Re: Harris’s equity speech, @jessesingal and I disagree on this and here’s why:
Equity sounds like a good thing. It sounds like equality+, and the idea that everyone gets exactly what they need to succeed is a nice vision of the world.
But what equity means in practice is, yes, equality of outcome, as @BretWeinstein & @ConceptualJames argue. Now, as for what this means in practice, let’s look at the Seattle Public Schools’ equity agenda, which I wrote about here: thestranger.com/slog/2019/12/0…
The equity agenda was meant to a address a real problem: black kids (boys, specifically) underperforming compared to other demographics.
If you look at, for instance, the SPS gifted program, most of the kids served by this program were white, Asian, and middle class and up. Not all, but most.
This didn’t look good. Schools were segregated, with mostly white and Asian students in some classrooms and mostly black and brown kids in others.
In an effort to fix this—to achieve “equity”—SPS, helmed by Superintendent Denise Juneau, decided to end the gifted program. Instead of tracking kids into different classes, high performing and low performing kids would all be together. There are some benefits to this, but...
It also means teachers could be teaching kids who test a couple grades below standard and a couple grades above standard at the same time. So tracking still exists, it’s just within the classroom, and it’s hard on teachers and students.
Of course, many parents of gifted kids were very opposed to this and argued that instead of dismantling the gifted program, SPS should work harder to bring black and brown students into it using various means.
But that’s not what happened. Instead, SPS decided to dismantle the program, and this is where I think “equity” can actually perpetuate inequity, because what do you think wealthy parents of gifted kids do in situations like this? They take their kids out of public schools.
This is exactly what gifted programs were designed to prevent, and in dismantling this program, SPS basically created another round of white flight, leaving poor gifted kids behind (many of whom, yes, were black and brown).
Of course, then Covid hit and everything got fucked beyond repair anyway, with, of course, poor kids of all races suffering the most.
Anyway, equity is a nice buzzword but pay close attention when people use it. And on the off chance that Denise Juneau (who, is now being targeted by activists for not doing enough) ends up in the Dept of Ed, pay VERY close attention. komonews.com/news/local/loc…
If I were in charge, I would focus less on getting all kids into college and more on apprenticeships and trades. Not everyone is a scholar and that’s fine. People who don’t excel in school should still be able to make a living. That’s the kind of world I’d like to live in.
I really appreciate all the politicians and reporters connecting the wildfires to climate change... but maybe we should also talk about forest management a bit more?
It’s well-established that a century of wildfire suppression has turned western forests in tinderboxes, as my old colleague @leddder wrote when we went through this in 2018. thestranger.com/slog/2018/08/1…
Obviously longer, hotter, drier summers exacerbates wildfire... but climate change can’t be fixed overnight, while controlled burns and other evidence-based fire management techniques could make a difference now. Use good fire to prevent bad fire. propublica.org/article/they-k…
I’m a liberal who has been on far more conservative podcasts and radio shows then liberal ones in the last few years. Why? Because I’m never invited on to liberal shows. That’s fine—invite who you want—but it’s pretty telling about the state of the media right now.
I’ve (reportedly) been blacklisted from my local NPR station, which is kind of odd considering I got my start in public radio and listen to it for about 20 hours a day. But conservatives—who I actually disagree with!—are more than willing to speak with me.
Speaking of which, I had a very fine conversation with @bdomenech today that will air next week.
There are plenty of resources for people who don’t agree with the Robin DiAngelo theory of anti-racism, and not just from people who are white and fragile. Some resources for your book club/HR department/Facebook group/etc:
BREAKING: Woman No One Has Ever Heard of Commits Microagression Two Years Ago
This woman was fired because the Washington Post decided an offensive Halloween costume (for which she was already humiliated) is national news. Way to speak truth to power.
I’ve heard all the arguments in favor of censoring these briefings and I still don’t buy it. This is just driving people deeper into bubbles and echo chambers and, at the same time, making it harder for voters to keep up with whatever the dumb fuck is claiming.
Do the professors and media professionals who sign these letters think news viewers absorb everything the president says and automatically believe it? Have a little faith in your fellow idiot!
My first inkling that trans was becoming trendy was in 2012 when a household of five lesbians I knew all transitioned within a year. It just seemed statistically impossible. And yet!
Well I caught up with one of the roommates recently and guess what?! Three of the five have detransitioned. One just had a kid but can’t breastfeed because she already had top surgery. She’s now using donor milk for her kid.
Two of the 5 still ID as trans and maybe always will. Trans people exist and social and physical transition helps many of them. But something else is happening here and ignoring or suppressing it is going to create a backlash that will hurt both trans and other LGB people.