The design behind the Republican voucher plans: Medicare and Education

Appeared in  the “Your View” op-ed column in the Allentown Morning Call on Friday, July 1, 2011 John Locke wrote that “a long train of abuses, prevarications, and artifices, all tending the same way, make the design visible to the people” Two voucher proposals, the Ryan Medicare plan in Washington and the Piccola education voucher plan in Harrisburg, show us the real design of the Republican Party today— to help the very rich by harming working people. Both proposals claim to address real problems. Congressman Ryan’s plan is meant to deal with the long term costs of Medicare. State Senator Piccola’s plan supposedly helps low-income kids who attend failing schools. However, the proposals will not meet those goals. The Medicare plan does nothing to reduce the costs of senior health care. Indeed, it repeals the Affordable Care Act which would reduce those costs by $500 billion in the first ten… Continue reading

Stop the education cuts petition: 34,000 signatures, delivery events ongoing

About a month ago, Penn ACTION joined with Education Voters to launch a petition against Governor Corbett’s million dolar cut to education. The petition took off like wildfire and in a little oer three weeks, 34,000 people had signed. (If you haven’t signed yet, you can do so here.) Last week we began recruiting volunteers to deliver the signatures to legislative offices. We have set up a separate web site www.stoppaedcuts.org at which we are posting reports and photos about our delivery events and recruiting more people to join them. So far we have made 40 deliveries. We recently completed deliveries to Bucks County and received press coverage of our efforts there and in Montgomery County. We are also planning a Harrisburg event at which we will deliver all 34,000 petition signatures to Governor Corbett. Details coming soon. Delivering a set of petition signatures is something you can do in… Continue reading

Voucher bill won’t help those who need it most

Originally published in the Germantown Chronicle and the Mt. Airy Independent, April 29-May 11, 2011 Seven years ago, as I campaigned for State Representative in Nicetown and Germantown, I saw that many people, and especially African Americans, felt betrayed by the public schools. They were frustrated with inadequate funding, inexperienced teachers, limited school services, and unresponsive administrators. So I’m not surprised that State Senators who rightfully care about these communities, such as LeAnna Washington (D-4), would consider supporting SB1, the voucher proposal that will be voted on soon in Harrisburg. Good public policy, however, cannot be made on the basis of frustration. There are voucher proposals that progressives like myself could support—proposals that equalize funding statewide for all students and that guarantee everyone a place in a good school where professional teachers are honored, respected and well paid. But SB1 is not that proposal. SB1 is, in fact, a fraud. Continue reading

Pennsylvanians follow Gov. Corbett to Washington to say NO to vouchers

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xn6jbA9e1uE That’s video from Penn Action’s May 9 D.C. rally against vouchers.  Along with Action United and with help from the SEIU, the PSEA, USAction and the Philadelphia Student Union, a bus of concerned citizens travelled from Bucks County and Philadelphia to Washington D.C. to protest against school vouchers.   Pennsylvania’s Gov. Corbett joined his role model, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, in addressing the American Federation of Children, a pro-voucher, anti-public school organization.  We wanted to be there to let Gov. Corbett know that vouchers are not the solution to any problems Pennsylvania schools have – and that his $1.2B of cuts are not helping.   You can read and watch accounts of the event from a number of media outlets that covered the event. Politics PA UFCW Photos Philadelphia Inquirer and here Philadelphia Daily News (AP) Washington Post Pittsburgh Post-Gazette WHTM-TV 27 (ABC) Harrisburg Teamster Nation AFL-CIO Daily Kos… Continue reading

The real problem at Temple

A week or so ago I defended myself, and Temple, against David Horowitz’s charges that left-wing political correctness undermines the education we give our students. Today I want to address a real problem at Temple. Two years ago I walked into my first class of the semester and found that I had only two African American students in my class. (My classes had typically been over fifty percent African American when I started teaching at Temple eight years ago.) After the class was over I complained to an higher level administrator. His response has been repeated as the company line for the last few years. Given the increase in the number of students, and especially students from the suburbs, the percentage of African American students at Temple was dropping. You can see that this is true from the following data from the recently released Temple Factbook which can be found… Continue reading

Response to David Horowitz

I want to respond to David Horowitz’s criticisms of my teaching of Marx. Horowitz points to my web page, The Failure of Revolution, which, he says “faces the fact that Marx’s predictions about revolution have been refuted by history.” But he criticizes me because I go on to say “We can understand the failure of a revolution to occur as Marx predicted in Marx’s terms. The conditions that Marx expected to bring about a revolution did not arise. And we can give a powerful social class based explanation of the failure of those conditions to arise.” Thus Horowitz concludes that my point is that “In other words, even though Marx was wrong, he was right, and we can all be Marxists – or neo-Marxists – now.” To say that this is my point is both to take one sentence entirely out of  context and to hold an absurd view of… Continue reading

Academic Freedom at Temple

David Horowitz, the leftist turned rightist who made a fortune as a best selling biographer of Kennedys and Fords, and who has recently been criticizing left wing radicals in our universities, turned up at a State House of Representatives hearing held at Temple last month. He has been pushing an “academic bill of rights” that would, among other things, prohibit professors from using their classrooms “to advocate for their political and partisan views on controversial matter that are irrelevant to their field of expertise” or “pressure students into adopting their personal opinions;” and that would also prohibit them from “grading students on the basis of their political, social or religious opinions.” I had thought that Horowitz’s campaign had some merit. I have learned however, that Horowitz is about as interested in fair and balanced teaching as Fox News is interested in fair and balanced reporting. Continue reading