Culture Yes, Things Are Really As Bad As You've Heard - A Leftist Schoolteacher Struggles To Say Aloud the Things He Regularly Witnesses That Are So Outlandish They Sound Made Up By Right-Wing Provocateurs

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I spoke with the anon poster below, a public school teacher in a Blue city in a Blue state, and examined correspondence from his colleagues and supervisors that left no doubt that his personal account is authentic. He is indeed the sort of committed left-wing partisan who uses terms like “systems of oppression” unironically and who regards “anti-woke” polemicists as cynical hacks and grifters. He also happens to be witness to absurd school policies justified under the guise of “racial equity” that are doing harm to the very kinds of students on whose ostensible behalf they are being implemented. This is of course a familiar dynamic with all of the policies embraced as part of the ideological succession in schools: they enact a brazen form of neo-racism rooted in a fundamental contempt for the ability of black students to meet the same standards as other students and act as if the gutting of the most basic standards for all students will somehow help black students rather than harm all students — with the harm disproportionately being visited on the very students the policies claim to help. There is something poignant about the dilemma he describes, about being unable to communicate to his fellow leftist peers the awful magnitude of the moral abdication to which he is witness and party precisely because it is so extreme that all will dismiss it as right-wing propaganda. It is a dilemma widely shared across a range of liberal institutions in which conscientious actors see destructive practices being entrenched and immunized against critique by the same dynamics which they find powerless to resist because the specter of right-wing reaction makes any self-criticism impossible.

The summer program where I'm currently teaching enrolls about seventy students between the ages of six and twelve. Classes are technically open to any child in the district, but only a few parents actually sign their children up themselves; instead, the vast majority of kids are registered for the program by a teacher who was concerned with their academic performance the previous year. Parents can choose to accept or reject the enrollment, but the acceptance rate is something like 90% – it's free, after all, and plenty of these parents are already looking for a safe place to send their children while they work during the day.

This "enroll first, ask questions later" approach removes many of the obstacles that keep struggling students from engaging with other summer programs, many of which have complicated application processes and require children to meet certain academic standards. However, it also means many families aren’t particularly invested in the program itself and, as a consequence, both parent and student engagement is lower than it might otherwise be.

Early on, an administrator confessed that this sort of setup could lead to "attendance issues," which I took to mean some kids showing up late or even skipping class once in a while. Nine of the eleven students in my grade level were absent the first day. The next day, it was ten. By the end of the week, I had one student consistently attending and a few who had been officially withdrawn by their parents – but there were still eight children on my roster who were technically enrolled while having never once shown up.

At this point, I took a look at the waitlist to see if there were any students I could bring in to replace them; the games and activities I’d planned needed more kids anyway, and I knew the waitlist was where families who actually wanted their children to attend usually ended up (students who were just referred by teachers had priority placement). On my lunch break, I walked into the administrator’s office and asked them when I could expect the half-dozen or so children on my grade’s waitlist to be let in.

Immediately, I was informed of something truly absurd: The district is not allowed to remove any student from the program on the basis of non-attendance. A child remains enrolled in my classes until a parent explicitly states they’d like them removed, even if they have never once actually shown up.

Now, when I say the district is “not allowed” to do so, I don’t mean they’re forbidden by some state law or local ordinance. Rather, the district actively embraced this policy as part of their larger equity and racial justice overhaul, and even bragged about doing so in public-facing materials. Their explicit position is that requiring attendance for any district program unfairly victimizes children of color, as does factoring in attendance to any student’s grades during the regular school year. The administrator I spoke to seemed baffled that I would even ask. “I’ll let you know if any parents pull their kids out,” he told me, “but otherwise, your class is technically full.”

As an extra dose of insanity, we can’t even request that the parents of a non-attending student remove their child from the program; doing so, I was told, could “make them feel disrespected” and “communicate to them that their children are not welcome.” We just have to wait and hope they make that decision on their own, risking the occasional hint on a daily absence call that most don’t even pick up.

Over the past week or so, some of the chronically absent have finally been unenrolled. But as the program reaches its halfway point, the number of students who have never once attended but remain on the roster is still larger than the number of students on the waitlist. Today, as I write this, more than a dozen children whose families have actively sought out our help are still sitting at home, unable to attend “full classrooms” of four or five students - who are themselves struggling without peers to work with!

To most people, this sort of policy is absolutely inexplicable. How could it possibly benefit racial justice or equity to keep classrooms half-empty, excluding students who want to attend in deference to those who don't? The whole thing sounds like the sort of outrageous Kafkaesque fantasy a conservative would invent to satirize the ultra-woke and their bigotry of low expectations. But that’s precisely the problem. After all, what options do you have when so many of the people in charge of our schools have priorities so disordered that merely describing them, no matter how dispassionately, will earn you accusations of strawmanning?

I've had liberal friends of mine dispute (to my face!) straightforward accounts of what my colleagues have said. They’ll tell me school districts could never embrace such obviously unworkable policies; what else can I do except shrug my shoulders and say, "I'm sorry, but yes, they can?" They’ll tell me I sound like one of those right-wing grifter types; what else can I do except sigh and tell them the grifters have a point?

This is where I have to stop and make one thing very clear: I’m a leftist. Like, a big one. I hate capitalism, I support abortion on demand, and I unironically use phrases like “systems of oppression” and “the dominant culture.” The last big paper I put together for my undergraduate degree was on critical race theory, for the love of God! I’m not the sort of person who can be easily dismissed as a conservative crank. But plenty of my fellow leftists are still willing to try, on the grounds that anyone who thinks there might be any problem with DEI policies must necessarily be a slack-jawed MAGA troll.

In my short career as an educator, I’ve had countless experiences like this – encounters with colleagues and administrators so surreal that even close friends chided me for exaggerating or “playing into right-wing tropes” when I repeat them. And there’s a sense in which I don’t blame them, because things really are that crazy out here. Let me rattle off two quick examples for now, in case the summer program wasn’t bizarre enough:

1) I once attended a meeting where we brainstormed strategies to increase AP enrollment. When we moved to discuss the gap in enrollment between Black and white students, a senior teacher said that trying to register more children of color for AP classes is inherently racist and that putting greater value on AP classes at all is an expression of white supremacy. To clarify: I don't mean that a senior teacher expressed a complex set of ideas regarding racial justice that could be uncharitably reduced to those claims. I mean I sat in a room where a senior teacher literally spoke the words Trying to register more students of color for AP classes is inherently racist and Putting greater value on AP classes at all is an expression of white supremacy, to an audience of other teachers who nodded along or otherwise kept quiet.

2) I once attended another meeting - lots of meetings when you’re a teacher! - where we were working to approve a new weekly schedule for students. When I said I was concerned that it would require leaving some sections of the curriculum untaught, a colleague said that might actually be a good thing, because most of our students are white and their test scores dropping slightly would help shrink the racial achievement gap in our state. Again, to clarify: I don’t mean my colleague had a a more nuanced approach to testing that a dishonest interlocutor could twist to sound like that. I mean my colleague literally spoke those words. (To be fair, one other teacher did speak up and challenge them this time, albeit very politely.)

Now, do those two anecdotes, no matter how explicitly I describe them, sound like something out of James Lindsay's fever dreams? Yes! Are these things that did, in fact, happen? Also yes! And I just don't know how to get both of those facts across to the fairly large segment of the American population who believes it could only ever be one or the other. (Honestly, if I were more conspiratorial, I would think progressives were engineering this dynamic on purpose; in reality, I think they just organically stumbled on a level of craziness perfectly calibrated to make their critics seem like loons. Lucky them!)

Like I said before, I’m a leftist myself; I have a real and abiding commitment to racial justice in education,. Do I like having to make the same points as pundits who want me kicked out of the classroom too? Of course not. But it's precisely because I think racism and poverty are so rampant in this nation, and our obligation to respond so overwhelming, that I can’t keep pretending these ridiculous DEI schemes aren’t hurting the children we owe so much to. They are. It’s happening, right now.

So that's why I’m writing about these issues – not to dunk on the woke or trigger the libs or “launder my white anxiety” (as a friend recently suggested on social media). I’m writing about these issues because I want to grab anyone who might listen and tell them yes, things really are as bad as you've heard, even if the people you heard it from can be absolutely nuts. These stories sound crazy because they are crazy. It’s not my fault a bunch of cynical hacks noticed that first while all my supposed allies were training themselves to look the other way.

https://wesleyyang.substack.com/p/yes-things-are-really-as-bad-as-youve?r=4bqhe&s=r (A)
 
Ironically this just increases inequality; anyone who can afford it will send their kids to private school or move to a better school district. Lower income kids who have potential will get no education which will drastically cut their chances of making it out.
Poor but intelligent White kids from flyover country are the most shit-upon people in America, because they don't have the money or connections to fight the blatant racism/classism used against them and are not permitted to organize and advocate for their own interests.

But it is extremely satisfying to succeed anyway, and to watch shitskins and shitlibs seethe when it dawns on them that they cannot replicate your successes and cannot take them away from you (conanwhatisbestinlife.wav).
 
Really? Algebra? I'm pretty sure I could teach a border collie algebra. The person is dumb but not retarded. Most of high school trig isn't that bad either tbh. I'm not saying that they should apply for nasa, but I think you're way underestimating what below average, but not actively stupid, means.

I'm going to guess you went to college and have a very, very skewed idea of what "average" intelligence is, since people with IQs below about 95 rarely even get into college at all. An IQ of 85 correlates to about a 680 on the SAT (the 1600-point scale). How many people do you even know who got below 700 on the SAT? No, they can't learn algebra, and trig, pre-calc, and calculus are out of the question. Their brains can't handle abstractions. They struggle with understanding why 1/3 < 1/2, or that 1/4 = 0.25. Why y = mx + b is a straight line is a non-starter.

Armies of do-gooders with the same mentality as you show up to run things every few years. They're sure they can teach these mouth-breathing hoodrats the quadratic formula. After all, their novel teaching methods worked on a room full of rich, unmotivated white kids! (Average IQ of their classroom: 123. They were just lazy and didn't see any reason to pass algebra instead of playing Xbox.) Surely it'll work on this super-remedial math for class at the shitty public school in the shitty part of town (average IQ: 79). They eventually get brutalized by reality and quit. Some of them even finally admit that no, brains aren't all born equal.
 
An IQ of 85 correlates to about a 680 on the SAT (the 1600-point scale). How many people do you even know who got below 700 on the SAT? No, they can't learn algebra
Sure, if an IQ of 85 is genuinely their full potential. But there's a famous result demonstrating that traditionally low-achieving populations can "magically" jump up 10 IQ points or so if you offer them an external reward for paying attention and trying hard on the test. I suspect it's not usually "can do algebra" vs "can't do algebra" as much as it's "can half-ass their way through algebra and still pass" vs "can pass algebra but only if they are motivated and study hard".
 
This book is hysterical-

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The do-gooder delusions of a gay progressive smash face first into the brick wall of inner-city minorities' hostility towards all things educational, and hilarity ensues.
Nigger thinks he's Edward J. Olmos, how can he reach these keeeds indeed.

For that gayboy teacher in OP article only one thing came to mind: If i had any of my friends talk down to me in such a patronizing way i'd stab them.
 
He's close. I didn't see an age in the article.

He may willfully stay this way no matter what forever, or is one "that really racist comment you made about class attendance last June didn't go over well, we discussed it as a group and you're uninvited from Friendsgiving" from snapping out of it. It is sad people get this caught up in the bullshit for so long to begin with... but he's close.
 
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Sure, if an IQ of 85 is genuinely their full potential. But there's a famous result demonstrating that traditionally low-achieving populations can "magically" jump up 10 IQ points or so if you offer them an external reward for paying attention and trying hard on the test. I suspect it's not usually "can do algebra" vs "can't do algebra" as much as it's "can half-ass their way through algebra and still pass" vs "can pass algebra but only if they are motivated and study hard".

Sure, if you pay attention on a test, you'll do a little better. But it's a test of complex pattern-matching; people's scores fluctuate in about a 10-point range. No amount of trying is going to get your typical 85 to a 120. How many people do you know who got below 700 on the SAT? I find nearly everyone who denies the existence of dumb people has never really been around them, much less been assigned to teach them algebra, and even less actually achieved the target pass rate of 100%. Nobody has done this, because it can't be done.
 
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A real "are we the baddies?" moment. At least he's questioning his cult, that's a big first step.
Eh, it reads more like "Real communism has never been tried," and less like an awakening. The guy is still a progressive, after all.

Progressivism is a closed intellectual system. If Reality doesn't measure up to the predictions of Theory, it's the implementation that was bad, not the Theory. This guy is still nowhere close to admitting that maybe, just maybe, a culture that celebrates thuggery and materialism and denigrates self-improvement and hard work is not going to result in good educational outcomes for the people raised in it no matter what you do from the outside.
 
When I said I was concerned that it would require leaving some sections of the curriculum untaught, a colleague said that might actually be a good thing, because most of our students are white and their test scores dropping slightly would help shrink the racial achievement gap in our state.

This one really stung. The mask slips more regularly than you think and sometimes we get to hear the quiet part out loud. They don't want kids to succeed. Those teachers want everyone to be the same miserable little mind slaves like they are. Test scores be damned, we have a nigger problem to "fix!"
 
This one really stung. The mask slips more regularly than you think and sometimes we get to hear the quiet part out loud. They don't want kids to succeed. Those teachers want everyone to be the same miserable little mind slaves like they are. Test scores be damned, we have a nigger problem to "fix!"
Marxists are all about making everyone equal in misery and/or death.
 
One thing that's never been tried that I think might work is making the bucket smaller.

I went to a ghetto school and in a class with 30 kids, there were maybe 5 who were the crabs pulling everyone else back in. Ooking, fighting, disrupting class all day every day.

Put ghetto kids in a class with 10 students and give the teacher absolute freedom to kick a kid out of the classroom for any reason at all and I think you'd see improvement.

But this will never happen because the last thing the powers that be want to admit is that educational systems that work great for white kids don't work so great for lower-class blacks.
 
I'm going to guess you went to college and have a very, very skewed idea of what "average" intelligence is, since people with IQs below about 95 rarely even get into college at all. An IQ of 85 correlates to about a 680 on the SAT (the 1600-point scale). How many people do you even know who got below 700 on the SAT? No, they can't learn algebra, and trig, pre-calc, and calculus are out of the question. Their brains can't handle abstractions. They struggle with understanding why 1/3 < 1/2, or that 1/4 = 0.25. Why y = mx + b is a straight line is a non-starter.

Armies of do-gooders with the same mentality as you show up to run things every few years. They're sure they can teach these mouth-breathing hoodrats the quadratic formula. After all, their novel teaching methods worked on a room full of rich, unmotivated white kids! (Average IQ of their classroom: 123. They were just lazy and didn't see any reason to pass algebra instead of playing Xbox.) Surely it'll work on this super-remedial math for class at the shitty public school in the shitty part of town (average IQ: 79). They eventually get brutalized by reality and quit. Some of them even finally admit that no, brains aren't all born equal.
Trigonometry confuses me. FUCK TRIANGLES! Sine, Cosine, Tangent.... How the fuck do they work?
 
The left does shit like this all the time. They also intentionally cause a problem and position themselves as the solution to it, literal mafia tactics.
It is absolutely 100% intentional. They know what most blacks are like, which is why they always choose to live in wealthy neighborhoods that are nearly 100% white and any blacks that happen to be there are the more academically-successful ones that have been assimilated into white progressive culture and graduated college. But if you gain political power by pretending to be the solution to black failure, blacks can't actually start succeeding, or else you aren't actually needed any more. Likewise, if you gain political power by posing as the solution to white racism, having whites stop being racist is equally unacceptable, and if most black people actually start to act decently and become successful on their own merits, the source of white racism will start to disappear.

They project their own racism onto all other whites and see white conservatives as people who have the same low opinion of blacks that they do, but are just too dumb and/or autistic to hide it. They were "smart" enough to understand all the unspoken rules and act to gain greatest personal advantage under those rules, so therefore they are superior people who deserve to succeed. (Of course they also consider "being smart" and "acting to gain my own greatest personal advantage" to be the same thing, the concept of objective morality is foreign to them; closely examining them on moral thinking will inevitably produce utter nonsense and defensive rage.)

The idea that all society will suffer if no one can speak the truth and problems will only get worse without the ability to formulate a solution in line with objective reality is of course completely alien to them. The whole idea is literally just incomprehensible to them. They simply don't believe in objective reality, not just as a matter of ideology, but also as a matter of personal experience. Their entire existence has been, to use their phrase, "socially constructed" and as such is fundamentally unreal. They just don't deal with hard problems with objective right and wrong answers, whether it's difficult math, the right way to fix a toilet without flooding the bathroom, or how to survive a crazed gunman. They never have. They exist in a reality where you can always get what you want as long as you can bring enough social pressure to bear in the right way. When they are at risk of having to deal with a problem with right and wrong answers, they hire somebody else to deal with it for them, and shit on them as much as possible for it to assuage their own gnawing insecurity; when all your achievments are social, all your achievments are hollow, and deep down they know it.
 
This is where I have to stop and make one thing very clear: I’m a leftist. Like, a big one. I hate capitalism...
a colleague said that might actually be a good thing, because most of our students are white and their test scores dropping slightly would help shrink the racial achievement gap in our state.
Whats the matter? I thought you were a good commie?

Math scores correlate strongly with IQ. With low IQ, a lot of help and tutoring might barely get you a C in a class you would have otherwise failed at, but you'll just go fail the next round. Unfortunately, our education system is based on the theory that every student is a potential Einstein, not on helping every student be his best self. There are useful things people with 85 IQs can do. There is no need to waste their time and ours trying to make them pass algebra. But admitting this upsets social pieties, and not just about race. White parents of dumb kids are awful about insisting their little brat's just as bright as the kid who got 100 on the trig test without studying, or even remembering we had a test that day.

This. I had to 'volunteer' at some inner city camp once when I was like 20 and 'teach' a bunch of 'inner city youth' how to use computers (ie: fill out web-forms and hit submit). They couldn't type, heck most of them couldn't read. They had no interest in following any instructions, completing any tasks, learning anything (I think 2 of 12 actually completed the assignment...poorly). I came in ready to "Give my all and make a difference" I left saying "These are lost causes who will probably be carjacking me in 10 years." I could see in 3 hours what these people ignore for a whole life time but deep down they know it to be true and that's why they want to remake the system. If you can't teach chimp to be human, teach the human to be a chimp, call it equity and proclaim yourself successful.

Back then I would say stuff like "It's their socioeconomic status, they weren't raised or taught as kids, we can fix it, we just need to take a long road, fix the next generation., start with jobs programs and stable homes, focus on early education..." Well guess what? Politicians and administrators are incapable of taking the long road as there are no optical wins to be had on the long road, the long road leads to a better society but not to re-election. The hordes of Indians or Chinese whose parents don't even speak english, who come from places where you shit on lawn, eat gutter oil and wipe with your hands do better and don't need 60 years of 'dem programs.' Not to mention this country doesn't have 20 more years. Now more and more I'm convinced that we could carry them on our backs the whole fucking way and they would still find a way to fuck it up, that they would still turn on us the second it was beneficial in the short term... The time to play benevolent benefactor has ended, they hate us, time to start hating them back the way nature intended. Now where the fuck is my corn cob pipe!?
 
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Damn that's some real doomer hours. Provided the author isn't making all this up, of course.
 
Whats the matter? I thought you were a good commie?



This. I had to 'volunteer' at some inner city camp once when I was like 20 and 'teach' a bunch of 'inner city youth' how to use computers (ie: fill out web-forms and hit submit). They couldn't type, heck most of them couldn't read. They had no interest in following any instructions, completing any tasks, learning anything (I think 2 of 12 actually completed the assignment...poorly). I came in ready to "Give my all and make a difference" I left saying "These are lost causes who will probably be carjacking me in 10 years." I could see in 3 hours what these people ignore for a whole life time but deep down they know it to be true and that's why they want to remake the system. If you can't teach chimp to be human, teach the human to be a chimp, call it equity and proclaim yourself successful.

Back then I would say stuff like "It's their socioeconomic status, they weren't raised or taught as kids, we can fix it, we just need to take a long road, fix the next generation., start with jobs programs and stable homes, focus on early education..." Well guess what? Politicians and administrators are incapable of taking the long road as there are no optical wins to be had on the long road, the long road leads to a better society but not to re-election. The hordes of Indians or Chinese whose parents don't even speak english, who come from places where you shit on lawn, eat gutter oil and wipe with your hands do better and don't need 60 years of 'dem programs.' Not to mention this country doesn't have 20 more years. Now more and more I'm convinced that we could carry them on our backs the whole fucking way and they would still find a way to fuck it up, that they would still turn on us the second it was beneficial in the short term... The time to play benevolent benefactor has ended, they hate us, time to start hating them back the way nature intended. Now where the fuck is my corn cob pipe!?
This is why I think China beats America long-term. They aren't schizo in their policies like America is.
 
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