Author Archive

A Path to Victory

Posted August 10, 2011 By Dave Thomer

Voters in six Wisconsin state senate districts voted in recall elections last night. The recall movement was triggered when newly-elected Governor Scott Walker and the state legislature pushed through a law that stripped members of Wisconsin’s public-sector unions of many of their collective-bargaining rights. All six seats were held by Republicans. If Democrats could win three of the six, they would take control of the Wisconsin state senate until next year.

They won two.

This is the sort of almost-but-not-quite victory that progressives have won before. I remember when Ned Lamont challenged Joe Lieberman in the Democratic primary in 2006. Lamont won the primary, but Lieberman won re-election as an independent and proceeded to make many Democratic activists crazy by campaigning for John McCain in 2008 and managing to retain his committee chairmanship in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

Actually, I don’t want to seem like I’m minimizing what Wisconsin Democrats accomplished. They defeated two Republicans who managed to win their seats in 2008, one of the high points of Democratic turnout. They came close in other races. That’s a win, as Talking Points Memo’s Josh Marshall argues in this post.

The thing is, it’s a win that needs follow-up. There needs to be a successful recall against Walker and the Republicans who are eligible next year. Progressives need to take back control of the legislature. Winning the state in the presidential race would be good. Without that electoral feedback, there is no reason for elected officials to respond to progressive demands.

The truth is, progressives and unions have a hard time wielding that electoral stick. In New Jersey, some Democrats teamed up with Republican Governor Christie to cut some benefits and bargaining rights for public-sector workers. The state AFL-CIO won’t support those Democrats for re-election, but I haven’t seen any signs of primary challenges. That tells me that progressive activists don’t have the power to win a primary or even make it close.

Contrast that with what conservative activists are able to do. There are multiple longstanding Republican senators who got bounced through the nominating process. It doesn’t matter if public opinion polls say a majority of voters like something – public opinion polls don’t put elected officials out of office. Voters can. So if progressive activists can’t convince a majority of voters to vote for candidates who will enact the policies that the majority of voters allegedly support, nothing’s going to change.

Scene from a Blackout

Posted August 9, 2011 By Dave Thomer

I’m writing this on my laptop in the middle of the second power outage of the evening. Hopefully I’ll get power back so that I can connect to the Internet and posit it before midnight, but either way I’m going to count my post-every-day streak as intact.

We have enough candles to see in the living room, and for now we can use our cell phones and flashlights, so we’re not totally unplugged. Trying to keep a nine-year-old girl entertained without television, Wii, or Internet is proving to be a challenge. I can’t say that I’m providing a very good example, since I’m here using a computer. But once I finish writing this I’ll see if there are any puzzles we can work out by the candlelight. We may have to crack open the freezer and try to eat some of the ice cream before it melts. It’s a tough burden, but we’ll try to bear it.

The funny thing is, there are a lot of non-wired things I’d like to do; plenty of books to read or rough notes to write. They’re kinda hard to do at 10:30 at night, though. I’m definitely gonna have to give Mr. Edison some extra thanks when we do important inventions in World History this year.

(Note: Power’s back. For now. DUN DUN DUN!)

The Story’s The Same?

Posted August 8, 2011 By Dave Thomer

I may be repeating myself here. If so, consider it an added bit of meta-commentary, because I think the time is right for this conversation again.

In the last ten to twenty years, the reboot has joined the remake as a source for new programming. Serialized stories, from TV shows to movie series to comic books, have had their story continuity restarted, sometimes but not always with some kind of link to what has gone before. Examples include the Star Trek movie from 2009, the Battlestar Galactica series that aired on Syfy, Daniel Craig’s James Bond films, and every third week of DC Comics publishing. Many of these stories are well-received, but there is also a certain stigma attached – a reboot is considered a sign of laziness, or inability to come up with something new. I wonder if that stigma is deserved.

This came to a head in the last few weeks because of two events. A couple of months ago, DC announced that they would restart all of their comics from new issue #1s in September. Many, but not all, of the previously-published plot points would be wiped from the storylines. And then J. Michael Straczynski, creator of the cult-favorite SF series Babylon 5, announced that he had been in negotiations with Warner Brothers to reboot that show along the lines of the Battlestar Galactica reboot. The premise would be kept, everything else would be up for grabs. Actors from the original series might be used, but perhaps they would play new roles.

Read the remainder of this entry »

Newspapers, Background Knowledge and Schools

Posted August 7, 2011 By Dave Thomer

Last week Chris Lehmann wrote about a school he’d like to see:

Every morning, the first thing everyone did was read the New York Times for an hour. Now, imagine that they are using some kind of Kindle-style software so that they can annotate with ideas, questions, etc… such that at the end of the hour, the school community could see who had similar questions from the day’s paper.

And now, imagine what it would look like if the kids spent the better part of the day researching those questions and seeing where that took them, with the end of every day being a “share out” where kids shared what they learned across a variety of media.

I’ve had his post bouncing in my head ever since.

As a teenager, I would have killed to attend a school like this. (Well, maybe maimed.) And if you could figure out all of the logistics and get all of the technology together to make it work, I think this could be a tremendous magnet or select-admission school. I wouldn’t make the admission criteria grades or test scores or even an essay. I’d want to interview the prospective students to see who has the curiosity and self-direction to thrive in a school like this. I’d maybe even want to see each prospective student pick up a copy of the day’s paper and map out a list of questions for further review.

Why am I thinking so much about who I’d let into a school like this, and therefore who I would leave out? Because I can’t help but think about the students for whom this wouldn’t be a helpful structure, and I can’t help but think about the reasons why. Partially, this is because I have looked for ways to incorporate news coverage of current events into my teaching, including newspaper articles and NPR broadcasts. I haven’t always had as much success as I would like.

One conclusion I’ve reached is that our news media assumes a great deal of background knowledge. Look at the first two paragraphs of the New York Times’ news story about Standard and Poor’s decision to downgrade the U.S. government’s credit rating:

Standard & Poor’s removed the United States government from its list of risk-free borrowers for the first time on Friday night, a downgrade that is freighted with symbolic significance but carries few clear financial implications.

The company, one of three major agencies that offer advice to investors in debt securities, said it was cutting its rating of long-term federal debt to AA+, one notch below the top grade of AAA. It described the decision as a judgment about the nation’s leaders, writing that “the gulf between the political parties” had reduced its confidence in the government’s ability to manage its finances.

OK. For starters, you have the writing style. “Freighted with symbolic significance” is not the kind of phrase I see high school students tossing around. It’s good to challenge kids, but the language is presenting a barrier to the concepts rather than carrying them to the reader. Get beyond that, and we get to the question of why this is a big deal that this company is changing this rating. It must be because the company “offers advice to investors in debt securities.” Well, what are debt securities? Who invests in them? Why do they care about this company’s advice? And what does this have to do with the United States government? Maybe it’s the phrase long-term federal debt. So what is the difference between long term and short term federal debt? And what’s that gulf in the political parties that the article is talking about?

Now, these are the questions you’d want to see a student ask. And then you’d want the student to think about where he or she could go to find answers to those questions. But if the student doesn’t enter the project with curiosity, or with a belief that this information in the newspaper is relevant, the student is more likely to give up. If the student doesn’t have a sense of how to go about answering those questions, the curiosity is not likely to lead to the kind of substantial inquiry that leads to deeper learning.

Now, as I’ve been writing this, it occurred to me that Chris’ proposal doesn’t say the students have to focus on the new section. Maybe a student starts reading about the debt downgrade, gets bored, and finds something in the sports section or the arts section that they do have some background knowledge about. Getting a student to dig deeper into a story about baseball statistics might help provide some of the media-reading skills I’m talking about. Maybe an analysis of the NFL lockout leads a student to think about antitrust law, or a performer’s contract dispute inspires a discussion about contract rights and the respective roles of labor and capital. This could be a good start, but sooner or later each student would have to be willing to dive into the front pages if this type of school is really going to help students become strong citizens.

When I think about a school like this, I think about the school system that it would be a part of. What would an elementary school that prepared its students to thrive in a school like this look like? What kind of college would its graduates seek out? Right this very minute, there are eighth graders across Philadelphia and the nation who would benefit by being able to look forward to a school like this. But I also wonder what we can do to build a system where that would be true of many more.

On Being a Teacher and Blogger

Posted August 6, 2011 By Dave Thomer

Natalie Munroe is a teacher in the Philadelphia suburbs. She also has a blog. Last year, it was discovered that she had posted disparaging comments about her students on her blog. She was suspended and then went on maternity leave. Now she’s getting ready to come back to work, and let’s just say that bygones aren’t bygones at this point. The principal has called Munroe unprofessional and said that any student can withdraw from her classes.

I’ve tried to steer clear of this story because I really have a limit to how much negativity concerning teaching I can handle at a given time, and there’s definitely an abundance of that right now. But the latest batch of stories caught my eye, there are some things I want to try to say to clear my mind, and if I’m not going to get all meta on my blog, what’s the point of having one?

  • I never read the original blog, so I can only see the quotes of Munro’s writing out of context. But the only context that would make some of these quotes not insulting, unprofessional, and otherwise way out of bounds would be if the phrase “You should never say” appeared before them.
  • Munroe says that blog was meant for close friends, and that she didn’t use her full name. Well, if you only want to send messages to personal friends – get an email list. Don’t create a blog that the whole Internet can see. And don’t put your picture on it. And leave off your last initial. How long is it going to take people to realize that on the Internet, very little goes away forever?
  • Related to the last point: Do not underestimate students and what they can/will do to find out more about you. Every year I have new students search for me on Google. They find my Facebook profile, this website, tons of stuff I’ve posted on message boards over the years, and photos of me. A few of them even remember my birthday. You can hide, or you can open up an opportunity for kids to connect to you. But if you’re gonna hide, you better do it well.
  • It is very interesting that Munroe still has a job when it’s pretty clear her boss doesn’t want her there. The principal is quoted as saying that the only reason Munroe still ha job is because she has “employee rights.” I have no idea what the contract in her district says, but I admit I am surprised that there is no notion that creating a hostile and difficult educational environment is not something that can get you fired. On the other hand, a First Amendment lawsuit would be almost inevitable. I would like to see those cases filed in order to get some precedent here, but I guess I can understand why the district doesn’t want to be on the hook as a guinea pig.
  • The result of that, though, is that some people are going to use this as fodder in the “Why can’t we fire bad teachers?” debate, and that makes me sad. I teach in a district that tried to fire a teacher for motivating her students to speak out about conditions at their school, a teacher whose alleged offenses were far less injurious to her students than Munroe’s. Union and contract provisions helped save her job, but they didn’t stop the district from trying. Those protections are not a Get Out of Jail Free card. If administrators find that a teacher is not doing the job, they should take the time and gather the evidence to make the case under the due process accorded in the contract. Otherwise, it’s too easy to imagine someone getting fired at a whim.
  • Munroe’s comments in the article I linked to do not help her cause in my eyes. It’s not the principal’s job or the district’s job to defuse the situation. It’s hers, by apologizing, discussing what she’s learned, and telling her students and colleagues how she will do better. But she doesn’t seem to realize that’s what she should do, and so I don’t really expect things to get much better for her. Nor do I have any sympathy.

Kicking the Tires

Posted August 5, 2011 By Dave Thomer

I am just barely making it to Day 5 of my renewed posting regimen – I have a headache that’s stopping me from putting together the post I had in mind for today, but I think it’s a good occasion to take a look at the site’s current form and see what I think. More importantly, I can beg for feedback or ideas.

  • Part of what made it easier for me to post this week is that I finally moved the site’s hosting from Globat to Bluehost. So far I am very happy with this choice. Globat occasionally would have some kind of odd hiccup that would make it hard for me to access the site or make changes. Bluehost’s control panel has been easy to work with and I had little trouble with moving the content. Which reminds me, I need to renew the site’s hosting contract.
  • I upgraded to the latest version of WordPress, which definitely makes a bunch of functions easier. I noticed it when I was moving content from the old forum – it’s pretty easy to click the right boxes and get the post up. And I found a theme that works with the new version. So far I like it, but I’m not wedded to it.
  • I’m still thinking about the sidebar to the right. Is having the Recent Posts and Recent Comments worth it? Does anyone find it useful to be able to click on a particular month’s archives, or does the Calendar serve that purpose well enough? I would like to add an Amazon widget. I don’t know if being an Amazon affiliate is even worth the effort these days, but I feel like I should give it a try. Is there anything else that should be there and isn’t?
  • There is now a link to Register at the top of the sidebar, so if you would like to leave a comment here, please feel free to do so. I would love to see if I could make that link more prominent. Maybe I’ll try to create a specific Register widget.
  • I really like the way this theme (Techozoic) formats posts. The date and headline look good, and it comes with social media buttons buttons built in so I can finally get on that bandwagon.
  • I should probably make the headline/title fonts a little darker, and get a Not News logo up somewhere on the page.
  • The blog roll definitely needs an update – I haven’t touched that in years.

So, overall, I’m happy with the way the site is functioning right now, and I hope that keeps me motivated to keep adding content. Thoughts, suggestions and feedback are always welcome, but right now while I have the time to do something about them, they’re particularly useful.

Thinking Through the Hostage Metaphor

Posted August 4, 2011 By Dave Thomer

A lot of people have used the metaphor of someone taking hostages to describe political standoffs such as the one that just took place over the debt ceiling or the one that just appears to have ended regarding the Federal Aviation Administration. One side (usually the Republicans) says that unless their desired policies are implemented, they won’t vote to do some basic thing that’s necessary to keep the government running. The other side (usually the Democrats) then has to figure out whether to agree to something that they don’t like or accept the consequences of the government (or part of it) shutting down. This tactic has been working fairly well for Republicans, so they’re fairly likely to keep using it. BooMan has a post over on his blog titled Get Used to Being a Hostage that outlines some of the upcoming situations. Not surprisingly, there’s a strong anti-Obama sentiment in the comments from progressives who feel that Obama’s willingness to negotiate with Republicans only encourages them to “take more hostages.”

I understand this position. I have found myself sharing it at various points since last November. But what I don’t think gets enough analysis from the “Don’t negotiate with hostage-takers” camp is, what happens to the hostage when you don’t negotiate? More likely than not, you wind up with a dead hostage. So every time there’s a hostage situation, you have to ask yourself if the price for keeping the hostage-taker from killing the hostage is a better outcome than a dead hostage. It doesn’t matter if the price is a worse outcome than not paying the price AND no harm to the hostage. That’s no longer an option once the hostage is taken. So you have to ask yourself is the dead hostage is really the best possible outcome. And remember, when there’s a dead hostage, there might be a lot of people applauding you for standing tough. But there are also going to be a lot of people mad at you for letting the hostage get killed.

Now, I will grant you that I am not an expert on hostage negotiations. But it seems to me like in a hostage situation, you often see the authorities take a two-pronged approach. Someone negotiates to try to keep the situation from getting out of hand, and in the hopes that the hostage-taker will change his mind and let the hostages go. Meanwhile, somebody else is getting into sniper position to try to take out the hostage-taker with minimum damage to the hostage, so that the hostage-taker no longer has the power to take hostages.

Now, if you take that part of the metaphor and reapply it back to the government, President Obama and Congressional Democrats are in the position of being the folks who negotiate to try stop the hostage from getting killed. So who’s the sniper? That would be the voters. Vote the Republicans out of power, the Republicans won’t be able to take any more hostages. One problem is, the voters won’t be able to take their shot for another 15 months. The other problem is, we can’t be sure that voters won’t decide they like the hostage drama after all. So I understand why some progressives don’t want to wait that long. I just hope they’re ready to deal with the consequences if negotiations stop.

I am late to the party here, I know. The Internet chorus rendered its verdict on Green Lantern at the same time that audiences did, the former with an abundance of snark and the latter with an abundance of not-being-in-the-theater. But after 30 years as a DC fanboy, I think I have reached a breaking point, so I have some venting to do.

Plus, if we’re lucky, my brother will show up to share his thoughts, and that’s some prime entertainment value right there.

Here’s the thing about Green Lantern. They gave me just enough get-my-geek-on moments that I could imagine what an awesome Green Lantern movie would look like. And then they absolutely failed to deliver that awesome Green Lantern movie in any way. Pattie will tell you I spent two weeks before the movie came out watching and re-watching the trailers. There are about five to ten minutes where test pilot Hal Jordan is on the planet Oa, meeting aliens and making swords and shields out of green energy. DC and Warner Brothers made sure everyone say those ten minutes, because those ten minutes are pretty cool. One of the aliens is even named Tomar Re. (Tomar . . . Thomer . . . never mind.) The problem is that they forgot to save much equally-cool stuff for the actual movie. Instead, they showed an almost uncanny knack for making bad decisions at every opportunity.
Read the remainder of this entry »

To Have or Have Not

Posted August 2, 2011 By Dave Thomer

One thing I’ve frequently wondered about is why poor and middle-class voters don’t use the power of their numbers to overcome the upper class’s power of money. Why wouldn’t the lower 80% of the wealth scale favor public officials and policies that would redistribute wealth from the top 20%? The recent showdown over the debt ceiling has been the most recent event to focus my thoughts on the question. President Obama and the Democratic Party have been pushing for a solution based on “shared sacrifice,” while the Republican Party has refused to consider plans that would require the public to make a greater contribution to paying for public services. A number of polls suggest that voters generally support the former position, but that polling support hasn’t translated to voters electing representatives who share that belief. Why doesn’t “shared sacrifice” create the same passion as “no new taxes?”

You could say that it’s because no one wants to pay more taxes, but I’m assuming here that if they wanted to, that bottom 80% could elect enough people to make sure that any tax changes would only affect the top 20 (or less). Whether it would be right or not, the majority should be able to soak the minority. So why don’t they?

I think that one reason is that the notion of shared sacrifice is a double-edged sword. Within domestic American politics, there’s a clear gap between haves and have-nots. There’s a gap between the wealthy and the rest of the population, and that gap is growing. But if you broaden out to a global perspective, suddenly many of the have-nots turn into haves. In the 1990s, the global poverty line was considered to be earning one American dollar a day. If you made $367 in a year, you were above the line. The World Bank seems to have updated the figure to $1.25, so let’s say that $500 would put you over these days. According to one report, someone in the bottom 5% of income-earners in America makes as much money as someone in the top 5% in India. This map from National Geographic shows how income is distributed around the world, and it should be pretty clear that a lot of that wealth is in America.

I think that, at a gut level, many Americans realize this. They understand why so many jobs are being outsourced overseas – there are so many people who are so much poorer than we are that it is almost inevitable that they will be able to offer their labor for lower wages. They understand why so many people try to make their way into this country – even a difficult life here can lead to a higher standard of living than it is possible to achieve in many other countries. So, if you agree with the notion that a majority of have-nots should redistribute wealth and income from a minority of haves in America, you will at least have acknowledge that a majority of have-nots around the world have a good case for redistributing wealth and income from the minority of global haves. And all of a sudden the American poor and middle class find themselves on the opposite side of the redistribution argument.

I honestly don’t know if there’s any way around this. I don’t know if there’s a way for this nation of 300 million to maintain its standard of living without subjecting billions of people around the world to lives of poverty and suffering. I hope there is, but I don’t know if we’re ready to face up to the question yet. People tend to be more passionate about protecting what they have than about gaining something in the future. If Matt Yglesias is right in this post about Globalization and the Progressive Dilemma, the Democratic Party is going to have a tough time generating support for any call for sacrifice in the future.

I Can Schedule That Recreation For Next Thursday

Posted August 1, 2011 By Dave Thomer

To celebrate my effort to return to frequent blog writing, I’m going to take a moment to discuss other things I have not had the time to do, particularly in regard to the category of having fun.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying I haven’t had any time to enjoy myself. I know the whole All Work and No Play thing. Especially in the summer, I can not complain about my leisure time. What I have noticed is that regardless of how much time I have, there are infinitely more things I have the opportunity to do than I have time to do them.

I have DVDs in my cabinet that I have not watched, months after I bought them. Most of them were in box sets, and I’ve watched some of the discs in the box, but there’s still stuff I could watch.

I have computer games and Wii games that I could keep practicing. One of these days I’m gonna score 100% on the guitar part to Driver 8. Steam had a ridiculous sale where I bought a bunch of games I have not tried to play yet, because I’m still trying to figure out how to kick the computer’s tail in Civilization IV.

I have Netflix and a Wii. Good heavens, that could keep me busy forever. Lost. Battlestar Galactica. Doctor Who. How many more shows that I haven’t seen yet?

I could always get the Harry Potter books out of the library again if I need to go on a two-week reading bender. And there are plenty of history books downstairs in my basement that I could read. (No comment, Pattie!)

I don’t always get to these things because Pattie, Alex and I also like to hang out with friends. And if no friends are available, we go hang out at Barnes and Noble, where there are MORE books to read.

I go through this litany in part to remind myself of how lucky I am. (Hold on to that thought, we’ll be getting back to it this week.) But I also go through it in the hopes that I will, perhaps, reduce the number of ADDITIONAL leisure activities that I pay for.

I mean, given that DVD and Netflix account, why am I still paying for cable? I spend more time following baseball on MLB.com than I do on TV! By the time I work through my backlog, there’ll be at least a year or two’s worth of new programs for me to watch! Do I need Food Network that badly?

And even with the games library that I have, I am looking at two BioWares coming down the pike, and I’m practically ready to throw my credit card at Amazon.

To some extent, this search for new experiences is a reasonable one. But as I get older, I’m getting to that point where I gotta prioritize my luxuries. And maybe someday soon I’ll have the sense to use my time and other resources more wisely.

That said, I don’t regret the plastic guitar for an instant.