EDITORIAL A GLASS DARKLY.POOR, poor Roy Romer Roy R. Romer (born October 31, 1928 in Garden City, Kansas, United States) was the 39th governor of Colorado and served as the superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District from 2001 to 2006. . As the retiring superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District The Los Angeles Unified School District (the "LAUSD") is the largest (in terms of number of students) public school system in California and the second-largest in the United States. Only the New York City Department of Education has a larger student population. , he feels like he's under constant personal attack from those who want to seize control of the city's public schools for their own personal and political benefit. They say it's just about fixing a failed school system. But Romer knows better. He knows what Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and his vast army of supporters really want -- to topple the greatest leader the LAUSD LAUSD Los Angeles Unified School District (Los Angeles, CA) ever had and tarnish tarnish, n 1. surface discoloration or loss of luster by metals. Under oral conditions, it often results from hard and soft deposits. 2. a chemical process by which a metal surface is discolored or its luster destroyed. his achievements. This is how it appears the story line is playing in Romer's mind, where a persecution complex has clearly developed. How else to explain how he might have made such a political faux pas as to compare the plight of the LAUSD to that of Japanese-Americans who were rounded up, relieved of their possessions, property and businesses and interned in concentration camps during World War II? It was all so clear to Romer: Anti-Japanese lies were being used to foment fo·ment tr.v. fo·ment·ed, fo·ment·ing, fo·ments 1. To promote the growth of; incite. 2. To treat (the skin, for example) by fomentation. public anger during the war, just as he believes the mayor is using lies about the LAUSD to foment public anger over the failures of local schools. Cringe. Is the wealthy former Colorado governor and tractor salesman being robbed of his possessions, locked up in jail, facing angry, hate- filled mobs? Obviously, in Romer's mind, it must look that way. Here he's done this brilliant job of building schools (without really integrating them as neighborhood centers) and raised test scores (without lowering the dropout (1) On magnetic media, a bit that has lost its strength due to a surface defect or recording malfunction. If the bit is in an audio or video file, it might be detected by the error correction circuitry and either corrected or not, but if not, it is often not noticed by the human rate) and these sinister forces are trying to convince people something is fundamentally wrong in the LAUSD. Romer really should have known better. There are certain historical events that are still raw enough that most people know enough to tread on To trample; to set the foot on in contempt. to follow closely. - Deut. xxxiii. 29. See also: Tread Tread lightly, if at all. Those would include the Holocaust, Sept. 11, 2001, and the internment of Japanese-Americans. It diminishes and exploits history's horrors to compare them to petty political grievances. But what the offended may not realize is that Romer wasn't being insensitive when he said the propaganda being spread about LAUSD is akin to the racist, ugly misinformation mis·in·form tr.v. mis·in·formed, mis·in·form·ing, mis·in·forms To provide with incorrect information. mis spread to get Americans on board with the Japanese internment plan. He actually really believes it. Therein lies Romer's biggest problem. His head games aren't earning him or the school district any points in this struggle over governance. He could have been part of the reform effort from the start, even led it. Instead he chose to fight it, defending his achievements and declaring every reformer an enemy. Is it any wonder, then, that he now sees himself as a victim of historic proportions? Ease up, Roy. You've done a lot of things well and left a lot of work still to be done. There's still time to change course and go out a winner. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion