The latest fad in wingnuttery is to be aghast that the President of the United States would have the audacity (ha!) to address our nation’s schoolchildren. I know I’m going to step on the new third rail–reality–a few times during the course of this post, but please bear with me.

While Roger can rewrite my hypothetical historical outlook all he wants, I wasn’t outraged that George W. Bush wanted to read to students. Or that his wife Laura was heavily involved in literacy programs. It’s perfectly and naturally acceptable for the elected leaders of our country to encourage us all to be good students. My dad used to argue that education was tantamount to homeland security.

This is from the fact sheet regarding the President’s address:

During this special address, the president will speak directly to the nation’s children and youth about persisting and succeeding in school. The president will challenge students to work hard, set educational goals, and take responsibility for their learning.

Reviewing the fact sheet, the following items are not in it:

  • We were wrong to go to war with Iraq.
  • My ruse was successful: I was born in Kenya.
  • You’re looking at your new communist dictator.

One of the principal reasons that these items are not going to be included in the address is because the address is going to be about PERSISTING AND SUCCEEDING IN SCHOOL. (The other principal reason is that most of them are untrue.)

Here is where continuing to thread the needle gets tricky because I’m going to bring race into the discussion. As you might’ve noticed, Pres. Obama is African-American (sometimes referred to as “black”). Reviewing both census data and NCES data, we find that the percentage of black students enrolled in public schools (2006) exceeds the percentage of blacks as part of the overall population (2000). “But wait,” I can hear you saying to yourself, “17% of public school populations versus 12% of the overall population isn’t that big a deal.” And I’ll actually even ignore the urban/rural distribution differences for now and highlight the aggregate data that makes Obama’s address a bigger deal: data on reading and math proficiency broken down by race, especially in the high school years. The racial differences in math performance are particularly striking.

If you didn’t have occasion to see the effect of exposure to Obama the candidate on black youth during the campaign of 2008, the basis of my entire post is likely to be lost on you. And, frankly, the socio-racial aspects of the argument are not as data-driven as the rest of why an Obama address is a good idea. I even thought about proposing a compromise address that included Michael Steele, Chair of the RNC. But as I continued to think about it, I continued to think about the magnitude of the impact for an elected black President to address black schoolkids who would have the opportunity to discuss the event with their parents, grandparents, etc. And I think the impact would be profound. And I think it would be profound for Obama to join with Steele at some point for a similar event focused on the importance of education. And possibly with Justice Sotomayor.

For large groups of people (often demographic groups) who have never had access to specific roles, firsts are important. The first people to hold those roles can have tremendous impact in terms of shifting, reducing, or eliminating barriers. I live in a majority-minority neighborhood, and I can tell you unequivocally: race continues to matter in America. There’s a certain irony, though: I would expect people who oppose affirmative action to be supportive of the notion of an Obama address. Non-white students will hear remarks from someone non-white who was able to achieve because of his education. There are worse things than opportunities for underperforming non-white students to do than hear someone in the position of greatest prominence in the entire world speak to them about performance. And when the generation of all students who heard Obama and listened to him grow up and enter the world, they will do so with the benefit of the lessons of good education that came from being good students and they will have, I think, a more profound understanding of what equality of opportunity is. By leveraging the ways in which race matters right now in America, Obama has more opportunity than most to make it matter less in the future.

So, frankly, I’m looking forward to the address, and I’m embarrassed at local policymakers around the country who are seeking to prevent it from happening in schools near them. Heck, I’d look forward to it even more if he admitted and acknowledged the ways in which his own private education benefitted him and how that relates to our broader system of education, although that might politicize the darned thing.

UPDATE: Clive Crook writing a few months ago on the urgent need for education reform, another compelling reason to not get in a bother but rather to be ebullient about Obama’s upcoming address. If you’re one opposing Obama’s address, note the stats on America’s standing in the world in education and ask yourself if you’re fighting the right fight.

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We're goin' down, down, down...

We're goin' down, down, down...

Every ten years or so of the last two thousand, we hear of the fulfillment of prophecy that proves the “end is nigh,” a.k.a. “end of days” or “OH MY GOD THE SKY IS FALLING!” Remember when Jesus himself kicked off the recurring doomsday theme by saying that the world would end in his lifetime (Mark 13:30)? Good times, but not the end of times. Because, yoohoo, it’s 2009 and we’re still here.

Yet, people continue to stick their fingers in their minds, ignore history, and apply failed prophecies to current events. Some are funny. Others are just sad. Scratch that, they’re all funny.

And it’s not only religious fundamentalists who whip out unwarranted and inaccurate accusations sans historical context to further their agenda. Our elected officials and political pundits do it, too.

Take the frantic and unrestrained declaration that our brand-spankin’ new President is a socialist and/or communist and is taking “cues from Lenin.” Been there, done that, with not one [pdf], but two, Roosevelts, a King, and a Clinton.

Oh and yesterday, despite evidence to the contrary, Tennessee’s own Congressman Marsha Blackburn joined the chorus of voices blaming the stock market slide on Mr. Obama’s candidacy, his election, and his whole 6 weeks in office. Little does she care – because I’m positive she knows – that her one-trick pony hopped on a ship that’s been launched to sail over and over again and over again.

Democrats have also ignored historical context. While attacking the leading voice of the Republican Party, Rush Limbaugh, for saying that he wants President Obama, and by proxy the country, to fail, they neglected to mention all the times during the last eight years that high-profile Democratic mouthpieces have said they wanted President Bush to fail.

Let’s go to the videotape. Oh wait. We can’t? There is no videotape of a high-profile Democratic mouthpiece or elected representative saying he wants President Bush to fail?

What if we accept (for the length of this sentence) Limbaugh’s excuse – that he only wants President Obama’s policies to fail – and modify the request?

Still no?

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For the last couple of years, we’ve hosted State of the Union Watch “parties,” which were actually more like Irish wakes – “Yeah, we had a good time but…”

This year, we’re at it again (along with the SEIU, Nashville Community Organizers, and the Davidson County Young Democrats). And even though it’s not an “official” State of the Union, that’s our story and we’re sticking to it. Let’s face it, it’s been a long time since we actually looked forward to a presidential speech in the middle of winter.

WHAT: A State of the Union Watch Party

WHO: Liberadio(!), Nashville Community Organizers, Davidson County Young Democrats, SEIU’s Change that Works Campaign, and you(!)

WHERE: Pie in the Sky, 110 Lyle Ave (Just off West End between Courtyard and Hampton Inn)

WHEN: Tuesday, February 24th, 7:00 to 10:00 PM Central (Speech and Obingo! start at 8 PM)

Like our past watch parties, there will be bingo (can you say, Barack Obingo?) for prizes, comaraderie, and beer (2 for 1 drafts!).

Unlike past watch parties, there will be approbation, optimism, and profound sense of hope. And we “hope” you can make it!

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Is the Ice Storm President Obama’s Hurricane Katrina? In a word, no. One difference is, you only have to ask him for help exactly one time and then, you know, you get it.*

President Obama’s quick response to last week’s deadly ice storm that swept through several states – and currently has our neighbor to the north in dire straights – shows what a competent administration can do when they recognize the urgent need to help their people and they’re not looking to place blame (See President George W. Bush telling the world the “I don’t think anyone anticipated a breach of the levees” whopper as well as any one of his revisionist exit interviews.)

Although the problem continues to worsen in some areas – mostly due to treacherous road conditions that make them unnavigable – needed supplies from Mobile Emergency Response Support units (portable radio towers, repeaters and radios; multiple portable KU Band satellite systems and satellite telephones to help officials in areas where cellular towers are inoperative) and FEMA (Incident Response Vehicle, technicians, and radio/repeater equipment, and industrial size generators) are reaching the hardest hit areas.

As hundreds of thousands of Kentuckians lingered in the dark nearly a week after an ice storm wrecked the state’s power grid, National Guard troops prepared to go door-to-door to check on residents….The Federal Emergency Management Agency was also on the ground delivering generators, food and water to residents in need….Utility crews worked feverishly to restore electricity amid the largest state power outage on record…

Even the shelters are getting what they need.

Although it might seem like a fortuitous “gotcha” moment, you really don’t want to compare the disaster relief responses of the two most recent presidential administrations. Seriously, trust me on this one.

As a matter of fact (“Matter of Fact,” the state where the reality-based community lives), the Katrina response was so mangled that President Obama is still dealing with it:

Newly appointed Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano today issued an “active directive” to “require specific department offices and components to work with state and local partners to review and assess current plans to respond to significant medical emergencies and address Hurricane Katrina’s lingering impacts.”

If you still have questions about President Obama’s response to the ice storm in 3 years, let me know ’cause I’d be more than happy to revisit the issue.

*The victims of Hurricane Katrina needed “immediate” help for years, and when they finally got it, some of it was poisonous. And then there’s the long range complications. But I guess the then President Bush will be getting around to that now that he has some more time.

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A friend said to me last night that while he and his Dad were watching the inaugural festivities they couldn’t help but write off a large swath of the country with a big hearty “f**k the South.”

It’s hard to blame him, really. It’s where I was after opening the paper post-election and reading this:

Race was a strong subtext in post-election conversations across the socioeconomic spectrum here in Vernon, the small, struggling seat of Lamar County on the Mississippi border.

One white woman said she feared that blacks would now become more “aggressive,” while another volunteered that she was bothered by the idea of a black man “over me” in the White House.

While the south is still home to yahoos in Mississippi – as well as yokels in Tennessee who thought it necessary to fly their Confederate flags at half mast while President Obama took his oath – the last thing we should do is damn them.

First, they live here and they’re Americans. Second, we live here with them and we’re Americans. Third, racism is not a mantle carried only by those living in Southern states. And last, but most importantly, theirs are the words and actions of those fighting a losing battle.

After the Civil War, Reconstruction allowed for the election of African-American political representatives. The equality of the black man was enshrined in our laws that for a time were being enacted by the same. Then, the Northern “occupiers” left the South and bitter resentments led to evil hijinks: disenfranchisement, Black Codes, the Ku Klux Klan, bullying, beatings, lynchings, Jim Crow laws, “separate but equal.”

What makes it easy, in January of 2009 and the day after the swearing in of our country’s first African-American president, to reach out to our “Confederate States of America” in all their red-state racist ignominy, is that the sin of a failed Reconstruction can never happen again. We, as a country, have broken a barrier and the only way to go is forward. There are no troops here keeping a fragile system in place and no President to bend to the pressures of bigots holding steadfast to their racist ideals and an archaic way of life. Hatred and violence doesn’t play here anymore.

What makes it even easier to reach out is that as fellow Americans we can tell those flying their Confederate flags to either get on the bus or get left behind.

What makes it imperative that we reach out is that while they have their bigotry, we have the Constitution, Lincoln, Frederick Douglas, the Tuskeegee Airman, Jackie Robinson, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Congressman John Lewis, The Civil Rights Museum, The Children, the children, 2 millions Americans celebrating on the Mall, hope, love, and a President Obama.

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