I have been inundated with these annoying, anonymous chain e-mails stating that Whitefolk are trying to sabotage Jamie Foxx's upcoming music show because he refused to put token white performers on the roster. And to foil the success of his show due to his insolent Black pride, they've purposely put him up against 'American Idol'. Is this true? Was Foxx acting with conviction or with racial malice? And regardless, so what? After all, of all the things to clog up my inbox with, why moral outrage regarding a televised music show, of the kind that Blackfolk have been disproportionately visible for years? Why is this what people have chosen to be up in arms about and leveraging the Internet to advocate for versus, say, Darfur, Haiti, Katrina, political corruption, corporate greed, the fight for a living wage, etc., etc.?
Regardless of where you come down on any of these issues, it is quite revealing how and why people respond to media-amplified and -skewed issues -- particularly when laced with race.
Do I think folks are kinda missing the point when they choose to carelessly and thoughtlessly forward unsubstantiated information about something as benign as a televised music show? Absolutely. But as my grandmother always used to posit: "If you're Black and not paranoid, you're crazy."
The Money's Not the Thing
"School" construction is most of that cost and would have to be capitalized over 30 years or whatever; it's not really like just spending a cool quarter-mil directly on each of this current crop of seventh graders!
That's the upfront part that is more like Disney than school district -- investment rather than operating cost.
Oprah's annual operating costs per girl might be more in line with the usual for live-in prep schools?
But while I was casting about for school construction data, I found this confidently far-advanced harbinger of change -- from a surprising source, the construction pros, not the hidebound instructional operation experts. Read the first few pages, it will blow your mind. Not just the usual about tech changes, but radically redesigning and re-integrating School as "learning communities" for all people (not just kids!) to learn and do everything, new public-private partnerships to pay for it all, serving Grandma and toddler in a real garden instead of test prep disguised as kinder-garten. Shopping mall complexes for learning, with natural light, onsite health care, you dream it and it's around the corner -- and I only read through page six!