OPINION
THE MESA TRIBUNE | AUGUST 29, 2021
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Arizonaâs most thankless job: school board member BY DAVID LEIBOWITZ Tribune Columnist
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ost of us like to believe weâre decent people. We give a few bucks to charity, we volunteer, maybe even help a friend move. But be real: Thereâs being a decent human and then thereâs going above and beyond. Like by serving on your local school board. If thereâs a volunteer role existent in Arizona today that I cannot wrap my head around, itâs that one. And the past year of headlines â full of protests, threats and extreme surliness â have only deepened my confusion. Our state has about 240 school boards and 1,200 board members. Each of them deserves a medal. Or our prayers. Because anyone who does that job for $0 a year deserves something in return. School board members begin their ca-
reers by running for election. You speak at public forums, knock on doors, stand in front of Safeway, anywhere you can meet a few voters, most of whom pay attention for 14 seconds before pushing past you like youâre a human turnstile. Then, say you win. That earns you the privilege of going to 25 or 30 weeknight meetings annually, many of which last for hours and involve a âcall to the public.â If youâve never been to a school board or municipal council meeting, lucky you. Iâve attended many, and trust me: Most members of the public who answer this call do so because no sane human being has ever listened to them for three minutes straight without dialing 911. Itâs like open mike at an insane asylum, minus the lithium. And that was before COVID, before anti-mask protests, and before machinations over Critical Race Theory. Nowadays, your average school board meeting frequently resembles Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol. Minus the gunďż˝ire â so far.
Down south near Tucson, the April 27 meeting of the Vail governing board required sheriffâs deputies before the meeting even started. About 150 antimaskers â some armed â stormed the meeting, pushing past school district employees, screaming and berating board members and refusing to wear masks, per Pima Countyâs mandate. âThere was a handful of people â I donât know exactly how many â who either donât have kids in the school district, donât live in the school district, donât live in the county, who came with the express purpose of whipping up that group,â Supt. John Carruth told the Arizona Education News Service. Talk about needing more hobbies. The Litchďż˝ield Elementary School District has degenerated into chaos over the passage of an âequity statementâ last December. Since then, the Arizona Attorney Generalâs Ofďż˝ice has been involved and protests have become a regular feature of board meetings. Last week, Dr. Tara Armstead, the
school boardâs only Black member, resigned and scorched the 12,000-student district on her way out the door. âI will not say thank you for the time that I served here,â said Armstead, âor express any gratitude or appreciation because, for the ďż˝ive months I have been here, I have been treated like Iâm not an expert in the ďż˝ield and have no idea what Iâm talking about.â The Scottsdale Uniďż˝ied School District Governing Board has been equally protest-laden and chaotic. Last week, Board President Jann-Michael Greenburg lost his temper over the distribution of a neo Nazi comic book on some campuses. Greenburg stage whispered an expletive into a hot microphone. He later publicly apologized. âIâm very sorry about that,â Greenburg explained. âI have to admit it was done out of frustration in the moment.â The wonder is, more school board members donât drop f-bombs. Or outright quit. Because thereâs surely no more thankless job in this state. â
a simpler and more sinister goal: the end of the USA as a democratic republic. While his immediate successor, Donald Trump, was widely viewed as âDisruptor-in-Chief,â itâs worth recalling that the Barack Obama of 2008 routinely pledged on the campaign trail to âfundamentally change America as we know it.â In many ways, he succeeded. From the enactment of Obamacare to the politicization of our military and intelligence apparatus, and on through the exploitation of racial disharmony, our 44th President lit long, slow fusesâŚnow set to detonate. How does Mr. Obama avoid responsibility? Simple. He employs euphemisms and administers âverbal tranquilizers.â Though his mask may slip occasionally, such an occurrence is usually explained
away by an infatuated press corps. A recent example of Obama speaking softly and sticking it to Republicans can be found in his remarks to the American Library Association in late June. There, he was asked about his biggest concern for the future, and responded this way: âThe degree to which misinformation is now disseminated at warp speed, in coordinated ways that we havenât seen before.â The former president then expounded on his âconcernâ by quickly adding a political dimension: âAnd that the guardrails I thought were in place around many of our democratic institutions really depend upon the two parties agreeing to those ground rules, those guardrails. And that one of them right now doesnât seem as connected to them.â Call it âaccusation by insinuation and omission,â preceded by âindictment
through redeďż˝inition.â All of it delivered in a calm, âthoughtfulâ manner. Translated into conservative context, Mr. Obama is basically saying this: âLetâs call investigative reports and assertions from the Right âmisinformationâ so that they can be immediately discredited.â âMoreover, Republicans need to know their place! They need to return to the passive, polite people they used to be, accepting election irregularities for the âgreater good,â which of course keeps our side in power.â The Left has made it a priority to politicize the pandemic; that continues with the use of government funds following the âObama Directive.â Check out this headline from the broadcasting trade journal Radio Ink in its Aug. 19 edition: âCPB Tar-
Biden is âďż˝inishing the jobâ for his former boss BY JD HAYWORTH Tribune Columnist
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arack Obama did not go gently into that good presidential retirement. While most of his predecessors departed once their âleaseâ at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue expired, Mr. Obama decided to remain. Now with his âNumber Twoâ elevated to âNumber One,â the former president sticks around with an up-close view and an important role in Joe Biden âďż˝inishing the job,â as Mr. Obama put it in an interview with The New York Times. Sympathetic journalists take that to mean that the 46th President will work to complete the progressive policy goals envisioned by the 44th. Americans with a different political point of view fear the expression conveys
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