Comment on Diane’s Bridging Differences blog about Bill Gates
Last night, (11/30/10) I listened to Diane Ravitch participate in a   discussion about public schooling with a panel of parents, teachers,   administrators, and politicians. She then fielded numerous questions from an   audience of teachers and parents in New  Haven Connecticut.   She was extremely well received, and was applauded time and time again while   not one NCLB panelist supporter was applauded. It is clear in my humble   opinion the tide is turning on NCLB these days. She mentioned the adversary   remark about "Bill Gates" in passing. In so many words she   indicated Bill is a rather little man who does not know much about education   with lots of money. Take away Bill's money, and people would not even notice   him in a room of two, (these words are my take on her discussion of Mr. Gates   not hers). But more importantly Diane passionately, elegantly, and back by   facts and data supported teachers. She has become the biggest defender of   tenure, unions, and teachers. She is not the defender of the status quo-she views the status quo as NCLB/RTTT, and that policy is destroying our public  schools in her opinion. She took on the Blueprint and the Learn act, and said the same thing about both of them. The Blueprint in the end with hurt public schools as well. My feeling at this point is any adversary of Bill Gates is a   friend of teachers these days. If Bill wants to donate to education then he   should give, and step back. Bill Gates reminds me of something I learned   studying the history of the Irish Famine. We had groups that offered soup and   bread to the hungry in Ireland   during the famine, but demanded people convert, and give up their children to   the orphanages and poor houses. People resisted that kind of giving. A   million souls died, and a million immigrated rather than accept their soup   and bread. That equaled half the population of Ireland at the time. America would   have to lose 150 million people in a decade to understand that kind of lost.   This convert and eat kind of giving fueled Irish rebellions for a hundred   years, and it became one of the main reasons Ireland is not part of the   United Kingdom. Irish History however fondly recalls that the Quakers helped   to feed us, and made no such demands on us. Irish history only remembers and   admires the Quakers. These are true givers, true servants of god, and will be   blessed in Irish prayers for a million years. My grandparents Irish Immigrants told us the story of the Quakers every year at Thanksgiving, and every   year the Turners give without asking people to give up something in exchange.   Those other so-called feed the hungry groups are portrayed as being   contributors to the famine. I say Bill Gates could learn a great deal from   the Quakers. While Diane Ravitch will be remember as a friend and admired by   teachers, parents, and educators for years to come. Diane Ravitch and the   Quakers are alright in my book. I am walking to DC, Jesse
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