convert Pence
#emoluments
Sorry World, We’ll Fix This
(On needlepoint:) I Made This So I Could Stab Something 35,000 Times
Patriarchy is for D—-
There Will Be Hell Toupée”

 

Meanwhile, Trump went to visit the CIA and blamed “the media” for falsely portraying a dispute between him and the intelligence community. Lucky we have a short memory and a vast tolerance for lies.

 

 

 

Meryl Streep won the Golden Globes Lifetime Achievement Award last night. Her acceptance speech was powerful. (Please note that she emphasizes the fact that she went to the public schools of New Jersey.)

 

She said:

 

Please sit down. Thank you. I love you all. You’ll have to forgive me. I’ve lost my voice in screaming and lamentation this weekend. And I have lost my mind sometime earlier this year, so I have to read.

 

Thank you, Hollywood Foreign Press. Just to pick up on what Hugh Laurie said: You and all of us in this room really belong to the most vilified segments in American society right now. Think about it: Hollywood, foreigners and the press.

 

But who are we, and what is Hollywood anyway? It’s just a bunch of people from other places. I was born and raised and educated in the public schools of New Jersey. Viola was born in a sharecropper’s cabin in South Carolina, came up in Central Falls, Rhode Island; Sarah Paulson was born in Florida, raised by a single mom in Brooklyn. Sarah Jessica Parker was one of seven or eight kids in Ohio. Amy Adams was born in Vicenza, Italy. And Natalie Portman was born in Jerusalem. Where are their birth certificates? And the beautiful Ruth Negga was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, raised in London — no, in Ireland I do believe, and she’s here nominated for playing a girl in small-town Virginia.

 

Ryan Gosling, like all of the nicest people, is Canadian, and Dev Patel was born in Kenya, raised in London, and is here playing an Indian raised in Tasmania. So Hollywood is crawling with outsiders and foreigners. And if we kick them all out you’ll have nothing to watch but football and mixed martial arts, which are not the arts.

 

They gave me three seconds to say this, so: An actor’s only job is to enter the lives of people who are different from us, and let you feel what that feels like. And there were many, many, many powerful performances this year that did exactly that. Breathtaking, compassionate work.

 

But there was one performance this year that stunned me. It sank its hooks in my heart. Not because it was good; there was nothing good about it. But it was effective and it did its job. It made its intended audience laugh, and show their teeth. It was that moment when the person asking to sit in the most respected seat in our country imitated a disabled reporter. Someone he outranked in privilege, power and the capacity to fight back. It kind of broke my heart when I saw it, and I still can’t get it out of my head, because it wasn’t in a movie. It was real life. And this instinct to humiliate, when it’s modeled by someone in the public platform, by someone powerful, it filters down into everybody’s life, because it kinda gives permission for other people to do the same thing. Disrespect invites disrespect, violence incites violence. And when the powerful use their position to bully others we all lose. O.K., go on with it.

 

O.K., this brings me to the press. We need the principled press to hold power to account, to call him on the carpet for every outrage. That’s why our founders enshrined the press and its freedoms in the Constitution. So I only ask the famously well-heeled Hollywood Foreign Press and all of us in our community to join me in supporting the Committee to Protect Journalists, because we’re gonna need them going forward, and they’ll need us to safeguard the truth.

 

One more thing: Once, when I was standing around on the set one day, whining about something — you know we were gonna work through supper or the long hours or whatever, Tommy Lee Jones said to me, “Isn’t it such a privilege, Meryl, just to be an actor?” Yeah, it is, and we have to remind each other of the privilege and the responsibility of the act of empathy. We should all be proud of the work Hollywood honors here tonight.

 

As my friend, the dear departed Princess Leia, said to me once, take your broken heart, make it into art.

 

 

The Network for Public Education and the NPE Action Fund has created a toolkit for citizens to use to protest the confirmation of a totally unqualified person for Secretary of Education. Billionaire Betsy is a lobbyist for vouchers and charters. She has wrecked the schools of her home state. Do not let her ruin the nation’s public schools. Resist!

 

Please use the toolkit to let your Senators know that you oppose her confirmation.