13)
CONTINUING THE DEBATE ON YOUTH ISSUES
(The following article
is from the
July 1-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low income rate; for
U.S. readers - $25 US per year; other overseas readers - $25 US or $35
CDN per year. Send to: People's Voice, c/o PV Business Manager, 133
Herkimer St., Unit 502, Hamilton, ON, L8P 2H3.)
By Liz
Rowley, Ontario leader of the Communist Party
By Johan Boyden
"Don't blame it on my eyes, blame on my youth," Sammy Davis Jr. once
sang - but a bad infection in the organs of vision has frustrated
writing my column. Never mind. My last two articles have created some
online debate. Now I reply.
"As a student heavily involved in student
government and who helped coordinate our students' union's tuition
campaign last year, I resent the claim ("Student Movement Today:
Tactics and Priorities," PV June 1-15) that the Canadian Federation of
Students is the only way for students and that the Canadian Alliance of
Student Associations is a right-wing plot to sabotage students. Student
issues and access to education are too important to get hung up on
ideology."
Respectfully, the history is there to be
googled. CASA's advocacy approach flows from their "line of compromise"
politics. Their founder recently authored a US think-tank report
calling for a 25% tuition increase across Canada! Likewise, the ideas
students demand of the capitalist state are dialectically connected to
their struggle in the streets - a mobilized membership is the muscle
backing up a student's alternative agenda. This struggle is inseparable
from ideology.
[T]he underlying issue is not "We should be
profiling these kids who don't fit in", but why must they fit in? ("The
Stereotype of Dangerous Youth", PV, June 16-30.) Not fitting in isn't a
prerequisite to becoming a reclusive, trigger happy psycho. There are
plenty of kids who have flipped out at school who appeared to be
perfectly normal children. ... Why should all children be the same and
carry the same thoughts and beliefs? That's like asking for two
identical bunches of bananas at the grocery store. It doesn't work. The
only limitation that inclusive teaching faces is funding, but now we're
getting into another issue (because funding should NOT be a problem
when it comes to education or health care, but apparently the BC
government thinks otherwise).
The Canadian Center for Policy Alternatives
estimates that in British Columbia during 2004-05, $300 million would
have been needed to maintain the same level of education funding as the
1990s, adjusting for inflation. But in 34 out of 92 BC school districts
funding is frozen; overall it is decreasing. The BC Teachers'
Federation has also just documented that cash-strapped School Districts
are hiring new administrators, not teachers. This is indicated by the
decreasing teacher/administrator ratio in 42 districts from '04-05 to
'08-09 (like negative 30% in Kootenay Columbia District). However, with
over 175 public BC school closures since 2002, when the Campbell
Liberals took office, some districts like Prince Rupert have positive
results: both groups have lost jobs.
Re: "Dangerous Youth" I don't think racial
profiling has anything to do with social malaise or a fetish of
violence in terms of a cause. It has to do with one group of people
repressing another and keeping them subordinate, not letting them get
ahead. You could have upbeat social conditions and unarmed police but
that would not solve the problem of racial profiling. Racial profiling
is where racial fears are used to target people of a subordinate group
and shake them down for anything that will stick. As long as there is
white supremacy there will be racial profiling....
Discussing racial profiling together with
other forms of stereotyping was, I agree, awkward. A recent Huffington Post article by Rinku
Sen, publisher of ColourLines
magazine, talks about the murders of Stephen T. Johns (a black security
guard at the Holocaust Museum killed by an anti-Semite) and also
abortion clinic physician George Tiller (shot by a man with roots in
the "racial purity movement").
"There's been lots of discussion about why
hate crimes are rising and how to prevent future tragedies, yet we've
largely missed the relationship between extremist racism and the less
obvious version," Sen writes. "Social psychologists ... tell us that
notions of the innate goodness of white people and the equally innate
badness of people of colour are so deeply embedded in our minds that
we're totally unaware of making such judgments."
Differences aside, Canadian and US history is
the partly bloody tale of a ruling class fostering racism. What danger
is posed to that ruling class by non-aboriginal workers, especially
white workers, inseparably linking the national grievances of Natives
with their own liberation, and considering Aboriginal people's
militancy proudly worth emulating?
More
discussion at http://www.Rebelyouth-magazine.blogspot.com.