Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers


I am a teacher. I teach English at the high school of an independent district within Oklahoma City. I love my job. I love your kids. I call them my kids. I keep blankets in my room for when they’re cold. I feed them peanut butter crackers, beef jerky, or Pop Tarts when Michelle Obama’s school breakfast or lunch isn’t enough to fill their bellies. I comfort them when they cry and I praise them when they do well and always I try to make them believe that they are somebody with unlimited potential no matter what they go home to when they leave me.

What do they go home to? Sometimes when they get sick at school they can’t go home because you and the person you’re currently shacking up with are too stoned to figure out it’s your phone ringing. Sometimes they go home to parents who don’t notice them, and those are often the lucky kids. Sometimes they go home to sleep on the neighbor’s back porch because your boyfriend kicked them out of the house and his dog is too mean to let them sleep on their own back porch. They go home to physical and verbal abuse. They go home looking for love and acceptance from the people who created them … and too often they don’t find it.

Many days your children bring the resentment they feel toward you to school with them and they act out against peers, property, or their teachers. When I call you I’m told, “When he’s at school he’s your problem.” Or you beat them, not for what they did, but because it embarrassed or inconvenienced you when I called.

Often, they stay at school with me for an hour and a half after the bell rings because they don’t want to go home to you. Reluctantly, they get on the two buses meant to take home students who stay for athletic practice, and they go away for a dark night in places I can’t imagine.

Over 90 percent of the kids in my high school are on the free or reduced lunch programs. The walk hand-in-hand with Poverty and its brother Violence. They find comfort in the arms of your lover, Addiction. They make babies before they are old enough to vote. Or drive. And they continue the cycle you put them in.

Sometimes I get through to a student and convince her that education is the way out of this spiral of poverty and despair. Then you slap them down for wanting to be better than you.

And you, the lawmakers of this state, you encourage it. I hold two college degrees and have been on my job for 10 years. I was our school’s Teacher of the Year in 2014. I teach kids to read the ballots that keep you in your elite position. I teach them to look behind your lies and rhetoric. I teach them to think for  themselves. The compensation of me and my colleagues ranks 49th in the nation, and is the lowest in our region. I currently earn about $18,000 per year less than I did in 2002, my last year as an office worker for an energy company that merged with another and eliminated my job. I feel like my life has purpose now, but, as I turn 50 this year and wonder how I’ll put my own high school-age kids through college, I have to consider giving up helping scores of kids per year so I can afford to give my own children what they need to find satisfaction in their lives.

And what do you do? You whittle away at education funding. You waste the taxpayers’ money so that our great state faces unbelievable shortfalls and massive budget cuts. You take home a salary that ranks 10th highest in the nation among state legislators and you are inept, uncaring, and an abomination to our democratic form of government.

Those kids who stay after school with me? After Spring Break 2016 they can’t do that. You see, our district can no longer afford to pay to run those late buses. Your kids wade through garbage in the halls because we had to release the custodial crew that cleaned at night. Oh sure, we could make the kids clean up after themselves, except our administrators live in fear of lawsuits, and making a kid pick up the lunch tray he threw on the floor has been considered forced child labor. There’s also the very real possibility that a belligerent kid will just take a swing at one of us — again — because he or she wasn’t taught respect for authority at home. Did I mention how we had to let go of our security officers because we could no longer afford them? We now share one single solitary Oklahoma County Sheriff’s deputy with our ninth grade center and our middle school and alternative school. That’s one deputy for about 1,300 students.

We can no longer afford rolls of colored paper or paint or tape to make signs to support and advertise our Student Council activities. This fall our football team won’t charge through a decorated banner as they take the field because we can’t afford to make the banner. There won’t be any new textbooks in the foreseeable future. Broken desks won’t be replaced. We’re about to ration copy paper and we’ve already had the desktop printers taken out of our rooms.

We live in fear that our colleagues will leave us, not just because they are our friends, but because the district wouldn’t replace them even if we could lure new teachers to our inner-city schools during the teacher shortage you have caused. We fear our classes doubling in size.

We fear becoming as ineffective as you are. Not because we can’t or won’t do our job, like you, but because you keep passing mandates to make us better while taking away all the resources we need just to maintain the status quo. We fear that our second jobs will prevent us from grading the papers or creating the lesson plans we already have to do from home. We fear our families will leave us because we don’t have time for them.

I am the chairman of my department. My teachers could easily take other jobs in the private sector where they would make more money, but so far they have chosen to remain teachers because they love working with kids. How long will they continue to put the needs of students over the needs of family? It’s something we’re all dealing with. How far will you push us? What will you do without us when we leave the classroom or leave the state? It’s happening. You know it’s happening, and yet you do nothing.

You, the representatives, senators, and governor of Oklahoma are creating a population of ignorant peasants fit only to work in the oil field and factories you bring to this state by promising those businesses won’t have to pay their fair share of taxes. You leave our kids in a cycle of poverty and abuse while your pet donor oil companies destroy the bedrock beneath us, shaking our homes to pieces while you deny your part in all of it.

Parents, I beg you to love your children the way we love your children. Vote for people who will help teachers educate and nurture the kids we share. We can’t do it alone anymore.

795 responses to “Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers”

  1. I read most of the comments. This same problem has been on the table in California schools for as long as I can remember. Forgive me if I am wrong, but, wasn’t the lottery supposed to fund the schools? instead that money gets put in the general fund and used elsewhere. I have only seen 1 school built in the last 20 years in this area. Now they need more prisons than schools.

    1. Walter:

      That’s what I also thought. I thought the reason that they lottery was allowed in California was to help fund the problems with our education system. Yet, teachers and administrators constantly complain about low salaries, poor supply quantities and quality, and rising classroom sizes. I keep seeing all these signs about how millions have been poured into our education system because of the lottery and yet the problems do not disappear. The lawmakers who make these decisions make more than the teachers educating our children. Hell, sports figures make more money than the teachers educating our kids. Sports is big business. The education of our children, rich and poor, should be big business too!!!!!!

    2. What happens is that the money IS used for schools, allowing other money (That WAS being spent on education) to be moved out of schools and used elsewhere.

  2. actually my kids went to public schools as did my grandkids. we had a very active PTA. I did serve in government and among my positions was a judge and the civilian head of the police department. I founded a special juvenile court division.

    what works is accountability and effective policing, not government dependency. Ive seen schools like you describe and have first hand experience seeing them turned around as I suggest. Ditto neighborhoods.

    increased funding had zero to do with it. It was a plan with accountability for actual progress not dependent on things like hope for change and putting process over actual identifiable results — fewer domestic calls, lower crime rates, kids actually learning, parents held accountable if their kids were truant, etc.

    no cars on jacks, trash all over the yard, drugs sold on the street corners. homes falling down and abandoned were torn down.

    Positive planned actions with verifiable results will always trump mouthing good intentions, whining and saying more money is the solution.

    As a country we’ve spent over a trillion dollars trying to cure poverty, but it’s worse than ever before. It’s too convenient to stay on welfare and blame others for a situation that in the vast majority of situations is self induced.

    I once owned a staffing company, over 1500 employees. We interviewed over 150 people per week and drug tested about 50 per week. It was amazing.

    the fail rate for drugs was about 15%. At least 10% of the people couldn’t afford to get off welfare for jobs paying $15.00 / hr full time. Another 4% only wanted to work long enough to qualify for unemployment.

    Before I owned the staffing company, I created and managed a public organization that placed people with developmental disabilities into private sector jobs. We did one on one training and on the job support.

    In two years the organization was self supporting and needed no further infusion of public funds.

    Bottom line I’ve seen both sides of the equation. My experience proven by results is that accountability coupled to the will to achieve verifiable results works.

    That said, it’s the simple truth that we are not all equal achievers. We are not all going to be high wage earners. We are not all going to live in the same type home or drive the same type car.

    Being envious of another’s success is a sin as is being willfully indolent. Choices have consequences and the choices we make are not another’s fault.

    by the by, name calling is the typical lazy way to address an issue for which the person writing or speaking is unable to participate as an adult in the conversation.

    1. John, you yourself are name calling. Lazy, willfully indolent, whining….doesn’t that make you a hypocrite? Please get off your soapbox – nobody wants to hear your speech where you pat yourself on the back because you can’t get attention elsewhere.

      1. It is hard sometimes to realize that we as parents are neglecting our children. We are now relying on the government to feed our children breakfast in the morning ,sending them off on an empty stomach. The schools are not failing. The families and the communities who have transferred parenting to the schools are failing. Schools can never take the place of loving parents. As a result of this loss of care, conversation and quality time children are having difficulty. Parents that spend time with their children have successful kids.

  3. Small Town School Counselor Avatar
    Small Town School Counselor

    I am a 20+ years veteran teacher and while it is absolutely correct that I knew pay was low before I became a teacher, I never expected to have to spend such a large portion of my salary in order to do my job effectively . The amount of money I contribute to our school has grown exponentially since I became a teacher in 1995 and my step raise does not begin to cover those additional expenditures. In addition, the amount of paperwork now required for each student is beyond ridiculous. #justletmeteach

    1. My granddaughter is working on her masters and will be teaching. I understand RE supplies is an issue. What I don’t understand is why your union does zip about it.
      The paperwork issue is easily cured – stop voting for the politicians who pass the laws which mandate the paperwork — get the Federal government out of the schools and the classroom.
      As for more resources, how about more emphasis on the 3Rs and less on sports and baby sitting services.

      1. John, wow you have all the answers! Why don’t you help these people out instead of criticizing everyone? And good for your grand daughter. Hopefully she isn’t an uncaring, narcissistic tool like yourself.

  4. ILAH DICKINSON Avatar
    ILAH DICKINSON

    I wish our government had the heart and love for the future of our children as you do. It saddens me to think our great state is so far down below other states when it comes to education. We will lose more good teachers if someone doesn’t pay more attention to our needs.

  5. Mr. Breen does add something helpful to the problem; students can study vocabulary words like sanctimonious, stupid, and stunningly short-sighted. Mr. Wedel, like all teachers, knows the pay scale and brutal requirements, and the all-too-few hours available for their Sisyphean efforts. (‘Pause’ while you look up Sisyphus; classical study disappeared decades ago.) And that is precisely his point: Yes, community and home lives make education more difficult than in past generations, but not impossible. It is more than that. Even dedicated, caring, Teacher-of the-year types are not enough. He and his colleagues are doing all that they can, and way more that they should, and it is still not enough. His point, and thousands of fellow educator’s point, is that with all the cuts, testing, rhetoric, and blind-eye-turning at the government level the education system is failing its prime mission: the education of students. The current climate in Oklahoma and many, many other states, is not that teaching is harder, even for the best of teachers. The point is that, even with our best efforts, students are leaving the system without even a basic education, or the ability to survive in the world, and ‘success’ is only something on the posters that the administrators make us put on the walls to make everyone feel good. We are not whining because it is hard and we are not paid enough; all we want to do is ‘make a difference’ and — student after student– we are failing at our moist basic mission.

    1. clever name calling remains just that.

      Comprehension is necessary to discussion. Imposing an agenda to illustrate disagreement is as dysfunctional as name calling.

      Whining occurs when the proposed solution lacks substance and probable success. Money, more and more has been thrown at the education system with little if any results. Funds are wasted to support nonproductive overhead for unnecessary personnel and services.

      Schools are not babysitting, or social engineering institutions. Schools ought not place and fund excessive sports activities and million dollar facilities.

      Schools can’t accept and should not accept the burden for kids with dysfunctional circumstances the solutions to which properly belong elsewhere. When schools do so, the kid and the school are headed for failure.

      If you want a plumbing problem successfully addressed, you don’t call an electrician.

      Schools need to go back to the basics

      1. What you say is true. However you miss the point of the Wedel letter, and that is that teachers are being made into babysitters by delinquent parents. Funds are being thrown at paperwork to prove education works, instead of being directed to the educators and the buildings in which they work. The solution to dysfunctional kids is to stop them ending up in the criminal justice system by dealing with dysfunctional parents realistically. You are right: “Schools ought not place and fund excessive sports activities and million dollar facilities”. But, kids should have access to sports and be supported in their endeavours, not by teachers who are trying to be parents, social workers and gaolers, but by teachers who are paid enough that they don’t have to worry about supporting their own families.
        Schools going back to basics means that the student is adequately fed, funded and loved at home so that they can attend to the schooling. That’s back to basics!

      2. John, and you need to grow a heart.

  6. I taught for 38 years. The last 6 were in Texas and the most excruciating of all of them. We aren’t fairing much better in the Lone Star State. It is terrible. Your students need you but I can understand your choosing to leave the profession if necessary. …. it’s not a profession any more. . The is no respect for our jobs…. We are expected to give and give without getting anything back. I’m glad I was able to retire. Most of my years are in Illinois. My retirement is from there thank goodness. It would be much less were it from Texas.

    1. Last I looked the IL pension system had a massive deficit created by too high wages coupled to a too generous pension system.
      Both circumstances were created by public officials too worried about staying in office rather than acting prudently with taxpayer funds.
      This situation is exactly where those with the same objective of buying votes to stay in power inside the Beltway are taking the entire country

  7. This is like a company that is really bad, has no customer service, and a lousy product, but none of the customers ever complain and the business just stays in business without changing a thing.

    1. There is rarely a shortage of teachers, so why would schools raise salaries or change anything if they can just keep hiring people to do the work?

    2. Parents should be flipping out, standing in protest lines, “occupying” the sidewalk in front of their child’s school, demanding change – NOW. But, do they? Do they care? Again, if the “customer” just keeps buying the lousy product at the bad company, why change?

    3. Why would someone with a degree, or 3, choose to get paid off a chart, and be OK with getting paid the same as other people with the same degrees and years, but who are mediocre? If you want more money, open the market to demand more. Us parents who care would love to pay an awesome teacher more, but not that mediocre one.

    1. Finally a viewpoint that faces reality.

      1. I am a retired high school science teacher. I taught 42 years and was a head high school basketball coach for 30 of those years. I taught in Oklahoma for ten years and the remaining time in Texas. Sometimes people make outrageous statements that result in visceral reactions of real anger. The result is name calling. You know Mr.Bream- moron, stupid, arrogant, sanctimonious. But I am not calling you any of those names. But I truly do not understand people who believe as you. You are not a teacher and you just don’t get it.

        Comparing the establishment of a juvenile court system and the operation of a staffing company with improving education has no validity. You completely discount the importance of money/funding as a way of improving education. It is just a matter of devising a better plan of accountability. What an absolutely laughable thought. You cite the fact that we have spent trillions of dollars trying to eliminate poverty and that we have more poverty than ever before. Perhaps if the money had been channeled more into education instead of government hand out programs, we would have seen different results.

        You should move to Texas. The idiots in the legislature here feel exactly as you do. Texas has cut educational spending drastically the last few years. It is among the lowest in the country in expenditure per student. The legislature response is that there is no proof that spending more money will increase the quality of education. No proof based on what? They haven’t tried!

        Did it ever occur to you that if teachers were paid more, more people might want to go into teaching? More teachers means more competition for jobs and more competition means the better candidates should get the jobs. Isn’t this the way business and industry operate? How many states have any sort of merit pay system? Did it ever occur to you that more money could mean better facilities and more programs to meet the needs of more diverse student populations? Our systems of accountability and measuring student progress don’t operate independent of funding. We need multiple graduation tracts and a diverse curriculum that meets the needs of the students. News flash- this costs money. You get what you pay for. Why not pay for it now rather than pay to support the kids who do not finish school . Rick McBride not Jean

    2. But how do you judge the excellent vs mediocre teacher? Sorry it is much easier to look like a good teacher if you are in a district with lots of money or teaching the higher level academic children. So this guy may only have with 50% of his kids graduate vs some teacher from a wealthy district teaching calculus etc. but actually be a better teacher.

    3. Wow….they say stupid people shouldn’t breed, but here are two examples of just that – Katydid and John W. Breen.

  8. Three years ago I retired from teaching after 35 years of service in Oklahoma. Sadly, this has been the case throughout this state for as long as I can remember. Great teachers came and great teachers went for the exact same reasons as now, but many teachers stayed. They didn’t stay because of the money and they didn’t stay because of the “powers that be”. They stayed because they wanted to make a difference in a dying world…….and then they prayed. They prayed for the children they taught, they prayed for their co-workers, and they prayed for their own families who suffered along with them through this impossible situation. They continued to pray even when the government said they couldn’t. It is tough in the educational world and it is not for the faint of heart. It takes courage, hard work, determination, and resilience. It takes loving and caring people full of faith. It takes creative geniuses to teach within the confinements of a broken society and a broken educational system. It takes dreamers who are strong enough to hold on to their own dreams while holding onto another person’s dream until it is claimed and owned. It takes passion……it takes you!! I was once told that teachers should not expect anything down here on earth because “our rewards would be in heaven”. I laughed them off due to the ignorance of that statement because I knew (and they too) that I had to take care of myself and my family while on this earth. Nothing was done and ignorance was bliss. We continued to teach without funding or support from some parents and most government officials. It was expected that teachers would provide what was needed for their classrooms and for their students from their own pockets. Why the expectation? It is in our personalities and it is in our DNA. We became teachers because of our love for children. Our rose colored glasses made us think we could change the world. We pressed forward in a system that took advantage of those characteristics that made us great teachers. Our greatest strengths became our greatest weaknesses. In return, the rest of the world went on in denial or just didn’t know. When the parents of my students came into my classroom, they thought that their tax dollars were at work. When I explained to them that everything they saw (excluding textbooks) was purchased out of my own pocket over the years, they were amazed and bewildered. I helped create the monster that stands before us today. I was quite and just kept moving forward and did what was expected. I protested here and there when the opportunity provided itself, but it seems that wasn’t enough. This monster can’t be ignored anymore! The reality of the situation is this. Until the adults of this world put our children first, the outcome will be the same. The difference between your current situation and my experience is the severity of the problems. They have escalated over the years and continue to get worse instead of better. Times have changed and they will continue to change. The question is how. Silence isn’t golden anymore. Having the courage to voice your opinion is a great start for which you should be commended.

    1. I really hope you are enjoying your retirement. From your post, I can really believe that you were one of the great teachers. You have nailed it.

  9. I am afraid that many of his comments could be applied to almost all 50 states but they are not as bad as OK. You are as right wing as right can get and people vote against their own self interests. Lets face it there are some people who should never be allowed to breed but we can’t have that conversation now can we as that would not be very PC. Want to eliminate poverty and violence? Stop breeding ! Problem solved.

    1. Ellen McGinnis Avatar
      Ellen McGinnis

      Children do not create or cause poverty and violence. It is a lack of basic parenting–parents who care more about themselves than about their precious children. If you are going to be a parent, you had better be prepared to sacrifice–your sleep, your time, your energy, and most importantly, your love. This isn’t about race or class. There are plenty of crummy rich parents who have no time, energy, or desire to raise children. Their children may not live in poverty and violence, but they are every bit as needy emotionally as their poorer classmates. Neither group is ready to learn when they arrive at school each day because their basic needs for food, shelter, and most importantly again–love, are not being met. Who cares about fractions, nouns, the capitol of Vermont, when you are hurting so badly physically and emotionally? Until parents of all classes and races get their acts together, children will be the ones damaged and education will suffer.

      1. Hold the parents accountable. It’s not hard to identify them and for children to be removed from the the horrendous situation some face.
        It’s a lack of will by teachers and others who fail to report the situations that allows so many to continue

        1. Wow…now you’re blaming the parents! You really are a piece of work. It’s always everyone else’s fault. You sound just like a crummy politician. I don’t see you doing anything to make the world a better place. All you can do is criticize and name call others. How very SMALL you are.

          1. exactly what name did I call anyone? Importantly, your post indicates that teachers should not report child abuse. Your type of thinking, the wring of hands rather than take affirmative action is exactly why parents who abuse their kids are able to do so

      2. I used to live in Santa Barbara. The rich parents were often worst than the less so. Busy with travel, entertaining, whatever. My son played little league. One kid’s very rich parents never came to any games and picked him up late every time. Poor little guy was growing up on his own.

  10. James E. Wimes Avatar
    James E. Wimes

    I am a retired teacher and Administrator in Chicago. I have wanted to be a teacher since the 4th grade. i retired because the BOE decided to close my high school to open 3 magnet schools that less than 4 years later are failing the students. Our governor has cuts funding at every level of education.
    Teachers and staff are being laid off. The union is threatening to strike. The parents need to go to school themselves to thank the teachers for caring about their children. I know exactly what the teacher in OKC is talking about. I have been there and understand low salary and abuse of parents. From Maine to California; Washington to Florida legislators
    need do there jobs. to ensure every one get a chance at life liberty and the persuite of happiness. A proper education is the avenue to that promise. Mr. Wedel thanks for your letter to the fools of this nation.

    A teacher for life
    James E. Wimes
    Retired USAF and Chicago Public School

    1. Your post calls into question your teaching.

      You wrote, “From Maine to California; Washington to Florida legislators
      need do there jobs. to ensure every one get a chance at life liberty and the persuite of happiness. A proper education is the avenue to that promise. Mr. Wedel thanks for your letter to the fools of this nation.”

      I hope you didn’t grade papers for spelling in as in your “persuite” I hope you didn’t employ name calling in your class as in “the fools of this nation.” I’d hope you once knew your pronouns as in, “there jobs.”

      1. John why don’t you shut your pie hole. You are nothing but cruel and narcissistic. You think you know better than everyone else and have all the answers and have the right to judge others. People make typos all the time, Mr. Perfect. You sound like you have some Mommy issues and didn’t get very much attention growing up – just like some of these children that are being spoken about. My advice, go give your comments to someone that actually cares, which is no one on here.

        1. Oh what a rant. Your attempts to use negative labels to avoid the issues is emblematic of a person unable to offer substance to a discussion.
          Your type thinks people are never to be held accountable.

  11. Veronica Gutierrez-Martinez Avatar
    Veronica Gutierrez-Martinez

    I know this isnt much. But I want to say thank you to every single unseen teacher out there. You educate MY child. You spend 8 hrs a day with them. You provide food, compassion and a shoulder to cry on (amoung many other things). My 20yr old is deaf. My 17 yr old has learning issues. I have never met such LOVING, COMPASSIONATE HUMAN BEINGS, as the teachers my kids had. You are the ones educating our future. Doing such a thankless job, with limited/no resources, and alot of out of pocket expense. Yet you dont care about yourself. You put OUR children before you. I go to parent-teacher nights. It saddens me when you see the check in log have 2-3 names on it. You have a bright smile and cookies laid out for us parents. Im not much, but it isnt lost on me. And my kids? Mine tell me all you do. I know that small gift card I give you for Christmas isnt enough to repay your kindness, your love. My family and I? We thank you. Thank you. For being there when I missed something important. For your emails. Your calls. Asking how my son’s surgery went. How MY surgery went. You are far from perfect. But your heart, your passion & your love for the profession is beyond words. Thank you.

  12. Just a note to say thanks for caring for our kids…it is appreciated greatly.

  13. …and as far as the people on welfare, make the recipients come in for a drug test (paid for by the government, of course) before they receive and periodically as they continue to receive…

  14. If it’s any consolation to you American teachers, European teachers are facing the self-same battles.

  15. So much for the results of “separation of church and state” which is really about the Administrations of each and ALREADY happened hundreds of years ago! No Pope, or other religious leader, dictates which books our schools should buy, who to hire, what subject matter to teach, etc. We continue to MISUSE terms, “separation of Church and State” to use ‘the state’ to separate Citizens from God, although our Founding Fathers, included the Bible as a part of the curriculum for a Reason. Take out the study time about dinosaurs and add in Bible study time. There is nothing different about believing the books in the schools about Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, George Washington, etc. are true. How do you know Washington really crossed the Deleware? The books says so. Let’s see what people believe about that event 2000 years from now.
    Jesus Christ, is real enough that the Romans, the largest government at the time, hunted down people who recognized the Miracles proved beyond a doubt, that Jesus Christ is not mere man. Our hearts are empty because so many were never given the opportunity to at least study the Bible which our schools used to provide, so they learn to recognize the dangers of this world, starting with ourselves, learn how to fill ourselves with strength, comfort and even joy despite our environment, and the perseverance to make ourselves better when earthly parents are contaminated. We have to DEVELOP the WHOLE PERSON. Schools were to act as checks and balances to fill in gaps where parents couldn’t.
    RESTORE: SUPPLIES, SAFETY STAFF, BIBLE STUDY and PRAYER to develop internal strength needed to rise up from hopeless surroundings. NO religious administration is running the show, but the State Administration has to realize that ‘We the People’ have to know God to so that ‘In God We Trust’ is truly part of our daily life.

    1. but of course you’re right. Our country is under assault with and without by those folks who hate our traditions, values and founding principles.
      Check out Hitler, Lenin, Mao for the plan to install an all powerful central government – abolish religion, abolish the middle class, create and maintain class warfare/envy and render people dependent on government for housing, food and healthcare

  16. Manuel A. Simo Avatar
    Manuel A. Simo

    My name is Manuel Arturo Simó Maceo. I’m 65 years old, a naturalized citizen – originally from the Dominican Republic- although I’ve resided and created my family, four children, a boy and three girls, in the state of Arizona in the United States since 1964.
    I served during the Viet Nam era aboard the U.S.S. Intrepid; now a museum in the city of New York. I’m retired living on the “entitled” measly income from Social Security that some politicians want to take away. As a way of subsidizing the before mentioned entitlement – and in order to share some of the knowledge acquired through the decades to our youth- I’ve become a substitute teacher in the Gilbert, Arizona School District, which is the reason behind me taking the time to write to you. I’ve noticed every deplorable condition that you speak about in your letter and it breaks my heart to do so because I see the dedication of your colleagues in this noble profession. The sacrifices you and them make should be rewarded way above on what it is but I’ve come to the conclusion that the idea stated by Lincoln in his Gettysburg address of “government of the people, by the people and for the people” will never come close to reality in this country. In fact every day it becomes more obvious that our so called ‘”Democracy,” hidden behind the laws so blatantly manipulated through our congress by the lobbyists of the corporations of America, are striving to maintain our children ignorant so that in the end, the only thing they will be able to do is consume the products that they themselves produce and to fight the wars that protect those so called national interest that belong to that select minority. It’s obvious that our children don’t matter – at least not those of the general population – the proof of it you have eloquently expressed. The majority of the politicians in our government don’t care. They’re not there to serve us; they only use us to reach the position to enrich themselves through the so called “election process” to reach the corruption of the government. Our children don’t matter. You don’t matter. Those that like you sacrifice, time; energy, compassion and dedication to educate the masses don’t matter. The laws don’t matter. They can be changed to benefit those that have the mean to change them to fit their interest.
    I applaud your dedication and your honesty, unfortunately, the only thing that will give precedent to the education of our children will only occur when the second American Revolution occurs and the government truly becomes of the people, by the people and a government for the people.

  17. One thing those SOB’s can’t stand is for somebody to tell ths truth about them so you probably won’t be allowed to be in a position to criticize them. The mn reason that people hate politics is because of the politicians but maybe you can break that chain. Run for office on a platform of truth. Maybe people are ready to hear it.

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