The Community Schools Movement Is Running Headlong Into Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s Hard-Right Agenda
Sunday, December 24, 2023
ICYMI: Christmas Eve Edition (12/24)
The Community Schools Movement Is Running Headlong Into Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s Hard-Right Agenda
Friday, December 22, 2023
Dominionism for Dummies
If you've been hearing the term Dominionism and keep wondering, "Well, what is that, anyway?" this post is for you (if you already know, you can correct me in the comments).
The conservative world of Christianity is not one homogenous blob, but a continuum. Along that continuum you can find folks who believe that a public official's moral and values matter and folks who believe that Christians make better leaders that non-Christians. But way out beyond them, you'll find the Dominionists, who believe that Christians (their kind of Real True Christians) should rule the country.
Watch for references to the Seven Mountains. These "mountains" are religion, family, education, government, media, arts & entertainment, and business, and Dominionists believe that their brand of Christian should rule all of them. The Seven Mountain Mandate showed up in the 1970s; here's the origin story from Elle Hardy in The Outline
The Seven Mountain Mandate came into being in 1975, when God allegedly delivered a concurrent message to missionary movement leader Loren Cunningham, Campus Campus Crusade for Christ founder Bill Bright, and televangelist Francis Schaeffer to invade the “seven spheres.” The largely dormant idea was resurrected in 2000, when Cunningham met with “strategist, futurist and compelling communicator” Lance Wallnau, and told him about the vision of 25 years earlier. The “prophetic” Wallnau, a 63-year-old business consultant based in Dallas, with a “Doctorate in Ministry with a specialization in Marketplace” from Phoenix University of Theology immediately saw the idea’s potential and began promoting seminars and training courses on the theory as a “template for warfare” for the new century. Its real surge in popularity began in 2013, when Wallnau co-authored the movement’s call to arms, Invading Babylon: The 7 Mountain Mandate, with Pastor Bill Johnson from the prominent California megachurch Bethel Church.I added some links and emphasis there. Lance Wallnau is one of the names to watch for.
The NAR was named and organized by the late C. Peter Wagner, who wrote in 2007 that the seven mountains had “become a permanent fixture in my personal teaching on taking dominion,” adding that “our theological bedrock is what has been known as Dominion Theology.” He explained that, “Dominion has to do with control. Dominion has to do with rulership. Dominion has to do with authority and subduing. And it relates to society. In other words, what the values are in Heaven need to be made manifest here on earth. Dominion means being the head and not the tail. Dominion means ruling as kings … So we are kings for dominion.”
If this all seems very non-democratic, well, yeah. As Katherine Stewart points out in her book The Power Worshippers, the idea is that "legitimate government rests not on the consent of the governed but adherence to the doctrines of a specific religious, ethnic, and cultural heritage."
That authoritarian bent is why Domionionism can get along so well with Donald Trump. He may not be very Christian, but he is certainly amenable to sweeping away all the Others that Dominionists see as an obstacle to taking their rightful dominion over the nation. And Dominionists like Paula White, the Trump "spiritual advisor," stay close.
Dominionism has been on the fringes so long that it has become adept at sliding by under the surface of other movements. Cohn has just laid out the ties of Moms For Liberty to the movement. The move to commandeer school boards often has a Dominionist flavor.
This is a deep and twisty rabbit hole, and it prompts one to repeatedly ask, "They can't really be serious about this, can they?" Watch enough video and you realize they are. Realize too that these are not crazy-pants mouth-frothing obviously-out-there folks. The man in this mountain-buying couple is a guy I graduated from high school, as regular a guy as you'll ever meet. Good Rotarian. Nice person.
It should go without saying that not all of us of the Christian faith want to take dominion over every aspect of the country. There are plenty of conservative Christians who don't dream of "taking back" all seven mountains and turning this into a nation where all are required to bow before God.
But Dominionists are out there. They are not interested in democracy or compromise (you don't make deals with Satan and his demons), and in the most extreme cases, they are willing to do whatever it takes to get power.
If you'd like to know more, read Stewart's book (written in 2019, and about to become the basis of a documentary by Rob Reiner). A new book by Tim Alberta, The Kingdon, the Power and the Glory, is also useful.
On the dead bird app, follow @KiraResistance, @jennycohn1, and @mentack, at least for starters.
These folks absolutely want to replace the current public education system with one focused on their particular concept of God and faith; whether that system is private or public is immaterial. Either way they'd like it financed by taxpayers. When they talk about religious freedom, what they mean is the freedom for their conception of religion to dominate the system to the exclusion of all others (aka "the wrong ones"). Their goals are incompatible with a democratic pluralistic society, and with God’s help, and to His glory, and for their own power, they intend to come out on top.
Thursday, December 21, 2023
OK: Ed Secretary Ryan Walters' Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Year
We’re hearing from folks that are looking in and they're all saying the same thing. Ryan Walters isn’t there. I talked to someone who is a constituent of mine who said that he is not a mean guy. He is always there with a handshake and a smile, but he is never there, literally.
“If there's nothing there, show me,” said Rep. Mark McBride, ( R) House Education Budget and Appropriations Chair. “There's no ‘I gotcha' question’ here. It's just questions about public education that any appropriator would ask.”
McBride says he tried to work with Walters and his chief policy advisor Matt Langston, but after many requests for basic information were left unmet, he says he had no other option but to issue the subpoena.
It's disappointing to see some folks in my own party decided to sell their souls for 30 pieces of silver from the teachers union, but I'm never going to stop or back down. I'm going to keep fighting for the parents of Oklahoma [and] the tax payers of Oklahoma. Your kids are too important. The future of this state is too important,
“What he has done through his entire approach to public life, from what I’ve seen, is create dragons for himself to slay,” Riggs said. “Do we have students here that, you know, some may identify in different ways? I’m sure we do. But our charge is to try to make those students’ lives better. Our charge is not to make them part of some kind of political conversation.”
Riggs said those dragons — leftist indoctrination, pornography pushing, terrorist teachers’ unions — just don’t exist. In a high-poverty area like Macomb, there are real problems, but Riggs says he doesn’t see a point in bringing those issues to Walters.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
MO: Another Ugly Anti-LGBTQ Bill
Missouri House Bill 1739 was prefiled earlier this month. Another "Parental Rights" bill, it has some of the most heavy-handed features found in such bills. It's an ugly, nasty piece of legislation.
Some of the standards are here. There's a bunch of transparency language, allowing parents the right to inspect materials and even make copies, unless there are copyrights involved, because while we aren't concerned about professional rights of teachers or personal rights of children, we wouldn't dream of infringing on the rights of the corporations that produce instructional materials.
There's boneheaded language like this:
No nurse, counselor, teacher, principal, contracted personnel, or other administrative official at a public elementary or secondary school or public charter school shall encourage a student under eighteen years of age to adopt a gender identity or sexual orientation.
Of course, traditional heterosexual is a gender identity and sexual orientation; the definitions offered in the bill even recognize this. So, for instance, this bill would make it illegal for the school to sell "couples" tickets to dances--particularly if it also had a requirement that couples tickets are only for boy-girl couples (as identified at birth, of course). Gender-specific bathrooms would also be illegal. And any reading materials that portrayed any gender identities at all. In fact, the law defines "sexual identity"
[O]ne's actual or perceived emotional or physical attraction to, or romantic or physical relationships with, members of the same gender, members of a different gender, or members of any gender; or the lack of any emotional or physical attraction to, or romantic or physical relationships with, anyone.
In other words, you may have been thinking, "Good lord! This means that schools could only model persons with no romantic interest in anyone at all, but that is also a sexual identity under this law, meaning it is literally impossible to comply with it as written.
There's the popular No Nicknames clause. Sorry, Robert, but I can't call you "Bob" without a note from your parents.
Then we get to the ugly stuff.
If a student approaches a school official to express discomfort or confusion about the student's documented identity, the school official shall notify the student's parent of the discussion within twenty-four hours.
Same rule if a student asks for different pronouns. 24 hours to notify the parent. No exceptions provided for students who have reason to believe that such a revelation might make them unsafe at home. The student has no agency, no choice, no rights. So we can expect the student to exercise the only agency they have left--to not tell anyone, but to stay isolated.
These mandatory outing laws will not stop LGBTQ students from being LGBTQ. What they will do is transform school into one more unsafe space for the students who already lack sage spaces. LGBTQ students are more at risk for suicide and homelessness. Mandatory outing laws will not make these students safer.
The bill doesn't skimp on the penalty phase, either.
A teacher who is found to have violated any of this will have their license suspended or revoked. A school official found in violation will be immediately terminated and will be ineligible to work in any school for four years.
The Attorney General can bring civil action against a school or school district. Any parent can bring civil action against the school or school district for violation of any part of the law.
So if the student is not already afraid of being outed, teachers and staff will also be strongly motivated to never get involved in any difficult conversation. "Mrs. Kindface, I just have to talk to somebody about these feelings I--" "Stop right there, Robert! Are you trying to get me fired?? Hush up and go away."
The bill comes courtesy of Doug Richey, a three term GOP representative who has run unopposed in his last two elections. He's a Baptist pastor, veteran, and law enforcement chaplain. He once proposed a bill that would let churches disclose credible allegations of sexual abuse without being sued. He once proposed a bill to stamp out DEI programs. And critical race theory in schools. And an earlier version of something called a Parental Rights Bill. Yes, he's that guy. And he's the chair of the damned Joint Committee on Education. Alao, he's running for a Missouri Senate seat, about which he has this to say:
I was born into a Christian, blue-collar family that raised me in a small town. I know my roots. I know, and am deeply convicted by, our shared values and principles. To me, political involvement isn’t my identity, it’s a stewardship responsibility in the effort to preserve our constitutional liberties and to hold government accountable to its purpose. I stand ready to serve the folks of this district.Well, some of the folks. Not the LGBTQ ones. And not the youth and children. But then, they don't vote.
The bill is prefiled for the 2024 regular session. Here's hoping that it does not successfully make the journey to becoming a law.
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Increasing Profitability
There was a gut wrenching article in yesterday's Washington Post, all about how the rise of investors in the assisted living biz are causing real human damage. And it has implications for the privatization of education.
The piece opens with the story of the Balfour chain that realizes they need to hire additional staff for one of their facilities. But to do that, they have to ask their owners, the Welltower investment firm, a real estate investment trust that invests in healthcare infrastructure. And here's how that went:
Executives at Welltower balked.
“Their position was: We are trying to increase our profitability,” said one former Balfour executive, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters. “Care is an ancillary part of the conversation.”
Care is an ancillary part of the conversation.
This will forever be the problem with handing over any organization doing the work of caring for human beings to a profit-driven free market operation.
This is the problem with all investment fund ownership of any business at all-- whatever the business is supposed to be doing, from making widgets to selling breakfast cereal, becomes an ancillary concern. It is a Kafkaesque world in which a business's business is not really its business. In the hands of hedge fund vultures, its main business is profitability; whatever its nominal purpose becomes just a means of increasing profitability, and if that means gutting workforce or increasing prices or lowering quality or any number of things that soak the customers without adding value.
This is bad enough for widgets and breakfast cereal, but it is intolerable if the work is any sort of human service, like medical care or nursing homes or schools. There the interests of the investment firm will always be in conflict with the interests of the human persons being served. And that's how we arrive at "We're not going to provide better care for these people because it will cut into our profits."
That's how we arrive at "Care is an ancillary part of the conversation."
Any economic system can be abused by people with a busted moral compass. I have no beef with the free market--it has and can accomplish some great things. But even in the best of hands, it is ill-suited as a tool for managing the care of human beings.
Education should not be an ancillary part of the conversation about a school and the students in it. Ever.
Monday, December 18, 2023
Where Have All The Teen Athletes Gone?
End the Rat Race
The roses under my window make no reference to former roses or better ones; they are what they are; they exist with God today. There is no time to them. There is simply the rose; it is perfect in every moment of its existence.