Happy #BlackHistoryMonth !

I'm still not talking about Black history. I'm still talking about white US history.

Q: Why do Black kids not do well in school? Is it because their dads are uninvolved and uncaring parents? Bill Cosby and Herschel Walker told me that, and they are good and wise men that we should listen to! It's Black dads' fault! Boo Black men!

A: No. Black kids only do poorly in school *in extremely racist countries.*

1/N

#BlackMastodon

Black dads are *more* involved in both early childhood activities like bathing and diapering, and school aged activities. From the CDC:

A larger percentage of Black dads
(41%) had helped their coresidential children with homework every day in
the last 4 weeks compared with
white (28%) dads.

Only 30% of white dads take their own kids to activities every day, vs 42% of Black dads.

71% of white dads talk with their kids about their day, vs 79% of Black dads.

Etc, etc.

But is poor school attainment because so many Black kids are born out of wedlock? The Nick Cannon effect?

No. The anecdotes are Nick Cannon, not Elon Musk, or Larry Bird. How many kids does Larry Bird have? That we know of? How many kids does Elon have? That we know of?

But ignore these ovulation addicts. The data shows that co-parenting is the trend for everyone. And it's fine.

"OK, when Black dads are present, they're involved. But too many Black dads are just not there! Why aren't they there?"

In the US, a Black man has a 1 in 4 chance of going to jail. Most likely for "drug use," even though white folk do more drugs. 🤷🏿‍♂️

Most Black dads incarcerated have not even been convicted of any crime. They're "awaiting trial," and are too poor to afford bail. You can be waiting for trial for *years*.

Just being falsely arrested will likely cause you to lose your job, and can prevent you from applying for a new one.

The mother of your child will likely need to apply for public assistance while you are locked up. The state will give her financial assistance... and then bill you.😮

You will rack up debt to the state *while you are in jail!*. You will be in "child support arrears."

Most of the time, this is not what the mother wants. Her partner has just been falsely arrested and so can't help with bills. She needs to make rent or she'll be evicted. She applies for assistance not to punish her partner, but to not be homeless with the children.

Even if you are innocent, you've just gone from being an employed, present Black dad...

To a dead beat dad, with warrants for his arrest for failure to pay child support, who can't even apply for many jobs due to the first arrest.

Some of you will remember that Walter Scott was shot in the back while running from police. But do you know why he was running?
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2015/04/10/why-was-walter-scott-running

If your definition of "stability in the household" revolves around marital status or cohabitation, rather than this systemic racism minefield presented to the parents, I urge you to reflect on that.

I mean, half of y'all's parents are divorced. 🤷🏿‍♂️ That's clearly not the issue.

Why Was Walter Scott Running?

50,000 parents, mostly black fathers, can guess.

The Marshall Project

Another comparison is white Europeans, who don't face this racism minefield.

4 out of 10 EU kids are born to unmarried parents. In France, closer to 6 / 10. Lower the marriage rate, the more men participate in childcare!👍🏿♥️

We call them "progressive."

https://www.statista.com/statistics/276802/births-out-of-wedlock-in-the-eu/

European Union - countries with the highest share of births out of wedlock | Statista

This statistic shows the European Union countries with the highest share of births out of wedlock from 2009 to 2011.

Statista

So this is where most of the Black dads are: in jail for unjust arrests. A human rights atrocity committed at a genocidal scale. Millions of dads.

But how do some Black kids in this situation manage to overcome this and get good grades anyway? Many factors, but an important one: Black teachers.♥️👍🏿

School in the US is fantastically racist too. A racist teacher cannot teach a Black student effectively. Even teachers that don't think that they're racist, do this:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/04/black-students-teachers-implicit-racial-bias-preschool-study

Teachers' implicit bias against black students starts in preschool, study finds

Findings reveal subconscious racial bias of teachers, who directed attention more closely to black boys when ‘challenging behavior’ is expected

The Guardian

This can be countered by Black teachers. ♥️👍🏿

Black students randomly assigned to at least one Black teacher in grades K-3 are 9 percentage points (13%) more likely to graduate from high school and 6 percentage points (19%) more likely to enroll in college than their same-school, same-race peers.

https://www.nber.org/papers/w25254

White kids can benefit from this too, and aren't harmed by it. Black kids from privilege benefit a little. Black boys from underprivileged backgrounds benefit the most.

The Long-Run Impacts of Same-Race Teachers

Founded in 1920, the NBER is a private, non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to conducting economic research and to disseminating research findings among academics, public policy makers, and business professionals.

NBER

People looking to minimize the impacts of racism, believe that Black teachers help through the "role model effect." That's part of it but not the whole story.

There are few enough Black teachers in this country, that we can literally ask a good portion of them what's really happening. It's not just the role model effect. Teachers are shielding Black kids from racism.

Until they can't anymore...

https://time.com/6130991/black-teachers-resigning/

Public Schools Are Struggling to Retain Black Teachers. These Ex-Teachers Explain Why

Pushback against efforts to discuss racism in the classroom, on top of pandemic-related pressures, are taking a toll on teachers of color

Time

The typical education experience for a Black boy in the United States, is to have almost all white teachers, mostly women, more than half of whom vote for the most racist candidate on any ballot, and no Black teachers. The teachers have low expectations of you, punish you more than your classmates, and threaten to call the cop who works in the hallway on you at any moment.

I don't know how to explain more clearly, that this is never going to work.

I'm not surprised that Black US kids don't perform as well as white US kids, or as well as Nigerian, Ghanaian, Kenyan, or Caribbean kids. I'm surprised that any Black kids make it through this hellish gauntlet at all.

When you look at how much the US pays to educate each student, and how poorly it does at Black educational achievement, it's clear that the US is the worst country in the world at educating Black students, by far. Because racism. No one spends more to achieve less.

Once you understand white US history instead of Black history, you'll understand why the following interventions will do much more to improve US Black educational achievement than most of the nonsense we're trying today:

• Bail reform
• Fire racist teachers, including the Bill Cosbys
• Retain anti-racist Black, white, AAPI, Latinx teachers
• Get rid of school cops
• Provide all students free lunch. And breakfast. And afternoon snack.
• Transfer police budget to school budget. Bring back art.

@mekkaokereke man, I'm white, but I was a poor kid and just the fact that food was a question had a serious impact.

And that's one factor. Only one factor.

@Unampho @mekkaokereke

I honestly can't wrap my head around how you can expect a school to function without providing food to the students inside it.

Edit because I posted too early: I know it's because they're not supposed to function as school but, hell, how do people believe this?

@thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke well, you expect the students to either eat the cheapest shit school pizza meal with no nutrition or bring the same cheap unrefrigerated sandwich everyday.

While hanging out with the rich kids who have much better food right in front of you.

@Unampho @thekernelinyellow

One of the funniest interactions I see online, is when Americans think it's inspirational that a young white US child is raising money not to buy themselves something, but to pay off their less privileged classmates' "school lunch debt."

US readers are like 🤗"Oh that's so precious! That sweet kid has a good heart!"

And EU readers are like 😮"Wait a minute... Go back a few steps... WTF is school lunch debt?! That's a real thing?! What is wrong with your country?!"

@mekkaokereke @Unampho As a European, I'm always like that.

The first time it happened I was very young and with little knowledge of the US apart from Hollywood propaganda and the first thing I did was assume my English was so bad I totally misunderstood the story. I needed to have it repeated to me a couple of times, with different words, to finally get it.

@thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke @Unampho as an American, I'm also always like that. It makes me homicidally angry that "feed the goddamn kids" is even in question, much less the exception rather than the rule.
@funkula @thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke @Unampho same. I think the bootstraps crowd would rather stick those kids back into factories so they can pay for their own lunches. 😡
Critics Slam 'Reprehensible' Iowa Bill to Expand Child Labor

Labor advocates on Tuesday decried a business-backed bill introduced by Republican state lawmakers in Iowa that would roll back child labor laws so that teens as young as 14 may work in previously prohibited jobs—a proposal one union president called dangerous and "just crazy."

Common Dreams
@GleaningSage @shadyspotlight @funkula @thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke @Unampho Arkansas has already done away with laws saying kids can only work certain hours and the limits on hours per week….and lowered the working age, so…the last few years I had kids coming to school after working all night, then going back to work when they got out of school. Guess where they were trying to sleep?
@johnettesnuggs @GleaningSage @funkula @thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke @Unampho I wasn't aware of either of these, but I'm not at all surprised. It's right in line with everything else they're doing. 😕
@GleaningSage @shadyspotlight @funkula @thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke @Unampho Women with infectious TB running around willy-nilly….Missouri now not banning the ability for kids to carry guns….states relaxing child labor laws…When the MAGAts said “make America great again,” apparently they were talking about sending us back to the days when kids could get lost in the meat packing plant and come out as potted meat…🤦🏻
@thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke @Unampho It’s frustrating because the beaureacracy of keeping track of the lunch money and debt probably costs more than it would to just feed the kids.
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow I always call such things the "orphan crushing machine" after this tweet: https://twitter.com/pookleblinky/status/1309325764739858432
Anosognosiogenesis on Twitter

“Every heartwarming human interest story in america is like "he raised $20,000 to keep 200 orphans from being crushed in the orphan-crushing machine" and then never asks why an orphan-crushing machine exists or why you'd need to pay to prevent it from being used.”

Twitter
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow Yeah, that's an absolutely dystopian hellscape, where 8-year olds are having to do the job of the district.
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow You don’t have to go as far as Europe. I’m just up in Canada and that boggles my mind.
@michaelmelanson @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow Also in America. This CollegeHumor video about GoFundMe really hits home. https://youtu.be/tIsXEkR5OVs
GoFundMe CEO: We Could Use A Few Fun Ones

YouTube
@michaelmelanson @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow Like those human interest stories: "High School robotics team build motorized wheelchair for disabled student after insurance turned down claim - isn't that adorable?" No, that's a fucked up system.

@michaelmelanson Yeah, but that's partly because most Canadian schools (in my experience, anyway) don't provide meals except as a charity to the poorest kids. High schools have cafeterias with food for sale, but most kids brought their own where I grew up.

But yeah, still better than making kids pay for the cafeteria food and then holding the debt over them if they can't afford it.

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

@AmeliaBR @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow True, I was talking mostly about elementary school with the buffet line and whatnot. It’s different at the high school level.

My high school had a cafeteria you could buy food at. But low-income kids could also get vouchers from the school to pay for their meals.

So it’s still true that schools provide free food at the high school level. It’s just operated on a voucher system rather than a buffet system.

@michaelmelanson Buffet line? That is not something I'm familiar with at all. In elementary school in Ottawa in the 90s, there was no hot food. But I guess I shouldn't be surprised that it varies a lot by province/city.

And yes, there were charity programs: cafeteria vouchers in high school, and a cold breakfast and basic packed lunch in elementary. Same as in the US, the people left out are those whose families aren't poor enough for the program, or who are too disorganized or proud to apply.

@michaelmelanson @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

Up here we're trying our best to fit in with our southern neighbour, e.g. Ontario releasing a plan to invest public dollars in private healthcare.

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow
Except in England, where child poverty has risen by about a quarter under 12 years of Tory rule...
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow and the , so called “pro-life”, GOP couldn’t even muster a single clap at the State of the Union when Prez Joe mentioned feeding school lunches for ALL kids! 🤬

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow Every American "feel good" story is actually a societal failure in disguise. Lunch school debt. Pooling sick days for colleagues. Buying cars for people walking miles and to work since there is no public transit. Fundraising for medical costs, etc. etc.

(Canada is starting to see these cropping up in the news lately as well, unfortunately).

@mdemeny
I had not yet heard of that one: "pooling sick days for colleagues".

I have never regretted returning to Europe, although my own life in the US was pretty good. I was a semi-federal employee, so with health insurance and a pension plan. One minus: there was always this weird danger that the employer would shut down because of the debt ceiling.

But it is not a fair society.

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

@mdemeny @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow sometimes I think that people in power keep the system bad because they love (occasionally) playing the role of the hero. So much glory! And you wouldn’t have that if the system just worked well for everyone. #FridayMorningCynicism
@mdemeny confused. Are you not counting people doing all these things as part of the “society”? What does one need to do to qualify in your world?
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

@mdemeny @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

"dying cat saved"
"queer kid's bullies beat up"
"giving pizza to homeless people"

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow their world view is that its your own fault you are poor no if buts or maybes.
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow coming in from Scandinavia, having lived in NYC:
Both reactions.

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow Canadians are weirded out by the lunch debt thing too. We don’t tend to have school lunches like America does. This varies provincially.

Kids go to school hungry here too. But staff look out for this & try to help with healthy food that tends to be in the school budget somehow or is supplemented through food banks or some thing. But profiting on lunches in school? Nope. It’s a cheap daily price, if there is one.

@snarkysteff @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow
They aren't profiting, but typically it's not subsidized, and if you don't pay, you don't eat.

@snarkysteff @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow I’ve not heard that US schools are *profiting* on lunches in schools. The school lunch you can buy has always been cheap.

But cheap is not free and plenty of kids can’t afford cheap. There are free school lunch programs, but why not just budget to feed every kid rather than require some proof of need?

Because USA, apparently.

@clauclauclaudia @mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow Yeah, but being unable to pay in Canada would trigger safety-net stuff, usually. It wouldn't mean running up debt and going hungry. The nature of the Canadian system is to try to catch the people falling between the cracks, hence "safety net".

But don't let me suggest our system perfect or even "really, really good." It's just not dog-piling bigger problems onto people who can't handle them.

@clauclauclaudia @snarkysteff I attended schools all over Canada in the 70s and 80s. I didn’t see my first school cafeteria until I was in grade 9. I couldn’t afford to buy lunches at them. Sometimes kids would beat me up to steal my packed lunch.
@mekkaokereke See also: kickstarters for medical procedures... 🙄
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow l see what you mean. But we #EU citizens shouldn't be to proud of what we have. There's plenty of politicians and special interests who wish to abolish it and see the #USA as a positive model. And thanks to them and our own apathy, our #social systems are slowly but surely being eroded... and this has been going on for 40 years at least.

@jack @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

Yep.

🤔 I'll never understand why UK Tory voters look at how the worst parts of the US government treats Black folk, and say, "Send over the *exact same far-right advisers* that created those intentionally cruel policies! Treat us like the USA treats Black people! Brexit us right in the face! End our affordable healthcare! We want medical bankruptcy and food debt too!"

I don't get it. We have good exports? Like tacos, and Janelle Monáe? Take those instead.

Anosognosiogenesis on Twitter

“Every heartwarming human interest story in america is like "he raised $20,000 to keep 200 orphans from being crushed in the orphan-crushing machine" and then never asks why an orphan-crushing machine exists or why you'd need to pay to prevent it from being used.”

Twitter
OrphanCrushingMachine • r/OrphanCrushingMachine

A subreddit for news stories involving themes such as generosity, self-sacrifice, overcoming hardship, etc., presented as 'wholesome' or...

reddit

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow this is a subject that fills me with righteous fury

This country produces so much food that school meals can be free for every child. Barely a rounding error in the federal budget

@thekernelinyellow @Unampho @mekkaokereke @gizmomathboy

we *throw out* enough food to feed everyone, many times over

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow

No, we in the USA think it's pretty messed up, too.

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow @ifixcoinops yeah we LIVE RIGHT ABOVE THEM and let me tell ya: they're a bit ridiculous, eh?
@Unampho @thekernelinyellow @mekkaokereke As a nation, we are being profoundly fucked in the head by selfish & greedy ideologues
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow There are sadly so many examples. Check cashing places that will charge you 25% interest on a three day advance on a paycheck. The price of insulin. The idea that working mothers are being selfish for taking more than a few days maternity leave…
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow I'm an American, and I think the same thing.
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow America is NOT the richest country in the world. It merely is the home to the most wealthy.
@mekkaokereke Do most/many Americans really see such things as heartwarming, rather than a symptom of a deeply broken system?

@acb They seriously see it as heartwarming.

People that point it out as not heartwarming, are often attacked with bad faith claims:

👩🏼Why are you attacking a boy for raising money for his classmates?!

👩🏻I'm not attacking him. I'm just saying that school lunch debt shouldn't be a thing...

👩🏼It's a feel good story! Just enjoy it!

👩🏻No it's not a feel good story... because lunch debt shouldn't even --

👩🏼You're attacking him again!!!

@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow -Nah. There was a BBC story the other day saying, isn’t it heartwarming that this man in Alabama would go to his local pharmacy and give the pharmacist $100 a month with instructions to use the money to buy pharmaceuticals for someone who couldn’t afford them. You’d think a *British* network would say, “Wait, there are people in America who can’t get drugs because they can’t afford them!? What century is this.” But nah.
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow The other thing I love about that story (the Washington Post told it too) is that all the people in his community who found out about it said he was an angel. If the government was paying for those peoples’ pharmaceuticals, you know their neighbors would say it was Socialism.
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow let's say i was the kid who paid somebody's lunch debt. that same kid couldn't afford a yearbook, i got in-house suspension for cutting out a picture of his girlfriend so he could have it, and that child later died before his 14th birthday of a treatable heart condition but Medicaid wouldn't cover it, and our teachers didn't care enough to ask why he was absent before calling a dead boy a truant in front of the class. #TrueStory
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow we'll get around to school lunch indentureship someday, where a child can clean off his lunch debt by just 7-8 years of working in the mines
@mekkaokereke @Unampho @thekernelinyellow It's kind of like when politicians congratulate someone (usually retail or food service workers) for their great work ethic of having 2.5 jobs to get by - "Thank you for working so hard for the below-subsistence wages your employers offer!"

@mekkaokereke

I'm an American and find it confusing, just as a matter of public policy. As a child, the cafeteria people worked around it when kids forgot their lunch or kept going hungry, though quite a few of us were, I don't know, programed to think that it wasn't right to take straight charity.

But it seems silly in terms of complexity, especially given how hunger impacts learning and behavior. It ultimately costs more to not make sure they're fed. Plus it's mean.

Back then the official rule seemed to be that you couldn't get behind at all - there were definitely confrontations with some of the cafeteria workers, especially for the bigger kids. Like, no money means no lunch.

It was the lady in charge who *fixed* things. She was kind of a "I won't tolerate disorder" person.

(Lunch was $0.85, which is $2.10 now. With 800k students, just 1% of the kids being in arrears would quickly become a budgetary crisis. The whole model was broken.)

@smpa @mekkaokereke @alesplin I haven’t heard about it lately but food programs like food stamps are traditionally under utilized and over funded.

The stigma keeps people away.