Pulled from the playbook of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and in the
spirit of Joe McCarthy, some anonymous bigots disseminated an anti-public
education propaganda pamphlet throughout Janesville, Wisconsin a week ago.
This fanatical flyer is layered with hatemongering. According
to the pernicious pamphleteers, Rock County public educators are responsible
for the “sexualization of minor children, anti-morality and anti-God messaging,
false indoctrination, stripping of parents’ rights, and holding children
hostage.”
This anti-public education flyer, titled
Indoctrination versus Education, also conjures
up our state’s most embarrassing history—when Wisconsin’s Republican Senator
Joe McCarthy led the national
witch-hunt for American communists during the Second Red Scare. A half a
century ago, Wisconsinites thought their national disgrace died with McCarthy,
but some 21
st century "patriots" have apparently summoned
the ghost of the paranoid GOPer. In true
red-scare fashion, the paranoid patriots cry out to Rock County taxpayers to
“Stop the Marxist/Globalist Agenda in Wisconsin’s Schools.” The anticommunist flyer
comes complete with a McCarthy-like, “enemies-from-within” blacklist of 29 entitled
and traitorous public school administrators and educators—who allegedly bilk
local taxpayers with their salaries and benefits.
None of this anti-public educatorism comes as a surprise to
me. A review of history shows social and economic unrest often fosters the
climate for scapegoating. Cognitive
dissonance kicks in for the conflicted. America’s
larger
socioeconomic ills, the recent
free-market
induced recession, and the
local GM plant closing
have sent the paranoid patriots in search of a fall guy for their troubles. With
overt racism, sexism, and anti-Semitism off the table—public school educators are
apparently the acceptable target of the freaked-out pamphleteers’ vitriol.
Public educators are unapologetically a unique breed of
professionals. Our collaborative
mindedness,
support
for our unions, and disinterest in
unproven, competitive business
measures contrast with the MBA-thinkers of the
private sector. Further conflicting, public educators sometimes
openly clash with
politicalprenuers in shielding students from the volatility of free-market
forces. Unfortunately, like other
scapegoats in history, nonconformist ways make public school teachers promising
prey for those hunting for fall guys and gals.
Some of this recent public school hatemongering could easily
be cooled by Gov. Walker. I have called on his office to do so, but have not yet
heard back. Certainly, our Governor does not want his office or Wisconsin
associated with the bigotry promoted by the anti-public education pamphleteers.
However, the paradox is that the anti-public education McCarthyites clearly stand with Walker. They seemingly feel
comfortable associating themselves with the Governor. Almost the entire third
page of the pamphlet is a promotion of Walker’s ways. It is only right for the Governor
to publicly disassociate with the paranoid patriots responsible for this filthy
flyer.
The proper playbook for responding to discrimination has already
been written by Martin Luther King, Jr. (MLK) and other activists from the civil
rights era. Silent disapproval might stall a conflict, but it does not resolve
it. MLK appropriately said, “In the end, we will remember not the words of our
enemies, but the silence of our friends.” Left a void, bigots will fill it. Public
education friends must leave no void for the words and actions of anti-public
education bigots. Silence in the face of bigotry will surely make public educators this season's sacrificial lamb.
As a parting thought, I am reminded how Janesville’s 1992 troubles
with the KKK were transformed into great things by the thousands who stood
against the bigots of the day. Local civil
rights activists, including my sister-in-law, formed a
Human
Rights Task Force and subsequently a
counter demonstration was organized that dwarfed the KKK rally.
The racial
tensions ignited by the bigots led to Beloit and Janesville school districts
collaborating on tolerance initiatives. Most impressively, city leaders led a fund
drive that resulted in over 2,500 donors contributing to the building of a
state-of-the-art playground on the very location of the 1992 KKK rally. The anti-racist park is appropriately and symbolically called
Peace
Park and one of Janesville’s treasures made possible by those who stood against
bigotry.
The suffering ends when the resurrection begins. Let’s stand
together against anti-public educationism. Let's resurrect something beautiful in its
place. Let's build well-funded, quality public school systems treasured by all who stand against bigotry.