Wednesday, April 28, 2021

DEI Charlatans Go Into Crisis Management Mode


Back in the 60s, European Marxists coined the term the "Long March." Borrowing from Mao, it was meant to describe how Marxism would ultimately triumph by hollowing out Western institutions from within.

We've seen this march steadily succeed over the years, but as of last May 25th, the Long March became the Mad Dash. May 25th was the date of George Floyd's murder. We all know what ensued.

Or do we?

The progressive left never sleep, and they never miss an opportunity. The distraction of COVID only increased the opportunity. While we all saw what was happening above the surface - the rioting, the looting, the demands to defund the police - there was a lot happening below the surface too.

The left had a busy summer last year.

By the time students showed up for school this fall, some virtually, an entirely new curriculum had been put in place - an "anti-racist" curriculum, which is the practical application of Critical Race Theory. 

In particular, New York's private schools went deep. The Naked Dollar has chronicled much of this. 

The curricular changes were done without consulting parents. Schools like Dalton, Brearley, and Grace Church have continuously said they were "studying" the idea, when in fact they had already woven it into their entire curricula as well as their mission statements. 

If you think "anti-racism" sounds like a swell thing, like maybe it's just like "not being racist," you must be a first time visitor to the Naked Dollar. I urge you to look through previous posts see what a vile, divisive concept it is.

Briefly, anti-racism says we are nothing more than a product of our skin color. We are not individuals. We are either the "oppressed" or the "oppressor," and must behave accordingly. If you are white, you are born with racism in your American DNA, and you must spend a lifetime atoning. 

And it's so much more, too. It's about a tearing down of all existing standards and institutions, because they are all "social constructs," and it was presumably white people who did the constructing.

This is what we're teaching our third grade kids. It's a new kind of racism. Neoracism.

If you stand in the way, or even raise a nuanced question, you are the racist. Better to shut up.

A few brave parents raised objections in the fall, only to be roundly ignored by both their schools and the media.

Then, in December, a Dalton School insider shared information with the Naked Dollar about the insane CRT-driven demands being made by the faculty. I wrote about it, and it went viral. This blog got over half a million hits. This can only be because others had begun noticing, feared speaking out, but were happy someone was at least drawing attention to it.

It was just the luck of timing, but the Naked Dollar lit the match.

What followed over the next few months was a series of others speaking out, laying bare the cultural rot of neoracist CRT in their schools. Publications - not just in the U.S., but globally - took notice. Ordinary people began to figure out that words like "anti-racist" and "equity" and "systemic racism" don't mean what they think they mean. Parents began forming organizations to fight back (more on this to follow).

The drivers behind all this are the contemptible opportunists of the DEI industry (diversity, equity, and inclusion). One of the big ones specializing in K-12 private schools is called Pollyanna. They will hollow out your school in a matter of months. (I previously profiled them.)

Well, it's possible they are finally feeling the heat.

What follows is a letter just sent out by Pollyanna to their "community." My comments are in bold.


Dear Pollyanna Friend:

I started Pollyanna because I believe schools can achieve real change. I believe a school community can exist in which young people of all races and backgrounds feel equally valued, heard, and supported. That’s the systemic change to which we aspire.

Would that include kids who don't agree that we should be divided by race? Would they be valued? Or what about the white ten year-olds you label "oppressors?"

We haven’t yet arrived at that destination. But we can.

As we approach a year since the resurgence of the social-justice movement that has energized our nation, our communities have experienced a whirlwind of feelings – from pride and validation, to exhaustion and cynicism.

At Pollyanna, our mission is “to advance systemic change by developing stronger communities.” Now is as good a time as any to ask: just what do we mean by that? 

DEI consultants love the word "community." It implies that everyone agrees.

It’s perhaps an intangible goal, and in its intangibility there can exist room for concern, doubt, and fear. 

Hell, yes, it's intangible. That's by design. The end goal must never be specifically defined or quantified, lest the need for DEI consultants go away.

It’s not surprising that some independent and public school families are feeling it’s necessary to speak out in opposition to their schools embracing DEI programs and a more inclusive curriculum. 

Well, you got that part right.

You may be hearing these concerns directly from your families, colleagues, and friends; you’re no doubt seeing them sensationalized in the media. 

The accounts I've seen are not sensationalized at all. They have been straight-forward reporting.

They present our collective work as zero-sum: to elevate marginalized communities, we must take away from others. 

You are less than zero-sum. You are about subtraction. The only way to achieve "equity," which means equal outcomes, is by chopping down opportunities for some to excel. Why else, for instance, would Dalton teachers demand that AP classes be eliminated if black students were not achieving the same results as whites? 

Or they present our work as capitalizing on a fleeting political trend.

Well, no. We see you as a very long-term trend that is coming to fruition. That's what gives us grave concern.

These may be instilling in you a sense of doubt or trepidation. But rest assured: our work is neither zero-sum nor politically motivated. On the contrary, our work is child-centered. 

No, no, and no! It is race-centered.

Every child – regardless of their identity – deserves the ability to be the most authentic version of themselves in their school community and beyond. As intangible as our goal may be, the future we envision is very real. We envision a world in which children grow into a society without prejudice, that embraces differences, and allows them to thrive to reach their fullest potential. We believe we can achieve this and we are on our way to this bright future.

Oh, my God, what dreck. And what lies. You tell 12 year-old white kids they should bear the burden of ancestors they never met, you tell their black classmates they are looking at their oppressors, you make absolutely everything about skin color, and yet they're supposed to grow up in a "society without prejudice?" You're the one teaching it!

I know you share our vision. We believe that many families do too when they consider this through the eyes of the children. We hope that those who doubt our mission and work will too. 

As you continue to navigate this challenging landscape, please know that we are here for you.  We stand ready to assist you in communicating these complex but vital initiatives. We feel confident that, when presented sensibly and through the eyes of the children, we can find common ground.

Translation: you will fall in line because we will brainwash your children.

 

All my best,


Casper Caldarola

Founder

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Woke Wars Update: Grace Church (cont.)




Caught Lying

This has been out there a couple of days, but just in case you missed it, it's a bombshell.

Here's a brief recap what came before. Try to follow along:

  1. Paul Rossi, a middle school math teacher at Grace, blows the whistle by going public with an expose on neo-racist Critical Race Theory run amuck at Grace (after trying and failing internally).
  2. Headmaster George Davison says Rossi shouldn't come to school this week for "his own protection."
  3. Then he says don't come for the school's protection.
  4. Then he says don't bother ever coming back, and don't even come in the building for any reason.
  5. Then Davison sends a school-wide letter which is highly critical of Rossi and says he made "glaring omissions and inaccuracies."
  6. Rossi responds with a letter of his own, relating that in a private conversation between them Davison was sympathetic to some of the points Rossi was making, in particular that they were "demonizing" white children. 
  7. Davison accuses Rossi of lying, saying he never made these statements.

And here's the update:

Rossi knew he had to protect himself, so he recorded* the conversation with Davison. Sure enough, Davison said, word for word, what Rossi said he did.

Davison lied.

My question for Davison is this:

You apparently know, on some level, that all this is insane. You are retiring at the end of the year. And yet, even you didn't stand up to the madness. Why? 

I'm not a lawyer, but it strikes me Rossi has grounds for both a wrongful termination suit (when he is formally fired) and a defamation suit.

I hope it happens.

*Note that this is perfectly legal in New York State.

Monday, April 19, 2021

NYC Private School Madness - Grace Church Edition


This is almost hard to keep up with. Dalton must be so happy they're not the only school that looks foolish right now.

About Grace Church. 


Paul Rossi

You will recall that a middle school math teacher there named Paul Rossi reached his boiling point last week and went public with Grace's DEI and CRT-driven insanity. You can read it here

First, the school said, "of course we won't fire you."

Then they said, "maybe you'd better stay home, you know, for you own safety." 

Safety from whom? Were the fifth graders planning some sort of attack? Or perhaps the lunch lady? Paul said he was willing to take the risk.

So then they said, "Actually, you should just stay home for our safety."

Did they discover that Paul was bringing nunchucks to school?


George Davison

Then just yesterday, the headmaster, George Davison, sent out a letter condemning Paul, saying his missive contains "glaring omissions and inaccuracies," without saying what those were. (They never do. See: the Brearley School.) 

And yes, Paul was all but fired. "It is clear to me that Paul cannot be an effective teacher at Grace any more," says Davison. He can't even enter the building after teaching there for many years. Because he might say something random and offensive like, "I think we should be blind to skin color." People could get hurt.

You can read the Davison's execrable letter here.

Of course, Paul knew this would happen. Woke justice is swift indeed. I have spoken to him many times. He loved his job, and he didn't want to leave, but he felt he had to do the right thing, to say something.

This is a modern day tragedy, wrapped in a farce.

Does everyone realize what's at stake here? Our finest schools are now marching in lockstep to a perverse, cult-like ideology, one that alleges to fight racism but is, itself, deeply racist. Dissent is not tolerated.

Everyone who enables this, from the board members to the parents who stay silent (and even write checks) should be ashamed.

But Paul, God Bless him, will not go quietly. He has written a response, and here it is:


Dear George, I am writing in response to the letter that you sent over the weekend to my colleagues. Grace’s public story — the story it is telling to the press and to its own community — has been very different from what you have told me. In light of your statement that my essay “contains glaring omissions and inaccuracies,” and in support of those who will inevitably be scared into silence by seeing the price I am now paying for speaking up, I am compelled to share what you have told me in our previous conversations.

In the letter, you reaffirm that Grace’s “commitment to antiracism is consistent with our identity and mission” and that “it has been at the heart of our work for years.” 

I believe that you share my desire to ensure that racism does not mar the experience of students at Grace. But, like me, you also expressed “grave doubts about some of the doctrinaire stuff that gets spouted at us, in the name of antiracism.” When I told you “they’re fighting a revolution” and “will hollow out Grace and move on to the next institution,” you acknowledged that “they've hollowed out a bunch of other ones ahead of us.” 

You write that you “find it regrettable that Paul Rossi chose to air his grievances with the school in the press.” But as you well know, speaking publicly about this was hardly my first choice. Over the course of several years, I have made my specific concerns clear, not only to you, but to the Head of High School, and the Assistant Head. These concerns centered on the impact of this doctrinaire ideology on our students. Even when I have simply tried to expose our students to alternative points of view in the classroom, I have been repeatedly shut down. The school’s response to my efforts to raise these concerns internally left me no choice but to speak about them publicly. 

In the letter, you say that “the wellbeing of our community is our first priority,” and that Grace cares “deeply about human dignity.” 

And yet you admitted to me that Grace Church is, in fact, “demonizing white people for being born,” and that the school is making white students “feel less than, for nothing that they are personally responsible for.” 

While I cannot know for certain, I suspect that the reason you have not shared these concerns with the broader Grace community is because you know exactly what happens to people who do — it is what is happening to me right now. I understand that. It is because of the fear I see in so many people, including so many of our students, that I felt compelled to speak out even though I knew I would pay a steep price for it. 

I love this school and its students, and I want to see it thrive. I want to see a renewed commitment to free expression, viewpoint diversity, and true education. And I think the public and, in particular, the Grace community deserve to know that these concerns are not mine alone. 

Sincerely, Paul


Here is my most fervent wish: that Paul hires an employment lawyer and sues Grace's ass off.

Below is a list of Grace Church board members. At least Grace hasn't purged this yet, unlike Brearley and Dalton. Note the presence of our old buddy Jim Best.


Olivia W. Douglas                  Chair

Ann Mellow                           Vice Chair

Tom Geniesse                         Treasurer

Karin Greenfield-Sanders.      Secretary

Jim Best

Kirby Chin

Carolina Esquenazi-Shaio

Donna Garbin

Greg Gushee

David Heller

Yoo Jin Kim

George Majoros

Renee Noel

Naomi Nwosu-Stewart

Folake Ologunja

Camille Orme

Dominique Schulte

Barbara Sibley

Jason Slibeck

Erik Sorensen

Valerie Toscano

Felicia Washington

Melanie Weston

Kenji Yoshino

Sunday, April 18, 2021

The Brearley School: the Latest Front in the Woke Wars


For those not familiar, Brearley is like Dalton; it's one of the most elite private schools in the nation, and is also on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.

And the last twenty-four hours may be the most shameful in its 137-year history.

Two days ago, a Brearley parent named Andrew Gutmann sent a letter to the school community. Like Paul Rossi's letter the week before about the Grace Church School, it decried the school's descent into racial madness. 


Andrew Gutmann

Both men, for the record, have done a very courageous thing. They are digital-age Martin Luthers. Both are even-keeled and soft-spoken. Speaking out did not come easily to them, but both had reached their breaking point. (For the record, I have had lengthy conversations with each.)

I firmly believe that the more people learn about what has been perpetrated in the last few months, the more they will reach their own breaking points.

If you haven't read Gutmann's letter, it's a barnburner.

Some highlights:

"It cannot be stated strongly enough that Brearley’s obsession with race must stop. It should be abundantly clear to any thinking parent that Brearley has completely lost its way. The administration and the Board of Trustees have displayed a cowardly and appalling lack of leadership by appeasing an anti-intellectual, illiberal mob, and then allowing the school to be captured by that same mob."

"I object to the view that I should be judged by the color of my skin. I cannot tolerate a school that not only judges my daughter by the color of her skin, but encourages and instructs her to prejudge others by theirs. By viewing every element of education, every aspect of history, and every facet of society through the lens of skin color and race, we are desecrating the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and utterly violating the movement for which such civil rights leaders believed, fought, and died."

"I object...that Brearley has begun to teach what to think, instead of how to think."

If you haven't read the whole thing, please do. Brearley has descended into the same DEI-driven hellhole as Dalton, Grace Church, and so many others. You can read some of my previous posts to get the full flavor.

Now for the shameful part.

The very same day, without missing a beat, Brearley's Headmistress responded, and I'm literally floored at what she wrote. It is breathtaking in its intolerance, divisiveness, and complete lack of self-awareness.


Jane Fried

Let's take a close look, shall we? What follows is the complete letter, interspersed with my comments.


Dear Members of the Brearley Community,

Today, Brearley families received a letter from a Brearley parent. The letter then circulated among students, faculty, and staff at school. Many have written to say that they found the opinions expressed to be deeply offensive and harmful, and we agree.

Offensive? Which parts? The part about how we should embrace Martin Luther King's ideal of a colorblind society? Or maybe the part about objecting to the idea that blacks can't succeed without white people helping them?

And harmful? Seriously? Did anyone have to go to the ER?

This afternoon, I and others who work closely with the Upper School students met with more than one hundred of them, many of whom told us that they felt frightened and intimidated by the letter and the fact that it was sent directly to their homes.

Oh. My. God. What kind of complete pussies have you created that they are frightened by a letter from a concerned parent? Did he threaten to physically harm anyone? Did I miss that? You claim to be training girls to be courageous, and yet you also think it's entirely appropriate when they cower in fear over some words on a piece of paper.

Our students noted that as this letter, which denies the presence of systemic racism, crossed their doorways, the evidence of ongoing racism - systemic and otherwise - is daily present in our headlines.

Oh, so you're relying on the media to help form your views? Because, you know, they are pretty balanced. And as for "systemic" racism, perhaps this might help you understand what a false narrative it is.

We express our unequivocal support for Black, Asian, Indiginous, Multiracial, and Latinx students, faculty, staff, and alums.

Latinx? Good for you signaling your virtue with the latest woke nomenclature!

Many of our students of color, especially those who identify as Black, felt that the letter questioned their belonging in the Brearley community.

I must have missed that in the letter. Did these students actually read it, or just rely on what others said? Did you even read it?

Their belonging and their excellence are unquestionable. We continue to move forward together to build an inclusive, antiracist school in which all members of our diverse community see that their contributions are acknowledged, know that they are values and that they belong.

Including the white kids? Because you just said your are "antiracist," and that actually means very specific things. It means that whites are automatically stigmatized as being part of an "oppressor class," even if they're little kids. It means we are all little more than products of our skin pigmentation. Seems to me you can't value everyone equally and in the same breath believe that one group needs to be labelled as oppressors.

Brearley will continue to listen, solicit feedback, and welcome constructive criticism from our students and our community as we challenge racism wherever we find it.

Except we won't do any of that if we don't like what you're saying.

We all share responsibility in preparing our students for purposeful and meaningful lives.

...living in fear of printed words.

We are all expected to engage in this work with respect for one another. This letter failed in both content and delivery to meet these expectations.

What content? You haven't actually brought up any specifics at all. And delivery? Are we talking about Gutmann's grammar or the postal service?

We are better than this and we must do better for our students. they are counting on us.

Sincerely,

Jane Fried


I know for a fact that many Brearley parents are astonished by Fried's response. It's a straight up effort to silence dissent and criticism by smearing the critic and stigmatizing him as a racist. She offers no specifics about where Gutmann might have been wrong, and thus allowed for zero debate on the merits. Nuanced discussion is off the table. And the allegations of "harm" are as absurd as they are offensive. Jane Fried is no better than the woke bullies who swim the fetid sewers of Twitter.

Fried's letter proves the very points Gutmann himself makes, but Fried is so blinded by the religious zeal of CRT and wokeism that she can't see that.

And as for her "community," (she likes that word a lot) she will never know just how many are pissed, because they, like parents at so many other schools, are afraid to say anything. That is the inclusive environment you have created, Ms. Fried.

And you, Brearley board members, where the hell are you? You are the enablers. I noticed, in a particularly craven move, you had your names deleted from the Brearley website yesterday. Dalton did the same thing. What are you afraid of?

Good thing the Wayback Machine exists, because here are your names:


Christine Frankenhoff Alfaro    President

David B. Philip                          SVP

Jocelyn E. Strauber.                   Secretary

Modupe Akinola                       Treasurer 

Tara Abrahams

Gideon Berger

Susan V. Beresford

Elizabeth R. Chandler

Joe DiMenna

Amina Elderfield

Tom Farrell

Jane Foley Fried

Julie Gamboa

Jane Gladstone

Martha Haakmat

Rebecca Haile

Munib Islam

Sue Meng

Stephanie Perlman

David Raso

Paula Campbell Roberts

Bill Shutzer

Lita Tandon

Olivia Wassenaar

Alan Yan


So, Dalton, Grace, Brearley...is anyone taking bets on who's next?


UPDATE: A bunch of Brearley parents sent out a letter attacking Gutmann. It is even more idiotic and tone deaf than Fried's letter. It calls Gutmann's letter "vile and racist." I dare you to read Gutmann's letter and find racism. He advocates for an MLK colorblind society, but to these idiots, that is now racist.

This has become a cult bordering on a religion


Dalton Fires Jim Best



Jim Best (inset)

Dalton is allowing its outgoing headmaster to say he's quitting, but make no mistake, he was fired. This all went down in January, and wasn't going to be announced until the end of the year, so it's curious as to why now.

Initially, I wasn't sure whether his firing was because he'd turned Dalton into a woke home of racial obsession, or because he'd allowed the situation to blow up beyond Dalton's ivy perimeter. Publicity is always awkward for a private school, and this one went supernova. Best's sin was to "say the quiet part out loud," as one friend of mine put it.

I now have some clarity. The board was actually split, with both halves wanting Best gone. One half was very upset with how he handled COVID, something that the parents were also up in arms about. Dalton didn't open for in-person classes until late January, unlike literally every other private school in New York.

The other half was upset about Dalton's woke/CRT explosion, which Best engineered, using the odious DEI consultant Pollyanna for cover. But I'm still not clear what part of that upsets the board. I suspect it was all the publicity, and not CRT itself. The board - still absent from Dalton's website - is not exactly a conservative hotbed.

In the end, both factions deemed Best's action to exhibit a failure of leadership. I'm told it was unanimous that Best had to go.

But the board told quite a different story to the parents.

A letter from the board to the community had nothing but glowing things to say about Best. Here's a small taste:

"In every role Jim has ever played at Dalton be has brought his giant heart, his passion for innovation, and his commitment to making Dalton the best it can be..."

"He will be deeply missed."

"We look forward to celebrating Jim when our community can safely gather to share a fist bump and toast his leadership..."

As one Dalton parent put it to me, "They must think we're morons."

Hey, Dalton Board: you should all resign right now. This was your chance to distance yourself from Best and everything he stood for, instead you publicly doubled down. Shame on you. You should at least have the courage to put your names back on the website.

As for Best himself, I don't doubt Best will land somewhere. The radicalized community of school administrators and board members takes care of its own. He remains on the board of the Grace Church School, which has had its own woke implosion over the last week. And while he has disappeared from Pollyanna's website, I suspect he remains very active there as well.

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Here's Why We Should Lower the Drinking Age


Out of 190 countries, only 12 have drinking ages as high as ours.

Twelve.

We are keeping company with other cool kids on the block like Iraq, Oman and Equatorial Guinea.

Congress raised the age to 21 in 1984 to combat drunk-driving fatalities. It's actually a state-by-state decision (as most things should be), but the Feds coerced states with the threat of withheld highway funds. Most caved right away, although Louisiana held out for a time. Since then, the rate of drunk-driving deaths has dropped more than 50 percent. 

Good news, right? 

Absolutely. But why has it dropped?

Mothers Against Drunk Driving, a powerful lobby, will tell you it’s because of the age increase, but does anyone really think college-age kids have stopped drinking just because it’s illegal? 

Get serious. If you think that, you've never had a college age kid. Or gone to college. Or have eyes.

In reality, drivers of all ages have reacted to the much tougher enforcement and severely increased penalties. Drunk driving rates are down for every demographic, not just 18-21 year-olds. It turns out no one wants to go to jail. Back in the day, it was, “Get home safe, son.” Now it’s the slammer and huge fines. 

Technology has also changed, creating safe alternatives. Kids know to call Uber, an option not available in the ’80s, as with the mobile phones used to summon them.

It’s time to lower the drinking age and join the rest of the civilized world. Current law is not a deterrent, and it has had negative cultural effects, particularly on our nation’s campuses.

But what’s the harm, you say? Let’s start with the binge drinking of hard alcohol. Beer, the college beverage of choice since the first student was forced to read Sartre, has faded away. Too bulky. No way to sneak a keg into your dorm room. Hard liquor is the new poison, particularly vodka. It’s clear and mixes with about anything. Not surprisingly, this has made alcohol a bigger problem on campuses than ever because too much hard alcohol kills. Back in the day, I can’t remember anyone going to the hospital because they drank too much beer. 

People tried, believe me. I would know. I was in Brett Kavanagh's fraternity. We liked beer.

The higher age has also affected college culture, and not in a good way. When I was a student, we had big, campus-wide events. It was all very social and egalitarian. In fact, on our very first day, our president, the great Bart Giamatti, welcomed all freshmen to his house with an open bar. 

Imagine. 

Now, students squirrel away, pre-gaming, consuming what they want in places they won’t be caught by RAs and other mandated busybodies.

A change is needed. And Republicans — you should lead the charge.

College social life has become cliquey, balkanized. With big events out, students now huddle in smaller groups that have an irritating habit (from a social engineer’s standpoint) of self-selecting mostly along demographic lines. 

(Note to the ever-expanding university diversity departments: You should not like this. What good is diversity if no one’s hanging out with each other?)

Consider that more than 100 college presidents have signed a petition to have the age lowered back to 18. They are on the ground and see firsthand the damage of hard alcohol. They’ve had to set up complex compliance regimes to keep an army of tort lawyers at bay. Complicating matters, most seniors and juniors can legally partake, creating a great schism of haves and have-nots.

A change is needed. 

Republicans — you should lead the charge. 

Let’s face it, most 18-year-olds won’t be caught dead registering for your party. It’s an image thing, mostly. You are a brand for old people and stiffs. You have erected a fortress that says, “Enter here and never get another date.” At that crucial moment when someone first registers to vote, this is what you are up against. And once someone registers for a party, they usually stick with it for life, so the stakes are huge. It is a branding problem almost beyond repair.

Lowering the drinking age is consistent with your support for personal liberty and will resonate with libertarian-leaning youth. Lower it for beer and wine to steer teens towards safer forms of consumption. My humble suggestion is that you rally around this issue. Go on the offense, make the Democrats be the wet rags for once. I bet they’d come around quickly. 

Hey, bipartisanship!

The best part about this is that it’s the right thing to do. Eighteen-year-olds can drive, sign contracts, get married, take a bullet in Afghanistan — everything except have a beer. It’s inconsistent and patronizing, and it’s time to change it. But as long as we treat alcohol like forbidden fruit, the thrill remains.