By Kyle Olson
Tuesday, January 08, 2013
The Chicago Teachers Union is not just about looking out
for its members’ interests. The union wants to fundamentally change America,
too.
That shift occurred when the radical Karen Lewis was
elected as its president two years ago. She’s best known for mocking U.S.
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan’s lisp and for taking on - and defeating -
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel in the district’s first teachers’ strike in a
generation.
CTU leaders have been on a victory lap of sorts since the
September strike, with union activists seeing themselves as protectors of union
power during a time of membership decline and education reform at the state and
local level.
They’ve also taken on the role of social activities,
fighting for causes like the Occupy movement and gay marriage, which have
nothing to do with education.
Some union leaders have called for violence and other
radical tactics to achieve social goals.
When Lewis appeared at the Illinois Labor History
Society’s “Salute to Labor’s Historic Heroes from the History Makers of Today,”
she didn’t disappoint the crowd. She threw gasoline onto the fire of class
warfare, and even mentioned mob killings of wealthy Americans.
“… Do not think for a minute that the wealthy are ever
going to allow you to legislate their riches away from them. Please understand
that. However, we are in a moment where the wealth disparity in this country is
very reminiscent of the robber baron ages. The labor leaders of that time,
though, were ready to kill. They were. They were just – off with their heads.
They were seriously talking about that.”
Some in the audience laughed and clapped at her remark.
“I don’t think we’re at that point,” Lewis laughingly
replied, without specifying when “that point” might arrive. “And that’s scary
to most people. But the key is they think nothing of killing us. They think
nothing of putting our people in harm’s way. They think nothing of lethal
working conditions.”
She then used schools without air conditioning as an
example of “lethal working conditions.”
The true labor leaders of the “robber baron” age would
probably roll over in their graves and remind Ms. Lewis that she and her
colleagues have it quite good.
Big salaries with an average income in the $70,000 range.
Generous benefits and pensions. Limited work days and nine-month work years.
What are these people complaining about?
Lewis also used the occasion to mock “job creators.”
“Which side are you going to be on? So are we going to be
on the side of justice? Are we going to be on the side of a living wage for
every person? Or are we going to be on the side of people whose entire
mentality is based on a lie. ‘Job creators.’ Really? Then why have we lost so
many jobs?”
With such a cynical, un-American attitude coming from
their union president, does anyone really expect Chicago teachers to introduce
students to the many virtues of the free market system, or the nobility of
taking a risk to become an entrepreneur and therefore a “job creator”?
As domestic terrorist-turned-professor Bill Ayers
acknowledged, leftists have the power in our schools and classrooms, and
they’re taking full advantage.
The Chicago Teachers Union is the tip of the spear in
terms of “social justice unionism.” It’s a union led by far-left radical
activists who are determined to alter American society through our schools and
children. Advocating for the interests of teachers is simply a means toward a
larger and nastier goal.
No comments:
Post a Comment