Archive for June, 2017

To understand white liberal racism, read these private emails – KUOW – KUOW News and Information

On a gray day last October, teachers across Seattle wore a shirt that read BLACK LIVES MATTER.

They knew there might be criticism. John Muir Elementary in south Seattle had done this in September and received a bomb threat and hate mail from across the U.S.

But they did, and the day was, by most accounts, uneventful. Some kids got it most didnt. Just another school day.

And then, a backlash, but this time not from outsiders. White parents from the citys tonier neighborhoods wrote to their principals to say they were displeased. A Black Lives Matter day was too militant, too political and too confusing for their young kids, they said.

Some danced around their discomfort, others snarked in ALL CAPS. These parents would not talk to us, so we made a public records request for their emails.

Their names were blacked out, which is why they are not named here.

Wrote a parent at Laurelhurst Elementary: Can you please address why skin color is so important? I remember a guy that had a dream. Do you remember that too? I doubt it. Please show me the content of your character if you do.

From Eckstein Middle School in Wedgwood: What about red and black or yellow and white and black? How does supporting Black Lives Matter help that gap?

And from Bryant Elementary in Ravenna: Im writing to share what my 9-year-old daughter told me about what she learned in class regarding the Black Lives Matter discussion. She said she felt bad about being white. And that police lie and do bad things.

These three schools are in northeast Seattle, one of the whitest, most affluent corners of the city. They are also in staunchly liberal neighborhoods dotted with rainbow yard signs that say All are welcome.

This is what Ive come to call Seattles passive progressiveness, said Stephan Blanford, a Seattle school board member whose doctoral research focused on race and public education. We vote the right way on issues. We believe the right way. But the second you challenge their privilege, you see the response.

Blanford is black and represents the Central District, the historic African-American heart of the city. He wasnt surprised by the emails from parents after the Black Lives Matter day. Middle-class white parents have asked him for help getting their kids out of Madrona Elementary, which is 44 percent black.

No one will say to me, We dont want our kids to go to a black school, but I believe thats frequently the underlying reason, Blanford said.

Black Lives Matter emerged from a Twitter hashtag in 2013. The movement gained momentum as videos emerged of police officers killing black men, and from there became a rallying cry against racism. Those three words say that black lives havent mattered enough in this country, and they should.

Reaction to the Black Lives Matter day might have been more muted had Sarah Talbot, the principal atLaurelhurst, not sent an email afterward to parents.

I heard from a few parents concerned about what teacherswerentsaying, Talbot wrote.

They werent saying anything about lives the lives of students, parents and families who are not black. I worried about that too. Would our Native students feel left out, since they face the same (or worse) effects of systemic racism in schools and outside of schools that black students face? What about the majority of the students in our school who are white? They also live with the effects of a society that unfairly prioritizes their lives.

But then I remembered that atLaurelhurstElementary, we have a 20 percent difference in the growth of black students reading skills when compared to the average growth of all students at our school."

After school, a mom learned that her 5-year-old was asked to stand up in front of his class and talk about Black Lives Matter and his shirt. By the end of the day, he had taken it off and shoved it in his cubby.

TheLaurelhurstBlog, which doesn't name its writer, wrote to media a week later: Many parents contacted theLaurelhurstBlog and found the email disturbing, divisive and offensive, and one called it racially biased."

The blogger continued, Talbot says there is injustice and there are gaps but where are her examples? Since she didnt provide any, is it her own invented bias that she is bringing to the community, creating divisiveness?

Director Blanford urged me to interview Jill Geary, the school board director representing northeast Seattle. Geary is a white mom of five with a daughter at Laurelhurst Elementary; maybe she could explain parent thinking, he said.

Geary doesnt see herself as a total insider, however. She was once an administrative law judge who focused on special education; years ago she refused to join other parents in trying to oust a program for highly traumatized kids at Laurelhurst.

She sighed a little as she explained:

They would prefer to be all lives matter, because then their child is included in the conversation about mattering, she said. What they dont think is, would a black mother feel like her child matters, based upon the way that history, the nation, the city, the institutional structures, have treated her child? Thats not the process theyre using.

Geary shared a story from earlier in the year: A sticker that read HCC = APPartheid was placed outsideThurgood Marshall Elementary. HCC stands for Highly Capable Cohort; APPartheid is a play on what the program was called before APP, or Advanced Placement Program.

The sticker's message: The gifted program is overwhelmingly white. Last year,1 percent of the program was black, even though the district was 16 percent black.

We got very angry emails about that, as though we had sponsored it, Geary said. They were upset their kid was being shamed for being in HCC. I think thats the same instinct.

Read: Where are the black kids in Seattle's gifted program?

When Geary spoke with a parent upset about the Black Lives Matter day last fall, she said, I know your child matters. You know your child matters. But Im not sure that we as a society have made it clear that we believe black children matter in the way that white children matter.

But Geary said caring a lot is part of the culture at affluent schools like Laurelhurst, where parents have time and money to get involved.

Theres a portable on the playground, and we are arming ourselves to get rid of it, Geary said. I hate to say it, but that is privilege amplified.

I asked Jennifer Harvey, a religion professor in Des Moines, Iowa, to read these emails and share her thoughts. Harvey recently had an opinion piece in The New York Times titled, Are we raising racists?

As a white person myself, I hear and I know how white people think about race,and I wasn't surprised to see just a basic lack of understanding of how racism functions, Harvey said. This would not be unique to Seattle liberal whites, nor among liberals who didn't vote for Trump. These kind of sentiments are very deep seated.

She continued: What I see when I read these emails is this utter failure to value black life. Because if you value black life you go, Oh my god, even if I don't understand this,why is it that African-Americans need to have this movement for black lives, and what is it like to be a 10-year-old child who's black?

It's like there's this total white vortex that just screams out from these emails, whether they are being nasty intentionally or just saying,'I don't get it.'They make me really sad.

Not that all parents bristled at the Black Lives Matter day. Several cheered on the school in their emails. And when I contacted members of the Laurelhurst PTA members, two moms replied that they supported it.

But there was also a mom heartbroken by how the day had played out for her son.

I was feeling scared to drop them off at school, [my son] in particular, being at Laurelhurst as a brown student in a sea of white peers and white staff, she wrote to Principal Talbot.

That morning, the mom and her son talked about what his Black Lives Matter shirt meant. He told me he felt scared, the mom wrote.

As we parked, he said, Mom! I just got a good idea. If I get white paint and put it all over my body to cover the brown so they cant see it, then people will stop killing us black and brown people.

I cried so many tears of sadness, fear, anger and feelings of lost hope yesterday morning, she said.

After school, she learned that her 5-year-old was asked to stand up in front of his class and talk about Black Lives Matter and his shirt. By the end of the day, he had taken it off and shoved it in his cubby.

I asked him why, and he said because he was tired of people asking him about it and wanting to take his picture, the mom wrote. I was so angry all I could do was pick him up, hug him so tightly and said, I can see why you chose not to wear it. That sounds uncomfortable and unfair.

When I told Director Blanford this story, he said it made sense the boy was overwhelmed. In his day-to-day experience as a student, he's probably pretty invisible, and then all of a sudden, hes the celebrity in the classroom."

Referring back to the critical parents, he said, The intersection of class and race always has the potential to be explosive. This was a nice powder keg, and it just needed the match."

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To understand white liberal racism, read these private emails - KUOW - KUOW News and Information

Democrats see high stakes in Georgia’s special election – Washington Post

Democrats will turn their gaze south this week, hoping victory in a special election in Georgias 6th Congressional District will serve as a referendum on President Trump and spark their efforts to counter his agenda and to win back the House.

Embodying those hopes is Democrat Jon Ossoff, a 30-year-old former Capitol Hill staffer who has campaigned as a moderate in the wealthy suburbs north of Atlanta and raised more than $23 million.

But despite Ossoffs financial advantage the showdown is the most expensive House race in history Democrats remain on edge. Polls show the clash between Ossoff and Republican Karen Handel too close to call, and GOP candidates have prevailed in several special elections this year.

Timing is critical, with Tuesdays vote coming as congressional Democrats are rousing their base by attempting to block Republican legislation to overhaul the nations health-care system. Senate GOP leaders have been privately revising a House-passed version for weeks, aiming to call a vote by the end of June.

Many Democrats see the Georgia race and their health-care moves as intertwined. If Ossoff wins, the likely wave of enthusiasm could rattle Trump and Republicans. If Ossoff loses, it could be demoralizing and reveal the challenges facing Democrats ahead of next years midterm elections, despite the GOP health-care proposals unpopularity and the controversy over Trumps handling of investigations into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

Democrats need to flip 24 Republican-held seats to take back the House majority, which they lost seven years ago.

The stakes have stoked talk of unity among wings of the Democratic Party, which has dealt with intraparty tensions since Trump won.

On Sunday, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said he was standing with Ossoff, even though Ossoff has not run as a vocal progressive.

Oh, absolutely, Sanders said on CNNs State of the Union. I very much want Ossoff to win. His views are a lot better than his Republican opponents.

Sanders also said Democrats should do everything possible to counter Trump and the Republican health-care bill, and framed the Georgia race as one of the ways the party could begin to turn around its fortune.

Senate Democratic leaders are considering several maneuvers to stop Republicans from proceeding on the legislation and to protest the GOPs behind-the-scenes discussions, according to aides.

Once senators return to Washington on Monday, Democrats may threaten to halt procedural routines and boycott committee meetings and hearings, the aides said.

Senate Republicans have acknowledged the potential political pitfalls should their legislation be defined by the secrecy in which it has been deliberated.

The Senate is not a place where you can just cook up something behind closed doors and rush it for a vote on the floor, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said Sunday on CBSs Face the Nation.

Every camera in the world is going to have to see whats in it, Rubio said.

Ossoff who nearly won the seat outright in the first round of voting in April spent the weekend urging Democrats who are furious with Trump to turn out, all while keeping his tone and message steady as he courted more centrist Republicans in a district that has been in GOP hands since 1979. It was represented by Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price until he resigned to join Trumps Cabinet.

We have a great candidate, Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), a veteran civil rights leader, said as he campaigned alongside Ossoff. Smart, young and just good.

Ossoff said Tuesdays election would have consequences far beyond the districts well- manicured lawns and glassy office parks.

Folks across the district, folks across the state, folks across the country, there are those who have lost faith, Ossoff said. All of us here today, and all of us in this district, have a chance now to help restore some of that.

Ossoff has avoided making the Russia probes and Trumps decision to fire former FBI director James B. Comey central to his closing pitch, calling for a vigorous investigation but mostly focusing on health care and the economy.

Handel, meanwhile, has embraced her long ties to state and local Republicans, a point she has played up repeatedly as she has jeered Ossoff for living outside the district.

A former Georgia secretary of state, Handel campaigned with Price and Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, a former Georgia governor.

This is a harbinger of national politics, Perdue said Saturday at a Handel rally. The world is looking, the nation is looking, and all the money has flowed in here.

Dont be fooled by someone who doesnt have a record, he added. Let me tell you something, [Ossoff] is a puppet, and the strings are being pulled by the Democrats and Nancy Pelosi, the House minority leader.

Early voting levels have been extraordinarily high, reflective of the intense interest in the race. More than 120,000 people have already voted, nearly a quarter of all registered voters in the district.

Trumps shadow continues to loom, not so much because of Republican reservations about his policies but because of their unease with his combative persona and the lack of progress in enacting key priorities, such as tax cuts and the repeal of aspects of the health-care law.

Handel has turned to the president for a fundraising lift but otherwise treaded cautiously when speaking of him, aware that much of her well-educated conservative base does not always identify with his roaring populism.

Trump barely won the district last year as Price coasted to a double-digit victory.

At the weekend rally, Perdue noted that some Republicans may even be turned off by our president. But he urged solidarity and said Trump keeps his promises.

Handel has been cagey, too, on the Republican health-care plan, saying the House bill is far from perfect in a nod to concerns among voters about the legislations scope and its coverage of people who have preexisting conditions or rely on Medicaid.

On Russia, Handel has dismissed the mounting questions about Trumps interactions with law enforcement officials as noise but said she supports letting the facts take us where the facts take us.

Handel has raised more than $5 million, putting her far behind Ossoff, but she has been boosted by outside groups that have spent more than $11 million on her behalf. A political action committee aligned with House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) has been particularly active.

Ossoffs droves of volunteers have drawn notice. During a recent trip to the district, The Washington Post encountered numbers of them in blue T-shirts going door to door a glimpse into the energy on the Democratic side, especially among progressive millennial-age voters who see Trump as anathema to their views.

Ossoff said Friday on MSNBC that he has built a coalition of Democrats, independents and Republicans.

But as she stood Saturday in front of an enormous American flag at an airport hangar, Handel described Ossoff as a liberal interloper who had values from 3,000 miles away in San Francisco.

It was a return to traditional partisan themes, seemingly as a reminder to any Republican tempted to stay home or vote for Ossoff.

We are going to show up on Tuesday, and were going to rock Nancy Pelosis world, Handel said to cheers.

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Democrats see high stakes in Georgia's special election - Washington Post

The Dems’ new midterm challenge: Replicate Ossoff’s success – Belleville News-Democrat


Belleville News-Democrat
The Dems' new midterm challenge: Replicate Ossoff's success
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The Dems' new midterm challenge: Replicate Ossoff's success - Belleville News-Democrat

Woman, 67, killed in Santa Rosa mobile home fire – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

(1 of ) Mobile home fire early Sunday afternoon on Bejay Avenue. (Photo courtesy Eloisa Ambriz) (2 of ) Firefighters work on putting out a fire at a mobile home at 404 Bejay Avenue in Santa Rosa Mobile Estates where there was one confirmed fatality on Sunday in Santa Rosa. June 18, 2017. (Photo: Erik Castro/for The Press Democrat)

KEVIN MCCALLUM

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | June 18, 2017, 4:11PM

| Updated 5 hours ago.

A woman was killed Sunday afternoon when fire engulfed her Santa Rosa mobile home.

The blaze in the Santa Rosa Mobile Estates spread so rapidly that by the time firefighters arrived, they had no hope of rescuing anyone trapped inside the home, Santa Rosa Battalion Chief Mark Basque said.

The fire was reported around 12:30 p.m. in the park on Brooks Avenue off East Robles Avenue just outside city limits. The park has about 120 mobile homes, some in poor condition.

Joe Giordani, battalion chief of the Rincon Valley Fire Protection District, confirmed there was a single fatality. The womans husband and her son escaped the flames, but by the time they realized she remained inside they were unable to get her out, Giodani said.

Giodani did not release the womans name, but neighbors identified her as Elizabeth Stamp, 67.

Photos and videos taken by residents showed the flames enveloping the home and a column of smoke soaring hundreds of feet into the stiflingly hot air.

Eloiza Ambriz, 20, who lives across the street from the park, said she and family members had been trying to stay cool in a kiddie pool as the temperatures approached 100 degrees when she spotted the smoke.

It was already huge, Ambriz said of the fire. Her family members used a garden hose to wet the fence and landscaping near the fire, hoping to prevent its spread, she said.

Firefighters were able to keep the fire mostly contained to the single unit although the flames scorched the neighboring mobile homes causing minor damage.

The exterior of Tonia Robinsons unit suffered minor damage.

She and other residents described the home a place from which homeless people came and went on a regular basis, with piles of bicycle parts strewn everywhere. Complaints to the management company went unheeded, said Chris Soeters.

There were so many complaints made about these people over the year and there was never a darn thing done about it, Soeters said.

Resident Melissa Miller said as her family watch the flames, they heard a number of loud popping sounds that made them run inside, worried there might be ammunition exploding. Word spread very quickly that her neighbor apparently was still inside.

It made me very sad, Miller said. This is an unforgettable day.

You can reach Staff Writer Kevin McCallum at 707-521-5207 or kevin.mccallum@pressdemocrat.com. On Twitter @srcitybeat.

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Woman, 67, killed in Santa Rosa mobile home fire - Santa Rosa Press Democrat

Web Extra: Tour of New Republican Party Headquarters – KARK

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - The chairman of the Republican Party of Arkansas took Capitol View host Jessi Turnure on a tour of the party's new headquarters, which is currently under renovation.

The party moved into its homestead on 6th Street right down the road from the state capitol in 1996, when Gov. AsaHutchinson served as chairman.

The renovated complex, the Rockefeller Republican Center, will include a brand new building in his honor, the Gov.Asa Hutchinson Historium. The facility merges two buildings built in the late 40sthat currently serve has the RPAheadquarters.

Chairman Doyle Webb said the historium will include busts of state elected officials, multimedia galleries and a custom-made light fixture symbolic of Arkansas history, including 75 stars for its 75 counties and a diamond for the state flag.

The current administrative office building, soon to be the Gov. MikeHuckabeeExecutive Wing, sits on the left of the historium with the reception hall, John PaulHammerschmidt Hall, on the right.

A new outdoor patio and kitchen, Diversity Plaza, is located behind the complex.

Webb said the RPA will move into its new headquarters in late summer and dedicate the facility Sept. 17, which is the230th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution.

You can see the full tour in the embedded video above.

Capitol View airs Sunday mornings at 8:30 on KARK.

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Web Extra: Tour of New Republican Party Headquarters - KARK