SHOUT OUT @Freeway on Being Questioned About His Faith at the Canadian Border

via Nah Right by eskay on 6/30/11

You’re a Black, Muslim rapper holding a passport with stamps from trips to Saudi Arabia and you’re trying to get through customs into Canada. The border agent starts asking you questions about your faith. There’s no way that ends well right?

Previously: Freeway Reviews Cars 2

Race, Class, and DCPS


School Segregation

The public school system in DC has fallen out of the national conversation since the departure of Michelle Rhee.

But locally, the debate rages on.

The Washington Post just posted a profile of Bill Kerlina, a young principal initially lured to DC from Montgomery County who has now resigned to open a gourmet cupcake shop.

If anyone had a shot at making it in DCPS, it was Kerlina. He was placed at one of the few high performing elementary schools in the system. In stark contrast to most of DCPS, Hearst Elementary School is beloved by parents and the majority of students are proficient in math and reading. (DCPS averages are dismal, with about 50% of kids in any given school meeting proficiency.)

After enticing Kerlina with promises of a promotion (Montgomery County has low turnover rates for principals) and dangling the mission to close the black-white achievement gap, the transition proved to be rough. While Kerlina loved the students and parents, the lack of support for teachers combined with a school reform that was more hype that action proved to be too much. Compensation factored into his decision. However, Kerlina also shared one more fascinating detail:

A few days before he quit, Kerlina received his annual evaluation from Instructional Superintendent Amanda Alexander. It was a positive appraisal, school officials confirmed, and Henderson sent Kerlina a letter of reappointment. But Alexander raised a concern, he said: Why were there not more white families at Hearst?

The question is sensitive in the D.C. system, where only about a third of students attend neighborhood schools. It is especially sensitive in affluent and largely white areas of Northwest Washington. At Hearst, 70 percent of the 241 students come from outside the neighborhood. Most are African Americans.

D.C. officials say they simply want more neighbors in neighborhood schools. But Kerlina took offense at Alexander’s question, which implied that as a white male, he should have been more successful at recruiting. The next day, in an e-mail to Alexander that he wrote but decided not to send, he laid out a taxonomy of Northwest parents in an effort to show the hurdles to recruiting more neighborhood families.

The well-to-do private school families, “the majority” in the neighborhood, he wrote, were a lost cause. “I have not courted them and do not plan to do so, since they will never consider DCPS,” Kerlina wrote. [...]

Finally, he wrote, there were families with racial prejudices. He said this conclusion came from a series of conversations he had with prospective neighborhood parents “that delicately asked about the number of out-of-boundary families and made reference to the ‘diversity’ of Hearst.”

“They will never come to Hearst because of the number of out-of-boundary black families,” he wrote.

One way to lure neighboring families — restricting the number of out-of-boundary seats — would be a “horrible mistake,” Kerlina wrote, as “the diversity at Hearst is what makes it a great school.”

The comments, as usual on education pieces, are a mix of outright racism, commentary on racism, and conversations about class:

cleancut77
Finally, he wrote, there were families with racial prejudices. He said this conclusion came from a series of conversations he had with prospective neighborhood parents “that delicately asked about the number of out-of-boundary families and made reference to the ‘diversity’ of Hearst
+++++++++++++++++++++++

Shocking!! So the white liberals in DC are not big on “diversity” either. Then why are they pushing it on everyone else? Also how is a school 70% Black “diverse”?

cheetahcats
Perhaps it’s just that many parents choose not to risk their children’s safety by exposing them to bused thugs who have been deemed “behavior nightmares.”

commonsense42
As a former teacher, “behavior nightmares” come in all shades of the rainbow. Don’t kid yourselves and think that only black students are problems….and that only white students are perfect little angels with high GPAs.

thetensionmakesitwork
Very true CS. Could we go further and not make it a race issue? My experience is that children with behavior issues generally come from households with single parents, low prior academic attainments, and low incomes. The amount of melanin, which is based primarily on where their ancestors lived relative to the equator, has nothing to do with behavior.

gusaxa
Kerlina speaks of the problem of out of bound students who are behavior problems and disrupt the school. But when white neighborhood parents speak of these same issues – well, they’re racist and obviously don’t understand the value of “diversity.” WaPo, please for the love of god strike the use of the word “diversity” from the paper. It means nothing. Diversity in what? income? race? education level? ethnicity? Or, is it code for “low-income blacks”? If it’s that, then just say it. Maybe it’s about time DCPS focus on educating children, period. Create a SAFE, STABLE, and ENGAGING education environment and they will come. Unfortunately, too many DC Public Schools reflect the dysfunctions of the communities they serve. No one can blame a white, black, hispanic family for sending their child to Sidwell Friends if afforded the option. And, yes, there are black DC families who send their children to elite private schools.

LuvDCArea
Things like this are why we left D.C. and moved to the Maryland suburbs. We couldn’t afford private schools, for our children, when we lived in D.C., and even though we lived in a good neighborhood, in D.C., the public schools were terrible.
It’s a shame that the system puts good teachers and principals in a double-bind; do well but we won’t give you the resources and training to do so. This sounds about right, from what we experienced, a dysfunctional system, even though there were some very dedicated, talented educators who were trying their best to make the situation better, they were fighting a huge uphill battle, which they couldn’t win.
This makes me continue to support D.C. Statehood. Perhaps, then, some of these problems would lessen.

cutsdeep
and then… that’s why I left montgomery county….

we could afford private school…. but were disgusted funding both our child’s education AND that of another….

So we moved.

where is that tax base coming from next year, maryland?

to issues of bullying and violence (which generally didn’t factor into the out of towner take):

POLOinDC
I went to DCPS from elementary school to high school, and finally graduated in 1985, without getting killed, thank God. After reading this article it would seem nothing has changed. The problems described in this article are the same ones that were present back then, most notably bad students with behavioral problems. I don’t know why school systems allow these bad apples to remain in school and basically turn the entire school up side down. It seems like school systems are more concerned with the rights of the few bad students then what is best for all of the students as a whole. There is a reason why some schools have so many out of boundary students, most of the neighborhood schools, especially in SE, are overrun with bullies and thugs. I begged my mom to send me to Gonzaga, but unfortunately we had no way to afford that, so I just crossed my fingers each day and hoped I would make it back home safe. And going home wasn’t all that better either, because after navigating the thugs and bullies at school you had to do it all over again once you got back to your neighborhood. When I read that some White families didn’t want their kids going to school with some of these kids, I can’t really blame them and while some it might be due to racism, trust me not all of it is. Some of these kids are just off the chart bad and I mean kids in first and second grade who are already showing signs of thuggery and aggressiveness. And a lot of times when you meet the parents you say to yourself ahhhh now I see where it comes from.

Until DCPS wakes up and deals with this menace, nothing will ever change. All the teacher evaluations in the world can not not make up for having to deal with these little terrorist on a daily basis.There is hardly any learning going on when the school day is constantly being interrupted with chaos and shenanigans. I don’t know how the remaining teachers do it, but I couldn’t at least not without a stun gun or some other weapon near by at all times. Teacher burn out is not the exception with DCPS but the norm. Good luck to those that stay, because there are truly some wonderful teachers in the system. Students like myself, who were trapped due to economics, appreciate your toughness to remain.

Clifton Galloway
H.D Woodson class of 85

to a take down of the issues with DC’s infrastructure:

lulu99
It should be acknowledged that Kerlina was nearly kind in his assessment of DCPS central office staff and their practices. The whole truth would be unprintable. The issues he raises wouldn’t even make water cooler conversation at my school. If we had a water cooler that is. Every teacher at my school sees more inane, ill conceived nonsense from Admin every day than he touched on. From parents, students and DCPS central office staff. Teachers are often little more than sh-t filters for all the crap showered on them.
Most well functioning systems do a national search for their Superintendent (our Chancellor). DC? No way, lets give another newbie a chance. Most well functioning school system have a curriculum for teachers to work with. DC? No. Most good system have alignment between Standards and classroom materials. DC? No way. We get random new stuff willy nilly. Why is it nobody is writing about these serious shorcomings? Ledership? Nonexistent in DC.

mr_silverman
What lulu99 mentions at the end of the post is easy to miss but important. When I worked at DCPS there were storage closets packed 15 feet deep and 8 feet high with the jumbled remnants of bygone curriculum materials. I spent one evening wading though the mess and found the scraps of dozens of different programs–much of the material still in the box. Some teacher’s editions and science programs dated back 20 or 30 years. One of the least examined problems in DCPS is that near-constant turnover in leadership is accompanied by near-constant turnover in curriculum. The system, as a result, is completely schizophrenic. As one of the 30-year veterans put it when confronted in a staff meeting by yet another new “curriculum specialist” with yet another new acronym-based reading program, “I was here before that bulls-it, and I’ll be here after it.” S-it filters, indeed.

If Rhee’s approach–get rid of the bad teachers–had beed successful, Fenty would be mayor today, there’s no question about it. But you can’t hope to reform teaching without first reforming a dysfunctional system. I don’t claim to know how to fix DCPS, but at least I know the law of gravity works: s-it still rolls down hill.

DC public schools have been in the spotlight for a few decades now, for various reasons. When I was younger, I remember reports on the news about Maryland residents trying to sneak their children into elementary schools in DC, which caused a lot of problems.

But for this piece, I want to focus on how diversity has become a code word, depending on the person using the term.

I went to three different elementary schools as a kid: Harmony Hills (Wheaton, MD); Anne Beers (Washington, DC), and Weller Road (Silver Spring, MD).

It should go without saying, but my mother moved to Montgomery County in hopes of providing us with a better education. Montgomery County, at the time, prided itself on progressive principles. I’ve written about the housing policies enacted in the 1970s and their influence on counteracting gentrification. When I was in school there, multiculturalism was a huge deal. I remember, from kindergarden on, that we were all told that differences make us special, and we should expect to have diversity in our lives. (I lived on the southern side of Montgomery County in a heavily urban area – the messages may have been different on the richer, northern side and the more rural areas.) So for me, diversity was always presented as something to strive for.

However, as I got older, I noticed people using the term diversity in a negative way, as some of the commenters on the Washington Post site did. They don’t feel as though they have gained anything from diversity. They don’t feel like it is of particular value to them. And they don’t want to pay for the education of those “others.”

But here’s what I find fascinating about the whole thing – the numbers and the attitudes do not lie.

DC has always struggled with segregation in the city, with clear race and class divisions. (What, you think the Gold Coasters didn’t have problems with class?) Montgomery County is starting to feel the same thing, just on a more delayed time schedule. But if you click on the links that I provided for the schools I attended, an interesting pattern begins to emerge. In DC, where people generally stick to their own, you have a dismal educational system, where gains mean that around 60% of students are at a proficient level in reading and math skills. This is considered a huge leap of progress.

In Montgomery County, where roughly 80% of kids hit proficiency markers, there are crisis and improvement plans on the website. Educators noticed that Latino students, special education students, and students with English as a Second Language were dipping below grade level with about 53% proficiency for targets in some groups. So there is an action plan to fix the problems.

Education is a community wide problem. If the community is fractured around the importance of this issue, it should not be a surprise why the problems persist.

If diversity is seen as the problem (“my child deserves a better education than those other kids”), all the solutions will involve things like charter schools, private schools, privatization of public schools, restriction of out of boundary seats at the schools that parents already desperately fight over.

However, if the idea of diversity is embraced, as in “all children deserve a good education”, the entire community benefits. Diversity means acknowleding, as Jane Van Galen writes for the Classism Exposed blog, that different starting points influence children’s outcomes. And all children just do not have the same types of access:

[A New York Times] article describes how in elite schools in New York City, wealthy parents anxious about grades and college admissions are investing tens of thousands of dollars in private tutors to sustain their children’s competitive edge. One parent concedes that her children’s tutoring bill climbed to six figures in a recent year. The schools are discouraging this for multiple reasons, but the parents will not be dissuaded from hiring “stealth” outside support for their own children.

As one of the tutoring providers explains:

    It’s no longer O.K. to have one-on-one coaching for sailing but not academics.

The teachers with whom I work are not preparing children for recreational sailing.

They’re charged with preparing diverse children for a productive place in the raveling economic fabric in their communities, to be confident and vocal citizens, to be ready to go on to whatever forms of higher education they choose. And increasingly, they are preparing children for cruel competition for access to any of these things.

And if these children do not eventually find productive and dignified work, find their voices in the public square, or thrive in college, blame will fall on the shoulders of their weary teachers, as blame is falling on them now when test scores predict the odds against their students doing any of these things.

Yet as this article illustrates so vividly, academic achievement is not, and never has been, primarily about what teachers do within the four walls of their classrooms.

Many of my teacher education students will start internships in the fall in schools in which families move mid-week because the eviction notice has been posted, multiple languages are spoken at home, parents struggle to sustain dignity after years of unemployment, and ever-more crowded classrooms are taught be ever-more exhausted teachers.

As someone who lives in DC, it’s disappointing to see the choices made in this city, time and time again.

(Image Credit: IsThatLegal)

LLS ... WATCH: The Most Epic Rap Battle In The History Of Epic Rap Battles

via Comedy on HuffingtonPost.com by Carol Hartsell on 6/17/11


You mess with Supa Hot Fire, you get burned. We really don't want to tell you anymore about this video than that.

But before we roll it, a word of warning: you will be quoting Supa Hot Fire for the next week. So just accept that about yourself now.


WATCH:



10 Dumb-Ass Dating Habits That Need To Stop

via Very Smart Brothas by The Champ on 6/6/11

black couple1 400x265 attraction

Um, what did I tell you about putting your fingers there? At least put them in the microwave or something first!

We all know the story

Boy approaches girl at annual Delta Sigma Theta waffle-making contest/boat ride. Girl, impressed with Boy’s uncanny resemblance to Derek Fisher, gives Boy her email address and Twitter handle. Boy and Girl connect through each other’s appreciation for ‘that’s what she said” jokes and squirters, and they decide to go to a movie and dinner. After a nice — not spectacular, but pleasant — date, Boy drops Girl off at her place, walks her to her door, and they exchange the type of hug that allows each to assess the other’s body (both were pleased) without it being too obvious. Boy drives off, and Girl enters the house, pleasantly surprised with how well the date went. It’s late, so Girl hops in the shower. When she gets out, she notices that her phone is vibrating. She checks it, and sees the following message from Boy: “I miss you soooooo much right now. I didn’t think it was possible to miss a woman like this. Well, a woman other than my momma.”

Girl immediately checks the time on her phone to make sure that she didn’t unknowingly fall into a coma for 6 weeks. When realizing that she hasn’t been unconscious for 6 weeks and that it’s only been 26 minutes since she last saw Boy, Girl immediately deletes Boy’s number, gets in bed, and fantasizes about Christina Hendricks while playing “Man Down” on her iPad.

The waaaay too soon “I miss you” text — sent to a person you haven’t even had the chance to freakin’ miss yet — is quite possibly one of the few things on Earth that’s disliked by all. No one enjoys receiving them, and no one wishes to be the person who gets clowned for sending one.

Despite this unanimous disdain, if we’re smitten enough, many of us ignore the voice in our head telling us to settle the f*ck down, and we somehow still end up sending them. It’s almost as if we’re being controlled by a sadistic puppeteer hell-bent on sabotaging our potential sexing one cringe at a time.

Anyway, the “too soon to be missed I miss you text” is just one of the many dumb-ass dating actions and habits that we still practice, despite the fact that we’re completely aware of exactly how inefficient, insignificant, or just plain f*cking stupid it happens to be.

Here’s nine more.

2. The dry finger finger-pop

Outside of the two places where this is an acceptable act — 8th grade semi-formals and dimly-lit Q house parties — there’s never an instance where shoving an index finger up a chick’s whoo-ha is going to produce anything other than brushburns, wincing, and smelly fingernails. Yet, despite the fact that I know exactly how anti-sexy this is, whenever I see a bare vagina, I still get an uncontrollable urge to stick a thumb in it. Go figure.

3. The double date

Ok, raise your hands if you’ve ever been on a fun double date. If your hands are up, you’re probably either a baby boomer or vegan, and you surely must be lost. You’ll probably have more fun here.

If neither, you surely understand how the double date is exactly like masturbating on a plane — good in theory until some turbulence makes everyone around you awkward, angry, and sticky.

4. The first date dinner and a movie

A first date is supposed to be an opportunity to talk to and learn more about your perspective paramour, and sitting in a theater for 120 minutes kind of defeats this purpose. Also, since we’re in a recession and since it costs something like $149 to buy an IMAX ticket now, this is actually two dates in one.

With this being the case, if we’re going by input/output entitlement ratios (ie:  ”if a woman accepts a drink from a man at a club, she has to spend at least 75 seconds talking to him”), “dinner and movie” should equal “definite anal sex.

5. The unprompted dick pic

As New York State Rep. Weiner has proven, nothing good can come out of sending an unprompted pic of your johnson to a woman. Seriously, I’ve yet to hear one instance of a woman getting a handsome wang in her inbox and immediately calling the wang’s owner for a ride on his warthog.

(This, btw, doesn’t apply to men. Seriously, if we’re even moderately attracted to you, you can send a pic of your f*cking shoulder blade and it’ll still make a guy immediately write back “Gotdamn, you have some sexy-ass shoulder blades. Why don’t you come over and rub them on my face“)

6. The female to male hook-up

In the history of the recorded world, the “female to male” hook up — where a woman tells one of her guy friends that she knows a chick who’d be perfect for him — has never worked. Why, well women are completely and undeniably awful judges of what type of woman a man might find attractive. Seriously, not only do you all suck at this, the depths of your sucktitude are so legendary, astonishing, awe-inspiring, and brilliant that it has to be intentional.

Which it is.

7. The break

If the double date is like masturbating on a plane, the “break” — where a non-married couple agrees to some sort of half-assed separation from each other — is like exactly what happens when a guy having sex has to think about something unsexy in order to keep from climaxing. Maybe her grandma will help you, but it’s just delaying the inevitable.

Speaking of “breaks”…

8. The long-distance relationship.

Many are unaware of this, but ”longdistancerelationship” is actually Arabic for “you’re not in a relationship anymore, you f*cking idiot!

9. The randomly arbitrary waiting period

The more I think about it, the more I’m convinced that milk and vaginas are very similar.

Think about it: Both tend to have arbitrary waiting periods/expiration dates attached to them that no one actually pays any attention to. Both go good with chocolate syrup, both spoil if you leave them in the sun too long, and they both have a peculiar relationship with cats. #thingsthatmakeyougohmmm

10. The drunk dial

A close cousin of the too soon “I miss you” text, the drunk dial is probably the impetus behind like 45% of the cases in family and civil court.

Why do we continue to do it? Well, once in a blue moon you’ll actually get a person on the other line who’s willing to do everything you want to do to them at that hour. Just hope that your drunk ass is actually calling an ex or a crush instead of the soup kitchen you volunteer at on the weekends.

Anyway, people of VSB.com, that’s it for me. Can you think of any other dumb-ass dating habits that we need to stop doing?

—The Champ

Please help keep Liz off the pole, Panama off the block, and The Champ on the wagon and buy “Your Degrees Wont Keep You Warm at Night: The Very Smart Brothas Guide to Dating, Mating, and Fighting Crime”

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4 Thoughts About Rihanna and Her “Man Down” Video

via Very Smart Brothas by The Champ on 6/7/11

1. The rape-revenge fantasy that takes place in “Man Down” is one of the oldest and most effective ways to tell a story. A person is wronged, and they spend the rest of the story tracking down and paying back those who’ve wronged them. We root for the protagonist, and the villian’s comeuppance is cathartic to the entire audience.

In fact, two of my favorite movies — the Kill Bill series (which I count as one movie) and Inglourious Basterds — revolve around this concept.

What separates ”Man Down” — and what is probably causing much of the negative attention it’s receiving, not racism or sexism – is the fact that the villain’s payback comes at the beginning. When his gruesome murder is the first thing you see when watching the video, it’s hard to sympathize with the hero. Yes, we eventually see that he was responsible for a rape, but he’s already a dead man so we just don’t care as much.

Just imagine if Kill Bill began with The Black Mamba slicing and dicing through O-Ren and the Crazy 88. The entire movie changes, and Beatrix goes from a wronged woman on a mission to a mass murderer with a stupid name in a stupider jumpsuit.

Still, it’s a f*cking five minute long music video. Who the hell cares if it sends the wrong message about…anything. Maybe the story should have been shown in a sequential order. Maybe Rihanna could have had the guy arrested instead of murking him. Maybe she shouldn’t have gone to a party dressed as Cubana Lust and twerked on a guy with a buck 50 across his face. Maybe they could have included 5 minutes of gratuitous boob and nipple shots instead of three. Who f*cking cares?

Just enjoy the video…or don’t enjoy the video, but don’t call for it to be banned because one idiot out of the billion people who’ll watch it might decide to go Charles Bronson on a rapist.

2. I have to admit that I don’t watch very many videos. In fact, before “Man Down,” Kanye’s “Runaway” was the last one I’ve watched in its entirety, and I honestly can’t remember the last one I watched before that.

I wonder if this apathy is unique to people like me — people who’ve aged out of the music video target audience range — or if videos themselves have just lost a bit of their cultural relevance. They just don’t seem to be the same star-making vehicle that they were a decade ago. More importantly, I’m not certain if kids today anxiously await videos the same way we did for the premieres of songs like “Mo Money, Mo Problems,” “California Love,” and “Triumph,” but it really doesn’t seem like they do.

Anyway, I’m making this point because what happens at the 26 second mark is the most graphically violent thing I’ve ever seen in a music video, and I can’t tell if this was unusually graphic or just par for the course with today’s fare.

Sure, I’ve seen videos with implied violence — “99 Problems,” “Many Men,” and “Stan” immediately come to mind — and I’ve seen hundreds of videos where the artist rapped about violent acts, but I’ve never seen something as graphic as when Rihanna steps out of the shadows and shoots a man her rapist in the throat; a shot that clearly jerks his head back and splatters his blood before it kills him.

(Also, Rihanna — or, rather, this character Rihanna is playing — must be a Navy Seal or some shit, because those are the only people on the planet skilled enough to be 20 feet away and still hit a moving target in a crowd with a freakin revolver. When she’s done serving time for murder, we need to send her ass to Afghanistan)

3. Rihanna has slowly become everything fervent Beyonce critics have always (and unfairly) wanted Bey to be. Basically, she’s, well, interesting, and this interestingness (even at the expense of actual talent) makes her compelling in a way that the ridiculously talented and hard-working Beyonce can never be.

She has an interesting voice, she dresses in an interesting manner, she makes interesting videos, and she says interesting things (her “Cuz I’m black bitch!!!” Twitter take down of a critical fan might be one of the most surprisingly awesome things that’s ever happened on the internet) But, her appeal mainly lies with the fact that she’s a moth — a pretty girl attracted to the flame.

Unlike uber-attractive women who appear to be completely vapid (ie: Beyonce, Kim Kardashian, etc¹) completely normal (ie: Nia Long), or completely burdened by their beauty (ie: Hallie Berry), the moth (ie: Angelina Jolie, Marilyn Monroe, etc) resonates and transfixes through sheer force of personality and the fact that their knack for questionable decision-making humanizes them. They are “The Blower’s Daughters,” the women we just can’t take our eyes off of because we don’t know if they want to f*ck or murder us (or both)

In Rihanna’s case, this even affects how we perceive her music, which, despite her megastardom, remains relatively “eh.” We all know that she doesn’t have the best vocal range or sing the most compelling songs, but her Rihannaness has a way of making her songs interesting by osmosis.

I mean, “Man Down” could have easily been a throwaway track on any of the several Reggae Gold CDs I owned in college, but because Rihanna and Rihanna’s boobs are involved, this song will probably be a hit.

Speaking of boobs…

4. One of my favorite “Seinfeld” episodes revolves around whether Jerry’s girlfriend’s boobs are fake. He finds out that she frequents the same gym as Elaine, and he asks Elaine if she can somehow verify for him while they’re in the locker room. Elaine agrees, chaos ensues, and the episode eventually culminates with Jerry’s girlfriend finding out about Jerry and Elaine’s plans.

Obviously upset, she storms out of Jerry’s apartment, but not before leaving one parting shot.

“And by the way, they’re real, and they’re spectacular

Those who remember my 181 word ode to Erykah Badu’s death-defying ass are probably expecting me to write something similar about Rihanna’s boobs. But while tempted to expound, all that really needs to be said about them is they’re (hopefully) real, and they’re f*cking spectacular.

¹To their credit, I think this vapidness is an act

—The Champ

Please help keep Panama off the block, and The Champ on the wagon and buy “Your Degrees Wont Keep You Warm at Night: The Very Smart Brothas Guide to Dating, Mating, and Fighting Crime”

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