Saturday, November 25, 2023

A defense of democracy

 

READ, LEARN, VOTE

Is democracy doomed? To hear day after day the fears about losing democratic rights to Trumpian/Republican authoritarianism has obviously got many of us running scared. Is the fear for our political future warranted?

First in New Brunswick and then in Saskatchewan and being contemplated in Alberta, current governments have found it okay to legislate the classroom procedure if a child asks that a pronoun and name exception be made without notifying parents. Ten Republican-governed states in the USA have done the same thing, and others are considering it. (Indiana Senate backs bill on student names, pronoun changes | AP News).

Without arguing the merits and pitfalls of this particular “parental rights” law, the prospect of a central government legislating in that way can certainly be disturbing. We have become used to the dismantling of earlier legislation that seemed to set standards for social/moral behaviour. Gay marriage, MAiD, even film classification are just a few examples of practically withdrawing central authority over what ought to be local, even familial or personal choices.

Granted, solving real or imagined social problems by enacting a law, will live on as a temptation. Problem solved, but in that solution the possibility of significant exceptions, of variations case-by-case are wiped out. Such is the dilemma created by applying central authority to the relationship between a teacher and a child; teachers come to know which students go home to loving, informed, nurturing homes and which to homes that are abusive or neglectful or oblivious. To legislate parental rights that can override individual human rights represents the common, devastating consequence of authoritarian regulation of social issues.

We do well to remember the words of Pierre Eliot Trudeau, who in debate regarding the decriminalization of homosexual acts famously quoted, “The state has no business in the bedrooms of the nation ('No place for the state in the bedrooms of the nation' | CBC).” And before countering with the fact that PET was much hated, we need to ask ourselves, “By whom was this devolution of central authority on socio-sexual behaviour hated?” Was it the cohort that relishes the presence of kick-ass, authoritarian governance that privileges one stratum of citizens, one set of opinions?

In today’s Iran, women who allow a lock of hair to protrude from a head covering can be arrested and maltreated by authority. Without implying that Canada is headed in that direction, it should serve as a reminder that without vigilance, we can as a nation edge closer toward authoritarianism. Populations in Germany now lamenting the rise and fall of Naziism mourn the fact that they didn’t read the signs and respond at the outset when the persecution of Jews was gaining strength.

You and I have as much power at the ballot box as does the prime minister or the governor-general. Going into the voting booth uninformed about the issues and the policies of candidates might as well be declaring that we don’t really care enough to bother.

Here in Rosthern, our member of the provincial legislature is also the province’s premier. Many are weighing recent legislation against the question of democratic/authoritarian governance in, for instance, the passage of a bill to regulate the approach to schoolchildren experiencing gender dysphoria, requirement that every school fly a Saskatchewan flag, the ongoing rhetoric pitting Saskatchewan against Canada on climate change and resource development issues, the promised attempt to refuse collection of the federal carbon tax, etc. Is the promise of a new hospital for people in the Saskatchewan Valley enough to ensure that we’ll ignore the elephants in the room? I would hope not.

The point being that as long as we’re well informed on issues, and have understanding enough to rank them in importance, we’re not as subject to voting on single issues that may crowd out more important ones. For instance, voting for the party that promises to lower the tax on gasoline, or the party that is keen on sticking to carbon-emissions-reduction goals requires ranking the two policies in importance. Election rhetoric is not likely to clarify the question; science can … for anyone taking the time to tune in, that is.

Most of us, most of the time, can “walk and chew gum at the same time.” Pride in our Saskatchewan needn’t feed on the denigration of our Canada; we don’t have to give up on one to support the other. In a place where Saskatchewanians are also Canadians, and in a province where legislation would never have been forced with the invoking of the Notwithstanding Clause until now, the authoritarian approach to governance lately demonstrated should certainly affect what people rank as important as they enter the voting booth.  

 

 

Monday, November 06, 2023

 

SWORDS INTO PLOWSHARES, SPEARS INTO PRUNING HOOKS

Forward: About five hundred years before Christ, a Chinese military strategist, Sun Tsu, wrote a book we now know as The Art of War. He said much about strategies for executing winning wars, but also wrote quite philosophically about wars precursors, including the personalities that lead people to wage destructive, murderous conflict. He wrote, for instance, “An evil enemy will burn his own nation to the ground … to rule over the ashes.” His “The wise general is a Lord of Destiny; he holds the nation’s peace or peril in his hands” I find naïve if applied to today’s geo-political environment. Surely placing our destinies in the hands of our militaries would be a lot like assigning curriculum development in schools to the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada. Good people, but primary education isn’t where their heads are.

When trade disputes, territorial claims, even ethnocentric impulses lead to strife, the difference between negotiated accommodation and bloody war has come to hinge around the possession of the means of force. US and allied response to Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan right now is to send killing and destroying machinery. Strenuous, prolonged negotiation isn’t necessary if you have a big gun to hold to an adversary’s head. What’s more, superior weaponry holds out the hope that you can have it all; compromise unnecessary. A zero-sum game.

And so I wrote this allegory ... But let the allegory—parable, if you prefer—do its work.

GGE

Pablo Picasso, Guernica (la guerra=war)

SWORDS INTO PLOWSHARES, SPEARS INTO PRUNING HOOKS

Drill Sergeant Yoshie Hauptmann wouldn’t have needed the alarm to go off at 7:30 every morning. He’d disciplined his body to fall asleep at 11:30 precisely, and as precisely to wake up at 7:30, and he was as punctual at setting the alarm as he was about everything. Just in case. You never know. Be prepared. The devil’s in the details.

               On August 5th, 2027, he rolled over, sat up gently so as not to wake Anika and padded into the walk-in closet to retrieve the uniform Anika had so carefully brushed the night before. It wasn’t there. He backed out of the closet and closed the door, in response, probably, to the ubiquitous advice that unplugging a thing that’s not working usually cures the problem. He opened the door again, but a white robe hung in the precise spot where his uniform should be. He woke Anika. She was as befuddled as he was.

               His duplicate uniform was at the cleaners and they wouldn’t be open until 10:00. He donned street clothes and drove to the barracks. A few dozen raw recruits were wondering around the parade ground, some in pajamas, some in their underwear. They gathered around Drill Sergeant Hauptmann and informed him that where they’d hung their uniforms and street clothes last night, there were only blue jeans and Hawaiian shirts. Also, that they’d been awakened at 7:00 by what sounded like a choir singing something about sheep grazing.

               With that news, DS Hauptmann took out his cell phone and dialed headquarters in Tel Aviv. They already knew something was up, had already decided that Iran was retaliating for the previous week’s bombing of a nuclear enrichment facility by Israel. “The air force has been ordered to scramble all fighter jets, and land-based-missile command to be ready for further orders. Do your best to …”

               The call was interrupted by “Hang on, Hauptmann,” and the click of a phone being hung up.

               The news flashed down the chain of command via X. When pilots (in street clothes) ran to the hangers, they found every jet had been replaced by a skateboard and where bombs were stored ready to be attached to planes, there was a bowling alley. Missile command examining the silos’ contents found that the ICBMs had mysteriously turned into long, fat sausages.

               The entire base was gripped by excruciating fear. Officers and privates ran back and forth between rooms, between buildings, and the parade ground was awash in Hawaiian shirted “civilians” carrying baseball bats, hockey sticks, anything they could get their hands on.

Fortunately, relief followed hard upon all this devastating news: Iran, Saudi Arabia, the USA, Russia, Australia, Great Britain were all struggling to understand how their entire military apparatus had turned into food, flowers, game venues and identical Hawaiian shirts. Nobody knew who was who, rank and privilege lost all their markers and most amazingly, every economy discovered that the last year’s military spending had been reimbursed and governments were awash in cash.

Prince William was up early, dressed for a portrait photograph to be taken by Amelia Standingstill, Great Britain’s most celebrated female portrait photographer. At 7:00 precisely, Amelia gasped as she saw poor William through her viewfinder suddenly without hat, coat, pants, epaulets and medals, his entire naval uniform gone, and him looking down and wishing he’d chosen boxers instead of briefs.

Jerry Pinkstable and Hank Surinamy were neighbours on Colonel Wogey Street in Denver Colorado. Jerry’s first thought when he heard the news of very strange doings was to prepare to defend his family. He reached in and felt around in his night table drawer, but his pistol was gone. In a panic, he ran downstairs to his gun cabinet and found when he opened it that his hunting rifles had turned into gardening tools and his last-ditch, assault rifle was now a cricket bat. Jerry has never, ever played cricket. Somebody goofed.

He ran out to make sure the gate in his chain link property fence was locked and discovered no fence and no gate. He ran back into the house and placed Jonathon’s and Sidney’s miniature baseball bats near the door, then ran back to the kitchen for a knife, but wherever a knife had been, there was now a pizza cutter. He felt silly holding one in his hand and making a few ridiculous thrusts with it. He dropped it back into the drawer.

               He picked up a bat and stepped gingerly out onto the front porch. He was startled to see that “that bastard Hank” was mirroring his stance and his weapon on the Surinamy’s front porch. Hank’s six-year-old son stepped out beside Hank, looked at Jerry and said, “Daddy, if your guns went away, and Jerry’s guns went away, prob’ly everybody’s guns went away.” Jerry’s defiant demeanour left, replaced by a sheepishness at the wisdom of a child. He dropped the bat on the lawn, as did Hank and both felt that a ton of rocks had been lifted from their shoulders, although it would take some time before they could admit it.

 

A chapter of Hell’s Angels had bought three adjacent houses on Grady Street in Summerdale, Ontario back in 2024. Every other house in that block had been FOR SALE ever since, but they didn’t care. They tore down the middle house and erected a large garage for their motorcycles.

               At 10:15, a bearded, barbed-wire-tattooed Jason Farthing awoke, sat up, scratched his ample belly, pulled on a black muscle shirt and reached for the leather jacket that he’d left hanging on the bedpost. What came away was not his jacket, but a plaid sportscoat whose only nod to leather was in the elbow patches. Jason hung it back up, shook his head, went for a pee—in response, probably, to the ubiquitous advice that unplugging a thing that’s not working usually cures the problem—and came back. The plaid sportscoat was still there, hanging from the bedpost.

What’s more, the handgun he kept under his pillow at night was not under his pillow.

               Jason pounded on every bedroom door in the house screaming, “OK, you jackasses, who’s the wise guy. Joke’s over!” A few doors opened, a few arms appeared, a few hands gingerly held out plaid sportscoats with leather elbow protectors and every coat with a pen clipped into the breast pocket.

               Eventually the world news registered via Aaron “Frisky” Patterson’s Facebook account. He rushed out to the garage where, you guessed it, fourteen Harleys and Yamahas and Phantom Blacks had been replaced by fourteen high-end racing bikes.

Aaron was probably the most astute of the chapter membership. First, he thought, “Strange, bikes for bikes, but why these?” Then he thought, “Military hardware intimidates; motorcyclists in packs wearing Hell’s Angels decals are intimidating, that’s what we set out to be. So what now?” He rang the little bell on the handlebar and remembered the thrill of owning his first bike, a pink CCM hand-me-down that had been a cousin’s. “Whoever did this is smart, not unlike me,” he thought.

He ran his hand across the new leather of a bicycle’s banana seat, then went back upstairs and put on the plaid sportscoat with the leather elbow pads and took the racing bike out for a spin.

               It felt really good except that the jacket didn’t match his leather pants. He stopped on a country road, took them off and hung them over a barbed-wire fence and gleefully headed west in his boxer shorts and the greenish-plaid sportscoat with leather elbow protectors.

               He was enthralled by the singing of the birds on the fence wires.

Joe Biden at age 87 was nearing the endpoint of his presidency and like everyone, he was shaken by the news as it unfolded from around the world. Most astounding to him were the images of the Pentagon on TV—before and after. Whoever or whatever force was at work had exercised some cosmic geometry and turned it into a circle. Furthermore, it was now a school; offices with their maps and strategic planning documents and international intelligence apparatus were all gone, replaced by classrooms. The signage out front and back now read “Plowshare College,” and President Joe chuckled because he’d actually been listening in church and knew where the name came from.

His attorney-general opined that it must have something to do with agriculture, an easy mistake to make.            

Prime Minister Poilievre in Canada approached the new governor-general with a request to prorogue parliament and institute martial law, a request that was denied. “You’re suddenly befuddled and clueless, Pierre,” she said, “and you can’t wrap your head around no fighter jets, no tanks, no army. Well join the club. Go back and write a budget and a throne speech. Trust me. It’s gonna be fun with all that new cash and all those personnel freed up to fight climate change. Right up your alley, nuh?”

And the world unfolded as it should. War- and terrorism-refugees started to drift home, people (who had practically habituated themselves to the inevitability of international violence) became obsessed with saving the planet, cleaning up oceans, rivers and lakes, planting trees, building renewable energy infrastructure, building better hospitals and better schools, ensuring food security, all these and more creating jobs, jobs, jobs.

               Street gangs filled their pockets with rocks at first, but gave that up when their thrown stones turned into potato chips the instant they left their hands. Everyone knows how hard it is to throw a potato chip with any degree of accuracy. A few gangs, in desperation, turned themselves into comic book clubs.

               Most importantly, the world of the poor, the rich, the powerful, the ordinary, celebrities and heroes, artists and poets, writers and readers, labourers and thinkers, all could finally count on a good night’s sleep. The sounds of snoring would at times have been deafening … if there’d been anyone awake to hear it, that is.

               CBC reported later--two years later, actually--that Putin had made a disparaging remark about the Canadian Prime Minister at an international conference. Apparently, the Canadian Prime Minister stuck his tongue out at Putin in response, at which the UN General Secretary was reported to have remarked, “My goodness, will this aggression, counter-aggression cycle never end?”

In Israel/Palestine all the walls and barriers came down, missiles and personnel weapons were nowhere to be found. And amazingly here, the power that had demilitarized the nations had added a twist: whether faces and clothes were different or just appeared to be, observers could no longer tell Jews from Palestinians. Authorities soon tired of having to ask people whether they were Jewish or Palestinian before telling them whether they were allowed to stand or walk, here or there.

There was nothing for it, finally, but to declare the entire area a democratic, secular state with politicians elected by universal suffrage, police armed with little more than good will, compassion and intensive first-aid training, and everyone tapped into the same spirit of well-being and optimism … side by side.

The En…, no, The Beginning!

 

Monday, October 30, 2023

Human "family?"

 


You and I are probably racists … and will likely continue to be until the words race, racism, racial no longer exist, and children all grow up with the consciousness of humanity as a single, interdependent family.

It’s not surprising that the dictionary I consulted for a definition of racism confines its meaning to harms committed to groups and individuals (prejudice, discrimination, etc.) based on their genetic (racial?) characteristics. I define it more broadly by adding: invoking persons’ or people’s genealogy in situations where genealogy is irrelevant. Call it “soft racism,” possibly. A persisting consciousness around people’s genetic origins that tills and fertilizes the soil in which the blatant, directly harmful kind can grow.

An example: Wab Kinew, a Manitoban, became leader of Manitoba’s NDP Party which won the most recent provincial election, making Kinew the new Manitoba premier. All this occurred through normal democratic processes; the same processes exactly by which all previous premiers were chosen. I was appalled at the emphasis on the fact that an indigenous person had just been elected to the highest political office in the province. Although Kinew verbally downplayed his Indigenous heritage as a relevant to his premiership, he made (to my mind) the colossal error of wearing a traditional Indigenous headdress to his swearing-in ceremony. Genetic heritage is irrelevant to Canadian democracy; that’s its strength … and possibly even, its last, best hope.

Heaven help Wab Kinew and the Indigenous population of Manitoba when the new premier makes his first glaring political mistake and the pictures of him in a war bonnet are cartooned all over reactionary media. Soft racism makes up a comfortable bed for blatant prejudice and discrimination.

This morning I read a justification from the chief editor of CBC News explaining why The Fifth Estate researched and produced a story questioning Buffy Sainte Marie’s claim to Indigenous roots. Genetic roots, that is. Is it accurate to say that people who falsely identify by race represent a hindrance to “legitimate” Indigenous artists? Could be; I don’t know the celebrity culture well enough to judge this. In any case, the story is interlaced with soft racism on all sides: at a very basic level, making music is race-irrelevant unless we insist that it be so; styles vary, of course, but dependent on culture, tradition, not on genetic heritage.

Related to soft racism, of course, is soft ethnicism, (ethnic nationalism)  i.e. invoking persons’ or a people’s ethnic heritage when it’s irrelevant to the matter at hand. I’ve been amused by people who identify as “ethnically Mennonite,” say, but do one of those DNA tests to discover that they’re, say, 8% Spanish, 12% Jewish, 4% indigenous and 76% undifferentiable European. True, the tests purport to shed light on biological, genetic heritage, not ethnicity. But as is the case with soft racism, soft ethnicism makes up a comfortable bed for the Newfie joke, the “Pollack” putdown and, most abhorrently, antisemitism and the practice of ethnocide.[i] Take the radical cleansing of ethnic Armenians from the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan as an example.

Here in the town, the province, the church community in which I move and rest and write posts like this, the current preoccupation on these matters is with the Truth and Reconciliation project and the subsidiary Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) focus. To make a difference, you’d think individuals and communities could engage in clearly defined actions in answer to the call to “make right a relationship gone wrong.” It’s not happening, and despite yeoman efforts to move the rock of reconciliation, progress so far tends to indicate that nothing substantial is going to change.

I think we all know intuitively that inviting an indigenous family to dinner and patting their children on their heads isn’t reconciliation. When you steal someone’s car, you don’t reconcile by giving him the occasional ride to town in it, you give him back his car! How to do that locally, municipally, provincially and nationally isn’t obvious by any means. When Jean Chretien proposed sweeping changes to the crown/First Nations relationship in his 1969 White Paper, it became immediately clear that settlers and First Nations both visualized a net loss if, for instance, the abolition of the Indian Act were to happen. That reluctance to risk change is still (seems to me) as decisive now as then. Meanwhile, without foundational changes, the “friendliness initiatives” remain gestures, although probably still worth doing locally as tools for building understanding of what the relevant hindrances to reconciliation really are.

But I’m not naïve enough to assume that genetic-heritage differences will be erased from our consciousness, will cease to be significant factors in our species’ varied strategies for survival.  Wiping out that consciousness, probably, would merit as much hope as would a project to teach deer to protect themselves from human predation by climbing trees.

But, there’s hope! As the world becomes more mobile, more interconnected, intermarriage among demographic groups will increase so much that by, say 3030, bigots will complain that they can’t tell who’s black and who’s white anymore, who’s Asian and who’s ‘Merican. And people’s language won’t give them away either, because we’ll all be speaking Chinese, French, Hindi … ENGLISH!

Why English? Well, it’s still 2023 and that’s my racist/ethnicist ego talking.

To respond, click here: gg.epp41@gmail.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 



[i] I made up the word ethnicist to parallel with racist. Ethnicism can be found in dictionaries to mean “ethnic chauvinism.”

Monday, October 16, 2023

WHAT CHILDREN NEED TO LEARN

 


I just read a Facebook post by an organization supporting the Saskatchewan government’s proposed legislation relating to gender curricula in primary schools. As a retired teacher, I’m convinced that a new and serious rift between homes and schools will occur if the tone of the resulting conflict is not dampened. It’s quickly turning ugly.

First, let’s make just a few observations about the life conditions humanity would most likely agree to as ideal, an environment worth striving toward, in our homes and in our schools:

In the best world we can imagine, the air is clean, the water is clean and clear, the nights are peaceful and quiet and there’s no good reason to lock your doors and windows. Children walk to school hand in hand, unaccompanied by adults, and are secure in their homes, in their schools and on the streets and playgrounds. There are challenges aplenty to whet the imagination, variety and inviting prospects enough to allow everyone optimism about the future, celebratory social events enough to bind neighbour to neighbour.

Everyone has access to sufficient safe and nutritious food without charity; clothing and shelter to suit the climate are general, health and emergency services are in reach when illness, bad weather or disasters strike. The prospect of war and the need to divert resources to prepare for it no longer exists; crime is rare because the desperation of poverty no longer drives individuals to theft and violence.

To keep and maintain such a world, the training and education of the young is as vital as it is among lions and tigers where the survival through adulthood is completely dependent on the ability to stalk and hunt in cooperation with others. What do human children need to learn, what skills need to be rehearsed again and again so that we together nudge our common humanity toward the best we can be?

To this end, I offer some thoughts that bear consideration in what is fast shaping up to be a fight about parents’ rights vs. public schools and curricula. The struggle for control of what children shall be taught is as old as education itself; an example among many is 1) below. 

In the late 1950s, Nikita Khruschev sought to promote atheism, obliterate religion and in that campaign declared that, “… all Soviet children belong to the Soviet State.”[i] The Nazi regime similarly targeted youth with its most strident propaganda campaign. State monopoly of educational curriculum development seems to be a very bad idea, especially when it falls into the hands of totalitarian regimes. Is it equally true that a laissez-faire, democratically-elected government leaving education matters completely in the hands of local administration would be a mistake of another kind?

We probably shouldn’t avoid talking about the changes that have led to a rancorous dispute about sexual/gender issues in school curricula. I took my elementary and middle school public education in 1947 to 1956. Gender and sexuality where not on the curriculum at all, references to it didn’t appear on radio or TV, parents were loathe to even allow their children to be present where animals were breeding or giving birth. Today, verbal and visual references, even explicit depictions of sexual matters are accessible to small children, can hardly be avoided in a home with TV and internet. A seventy-year-old approach to preparing children for the sexual/gender realities they’ll need to face simply won’t answer to the need. We must engage in many conversations that aren’t “them against us,” but are “all of us for all the children.” To this end, I offer some thoughts that bear consideration in what is fast shaping up to be a fight about parent’s rights vs. public schools and curricula. By no means exhaustive, I hope it can get at least one or two conversations started.

 

1)   In the 1920s, hundreds of Mennonite families left Canada and moved to Mexico because they were unwilling to enrol their children in provincial schools. They’d set up their own schools where rudiments of language and arithmetic were taught, and the bulk of the curriculum was Bible-centred. The national mood was overwhelmingly for compulsory citizenship education and conformity to a national standard, and both the conservative Mennonite community and the Indigenous people experienced the practice of forcing assimilation via public education.

2)     Today, under the umbrella of multi-culturalism, a citizenship-oriented public education remains mandatory, but separate schools, home schooling are permitted, even financially supported in some cases so that cultural/spiritual values education can form part of children’s education alongside the public schools’ curricula. Is there a downside to a child being schooled with different value sets in the classroom and the home? An upside?

3)     As with the exiting Mennonites in 1) above, the 2023 backlash against gender issues as part of public education is bound to evoke comparisons to the force-feeding of values to captive children. The “revolt” of parents was completely predictable in the case of the Mennonites as it is with parents in Saskatchewan today who deem a conservative, home-based approach to sex/gender values to be “right,” considering the sensitivity of the subject.

4)     It seems overstated to assert that “the state” has the right to determine what education its citizens must have in the interest of maintaining a peaceful and prosperous democratic nation. By the same token, it seems simplistic to assert that parents alone have that right, given that children very quickly become independent adults with the necessity of functioning in society as opposed to in family or in school. In a democracy like Canada, a citizens’ education would likely be developed if it didn’t already exist, while at the same time, our multi-cultural, multi-faith society demands a more liberal approach to education content than that of the Government of Saskatchewan in the 1910s and ‘20s.

5)     For a percentage of parents to demand and be granted as a right the addition or subtraction of material from a provincial curriculum automatically usurps the equal right of dissenting parents, and vice versa. Can disagreement on what’s allowable in public education and what isn’t succeed if settled by a zero-sum combat?[ii]

6)     As a teacher, I was trained on what rights and responsibilities I had and didn’t have over and for students in my classroom. I had a right to protect the integrity of the learning environment by evicting a disruptive student, for instance, but not to administer corporal punishment. As a teacher, touching a student, even supportively, would put me in danger of violating a student’s rights. If I observed that a student coming to school appeared to have been physically abused, it was my solemn duty to report it—not to the parents—but to the police and/or social services. If a boy of twelve were to have asked me to use the “they” pronoun for them, but not to tell their parents, would that have been a dilemma for me that I as a classroom teacher didn’t deserve?

7)     Using rights as an argument in these situations is fraught with problems. Teachers, parents are not equally competent; most teachers nourish and educate, some occasionally neglect or abuse students and are struck off; most parents nourish and teach, some abuse and/or neglect their own. Whose rights matter here? Who needs the protection of rights? Would it be truer to the current conflict to speak of school responsibility and parent responsibility as relating to the children?

8)     Many Canadian parents entrust their children to organized sports programs. Some, of course, seek to influence how coaches make decisions affecting their child, castigating a hockey coach, for instance, for not giving their child more ice time. If we decided it’s one parent’s right to exercise some control at that level, then it would surely become ALL hockey-parents’ right. Would it then be possible for a coach to form and direct a team?

9)     Suppose a government were to decree that school curricula at the, say, Grade Six level, must include training in the use of firearms and the martial arts. How would Quakers, Doukhobors, Mennonites and other pacifist-bent groups respond, and how might that be comparable to protests over the gender studies curricula happening today?

10)  Historically, how have protests regarding public education content been resolved? Allowing children of non-Christian families to congregate in a separate area during opening exercises that included The Lord’s Prayer and Bible reading was one response. Eliminating sectarian religious activity in public education is the current approach. Neither response has met with universal approval, as you’d expect. Bill 137[iii] if passed will require that schools inform parents of the scheduling of sex/gender class instruction and that provision be made for children to be excused during those times if parents request it. Where will they be while excused, and what will they be doing and under whose supervision might well be the relevant question.

11)  I can imagine an eight-year-old pretending to be copycat trans-gendered as a way of fulfilling some need for acknowledgement, although it’s not easy given the negative response to gender difference generally in this country. And if an eight-year-old is struggling with a gender identification issue, how would a loving, nurturing parent not already know this before it manifested in school? Does gender dysphoria in children really only exist because the education system has promoted it? If it is, what would be the motive behind it? By what means would all educators have planned such a program and kept the planning secret?

12)  If a student asks for non-gender-specific pronouns in school, is it logical to assume that the school has groomed that student to a trans-gender self-appraisal? And if a teacher is faced with a request for secrecy vis-e-vis the parents, is it logical for that teacher to assume a relationship breakdown in the home? Is it more reasonable in such a situation to refer the student to professional counselling whose object would be to involve the parents with the student’s consent, as prescribed in Bill 137?

13)  Private indebtedness and public indebtedness are both serious issues in Canada. Imagine that the federal and provincial governments were to decree that much more intensive consumer education must be offered at every grade level. Imagine further that many schools would end music or art programs to free up resources for consumer education. How do we decide what is essential, what is “nice to have but not essential,” and what is unnecessary as part of public, citizenship education?

14)  Is it possible for public education to present a comprehensive social studies curriculum that excludes or restricts sexual/gender relationship matters?

15)  Is sexual interference against children enough of a problem in Canadian society to warrant teaching even the youngest to identify and defend against paedophilia, child pornography and related abuses of the young?  And is the environment of classroom and playground relevant to how any such teaching should occur? (See Pedophilia - Wikipedia for related information.)

16)  Education has become much more integrated, more confluent than formerly. Roughly, simply visualized, Industrial Arts and Arithmetic can be taught as less-separate subjects, and theoretically, “Industrial Arithmetic” could take on the aura of an entity which advances both disciplines simultaneously. Teaching “the whole child” is a common catch phrase. If parents sincerely and consistently seek to pass on values that may not be shared by the majority of citizens (recent immigrants, members of minority religions, for instance) does that mean that there are “parts of a child” public education has no business addressing? If so, what are they?

17)  It’s been nearly half a century now since public educators began searching for better ways to tailor teaching to individual learning strengths. Earlier on, education required every student to rise to an average standard … or “fail.” Individualized learning, however, can never reach its apex; that would be one teacher teaching a class of one student. (In this sense, a parent is an excellent choice as a teacher of that child, given the skill and perseverance of a parent in the nourishing arts.) Although class sizes have improved somewhat, and teacher-aides have been hired in some places, we still lack the resources to do our best for, particularly, special needs students whose special need isn’t physically obvious. Do we accept that gender dysphoria constitutes a special need in some children, affecting learning?[iv]

18)  School classrooms and playgrounds develop cultures that take the shape of their adult leadership, their facilities and the children themselves. Friendships form, cliques develop, prejudices spread like viruses, pecking orders are established, all under the umbrella of children’s need for acceptance in a culture over which they have little or no control. A microcosm of the world in which their adult stage must make its way; a practice run for maturity. Does a child who’s “gender different” stand a better chance of acceptance if all children on the playground are taught that gender identification differences exist and are “normal,” or are they better off if gender identification is not broached in primary and middle grades, and they attempt—and sometimes succeed—in hiding their difference? Are there home environments in which a child’s uniqueness is denied, such that some children seek it in places where it’s recognized … in school, for instance?

19)  Assuming “parental rights” are fundamental rights like freedom of conscience, freedom of religion or freedom of speech, would such a “parental right” include surgically removing the foreskin of baby males or the clitorises of baby females in obedience to a religious dictate? Would it mean that children are completely subject to their parents’ choice regarding vaccinations or medical treatments like blood transfusions? Is the application of corporal punishment to correct behaviour a part of “parental rights?” Could there be a conflict between parental rights and human rights applying to the child, and how and by whom would such rights conflicts be adjudicated?

20)  Much of a child’s life is legitimately regulated by parents: sports participation or not, family moves whether the child approves or not, bedtimes, table manners, music lessons, etc. Failure to raise a child to accept guidance and to live peacefully and cooperatively with others and, yes, to bend to authority and the rule of law, could surely be chalked up to parental neglect, school and community neglect, or both. How important is it that a child is being guided toward the same set of values by his/her/their teachers and parents? Are there forums for home/school values discussions?

21)  In ancient times, school curricula revolved around community faith and life, standardized content enabled by the fact that mono-culturalism made common views on values and life skills likely. In a diverse, multi-cultural, post-modern nation like Canada, values coinciding can’t be taken for granted. The strongest thread binding us together is our citizenship; our common celebrations relate to nationalism, not to religious or cultural observances. If correct, what does this say about the process of determining educational content?

22)  Suppose that you, a parent of an eight-year-old, see in your child’s homework an emphasis on saving money that in your eyes communicates a message of which you disapprove. You would rather see generosity given at least equal time with wealth accumulation. How would you proceed in the best interest of your child’s well being? Is it possible to supplement the school’s curriculum with your values regarding money in such a way that the child benefits from the combination? or do you protest to the teacher? or is it more important that you as a parent begin to teach your child that life is about competing visions, and in your family, this or that value is king?

23)  Do we know who wrote the Grade Five curriculum on sex and gender? Do we know how it was vetted and approved? Are we willing to find out before reaching a judgment about whether it’s conceived and delivered appropriately? Are we prepared to go beyond “all or none” to possible tweaks of whatever previous work on the subject has produced?

I’ve tried with this to generate at least some public thought about the current division shaping up regarding sex/gender education in the public school system. We live in a world where increasing hard-line division has become a real concern, and the fact that public, aggressive demonstrations for and against proposed legislation on the subject threatens to increase the sense of “them vs. us” in an era that can ill afford further hardening of opposing positions.

A liberal vs. conservative worldview has always existed and always will. Saskatchewan citizens have alternately elected more-conservative and more-social-democratic governments, and this pattern has served us well. It’s when we become convinced that it ought to be one or the other, fulltime, that we begin to see the other as a cohort that must be defeated, and our elections become zero-sum games.

We can’t afford that in education. Our resources can’t possibly stretch to accommodate the myriad points of view and diverse value sets represented in the broad range of political, social and faith persuasions. In my opinion, opening up every detail of public education curricula to close scrutiny would end up making us all conflicted and angry: should there be music or no, and if so, what kind of music, and at what grade levels? A dozen in conversation around a table, a dozen opinions. Every choice a compromise … or heated separation. More STEM education, less social studies? The other way ‘round? A dozen in conversation around a table, six of one opinion and half-a-dozen of the other. Somehow, we must engage in a conversation across worldviews about how educational content will be developed and how disagreements will be arbitrated … and honour whatever decision we’ve arrived at.



[i] Friesen, Leonard G. Mennonites in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2022, p. 261

[ii] Zero-sum is a term used to describe sports games particularly. In simple terms, it means that there must be a loser for there to be a winner. A conflict or game without a loser would be a win-win conclusion; in this case, it’s hard to imagine such an outcome without dividing children into the “gender education” and “non-gender education” groups, possible now via separate schools or home schooling. Dividing a single playground population has its own effects (see #17), a reminder that “win-win” can turn out to be “lose-lose.”

[iii] "The Parents' Bill of Rights outlines a number of different rights that parents have regarding their children's education, including:

• act as the primary decision-maker with respect to the pupil's education;

• be informed on a regular basis of the pupil's attendance, behaviour and academic achievement in school;

• consult with the pupil's teachers and other employees of the school with respect to the pupil's courses of study and academic achievement;

• have access to the pupil's school file;

• receive information respecting the courses of study available to the pupil, including online learning, and to make decisions as to which courses of study the pupil enrolls in;

• be informed of the code of conduct and administrative policies, including discipline and behaviour management policies, of the school;

• be informed of any disciplinary action or investigation taken by the school in relation to the pupil's conduct;

• if the pupil has been expelled from school, request a review and reconsideration of the expulsion after the expiration of one year;

• be informed and consulted in relation to the pupil's school attendance problems;

• be consulted in or request a review in relation to the pupil's capacity to learn;

• excuse the pupil from participating in the opening exercises;

• be consulted before any medical or dental examination or treatment is provided to the pupil;

*********

• if sexual health content is to be presented to pupils in the school:

o at least two weeks before the sexual health content is presented to the pupils, be informed by the principal of:

§ the subject matter of the sexual health content;

§ the dates on which the sexual health content is to be presented to the pupils; and

§ if the parent or guardian so chooses, withdraw the pupil from the presentation of the sexual health content by giving written notice to the principal;

• if the pupil is under 16 years of age, provide consent before the pupil's teachers and other employees of the school use the pupil's new gender-related preferred name or gender identity at school; and

• be a member of the school community council or the conseil d'école, as the case may be, of the school.

[iv]Dysphoria is a profound state of unease or dissatisfaction. It is the semantic opposite of euphoria. In a psychiatric context, dysphoria may accompany depression, anxiety, or agitation...” (Wikipedia definition)

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Meeowww

Like this sign, we tend to see the world in yes-no categories. Why not "Please avoid trespassing unless you have a very good reason." Of course, that would take a bigger sign!
The conversation was about “furries,” kids who identify as animals and the schools who allegedly allow them to carry this identity into the classroom, the playground and the washroom, even to the point of providing litter boxes so cat-identifying kids can pee like cats.

Way back in the 1950s, I identified as both the Lone Ranger and his horse, galloped across the pasture with my bent-stick six-shooter under my belt, drew my horse to a rampant stop in an imaginary cloud of dust and shot the eyes out of an evil bandit before he could say, “Mennonite non-violence.” On other days, I identified as an engineer, damming up rain runoff in the yard, creating new rivers and lakes. Built bridges. Later, I’d pick up the family guitar and identify as a country singer like, well, take your pick.

My school never provided my horse-me with a stall and a manger of hay.

Identifying as something you want to be or wish you were, is a general phenomenon. Some men dress up as women, use makeup in the way glamorous women do. Some women dress in a way that projects an anti-effeminate, physically active identity. Performers preen images, politicians are only fluent when they have teleprompting, courting adults “put on the Ritz.” Hiding our shortcomings while projecting an image is commonplace.

In children, pretending, mimicking, identifying-with are learning tools. The object of “furries” identification, of course, can be disconcerting if it’s relentless and goes on and on. And granted, kids could certainly mimic behaviour to the point where it appears to spread like a virus. Schools had to ban “fidget gadgets,” after all.

People have been saying, “she/he/they thinks she/he/they is a cat, or dog, or boa constrictor.” Well, no. The only way you can see yourself in a mirror and register “body of a cat” is if you’re hallucinating, and hallucinating is symptomatic of brain trauma and cause for medical intervention. It’s far more likely that an ongoing cat-identification has to do with mimicking cat behaviour and demeanour, and that lying, walking and even “speaking” like a cat fulfills a social/mental need. Cats project calm; the world is stressful, possibly.

But that brings us to the charge that educators are accepting, even encouraging, such behaviour. I’ve read numerous credible reports refuting every one of the “litter boxes in the washrooms” stories. Given the nature of the children I’ve known, being caught by your peers sitting on a litter box in a washroom, even using an especially designated litter-room for cat-identifiers, would render every other part of school life a living hell for that individual.

As closely as I can gather from my reading, the “litter boxes in schools” propaganda dovetails with the abundant doubts being expressed about our educators, particularly via social media. Schools tend to be progressive, in part because their clientele live at the very frontier of whatever changes post-modernity is bringing to humanity. Your local principal and school staff have all had years of training bent toward educating children to live successfully in the world as it is and likely will be, not in a world seen through rose-coloured nostalgia. Keeping balance on a moving train rather than gluing yourself to the platform is an appropriate analogy.  

Reaction to change is always a given, and conspiracy theories serve nicely as tools for attacking progressivism in, in this case, education. The essence of the propaganda is this: homosexuality, transgenderism, “furries” identification, are products of the education system, which is therefor not to be trusted on any level. Misinformation can be bad, but the end goal here is to return education to the imagined past, and that’s important enough to make “the end justify the means.”

Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada has stated that “schools should leave LGBTQ issues to parents.” This “simple question, simple answer” solution couldn’t be more naïve in its conception. The “LGBTQ issues” march through schools, churches, workplaces, politics as surely as through homes, and if gays are being bullied, for instance, it’s possibly not in the home but in the school where it will become immediate and urgent. For a school to ignore discussion of human rights—of which gay rights are one item—avoiding both the social and the biological science surrounding gender/sex subjects would be a blatant derogation of duty.

It's hardly surprising that in New Brunswick and Saskatchewan, sitting governments feel compelled to take sides in questions of what should and what shouldn’t be addressed in the public school system. Among Christians, the creation allegory has Adam and Eve noticing that they are naked, right after sinning against God. In my growing-up generation, sexuality vs. biology was resolved through denial, voluminous covering of the female body, a cloak of silence and euphemism, and a tacit agreement to live in the pretense of sexualities non-existence.

That’s what all this is about; a fear that liberalizing the discussion to include frank education on sexuality and gender will—poetically put—result in our looking down at last and discovering that we’re naked, or even deciding, “Wow. Is that how it’s done? Looks like fun! Let’s do it.” This conservative push toward silencing liberalization in the area of sexuality and gender is strident and persistent … and the attempted repetition of a huge mistake.   

Parents have every right and responsibility to be guiding, nurturing influences in the development of their children. Teachers are charged with preparing them for the responsibilities, rights and privileges of citizenship, and for providing them with the tools to allow them to succeed as independent adults. The roles obviously overlap in many ways, and in an ideal world, differences in philosophy or practice would lead us to negotiate, not to demands for the resolving of differences through government decree.

Therein lies the biggest challenge I see. First order, of course, is to consult with, read reliable sources so that we know sex/gender, pedagogical subjects before firing off, or re-posting, half-baked opinions on social media.

A little learning is a dangerous thing;
drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring[i]:
there shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
and drinking largely sobers us again. (Pope, Alexander, in An Essay on Criticism, 1709.)

 

 



[i] The source of knowledge


Tuesday, August 29, 2023

 


Tell me a Story


Premier Scott Moe was asked
by a reporter about the evidence on which the decision to require—by law—that teachers must inform parents of any student’s expressed wish to be addressed with gender free pronouns. The new directives also legislate that any parent will have the right to withdraw their child from a sex education program if they deem it inappropriate, plus a few other provisions claimed to be "parents' rights" supportive. 

His response[i] to the reporter cited a survey of some 3000+ people, the majority of whom agreed that any student’s request to have a name change or to be addressed with gender-neutral pronouns in school should be reported to the child’s parents.

It’s easy to word a question that will elicit a positive response in favour of parental rights regarding children. Of course, the people who manage the household in which a child spends most of his time are justified in claiming greater authority over that child than does a neighbour. Not the government nor his teacher can set a bedtime for my boy.

There are a number of factors that make of the premier’s defense of the policy a naïve and hopelessly incomplete. Some that come to mind include:

First: in in loco-parentis law (local parent), the adult in legitimate supervision of that child has the responsibility of a parent, and by the same token, the biological or adoptive parent cannot maintain parental supervision while his/her/their child is in a classroom or on the school playground. Are we clear about what that means in this case? As it stands, a teacher's relationship to a student's parent is not like that parent's relationship to, say, a babysitter. 

Second: “Parent,” as used in the survey for instance, conjures good, responsible, thoughtful, informed mother and father who live together and plan and cooperate in the teaching and mentoring of their children. Parents out of Dick and Jane readers, sort of. Meanwhile, every teacher knows that some minority in their class are coming to them from dysfunctional homes. It requires four years of pedagogical training including internships and regular evaluations in order to become qualified for the in loco parentis role. Heated copulation in the back of a Nash Rambler is all that’s required to make of yourself a “parent.”

Third: Is “parental rights” the appropriate term for what we’re talking about? In general, human rights are our way of defending the basic well-being of individuals, not of classes of people. If a child is badly injured and doctors determine he/she/they require a blood transfusion to survive, would an ability of the parent to overrule the doctors—in obedience to a religious tenet, say—be a legitimate right? Or is it the child’s human right to life that is in question? Likewise, if a teacher senses a danger to a child if the child is outed to the parent(s), would that be like the doctors following the parents’ wishes in the blood transfusion case if the teacher is forced to inform? Do human rights of the individual extend to, say, a ten-year-old child who has already decided that coming out to parents will bring him/her/them harm?

Fourth: Saskatchewan once had a premier whose grasp of issues went well beyond political or religious calculations. Tommy Douglas would say things like,[ii] “We are all in this world together, and the only test of our character that matters is how we look after the least fortunate among us. How we look after each other, not how we look after ourselves. That’s all that really matters, I think.” There’s no arguing that people with same-sex orientation or gender dysphoria’s manifestations form a minority in Canadian culture. Do their unchosen natures fit them into Douglas’ “least fortunate among us” category? If so, is Moe’s new legislation an attempt to “look after” their well-being? Or is it another too-hasty reaction of turning the dilemma of being born different into a simple question-simple answer, solution?  

Five: Is there any part of pitting teachers and parents against each other that can be logically justified? If a teacher is attacked verbally, pejoratively and a school is ordered by a parent to otherwise engage their child when a provincially authorized sex education curriculum is being taught, what outcome should we expect for the well-being of the child, either in school or at home? Isn’t the sex education curriculum already carefully tailored to match the students’ developmental ages? Is parent education on these curricula lacking? Are there better ways of doing Home and School?

Six: The legislation curtails schools’ utilization of outside resources in sex education instruction. Are we remembering that this all started in Saskatchewan with a Planned Parenthood presentation to a school class in Lumsden whose participation there wasn’t criticized, except for having left behind a brochure that a parent found offensive because of its explicit illustrations? “Is the decree proportional to the problem?” I ask myself. And myself answers, “No, it’s not. It’s too much like banning all people under the age of twenty-five from owning Pitbulls because one twenty-two-year-old in Melville had such a dog that bit his neighbour twice.”

Finally, opinion surveys are not research; for one, responses are far too subject to the phrasing of the question. Also, we know full well that, “the majority think so” doesn’t necessarily make an assertion wise, true, or even practical, although it can help a political party plan its election strategy. Lastly, a society that heeds Tommy Douglas’ statement on what matters, and is therefor proactive in defending the rights of minorities, by this same impulse can’t help but be a defender of every child: yours, mine, the neighbours’. Sexual behaviour affects everyone; education to help all of us get it right is key; surely the timing and content can be arrived at in better ways than through arbitrary and hasty legislation.



[i] https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/sask-poll-policy-1.6949760

[ii] https://www.azquotes.com/author/4101-Tommy_Douglas