Meta-Nerd
  • Home
  • About
  • Nerd Files
    • Meta-Nerdery
    • Fandoms >
      • Buffyverse
      • Comics
      • Doctor Who
      • Gaming
      • Harry Potter
      • Middle-Earth
      • Star Wars
      • Other
    • Politics
    • Psychology
    • Life, the Universe, and Everything
    • Blackness
  • Places I've Been
  • Contact

Threatening Schools for the Crime of Teaching

12/22/2015

0 Comments

 
Picture
Educators around the country are making good-faith attempts to educate our young about Islam - its tenets of belief, its daily practices, its cultural trappings.

The backlash they experience is strong enough to prevent the education in question, almost every time. Suspended teachers, closed schools, cancelled classes.

I used to say knowledge and understanding could cure ignorance and fear. Now the hierarchy has flipped: ignorance and fear are (if you'll forgive me) trumping our efforts to raise the next generation to surpass us in empathy and egalitarianism as we have surpassed our parents, and - face it - as Millennials have largely surpassed us.

This must cease.

The burden is not on the educators themselves. It's on the administrations supporting them.  It's not a light burden: it is difficult to receive spurious claims of offense and of treasonous activity. It is frightening to receive threats to campus safety, no matter how high or low in credibility.

So I have a question for those administrators: in our nation's recent (say, past 65 years) history, how often have the centers of secondary and higher education been the breeding grounds of desperately needed progress? How often have they been the last places to welcome the open, considered, and nuanced exchange of ideas? How often have activities on those campuses served to energize their charges, instilling within them an unshakable commitment to reduce some form of suffering in the world?

Let's implore those administrators to stand by their educators' efforts. If the campus must close, carry right on with the curriculum when it reopens. Don't cancel the class. Definitely don't suspend the teacher (although, as a dear friend observed, that's one of those "crazy-christian colleges" and likely would have done so anyway).

The fear-mongers among us want theirs to be the only voices teaching us of the things they want us to fear. Let us not be complicit in the success of their efforts.

0 Comments

You Can't (Well, Shouldn't) Believe Their Eyes

12/21/2015

0 Comments

 
Picture
Can we talk for a minute about how imagery in media is used to craft narrative?

Do you really think Robert Dear manages to keep those eyes this crazy all the time? Or even every second he's on camera? This is the only expression I've seen him wear since he was (peacefully) taken into custody (alive).

Poor Senator Khaleesi appears to never - ever - close her mouth. Breitbart (top right) just wanted her to look like an angry crusader (and, fair enough, she is - he just wants that to look like a bad thing). Daily Caller (bottom right) gave her the same treatment Reuters gave Dear.

Don't forget this. No matter where you stand on the political spectrum or how strong your confirmation bias is (we all have it, don't feel bad), the images you see while you're consuming the news do a far better job of shaping narrative in your head than the words you read.
Picture
Picture
0 Comments
    The major problem--one of the major problems, for there are several—one of the many major problems with governing people is that of whom you get to do it; or rather of who manages to get people to let them do it to them.

    To summarize: it is a well-known fact that those people who must want to rule people are, ipso facto, those least suited to do it.

    To summarize the summary: anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job.

    To summarize the summary of the summary: people are a problem.
    --Douglas Adams

    Archives

    July 2016
    February 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    September 2015

    Categories

    All
    Education
    Fruit-fly Outrage
    Identity Vs. Behavior
    Islamophobia
    Journalism
    Media Narrative
    Paris Attacks
    Political Psychology
    Politics
    Racial Anxiety
    Terrorism

    RSS Feed