Sunday, September 30, 2007

Childrens Do Learn

In 2000, George W. Bush said, "Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?"

Now he's got an answer.

In touting the success of No Child Left Behind this past week, he exclaimed, "Childrens do learn." The White House later released a cleaned up version of the transcript changing it to "children." Watch a video clip of the press conference.

A day earlier, a draft of Bush's speech to the U.N. General Assembly was posted to the U.N. Web site by some White House staffer with a good sense of fumor. The speech included a phonetic guide for the names of numerous countries and leaders: "KEYR-geez-stan" ( Kyrgyzstan), "moor-EH-tain-ee-a" (Mauritania), "sar-KO-zee" (French President Nicolas Sarkozy).

This is the education president.

Read the Washington Post article and other dumb s#*t Bush has uttered.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

A Message from Tyler Wood

Greetings Bostonians,
I'm gearing up for a week long tour with Luke Temple, which will bring us back to
Cambridge, my old hometown, next Tuesday. It would be wonderful to see all of you. For a taste of the brand new album we just released, please visit the website

Tuesday Oct. 2, 2007
Doors at 7:30PM (we play first)
Middle East Downstairs
@ 427/480 Mass. Ave, Central Square, Cambridge

Monday, September 17, 2007

Foux Da Fa Fa


A little French lesson to go with that croissant.

Ah non, la gloussement!

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Petraeus' Smoke and Mirrors

Gen. David Petraeus gave testimony this week, citing success stories in Iraq particularly in Anbar province where former Sunni insurgents are fighting side by side with U.S. troops to combat Al Qaeda. Democracy Now aired a report from Anbar by independent filmmaker Rick Rowley that examines how the U.S. is fueling civil war in Iraq by funding and arming the former Sunni insurgents. When the US-backed fighters successfully defeat or push out Al Qaeda from Anbar province, where will the weapons go? What did the US learn since we funded Osama bin Laden Afghan fighters to resist the Soviet Union in Afghanistan?

If you missed Democracy Now, watch parts of the film as shown on Al-Jazeera.
Report from Anbar Part I
Report from Anbar Part II

Why is Jonathan Kozol Fasting?

Time and time again, Jonathan Kozol brings to light the things in education that most people would rather forget or ignore...

posted by Kozol to the Huffington Post on Sept 11:

This morning, I am entering the 67th day of a partial fast that I began early in the summer as my personal act of protest at the vicious damage being done to inner-city children by the federal education law No Child Left Behind, a racially punitive piece of legislation that Congress will either renew, abolish, or, as thousands of teachers pray, radically revise in the weeks immediately ahead.

The poisonous essence of this law lies in the mania of obsessive testing it has forced upon our nation's schools and, in the case of underfunded, overcrowded inner-city schools, the miserable drill-and-kill curriculum of robotic "teaching to the test" it has imposed on teachers, the best of whom are fleeing from these schools because they know that this debased curriculum would never have been tolerated in the good suburban schools that they, themselves, attended.

The justification for this law was the presumptuous and ignorant determination by the White House that our urban schools are, for the most part, staffed by mediocre drones who will suddenly become terrific teachers if we place a sword of terror just above their heads and threaten them with penalties if they do not pump their students' scores by using proto-military methods of instruction -- scripted texts and hand-held timers -- that will rescue them from doing any thinking of their own. There are some mediocre teachers in our schools (there are mediocre lawyers, mediocre senators, and mediocre presidents as well), but hopelessly dull and unimaginative teachers do not suddenly turn into classroom wizards under a regimen that transforms their classrooms into test-prep factories. Read more