For the past almost 5 decades I've been one of the UFT's biggest critics and they deserve a lot of criticism for what they are and how they operate. My gripes which are somewhat fact and experienced based. But I won't list them at this point. My goal had always been an organizing goal - and if you read the lead at this blog it says: Educate, organize, mobilize - in that order. You can't mobilize or organize if you don't have the knowledge you need. Thus my aim has been to give people information and use that to get them to act. I used to believe that by organizing a group of people who are in a lot of schools we could present a real challenge.
A main area of action - the main area of action - has been organizing opposition caucuses to challenge the UFT leadership on a number of levels. Since the opposition led by MORE has fallen apart in the goal of challenging the leadership on a broad-based basis, I've rethought the point of griping about ever single thing. I mean, what exactly is the point other than to get your rocks off? I've not been interested in getting my rocks off. With no organizing goal we are left with using the internet and social media to broadcast our ideas with no reach into the schools -- to me organizing means giving people info they can read and talking to them about it. With no base it becomes preaching to the ether.
I've also taken a different look at the leadership and rather than slamming them I try to see things through their eyes in an attempt to divine their motivations for their actions. I still put forth the idea that watch what they do, not what they say. Use what they do as a basis of analysis rather than a gut check attack.
My advice for activists in the UFT would be to take your activism elsewhere -- there's plenty to do with many organizations. Thus if you want to fight racism, you are wasting your time doing it in the context of the UFT, especially when the Unity Caucus is so much more diversified than its critics. Try NYCORE or Teachers Unite. Or if you are left enough go join DSA and take on their work on housing or healthcare where you can have a bigger impact. Or go work for one of their progressive candidates. Don't waste your time and energy butting your head up against a wall.
Written and edited by Norm Scott: EDUCATE! ORGANIZE!! MOBILIZE!!! Three pillars of The Resistance – providing information on current ed issues, organizing activities around fighting for public education in NYC and beyond and exposing the motives behind the education deformers. We link up with bands of resisters. Nothing will change unless WE ALL GET INVOLVED IN THE STRUGGLE!
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Monday, July 1, 2019
School Scope: The Debates: On Busing, Capitalism, and Socialism
Submitted to The WAVE for publication, July 5, 2019
School Scope: The
Debates: On Busing, Capitalism, and Socialism
By Norm Scott
The initial debates, while shallow in
terms of drilling down, touched on a number of essential issues, at times
raising more questions than answers. Headlines stressed the Biden/Harris
confrontation on race and busing. I remember the contentious battles over
busing back in the 60s and 70s and the consequential racial divides. Biden, as
he often does, danced and obfuscated a bit by saying he opposed forced busing
imposed by the federal government and we should leave it to the local
communities. Harris pushed back about local communities run by people who are
anti-segregation. We know there is a history of federal involvement in forcing
integration in the schools from both parties – you know, when the Republicans
were still a rational party – Eisenhower sent troops to Little Rock and Kennedy
to Alabama and Mississippi.
I found Harris’ raising the issue,
while legitimate, somewhat artificial – especially when those tee-shirts of her
as a little girl started appearing the next morning. I would like to have all
candidates raise their hands if they support busing as a solution to
segregation today. I wonder if Harris would have raised her hand. When Bernie
was asked specifically about the issue on Sunday, he gave a rational response
that we rarely see from politicians: Is it a good idea to put kids on buses
takes them out of their neighborhood for up to an hour ride each way? It is a surface
tool that should ideally only be used when absolutely necessary. Real solutions
call for housing and economic reforms. By the way, look at the streets on
school days and count the buses.
The debate also focused open attacks on
Bernie for being a socialist, with loaded questions from the NBC panel - the right always points to them as liberals
but they are as opposed to socialist oriented ideas as is the right.
Hickenlooper who apparently sees Bernie’s ideas as a real threat, never missed
an opportunity to attack Bernie indirectly by talking about socialism. (The
July 1 New Yorker has an article: John Hickenlooper’s War on Socialism.)
I was disappointed in some of Bernie’s
responses which were stock and repetitive, but he did hammer the point that
many of our problems are due to outrageous profits on health care. Yes, he said
we would raise taxes but at the same time cut the costs of health care which is
also a tax of sorts. Get rid of insurance companies and the cost of their
profit disappears. He pointed to our high costs compared to universal health
care nations with much lower costs (see Germany).
Bernie’s policies align with social
democratic parties in capitalist Europe, many of whom have run the governments
at times. Not to be confused with Democratic Socialists (DSA) who are closer to
traditional anti-capitalist ideologies. DSA is a broad socialist tent and the
majority seem to believe that socialism can be achieved by democratic means.
But there are also people who do not support liberal democratic norms, like a
multi-party system. Confusion around these terms should be cleaned up
Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winner
in economics, a voice representing a vision of left-leaning economic analysis, was
often ignored – until the 2008 crash and the crisis it created within
capitalism and its structure. He has a new book, People, Power, And Profits which makes a case not for socialism but
for progressive capitalism, sort of where Elizabeth Warren is coming from. He
argues that we don’t have really free markets, a faux bedrock of capitalism,
but an economic system concentrated in the hands of the few who in turn
exercise control over the political system, thus leading to an increasing
economic gap which has spurred populism on the right and the left. I know
revolutionary socialists who believe in overthrowing capitalism who are cheered
by this news since they feel it is pretty much what Marx predicted would happen.
What he didn’t predict was that the right populists could defeat the left, as
it did in Germany under Hitler.
A closing note on free markets. Trump
Dept of Ed. appointee Betsy DeVos’s has rolled back Obama-era regulations, intended to protect students against predatory for-profit
colleges, which trap students into high debt they can never repay,
guaranteed by the federal government which funnels money into their hands.
People who ask when Bernie of Warren talk about free college how are we paying
for it don’t ask the same question about those tax payer funded profits.
Norm blogs for no profit at
ednotesonline.com.
Comment from a parent activist:
-->
Comment from a parent activist:
A good article on busing by Matthew Delmont.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ ideas/archive/2019/07/kamala- harris-and-busing-debate/ 593047/
"Buses had long been used in the South—as well as in New York, Boston, and many other northern cities—to maintain segregation. This form of transportation was not controversial for white parents. Put more starkly, school buses were fine for the majority of white families; busing was not."
"Buses had long been used in the South—as well as in New York, Boston, and many other northern cities—to maintain segregation. This form of transportation was not controversial for white parents. Put more starkly, school buses were fine for the majority of white families; busing was not."
Plenty of parents are willing to make their kids travel out of their neighborhood to attend G&T programs.
Friday, June 28, 2019
A Deeper Dive into The Queens DA Race - A Battle for the Democratic Party
While progressives celebrate the narrow victory of Tiffany Cabán in
the Queens DA race, it was a shock and awe moment for the Queens Dem
Party machine and allies (yes, to the UFT). But hope springs eternal and they are holding out hope
that the absentee ballots will give Katz the victory.
I'm sure people are sick of my reports on this election:
This election mimics the Bernie/Hillary split in the Democratic Party. One candidate,
I love how publications interpret events from their own point of view. The WAVE, which I write for, took a basic Anyone But Tiffany position and was critical of outsiders coming in to support her. Look at the map of the voting below -- my neighborhood went all blue for Greg Lasak, a retired Supreme Court Justice, who is associated mostly with the old regime. He had 12,377 votes -14.5 percent. While the progressive celebrate, consider that if you combine the Lasak and Katz votes, Tiffany gets swamped. Look at that sea of green for Katz and sea of yellow for Tiffany. Pick a color and you can see the racial divide plus the white progressive in Astoria, Long Island City and Jackson Heights -- their vote pulling efforts were impressive.
There's still the election...
Sometimes politics is better than sports.
Both articles below.
Katz and her supporters remain optimistic that the approximately 3,400 absentee ballots, which remained uncounted as of earlier this week, could still tip the polls in her favor. .... The WAVE, June 28, 2019, www.rockawave.comThe WAVE took no formal position in the race other than "anyone but Tiffany." Yes, I write for a publication that doesn't quite align with me politically but they do give me space.
I'm sure people are sick of my reports on this election:
- Queens DA - Bad News for Katz, Democratic Machine,...
- School Scope: Queens DA, School Discipline Needs ...
- School Scope: The Queens DA Race - The Battle of...
This election mimics the Bernie/Hillary split in the Democratic Party. One candidate,
Deputy Attorney General Mina Malik, told a crowd in Southeast Queens on the Thursday evening before election day that “Bernie Sanders is the reason we have Trump in the White House.”The articles I quote below have all the elements of this split, including black leaders' support for the regular Democrats and slams at the left.
Katz, who was running for her sixth elected office in New York in 25 years, had support from former congressman and former Queens County Democratic Party Chair Crowley, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, along with New York Congressional Reps. Gregory Meeks, Tom Suozzi, Carolyn Maloney, and Adriano Espaillat, and a host of local and state unions. Meeks, despite a key vote on Capitol Hill Tuesday, was at Katz’s election night party. Earlier, he slammed Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., for endorsing Cabán without consulting leaders of the machine. The move, he said, was “arrogant” and “patronizing.”Our own UFT lines up firmly against the left and will do so every time. The number of UFT failures in its endorsement policy continues the trend. In other words, whoever they endorse for president should view it as a kiss of death.
A year ago, the party establishment could claim — whether it was true or not — to have been caught off guard by Ocasio-Cortez. That rationale is absent in Tuesday’s race. The eyes of the country were on Queens, and the machine was as prepared as it could be. It simply couldn’t muscle out the vote... The InterceptThere's a lot packed into this comment -- DSA vs Dem Machine. But also ignores that the number of candidates who were not progressive splintered the vote. If it was Katz against Cabán head to head this would be a different story.
The progressive Intercept has a different take
Tiffany Cabán Stuns Queens Machine, Holds Solid Lead in Race for Queens District Attorney... progressive groups coalesced around Cabán
The Intercept called this victory more significant in some sense than AOC's defeat of Joe Crowley - who by the way still runs the Queens regular Democratic Party despite the fact that my own Congressman, Greg Meeks is the chair. Meeks is black and all the black elected officials came out for Katz with slams at the left.Cabán’s apparent victory is a show of force in New York for the local chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, which worked hard for Cabán early, as well as for the Working Families Party and Real Justice PAC. Larry Krasner, the Philadelphia district attorney elected with the help of Real Justice on a similarly radical platform, was in attendance at Cabán’s election night party. The most significant endorsement, however, likely came from Bronx and Queens Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. ....The Intercept
I love how publications interpret events from their own point of view. The WAVE, which I write for, took a basic Anyone But Tiffany position and was critical of outsiders coming in to support her. Look at the map of the voting below -- my neighborhood went all blue for Greg Lasak, a retired Supreme Court Justice, who is associated mostly with the old regime. He had 12,377 votes -14.5 percent. While the progressive celebrate, consider that if you combine the Lasak and Katz votes, Tiffany gets swamped. Look at that sea of green for Katz and sea of yellow for Tiffany. Pick a color and you can see the racial divide plus the white progressive in Astoria, Long Island City and Jackson Heights -- their vote pulling efforts were impressive.
There's still the election...
Given that Queens leans heavily Democratic, Cabán is all but assured a general election victory, provided she survives whatever challenges Katz files. That election will take place on November 5, 2019.But there is still a chance for a conservative/right wing/Reg Democrat alliance. Melinda Katz's ex, right winger Curtis Sliwa who fathered two children with Katz was on Bernie and Sid this morning pointing out that Katz had no chance to win and would probably be given a judgeship, the usual way the graft works, saying all non-progressives, Republican and Democrats, should all gather together and back Lasik against Tiffany in the November election.
Sometimes politics is better than sports.
Both articles below.
Labels:
AOC,
Democratic Party,
Queens District Attorney,
Tiffany Caban,
UFT
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
Queens DA - Bad News for Katz, Democratic Machine, the UFT (so often wrong), Cuomo, Real Estate Interests, etc.
UPDATE 2:
Hi Norm:
I read what you wrote about Caban beating Katz. You might be interested in these articles:
https://www.politico.com/state s/new-york/albany/story/2019/ 06/26/cabans-likely-win-deals- another-big-blow-to-the-queens -machine-1075762
https://theintercept.com/2019/ 06/07/queens-new-york-district -attorney-race-melinda-katz/
The UFT gave Katz $36,000.
UPDATE1: Let me add this FB comment from Schoolgal about the UFT, which expresses the attitude of many teachers - at least the ones that follow things closely:
ny-principal-wins-nod-from- alexandria-ocasio-co- 1835674536.)
Who supported Katz? She raised lots of money from real estate interests and the UFT was one of the major contributors.
Now what does this mean? I think that the insurgents from the left have shown they can go neck and neck with the regular Democrats aligned with our own lovely UFT which so often picks the wrong side and will continue to pick wrong sides (it's in their DNA.) They will do so again in the 2020 presidential race. The UFT has always fought off the left both internally and externally. They are lucky that the left in the UFT, unlike in other teacher unions, is so inept.
This is Queens, though a much changed borough of Archie Bunker fame. Ooooh, politics as sport -- I turned off the Yankee game to write this - there's a machine that manages to win.
Hi Norm:
I read what you wrote about Caban beating Katz. You might be interested in these articles:
https://www.politico.com/state
https://theintercept.com/2019/
The UFT gave Katz $36,000.
UPDATE1: Let me add this FB comment from Schoolgal about the UFT, which expresses the attitude of many teachers - at least the ones that follow things closely:
Hey UFT! Why did I get so many calls for a DA race? Do you really think I’m gonna buy a plane ticket to vote....illegally.....in NY? And for a woman who folded to give Bloomberg an illegal 3rd term! Glad to see Cuomo, Randi and Mulgrew with egg on their face! Remember when Bloomberg won by a slight margin the year you didn’t back a Democrat! In fact you didn’t back a Democrat against Pataki. Teachers don’t forget!And a big win for the AOC wing of the party and the Democratic Socialists (DSA) who I've been writing about and pointing out their ability to put together a grass roots movement that seems to be able to outflank the regular Democrats when they chose to contest. (See the upcoming primary next year between Elliot Engel and Jamal Bowman -Bronx principal Jamaal Bowman running for Congress - https://www.theroot.com/bronx-
That adds up to bad news for Katz — and worse news for the Queens Democratic Organization. It would mean that Ocasio-Cortez was not just a blip localized to one congressional district, but rather, that the organizers on the ground have built a movement that may be capable of consistently challenging the establishment. The 2020 primaries are shaping up to be a wild ride! ((Gothamist)In yesterday's post for The WAVE on the morning of the primary (School Scope: Queens DA, I predicted that Katz would win, especially since the Dem machine, probably seeing the dismal pre-election polling, convinced (or threatened) Rory Lancman to drop out days before the primary (I heard he was offered borough president but imagine if the progressive wing of the party makes a big push for that - and it probably will). It's still neck and neck with Tiffany Cabán leading by a hair. If Katz hadn't picked up the Lancman votes Tiffany's would be even further ahead.
Who supported Katz? She raised lots of money from real estate interests and the UFT was one of the major contributors.
Now what does this mean? I think that the insurgents from the left have shown they can go neck and neck with the regular Democrats aligned with our own lovely UFT which so often picks the wrong side and will continue to pick wrong sides (it's in their DNA.) They will do so again in the 2020 presidential race. The UFT has always fought off the left both internally and externally. They are lucky that the left in the UFT, unlike in other teacher unions, is so inept.
This is Queens, though a much changed borough of Archie Bunker fame. Ooooh, politics as sport -- I turned off the Yankee game to write this - there's a machine that manages to win.
Shocker in Queens DA Race
By Brigid Bergin
|
|
Labels:
Democratic party machine,
DSA,
Queens DA,
UFT
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
School Scope: Queens DA, School Discipline Needs Class Size Reduction
Submitted for June 28, 2019 publication in The WAVE.
School Scope: Queens
DA, School Discipline Needs Class Size Reduction
By Norm Scott
You may have been reading
about changes to the NYC school discipline and integration policies spearheaded
by Chancellor Carranza and the Mayor and tabloid press has been going wild by
emphasizing the excess in these policies. The use of restorative justice (RJ)
has many supporters but also many detractors in schools where the
administration has allowed discipline to get out of control and is not capable
of creating an adequate RJ environment. Often these admins absolve themselves
of responsibility and play the “blame the teacher game.” These schools often
have very high turnovers of staff. If you want to see a key to admin
incompetence check the turnover rates. In the Bloomberg days, principals who
had high turnover were praised as bringing in new blood while dumping senior
teachers (and their salaries).
The most controversial have
been attempts to revise the conditions for entry to the big 3 specialty
schools: Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Tech and Bronx Science, the only schools based on
one test, the SSHAT. Traditionalists are going wild. As is the Asian community,
which dominates all three schools. What is sort of funny is that the equally
great school, Townshend Harris in Queens, does not rely on the test but on an
amalgam of grades. I don’t believe in the one test policy but am also always
suspicious of the De Blasio administration of the schools. I also believe all
students benefit from a diversity of schoolmates. That Brooklyn Tech at one
time had a high proportion of black students and now has barely none means
something. The number of white kids at these schools has also declined but they
are viewed as having other options.
Teachers are very familiar
with the constant refrain to “differentiate instruction” which means reaching
every child at his/her own level, even if class sizes are in the thirties. I’ve
been sitting in on a 3020a hearing where they are trying to fire a 17-year
tenured teacher on what seems a very flimsy case. A key argument is that she
has not differentiated instruction effectively enough – in middle school math
classes of 30 students (LOL). And then there are her ratings on Danielson
rubrics, which calls for a double LOL. As someone who spent 20 years teaching
4-6 grades, I had to stifle an instinct to LOL at what has been done to the
ability to teach.
Restorative justice and differentiation of instruction are ideals I agree with but without addressing a serious reduction in class size, chances for success are minimal. It is expensive to reduce class size, but it is time to bite the bullet and begin the process, at the very least in the earliest grades k-4.
Restorative justice and differentiation of instruction are ideals I agree with but without addressing a serious reduction in class size, chances for success are minimal. It is expensive to reduce class size, but it is time to bite the bullet and begin the process, at the very least in the earliest grades k-4.
The DA race has national implications
· Race For Queens DA Tightens As Lancman Quits, Backing
Katz
· Cuomo: AOC-backed candidate could win in Queens if
voters don’t show up
· A looming district attorney election may not bode well
for New York City’s second-largest borough.
Just a few headlines about
what would usually be an obscure election. I’m about to head out to vote for Tiffany Cabán
for Queens DA because I believe in reforming the criminal justice system.
Melinda Katz has also promised reforms but I’m concerned about the sources of the
money she raises. Rory Lancman dropped out at the last moment (rumors are he is
being offered a chance to take Katz’ place as Queens borough president), Katz
should win. But the numbers will tell an interesting tale of the power of the
Queens Democratic machine and its allies vs. the newly activated people by the
Democratic Socialists (DSA).
NY Times headline: A Race for Queens D.A., but Ocasio-Cortez,
Warren and Sanders Loom
A few excerpts: “The Democratic primary may show whether a
progressive vision for criminal justice resonates in a borough with a
law-and-order past. One persistent, if timeworn, image of Queens, popularized
in television shows like “All in the Family” and “King of Queens,” centers on
white working-class families in New York City’s second most populous borough. “Another
is that of an ethnically diverse and gentrified place, a force that helped
propel Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to a shocking primary victory last year over a
powerful Democratic congressman, Joseph Crowley. The upcoming six-way
Democratic primary for Queens district attorney may go a long way in
determining which portrait is more accurate. It is a local race that is
unexpectedly drawing national attention, with presidential candidates like
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren weighing in. In cities like Boston and
Philadelphia, progressive candidates have captured district attorney seats by
promising criminal justice reforms in the hopes of ending an era of mass
incarceration brought on by policies enacted during the 1990s, when crime was at
record highs.”
The WAVE didn’t make an
endorsement but the editorial made it
clear that Tiffany was taboo.
Norm blogs at
ednotesonline.com and wishes all school workers a happy end of school year.
Monday, June 24, 2019
"Hitler’s a damned remarkable man,” Tollever says - Wouk, Winds of War
That an American, a person of some authority, could be so cavalier about the Nazis in a story set after the Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of equal rights, not to mention after Hitler had imprisoned his political opposition and eliminated the free press — was both mind-boggling and infuriating. Of course, this was the point. A canny novelist, Wouk — who died on Friday, just shy of his 104th birthday — had the good sense to let his characters hang themselves with their own words..... It seemed silly to protest … she insisted that anti-Semitism was a blot on an otherwise exciting, lovely land.” As such, her resistance primarily took the form of playfully chastising high-ranking Nazis at booze-filled dinner parties.
...... Adelle Waldman, NYT book reviewThe NY Times June 23 book review print edition this past Sunday had this very interesting piece on the late Herman Wouk who died recently.
Herman Wouk, Best-Selling Novelist With a Realist's Touch, Dies at 103https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/17/obituaries/herman-wouk-dead.html
Herman Wouk Wrote Historical Novels. But His True Subject Was Moral Weakness.
Principal Barred From LaGuardia's Graduation! - Mars has been promoted and is gone from LaGuardia!!!!!
We just got a comment saying Mars is gone - promoted of course.

|
Mon, Jun 24, 8:03 PM (12 hours ago)
|
|
https://www.wsj.com/articles/ fame-high-school-principal- leaving-post-after-student- protests-11561417253
‘Fame’ High School Principal Leaving Post After Student Protests
Students and faculty say Lisa Mars hasn’t prioritized the arts enough in her push for strong academics at the Manhattan public school
Students
from Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and
Performing Arts celebrated before their graduation ceremony at David
Geffen Hall, Lincoln Center, in Manhattan on Monday. Photo: Sarah Blesener for The Wall Street Journal
By
Leslie Brody
Updated June 24, 2019 7:18 pm ET
The
principal of Manhattan’s famous high school for the arts, known as
LaGuardia, is leaving after protests by students and teachers saying she
didn’t prioritize the arts enough in her push for strong academics.Principal Lisa Mars will join the city Department of Education this summer in a senior post in academic instruction, according to the head of the city principals union.
A Department of Education spokesman didn’t confirm the change. Dr. Mars didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Before the announcement, questions mounted about her future when she didn’t attend graduation Monday, held at Lincoln Center.
The Upper West Side school hit the spotlight in the 1980 film “Fame.” In recent days, some seniors had threatened to turn their backs on Dr. Mars during the graduation ceremony and avoid shaking her hand.
Last month many held a sit-in to call for more focus on arts education, and heavier weighting of artistic talent in admissions at the public school, formally called Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts.
Alumni include a host of actors, artists and entertainers, including Al Pacino, Eartha Kitt, Jennifer Aniston and Wesley Snipes.
Tension about how to balance arts and academics had simmered for years, even before Dr. Mars arrived in 2013, and grew more intense in recent months, said students and faculty. Some said there was more pressure to take Advanced Placement classes, some arts classes were cut, and rehearsal time was reduced, among other changes.
The faculty union held a poll this spring in which 88% of participants said they had no confidence in Dr. Mars, said Richard Titone, a music teacher. The faculty, he said, has had less say in admissions, and some brilliant young musicians were rejected due to their middle-school grades.
“There was less input from teaching artists,” Mr. Titone said. “There was no ability to compromise.”
Admission is highly competitive. Students must audition and supply academic records.
This high-achieving specialized high school, with a 99%-graduation rate last year, is more diverse than eight elite public high schools where admission is determined by a single exam. That test, which has fierce critics and staunch defenders, has been at the center of debate about fair access to opportunity.
Among LaGuardia’s 2,800 students last year, 46% were white, 20% Asian, 18% Hispanic and 10% black by city data. It said 31% faced economic hardship, compared with 71% of students in the system.
Mark Cannizzaro, president of the Council of School Supervisors & Administrators, said Dr. Mars had been considering a department offer of a new position long before the spring protests.
When she arrived at LaGuardia, senior department officials were concerned there wasn’t enough emphasis on academics, he said, and she valued the arts while pursuing curricular rigor.
“I’ve been to outstanding performances there, like nothing I’ve ever seen before by high-school students,” Mr. Cannizzaro said. “I don’t think anyone could fairly say it wasn’t focused on the arts.”
Write to Leslie Brody at leslie.brody@wsj.com
I've seen no news reports but this petition has been signed by almost 15,000 people. I don't see how a principal would be barred unless students planned to protest her being there and the DOE caves. Now if there's a back story and alumni with pull have gotten to the DOE then this could be possible.
Petition update
Principal Barred From LaGuardia's Graduation!

LaGuardia High
New York, NY, United States
Jun 24, 2019 —
Dear friend of LaGuardia High,
In response to years of overwhelming evidence of incompetence, as well as the public outcry from concerned people like you, the Department of Education has finally taken action: Principal Lisa Mars has been barred from attending graduation of the 2019 class!
This is only the beginning of LaGuardia's renaissance. We are committed to restoring the beleaguered arts programs of our school, with leadership who understands the importance of talent over tests.
Stay tuned for more news this coming week!
#BringFameBack
Here are some articles.
In response to years of overwhelming evidence of incompetence, as well as the public outcry from concerned people like you, the Department of Education has finally taken action: Principal Lisa Mars has been barred from attending graduation of the 2019 class!
This is only the beginning of LaGuardia's renaissance. We are committed to restoring the beleaguered arts programs of our school, with leadership who understands the importance of talent over tests.
Stay tuned for more news this coming week!
#BringFameBack
Here are some articles.
May 24, 2019 - Published May 24, 2019 at 11:08 AM | Updated at 5:46 PM EDT on May .... Some auditions that were given perfect scores were rejected because of a C average in one class, ... LaGuardia school is led by its principal — Dr. Lisa Mars. ... in New York City has been raging amid admission questions of race, ...
By Alice Gainer June 3, 2019 at 6:50 pm ... According to some students, alumni and parents, the current principal, Dr. Lisa Mars, has placed a bigger focus on middle school academic records and attendance when it comes to accepting ... But the Department of Education says the current policy has been in place for over a ...
Jan 11, 2017 - Update: LaGuardia's Failing Principal Gets Tenure! ... grades over artistic talent in a school with an historical graduation rate of 98%. ... June 2, 2019 ... But students say Dr. Mars has gone too far by enforcing a decade-old .... continues to attend LaG events, I'm sad and infuriated that Lisa Mars has been ...
Sunday, June 23, 2019
Democratic Socialism and Social Democracy - How they differ - NY Times
...if you ask five self-described democratic socialists what the term means, you’re likely to get five different answers... no federal official or Democratic candidate advocates communism.These exceprts are from a June 12, 2019 NY Times article on socialism that tried to sort out the various aspects - I thought it was one of the better pieces and included talking to the leader of Jacobin and the leader of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), people who do not get quoted in the mainstream press. I've tried to write about the same subject but often get it muddled -- even my wife, who occasionally reads my columns in The Wave commented how much clearer this NYT piece was than mine.
At the other end is social democracy, which is common in Europe. It preserves capitalism, but with stricter regulations and government programs to distribute resources more evenly.
Ultimately, though, Sweden isn’t what democratic socialists like Bhaskar Sunkara, editor of Jacobin magazine, a quarterly socialist journal, are looking for. “We come from the same tradition,” he said of democratic socialists and social democrats. But generally, he added, social democrats see a role for private capital in their ideal system, and democratic socialists do not.
.....NYTimes
I heard last week on NPR attempts to define differences between Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren - she supports capitalism and the market based system but wants it tightly controlled - she would say that our current system is a distortion of capitalism. Bernie is an an avowed socialist - but what brand?
The NY Times has done some hits on his history trying to pin him to support for socialist regimes in the past that were not democratic socialists.
Mayor and 'Foreign Minister': How Bernie Sanders Brought the Cold ...
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/17/us/bernie-sanders-burlington-mayor.html
What the article below does is try to articulate the differences between social democrats (regulated capitalism and markets and democratic socialists (capitalism nyet.) I joined DSA without understanding this --- DSA is a broad-based open tent for socialists of every brand but after a few meetings it seems clear to me that social democrats who believe in regulated capitalism don't really fit in. There are no debates over this in DSA -- the assumption is that you are there because you believe in socialism where the means of production are not in private hands. They call themselves "democratic" socialists because they think this can be brought about by democratic means and governance under socialism will be democratic. I have my doubts.Jun 12, 2019 - 1:49Sanders Presents Vision of Democratic Socialism in Speech.
My experience in MORE has taught me a lot about the left and socialism. MORE has fundamentally become an arm of the DSA NYC labor branch. As for bringing about change through democratic means, the DSA people in MORE, many of whom are aligned with the ISO faction, gave us a very bad example -- they couldn't bring about change in a tiny irrelevant caucus with less than 20 active people without tossing out democracy. DSA as a whole is really trying to do things democratically, but that is as long as people are on the same page - roughly -- just wait until the spitting and splitting begins. I'm still a member but not active.
What Is Democratic Socialism? Whose Version Are We Talking About?
By Maggie Astor
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/12/us/politics/democratic-socialism-facts-history.html
Members of the Democratic Socialists of America gathered in New York in May. Because a binary view of “liberals” and “conservatives” dominates American politics, ideologies to the left of mainstream Democrats tend to get lumped together.
Saturday, June 22, 2019
School Scope: The Queens DA Race - The Battle of the Political Machines in the Democratic Party -
Does the Queens District Attorney race
come down to Katz vs. Caban?
Published in The WAVE print and e-editions, June 21, 2019
www.rockawave.com
Published in The WAVE print and e-editions, June 21, 2019
www.rockawave.com
School Scope: The
Battle of the Political Machines in the Democratic Party
By Norm Scott
Does the Queens District Attorney race
come down to Katz vs. Caban?
The Queens DA race has
national implications as it pits candidates with a range of political and
philosophical positions on the criminal justice system. Seven – count ‘em –
seven – candidates are running, some professional politicians, others new to
the political scene.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC)
shocked the world when she beat the Democratic machine and Joe Crowley for
Congress in a Queens/Bronx district in 2018. She was backed by the Democratic
Socialists of America (DSA) which put troops on the ground for AOC, in essence
building its own more fluid machine for races they focus on, which makes them
more nimble (and much younger) than the traditional party machinery. We will
see local and national races pitting the
two forces against each other, a fascinating development.
A similar battle is taking
place in the Queens DA race which has some relevance to the national internal
battle among Democrats between the progressive/reform and the machine wings. Many
progressive District Attorneys have been elected around the nation, promising
major reforms, so DA has become a sort of glamor job for change.
The favorite is
machine-backed Melinda Katz. The Democratic party machine has the ground
troops. I knew that when I saw Lew Simon getting signatures for Katz. She is a
permanent politician with six years in
the Assembly, eight on the City Council and the last six as Queens Borough
President. There’s good, bad and ugly in that, as I generally do not trust the
machine. Katz has a lot of experience as a politician and The WAVE gave her an A
for her policies, along with three others. I wrote last week that experience
does count in every endeavor and
politician is no different. Katz knows how to work the political ropes. What
will be telling is how well, if she wins, she works the line between law and
community, a necessary function of the job of a DA today. Katz has received
over a $1 million in contributions, a quarter of a million from real estate
developers and related interests, a red flag for me.
But not a red flag for my
union, the UFT, which took out a full page ad for her in the WAVE last week. The
UFT, which also endorsed Crowley, mostly takes the center position, when
possible. And in the presidential race it will do what it can to tack away from
the left and into the center. So don’t look for any love for Bernie or Warren.
The UFT will try to sell the idea that the left can’t win, but the fundamentals
are that the UFT, since its founding, has been centrist in the Democratic
Party. (The UFT and its own machine,
Unity Caucus, took over the AFT in 1974 and created a state affiliate, NYSUT in
1975 and all three organizations have played a major part in centrist
Democratic Party politics since then at the city, state and national levels.)
AOC proved that political
newcomers can have a major impact and Katz’ major competitor, Tiffany Caban
(excuse the lack of hyphen over the second a – I can’t figure how to do that), represents the alternative inside the
Democratic Party. The WAVE rated her a C for not focusing enough on law and
order but on reforming the criminal justice system – I think we need to dig
deeper on these issues.
Caban is backed by DSA and
progressive all over Queens and is the only candidate AOC has endorsed. When I
attended the Bernie Sanders rally at Brooklyn College there were loads of
DSAers getting Tiffany’s petitions signed. And as a member of DSA I regularly
get notices about supporting her, not just with money but with active
canvassing. It takes troops to get on the ballot and loads more to run a
serious race. The progressive monthly, The Indypendent, which I have been
dropping off at Rockaway libraries, has devoted a lot of space to Caban with
her story being featured on the front page. Caban has raised a quarter of Katz’
total from at last count 2,545 people with an average of $84 per donation, but
for a newbie, significant.
Caban’s positions have forced
Katz to tack left on certain positions like cash bail and on the opening of
borough jails (which she initially supported). The threat to Katz is if the
other candidates take votes away from her and Caban captures the bulk of
progressives. It probably won’t surprise readers of this column that I’m urging
people to vote for Caban.
Vote for Norm by visiting his
blog ednotesonline.com.
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