Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dr. Gayles’ view was that if public schools could not open, private schools should not be allowed either, on equity grounds. There was never any scientific justification for it, and months of experience now show the private schools were entirely correct in believing they could reopen safely.
He was, however, very successful in delaying and making it hard for private schools to reopen. He will pay no political price because there is a critical mass of people in the county who agree with that decision — if they can’t have it, nobody should have it.
You've got to be prepared to give up some of your privilege in order to achieve equity. I think kids in private schools should be forced to learn nothing next year. That would be equitable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He’s just speaking the truth. That’s why everyone on this thread is upset. Why not acknowledge your privilege and then have a conversation?!
You're an idiot. He was wrong in his prejudiced efforts to attempt to keep non-public schools closed and he was wrong in his inappropriate emails. Time to go, bye bye.
Fascinating glimpse into your mind here. The goal was for privates to be closed just like publics were, which is prejudiced against non-public schools because . . . it's not what you wanted?
Here in the DMV, many schools were able to open safely by following CDC guidance on distancing, mask-wearing, cohosting, etc. They opened in September and have been open all year without in-school transmission. Gayles didn’t care about the science or the CDC guidelines, he just wanted all the schools closed so the public schools wouldn’t look bad for closing too. This was absolutely a political decision, not a public health one.
The fact that the position "keep all schools closed" turned out to be overly cautious vis a vis what was necessary to mitigate community spread (something brought up in the emails people are so horrified by - "You mitigate risks by being overly cautious") doesn't in any way show that it was *prejudiced* against non-public schools. It wasn't. Trying to get all schools to behave in the same way, even if it's not the way you prefer, is not prejudice.
Except it’s clear from what he wrote that he had great disdain for the private school community.
It's clear from what he wrote that he was irritated by them, sure. But being irritated by a group of people and then insisting they be treated the same as everyone else is still not prejudice. Words have meanings.
But he wasn't treating them the same. Other organizations that were able to operate safely under CDC guidelines were allowed to open; schools that were able to operate under CDC guidelines were not; they were treated differently.
His attempts were to treat all schools the same. He did not demonstrate prejudiced efforts to attempt to keep non-public schools closed. He wanted all schools to be closed, not just non-public schools. And if you're now trying to move the goalposts to say that he was prejudiced against schools as opposed to other organizations, then the whole "he didn't like private school parents" argument is completely meaningless. There was no prejudiced effort against private schools. There was no prejudiced effort against schools writ large. There was an overly cautious approach that some people disagreed with for good reasons, some for bad reasons, and some supported for good or bad reasons, but still: not prejudiced.
You are really trying to twist things around there.
Actually, I re-quoted the exact same language I quoted the first time, which is the opposite of "trying to twist things." I'm insisting on sticking to the premise. PPs (I have to assume there were more than one because they're all over the place) have tried to move the argument from "he was prejudiced against private schools" to "he was prejudiced against private school parents if not the schools themselves" to "he was prejudiced against schools vs. camps," which is actually trying to twist the discussion.
I'm sorry that the facts don't fit your feeling of aggrievement. But there's no evidence of prejudice against private schools in the efforts to keep all schools closed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact is that Gayles erred on the side of caution rather than let independent schools be the guinea pigs for the rest of the area. People seem to forget that even three months ago we did not have a full grasp or understanding of the virus, how it can be transmitted, whether or not children are super spreaders, whether or not high school students are. Sure, there was a vocal group of people demanding schools open, but that doesn't mean they had a clear understanding of what was going on. As someone mentioned earlier, hindsight tends to give you 20/20 vision.
The goal was not to overload hospitals and it was stated that the risk group was very specific. With protocols in place like the aay cares , the risk was low, but coverage and fear was disproportionally high. In my hindsight and opinion.
Furthermore, CNN was caught on tape saying the ratings were high and they wanted the "death count" live.
In truth, the flu can be more dangerous to children.
With masks, protocol in privates, we actually had much less flu and stomach virus than in normal years....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact is that Gayles erred on the side of caution rather than let independent schools be the guinea pigs for the rest of the area. People seem to forget that even three months ago we did not have a full grasp or understanding of the virus, how it can be transmitted, whether or not children are super spreaders, whether or not high school students are. Sure, there was a vocal group of people demanding schools open, but that doesn't mean they had a clear understanding of what was going on. As someone mentioned earlier, hindsight tends to give you 20/20 vision.
The goal was not to overload hospitals and it was stated that the risk group was very specific. With protocols in place like the aay cares , the risk was low, but coverage and fear was disproportionally high. In my hindsight and opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dr. Gayles’ view was that if public schools could not open, private schools should not be allowed either, on equity grounds. There was never any scientific justification for it, and months of experience now show the private schools were entirely correct in believing they could reopen safely.
He was, however, very successful in delaying and making it hard for private schools to reopen. He will pay no political price because there is a critical mass of people in the county who agree with that decision — if they can’t have it, nobody should have it.
You've got to be prepared to give up some of your privilege in order to achieve equity. I think kids in private schools should be forced to learn nothing next year. That would be equitable.
Anonymous wrote:The fact is that Gayles erred on the side of caution rather than let independent schools be the guinea pigs for the rest of the area. People seem to forget that even three months ago we did not have a full grasp or understanding of the virus, how it can be transmitted, whether or not children are super spreaders, whether or not high school students are. Sure, there was a vocal group of people demanding schools open, but that doesn't mean they had a clear understanding of what was going on. As someone mentioned earlier, hindsight tends to give you 20/20 vision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He’s just speaking the truth. That’s why everyone on this thread is upset. Why not acknowledge your privilege and then have a conversation?!
You're an idiot. He was wrong in his prejudiced efforts to attempt to keep non-public schools closed and he was wrong in his inappropriate emails. Time to go, bye bye.
Fascinating glimpse into your mind here. The goal was for privates to be closed just like publics were, which is prejudiced against non-public schools because . . . it's not what you wanted?
Here in the DMV, many schools were able to open safely by following CDC guidance on distancing, mask-wearing, cohosting, etc. They opened in September and have been open all year without in-school transmission. Gayles didn’t care about the science or the CDC guidelines, he just wanted all the schools closed so the public schools wouldn’t look bad for closing too. This was absolutely a political decision, not a public health one.
The fact that the position "keep all schools closed" turned out to be overly cautious vis a vis what was necessary to mitigate community spread (something brought up in the emails people are so horrified by - "You mitigate risks by being overly cautious") doesn't in any way show that it was *prejudiced* against non-public schools. It wasn't. Trying to get all schools to behave in the same way, even if it's not the way you prefer, is not prejudice.
Except it’s clear from what he wrote that he had great disdain for the private school community.
It's clear from what he wrote that he was irritated by them, sure. But being irritated by a group of people and then insisting they be treated the same as everyone else is still not prejudice. Words have meanings.
But he wasn't treating them the same. Other organizations that were able to operate safely under CDC guidelines were allowed to open; schools that were able to operate under CDC guidelines were not; they were treated differently.
His attempts were to treat all schools the same. He did not demonstrate prejudiced efforts to attempt to keep non-public schools closed. He wanted all schools to be closed, not just non-public schools. And if you're now trying to move the goalposts to say that he was prejudiced against schools as opposed to other organizations, then the whole "he didn't like private school parents" argument is completely meaningless. There was no prejudiced effort against private schools. There was no prejudiced effort against schools writ large. There was an overly cautious approach that some people disagreed with for good reasons, some for bad reasons, and some supported for good or bad reasons, but still: not prejudiced.
You are really trying to twist things around there.
Actually, I re-quoted the exact same language I quoted the first time, which is the opposite of "trying to twist things." I'm insisting on sticking to the premise. PPs (I have to assume there were more than one because they're all over the place) have tried to move the argument from "he was prejudiced against private schools" to "he was prejudiced against private school parents if not the schools themselves" to "he was prejudiced against schools vs. camps," which is actually trying to twist the discussion.
I'm sorry that the facts don't fit your feeling of aggrievement. But there's no evidence of prejudice against private schools in the efforts to keep all schools closed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dr. Gayles’ view was that if public schools could not open, private schools should not be allowed either, on equity grounds. There was never any scientific justification for it, and months of experience now show the private schools were entirely correct in believing they could reopen safely.
He was, however, very successful in delaying and making it hard for private schools to reopen. He will pay no political price because there is a critical mass of people in the county who agree with that decision — if they can’t have it, nobody should have it.
You've got to be prepared to give up some of your privilege in order to achieve equity. I think kids in private schools should be forced to learn nothing next year. That would be equitable.
Anonymous wrote:Dr. Gayles’ view was that if public schools could not open, private schools should not be allowed either, on equity grounds. There was never any scientific justification for it, and months of experience now show the private schools were entirely correct in believing they could reopen safely.
He was, however, very successful in delaying and making it hard for private schools to reopen. He will pay no political price because there is a critical mass of people in the county who agree with that decision — if they can’t have it, nobody should have it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He’s just speaking the truth. That’s why everyone on this thread is upset. Why not acknowledge your privilege and then have a conversation?!
You're an idiot. He was wrong in his prejudiced efforts to attempt to keep non-public schools closed and he was wrong in his inappropriate emails. Time to go, bye bye.
Fascinating glimpse into your mind here. The goal was for privates to be closed just like publics were, which is prejudiced against non-public schools because . . . it's not what you wanted?
Here in the DMV, many schools were able to open safely by following CDC guidance on distancing, mask-wearing, cohosting, etc. They opened in September and have been open all year without in-school transmission. Gayles didn’t care about the science or the CDC guidelines, he just wanted all the schools closed so the public schools wouldn’t look bad for closing too. This was absolutely a political decision, not a public health one.
The fact that the position "keep all schools closed" turned out to be overly cautious vis a vis what was necessary to mitigate community spread (something brought up in the emails people are so horrified by - "You mitigate risks by being overly cautious") doesn't in any way show that it was *prejudiced* against non-public schools. It wasn't. Trying to get all schools to behave in the same way, even if it's not the way you prefer, is not prejudice.
Except it’s clear from what he wrote that he had great disdain for the private school community.
It's clear from what he wrote that he was irritated by them, sure. But being irritated by a group of people and then insisting they be treated the same as everyone else is still not prejudice. Words have meanings.
But he wasn't treating them the same. Other organizations that were able to operate safely under CDC guidelines were allowed to open; schools that were able to operate under CDC guidelines were not; they were treated differently.
His attempts were to treat all schools the same. He did not demonstrate prejudiced efforts to attempt to keep non-public schools closed. He wanted all schools to be closed, not just non-public schools. And if you're now trying to move the goalposts to say that he was prejudiced against schools as opposed to other organizations, then the whole "he didn't like private school parents" argument is completely meaningless. There was no prejudiced effort against private schools. There was no prejudiced effort against schools writ large. There was an overly cautious approach that some people disagreed with for good reasons, some for bad reasons, and some supported for good or bad reasons, but still: not prejudiced.
You are really trying to twist things around there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank God our private is in Anne Arundel, far away from these self-righteous ding dongs.
Amen to that! Nothing reassures me about our choice to move to the outer burbs than reading DCUM education boards.