by Oneaboveall » Tue 26 Apr 2011, 16:09:39
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pretorian', 'H')ow come that I knew that no one will be able to refute anything that i said?
In all seriousness Pretorian, I can't really refute what you have said. I worked as a high school teacher in Jersey City and Newark, NJ from 1997-2008. During that time, I saw (to perfectly blunt) more stereotypes than a KKK rally. I taught kids who were gang members, drug dealers, parents in jail, and were homicidaly violent. I should also add that the administration seemed to think that we were in a movie like
Dangerous Minds or
Freedom Writers and that you had to be a missionary on top of being a teacher. I got so burned out that I decided that I really needed to change careers. So maybe it is hard to argue with your statements.
That being said, there are a few things I should mention:
I come from a family with an abusive alcoholic father. Going to school in the 1970s, you didn't talk about what was going on at home, so I would act out in class constantly. I did everything I could to get kicked out of class and spent most of the first grade on the bench in front of the principals office (of course no one knew why). If you know anything about Newark, you know that the city is as follows: East Ward (Portuguese with a lot of Italians when I was growing up); South and Central Wards (Black), and North Ward (Hispanic with an Italian enclave that's there to this day). It was decided to send me to school uptown, since it was figured that the hard ass black teachers could handle me. They were right. These teachers made sure I worked and if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't have been where I am today. I should also note that I came from a really blue collar neighborhood and I was marked since I was a shy kid who liked to read. I got picked on a lot and jumped a few times by the white kids. I actually got along better with the black and Peurto Rican kids uptown. I never got jumped by them either.
Next thing that I want to mention is that when I lived in Carlisle, PA, I subbed in a few different districs in the area and couldn't believe that some of the kids out there in these small white-bread towns were dealing with some of the same issues as kids in the inner-city. I'm not talking about white kids who imitate homies in the 'hood. I'm talikng about having the exact same issues. They also wanted to keep everything hidden in this area and not acknowledge some of the problems they were facing (conversely, they were great at turning little issues and blowing them up into enormous problems). One place,which we will call Big Spring Area School District in Newville, PA was full of rednecks who displayed more sterotypes than a monster truck rally. So let's not pretend it's just the inner city kids who have issues.
When the banksters want something, our policymakers move with the speed of Mercury and the determination of Ares. It’s only when the rest of us need something that there is paralysis.
How free are we today with the dominance of globalist capital and militarized security apparatus?