Tag Archives: school

ASU denies claims made by student | The Augusta Chronicle

Augusta State University officials said it's not a graduate student's religious beliefs, but her refusal to work toward being able to counsel homosexual clients that is threatening her standing in the school's counseling program, according to court documents filed Monday. The filing states that Jennifer Keeton must demonstrate her ability to counsel all clients, including the homosexual and transgender population, in order to graduate. The response is the school's first legal answer since Keeton filed a lawsuit July 21 alleging that she was facing expulsion from the counseling program based on her religious beliefs and her refusal to complete “a thought-reform remediation plan.” In an e-mail cited in the suit, ASU assistant professor Dr. Paulette Schenck told Keeton “the faculty did not expect (her) to change (her) personal beliefs and values.” “(T)he unethical part (was) applying your own personal beliefs and values on other people and not truly accepting that others can have different beliefs and values that are equally valid as your own.” Keeton is a graduate student in ASU's K-12 school counseling program, which requires students to adhere to a neutral code of ethics. The university's response explains that ASU professors asked Keeton to complete a remediation plan after she wrote in a term paper regarding the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender, or GLBT, community that “it would be hard (for her) to work with this population.” Keeton also told fellow student Justin C. Earnest that she would tell gay clients “their behavior is morally wrong and then help the client change that behavior,” according to an affidavit by Earnest included in the school's filing. The remediation plan required Keeton to attend counseling workshops, read counseling journals regarding the GLBT community, increase her exposure to the gay population and write reflections on what she was learning. The university's legal filings did not directly address Keeton's contention that she was told to attend a gay pride parade as part of the remediation plan. Members of ASU's faculty also were concerned with Keeton's support of conversion therapy for homosexuals, which the American Counseling Association's ethics committee has concluded “may harm clients.” In her lawsuit, Keeton said the remediation plan “subjects her to aggressive ideological instruction” and asks that she “change her beliefs.” Keeton said she would like to continue her education in the counseling program without fear that the school “will punish her for her religious views” and her “unwillingness to change or abandon those views.” But university officials said if they exempted Keeton from counseling homosexual clients, they would also have to exempt those opposed to war from counseling soldiers. “The same curriculum would require an atheist student counselor to competently counsel a deeply religious client,” the filing said. “A staunch feminist student counselor is required to competently counsel clients from male dominated cultures … the common thread being that all counselors are required to keep separate their own belief system from the counseling relationship.” The suit also points to a U.S. District Court judge's recent opinion in a similar case, Ward v. Wilbanks. In the July 2010 ruling, a judge upheld Eastern Michigan University's decision to dismiss a student who refused to counsel a homosexual student or participate in a remediation plan. University officials said that if the court moves forward with Keeton's case it could affect the school's accreditation and other students' degrees. What's Next? Jennifer Keeton has asked the federal court to force the college to drop its requirement that she complete the remediation plan. The U.S. District Court in Augusta scheduled a hearing on her request for a preliminary injunction at 9 a.m. Wednesday. added by: toyotabedzrock

Duplicitous ABC Advances Obama’s Big Spending College Graduation Agenda

ABC on Monday night delivered an even shoddier than usual piece of advocacy for President Barack Obama in the guise of a news story, duplicity which started with fill-in anchor George Stephnopoulos, trying to make Obama’s comments seem well-timed and topical, falsely describing statistics, released more than two weeks ago, as “new numbers today show…” Stephanopoulos intoned: Now to a stunning example of the U.S. falling behind where we shouldn’t. New numbers today show eleven countries, including Canada, South Korea, and Russia, now lead the U.S. in the rate of young adults getting college degrees. That spells trouble, and President Obama said we can’t afford to ignore it. On screen, ABC credited the College Board and, indeed, the “College Board Advocacy & Policy Center” released such a report – but back on July 22 ( press release ). Reporter Yunji de Nies managed to produce a story on the administration’s promise “everything is on the table” to improve education, yet she failed to mention how the administration’s loyalty to teacher unions blocks public school reform.   de Nies related how, at a speech at the University of Texas, Obama told the students “America has failed them” and he “set a daunting goal: Raise college graduation rates from today’s 40 percent to 60 percent in ten years by adding at least eight million graduates” so “the President wants to get more students in the door by making college more affordable through increased financial aid and student loans.” She concluded with an assurance from Secretary of Education Arne Duncan: Secretary Duncan says everything is on the table. There’s talk of adding more days to the school year, hiring an army of new teachers and, of course, raising standards. None of that is cheap and it could be a tough sell for states with tight budgets. As if “everything” only includes ideas which require more spending. From the Monday, August 9 ABC World News: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Now to a stunning example of the U.S. falling behind where we shouldn’t. New numbers today show eleven countries, including Canada, South Korea, and Russia, now lead the U.S. in the rate of young adults getting college degrees. That spells trouble, and President Obama said we can’t afford to ignore it. Yunji de Nies is at the White House tonight. YUNJI de NIES: Today, President Obama told an audience, that included 3,500 college students, that America has failed them. PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: In a single generation, we’ve fallen from first place to 12th place in college graduation rates for young adults. De NIES: How did we get here? ARNE DUNCAN, SECRETARY OF EDUCATION: We got a little self-satisfied. And other countries have, I think, out-worked us. They have out-invested. They have taken this more seriously, and I think this is a wake-up call. de NIES: Mr. Obama has set a daunting goal: Raise college graduation rates from today’s 40 percent to 60 percent in ten years by adding at least eight million graduates. OBAMA: The single most important thing we can do is to make sure we’ve got a world-class education system for everybody. de NIES: Some education experts say the problem isn’t colleges but high schools that fail to prepare students once they get there. RICK HESS, AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE: A large percentage showing up needing remediation in reading and mathematics and courses that colleges would like to think have been done in high schools. de NIES: To tackle that problem, the President is pushing a set of common academic standards so all colleges would have the same skills and the President wants to get more students in the door by making college more affordable through increased financial aid and student loans. de NIES: It took 30 years to get to number 12. Do you think we can really get to number 1 in 10? DUNCAN: I do. Is it an ambitious goal? Absolutely. Is it going to take hard work? Absolutely. But, frankly, failure’s not an option here. De NIES: Secretary Duncan says everything is on the table. There’s talk of adding more days to the school year, hiring an army of new teachers and, of course, raising standards. None of that is cheap and it could be a tough sell for states with tight budgets.

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Duplicitous ABC Advances Obama’s Big Spending College Graduation Agenda

Study Shows Conflicted Meat-Eaters in Denial That Meat-Animals Suffer

A new study from the University of Kent has provided direct evidence that people who wish to escape the ‘meat paradox’ i.e. simultaneously disliking hurting animals and enjoying eating meat, may do so by denying that the animal they ate had the capacity to suffer. By engaging in denial, those participating in the study also reported a reduced range of animals to which they felt obligated to show moral concern. These ranged from dogs and chimps to snails and fish. The study, the results of which are published in the August issue of Appetite, was conducted by Dr Steve Loughnan, Research Associate at the University’s School of Psychology, and colleagues in Australia. Prior to their study, it was generally assumed that the only solutions to the meat paradox are for people to simply stop eating meat, a decision taken by many vegetarians, or the ongoing failure to recognise that animals are killed to produce meat (although few people live in true ignorance, some meat-eaters may live in a state of tacit denial, failing to equate beef with cow, pork with pig, or even chicken with chicken). Dr Loughnan explained: ‘Some people do choose to stop eating meat when they learn that animals suffer for its production. An overwhelming majority do not. Our research shows that one way people are able to keep eating meat is by dampening their moral consideration of animals when sitting at the dinner table.’ Dr Loughnan also explained that, broadly speaking, their study has shown that when there is a conflict between their preferred way of thinking and their preferred way of acting, it is their thoughts and moral standards that people abandon first – rather than changing their behaviour. ‘Rather than change their beliefs about the animals’ moral rights, people could change their behaviour,’ he said. ‘However, we suspect that most people are unwilling to deny themselves the enjoyment of eating meat, and denying animals moral rights lets them keep eating with a clear conscience’. ‘The role of meat consumption in the denial of moral status and mind to meat animals’ (Stephen Loughnan, University of Kent; Nick Haslam, University of Melbourne; Brock Bastian, University of Queensland) is published in the August issue of Appetite. Dr Loughnan is a member of the University’s Leverhulme Trust-funded Centre for Research on Social Climate. added by: animalia_libero

Justin Bieber Gives Surprise Performance At Florida High School

The Biebs stops by summer band camp to dole out cash for music education. By Mawuse Ziegbe Justin Bieber surprises a band camp in Florida Photo: Gerardo Mora/ Getty Images If you were in the Sanford, Florida, area Thursday (August 5) and heard the screams of hysterical teenagers, don’t fret. It was probably just the passionate yelps of students at Seminole High School, who were granted a surprise show from none other than singer and inducer of mass tween mania, Justin Bieber. The Biebs dropped by Seminole High to present the school with a $5,000 donation from the Grammy Foundation and Best Buy to support music education. The singer strummed the guitar, pounded the drums and chatted with students, who were attending a summer band camp, according to reports . “The students had no idea I was coming, and it was fun to completely surprise them,” Bieber said in a statement . “I was excited about this opportunity to team up with Best Buy and the Grammy Foundation to raise awareness around the important cause of funding music education programs in schools. I talked to students about pursuing their passion in music and encouraging them to keep doing what they’re doing.” Bieber also shared the experience with his more than 4 million Twitter followers, revealing that he battled illness to make the surprise appearance. “I actually got sick in the middle of the show and they wanted to cancel but the show must go on and the fans gave me my second [wind],” Bieber tweeted . The singer added that the energy from his Beliebers, especially the female ones, helped get him through the performance. “Been sick all day…but we are toughing through it. SOUTH FLORIDA…the girls….Im feeling better :)” The singer even gave a shout-out one lucky fan in particular: “So thank u to everyone for being so incredible tonight…and @meganburrier i hope we gave u a good surprise :).” What would you do if Justin Bieber dropped by your school? Let us know in the comments below! Related Photos Justin Bieber Goes To Band Camp Related Artists Justin Bieber

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Justin Bieber Gives Surprise Performance At Florida High School

CBS ‘Evening News’ Bemoans Lack of Diversity in FDNY

On Monday’s CBS Evening News, anchor Katie Couric praised the heroism of the New York City Fire Department but fretted: “…a federal judge says something is missing in their ranks: Diversity.” Correspondent Jim Axelrod began a report on the topic by noting: “Fire Captain Paul Washington has a big problem with his department.” Washington declared the FDNY to be “all-white, lily white.” Axelrod described how “Eight years ago, the fire department was 92 percent white and only 2.8 percent black, in a city that was 24 percent black. A disparity that remains largely unchanged.” A sound bite was featured from Columbia Law School Professor Suzanne Goldberg, who like Couric, noted the department’s heroism, but went on to describe the lack of diversity as a “singular embarrassment.” Touting how “a federal judge agreed” with Goldberg, Axelrod explained: “…the hiring test to become one of New York’s bravest was not just discriminatory, but illegal. [The judge] ordered the city to fix it.” As Axelrod mentioned the judge’s ruling, a few sample questions from the supposedly discriminatory test appeared on screen. One set of questions asked applicants to respond to a particular firefighting scenario: “What would be the most direct entrance for firefighters to take to save the children?…The probable cause of the fire was?…How many ways can firefighters enter the house?” Axelrod never cited any specific criticisms of the entrance exam. Even so, a clip was played of Washington claiming: “Blacks don’t fare as well as whites on this test, probably due to the disparity in education.” Axelrod added: “Now the judge says the city has been dragging its feet and tightened the screws, appointing a special master to ensure New York does what big cities like Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami did long ago when they were sued.” Acknowledging opposition to the judge’s ruling, Axelrod mentioned: “FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix doesn’t think New York needs to follow their example.” In an exchange with Mannix, Axelrod pressed: “Look at Los Angeles. Look at Philadelphia. Look at Boston.” Mannix replied: “Quotas. Quotas. Quotas.” Axelrod insisted: “Whatever your method, they corrected racial imbalance.” Mannix responded: “By using quotas, and we are against quotas.” Axelrod continued: “Mannix believes the current FDNY test focuses too much on producing a racially diverse department and not enough on identifying the strongest candidates regardless of race.” Mannix explained: “You’re asking me to make my job more dangerous to – to satisfy a social engineering experiment.” Axelrod’s report concluded with another sound bite from Goldberg: “I find it shocking that the fire department looks like it does today. And the city is fighting the decision and threatening appeal rather than going ahead and giving the city the fire department that it deserves.” A final sound bite of Washington was also played: “I want to see black New Yorkers share in this job, because, as I say, it’s not a good job, it’s a great job.” Axelrod proclaimed: “The only thing Paul Washington wants to change about this great job is the way New York City decides who gets it.” Here is a full transcript of the segment: 6:44PM KATIE COURIC: The fire department here in New York City is one of the most respected in the world and second only to Tokyo in size. The FDNY has well over 11,000 firefighters and officers, and their heroism on 9/11 and on many other occasions is legendary. But as Jim Axelrod reports, a federal judge says something is missing in their ranks: Diversity. JIM AXELROD: New York City Fire Captain Paul Washington has a big problem with his department. PAUL WASHINGTON: This fire department has been all-white, lily white, for almost 150 years now. And I mean, it has to end. AXELROD: Eight years ago, the fire department was 92 percent white and only 2.8 percent black, in a city that was 24 percent black. A disparity that remains largely unchanged. A group of African-American firefighters sued. SUZANNE GOLDBERG [COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL]: The fire department in New York on the one hand is tremendously heroic, and the whole world knows about its heroism. And on the other hand, we have this kind of singular embarrassment. AXELROD: Last January, a federal judge agreed, ruling the hiring test to become one of New York’s bravest was not just discriminatory, but illegal. He ordered the city to fix it. WASHINGTON: Blacks don’t fare as well as whites on this test, probably due to the disparity in education. AXELROD: Now the judge says the city has been dragging its feet and tightened the screws, appointing a special master to ensure New York does what big cities like Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami did long ago when they were sued. They now have much greater diversity, but FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix doesn’t think New York needs to follow their example. Look at Los Angeles. Look at Philadelphia. Look at Boston. PAUL MANNIX: Quotas. Quotas. Quotas. AXELROD: Whatever your method, they corrected racial imbalance. MANNIX: By using quotas, and we are against quotas. AXELROD: Miami, in particular, expanded recruitment by targeting young minorities still in public schools with high school EMT training classes. Today they have firefighters like Maurice Kemp to show for it. That’s Chief Maurice Kemp, the department’s first African-American in charge. MAURICE KEMP: Like all other major city departments, it doesn’t come without a struggle. I mean, we have to be conscious of the fact that we need to be diverse. AXELROD: Mannix believes the current FDNY test focuses too much on producing a racially diverse department and not enough on identifying the strongest candidates regardless of race. MANNIX: You’re asking me to make my job more dangerous to – to satisfy a social engineering experiment. AXELROD: Mannix doesn’t officially speak for the city, but both the fire department and the mayor declined our request for an interview. In a statement, the city said that it disagrees with the court’s findings that these tests were discriminatory and intends to appeal. The city says next time it hires, the incoming class will be one-third minority. But no new firefighters have been hired in the last two years and no one knows when the city will hire again. GOLDBERG: I find it shocking that the fire department looks like it does today. And the city is fighting the decision and threatening appeal rather than going ahead and giving the city the fire department that it deserves. WASHINGTON: I want to see black New Yorkers share in this job, because, as I say, it’s not a good job, it’s a great job. AXELROD: The only thing Paul Washington wants to change about this great job is the way New York City decides who gets it. Jim Axelrod, CBS News, New York.

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CBS ‘Evening News’ Bemoans Lack of Diversity in FDNY

Tonight’s Northern Lights Will be Incredible, Thanks to Solar Explosions

The sun blasted mass quantities of plasma into space a few days ago, and the “coronal mass ejection” is headed straight for Earth. Which means we're about to get some incredible aurora displays. Harvard astronomer Leon Golub explains that predicting space weather is an extremely inexact science, but that these times are likely to be good for viewing the solar debris as it hits our magnetic field: * Wednesday, Aug. 4 – 3:00 a.m. EDT * Wednesday, Aug. 4 – 8:00 p.m. EDT * Thursday, Aug. 5 – 2:00 a.m. EDT Get the latest aurora updates via NOAA and Harvard http://io9.com/5603715/tonights-northern-lights-will-be-incredible-thanks-to-sol… added by: pjacobs51

Teen Raped After Being Used by School as "Bait"

If a high school student goes to administrators to report that she and another teenage girl were raped by a boy at the school, you might think that the immediate course of action would be to keep the survivors safe while investigating the allegations. But a student at Upper St. Claire High School is suing her school district for using her as bait, which resulted in her being raped a second time. It's possible that the principal had watched The Sting a few too many times and thought that he could launch his own undercover operation. Even so, to put a sexual assault victim in the path of her rapist seems like an absurd level of endangerment — except that Principal Michael Ghilani didn't believe that he was dealing with a rape survivor. Instead, he turned the rape victims into guilty parties, deciding that student were having consensual sex on school premises after hours, and he wanted them all caught. Instead of having the girls safely escorted to their bus, as the teacher to whom the crime was first reported wanted to do, Principal Ghilani kept them on school grounds and tasked the school police to follow them — in order to see if they went somewhere to have sex, rather than to watch out for their well-being. The police apparently thought everybody had gone home, but were mistaken, since two girls reported being raped in the stairwell that afternoon. Why the principal would think that the girl would report on herself having consensual sex is beyond me. In the school district's attempt to defend its gross negligence, it argued that these girls were just jealous of other girls having sex with the boy in question. The boy himself, by the way, has pleaded guilty to sexual assault, although not to rape, and faces up to four years imprisonment. Cara writes on the Curvature, “I’m honestly not even sure which facet of this case I find most appalling — the lesson that if you report being raped to your school, they’ll use you as a method to catch other students doing allegedly naughty things rather than protecting you; or the lesson that if you report being raped to your school, they’ll respond to their own culpability in the situation by telling the national media that you wanted it, anyway.” The lawsuit further states that the school knew that the boy was sexually harassing and assaulting girls the month before this incident took place, but did nothing. The school also failed to report any rapes occurring for the year's Safe Schools Report, which suggests that the administrators might have chosen to perceive the attacks as consensual in order not to have to admit the lack of safety in their hallways. Why guarantee the security of your students when you can just present the appearance of security. added by: putdownmypants

Vanessa Hudgens Says ‘Sucker Punch’ Would Be ‘So Badass’ In 3-D

‘Having my tomahawk fly towards your face, [it would be] just too cool,’ she tells MTV News of Zack Snyder flick. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Tim Kash Vanessa Hudgens Photo: MTV News Vanessa Hudgens’ upcoming film roles are definite departures from her squeaky-clean work in “High School Musical” — particularly in the upcoming action-thriller “Sucker Punch,” directed by “300” helmer Zack Snyder. When MTV News recently caught up with the young star, she revealed just how different the role really is. Hint: She’s traded singing for slinging bullets. Although the film will present at Comic-Con this weekend, Hudgens said it is far from completion. “It’s probably, definitely not done,” she said. “There’s so much CGI in it, it’s ridiculous.” Regarding the film joining in on the popular 3-D trend, Hudgens was enthusiastic about “Sucker Punch” going that route. “It would be so badass,” she said. “It’s already really badass, but having it in 3-D … having my tomahawk fly towards your face, [it would be] just too cool, you know?” Speaking of badass, Hudgens continued to cite the gun-slinging as her favorite aspect of filming. “Shooting a .50-cal [machine gun], there’s nothing like it,” she said with a smile. Hudgens added that she and her female castmates (including Jena Malone, Abbie Cornish and Emily Browning) found a new sense of empowerment with their gun-wielding skills. “I think all of us girls loved it so much. We’re all strong individuals, and when you give us a gun … you kind of unleash something.” Hudgens is also excited for fans to see a sneak peek of footage, which will premiere at Comic-Con in San Diego. “I’m going for the first time, and I’m so excited!” she exclaimed. “I want to go dress up in a mask or paint my face so I can walk around in the crowd.” Most of all, Hudgens can’t wait to see the first clip from the film, which is slated to premiere Saturday. “I’m really excited [for fans to see it]. There’s this beast that’s been unleashed with all of this. … I’m a lot tougher, stronger, badass — I don’t want to sound cocky, but it’s cool.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Sucker Punch.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Vanessa Hudgens Says ‘Sucker Punch’ Would Be ‘So Badass’ In 3-D

AP Shills for NAACP Against Wishes of Black Citizens in North Carolina

The Associated Press on Monday published a news item that would more correctly be called a shameless press release on behalf of the NAACP. Writer Allen G. Breed followed the liberal group to Raleigh for a recent show of kabuki theatre. The cause? Getting the Wake County school system to continue the antiquated method of forcibly busing students to far-flung neighborhoods in pursuit of racial integration. Never mind that the minority-heavy county brought sweeping changes to the school board by giving Republicans control last year – on the very platform of ending integration. And never mind that the majority of African-Americans living there are either opposed or indifferent to school integration. The NAACP knows what is best for them. Breed predictably began with the headline ” Fear of ‘Resegregation’ Fuels Unrest in NC .” What followed was a history lesson obviously designed to drum up more fear: In the annals of desegregation, Raleigh is barely a footnote. Integration came relatively peacefully to the North Carolina capital. There was no “stand in the schoolhouse door,” no need of National Guard escorts or even a federal court order. Nearly 50 years passed – mostly uneventfully, at least until a new school board majority was elected last year on a platform supporting community schools. The result has been turmoil. When a mainstream media news item uses a delicate word like “turmoil,” you can usually take that as a sign of some unhinged liberal getting arrested. In this case, that’s exactly what happened : four activists, including the NAACP state leader, disrupted a school board meeting in front of media cameras, sat in the chairs belonging to the school officials, and waited to be pulled away by police. This apparently made them heroes in the eyes of Breed, who contacted at least one of them for a quote: “We’re not going to sit idly by while they turn the clock back on the blood, sweat and tears and wipe their feet on the sacrifices of so many that have enabled us to get to the place we are today,” says the Rev. William J. Barber II, head of the state NAACP chapter and one of the four protesters arrested for trespassing at the June 15 board meeting. If Barber is so worried about those trying to turn back the clock, his outrage is aimed in the wrong direction. The new school board was elected to do that very thing by voters in the county, many of them minorities, tired of the pointless practice of integration. Raleigh’s local News and Observer provides information from 2009 that got conveniently ignored by the AP: Winning candidates in Tuesday’s Wake County school board elections achieved their victories by tapping into widespread resentment about the schools and offering up the rallying cry “neighborhood schools.” So these proponents of localized education were swept into power by a population ready and willing to “turn back the clock” on school integration. But wait, it gets worse: Interviews with candidates and supporters showed that other factors in the near-sweep by opponents of current school board policies included:   Lackluster support for current board diversity policies by Democrats and even opposition by a significant percentage of African-Americans, as reflected in a private poll taken by a Democratic operative last month. A core of discontent not only with board policies on diversity but also with year-round schools and what opponents called an arrogant and distant board and administration. Indeed, that internal poll conducted by a Democrat campaign operative in September 2009 found that some 46 percent of black voters opposed forced busing, 14 percent had no opinion, and only 39 percent approved. In other words, the NAACP is staging protests and spouting about civil rights against the very wishes of nearly half the African-Americans in Wake County.  The AP did eventually get around to admitting that some folks wanted to repeal integration… only to reprimand them for being ignorant: With 140,000 students in 160 schools, Wake County was the largest of about 70 districts across the nation using socio-economic status to maintain diversity. The system was considered a model for those looking for a way around race-based assignment scheme rejected by the courts. “It (the Wake County system) really was a beacon, a flag around which more and more people were rallying as they saw the positive effects of this,” says sociologist Gerald Grant, a professor emeritus at Syracuse University and author of the book “Hope and Despair in the American City: Why There are No Bad Schools in Raleigh.” But some parents grew tired of sending their children off on long bus rides. Others said the policy may have brought whites and blacks together, but it wasn’t really helping blacks educationally. And there are those who say people forgot how bad the bad old days were. “For folks who were there and lived through it, there’s a real sense of a collective forgetting, a collective amnesia,” says James Leloudis, a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who was in high school when the county system integrated. “There is a kind of tragic disremembering.” Part of the story is that Wake County is increasingly populated by people who did not grow up here and do not feel the tug or burden of that history. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, about half of Wake County’s residents were born outside North Carolina. So let’s break this down. First, courts kept striking down racially-driven school district schemes, but the geniuses in Wake County circumvented this by calling their scheme economically-driven, and this trick was heralded by liberal community organizers nationwide. Yet despite the apparent brilliance of this scheme, voters were unable to appreciate their good fortunes. Kids didn’t like being stuck on a bus for an hour, parents didn’t like PTA meetings on the other side of the city, and minority children were still not matching white peers on performance. The whole scheme was wasting money, time, fuel, and resources, all for very little gain. And then outsiders moved to Raleigh with their silly ideas of attending the school nearest home. Impressionable young black families, who don’t harbor resentment from the 1950s, are being convinced that forced busing is a stupid idea. Middle age NAACP activists are the true voice of the black community and know what is best for these naïve young blacks. This is what the Associated Press calls an informative news report about a complex issue. But it wasn’t done yet! No article on race would be complete without a random shot at tea parties: A columnist for The News & Observer in Raleigh recently called Margiotta and Tedesco “a couple of carpetbagging Northerners.” And Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker referred to the board majority as “people who are not from the area, who don’t share our values,” and announced the formation of a group to ensure that any new student assignment plan doesn’t violate the state constitutional guarantee of a sound education. The NAACP’s Barber admits busing supporters were caught napping last fall. But with five seats – including Margiotta’s – up for grabs next year, they are determined to keep up the heat to counter what “the anti-diversity, right-wing, tea party-sympathizing, resegregationist caucus is doing in Wake County.” That’s right, folks. If you think it’s pointless to make a black student sit on a bus for an hour to attend a school miles away from friends and family, you’re a right-wing bigot. The AP did not quote one single black voter who disagreed with the NAACP. It didn’t cite any polling data on how local minorities felt, and it didn’t share any facts on how ineffective the scheme has been. How kind of the AP to care so much about the plight of poor minorities in North Carolina. Perhaps when the news wire gets done propping up liberal activist groups, it can return to reporting on actual news from that state – like say, perhaps, the ongoing investigation against former governor Mike Easley, which the AP has all but ignored in recent months. Since the local affairs of North Carolina are of so much interest to readers nationwide, it would only make sense to report on all of them. Or do nationwide readers only need to hear about the NAACP’s grasp at relevance?

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AP Shills for NAACP Against Wishes of Black Citizens in North Carolina

VIDEO: Yes, there is racism in the Tea Party movement

After months of racist incidents and rallies filled with hateful signs disparaging President Obama’s ethnicity and other minorities, the NAACP has passed a resolution officially condemning racism in the Tea Party movement. This morning, Tea Party leader Mark Williams — who has been paid over $20,000 by the Tea Party Express political action committee — attacked the NAACP’s resolution, charging that the NAACP makes “more money off of race than any slave trader ever.” Other Tea Party leaders have criticized the resolution and claimed that there is no racism within their movement. Phillip Dennis, the leader of the Dallas area Tea Party, told Fox News that the Tea Party never focuses “on the pigment of people’s skin.” However, ThinkProgress has produced a short video demonstrating the vile racism that has been exhibited at some Tea Party events: DENNIS: The Tea Party does not focus on the pigment of people’s skin. TEA PARTY ACTIVIST1: He’s too black to be President. TEA PARTY ACTIVIST2: I’m a proud racist, I’m white. TEA PARTY ACTIVIST3: Afro-Leninism! Coming to you on a silver platter, Barack Hussein Obama! TEA PARTY ACTIVIST4: Go home wetbacks! Watch it: http://thinkprogress.org/2010/07/14/tea-party-racism/ added by: unimatrix0