The following article, which Insight on the News published in 2000, could be published today, without being dated. Racial socialists have continued foisting fake research, journalism, and talking points on the public, and Republicans have done … well, if they’d only done nothing, things wouldn’t be half as bad as they are. But since then, Republicans and “conservatives” have essentially said, “You want $1 trillion? Here, take $2 trillion!”
George W. Bush wanted, like his father before him, to be known as “the education president,” and so he kept shoveling the White taxpayers’ hard-earned money into the pockets of White racial socialists, black supremacists, and reconquistas. Ditto for the John Doe calling himself “Barack Obama,” for the black man’s president, aka Donald Trump, and for Fake President Joe Biden.
In her 1999 book, Losing Our Language, Sandra Stotsky revealed how, in advocating for a dubious pedagogical practice, a multicultural professor of education routinely will refer to research supporting his position. The typically unsubstantiated supporting research will consist of editorializing and references to yet more articles lacking factual support.
In simple English, we’re talking about an endless chain of lies.
Insight on the News (1985-2004) originally published this article. Insight was America’s finest news magazine. When I taught at CUNY’s York College in the late 1990s, I had a socialist colleague and friend whom I trusted enough to tell her about my work for Insight. She called it the “conservative Newsweek.”
The South Korean founder of the Unification Church, and founder/owner of The Washington Times, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon (1920-2012), also owned Insight. The beauty part of this arrangement was that The Times had some tremendous investigative reporters, whose work was published by Insight Editor Paul Rodriguez. I don’t know if the reports were original productions for Insight or reprints from The Times, I can’t recall the reporters’ names, and don’t have the time to search through old copies my editor, Doug Burton sent me to find them, but they were standard-setting.
Between 1997 and 2003, Doug Burton published a baker’s dozen of my articles, including debates on remedial college education and ebonics. But in 2004, the 84-year-old Rev. Moon pulled the plug on Insight, thus ending the run of a great American magazine.
Dubious Scholarship Feeds Racial Politics in Schools
By Nicholas Stix The alleged discrimination took the form of much higher suspension and expulsion rates for black students; zero-tolerance policies that have a disparate impact on black students; fewer advanced-placement classes for black students; and proportions of black and Hispanic teachers that were lower than those of black or Hispanic students, respectively. Another form of alleged “proof” of racism was a district’s refusal to hand over the racial information the researchers demanded.
April 24, 2000
Insight on the News
Is your local school district racist? According to a new think-tank report, the answer is surely yes. The report, “Facing the Consequences: An Examination of Racial Discrimination in U.S. Public Schools,” published March 1 by the Oakland, Calif.-based Applied Research Council, or ARC, was coauthored by Rebecca Gordon, Terry Keleher and Libero Della Piana.
You’ve probably never heard of the Ford Foundation-supported ARC, aka ERASE (Expose Racism & Advance School Excellence), but take heed: American education is dominated by radical, racialist groups like it and by the research they produce.
The ARC/ERASE report, the recipient of a 1,000-word puff piece in the March 1 New York Times, maintained that in the 12 school districts studied, minority students and teacher applicants were the victims of vicious discrimination. The districts were in Los Angeles; Austin, Texas; Boston; Chicago; Miami-Dade County; Denver; Durham, N.C.; Missoula, Mont.; Providence, R.I.; Columbia, S.C.; Salem, Ore.; and San Francisco.
The report’s centerpiece was its “racial-justice report card,” which flunked schools that did not subordinate all of their hiring, grading and disciplinary decisions to racial quotas. It never occurred to ARC/ERASE that making people’s treatment dependent on their race or ethnicity itself is racist.
Consider teaching. In New York City, where more than 80 percent of public-school children are black or Hispanic, one-third of all active teachers have flunked the New York state certification exam three or more times. That is grounds for automatic dismissal. But when the city board of education sought to fire the incompetents, the vast majority of whom were black or Hispanic, activists cried “Racism!” and the city backed down. Since a teacher’s own academic talent is the primary determinant of his success as a teacher, these inept teachers are robbing students of an education. No wonder then that half of New York City’s 1.1 million public-school children are illiterate.
As Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom showed in their epic 1997 work, America in Black and White, things are hardly better in California. In 1996, a California judge threw out a lawsuit by 50,000 applicants for minority teaching positions who had failed the CBEST (California Basic Educational Skills Test). Charging racial discrimination, the plaintiffs “not only sought to dumb down or abolish the CBEST altogether; they also wanted back pay for all prospective teachers who flunked the test and additional monetary damages to compensate for psychological trauma,” the Thernstroms wrote. Not surprisingly, ARC/ERASE is campaigning to have CBEST abolished. So much for advancing school excellence. So much for black and Hispanic kids’ futures.
Suspension and expulsion rates are likewise no mystery. Black students engage in misconduct and violence at much higher rates than do their white peers. In addition to statistics, the Thernstroms cited liberal reporter Emily Sachar’s 1991 book, Shut Up and Let the Lady Teach, about the year she spent teaching at Brooklyn’s 89-percent-black Walt Whitman Intermediate School: “Many kids, she discovered, had never been taught how to sit still, how to control what they said, how to behave. Her students called her ‘c -- face,’ told her to ‘f--k off,’ spat in her face, played radios during class and threw chairs at one another.”
The education subculture is dominated by so-called fugitive and “shadow” research, which is circulated among ideologues – often privately – and secretly imposed at the district level by highly paid, racist (anti-white) diversity consultants, at taxpayers’ expense.
In her 1999 book, Losing Our Language, Sandra Stotsky revealed how, in advocating for a dubious pedagogical practice, a multicultural professor of education routinely will refer to research supporting his or her position. The typically unsubstantiated supporting research will consist of editorializing and references to yet more articles lacking factual support.
In a case I unearthed, in 1996 the Oakland School Board insisted that unspecified “research” had proved that teaching in “ebonics” helped black children master standard English. No such research existed. But that didn’t stop Afrocentric professors from repeating the claim, or ARC/ERASE from citing as support for its work the Afrocentric professors’ “research.” Similarly, in calling on March 15 for 1,000 new, bilingual-education schools, Education Secretary Richard Riley claimed that bilingual education had been proven a boon to Hispanic children’s academic success.
In fact, as Jorge Amselle of the Washington-based Center for Equal Opportunity has painstakingly documented, bilingual education has proved the greatest method ever devised to arrest language acquisition. As Stotsky found, the educational problems children are encountering are largely attributable to multiculturalism’s anti-intellectual, hate-based pedagogy. Thus, the culprits guilty of intellectually destroying a generation, and especially of harming black and Hispanic children, are those who claim to speak in their names.
Monday, October 11, 2021
Generations of Lies: After Stealing Tens of Trillions of Dollars from Oppressed, White Taxpayers, Educrats and Their Propagandists Have Never Changed, Because “Conservatives” Never Made Them Change
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3 comments:
Twitter/Way of the World
There's a video at the link -- I assume RHS = Richfield High School (link) and Richfield Public Schools is the district in Richfield MN (estimated 68% white in 2019, link, down from 81% white in 2000, link) -- at 8s in the video the following statement appears:
At RHS we believe in providing a rigorous and equitable education reflecting the strengths and experiences of our community. We believe students learn best when the feel safe and affirmed in who they are. Therefore, we commit to dismantling policies and processes that benefit whiteness and other systems of privilege.
I wonder if white kids feel 'safe and affirmed in who they are' after reading this?
I don't have to wonder why their parents would be angry.
It's very simple:If you don't earn it,you shouldn't get it.
Grades,jobs,housing--anything.
blacks are good at earning one thing--prison time--but THAT'S being taken away by the liberals you mentioned.
The mindset is nothing short of insanity.
--GRA
GHWB and GWB WANTED TO BE education Presidents. Get it? Wanted to be.
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