Oklahoma Teacher's Strike: Protesters Say It's Just As Much The Conditions Inside the Classroom As It Is Their Salaries.

As usual Jimmy Dore and company give such a well-rounded look at what's really going on with a situation:

As he says, "they're striking for funding for the classroom, for books, for chairs, for desks for supplies, for heat in the building. And they're striking so that other people who work in the cafeterias, janitors, so that they also get a living wage."

Teachers selling their plasma for money, work double duty as janitors, have to work other jobs (which isn't all that extraordinary if it's summer jobs, but during the school year is a whole other indsidious thing), - while the Governor compares teacher strikers to "teenage kids who want a car." This is the state she governs:

...a quarter of Oklahoma City's teachers leave every year and the state
had to issue a record number of emergency teaching certificates - 1,917 - for the current school year. A growing number of students in Oklahoma don't have properly certified teachers

That first photo, featured in Dore's report (damn, he's doing such great work!), just sent me into a fit of rage and disgust.

And again, this is why Twitter is so much more important, in my view, than Farcebook. It is setup to be We-oriented, not Me-oriented. To the extent that the #hashtag provides the flashpoint for discussion, instead of being barraged by the inanity of family/lunch/pet photos, cringe-inducing self-aggrandizement and tawdry gossip from people you went to jr high school with. I don't follow any "friends" on Twitter, just investigative journalists and activists.

This Teachers' Strike is the kind of story, that if given a national platform with real dialogue and investigation, could really coalesce a mass class movement. Because people might begin to ask themselves and begin nudging others to do similarly, "how does something like this transpire in the Richest Country In The History of the World, where Wall ST Economic Terrorists, the same inveterate criminal gamblers with municipal funds who are behind ransacking the pensions of and defunding these schools and their teachers, get obscenely filthy rich while teachers have to beg for crumbs - and no one gives a shit?" It's because the public is not getting these stories in any measure that could change things. People would be riled with righteous indignation - if they only saw these stories reflected back to them.

The MSM is a complete propaganda tool for the status quo, which is what their owners and shareholders demand so that they can keep looting while we fuss and fight, divided and conquered. I bet folks striking, which hopefully will extend across the country, see themselves as political partisans too, just as the media cements them in with.

But when the teachers and students have common cause all that bullshit partisanship stoked by propaganda goes by the wayside and they start to see the bigger picture, that it's really the 99% vs 1%. Black schools have been victimized like this for decades. Now maybe they can empathize and coalesce into a bigger, serious movement that begins to ask why. It's a much different thing having the proverbial water cooler chat in the teacher's lounge than it is to be holding signs together and talking on the picket line about the machinations of corrupt government beholden to corporate and banking donors. When there's solidarity around an issue such as theirs, there's no more Red/Blue, Dem/Rep, Lib/Con divide. Which is why the partisan driven networks of MSNBC and Fox won't cover it. It confuses their viewership, who always need to demonize the other side.

I know a fair amount of teachers, ranging from grade school to college, who all have horror stories. Same stuff too: had to buy teaching materials for their classrooms, the long insane hours of grading papers after long day in the classroom, and then still only being able to afford a small, cramped basement apartment. One professor I know commutes to Boston from Brooklyn as an adjunct because she couldn'd find a job closer. Another has been teaching for four decades and has similarly been bounced around, having been let go at yet another new gig.

Chris Hedges, who brilliantly goes into this in probably his best book "Death of the Liberal Class," warned that the revolution will come not from the oppression of the working class, but will when the middle class finds itself suddenly without the framework of job security or the expectation of mobility.

It is not the poor who make revolutions. It is those who conclude that they will not be able, as they once expected, to rise economically and socially. This consciousness is part of the self-knowledge of service workers and fast food workers. It is grasped by the swelling population of college graduates caught in a vise of low-paying jobs and obscene amounts of debt. These two groups, once united, will be our primary engines of revolt. Much of the urban poor has been crippled and in many cases broken by a rewriting of laws, especially drug laws, that has permitted courts, probation officers, parole boards and police to randomly seize poor people of color, especially African-American men, without just cause and lock them in cages for years. In many of our most impoverished urban centers—our internal colonies, as Malcolm X called them—mobilization, at least at first, will be difficult. The urban poor are already in chains. These chains are being readied for the rest of us. “The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets or steal bread,” W.E.B. Du Bois commented acidly.

Again folks, apologies in advance. I'm down in the thick of it here. But was watching this Dore segment while having lunch and was so outraged that I had to share it.

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Mark from Queens's picture

Where's all the coverage about that, after months and months of breathless #MeToo and Neoliberal Faux Feminism?

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Wink's picture

and family (coworkers) behind like you do on Twitter - or even simpler, just create a new account - you'll find that Facebook works just fine. If you just follow progressive media and groups, as I do, you'll have damn few "issues" with FB. Yes, they still follow your every move, blast you with ads you never wanted to see, but it Is Not the horror story people make it out to be. With that said, since Twitter has Finally gone to 240 characters it is Much easier to use! I can actually finish a thought without having to send people to another platform for the rest of the Tweet. yay!

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Alligator Ed's picture

@Wink Wink

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Wink's picture

them fake news,
@Alligator Ed
~er fake info.
If you're not on there all day long you'll have no issues.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Alligator Ed's picture

The sign you posted really says it all.

The lack of education is conducive to crime, poverty, and decay. This certainly is not a profoundly original observation. But this is an exact description for the poisoning of our society, even more than austerity and asset stripping. Cradle-to-grave propaganda sets the stage. Unbridled capitalism impoverishes workers, making them scrabble so hard making a living that they have not time to learn what is oppressing them. As the poster clearly demonstrates, a clear inverse relationship between education and criminality. A high school education for one parent at one time allowed access to the middle class. No more. Now, a college education often produces mountainous debt which chases student and family to the grave and offers no reward greater than burger flipping in many cases.

Most other developed and developing countries wisely invest in public education, an adequate education in which students are trained to think, analyze, reason and be creative. Our educational system is shorn of the arts, depleted of science, lacking in relevance to real world problems. The insistence on multiple testing for the sake of testing produce only rote memory, which is usually forgotten within three days after cramming usually inadequate material into minds unready to receive them--because the students are not TAUGHT to think.

I am hopeful that this teachers' strike will be like rolling thunder, a massive wake-up call and warning of how perilous our national situation has become. This strike could become this decade's Occupy movement and I hope it does.

This is a matter of dignity for teachers. It is a matter for a fuller, more rounded education for students. This is about informing oncoming generations to think. This need for education IS A MATTER OF NATIONAL SECURITY. How can we, as a country, maintain our standing as "number one" in the midst of declining intellectual resources? That's a rhetorical question. By the way, most current elementary and high school students could not give a definition of "rhetorical" if asked.

How do we have a viable country when more and more the populace is reduced to animate robots following programmed tasks of little originality, initiative, and understanding?

Yes, the teachers deserve better. They deserve manageable class size; sanitary heated/air-conditioned classrooms; non-politicized and current textbooks; teachers being properly respected by not only society but their students--students who perceive the degradation of their instructors and immaturely react accordingly to the perceived low status of those instructors.

I make the following suggestion, only partially in jest: let us have a nationwide teachers' strike wherein none of them go to school. This simple, although costly for the strikers, act will loose an entire generation of young people to roam the streets requiring increased policing of undisciplined mobs of children. Parents will have to leave work. Productivity will come to a standstill.

The short-sighted globalistic oligarchs won't give a damn until such an action, should it ever come into existence, cuts into their bottom lines. That's the only thing foremost on their minds: more, More, MORE!

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snoopydawg's picture

You've made so many excellent points in this essay. I'll start with this.

This Teachers' Strike is the kind of story, that if given a national platform with real dialogue and investigation, could really coalesce a mass class movement. Because people might begin to ask themselves and begin nudging others to do similarly, "how does something like this transpire in the Richest Country In The History of the World, where Wall ST Economic Terrorists, the same inveterate criminal gamblers with municipal funds who are behind ransacking the pensions of and defunding these schools and their teachers, get obscenely filthy rich while teachers have to beg for crumbs - and no one gives a shit? It's because the public is not getting these stories in any measure that could change things. People would be riled with righteous indignation - if they only saw these stories reflected back to them.

This definitely needs to happen if this country has any chance of getting of the capitalism treadmill. Too many people are bad mouthing teachers and unions because they have bought the propaganda against them. I'd love to see parents on the picket lines because it's their kids who are being robbed of an education. The photos of the school books should shame any state if they had a conscience.
Banks should not have been bailed out or if they were, then there should have been rules put in place to make sure that they never do it again. But since no rules were set, we are looking at another economic crisis coming soon. Some are saying that it's coming this year.

Another great point. Any ideas for how we can wake people up to this fact?

But when the teachers and students have common cause all that bullshit partisanship stoked by propaganda goes by the wayside and they start to see the bigger picture, that it's really the 99% vs 1%.

As the alligator said, I'm hoping for this too. Unfortunately, Jaimie Dimon, gawd's BFF is saying that if strikes gain traction he will raise interest rates to defuse them. Sure Jaimie, that is what gawd wants you to do. Your butt should still be sitting in prison for what you did to the world.

I am hopeful that this teachers' strike will be like rolling thunder, a massive wake-up call and warning of how perilous our national situation has become. This strike could become this decade's Occupy movement and I hope it does.

Excellent essay! The blue blog strikes again.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Wink's picture

hanged for treason.
@snoopydawg
Right there on Wall Street.
Next to the bull, in front of the little girl.
And he ain't alone.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

orlbucfan's picture

public and private, for all the white-collared corpseporate crooks who belong there. Lewis Powell described their classic FRightwingnut plan very clearly 47 years ago. My sister, a Math whiz who could be making a fortune in the private sector, is a dedicated teacher in the FL panhandle. She considers it her calling. She's right: educating the young is sacred. That's why the greedball infestation has feared it throughout history. I sure hope this is the turning point. Rec'd!!

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.