Welcoming inclusive headline HERE


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The ladder says more about access than the nicest "Welcome" sign you hang on the door. - Jessica Sherwood
The ladder says more about access than the nicest “Welcome” sign you hang on the door. – Jessica Sherwood

It looked to me like RI Future’s Bob Plain confronted a fork in the road last week. The road began with the RI Future headline, “When the NRA jerks her chain, Doreen Costa barks.” I share the disdain for elected officials who are beholden to the NRA, but it wasn’t those politics that caught my attention. It was the sexism of portraying a woman in office as a dog on a leash. A couple of us commented on the post, objecting to the headline. And that was where the fork in the road developed.

It would have been easy, and familiar, for the post author and editor to dismiss the objections as feminist hypersensitivity. We’ve heard that one before, fellas, about a million times. (Play along with a bingo card.) In fact, “lighten up” is a time-honored defense – or really, more of a derail. If you shoot the messenger, you’re also announcing your complete dismissal of the message.

At this fork, the other path to take is to consider – not automatically embrace, but truly consider – the message you’re getting. I’m really pleased that RI Future took this path (which included inviting me to write this post), because this fork in the road has consequences.

Before I discuss those consequences, I must also mention the muddy middle path that people often try to take. People get in this mud when they respond, “it was not my intention to cause offense, and I apologize to anyone who was offended.” We call that a fauxpology or a nonpology, because it’s just a slightly nicer way of dismissing the received objection and absolving the actor. A real apology acknowledges: “I messed up.”

So, what’s so important about these forks in the road? They are little decision points that affect the climate of an organization, a space or a virtual space. As a sociologist, I’ve spent a lot of time studying how privileged people hold on to their privileges, or sometimes share them. And yes, managing a space is a privilege, often accompanied by other (race/class/gender/ability/etc) privileges. Whether the “space” is a group blog, a workplace, a country club, or an occupation, there are some parallels in how they might be protected or shared.

The easiest, and least generous, way to share is to accept different other people as long as they make no issue of their difference. I interviewed a country club member who quipped about their admission of African-Americans, “okay, I’ll be the well-behaved WASP with dark skin.”

The more genuine way to share is to consider how your space, and your own routines, might need some adjustment in order to become truly welcoming. Part of privilege means that you typically don’t have to do that reflection.

Once, a group of us were talking to a professional baseball scout. A woman who loved baseball asked if any women did his job. He said no. A little later he was trying to describe the process of evaluating minor league players. He said it was like when people evaluate women: anybody might be able to say “she’s an eight,” but the scout is able to articulate the specific elements that combine to yield that evaluation.

Gosh, I said, I wonder why no women are in this occupation. Some people don’t want to reflect on the ways their spaces are welcoming/unwelcoming to different sorts of people. As I said, you don’t have to. But if you would like to attract more different other people, do it! I have no sympathy for those who only do the former stingy version of space-sharing, and then bemoan the fact that “diverse others” are not filing in. I’ve heard that repeatedly. But whether it’s a strategic derail or oblivious ignorance, I will object. Impact matters more than stated intentions.

Thank you, Bob, for listening, considering the impact, and staying off the low road. That road only leads to the same good old boys’ club, and not to fairness and justice.

What is a progressive?


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ProgressiveWordCloudRecently Mark Gray and Bob Plain were discussing the word “progressive” (while discussing Sam Howard’s piece here)  and neither seemed sure of how to define the term. Bob took a stab at it saying it had something to do with supporting “bottom up” Keynesian economics and later suggesting that progressives should seek to the greatest amount of good for the greatest amount of people. Mark seemed to indicate that the term was essentially meaningless and suggested the word “liberal” be reclaimed. As a Humanist, I found this exchange interesting, because at its core, Humanism is a progressive philosophy of life based in reason, compassion, optimism and action. The term “progressive” is at the core of my beliefs in a very basic way.

Reform vs. realpolitik

Simply put, progressives advocate for social reform. Working from the core value of compassion, progressives see the expansion of human and civil rights as important goals and work to advance the wellbeing of all human beings. Built into progressive ideals is an optimism about the necessity of human beings coming together to solve the larger issues confronting our world. When done correctly, progressivism is not Utopian fantasy, because progressives should optimally be pragmatists, grounded in the real world.

Mark and Bob indicated in their podcast that being a pragmatic progressive is akin to being a compassionate conservative. They were riffing off statements made by House Speaker Gordon Fox and General Treasurer Gina Raimondo, who both referred to themselves as pragmatists. However, Raimondo and Fox were not talking about pragmatism as an approach to values decisions but as an approach to political realities, akin to Kissinger’s realpolitik. The statements by the two politicians indicated a willingness to abandon progressive values when politically expedient, rather than adopting a pragmatic approach towards executing progressive values.

Pragmatically executing progressive values requires science and reason, rather than cultural prejudices and tradition, as the best tools with which to better society. Science and reason are not in and of themselves the goal of progressives, they are the tools progressives use to create a better, more just and more compassionate society. Progressives are led by their compassion to enable the best possible social reform by accessing the best possible tools, which as of now are science and reason.

So what does this all mean in real world terms? Going back to Bob Plain’s idea that progressives advance the ideas of Keynesian economics, for instance, we can see that it’s not a belief in Keynesian economics that makes one a progressive, it’s a belief in compassion,  reason and science that brings one to view that Keynesian economics is currently the best possible theory around which to organize a capitalist economic system. As to whether capitalism is the best way to organize our economy, that’s a discussion for another time.

Progressives value democracy. Recognizing that all human beings have inherent worth and dignity means that all human beings should have some say in how our society should be arranged. Democracy and universal enfranchisement, limited by a commitment to the widest possible understanding of human rights, is right now our best method of ensuring our fidelity to the goal of protecting and enhancing human wellbeing.

Labor unions

Bob and Mark felt that support of organized labor was a sticking point for some progressives. Just as all progressives should be in favor of democracy, so should all progressives be in favor of unions. Unions are simply groups of people advocating for the best deal possible in their workplace. Unions are democratically run, and work to better the wellbeing of people. The right of people to peaceably assemble and collectively bargain is as absolute as any right there is.

Progressives and others would be right to take issue with the way some unions behave in the real world, just as they are right to take issue with the way some democracies behave in the real world. One can stand up for democracy and be opposed to the treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo or support unions without supporting corruption. However, progressives should not be opposed to unions on philosophical grounds. If you accept that people have the right to collectively bargain, then you have to accept the right of people to unionize. If you deny that people have the right to collectively bargain, then you should hang up your “progressive” hat for good, because you are denying basic human rights, democracy and the advancement of human wellbeing in favor of monied interests, plutocracy and economic ideology. (See: Gina Raimondo above.)

Education

Education is another issue that bedevils progressives. Right now there is a concerted effort to wrest public education from government control (and in our democracy that means wresting it from the control of the citizens) and putting it under the auspices of private industry or religious institutions. Both of these options should be anathema to progressives. If there is truly something deeply wrong with the public education system in the United States (and that seems unclear to me, though I am by no means an expert in this area) then it falls to the public to correct that issue.

Turning over control of our schools to private, for-profit industry, in the hopes that business models will be more effective at finding educational solutions, treats our children as commodities, which is the very opposite of treating our children as worthy human beings. Furthermore, the idea that businesses, operating under the grinding Darwinism of the free market will do a better job educating our children flies in the face of what business is truly about.  Businesses are not about delivering better products, businesses are about maximizing profits. Look at the world around us. Most cars are not high performance Audis, and most cellphones are not state of the art iPhones. Education by free market will produce some exceptionally high quality educations but will mostly churn out assembly line cookie cutter educations designed to meet minimum standards. Again, kids as commodities. For-profit businesses seek maximum profits, and indeed, for most corporations, that’s all they can do.

Vouchers, which would give parents money allotments that would allow them to send their children to private and parochial schools, are also contrary to progressive values. Money would be siphoned away from already underfunded and struggling public school systems and channeled to educational environments that may well stand in direct opposition to the values of democracy, human rights and human wellbeing. Private educational institutions are under no obligation to teach our students in accordance with the values of a free and open society.

Some private schools may deny the fundamental principles of reason and science by rejecting evolutionary science education, and others may reject universal human rights by denying the existence of women’s and LGBTQ rights. More extreme schools of thought cannot be excluded from public funding through vouchers. Private schools could just as easily deny the roundness of the earth or the humanity of non-whites.

Progressives believe that our society should be under no obligation to fund, in any way whatsoever, ideas that fly in the face of compassion, reason and human rights. Though we recognize that in a pluralistic society such ideas do exist, and understand that some parents and guardians will make the decision to pull their children from public schools in order to send their children to a private institution or home school, our commitment should be to making our public schools the best they can be, using the best ideas and most recent studies to ground our work, not helping to fund those that would tear down our society based on religious or ideological beliefs.

Progress

The root of the word “progressive” is “progress.” Progressives need to look beyond current issues and current events and keep one eye on the future. Progressives should imagine the kind of world this could be, and work to get there. Being a progressive in the 1930s did not necessarily include being passionate about LGBTQ rights. But by the 1980s that’s exactly what it meant. Today’s seemingly minor issue could become the great civil rights battle of fifty years from now. There should be no shame in advocating today what will only seem like common sense in the future. Nor should there be shame in giving due consideration to ideas that are outside our experience or seem somewhat wacky. Many things we take for granted today would seem unbelievable to people who existed a century or even fifty years ago. Remember to use compassion, tempered by reason, optimism and the council of others, and you will not go too far astray.

One final note on what it means to be a progressive, particularly in Rhode Island, as regards religious and other concerns of conscience. Democracy and a concern for the value of all human beings necessitates a secular, non-religious government. This is as essential to being a progressive as anything. Our private beliefs can be as varied and imaginative as we desire, but the space in which we all must interact, that is the government and its institutions, needs to be free of religion and dogma, so that all people feel free to express themselves fully. Public, government sponsored religion and prayers, even if deemed ceremonial and traditional, fly in the face of inclusion. The prayer that opens a legislative session or the Christmas Tree displayed in the State House privileges and legitimizes one set of beliefs over another. Justice and equality seem a revokable gift of the ruling class, rather than a basic and guaranteed human right.

Being a progressive is deeply meaningful, and progressives should know that they are following a proud tradition of advancing human rights, human wellbeing, and institutional fairness.

Of course, this is only my opinion, and I am willing to discuss it further.

RIF Radio: Universal pre-K for RI, the COPAR quarry in Westerly, steroid era of Thanksgiving


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waterfall1126Tuesday Nov 26, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

It’s Tuesday, November 26, the day before the day before Thanksgiving … or, this year, the day before the storm. The weather prophets are predicting a miserably stormy Big Wednesday, so if you’re traveling, be careful.

The steroid era in baseball may be over but not in Thanksgiving … since 1965 the average weight of a turkey has increased from 18 to 30 pounds, according to Mother Jones. God help the human race if it’s true that we are what we eat….

There’s an environmental catastrophe taking place in Westerly as we speak. The COPAR quarry is mining gravel to the detriment of nearby wells all over the area, and not even an ongoing lawsuit seems to be able to put at least a temporary halt to it. You can read more about it on Progressive Charlestown, our sister blog. It’s an amazing story of how an environmental disaster can be done before the public sector has time to react.

But here’s the good news of the day, and maybe of the gubernatorial campaign is that Providence Mayor Angel Taveras said he’ll implement universal pre-kindergarten for Rhode Island toddlers if we elect him governor. Take that folks who say Angel is a progressive in name only!! This would be a huge. Currently there’s free market nursery school for rich kids and Headstart for poor kids but there isn’t a whole lot in between. This would mean every kid in Rhode Island would be guaranteed a pre-K education, and Taveras says he’ll also push to fund full day kindergarten.

This is the biggest and best idea I’ve heard in terms of fighting the too huge achievement gap between suburban students and their inner city counterparts in the Ocean State. And forgive me if I still believe funding education is a more critical social issue than de-funding retirement.  The paper of record ran the universal pre-K story on page 3 and on page 1 had a story about how expensive post-retirement benefits are…

Speaking of the ProJo and the governor’s race … columnist Ed Fitzpatrick asks the candidates about their “Before I die” wish. Taveras wants to see his daughter succeed, Raimondo wants to succeed as a grandmother, Allan Fung wants to go to China, Clay Pell wants Rhode Island to have the lowest unemployment in the nation … and the 5-foot-5 Ken Block wants to slam dunk someday. To date, this is the most realistic prediction each potential candidate has given for the future – and don’t be shocked if Block starts saying every Rhode Islander will be able to slam dunk if he’s elected governor.

The Before I Die project is a public art initiative happening at spots around Providence … it’s a wall where folks can share their wish for the world or themselves. A really great idea to remind us to imagine the world we want to live in. Before I die I want war and poverty to be things that happened in the past tense. For Rhode Island, I just want every kid to have access the same great education. Charter schools and teacher evaluations and high stakes tests are all just distractions from that…

And speaking of public art … the I-195 commission is looking for people to instal art projects on the 20-acres of undeveloped land left vacant when the highway was moved. The commission will pay up to $2,000 for 12 to 15 installations. Details here.