America’s Real Occupiers
Last week, my local twittersphere momentarily erupted with allegations that Denver's public school superintendent, Tom Boasberg, is sending his kids to a private school that eschews high-stakes testing. Boasberg, an icon of the national movement pushing high-stakes testing and undermining traditional public education, eventually defended himself by insisting that his kids attended that special school only during pre-school and that they now attend a public school. Yet his spokesman admitted that the school is not in Denver but in Boulder, Colo., one of America's wealthiest enclaves.
Boasberg, you see, refuses to live in the district that he governs. Though having no background in education administration, this longtime telecom executive used his connections to get appointed Denver superintendent, and he now acts like a king. From the confines of his distant castle in Boulder, he issues edicts to his low-income fiefdom — decrees demonizing teachers' unions, shutting down neighborhood schools over community objections and promoting privately administered charter schools. Meanwhile, he makes sure his own royal family is insulated in a wealthy district that doesn't experience his destructive policies.
No doubt this is but a microcosmic story in a country whose patrician overlords are regularly conjuring the feudalism of Europe circa the Middle Ages. Today, our mayors deploy police against homeless people and protestors; our governors demand crushing budget cuts from the confines of their taxpayer-funded mansions; our Congress exempts itself from insider-trading laws and provides itself health care benefits denied to others; and our nation's capital has become one of the world's wealthiest cities, despite the recession.
Taken together, we see that there really are "Two Americas," as the saying goes — and that's no accident. It's the result of a permanent elite that is removing itself from the rest of the nation. Nowhere is this more obvious than in education — a realm in which this elite physically separates itself from us mere serfs.
As the head of one of the country's largest urban school districts, Boasberg is a perfect example of this — but he is only one example.
The Washington Post, for instance, notes that it has become an unquestioned "tradition among Washington's power elite" — read: elected officials — to send their kids to the ultra-expensive private school Sidwell Friends. At the same time, many of these officials have backed budget policies that weaken public education.
Outside of Washington, it's often same story; as just two recent examples, both New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel have championed massive cuts to public education while sending their kids to private school.
In many cases, these aristocrats aren't even required to publicly explain themselves. (Boasberg, for example, is never hounded by local media about why he refuses to live in Denver.) Worse, on the rare occasions that questions are posed, privacy is the oft-used excuse to not answer, whether it's Obama defenders dismissing queries about their Sidwell decision, Christie telling a voter his school choices are "none of your business" or Emanuel storming out of a television interview and then citing his "private life" when asked about the issue.
This might be a convincing argument about ordinary citizens' personal education choices, but it's an insult coming from public officials. When they remove themselves and their families from a community — but still retain power over that community — they end up acting as foreign occupiers, subjecting us to policies they would never subject their own kin to.
Pretending this is acceptable or just a "private" decision, then, is to tolerate ancient, ruling-class notions that are no longer sustainable in the 21st century. Indeed, if this nation is going to remain a modern republic, it can't also be a Medieval oligarchy — no matter how much America's elite wants to keep governing from behind the palace walls.
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14 comments on "America’s Real Occupiers"
January 14, 2012 3:48pm
Mr. Boasberg should be free to live anywhere he and his family decide they want to live, despite what the author thinks. The author (Mr. Sirota) shouldn't make judgements about where Mr. Boasberg and his family live any more than he should judege where you or I live.
Also, Mr. Boasberg pays property taxes in Boulder where he lives and his kids go to school; he supports the schools in the neighborhood where he lives and his children go to school.
Many states are broke, Colorado is likely one of them, and closing public schools with marginal attendance and/or delapidated buildings is a reasonable way to save Colorado money. As Superintendent of the Denver school district, efficiency is one of Mr. Boasberg's RESPONSIBILITIES.
If Mr. Sirota has some ideas on saving money for Colorado, by all means voice them, but don't criticize those trying to find solutions.
January 14, 2012 10:21pm
@McKinlp: Your statement that "many states are broke, Colorado is likely one of them" indicates that you do not live here. Since both the author of this piece and I do reside in Colorado, I believe we both know far more about the economics of Colorado than you ever will. How would you know about "marginal attendance" and "delapidated [sic] buildings" anyway? And FYI, the Denver public schools have a 48% graduation rate. FORTY-EIGHT PERCENT! Very telling about how well Mr. Boasberg is doing his job, I daresay.
As far as his "trying to find solutions" for saving money for Colorado (not his job, by the way, he is only responsible for the DENVER school district), I have one solution Denver could start with. I'll bet you are also unaware that the City and County of Denver spends over $803,000 per year enforcing a ban on "pit bull" dogs which has been in place for over 23 years now - imagine the financial impact that little nugget of foolishness has had on the Denver public schools? I'm not referring to Denver's Animal Control operations, either. No, this huge annual sum is wasted solely to enforce a ban on only one type of dog. Nor does it include the megabucks Denver has spent and continues to spend defending the numerous lawsuits it has provoked with its illegal discrimination against disabled individuals whose service dogs have been identified (incorrectly in some cases) as "pit bulls." Doesn't it seem a bit ridiculous to you that one city spends 3/4 of a million per year enforcing a meaningless law that has made that city even LESS safe (Denver has far more hospitalizations for serious dog bites than the rest of the state, INCLUDING fatalities from dog attacks, not a single one of those by a "pit bull") when that money could be more "efficiently" spent on upgrading the schools there?
So many people in this country knock public education, yet no one admits to the fact that schools are ALWAYS the FIRST area to be cut whenever the politicians want to cut budgets. Just what do people expect will happen when they keep taking funding away from education? Oh, and by the way, the author did NOT say Mr. Boasberg is not "free to live anywhere" he wants to, nor did he judege [sic] where anyone should live - he merely pointed out Mr. Boasberg's hypocrisy in sending his own children to private schools and the Boulder public schools (one of the wealthiest districts in the nation) while he himself works hard to destroy those very schools he has been charged with improving, utilizing underhanded methods such as CSAP testing and forcing teachers to teach to these meaningless tests rather than teaching critical thinking and giving children a basic education in the sciences, math, and language arts. And let us not forget Mr. Boasberg has absolutely no experience in the education arena, either.
You might do well to refrain from being so critical of the author's well thought out and fact-filled piece, and remember to keep your comments on topic, as well. The article is not about "saving money for Colorado," my dear sir, but the hypocrisy of the politicians who would trash education for public school students. Perhaps your own education was lacking a bit in the areas of spelling, grammar, and critical thinking, eh?
January 15, 2012 1:08am
SRUASONID.......Sirota's article states, "Boasberg, for example, is never hounded by local media about why he refuses to live in Denver." Hounded?Excuse me, but why should anyone be "HOUNDED" about where they live? Stop this nonsense!
Regarding Colorado's financial situation, Governor John Hickenlooper's Budget Director, Henry Sobanet stated on September 20, 2011, "The state will face a structural imbalance of $400 million to $500 million in the 2012-13 budget." Sorry, but that means Colorado is broke....... I admit I was just guessing in my earlier reply, but now I now I'm correct about Colorado's situation.
"Sobanet's office said a historic recession combined with higher demand for state services has created the structural gap. An 11.1 percent increase in Medicaid costs and a 3.7 percent jump in prison expenditures also contributed to the budget gap."
"In November 2011 the governor called for cuts to public schools and universities to help close the budget gap. Specifically, the governor would reduce funding to K-12 schools by $97 million, approximately $160 per student, and reduce higher education funding by $76 million."
I think the reason education is constantly looked at as an opportunity for saving is that more spending on education rarely results in better student test scores. In other words, increased spending doesn't produce better educated students. That should be the only criteria. I admit there are likely many other factors contributing, but increased spending on schools is rarely the answer.
The graduation rate of high schoolers in the DPS system is 52%. The national average is closer to 60%. That's not an encouraging statistic for Denver schools, but likely skewed by the 40% hispanic population in the DPS system with a dropout rate closer to 70%.
We do agree on one thing......spending any amount of tax money demonizing pit bulls is outrageous. I'm right there with you on that one; it's a shameful waste of money, energy and dogs.
January 14, 2012 7:14am
I'm always amazed at the predictable dynamic in these situations: the press/people shine light on the disparity and the elite cry warfare. Or victim. We need more leaders dedicated to the common good instead of competition.
January 13, 2012 7:40pm
I just found out that if my Grand daughter can be chosen for Kinder Garden next year it will cost $300.00 per month. In a Denver suburb.
That is only if she is one of the chosen. What is going on in our country????
January 13, 2012 5:46pm
While I find Boasberg and Emanuel's skirting their obligations as public officials abhorrent -- not defending or explaining their decisions to send their children to private schools at the same time making political and policy moves to tear public education apart -- there is fodder here for a conversation. I will argue again and again that public education is not broken and children, with support and guidance from their parents in every single economic strata, will excel through the public education system. It just isn't possible that what was good 25 years ago has receded into a completely dysfunctional system that doesn't produce outcomes. Public education needs some tweaking -- namely, the nurturing of vulnerable children -- and it requires money to produce the outcomes that the privileged require of the system. My own family is an example: two children of educated, engaged parents were educated in the public school system and went on to graduate school on scholarship and meaningful careers. I'm not doing this to brag; I'm am saying that public education does work with parental support. I'm saddened that Boasberg and Emanuel lead public lives while educating their children privately.
January 13, 2012 4:44pm
Feudal lords were better than the present day "lords of capitalism". Feudal lords knew many of their subjects, and for many of them a sense of "noblesse oblige" tempered their actions. Modern capitalists have no such restraint. They are both physically and psychogically removed from those they exploit.
It seems that you liken this wealth hiding as Feudal. My blog, "Back to Feudalism" tackles this issue. These plutocrats see themselves as latter-day Feudal Lords - the 1%, and the serfs will soon be everybody else. The thing that gets me is that the lords champion free market capitalism, yet they forget that capitalism ended Feudalism, as Marx says, in the Renaissance (Dutch banking and shipping, Italian market hill towns, English land enclosures). The French Revolution nailed the coffin shut on the last traces of an extended Feudalism (small monarchy with all the wealth, and huge peasantry). It ushered in the Bourgeoisie, the upper-middle class, who used their wealth, newly-acquiried from the dead monarchy, to purchase goods and create a new consumer class. The American middle class of the 20th century was the high point of this, and it was the touchstone for American finance and culture (I would also argue psychology) for decades. The upper class and capitalism depended on a large middle class with disposable income; it created wealth for the elites.
Now the Feudal lords are putting the heads of the middle class on the chopping block and relegating them to the serfdom. Foolish lords, don't you realize you will remove the base of your own wealth? It's like the Middle Ages carving of the dragon devouring its own tail.
January 13, 2012 3:29pm
It seems that you liken this wealth hiding as Feudal. My blog, "Back to Feudalism" tackles this issue. These plutocrats see themselves as latter-day Feudal Lords - the 1%, and the serfs will soon be everybody else. The thing that gets me is that the lords champion free market capitalism, yet they forget that capitalism ended Feudalism, as Marx says, in the Renaissance (Dutch banking and shipping, Italian market hill towns, English land enclosures). The French Revolution nailed the coffin shut on the last traces of an extended Feudalism (small monarchy with all the wealth, and huge peasantry). It ushered in the Bourgeoisie, the upper-middle class, who used their wealth, newly-acquiried from the dead monarchy, to purchase goods and create a new consumer class. The American middle class of the 20th century was the high point of this, and it was the touchstone for American finance and culture (I would also argue psychology) for decades. The upper class and capitalism depended on a large middle class with disposable income; it created wealth for the elites.
Now the Feudal lords are putting the heads of the middle class on the chopping block and relegating them to the serfdom. Foolish lords, don't you realize you will remove the base of your own wealth? It's like the Middle Ages carving of the dragon devouring its own tail.
January 13, 2012 2:58pm
Romney says the 99% are jealous and should stop complaining. WTF!
January 13, 2012 2:57pm
Romney says the 99% are jealous and should stop complaining. WTF!
January 13, 2012 2:35pm
One simple fact that those who arrogantly cower behind the walls of their gated communities fail to realize that when the time shall soon arrive to liberate this nation from tyranny, we, the People have them surrounded. We can cut off their power, fuel and water supplies. Sooner or later they will get hungry and thirsty and have to come out from hiding and answer for their crimes against The Peoples of the United States of America..
January 13, 2012 7:45pm
Anono, you are correct. I visited Indonesia recently and the homes there have tall walls with barbed wire and glass across the tops of the walls. The steel gates to each home is locked at dark. Isn't that a nice way to live.
January 13, 2012 2:00pm
More of the "Same old. Same old..... 'Don't do as I do, Do as I say'"