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davidswanson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-12-10 11:30 PM
Original message
When Teachers Unions Back War Escalations
By David Swanson, special to the International Labor Communications Association

On July 12th I received an Email from the American Federation of Teachers with a soft pink headline and an image of a heart. It said: "Pink Hearts. Not Pink Slips." That sounded nice. The text continued:

"Now is the time to tell the Senate to put our children first. The House of Representatives approved an emergency spending bill that included $10 billion to save educator jobs and $5 billion for Pell Grants. It is now up to the Senate to do its part and approve the same level of assistance when it returns to Washington, D.C., this week."

That was true, I suppose, in as far as it went, but horribly misleading because of what it left unsaid. Congress had not passed an emergency bill to save teachers' jobs. Congress doesn't treat such things as emergencies. This was a bill that had been sat on for half a year, and the teacher funding was an amendment tacked onto it. The bill itself served primarily to dump $33.5 billion into escalating a war in Afghanistan by sending 30,000 more troops plus contractors. It was called an "emergency" bill purely in order to keep war spending off the books and make the government's overall budget look less imbalanced than it is.

Now, it's hard to blame teachers unions for promoting a bill, any bill, that saves teachers' jobs. The National Education Association, too, has been promoting the same bill. It's easy enough to blame the peace movement for not building relationships with the teachers unions. And no doubt the Democratic House Leadership gets the lion's share of blame for packaging teacher funding together with war funding. But there's something extraordinarily revolting about an Email that asks us to "put our children first" by escalating a criminal foreign war.

There are activists within the teachers unions and the labor movement as a whole advocating for school and jobs funding only if it is clean of war money. The National Education Association Peace and Justice Caucus and U.S. Labor Against the War are examples of grass roots movements for peace within the world of organized labor. But they have an uphill struggle. At its recent convention, the NEA voted down a proposal to support the sort of measure recently legislated in Maryland requiring that parents give permission before the military gets access to students' test results and contact information. The NEA is now on record supporting such access for the military without parental consent. Surely that's not contributing to the well being of our children, the state of our economy, or the availability of public funds for non-military educational purposes.

The cynical view on war funding bills maintains that wars will be funded no matter what, and so we should use those opportunities to tack good things onto the same legislation. If the Senate won't pass teacher funding by itself, then the House is actually being responsible and moral by packaging it into war funding that the Senate won't dare vote against. Thus explains the cynic.

But there's another way to look at this. If war and military funding is eating our economy and our public treasury out from the inside, then we must stop it, regardless of how much more comfortably we can rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic. The bill that the House passed on July 1st and sent to the Senate put three times the money into war that it put into schools, and thereby (if it becomes law) escalated a war, guaranteeing much larger expenses going forward. The same bill also advanced the cause of dismantling Social Security. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi buried in this legislation a requirement that if the Senate passes any proposals from the President's deficit commission, the House will vote on them, regardless of what they are. And we know what they are most likely to be. So, this bill fundamentally advances the transfer of our resources from retirement funding to war funding. Should the tacking on of a relatively small amount of teacher funding redeem such legislation? Isn't there another way we could fund our schools?

If war funding were separated from human needs funding in the U.S. House of Representatives, then the war funding would have to be passed, as long as it can continue to be passed at all, by the Democratic leadership and primarily Republican congress members. This process would be educational and useful in identifying who really stands where, and who deserves to be voted out of office. Meanwhile, teacher funding would pass with primarily Democratic votes. In the Senate, war funding would pass easily with bipartisan support, up until the House stopped passing it, at which point the Senate would be powerless to keep it flowing. The funding of useful items, like schools, on the other hand, would involve a tougher fight, but only as long as the Democratic Senate leadership chose to keep the filibuster rule in place. Even then, the senators deserving of unelection would be clearly identified.

As of now, Senator Tom Udall has promised to create a vote on reforming or eliminating the filibuster rule in January, but that vote could be brought about earlier if the necessary leadership were pressured into existence. And the same pressure that could eliminate the filibuster and minority rule in the U.S. Senate could also pass through both houses of Congress the funding of an educational system beyond our wildest imaginations. A movement that combined the strengths of labor with peace and justice advocates could shift the vast bulk of our public spending from wars and the military to education and other useful, non-destructive endeavors. Such a shift could fund top quality free public education from preschool through graduate school. That sounds like a fantastical dream at a moment when we're just hoping to avoid more layoffs, but it is a plausible strategy for a movement that takes a different direction.

The labor movement does not actively promote and cheer for wars the way it used to do so reliably and so self-destructively. But neither does it, by and large, oppose the single biggest pit into which we dump our hard-earned pay. At the same time, the peace movement does not sufficiently work for justice and peace in our own cities and towns. Rather than building a broad-based coalition movement to shift public spending from where we don't want it to where we need it, the peace movement tends to focus on non-binding resolutions that avoid the subject of funding and thereby also avoid the possibility of gaining allies in the struggle.

There is nothing altruistic in the idea of peace activists helping workers and the unemployed here at home. That's how you build a movement for any political end, and that's how you keep our young people from becoming cannon fodder. There's also nothing selfless in unions advocating for only the clean funding of jobs and human needs. The wars are endangering us all and bankrupting us all and all of our children. I know people in both movements who agree with this. I don't know how to build a united front willing to take risks for it.
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proud2BlibKansan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-12-10 11:56 PM
Response to Original message
1. There is a group of us in my union who are complaining loudly about this
Edited on Mon Jul-12-10 11:56 PM by proud2BlibKansan
We have emailed, called and written letters in protest. The lack of response is beyond disappointing.

Wish I had better news.
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davidswanson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-13-10 06:48 AM
Response to Reply #1
7. that you're trying
IS good news

Thanks

This won't be fixed instantly
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midnight Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-13-10 12:05 AM
Response to Original message
2. More pell grants are greatly needed to help pay for college.
K&R
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kelly1mm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-13-10 01:09 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. So 6 times as much money goes to the Afganistan war effort as part
of the package and you are OK with that? What if it was 60 times? 600 times? I guess it is OK as long as crumbs go to those that nee help to pay for college.

How about a bill that reinstates slavery and outlaws abortion and gives 10 billion to pell grants? Well that would be twice as good I suppose.
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Sciguy Donating Member (23 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-13-10 06:18 AM
Response to Original message
4. Even dirty money is still money. We're stuck with dirty or nothing.
I don't think there's any way to build a peace and jobs and education movement - yet. Soon, perhaps. I think the problem is that it's just plain not bad enough yet. We're at 10% unemployment (I know, it's really at least 17%), not 25% unemployment. We're losing roughly 40 soldiers/month, not 40 soldiers/day. Our schoolkids can still read and do basic math (more or less) if/when they graduate - we're not quite as ignorant as we would be if the teabaggers succeeded in killing off public education. In other words, it's not yet time to storm the Bastille, and most folks won't care until it hits them and their jobs, their kids.

If war funding were separated from human needs funding


Heh. Dontcha know that killing people for oil is a human need? (snark!)
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Obamanaut Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-13-10 06:37 AM
Response to Reply #4
6. Or, they could vote against funds for all these wars, and free up the
dollars for jobs and Pell Grants. Then it wouldn't be 'dirty money.'
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Obamanaut Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-13-10 06:35 AM
Response to Original message
5. It isn't uncommon to stick a 'good thing' on a 'not so good' bill in order
to sugar coat it, currying favor (and a vote) from those who like the 'good thing' but can't get it as a stand-alone.

And, if the people who are in favor of the 'good thing' vote against it because they appose the bill to which it is appended, their opponents can use that against them - in this case they could say that "Congressman X doesn't like teachers and students. He voted against Pell Grants and jobs for teachers."

We the people eat that up. We won't read the whole thing.
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liberalhistorian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-14-10 10:38 AM
Response to Original message
8. The AFT has always been much more conservative
than the NEA. They've often had no problem with supporting or advocating policies that would make conditions and pay worse for their own members and have lobbied against policies meant to help physically and learning-disabled students (some of the more traditional members don't even believe in learning disabilities or the "new-fangled" knowledge on how to diagnose them and methods of handling them; they even went so far as to lobby against any inclusion or mainstreaming). It's a major reason why my now-retired teacher parents wanted nothing to do with them and went with the NEA.
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NNN0LHI Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-14-10 11:06 AM
Response to Reply #8
9. Yea, that doesn't sound very progressive to me
And I haven't seen anyone come along to refute what you said.

Which makes it doubly troublesome.

Don
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