Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Are you willing to admit that some of the issue is not personal responsibility?
I'm convinced that a failing school is labeled "failing" when students fail the tests and when they have low attendance. I've had crappy teachers in my life and I still got As because it was my responsibility to get a good grade, and a crappy teacher was not an excuse. So if I don't accept it as an excuse for myself, I'm not accepting it for anyone else.
I'm also convinced that no one opens a new school with an intention of sabotaging AA students and providing crappy education. I think it becomes failing as they fail academically and the funding is cut due to drop outs and lack of attendance.
I'm convinced that not all the teachers are crappy at black schools.
Anonymous wrote:
Are you willing to admit that some of the issue is not personal responsibility?
Anonymous wrote:What I see is a bunch of parents (not the honor student from TAL episode, that's an outlier) who failed their kids by not enforcing education at home who made their own school a failing one by failing tests and failing attendance.
Now these parents relinquish responsibility for the failure and demand that it's school's fault they didn't make their kids succeed.
And you want to fix this at the expense of my kid? My kid is supposed to be a crutch for your failing kid? I don't think so. Your success is your job and you have to work for it. No one owes you anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Even today with the caste system officially outlawed, are lower castes all given the same opportunities as those in higher castes? This is the closest--although still imperfect--analogy I can get to the experience of AAs here, and the systematic disenfranchisement that they've faced over the years.
Seriously? You're comparing AAs to a caste? What's stopping an AA students from studying really hard and becoming a top student in class and receiving a scholarship to college, like you did? Nothing. Nothing, but his own family and environment at home. That is the real problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster here
Here is the elephant in the room
Why do many Asian and African immigrants generally break the poverty cycle in one generation while other populations don't
It's not SES because most immigrants arrive at the bottom of the SES stack so they have to attend a "crappy" school with parents working crappy long jobs but somehow the students make it
In all honesty, I hear this question over and over again. I know many Africans from different countries. I was an active member of African Society Union in college. I have never met one African immigrant who was impoverished. They may not have come to this country rich, but they were not impoverished in their home countries. The Africans who make it to the U.S. and Canada are not the poor Africans you think you know. They are not the Africans you see when you go outside your gated resort and walk and drive around the countryside.
Now I will readily admit that I don't know very many Asians, but surely the Asians who are paying thousands of dollars to get here to send their kids to TJ while another parent stays in the home country to work cannot be considered a poor immigrant. Where are these poor immigrants, outside of the Central Americans, that you speak?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Let me see if I get you right... you think institutional racism is ok because other people have it worse? And you're calling them entitled?? LOL, I'd like to buy you a mirror.
You can't play racism card for all your life's failures.
The racist schools didn't lure all black students and failed them, one after another. It's time to take some responsibility for yourself.
Anonymous wrote: Even today with the caste system officially outlawed, are lower castes all given the same opportunities as those in higher castes? This is the closest--although still imperfect--analogy I can get to the experience of AAs here, and the systematic disenfranchisement that they've faced over the years.
Anonymous wrote:
Let me see if I get you right... you think institutional racism is ok because other people have it worse? And you're calling them entitled?? LOL, I'd like to buy you a mirror.
Anonymous wrote:My grandmother was a single mom of 6 kids in rural India. Farming was the only source of income and it was modest income , hard labor, not many resources, no school in the village, no college within 10 miles. All 6 of her kids graduated from college (3 also finished masters). She instilled in them that they must study if they have to break this cycle, this was drilled into them everyday ( back in the 70s). Trust me when I say this, If she and her kids could do this, all AAs in this country can do this , you guys don't know what's it like to not have resources. It's time for personal responsibility people, lift your families, lift your communities on your own shoulders. Barack Obama became president because of the whites in this country, this country is ready for you, it's time to stop blaming the whites.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
one generation requires that freedom to leap which does not happen if the schools are all poor people who still don't feel like they merit the investment of resources their wealthier counterparts do.
You know, there immigrants from Africa and middle East wasing up on the shore of Europe who would kill for the opportunities that you have, for the crappy books that you don't bother to read because they are not premium white kids books, for your free libraries, for your seat in a classroom that you often skip. Who wouldn't dream of dropping school.
If we bring a rural Chinese impoverished kid and put him in your place, he'll make all As. There are kids in India who started a school under a bridge because they feel education is their ticket out of slums.
And you sit here, entitled. And complain that you didn't get the best of everything and this is your excuse for failure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
one generation requires that freedom to leap which does not happen if the schools are all poor people who still don't feel like they merit the investment of resources their wealthier counterparts do.
You know, there immigrants from Africa and middle East wasing up on the shore of Europe who would kill for the opportunities that you have, for the crappy books that you don't bother to read because they are not premium white kids books, for your free libraries, for your seat in a classroom that you often skip. Who wouldn't dream of dropping school.
If we bring a rural Chinese impoverished kid and put him in your place, he'll make all As. There are kids in India who started a school under a bridge because they feel education is their ticket out of slums.
And you sit here, entitled. And complain that you didn't get the best of everything and this is your excuse for failure.