Bob
Braun covered education for the Star-Ledger in New Jersey for fifty years. He
retired from reporting, and now he writes one of the best blogs in the nation.
And this is one of his
best. He explains that he supports teachers and he supports the
teachers’ union, and no one pays him to do it (as critics charge). Those who
hate public schools can’t believe that anyone would defend them unless they
were paid to do so. Those who hate unions can’t believe that anyone would side
with them unless they were paid to do so. They are wrong.
He
writes:
So,
yes, I support unionism–for private and public employees, including teachers.
Teacher unions have helped many urban residents achieve middle-class economic
status and that translates into better lives for their children. I do not
believe it is a coincidence that corporate reforms that have led to school
closures, Teach for America, charter expansion, and other changes have come
just at a time when many persons of color finally got good, secure jobs as
teachers and other public employees. Yes, I do believe many so-called “reforms”
are aimed at African-American school employees.
One
deranged blogger–a suburban school board member from Lawrenceville–has called
me a “loyal union lackey.” Recently, she quoted none other than a paid charter
supporter from Montclair–and former spokesman for the disgraced Cami
Anderson–in her continuing rants against me. I am an outsider, they say,
because I live in Elizabeth, a city that abuts Newark and is a hell of lot more
like Newark than either Montclair or Lawrenceville.
I
have been accused of “working” for the union. Readers will note I have one
advertiser, a neighborhood restaurant that is almost a second home to me. Both
the New Jersey Education Association (NJEA) and the Newark Teachers Union (NTU)
have offered to buy advertising on this site. I have refused to accept those
offers for the very reason suggested by the lying criticism of me–that I would
express support for these organizations only because I was paid to do it. No,
my friends, this blog doesn’t make any money–whether I have one reader or, as
happened last spring with my coverage of Pearson’s spying on New Jersey
students, 1.5 million. Bob Braun’s Ledger is brought to you primarily by my
Social Security and well-earned pension checks.
People
who are motivated by money can’t believe that anyone is different from
themselves. Bob Braun is different. He writes what he believes, not because he
is paid.