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Monday, September 21, 2015

The Problem:  Some believe what isn't true and others refuse to believe what is… - Wait What?

The Problem:  Some believe what isn't true and others refuse to believe what is… - Wait What?:

The Problem:  Some believe what isn’t true and others refuse to believe what is…






As we contemplate how it is possible that elected officials like Democratic Governor Dannel Malloy remain steadfastly committed to his anti-teacher, anti-public education, pro-Common Core testing and pro-charter school corporate education reform initiatives we might do well to remember the words of the great Danish philosopher, Søren Kierkegaard, who observed that fools are those who “believe what isn’t true [and/or] refuse to believe what is true.”
The damage that Malloy and his cadre of “reformers” have done to public education in Connecticut, and continue to do, has been significantly exacerbated by the utter failure of the Democrat controlled Connecticut General Assembly to stand up to Malloy’s bullying.
Incredibly, the majority of State Senators and State Representatives have abdicated their responsibility when it comes to promoting public education.
Rather that step forward and fulfill their constitutional and moral duty as participants in our representative democracy, they have relegated themselves, doing little more than rubber stamping the very policies that are hurting Connecticut’s students, parents, teachers, public schools and taxpayers of their districts.
With little to no support from the Legislative Branch of Government, the role of the Judicial Branch becomes all the more important.
Public education advocate and commentator Wendy Lecker had another MUST READ column in this past weekend’s Stamford Advocate.
In her column, Wendy Lecker alerts us to the fact that we’ve apparently and unfortunately reached the point where the courts must step in and guide our elected officials toward policies that help, not hurt, public education in Connecticut.
Wendy Lecker’s piece, entitled, “Do courts need to guide Malloy about education?” was first published in the Stamford Advocate and can be found at: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/news/article/Wendy-Lecker-Do-courts-need-to-guide-Malloy-6514492.php