Sunday, January 22, 2017

Gang: The Sequel to the Quickest Movie Grades Ever

Wow. What a great time to go to the movies! (Besides it is a great escape from the rain, reality, and fake news. So here is what I see from my view in the metaphor Cafe:

Hidden Figures: A+  The comment most everyone makes as they walk out if the theater is "How did this not ever get publicized." As a matter of FACT--the actresses in the film thought it was a fictional script! Seriously. It is the best America has to offer--it makes us remember we are-- as the great Zora Neale Hurston once explained, and I am paraphrasing-- we are all paper bags filled with all things precious and common but those bags all have the same ingredients, just the color of the bags are a different shade. These three women broke barriers and lived lives that were understated, but not underestimated. They had to prove themselves in the late 50's and early 60's--nothing handed to them. They faced the prejudiced attitudes of white society (and NASA dominated by men). This may not win many Oscars but it wins the hearts and minds of its audience.

Lion: A-  Never any spoilers from me except that this true story, like "Hidden Figures" also amazes the audience. I did not go in with huge expectations, but I came out very impressed. The young boy steals the show. However, the pain of the adult character played by Dev Patel is evident as each of us flashes back to our own childhood and we reflect on those pictures in our mind of where we came from and who raised us. I thought of that brownstone in Brooklyn that my grandparents owned, playing on the streets with my best friend Tootie (really, his dad raised pigeons). There are images none of us can shake, but at least we know where that home is (or can find it on Google Earth).





Moonlight A The two Gentleman pictured below, Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney, have produced a heartbreaking look at their troubled "Throwaway" neighborhood in Miami, Liberty City  and the troubled characters that inhabit it. Roger Wilkins, the esteemed author and professor of George Mason University, once explained that a child born without parents is like a child born without skin. Chiron is that little boy, whose fiction was fact for both the men who created "Moonlight": their mothers were both crack addicts and HIV Positive. Much like the film's creators, Chiron has no father is in the picture and a mother essentially abandons him McCraney explains why the film is so relevant, "If we don't tell these stories, we lose who we are." That is the truth of the formerly segregated communities of the early 1960's, and despite all the efforts of Dr. King and the Civil Rights Acts, these cities disintegrated during what Professor Wilkins calls "the Second Great Migration," with the upper and middle class African Americans breaking free from segregated cities that reminded them of slavery and humiliation of Jim Crow. What was left were the poor, the elderly and the uneducated. The crack/ drug invasion tore through cities like Liberty like a hurricane, and it became the reality we see in "Moonlight." However, that is the history behind of the story. The film's humanity is the most compelling. The sexual and racial issues evolve as we see Chiron's life in the three iterations, from a seven year old, to a teenager, to the mirror image of someone who saved him. The duo who produced the film escaped the vicious cycle of poverty and drug dependency because, as they admit, they were saved by figures in the neighborhood. But they are the exception to the rules because they are exceptional. So is their film. It is hard to watch "Moonlight" if you, like me, come from White Privilege, if you have avoided these cities out of fear (me, as well), or if you watch TV programs that portray these places as crime infested, morally bankrupt in need of some handsome duo to save someone or lock others up (not me!). Black Lives Matter and their lives, like everyone's, is in desperate of love, hope, and attention.


 

Friday, January 20, 2017

"In Order to For a More Perfect Union" The Obama Creed

Note: for those who oppose politics in social media, please ignore this particular blog post. I do not mean to offend. I mean to commend.

 I am always nice to folks that are respectful, so Michelle Obama's words "When they go low we go high" speak to my moral latitude and longitude.

It is with this respect for others I submit these thoughts--brief though they be about why President Obama is one of the finest men to hold the office of President of the United States, and, alongside some of the greatest of our leaders, the most consequential.

People can be very forgetful. Eight years ago we were bleeding out jobs by the thousands each month. The Dow dropped into the 600's (total points), and the US was teetering on the brink of financial collapse. Unemployment was bouncing around 9-10%. These are facts. No president since FDR faced a crisis like this coming into office. 

People forget two wars were being fought. No president since Nixon has inherited a war when they took the oath of office. 

But NO PRESIDENT in the history of this nation ever faced BOTH cataclysmic issues at the same time when they were inaugurated. President Obama gets that dubious distinction uniquely.

The economy has rebounded. You know the numbers: 4.9% unemployment, incomes up in all sectors of the economy, the Dow is pushing 20,000 points. That alone is remarkable. The wars have gradually tapered off so that we are in a drone battle with ISIS as we help the nations involved choke the life out of this cancer that plagues the Middle East. Finally, the leader of the 9.11 attacks does not take a breath on this Earth.

But to so many Americans all that was not enough. Millions of Americans claimed that they have not been heard or helped. They feel 'forgotten.' Others are angry that they have had to pay a price for others. They feel this burden is too heavy--he/she is not my brother. Oddly enough, many claim Christian spiritual values to be at their core; until, they have to reach into their wallet and help 'form a more perfect union.' Obamacare is just too expensive, the cost of covering their employees is too high. Of course, having 20 million Americans uninsured is far more expensive. They ignore the Obama position that the President does not control Big Pharma or the medical insurance industry. They do not urge their congressman to improve the ACA, but rather to repeal it (but just keep the good parts). The 'good parts' are the parts that cost the most--those are the essence of the AFA/ Obamacare.

They claim it is the President's fault that their business is not growing enough (if at all), their jobs have been outsourced, automated, or become obsolete. I find that strange because it was not a Presidential decision that caused any of this (or could have prevented any of it.) The corporate greed, the 1% club, the obsession for increasing wealth for the powerful shareholders in Big Pharma, Big Oil, etc (just to pick a few of the many corporate giants who have made a killing in the last eight years). The very people whom they just voted into office have appointed nominees, sitting smugly waiting for cabinet appointments, those folks are your 'advocates' now.

We want more. A "more perfect union" does not mean "I have to sacrifice"--let this cup pass me by. It's someone else's problem. "I paid my taxes and what did I get for it?" they ask.

Answer. The greatest nation on earth. The leader of the free world. The oldest democracy on the planet. The richest, most educated, most technological, most inventive, most humane, most forward thinking government--that is what you have received. Are we perfect? No. Are we still racist? Yes. Are things better than they were eight short years ago? Unquestionably. Not for all, but for most. And the forgotten ones? Ask who forgot them. Companies that shipped lobs overseas, automated, or just went under because they could not compete. Will a new administration change the profit motive? The shareholders thirst? Turn Chinese products away? All questions that require time and attention paid by informed Americans.

To my way of thinking, the most divisive, un-American action by any government official came from the power of one Mitch McConnell, who claimed that it was his patriotic duty to make sure President Obama is not re-elected. Obama must be seen as a failure. He must fail to right the ship that was lost in the President Bush years. (Mind you, President Bush is not to be solely blamed for the downward spiral. There is enough blame to go around from both political parties.) To decry that the President must never have his administration pass anything of significance, to be completely "the party of obstruction," to block the appointment of a Supreme Court justice for the better part of a year would make the Framers of our Constitution turn in their graves.

So fear trumps hope in the eyes of far too many Americans. And then fear leads to irresponsible acts of hatred. A call to ban all Muslims from entering the USA. A fence to keep out all Mexicans who are "bad hombres." A deportation team to move 12 million people out of the USA. A chant to "Lock her up" and a call for a commission to investigate and prosecute Hillary Clinton for crimes of which not a single shred of evidence has seen the light of day. Fear brings conspiracy theories. Fear brings claims of 'fake news' or facts one cannot trust because as one Trump spokesperson implied "there are no facts anymore."

FDR, when facing the greatest crisis of the 20th Century, reminds us: "We have nothing to fear but fear itself." That is really the crux of the issue. And what else does fear do? It blinds us to the greatest issue of our time: Global Warming. The Paris Accords is the first step, as President Obama said, to saving the planet. But we can't see that because it's not in our backyard...yet.

I refuse to accept that I should support the "McConnell Mandate"--make sure Mr. Trump fails. No, we need President Trump to "bring jobs back". He needs to realize only some of those jobs will be sustainable. We also need those jobs to pay better wages, but we also better accept that the products made in the USA will cost more. People better not moan and complain about that. Perhaps Trump needs to live by his own words and make neckties in our country, buy steel from the USA Steel, and pay his own hotel employees better and (you may not know this) and offer them medical coverage, which he does NOT do in Las Vegas. Oh, the shareholders will not be happy when the labor costs rise.

As for acting like a grown up and not the narcissist bully that he inherently has demonstrated--that is too much to ask. Maybe the best we can hope for is a man who becomes more educated to the drama that our world faces.

So I am rooting for this administration to continue President Obama's work of making this a "More Perfect Union." And I hope that Americans begin to realize that "a more perfect union" was energized when young children today have never know an America that did not have a African American President of these United States of America. That alone may be his most remarkable achievement. Hope, my friends, hope.

Saturday, January 7, 2017

To All Those Parents (and Teachers) with "Special Needs" Children: The Michigan Christmas Miracle

Mark McWilliams speaks at the State Capital--Lansing
Amid all the turmoil of the election, the hoopla of the holidays, and the angst directed at government...a miracle occurred in the state of Michigan. One legislative act that few outside its boundaries may know. It is my intention to spread the word far and wide--thousands of children will be saved from the “archaic and barbaric practices” that are sometimes used to control students with behavioral issues or special needs." 

The hero of our story, who has worked tirelessly for years on this legislation, is my lifelong friend Mark McWilliams. Mark's son, Bob, summed it up best in this Facebook post just before the holidays: "...My dad worked all year to push a package of bills through the Michigan legislature that will protect students with special needs throughout the state. For the many thousands of kids in Michigan with autism, attention disorders, behavior disorders, and so on--these bills are a big deal, and they're a big step in the right direction. This is news to feel good about amidst all the madness."

What is the "madness?" The Detroit News explains: "Michigan legislators on Wednesday gave final approval to plans designed to end the use of “seclusion and restraint” in K-12 schools.....The nine-bill seclusion and restraint package, a top priority for Lt. Gov Brian Calley, seeks to end what he has called 'archaic and barbaric practices' that are sometimes used to control students with behavioral issues or special needs.The bipartisan proposal would require the Michigan Department of Education to develop a statewide school policy prohibiting the use of seclusion and restraint except in emergencies....while discouraging actions that could worsen behavioral issues in students, such as locking them up or tying them down.'What this does is it sets some minimum standards with respect to the sorts of things that would be illegal in a household, illegal in a prison, or illegal in a hospital that would (now) be illegal in a school,' Calley told reporters last week."

Mark McWilliams and the Michigan Miracle for Special Needs Kids
Bob McWilliams is right--this is a big deal! His father Mark worked with his advocacy team against all odds to get the Governor of Michigan to sign this bill before the Christmas break. Things looked bleak. Everyone wanted to go home--shopping to do, trees to decorate, parties to attend; yet with the help of the Lt. Gov. Calley, whose own child is 'Special Needs', the system pushed and pushed. And by the 'system' I am referring to the broad shoulders and articulate voice of Mark McWilliams. And at the last minute, the bill was signed...to even Mark's surprise. Amazing how government can work when it personally matters. 

However, Mark has no dog in this fight. His own children are brilliant and gifted. But he and his wife Kathy live by a different code: one that reads--there but for fortune. And for that reason Mark, a lawyer by trade, has spent his working life in advocacy for those less fortunate who need to be treated with dignity. The wins are far between--but this is one for the ages. So this is a story filed under these words:

Staying the course regardless of the personal cost.


If Mark were sitting next to me as I write this he would tell me that he is a small part of the legislative victory. I'm not buying that and neither should you.. He would also ask me to do all I can to spread the word to other organizations and other state governments to follow the Michigan Miracle. So please share this with parents, principals, school board members, government officials and alike.May the word be spread far and wide: a child was protected in Michigan this year...

My heroes: Mark and Kathy McWilliams

Friday, January 6, 2017

Gang: the quickest of movie grades--ever!

Gang: the quickest of movie grades--ever. [ Remember, I am a soft touch--always the easy grader.] No spoilers...and I been in a movie mood since Christmas.


"Fences" A+ Denzel and Viola embody Troy and Ruby. It is an Arthur Miller styled play as movie, except it is set in the segregated part of town. It explains so much about the affects of America's Original Sin and the men and woman who have endured it--then and now.

"La La Land": B Just didn't do it enough. The singing not good enough; the dancing not good enough. Gene Kelly, Nope. Ginger Rogers, nope. Loved the closing scene and all the Hollywood allusions. The opening scene is just really strange--not sure what it had to do with anything.





"Passengers" B I just loved Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt. And I love sci-fi (as opposed to fantasy), but you have to really push "reality" out of your mind. It is a film about what makes one happy and loved, and how this contrasted by the Earth these characters abandon.

"Rogue One" A It knocked me out. Fantastic. Can't wait to see again. I went home and immediately watched "Star Wars: A New Hope." I had to see how it connected.


"Arrival" A- Amy Adams rocks. The film's themes of communication and fear, as well as its time traveling plot makes it a movie one needs to see twice. A mind-bender.

That's the way I see it from my Metaphor Cafe...
Next up "Hidden Figures"...

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

"Tramps Like Us": Springsteen's Final Chapters with Me


The readers of my blog have been following my thoughts as I have been reading Bruce's deeply personal autobiography, "Born to Run." The is my finale, and I hope to not put any spoilers forth yet give you an understanding of my attachment to this American icon, both as a teacher and as a fellow traveler through the turbulent and glorious decades we both have had the good fortune to frolic. Thus, some finale thoughts:

1) Longevity (aka: Going Balls to the Wall): We are both in our 60's, yet six years apart. Springsteen has far more 'dents in the armor' as my good friend Gary Charlebois puts it; however, both the knees and the noggin have had their share of repairs. Springsteen's years touring, not to mention his longer-than-an-NFL- football game, concerts are awe inspiring. Perhaps it was because he had nowhere else to go then, and because the limelight could be the antidote for what ailed him. He learned the hard way the tours may help the symptoms, but wasn't the cure. The addiction to center stage is something to which I can thoroughly relate. 32 years is a long time to teach--5 shows a day--'give em all ya got!' Then in the latter years, I came home and crashed on the couch, only to be nudged awake by my devoted wife for our dinner. But I wouldn't change a thing. I loved teaching kids--the thrill is never gone. Now I make cameo appearances--LIVE-- and through my novels and this blog. I hope to keep on keeping on.

2) Losing souls: Along the way, as Emily Dickinson surmised, if one could not stop for death, death would not kindly stop for us. The E Street Band lost its organ player, Danny, and its 'BIG MAN on the saxophone,' Clarence. Bruce, in his own words, lamented: "It was like losing the rain." It is strange how death affects me differently. When I was 21, I lost a high school friend and teammate, Larry Hughes. It was my first funeral. It was sad, but I was not shaken as I am today when I was recently told that another friend and teammate passed. Tim Millar, like Larry, had signed my yearbook, noting great optimism for our futures. At least Tim got to enjoy 61 years, 40 more than Larry. I was shaken by his loss, not because of our personal closeness, but because his untimely death is a 'kind' reminder of my own mortality. That brings me to ...

3) ..."The Lord's Prayer: No spoiler here, but Bruce closes his chapter on lost souls reflecting on the prayer I say to myself each day. We both grew up catholic, went to a 'Saint's church' most every day for a while but found ourselves detached from its doctrines, not to mention its hypocrisy. But to my surprise, Springsteen returns, as I do, to the Lord's Prayer, and both of us feel a sense that 'somebody up there likes me.' I feel abundantly blessed with a loving wife and children, as does he. I don't know what I would have done or how I would have possibly felt fulfilled without them and the chorus of close friends who have guided me through thick and thin. Ditto Bruce. Both our parents made the 3,000 mile trek in the 1960's, desperate to head to the Promised Land of California. My folks courageously took off in a Rambler, and without a job in hand and nothing but their wits and wherewithal, stayed here. For all that, I am eternally grateful. Bruce Springsteen's folks left without him, and the abandonment he felt as he stayed in 'Jersey' makes his rise so unlikely and inspiring.

Finally, Turnin' 60: I do not want to divulge the climax to his story, but suffice it to say, at a time of desperate need, we found peace.

The singer and writer long for a audience, as does the teacher and writer. It is the audience, you--the reader, the student, the listener, who drive us to tell our story BECAUSE YOU MATTER. And we hope that we strike a chord in you, those who have sat behind the desk or on the stage floor, and that in so doing, we have made a difference in this Jungleland.