A People’s History

Finally finished reading Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States – I guess April’s not bad for a New Year’s Resolution. Read it if you haven’t; reread it if you have; it’s the kind of book that changes your perspective. Out of everything Zinn has to say, here’s the part that will stick with me:

But with all the controls of power and punishment, enticements and concessions, diversions and decoys, operating throughout the history of the country, the Establishment has been unable to keep itself secure from revolt. Every time it looked as if it had succeeded, the very people it thought seduced or subdued, stirred and rose. Blacks, cajoled by Supreme Court decisions and congressional statutes, rebelled. Women, wooed and ignored, romanticized and mistreated, rebelled. Indians, thought dead, reappeared, defiant. Young people, despite lures of career and comfort, defected. Working people, thought soothed by reforms, regulated by law, kept within bounds by their own unions, went on strike. Government intellectuals, pledged to secrecy, began giving away secrets. Priests turned from piety to protest.

To recall this is to remind people of what the Establishment would like them to forget – the enormous capacity of apparently helpless people to resist, of apparently contented people to demand change. To uncover such history is to find a powerful human impulse to assert one’s humanity. It is to hold out, even in times of deep pessimism, the possibility of surprise. (634)

 

Holiday Reading List 2015

“Just because it’s Christmas – And at Christmas you tell the truth” –Love Actually

It’s that time of year. The time of year in which Thanksgiving has actually passed and this thing called December has started and I allow myself to use the word “Christmas.”

Sometimes I like to celebrate Christmas by listening to the latest “War on Christmas” diatribe and shaking my head at how strange it is to live in a deeply religious country that occasionally pretends to be secular.

Sometimes I like to celebrate Christmas by carefully employing the phrase “Happy Holidays” to emphasize that all that D.C. area political correctness sunk in, which is why I used to know at least two elementary school choir songs about Hanukkah (and still can’t ever decide how to spell it) and one about Kwanzaa (although my main memory of that holiday is that there was one black student in my high school journalism class, and he hated the end-of-year issue because someone would inevitably ask him if people for real celebrated that holiday – a question which was justifiably met with the same eye roll a Japanese friend gave to our freshman history teacher when she was asked if she wanted to explain to the class what Buddhism meant).

Mostly I don’t play that game.

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Recommended Reading for Columbus Day

Whether or not you happen to have the day off tomorrow, here’s a reading list you could try (I believe in celebrating all holidays with spirited debate : )

In celebration of Columbus Day, educate yourself about our most famous explorer:

Ch. 1, A People’s History of the United States by Howard Zinn

If you’ve already read that, here’s my reading list for tomorrow:

LANGUAGE: Etymology of “rough draft of history” aphorism

http://www.readex.com/blog/newspapers-rough-draft-history

FEMINISM: Lean In “Women in the Workplace 2015” slideshare presentation

http://www.slideshare.net/LeanInCommunity/women-in-the-workplace-2015-53354844?ref=https://www.linkedin.com/

Continue reading “Recommended Reading for Columbus Day”

Recommended Reading

Here are some articles I’ve recently found to be worth a look (and some even have audio, thanks podcasters 🙂

ED REFORM: Why Growth Mindset should be integral to school culture

http://ww2.kqed.org/mindshift/2015/10/02/how-to-weave-growth-mindset-into-school-culture/

CAREER: Is the Leadership Industry creating bad leaders?

http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201510011000

BLACK LIVES MATTER: Opinions on N.C. Voter ID Law

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/7-voices-react-north-carolinas-controversial-voting-law/#.VhK9lnoEjq0.twitter

LGBTQ: Is Bernie Sanders telling the truth about his support for marriage equality?

http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2015/10/05/bernie_sanders_on_marriage_equality_he_s_no_longtime_champion.html

ED REFORM: Higher ed moves online

http://ww2.kqed.org/mindshift/2015/07/31/a-peek-inside-a-college-with-no-lectures-deadlines-or-quads/