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What ‘White Folks Who Teach in the Hood’ Get Wrong About Education

KENYA DOWNS PBS NewsHour
Dr. Chris Emdin, who is also the university’s associate director of the Institute for Urban and Minority Education, has had enough of what he calls a pervasive narrative in urban education: a savior complex that gives mostly white teachers in minority and urban communities a false sense of saving kids.

Claudia Rankine Challenges White Teachers, Pities White Racists

Boris Kachka New York Magazine
Claudia Rankine, is better known for broadsides than bromides. Her stated topic at the annual AWP conference was “what keeps us uncomfortable in each other’s presence” or, more specifically, what she sees as persistent racial tokenism in MFA workshops.

Obama Supreme Court Nomination: A Missed Opportunity

Bill Mosley Washington Socialist
We should demand that the Senate respect the nominee of the President and give him a fair hearing and a vote But we should do more: we need an ongoing grassroots movement to pressure the White House to select judicial nominees – not only for the Supreme Court but all federal courts – who would bring to the courts a greater regard for social justice as well as more racial and gender diversity.

Why Tech Professionals Now Share A Fate with the Working Class

TAMARA DRAUT Fast Company
The debate this election cycle about how to shore up the American middle class and the longer-term worry that automation will chip away at the labor market both miss a more proximate and pressing reality: knowledge work, including tech jobs, are already being shipped overseas. What happened to manufacturing jobs a generation ago is now being repeated in the knowledge economy, linking the fates of the professional class and the working class together.

Debtors’ Island: How Puerto Rico Became a Hedge Fund Playground

Jennifer Wolff New Labor Forum
By the year 2000, the government ran on ever-larger deficits. It all came to a screeching halt in 2014, when Puerto Rico’s debt was degraded to junk status and the island was effectively shut out of the financial markets. The fiscal and economic predicament has had a devastating impact on the working and middle classes.

 The Panama Papers Expose the Hidden Wealth of the World’s Super-Rich

Chuck Collins The Nation
 The Panama Papers reveal the widespread use of shell corporations in the British Virgin Islands, the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean, and Panama. Historically, North American investors prefer tax havens in the Caribbean or Panama, with an estimated 54 percent of offshore investments going to those areas.   The release of the Panama Papers should give a strong boost to US and global campaigns to crack down on these global secrecy jurisdictions and practices.

Why Bernie’s Right About Glass-Steagall

Edward Morris History News Network
Sanders believes that the repeal of Glass-Steagall in 1999 led to the formation of banks that became “too big to fail,” contributed to the financial crisis in 2008—and will lead to another crisis without corrective legislation. And he has a strong argument, one that can be effectively made using Citigroup, the two-century old bank that has a history of wreaking havoc on itself and the economy when it mixes commercial banking with with investment banking.

Review: 'Miles Ahead,' an Impressionistic Take on Miles Davis

Manohla Dargis The New York Times
Does it matter that stretches of "Miles Ahead"— a gun-rattling, squealing-tire car chase included — came out of the filmmakers’ imagination rather than Davis’s life? Purists may howl, but they’ll also miss the pleasure and point of this playfully impressionistic movie.