On 3/20/21 2:29 PM, Robert wrote: > To: Brian <http://www.cs..edu/~b> > > > From: Brian <http://www.cs..edu/~b> > > Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2021 01:46:39 -0700 > > > > And finally he says that he didn't deserve this well-paying job > > in the trenches, that there are people who are called to teaching, and > > they should get those jobs. > > Boy, this story is deeply depressing. Is the only way forward to have an > upheaval of the system? Or, is it up to the lucky individuals who get to > pay for their kids to be kept separate from the system? Yes, it's depressing. The part about being called to teaching or not was troubling to me in particular because I always thought of myself as called to teaching, but when I started student teaching in a SF school full of poor kids, I couldn't take it, and fled to a Marin suburb. And, ultimately, I couldn't even take Sudbury for very long. Teaching poor kids for a long time requires either an amazing strength of character, so you can simultaneously care about the individual kids and not take their failures or attacks personally, or an emotional withdrawal and becoming a terrible teacher, which is what Mr. Parent did, except that even then he didn't stay for long. Even Jonathan Kozol, the patron saint of teachers of poor kids, didn't stay in the classroom forever. And yes, what schools need is the abolition of poverty. > (We recently had a break-in and the guy was arrested and, presumably, is > still in jail (I doubt that this guy could afford bail). But, within the > context of your story, is this guy just one of those people with ADHD who > just end up being losers all their lives and are just condemned to suffer > by our societal norms?) Your particular loser may not be ADHD. (Conversely, the rich ADHD kids end up doing fine, or at least not being petty criminals.) Poverty is the fault of society, not a matter of inherent disability of the individual poor people. But yes, the petty criminals are themselves victims, even as they are pushed into being enemies of, mostly, other poor people. (The rich criminals, of which there are plenty, aren't victims and aren't driven by desperation.) There's no good short-term solution. We can't not lock up the criminals, in general, although when people are willing to invest a lot of effort and resources on individual criminals, it's sometimes possible to rescue one. Perhaps millennials-and-younger activists, who tend to have a good understanding of the systemic roots of social problems, will manage a revolution, but I confess I'm not optimistic. Capitalism can't last forever, because of its ecological damage. What comes next won't be pleasant, but maybe in the very long run the survivors will build a better society. Sorry... I wish I had a more cheerful story to tell you.