So
proud of one of my students who self-selected a favorite Tom Robbins
quote of mine for their project which was displayed at Open House
tonight! #LGTB #(SIC)
Thursday, May 25, 2017
Friday, March 24, 2017
WSJ Uses Their Words
OUCH!!
When even the WSJ notices your "seemingly endless stream of exaggerations, evidence-free accusations, implausible denials and other falsehoods,” and then says, "The President clings to his assertion [that Obama tapped him] like a drunk to an empty gin bottle,” you might be in trouble! (Please note, they DIDN'T call him a liar.)
Nice job using your words, WSJ!
When even the WSJ notices your "seemingly endless stream of exaggerations, evidence-free accusations, implausible denials and other falsehoods,” and then says, "The President clings to his assertion [that Obama tapped him] like a drunk to an empty gin bottle,” you might be in trouble! (Please note, they DIDN'T call him a liar.)
Nice job using your words, WSJ!
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Can't Beat Drum
First, both sides should try to respond to the standard issue folks on the other side, rather than pretending that they're all represented by the loudest, most extreme voices. It's easy to mount arguments against the extremists, but those arguments never actually persuade anyone. Second, we liberals should keep pushing for more tolerance of cultural change, but we should also recognize that lots of perfectly nice, perfectly ordinary people get nervous about it a lot faster than we do. That doesn't make them bad people, it just means they're a few notches away from us on the bell curve. - Kevin Drum, Mother Jones
Read the whole thing here.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Shiny Tweets
I
wonder if our "liberal" media will scrutinize the GOP's new health care
plan... Seems like its sliding by, under the radar with no CBO report
on cost and no numbers on how many Americans it's going to affect.
Is it me or are we being distracted by debating employment numbers, Russian hacking, Sessions asking 46 attorneys to resign, and the head of EPA saying CO2 doesn't cause climate change?
Could those crazy tweets from 45 actually be diversionary tactics??
Will the MSM fall for it again?
Let's keep our eyes on the prize, media... American lives hang in the balance.
Is it me or are we being distracted by debating employment numbers, Russian hacking, Sessions asking 46 attorneys to resign, and the head of EPA saying CO2 doesn't cause climate change?
Could those crazy tweets from 45 actually be diversionary tactics??
Will the MSM fall for it again?
Let's keep our eyes on the prize, media... American lives hang in the balance.
Monday, March 06, 2017
Listen to Your Elders
I couldn't agree with the wisdom of this nonagenarian more...
Remember, 63,000,000 people may have voted for Trump, but Dems only lost by about 79,000 votes in 3 states, and some of those people had even voted for Obama in 2008 & 2012.
That's roughly .1%!!
Could we win those votes back in 2020 if we worked smarter?
Remember, 63,000,000 people may have voted for Trump, but Dems only lost by about 79,000 votes in 3 states, and some of those people had even voted for Obama in 2008 & 2012.
That's roughly .1%!!
Could we win those votes back in 2020 if we worked smarter?
Thursday, March 02, 2017
Happy Birthday Dr. Suess!
That moment when you're reading Dr. Seuss's ABC book to your daughter and you get to this page... lol!
Sunday, January 01, 2017
Saturday, November 12, 2016
Mourning in America
These last few weeks have been rough for me with the passing
of my padre and the Presidential election – of late my feelings ricochet from
denial to despair, grief to anger, and everything in between – and I’ve not
really known how to respond to these highly fraught events.
But one thing I’ve had the luxury – the privilege – to NOT
feel is scared, and for that I’m thankful.
The post below addresses the fear that many marginalized
groups are feeling right now.
I hope Trump supporters can empathize with these fears and do
their part to help quell them.
xo
“If you say you voted for [Trump] based on gun rights or economic issues, or because you think Hillary really was that awful, and in spite of his rhetoric, rather than because of it, I believe you.If you're in my life, I clearly don't think you're a vile hateful person.But if you're now watching protests across the country and you don't understand why, or think they are just being sore losers, let me break something down for you.These people aren't just angry or sad that someone they didn't support won the election, they're scared.They're black Americans who hear talk of law and order and remember a racially charged stop and frisk program, or see an emboldened KKK holding a celebratory parade.They're Muslim Americans who worry that spitting in their face is now okay and violations of their rights to assemble and their rights to privacy are about to come.They're LGBT Americans who fear not just of the loss of marriage rights or restaurants gaining the right not to serve them, but of an administration that thinks it's more important to research electrocuting the gay out of them than AIDS.They're Hispanic and Latino Americans who are scared their children will be bullied in schools, and their families ripped apart while their culture is mocked.They're women who are wondering if we've normalized groping, and if their career endeavors will be judged by their face and body, and not their mindsI believe you when you say you didn't vote for any of these things. Most of America wasn't thrilled with the choices we had in this election.But if you didn't know that this is why they're protesting, if you think it's really just about free tuition or more government giveaways, then you, like the elite liberals you love to castigate, have also not been listening.If you're tired of being called a bigot, then you need to use the same voice you used on Tuesday and speak out against these things fully and clearly.It's not enough that you didn't say them yourself.You need to reassure your friends and family members who feel like they no longer have a seat at the table that you still stand with them, even if your priorities were different on Tuesday.If you aren't willing to do that, then you have no right to call for unity." - Michael Rex
Sunday, October 30, 2016
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Going High
A high school classmate of mine, Leesa Coble, recently posted this on FB:
Two days later, I responded:
“'Who’s clever enough to think of something we can do to change this guy’s mind?’”
That’s something I’ve been wondering aloud for many years now – how do you change someone’s mind politically?
Most answer with some variation on the futility of such efforts – there simply is no way to dissuade people with different political leanings – but I don’t believe that and Matthew Stevenson certainly didn’t either. Maybe we just need to look at our tactics.
Could we liberals learn something from how Matthew helped change Derek’s mind?
Or should we continue to believe it’s impossible because some of our favorite tactics (a facile meme, a sick burn, or le snark du jour) tend not to persuade our political opponents but do the opposite? (As one student in the article states, “'Ostracizing Derek won’t accomplish anything.’”)
I’m a little ashamed to admit that when “Mathew decided his best chance to affect Derek’s thinking was not to ignore him or confront him, but simply to include him,” telling his friends “to treat him like anyone else,” I had to choke back a mordant chuckle.
Was that idea “clever” or simply kind, human?
Now, granted, it’s pretty easy for me to sit here as a cisgender male with plenty of privilege to say, “Be kind to people that don’t like you,” since I obviously haven’t felt the hate as fiercely as people in marginalized communities have. But look how being kind worked out for Matthew, whose Jewish ancestry ascribes him to one of our most historically marginalized groups.
He helped change a hateful heart to an accepting one.
And, sorry to be “that guy” with the MLK quotes, but this reminds me of a passage in his book, Stride Toward Freedom, when Dr. King talks about the people that bombed his house with his wife and newborn daughter inside.
Doesn’t that sound like Derek’s childhood? King recognized and acknowledged the humanity in his enemies just as Matthew did in Derek, and they both got positive results.
King told the crowd that had gathered at his house after the bombing:
Or as our FLOTUS put it, “When they go low, we go high!”
I try, but Matthew Stevenson most definitely does.
Thanks again for sharing! :)
THIS PIECE! I'm in awe of how many right notes this piece hits about how truly dangerous and genuinely deeply rooted in white robes and hoods Trump's anti-immigration stance is. Yet, the writer barely mentions him, it's sublime. Jason Cordero, perhaps this speaks to some of the questions you posted about earlier. This turnaround gives me hope in humanity when it feels like so many have lost theirs. God, I wish I wrote this.
Two days later, I responded:
Thank you for sharing this with me,
Leesa! I certainly agree – it’s a
very inspiring article. Sorry it’s
taken so long for me to respond… :/
Nevertheless, here’s where I think the rubber meets the road in this piece, when a student asks a question in the school’s online forum similar to the ones (I think) you were referring to:
Nevertheless, here’s where I think the rubber meets the road in this piece, when a student asks a question in the school’s online forum similar to the ones (I think) you were referring to:
“'Who’s clever enough to think of something we can do to change this guy’s mind?’”
That’s something I’ve been wondering aloud for many years now – how do you change someone’s mind politically?
Most answer with some variation on the futility of such efforts – there simply is no way to dissuade people with different political leanings – but I don’t believe that and Matthew Stevenson certainly didn’t either. Maybe we just need to look at our tactics.
Could we liberals learn something from how Matthew helped change Derek’s mind?
Or should we continue to believe it’s impossible because some of our favorite tactics (a facile meme, a sick burn, or le snark du jour) tend not to persuade our political opponents but do the opposite? (As one student in the article states, “'Ostracizing Derek won’t accomplish anything.’”)
I’m a little ashamed to admit that when “Mathew decided his best chance to affect Derek’s thinking was not to ignore him or confront him, but simply to include him,” telling his friends “to treat him like anyone else,” I had to choke back a mordant chuckle.
Was that idea “clever” or simply kind, human?
Now, granted, it’s pretty easy for me to sit here as a cisgender male with plenty of privilege to say, “Be kind to people that don’t like you,” since I obviously haven’t felt the hate as fiercely as people in marginalized communities have. But look how being kind worked out for Matthew, whose Jewish ancestry ascribes him to one of our most historically marginalized groups.
He helped change a hateful heart to an accepting one.
And, sorry to be “that guy” with the MLK quotes, but this reminds me of a passage in his book, Stride Toward Freedom, when Dr. King talks about the people that bombed his house with his wife and newborn daughter inside.
“They say the things they say about us and treat us as they do because they have been taught these things. From the cradle to the grave, it is instilled in them that the Negro is inferior. Their parents probably taught them that; their schools they attended taught them that; the books they read, even their churches and minister, often taught them that.”
Doesn’t that sound like Derek’s childhood? King recognized and acknowledged the humanity in his enemies just as Matthew did in Derek, and they both got positive results.
King told the crowd that had gathered at his house after the bombing:
“'If you have weapons, take them home…’ I then urged them to leave peacefully, ‘We must love our white brothers,’ I said, ‘no matter what they do to us. We must make them know that we love them… This is what we must live by. We must meet hate with love.’”
Or as our FLOTUS put it, “When they go low, we go high!”
I try, but Matthew Stevenson most definitely does.
Thanks again for sharing! :)
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Outliers Who Support A Liar
I’ve heard many things said about Trump supporters but here are a few
myths that my amazing colleagues, lovely friends, and loving family
members who support him have dispelled for me:
Trump supporters are stupid. Sorry, almost without exception the people I’ve talked to who support him are very smart, extremely intelligent, and have college degrees (some with Masters) not to mention that many, like my colleagues at school, work with some of the most under-served populations in our society, which leads me to…
They are hateful. Again, not from my experience. All of the aforementioned are thoughtful, caring, loving people whose generosity knows no bounds. I see it every day.
And finally…
Public schools are almost exclusively liberal. Haha, I know! I was shocked, too, but it’s NOT true. At least from my experience, many teachers support Trump (and many are female, too!)
Which begs the question: Liberals, what are we doing wrong?
Why can’t we get these loving, lovely people to vote for our candidate??
Trump supporters are stupid. Sorry, almost without exception the people I’ve talked to who support him are very smart, extremely intelligent, and have college degrees (some with Masters) not to mention that many, like my colleagues at school, work with some of the most under-served populations in our society, which leads me to…
They are hateful. Again, not from my experience. All of the aforementioned are thoughtful, caring, loving people whose generosity knows no bounds. I see it every day.
And finally…
Public schools are almost exclusively liberal. Haha, I know! I was shocked, too, but it’s NOT true. At least from my experience, many teachers support Trump (and many are female, too!)
Which begs the question: Liberals, what are we doing wrong?
Why can’t we get these loving, lovely people to vote for our candidate??
Thursday, October 06, 2016
They are NOT Klingons!!
"What's a Kardashian?" - Overheard conversation between two 5th graders...
Haha, I KNEW i had a good class this year!!
Haha, I KNEW i had a good class this year!!
Friday, September 30, 2016
My College Educated Sister is a Trump Supporter
Alas, it's true! I still love her all the same though.
After posting the Nation article and comment on Wednesday, my sister vehemently pushed back... The following is my response:
After posting the Nation article and comment on Wednesday, my sister vehemently pushed back... The following is my response:
Thanks for the thoughtful comment, sis!
Interesting first question… to my very imprecise, clumsy
statement…
Honestly, I’d rather not think Left/Right – it’s too
divisive – Divide and Conquer merely serves Plutocrats, allowing them to loot
and plunder while the Red and Blue are so busy beating each other black and
blue, we don’t notice.
In other words, if the 99% of us (which mathematically
speaking includes the 26% of Americans that identify as Republican, the 29%
that are Democrats, and the 42% that are Independent, according to a recent
Gallup Poll) stopped bickering and worked together, we could make some progress
in this country.
For example, have you ever seen these data from the OECD?
Health care spending,
per person, 2011:
United States: $8508
Canada: $4522
Germany: $4495
France: $4118
Australia: $3800
United Kingdom: $3405
Japan: $3213
Spain: $3072
Italy: $3012
United States: $8508
Canada: $4522
Germany: $4495
France: $4118
Australia: $3800
United Kingdom: $3405
Japan: $3213
Spain: $3072
Italy: $3012
We’re getting fleeced! Privatized medicine is a racket!
Both Left and Right should be up in arms about that!
Why don’t we save money and socialize medicine like most of
the industrialized world?
You’re correct “socialism is not how this country was
founded,” but do you really want to get into our nation’s brutal racial history
with regard to Africans and Native Americans that were killed, forcibly taken
from their land, and/or enslaved to work for free for others’ profit?
Yes, “hard working Americans should be rewarded for their
efforts,” (and I am, thank you), but does that negate their responsibility to
their country and community?
Could Jeff have started and run a successful business in
Afghanistan or Iraq?
Haven’t taxes allowed him to have the infrastructure
necessary to have a thriving small business and hire employees from an educated
work force?
You may be right about small business taxes being too high,
but despite that, don't you think both Jeff and my uncle have made a pretty good go of it here in one of the most sought after areas in the world to live, beautiful
Southern California?
Side note, I take it you will be voting for Prop. 64, which
would legalize weed for recreational use? (We voted for medicinal use 20 years
ago, in 1996.) If not, couldn’t
small business people (like your cousin Nick) benefit from lifting this
pointless prohibition?
The weed-conomy in Cali could be the next Gold Rush!
And sorry, can’t give big business a pass. Seems to me that some of our biggest
banks get to privatize their profits and socialize their losses. Talk about disincentivizing honest,
ethical, hard work.
So maybe we do agree on welfare – we shouldn’t be giving it
to our biggest companies.
But I’m curious how “taxation and government regulations…
de-motivate very hard working and talented Americans” like Jeff…
What about the hard-working single mother of a child in my
class that works two jobs just to pay her bills? She’s the one that qualifies for “freebies” like free lunch
for her child because her money goes to rent of her small apartment, money for
the Laundromat, and the bus fare to get to her jobs.
Thank goodness for the patriotic, taxpaying Americans who pay
for her child and many more like hers to have a free public education like you
and I got.
Speaking of public education, did you have Mr. McGuire for
American Government at Kennedy?
Reading your comments reminded me of his old axiom about politics: “Where a person stands depends on where
he sits.”
From where I’m sitting, economic issues are only one part of
the national discussion.
And when I see where someone like my student’s mom sits, I
feel extremely lucky.
I’ve never had to worry about socioeconomic, racial, sexual,
or gender issues.
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
President Camacho
Interesting piece in the Nation, but I don't really agree with the conclusion this
article draws: that we'll see a legitimate, neo-fascist, populist
candidate for Prez in 2020.
I'm optimistic that if we Libs can competently and compassionately continue the conversation Sanders started during the primaries, we can push our country away from both conservative and neo-liberal policies.
Progress takes time (and patience, my radical friends
),
but we've come so far already (LGBTQ rights), I'm confident if we
employ smart politics, we can make America a far more equitable country.
I'm optimistic that if we Libs can competently and compassionately continue the conversation Sanders started during the primaries, we can push our country away from both conservative and neo-liberal policies.
Progress takes time (and patience, my radical friends

Friday, September 16, 2016
Clinton Rules and Trump Wins
Yesterday, I wrote online that I think Trump will win because our MSM play by The Clinton Rules.
My buddy and bandmate, Mike, disagreed. Below is my response.
My buddy and bandmate, Mike, disagreed. Below is my response.
I sure hope you’re right, and I’m wrong,
Mike.
I didn’t say that Trump hasn’t received
“overwhelmingly negative” press. (And
what is it they say about “all press” anyway?)
I said that The Clinton Rules dictate that
she is held to a different standard than other public figures, and all things
being equal, it will cost her the election.
Over the last 20 plus years, there have been
too many examples of this to name, but just for one recent case:
Did you notice the difference in how Matt Lauer
(sadly, a totem for our upper-end mainstream media) treated Trump as opposed to
Clinton at the Commander in Chief forum?
After burning at least a third of the
interview asking Clinton questions about her emails (for which she’s been found
to have broken no law), he directly suggests that her behavior may be
“disqualifying.”
Contrast that with Lauer’s treatment of Trump
supposedly being against the Iraq war.
How many follow up questions did he ask?
Zero.
Zilch. Nada.
He passed, sitting
like a potted plant, politely deferring to power.
Did he challenge Trump on that Birther
nonsense he was spewing a few years back (incidentally, using that same
mainstream media to sew seeds of doubt about the legitimacy of President Obama)?
Yeah, right.
Did he ask if either of those two things were
“disqualifying?” Of course not.
Again, how many questions did he ask Clinton
re: email? (And seriously, was he really going to get some crucial NEW
information that congress, the FBI, and the inspector general DIDN’T get from
her on national TV?)
Michael, please! Clinton Rules stipulate that she must be held to a different
standard than other candidates!
Notice how he nicely mentions all the
“’gates’ affixed” to Clinton while conveniently forgetting to say how phony all
those “scandals” were.
Why would he do that on the front page of the
Paper of Record?
Could it be because they promoted that
nonsense on those very front pages 20 years ago?
Gene Lyons wrote all about it in, Fools for
Scandal: How the Media Invented
Whitewater way back in 1996!
Joe Conason and he wrote The Hunting of the
President: The Ten-Year campaign to Destroy Bill and Hillary Clinton in
2000. It was even turned into a
movie!
Again, these books discussed our mainstream
media, not right-wing talk radio.
Today, Nicholas Kristof suggests one reason
Clinton Rules still apply is because, “We all fall into” the trap of media
narratives, as he graciously includes journalists along with us plebs.
Could it be we citizens have fallen into
these traps because we see these narratives and storylines in our mainstream media
over and over and over again?
Facts and context be damned in our national
discourse, there's a story to tell!
Vox had a piece I posted the other day discussing
the potential conflicts of interest with Colin Powell’s foundation, America’s
Promise while he was SOT.
The takeway was that we don’t know if there
were conflicts of interest precisely because of the trap of media narratives
and the Clinton Rules. To
wit: in our mainstream press
narrative, Colin Powell is cast as a good guy, so his charity hasn’t received
the scrutiny that the Clinton Foundation has.
I could go on, but alas, gone are the
days/nights that I could spend hours upon hours thoroughly researching adequate
rebuttals, at least for the time being…
But needless to say, Mike, I still fervently
hope you are right about Trump.
Sunday, September 04, 2016
Thursday, September 01, 2016
We Could Be Heroes...
Behold! The power of mainstream media narratives and the different treatment their "heroes" and "villains" receive...
And here's another case in point.
But when the press thinks of you as a good guy, leveraging your good reputation in this way is considered a good thing to do. And since the charity was considered a good thing to do, keeping the charity going when Powell was in office as secretary of state was also considered a good thing to do. And since Powell was presumed to be innocent — and since Democrats did not make attacks on Powell part of their partisan strategy — his charity was never the subject of a lengthy investigation.Which is lucky for him, because as Clinton could tell you, once you are the subject of a lengthy investigation, the press doesn’t like to report, “Well, we looked into it and we didn’t find anything interesting.”
And here's another case in point.
Sunday, August 28, 2016
The Pernicious Inanity of Sean Hannity
Nice to see the New York Times call out Sean Hannity by name, someone (like Rush)
who's spent the last two decades making millions of dollars by dividing this country with
misleading misinformation and half-truths. Or, as "conservative radio
host Charlie Sykes...lamented in an interview with the Business Insider, 'We have spent 20 years demonizing the
liberal mainstream media... At a certain point, you wake up and you
realize you have destroyed the credibility of any credible outlet out
there.' Therefore any attempt to debunk a falsehood by Mr. Trump, he
said, becomes hopeless."
Friday, August 05, 2016
Thursday, July 14, 2016
Sick Burn
So, apparently the newest insult for 5th graders to say to each other is, "You're related to Donald Trump!"
Lol!
Lol!
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