Thoughts, Prayers, what.ever

Another shooting on a campus, this one a College at UVA. Meanwhile across the country in Idaho outside the campus four were found dead believed to be a homicide.

I wrote about the school I used to teach at and where I began my career in Teaching in 1996. It was the students who kept me going and I believed in them and with that I no longer do. I have come to fear and dislike them. The lack of any dignity for themselves and others is most apparent. It was happening long before Covid and I saw that in Nashville and now in Jersey City that is only further exacerbated by the pandemic and distinction between those who managed to attend private or charter schools that remained open or had access to better online learning tools that also allowed them to forge forward on the path of academia. But with that I have already written about the challenges and adjustments made by those who went onto higher learning and have struggled, often blaming others and leading to Professors being terminated as their work was too challenging, they were unavailable or many other factors that seemingly have little to do with their actual skills or abilities that lend to achievement. That is our current state of affairs and again has been happening for quite some time – lay blame, point fingers and deny any personal responsibility or have any accountability.

Now we have 99 problems that have come from the pandemic and the magnifying glass that was finally placed upon the social inequity of our country and its heavy systemic and broken systems that are racist and elitist enabled those who for whatever reason seemingly knew nothing about it did. They read the right books, attended the right protests and then went back home to post their endless diatribes on social media to validate and confirm their wokeness. And with that the pendulum swung from left to right and with that we now have curriculum banning, book banning, conversations and word banning and a divisiveness that is now entrenched with the words”crime” as the dog whistle to remind everyone that the others are dangerous and could do harm. What “they” do harm with is of course guns but that is okay as now we are opening the flood gates and allowing anyone within arms reach of a gun to have one. It is working out great as the age of shooters are declining as access to guns is increasing. Coincidence much?

The political divisiveness was always a problem but we are back to serious racial ones. For those who were citing George Floyd as their moment to defund the Police, I suggest they turn back the clock to Michael Brown, or earlier to Eric Garner (2014) or earlier to Amadou Diallo. Or to any number of Police Brutality cases that may or may not have ended with death but serious harm and long term damage. There are no shortage of them but until Michael Brown there was what? Little accountability or information with regards to the number of cases thanks to no single source of record keeping. There are so many different agencies that are under the umbrella of law enforcement it is why many did not know and with that so many Police who were ultimately let go for said behavior simply transferred to another agency and continued to act in the manner that was less about serving and protecting the public, but of their own needs and beliefs. Think about the amount of law enforcement in your community, the City Police, the State Patrol, the County Police, the Transit Enforcement, the Port Authority are just some that all work or have business here in New Jersey. Then you have the Federal Agencies and their distinct Police – the FDA, the FBI, the CIA, the ATF and all of them have jurisdictions that supersede the State and Municipal ones. Yeah you can run but you can never hide.

But the reality is that despite it all Guns are the most significant tool and weapon we carry. The ATF is the single largest organization in which to regulate and enforce gun legislation but we have little to NO federal laws over guns and with that the piecemeal of laws that States and Cities try to enact are now being taken to the largest Federal Court in the land to overturn them. One minute it is State’s rights to create and enforce laws regarding Abortion but not when it comes thanks to the pesky 2nd Amendment. So with that it is Check and Mate on gun control. And yet when it comes to ATF they are being played well by Chess Masters that defy game play.

The constant refrain is that it is a Mental Health issue , and with that the idea that anyone who is nuts will not be able to get a gun. Sure that is a belief, but despite it all few if any of the most recent shooters had a mental health “red flag” that would have prevented them from doing so. I point to the Michigan shooter as his Parents are awaiting trial for their role in enabling if not encouraging their fucked up son from having a gun despite the school sharing with them their concerns. Great parents there. And the same goes for the Parade kid whose Dad bought him his gun. More shooters, more guns and more dead. Thoughts and prayers.

And so now with the crime bullshit being the least mentioned factor in the midterm and abortion as the reason many went to the polls will anything change? In a word? Fuck no. Okay that is two but in reality we are a Nation of Karen’s and Ken’s (their male equivalent) who are sure they are right about their indignant feelings of entitlement and rightness. That is the new “wokeness” as the aggrieved state of it all is about their inconveniences, their accommodations and their betterness about being white and yet no one is accommodating them? But they read White Privilege isn’t that enough? No, for anyone who is not like you, just like you, if not in actual color but in belief and demeanor, you are not white enough, so no clearly no. But a gun can solve that. If you fail to kill yourself with it try killing your own. It will work out well. Or not.

Dance Dance Dance

I live in Trump country and tomorrow the lesser of two evils – Bresden and Dean – will be elected Senator and Governor respectively or we are fucked frankly. I have no idea why a Plumber feels he would be qualified to run for elected office and in turn actually get elected right there should tell you all you need to know about the fucktards here.

As I have said many many times the concept of Southern Hospitality is an anathema and the phrase the Nashville Way means Nashville Crazy and there is no crazy like it. The faux liberalism masks a faux intellectualism that is defined by the endless nodding and affirmation when in conversation that seems to give the impression they are knowledgeable about the subject and have great familiarity with the issues at hand. Of course the actual percent of degree holders, those with degrees from Secular institutions and have work and employment that is compensated appropriately would be of course another indicator that one has managed to achieve a type of success equivalent to one well educated and informed. Bitch please!  Literacy here runs about one-fourth of the population with only one third degree holders.  The voting records show us as the fewest registered voters in the country voting in fact irony only one-third of the population votes or the same number of degree holders and yet we are highly red in our political shade. Go figure.  Of those that identify as Evangelical in Nashville it runs at just over 50%.  So again that rarely reflects a well educated and sophisticated populace.

When I go to the schools I shudder and today was no different.  I am off tomorrow as they chose to make this a Conference day as many schools are polling places and in turn needed for the rare time people vote and funny they have been so go figure!   But today was a coin with two sides. The IB cohort of kids working for the prestigious International Baccaluerate degree were on task and independent workers. They were reasonably polite and pretty much were not an issue. I pretended to take attendance and promptly threw it out as they had me running up and down stairs to cover another class during the down times when this Teacher did not have classes.   So I can only do so much and that pushed it.  I realize that they can’t manage subs so managing attendance is not my problem and as one class was all Seniors who cares and the other class was rotating with one sub after another over the day so again who cares.  But this was where the issue of race and class became apparent.  The IB class was all white with some faces of color.  The other was a Spanish class entirely composed of Black Students.   The behavior and disorder was obvious as the Teacher had left plans noting that one class was a problem and do the following to maintain order.   Wrong I do nothing.   This school has instituted a lot of new plans including bathroom times and dress code with the Teachers noting those out of code. Funny when that happened in Los Angeles it ended with a beat down. So no not doing that either.    Here is what you get from me – seat filling.

I again have made it my business to note race, gender and ethnicity when I foresee a problem as I am doing it to somehow find balance and equity but the schools here are largely faces of color and funny in a  nearby charter school with largely faces of color they found that without the same constraints that public schools face regarding discipline, the charter suspends the faces of color at higher rates than the minority population which in this case is white.  So someone explain this to me?  This is a school run by faces of color, administered and taught by the same and in turn in a largely poor and minority area so they are well aware of the problems of the students and families that surround the school so how is this working?  It isn’t.   I can no longer try to rationalize, excuse or explain it as just poverty as there is a distinct culture here that crosses race and that sense of entitlement and arrogance enables the schools to ignore or at least in some sort of passive racism allow it.   When you excuse an act as something that “those people” do and not hold everyone to equal standards and expectations is a type of racism and that defines what I feel is the institutional racism that exist  and bizarre type of co-dependent behavior that crosses boundaries for those poor, particularly faces of color and those in positions of authority.  And that again crosses race and gender which again may explain some of the problems with sexual issues that plague the schools here.

But the reality is that some of this is not exclusive to Nashville the crazy shit they do here, mocking people and demeaning them literally to their face then when confronted deny it, this is in fact the Nashville Way,  but that the ignoring, excusing or explaining the rest about behaviors and expectations with regards to children who are poor and particularly minorities,  that crosses state lines. I saw this in Seattle the endless buttons, t-shirts, protests and like which did nothing but made everyone feel better; however, it was at least some attempt at righting a societal problem that will take much much more than any Teacher or School could do alone and independently. Sorry but that is absurd as eventually you leave the school ground for the hard reality of the real world so helicopter that parents. 

And we have come to see that Teachers rape students, Teacher’s take drugs, live in poverty as well and have all the same scars that life brings when you have lived a life.  I came to teaching because I loved history and literature and I wanted to share that passion and in turn hopefully enable some children to feel the same.  Ed Schools kill Teachers  (again a metaphor and figure of speech so don’t send the cops) and what I am seeing of late the bodies are piling up as they are clueless on Teaching as a skill.  Teaching is also as an art that takes time and takes support in which to find the right balance of leading and guiding and in turn instructing children on the foundations of the subject you are equally skilled and knowledgeable about.  So you master two subjects – the field of teaching and that of the field in which you teach.  It ain’t easy folks.  I urge people to learn to fail so they can learn to climb.  Funny how Silicon Valley preaches this ethic yet in education it is the last thing we allow.

I look forward to putting hard road between me and Nashville’s Dumpsters that others call schools but they are horrific and I have long said rather than have take a child to work day, have bring a parent to school day and force them to spend the day with their child going down crowded halls, finding an unlocked toilet to use, eating the slop food, watching kids implode and Teachers struggle to gain a modicum of dignity.  Meet the Security personnel, the Janitors, the Lunch Ladies, the other members of the school that comprise its composition – from Social Workers to Instructional Aides.  NEVER.GOING.TO.HAPPEN.

Perhaps if parents were there this kind of bullshit would not happen as they would know these kids and their families and in turn mutual respect would be earned and deserved.  Seriously what this shit was is beyond my grasp but then again I have seen much of late that makes little sense.   Bullying is learned at home and at school and by adults it is not inherent in children it is LEARNED. 

The schoolteachers who dressed up as ‘Mexicans’ and a MAGA wall for Halloween have been suspended

The Washington Post 
By Eli Rosenberg
November 5 2018

An Idaho superintendent has issued a public apology and placed 14 employees on paid administrative leave after staff at a public elementary school dressed up as Mexicans and a border wall for Halloween.

The images began circulating on social media this week, and they depict more than a dozen adults dressed up in two groups at Middleton Heights Elementary School, in a town of about 7,500 located 30 miles west of Boise. One group is dressed up as stereotypes of Mexicans, replete with maracas, ponchos, sombreros and fake mustaches. The other group is dressed as wall segments plastered with the Make America Great Again slogan.

Staff dressed up as “Mexicans” and others as a “wall” on which it said “Make America Great Again” at an ELEMENTARY SCHOOL in Idaho.

Superintendent said there was not “malicious intent.”

“I want to say we are better than this,” Superintendent Josh Middleton said in a Facebook video Friday. “We embrace all students. We have a responsibility to teach and reach all students. Period. Do I think that there was a malicious intent in this poor decision? No, I don’t. Was there a poor judgment involved? Absolutely. And we now have to own those decisions.”

On Saturday morning, Middleton announced the employee actions during a special school board meeting, The Idaho Statesman reported. The board later said the investigation would continue.

“This type of behavior has no place in education and certainly is not tolerated here at Middleton School District. This situation is being taken very seriously,” part of the statement read. “This is an unfortunate incident of very poor judgment. Yet it is not indicative of the Middleton School District or our teachers as a whole.”

The story had quickly taken off on Friday evening, drawing coverage in national news media outlets. Angry reactions flooded the school’s Facebook page. And social media responses were harsh.

“The fact that these elementary school teachers thought this would be okay demonstrates how much more cultural competence training is needed in education,” Kevin Nadal, a psychology professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, wrote on Twitter.

After the teachers were suspended, a Change.org petition was created to argue that the controversy had been overblown and that the teachers involved shouldn’t lose their jobs. More than 12,000 people had signed as of Monday afternoon.

Middleton said that he had been initially alerted to the issue by a parent who expressed concern over the costumes last week.

“I was shown those photos and deeply troubled by the decision by our staff members to wear those costumes that are clearly insensitive and inappropriate,” he said. “Right now our time is going to be devoted to investigating those events and those poor decisions that were made.”

According to the Statesman, the photos were originally posted on the Middleton School District’s Facebook page with a caption reading, “It was a great day to be a Heights Hawk! We celebrated our RESPECT character winners, single and double marathon runners.”

The Halloween incident is another data entry in the long list of controversial, racially insensitive or historically ignorant costumes that inevitably get trotted out every year. But this incident also struck at the heart of an emotional political debate over immigration that has only grown more bitter in recent days in the lead-up to Tuesday’s elections, as President Trump has warned of an immigrant “invasion” and released a misleading ad about immigrants that was widely criticized as racist.

Twelve advocacy organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union’s chapter in the state, sent a letter to the district expressing concern about the costumes, the Statesman reported.

“Regardless of the intent of a teacher’s actions in the classroom, we must focus on and give weight to the impact of such actions on the students who rely on teachers and other school officials for guidance and support throughout their educational experience,” the ACLU of Idaho said in a statement. “School districts, their staff and other agents have obligations under federal law, state law, and district policies to prevent and protect students, staff, and others from discrimination, bullying, intimidation, and harassment.”

The Idaho Human Rights Commission, a state governing body, also weighed in on Friday night.

“Discrimination under these acts can occur when an employer or school allows a hostile environment to exist against persons because of their race, sex and national origin,” the commission said in a statement, according to the Idaho Press. “Simply because conduct takes place as a so-called joke does not excuse otherwise unlawful conduct.”

The school did not identify the staff members who wore the costumes.

About 13 percent of the students at the elementary school are Latino, according to data from Idaho Ed Trends.

Potatoes Anyone?

 In the blog post, Union Label, I discussed how Unions need to change their dynamics and in turn educate those about the point and purpose of the Union. They need to disrupt in the same manner Uber disrupted Taxi Service only without the bullying, sexual harassment and intimidation.  Oh wait Unions did do that so they can just skip that phase. 

But I also mentioned the infamous and now growing non compete clause set into employment agreements for even the most mundane gigs.   And nowhere epitomizes this better than Idaho. And you thought the lawsuit a few years ago over the dead Steve Jobs tactics on job poaching were new? Again they just do it with Zen in the Valley.

Quit Your Job for a Better One? Not if You Live in Idaho

By CONOR DOUGHERTY
THE NEW YORK TIMES
JULY 14, 2017

BOISE, Idaho — Idaho achieved a notable distinction last year: It became one of the hardest places in America for someone to quit a job for a better one.

The state did this by making it easier for companies to enforce noncompete agreements, which prevent employees from leaving their company for a competitor.

While its economy is known for agriculture — potatoes are among the state’s biggest exports — Idaho has a long history as a technology hub. And the new law landed in the middle of the tech world, causing a clash between hungry start-ups looking to poach employees and more established companies that want to lock their people in place.

“We’re trying to build the tech ecosystem in Boise,” said George Mulhern, chief executive of Cradlepoint, a company here that makes routers and other networking equipment. “And anything that would make somebody not want to move here or start a company here is going to slow down our progress.”

Alex LaBeau, president of the Idaho Association of Commerce and Industry, a trade group that represents many of the state’s biggest employers, countered: “This is about companies protecting their assets in a competitive marketplace.”

Versions of this clash have played out nationwide, as state lawmakers consider whether to make it easier or harder for companies to block workers from jumping to competitors. Both sides in the debate, which bridges party lines, say they are trying to create an environment in which local businesses can thrive.

For the most part, states have been moving toward making it easier for people to switch teams, but Idaho went the other direction with legislation that was friendlier to employers. The resulting law was particularly strict because it put the onus on employees to prove that they would not harm their former employers by taking the new jobs.

Proponents note that the statute applies only to “key employees” who tend to have more responsibility and better pay. But employment lawyers say Idaho companies tie down all levels of workers, not just top executives, with tough employment contracts. And indeed, the new law has roots in a yearslong fight waged by a woman who never finished high school but built a career selling tech-training services, only to be sued when she left for a better-paying job.

The most extreme end of the spectrum is California, which prohibits noncompete agreements entirely. Economists say this was a crucial factor behind Silicon Valley’s rise, because it made it easier for people to start and staff new businesses. But as states like Utah and Massachusetts have tried to move closer to this approach, legislators have run into mature companies trying to hold onto their best employees.

When Mike Schultz, a Republican state representative in Utah, introduced an ultimately successful bill last year to make such agreements harder to enforce, incumbent businesses were his biggest opponents. “But then you had the new entrepreneurs, and most of those guys were in favor of doing away with noncompetes,” he said. “Those are the guys out there growing and trying to hire people.”

A recent survey showed that one in five American workers is bound by a noncompete clause. They cover workers up and down the economic spectrum, from executives to hairdressers. Despite their widespread use, these agreements often catch departing workers off guard because they are rarely highlighted during interviews and are usually tucked inside employment contracts that are full of impenetrable legalese few people can understand.

The growth of restrictive employment contracts dovetails with a broad pattern in the labor market: People don’t quit their jobs as much as they used to. The share of workers changing jobs has been on a long-run decrease since 2000, according to research by the economists Steven J. Davis at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business and John Haltiwanger at the University of Maryland.

One explanation offered by economists is that a bloat of regulations has made it harder for employees to change careers or move across state lines. The barriers include employment contracts and occupational licensing laws that cover a third of the work force and require people to spend months or years training to do even basic service jobs.

The impact has fallen disproportionately on start-ups and high-growth companies, which tend to be against strict employment agreements because they are primarily concerned with growth.

“The noncompete is a two-edged sword,” said Matthew Marx, a professor at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business. “Although it enables companies to retain their employees, it makes it harder for them to recruit workers with relevant experience.”

It also ends up hurting wages, because most people get raises when they switch jobs. This goes far beyond defectors to the economy more broadly, and Idaho’s tech scene shows why.
An Answer to Poaching

Boise is one of America’s most remote metropolitan areas. Despite its Rocky Mountain setting, or perhaps because of it, the city and surrounding suburbs grew to prominence and affluence thanks to homegrown businesses like the semiconductor giant Micron Technology, a former start-up itself, as well as the J. R. Simplot Company and the Albertsons grocery chain.

Over the past several decades, these companies got so big that the city gained a reputation as a hub for Fortune 500 headquarters. Today, however, a new group of entrepreneurs is building on Idaho’s tradition of homespun growth.

Matt Rissell is one of them. Mr. Rissell is a founder and the chief executive of TSheets, which makes time-management software. Mr. Rissell started his entrepreneurial career as the owner of three Cartridge World stores. It was a tough, low-margin business and he was losing a lot of money from employees who fudged their time sheets for extra hours.

Mr. Rissell enlisted an engineer friend to help him fix the problem with software. When his stores saved $2,400 the first month, Mr. Rissell realized he had found a much better business than selling printer cartridges.

Today, TSheets is the darling of Idaho’s start-up scene. The company was founded in 2006, but two years ago took on its first $15 million in venture capital. Since then the company has grown to 200 people from 60, and is on pace to add 100 more by the end of the year.

TSheets is tiny compared with companies like Micron, which has about 30,000 employees around the world. But according to Mr. Haltiwanger’s research, a relative handful of high-growth companies — most of them youngish companies like TSheets — account for about half of new jobs created. They also play an outsize role in raising wages, because people quit their jobs to join them.

During a recent interview in his office, Mr. Rissell said that one of his main challenges was simply finding enough people. TSheets has about 70 employees on its engineering and product team, and almost all moved there from jobs at local companies.

“The ability to recruit from the local area has been extraordinary for us,” he said.

Two years ago, TSheets hired a pair of engineers from a smaller software company called Zenware. Jody Sedrick, Zenware’s chief executive, was hurt and disappointed. He contacted a lawyer to see if it was possible to prevent his employees from leaving for a rival, but instead of spending money on legal costs, he decided to try something else: He gave each of his remaining employees a raise.

“I said, ‘You know what, we’re going to double down internally,’” he said in a recent interview.

The result for the Idaho economy was that TSheets hired two people — but in doing so got 12 other people a raise. Had Mr. Sedrick decided to sue his two departing employees, something Idaho’s new law made easier, those raises might never have happened.

‘Trust No One’

For a law that would end up riling tech companies, Idaho’s statute began with an unlikely character: Debbie Nolan, a 51-year-old saleswoman who never went to high school.

Ms. Nolan is from the New York City borough of Queens. She left school at 13 but through decades of work experience managed to carve out a middle-class career selling technology-training classes for office workers. She moved from New York to California to Nevada and finally to Idaho, where she worked at a company called LeapFox Learning. Ms. Nolan made $48,000 a year there, based on her extensive work history and little else.

“I don’t think I could get a job at Walmart without a high school diploma,” she said in an interview.

Three years ago Ms. Nolan quit and started working at ExecuTrain — LeapFox’s main competitor — where she negotiated a $65,000 salary. LeapFox sued her for violating her exit agreement, setting off a three-year legal battle that was settled out of court but inspired Ms. Nolan to get a tattoo that sits just under her collarbone and reads: “Trust No One.”

After Ms. Nolan’s defection, Codi Galloway, who owns LeapFox with her husband, Scott, became an outspoken advocate for amending state law to make it less expensive for businesses to block an employee from going to work for a rival. The result was a bill that shifted the burden from companies to employees, who must now prove they have “no ability to adversely affect the employer’s legitimate business interests.”

The bar for that is so high that Brian Kane, an assistant chief deputy in the Idaho attorney general’s office, wrote that this would be “difficult if not impossible” for an employee to do.

Ilana Rubel, one of the few Democrats in Idaho’s House of Representatives, became the bill’s fiercest critic. Ms. Rubel, a Harvard-trained lawyer who does intellectual property litigation for the Silicon Valley-based law firm Fenwick & West, described the proposal as “toxic to a good business ecosystem.”

“This bill was a giant thumb on the scale in favor of old established business at the expense of start-ups,” Ms. Rubel said.

Despite the bill’s passage, Ms. Rubel is undeterred. She has drafted legislation to repeal the law and is enlisting tech executives to help.

As Jeff Reynolds, a local entrepreneur who advises young companies at a co-working space called Trailhead, noted: “If you’re in Boise, Idaho, and you’re trying to build a start-up culture, it’s not like we have a head start in doing that. We shouldn’t try to put new impediments in our way.”

At a hearing last year to debate the proposed law, one of those who showed up was Mr. Sedrick, the Zenware chief executive who lost two engineers to TSheets. He didn’t mention his competitor by name, but complained about a local software company “hand-poaching” engineers.

Today, Mr. Sedrick tells a different story. In a recent interview, he said his feelings on noncompete agreements had mellowed.

“I want to create a good marketplace as a whole, and in reality there is enough room for all of us,” he said.

In addition, he said, the defections taught him how to be a better leader and more efficient boss. His employees are happier and better paid.

“Rather than going on the defensive, because that’s what a noncompete is, just go on the offensive and create a great environment so that people want to stay with you,” he said. “That makes you a better company in the end.”