Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Democracy In High-Speed



Almost 2000 teachers cut class on Wednesday, October 11th and hit the streets. They wore red shirts and carried picket signs that said things like, " I need more than an apple. I need a raise" and "How about no teacher left behind? "

United Teachers of Dade (teacher's union) and the Miami-Dade School Board are currently in negotiations over how much more teachers should earn over their current salary. Teachers are asking for a starting salary of $40,000, which would make their salary competitive with the salary of Broward County's teachers. The district is currently offering a raise that is $4000 less.

The demonstration was part of a week-long series of activities. Teachers handed out flyers at their respected schools and wore red t-shirts daily.

The teacher's union forbids any employee to organize, demonstrate or strike while on the clock. But these teachers were crafty, they took to their keyboards and began circulating hundreds of e-mails to fellow teachers, parents and administrative staff.

"I got involved through e-mail," said Jill Prince, a teacher at Gloria Floyd Elementary, "But you gotta be out there for it to work. I think the internet helps as far as getting people together, but you gotta get out on the street to make a difference."

The demonstration worked, in that it got the attention of every local news station. NBC6.net reported that they deceived dozens of e-mails regarding the protest as it was going on. The e-mails came from teachers and Dade County residents. All of the e-mails supported the teachers in their struggle.

"Helicopters flew overhead. I saw us on t.v." said Miriam Calderin, a first grade teacher who attended the demonstration held on Kendall Drive and 137th Avenue in Miami.

Calderin, like Prince, was told where and when to demonstrate through an e-mail she received, but she warns that the internet shouldn't be used as their primary tool.

"The fact that their having discussions using the internet does nothing. It just airs out their frustrations, but no one important is looking at it," Calderin said.

The mass e-mailing that lead to the Dade County teacher protest may not get them a raise, but it did raise a few eyebrows across the country. They made national news for a week straight and even got the attention of a few bloggers. Peter Rothberg, a writer for The Nation, wrote a blog on October 5th entitled "Teach the Children Well", about the protests and received 108 comments that same day. Most of the readers who commented sympathized with the teachers.

The teacher who organized the protest through Dade County Public Schools e-mail system, Shawn Bightol, was reassigned to the maintenance department just three days prior to the negotiation meeting between the teacher's union and the school board. The school board has yet to confirm whether it was a punishment or sheer coincidence.

Unfortunately for the school board, the damage has already been done. The debate over teachers' salaries has gained national attention. It has become one of the main issues of political candidates these past few weeks. During Tuesday's gubernatorial debate, the first question on the floor was whether or not teachers' salaries would be raised. Charlie Christ said that only teachers who are employed by schools who have scored in the top 25% on the FCAT should get a raise.

"Teachers salaries should be used to make sure they have the support they need to be a powerful teacher in the classroom, " said Jim Davis who is endorsed by the United Teachers of Dade.

Both candidates claim that they have a "plan" to raise teachers' salaries if they are elected.

The key to gaining national attention of this magnitude is to use the internet as a way to organize large groups of people for a single cause. E-mailing and blogging does nothing, if not proceeded by some kind of public demonstration. For example...

On January 21, 2003, Wired News uploaded the story, "Internet Strokes Anti-War Movement", on to their website. Wired reporter Leander Kahney credits the "organizing power of the internet" with the largest anti-war demonstration since the Vietnam anti-war movement.

The biggest difference between the Vietnam anti-war protest and the protest against the then "possible war in Iraq" was that Vietnam protests took years to reach the level that it did, while the protest against the Iraq War took just a few months. Anti-war websites and mailing lists spread information about the protest, which resulted in dozens of protests across the United States. Wired News states that the two biggest demonstrations were held in San Francisco and Washington, where about 100,000 protesters gathered.



Some websites, like InternationalANSWER, use the internet to organize protests on an international level. The acronym, ANSWER, stands for Act Now to Stop War & End Racism. The organization is planning a "Global Day of Action" for March 17, 2007. The demonstration is being promoted mainly through their website, which states that they are calling for mass protests in Washington D.C., Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago. Only time will tell whether their internet advertising and mass e-mailing will prove successful.

Sunday, October 01, 2006

"Welcome to the Kids On Fire Pentecostal Summer Camp. Orientation will begin shortly; followed by a play about raging war for God. Then we'll protest secularized government. And get your picket signs ready...'cause we're going on a field trip to the local abortion clinic."

That's what I imagine camp director, Becky Fisher, telling the new recruits (average age 7 to 12) the first day of summer camp at Devil's Lake, North Dakota. I was first made aware of this camp when Good Morning America aired the story 'Jesus Camp' Pastor Says She Does Not Manipulate Children. I was horrified to see children marching in time while Fisher shouted, "Take these prophesies and take what the Apostle Paul said and make war with them...This means war." During the short interview with Good Morning America, Fisher made no apologies and looked at the footage of her campers like a proud mother hen. In fact, Fisher is so proud that she has helped co-producers Heidi Ewing Grady promote the documentary, Jesus Camp, which focuses on Fisher's Kids on Fire Summer Camp.

In the ABC news clip, made famous by YouTube.com, a camper is shown saying "We're kind of being trained to be warriors in a much funner way." Is it possible to teach war in a fun way, when war inevitably means the suppression or extinction of a group of people?

Mike Papantonio, the liberal Methodist talk show host of Air America, told ABC News on Sept. 28, "Today as we sit and talk about the issue, there are children- what we call 'child soldiers' in Sudan- who carry AK-47s because for some reason they are emotionally led, for some reason it is us against them. They have this belief that their politics are right and other politics are wrong. Well, they are led that way at 5,6, and 7 years old not by reason. They are not even at the age of reason. They are not able to determine right from wrong."Most Americans watch the news clips of Sudanese children carrying guns twice the size of their little bodies for a cause they are not old enough to understand and ask 'how do these children become this way?' Well, lucky for us 'Jesus Camp' gives a window into the mind of a child destined to become a fanatical religious militant.

The documentary focuses on three campers: Tory, 10; Levi, 12; and Rachel, 9. In an article written by Ann Hornaday for the Washington Post, Hornaday stated Tory's mother homeschools her children and teaches them that global warming does not exist. She teaches that Creationism is "the only possible answer to all the questions". Most Evangelists believe the theory of Creationism, which states that the earth is only 6000 years old and that humans existed alongside dinosaurs. Therefore, they believe global warming does not exist because the earth is simply not old enough to be having that kind of problem.

Tory is also shown, in the film, dancing in her room to her favorite Christian rock music. She tells the camera "I have to make sure that that's God. People will notice when I'm just dancing for the flesh." Tory is only ten and she's worried about "dancing for the flesh." These children haven't even hit puberty yet and they are being asked to confront their sexuality. Worse still, these children are being trained to be anti-abortion protestors. While at camp, they are given plastic fetuses that they strap to their hands as they cry for their immortal souls. A speaker tells the children "One-third of your friends could be here tonight, but they never made it."

In the film, Levi declares that he was saved when he was five "because I wanted more out of life." Exactly how do you get "saved" at age five. Did divine intervention prevent him from eating dessert before dinner or drawing outside of the lines? Besides, how often have you heard a twelve year old say "I wanted more out of life. " That sounds more like someone going through a midlife crisis; perhaps someone like Pastor Fisher or her accomplice Rev. Tedd Haggard, who is now snubbing the film because he feels he has been misrepresented.

In an interview given to The Guardian, Haggard said "The war talk is allegorical. It doesn't mean we're going to establish a theocracy and force people to obey what they think is God's law." Really, Rev. Haggard, you're not trying to create a theocracy? Then why all the political talk in what's supposed to to be a religious summer camp? Why are children praying to a card board cut-out of President Bush and shouting for righteous judges? Why are young children attending abortion rallies with duct tape across their mouth with the word 'Life' boldly printed across?
But I guess if Rev. Haggard says that there is no political agenda then it must be true. I mean, he is a child of God and all.One of the most chilling parts of the movie is when Pastor Fisher tells the children "I want to see young people who are committed to the cause of Jesus Christ as the young people are committed to the cause of Islam. I want to see them radically laying down their lives for the gospel, as they are over in Pakistan and Israel and Palestine."

Congratulations Pastor Fisher and Rev. Haggard for shaping the minds of the future suicide bombers of America, mazel tof!