Wow - Indy really is wolfpackgrrrs little bitch.
6/21/2010 12:11:19 PM
GGMon puts in his monthly Soap Box appearance.
6/21/2010 12:15:04 PM
So nobody wants a million dollars?
6/21/2010 1:56:23 PM
BridgetSPK:
6/22/2010 7:08:56 PM
6/22/2010 7:14:49 PM
^^My frame of reference is that I have eyes, and I'm honest. The neighborhood I grew up in has had a grand total of two non-white families over the past seventeen years--currently, we're at zero.In one way, you're right that we are more integrated than other cities. Because we chose to use bussing as aggressively as we did, we've had less white flight out of the city, but we still live separately for the most part. The majority of less affluent neighborhoods are populated by racial and ethnic minorities. And the majority of more affluent neighborhoods are populated by white folks.This is not a liberal lie. It's just the truth. Everybody in this debate--school board members, posters in this thread, liberals, conservatives, whatever--agrees that our neighborhoods are not diverse in class or race, particularly those at the more affluent and less affluent ends of the scale.^You're correct that there are no bad schools here now. We need to improve, but you're right that nobody is accusing of us academic genocide or threatening to take over our schools (a reality other counties have had to face).But the reason why we have no bad schools is because we've used busing. They chose not to have schools that would be at 70% receiving free and reduced priced lunches...because they knew the other 30% would do their best to leave. As people with money leave, businesses in the area collapse. As businesses collapse, employment opportunities dry up for the people that are left, and the poor end up poorer. Now, these are just the first few steps to building yourself a "bad" school, but I'm sure you get the picture...
6/23/2010 1:27:02 AM
^Holy fucking You egalitarians are a total joke.Oh boo hoo, this rich kid is gonna have a better life than this poor one!!So fucking what? God damn!
6/23/2010 9:08:38 AM
^I've argued this particular issue for years. It's not necessarily a matter of egalitarianism, being a liberal, social engineering, or boohooing for poor kids. It's good business.Even conservative business owners saw the writing on the wall, and they have continued to support the busing policy all these years.But, hey, you wanna pay extra in taxes to support people who can't find work and pour millions of extra dollars into failing schools, that's your business. And I don't wanna come off like I'm threatening you, but you should be clear that when these schools fail, we will have to pay one way or another. There are public schools in NC where per pupil spending nears $20,000/year...average for the state is less than $7,000/per pupil. And the extra money does not improve academic performance. But at least all the kids have bus rides that are an average of five minutes shorter! Thank God for that!
6/23/2010 5:31:35 PM
I think to be honest that class diversity in neighborhoods is a pipe dream. Not because people can't live together, but simply because they don't want to. Someone trying to figure out which of their cars they can afford to get repaired this month doesn't have much in common or even want to talk to someone who's biggest vehicle concern is whether they accidentally put regular in their corvette. People naturally congregate with like minded people with like problems and like successes. This isn't automatically a bad thing (although as pointed out, it can easily contribute to self destructive behavior).It seems to me though, a better solution to the "white flight" problem (as if affluent blacks, asians and hispanics don't leave when the neighborhood gets bad too) is to provide incentives to stay. So when you build new schools, build them nearer or in the poorer performing districts. Not only would this reduce the class size for the current students (a good way to improve education) but it also provides incentives for people to stay or even move to the district (I know I would prefer my kids go to a school with 12 students per class as opposed to 20). As an added bonus, by putting a new school say on the border of a poor area and an affluent area, now you have a new "neighborhood school". Instant race class integration and a neighborhood school to boot. It's a win for everyone.
6/23/2010 7:08:38 PM
they've been building nice schools in shitty areas for a long time, hell hillside high in durham had some of the nicest facilities when it was built and its a terrible high school.
6/23/2010 7:11:11 PM
6/23/2010 7:11:45 PM
Sort of. I just think that of all the things you can spend money on in a school (short of quality teachers) reducing the class size is one of the best.^^ There's a considerable difference between a nice school building and building a nice school. It doesn't matter if you have all the latest wizbang $50,000 per room electronic whiteboard projector screens with student laptop integration devices that money can buy. If you don't hire quality teachers and you don't keep the class sizes manageable, all you've done is waste money.
6/23/2010 7:24:50 PM
well i mean if there was some secret to making a school "nice" we wouldn't be having this discussion at all. you can't superficially say, "hey, why don't we just make "nice" schools in the ghetto" because there is no consensus on how to make a "nice" school. i mean otherwise i would just follow up your idea with, "why don't we just make every school nice then there is no issue at all!!!"
6/23/2010 8:06:28 PM
6/23/2010 8:35:19 PM
6/23/2010 9:07:41 PM
6/23/2010 9:24:53 PM
6/23/2010 9:45:05 PM
6/23/2010 10:15:06 PM
6/24/2010 12:35:56 AM
Easy there killer. Though the word choice was admittedly bad, the "firing qualified people because they don't want to play your games" remark was a direct reference to the school board's stupid decision to dismiss Del Burns early, resulting in having to pay off his contract, finding someone to work in the mean time and still having to search for a new person (at the low low price of $100,000 to some recruitment firm). So, sorry about the poor word choice. There was plenty of snark, but it wasn't directed at you, it was directed at the politics that surround this issue. There are plenty of ways to improve the school system, and other ways to solve the busing issue, but as you point out, many are unfeasible. They're unfeasible mostly do to politics, and that is a shame.
6/24/2010 8:00:30 AM
How exactly is a 12 student classroom not feasible due to politics ?
6/24/2010 8:55:32 AM
6/24/2010 9:49:42 AM
There would have to be a crapload of schools, public or private, to achieve that. I'm not sure we have the space. Guess we could build skyscraper schools
6/24/2010 11:00:00 AM
6/24/2010 12:52:19 PM
The fact that it would cost a shit more than the budget doesn't make it political, and going 100% private doesn't warrant a responsE because it's ben covered
6/24/2010 2:29:13 PM
Since both the budget and privatizing schools and/or vouchers are almost completely political issues, that would make the feasibility of classroom sizes a largely political issue as well.But go for it, tell me what are the issues that prevent us from decreasing class sizes that aren't more or less controlled by politics. And before you start, yes, there is an upper limit on how much the government can actually squeeze from their citizens before the citizens can't pay the taxes anyway, but unless you're suggesting we're anywhere near that point, it's a political issue.
6/24/2010 4:23:29 PM
6/24/2010 7:02:46 PM
6/24/2010 10:03:15 PM
^ Nah, they'd have to install elevators, can't hurt anyone's self esteem you know I would imagine that it cames down to construction costs originally. Many of the schools were built long before the population boom, and more stories tend to require different foundations. Since they didn't imagine needing such capacity, they didn't build a foundation to support it.
6/24/2010 10:18:07 PM
6/25/2010 1:25:33 AM
^None of your business.But our neighborhood is modestly priced compared to a lot of these new places going up nearby. I'm pretty sure the neighborhood up the street from us with homes that start at $1.5M isn't going to be particularly diverse either. Of course, there are plenty of exceptions--the two black families in my neighborhood were most affluent people in the neighborhood, and I suspect the wealthiest people I've ever met in real life are my Asian friend's unassuming parents.But overall, it's just a matter of economics and the way money is distributed between the races. Feel free to consult eleusis's posts and his link on page 3 if you need any more convincing of a reality that everybody but yourself is able to acknowledge.[Edited on June 25, 2010 at 2:08 AM. Reason : ]
6/25/2010 2:00:47 AM
its funny how you make a remark about my need for reality while all of your posts are admitted "assumptions." additionally, you are going to have to clarify if you are seeking financial diversity or ethnic diversity. you keep dancing around both as if they are dependent on each other when they are not.
6/25/2010 7:08:49 PM
I'm talking about racial/ethnic diversity. The reason why I continue to bring up money is because it's the main reason why a lot of our neighborhoods are not diverse. According to the link I mentioned, black/Latino students in Wake County are ten times more likely to receive free and reduced priced lunch...following these numbers, there's just no way in hell that your claim of diversity ("most of the affluent neighborhoods are pretty damn diverse anyway") could possibly be true.And a lot of it has to do with money, but we also still have some racial stuff going on in real estate. For example, here are lots of majority-black middle-class neighborhoods. My friend wants to live in one, and I assume it's because she wants to be around other black people or whatever. But I'm pissed because I know the real estate agent is pushing her towards that direction in order to dump the listing/not have to try to convince one of her white clients to buy a home in a majority-black neighborhood. It's still easier for them to put the blacks with the blacks and the whites with the whites.
6/25/2010 8:40:02 PM
6/25/2010 10:02:27 PM
6/25/2010 10:49:07 PM
^^Meh, just read about the practice in books.And it makes sense that it would work like that on occasion.[Edited on June 25, 2010 at 11:10 PM. Reason : sss]
6/25/2010 11:01:29 PM
6/25/2010 11:42:29 PM
6/25/2010 11:56:34 PM
^ what are you saying? You don't think real estate agents might consider race in the way BSPK is noting?Do you really expect agents to come out and say "yes, we do certain things based on skin color" and in the absence of such a statement, just say those practices simply don't exist?If you are waiting for a poll or study where people come out and admit they are racist, you're going to be waiting for a long time. That is a somewhat naive mentality to take i think. The correlations are there, the causes are known, it's the solutions that are still somewhat elusive.But asserting that the correlations or causes don't exist is counterproductive.
6/26/2010 12:37:27 AM
^^It was just a one-off example of how money doesn't entirely dictate where people choose to live and whatnot. Some people pick a majority-[blank] neighborhood because they don't wanna be in the minority. Sometimes there's some steering going on.I didn't intend to upset anybody by mentioning these things. And I hope I haven't upset you in revealing my "mindset" about the way real estate can work sometimes...The amount of words/upset you're devoting to a small (largely inoffensive) portion of my post seems really disingenuous. What I'm getting from you right now is feigned outrage: "OMG, YOU'RE MAKING ASSUMPTIONS AND HINDERING HONEST CONVERSATION! YOU'RE DANGEROUS!!"
6/26/2010 1:04:12 AM
This just inPeople like being around other people who are like them
6/26/2010 1:07:27 AM
^ i don't.
6/26/2010 1:10:13 AM
6/26/2010 10:26:35 AM
6/26/2010 4:44:15 PM
6/28/2010 9:45:44 AM
6/29/2010 9:18:16 AM
Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.
6/29/2010 9:52:36 AM
6/29/2010 3:49:14 PM
Are people accusing the individuals of being racist or the policy of being racist? I haven't paid much attention to the rabble of the NAACP to be honest.
6/30/2010 1:37:53 PM