Outrage: Who’s Protecting Our Kids
Why does a fifth-grader have to go to her school board to
beg for protection from bullies? “Hi my name is Delanie. I’m here to talk about a problem that means a lot to me," she said. "Bullying... I've been threatened to get shot in the head by a AK-47 and buried in my backyard and many other things..." And then this little piece about the
sexual misconduct in Chicago Public Schools:
When students summoned the courage to disclose abuse, teachers and principals failed to alert child welfare investigators or police despite the state’s mandated reporter law.
This made me reflect on my high school years when we had to watch out for
R. Kelly
and the school security guards and no one ever said anything. Seriously. Look, I know teachers and administrators have to juggle a lot during the school day and may even drop a ball or two. But it’s never OK to drop the ball on bullying, sexual assault or try to
silence student voice. Ever! Kids these days are
facing trauma at every turn. And if adults are buckling under the pressures of life then our kids are probably being crushed by them or even
turning to suicide to escape. Teachers, this isn’t shade or me throwing the blame at you. This is just me pleading to you to really listen and take our kids’ cries for help seriously.
Hope: Get Em’ Together, Chris!
This is church.
You tell our people their best prospect is to dedicate themselves to the preservation of schools that have harmed them for decades. That pitch is emotional, seemingly earnest and straight up suicidal. I’ll need you to stop.
Sunday school, afternoon service and Bible study from
Chris Stewart! https://giphy.com/gifs/king-of-pop-vaokkmMKZJlgA Y’all,
education has become so politicized it’s sickening. And even those of us
Black people who are fighting for our kids to have access to better education tend to fall on one side of the argument or the other, inadvertently doing the political bidding for teachers’ unions, school districts or billionaires for school choice. My people, we’ve been distracted and fighting battles that probably don’t even belong to us. Worse, it’s got us fighting with each other. Here’s the real talk, y’all. We can’t expect freedom to come from
institutions that, historically, have oppressed us. Also, no one is going to work as hard to give us that freedom as
we will. We really have to realize that the model of the school doesn’t matter nor does the method of delivery as long
as our kids are being taught well. I’m glad that Chris said this. I’m glad that Black people are starting to wake up. We have to keep having these conversations, meet in the middle of the road and walk this journey together. That’s the most important and clearest path towards
hope.