Maynards of East Kentucky

I know it’s a bit of a reach, but if anyone in the audience has an extra copy of The Maynards of East Kentucky laying around, I’d love to borrow it.

In case you can’t read the small print, this is what’s written at the bottom of the cover… “On Brushy Creek in 1813, James Maynard built up the sides of a rock gap and lived in a rude cabin for a year. Here was born the first child on Brushy, Christopher “Kit” Maynard in 1814.”

And, I might add, that Maynard child born on the banks of the Brushy, wasn’t just any child. He was white… The following comes from the publisher of the book.

“This is a book of genealogy of Maynards that were traced back to the Conquest of England by William the Conqueror. It spans ten generations and proudly presents a Maynard as the first white child born on Lower Brushy of Pike County, Kentucky.”

As you can imagine, I’m curious to read the book, if only to find out all the things that my ancestors were the first white people to do. I wouldn’t be surprised if, in addition to giving birth, my ancestors were also the first white people to stub their toes, eat beans, and point out clouds that looked like boobies.

My main reason for wanting to see the book, however, is because I think it might help prove once and for all that I’m related to Lieutenant Robert Maynard of the Royal Navy – the man credited with bringing the pirate Blackbeard to justice in 1718. (According to the story, Maynard and Blackbeard traded shots with pistols. Maynard hit Blackbeard, but didn’t kill him. The two men then clashed with swords, with Blackbeard gaining the advantage. At this point, a man on Maynard’s crew slashed Blackbeard’s throat. The name of that man, however, has been lost to history, illustrating the fact that glory always goes to those in charge.)

Posted in History, Mark's Life, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 38 Comments

Is this racist?

Remember that Obama impersonator I told you about a few days ago, who the folks at FOX News paid to fake debate Republican presidential candidate Gary Johnson? Well, he’s back. This same impersonator – a guy by the name of Reggie Brown – appeared this weekend in New Orleans, at the Republican Leadership Conference. Here he is on stage, just prior to a keynote delivered by RNC Chair Reince Preibus.

Watch it, and then tell me whether or not you think I’m being overly sensitive when I say that it’s racist… As much as I love Sanford and Son, I can’t help but think that comparing Michelle Obama to Aunt Esther isn’t such a good thing in the eyes of most white Americans.

Posted in Media, Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 23 Comments

One more post on the takeover of the Catherine Ferguson Academy

A few days ago, in a post about Detroit’s Catherine Ferguson Academy for pregnant and parenting teens, and how, at the order of Roy Roberts, the Emergency Financial Manager placed in charge of the Detroit Public Schools, it was being turned into a charter school, I posed a question about how much it presently cost to run the school. I asked because it was mentioned in a Detroit Free Press article, that making the CFA a charter school would save on the order of $2 million dollars. The article didn’t, however, say whether or not that was $2 million per year, or $2 million over the course of several years. Furthermore, it didn’t mention how much the annual budget of the internationally-aclaimed school was to begin with. Well, the following comment was just left by a reader calling herself FoodFighter:

I’ve been involved in this story for awhile, and here are two pieces that I wrote recently about it. The first was after the May 10 march through Detroit, published in the June edition of iSPY, and the second is simply a short update + photos after attending Thursday’s rally.

I would add that the whole EFM rationale about insufficient funds driving the closures & cut-backs is simply a rationalization they are using to promote Charter takeover. It is not reflective of the financial reality of the school. I have been to CFA twice in the last two weeks & both times that I was there (once as a guest on a class field trip for students from Roberto Clemente & once at the rally), I was reminded by faculty & staff that although the school costs $1.7 million a year to run, $1 million of that comes from federal grant money, as all their students are considered ‘high risk’. With that said, that boils down to about $300,000 more than other DPS schools (aka ~$2000 per student). So, in other words, for those of you who think this is all about financing –think again– it’s much more a political maneuver to remove the job security for DPS teachers while also silencing a marginalized yet empowered population that has been slowly gaining a voice.

I urge all of you to watch ‘Grown in Detroit’, the award-winning film about CFA, if you have not already.

And here’s another source for that $$ data that I mentioned.

That last link takes you to a piece by Free Press columnist Jeff Gerritt, who has the following to say:

…The argument that high costs drive the financially strapped district’s decision to close Ferguson appears bogus. The school offers free daycare for its 120 babies, on-site medical services and relatively low student-to-teacher ratio — a key ingredient to success. Those things cost and, on paper, Catherine Ferguson’s annual budget is high — $1.7 million. But more than $1 million of that comes from state and federal at-risk grants, including Title 1 funds. All in all, the school probably costs $300,000 more a year in general funds (mostly for early childhood education) than a similar-sized DPS school. That’s chump change for for an education that could break a cycle of poverty and failure for generations. Boys whose mothers haven’t finished high school, for example, are 10 times more likely to go to prison, where they each cost taxpayers $35,000 a year.

These young women carry a lot into the classroom. When I asked 10 of them last year how many had a parent who had been incarcerated, nine of 10 raised their hands. Six students had one parent at home; the other four had none. More than 90% of the students at Ferguson meet income guidelines for free or discounted lunches, as do 77% in the district. But the attention CFA staff members give their students tells them they will make it — and most do. Schools often produce pride, but I’ve never seen a school generate the loyalty and love from its students and staff that Catherine Ferguson does…

I personally can’t see how a for-profit, charter version of the Catherine Ferguson Academy could possibly deliver the same level of service, with considerably less money. (Not only will they be given significantly less funding to work with by DPS, but they’ll also be expected to turn a “profit” for the shareholders of Evans Solutions, the company behind the charter relaunch.) Whether or not you agree that the Catherine Ferguson Academy was singled out for closure because, as FoodFighter suggests, it was giving voice to a marginalized population, I think it’s clear that, at best, the move is shortsighted in the extreme. And, I think it demonstrates that the people at the top – the people making the decisions – don’t give a damn about the kids and the families that they’re elected to serve. They don’t care in the least that the Catherine Ferguson Academy was graduating kids at a much higher rate than other schools, and putting more kids in college. All they care about is keeping taxes low. Make no mistake about it – this is all about low taxes and cheap labor.

And here, in conclusion, is a little video of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie that I think sums up the attitude of Republicans on the subject of public education pretty accurately.

Posted in Education, Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

The takeover of America by the super-wealthy

This brilliant explanation by former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, as to what’s really been going on in America, economically speaking, has been going around the internet for the past few days. I suspect that most of you have already seen it, but I thought that I should put it up here on the front page, just in case some of you hadn’t.

While we’re on the subject, you might also be interested in checking out these graphs, presented by our friends at ThinkProgress.org, which clearly show, as Reich suggests, that the rich in America are contributing at historic lows…. Here’s one such example.

And, as all of this is going on, and as our once great nation is being defunded to the point of collapse, we somehow allow the national debate on patriotism to center on whether or not someone wears a flag pin on his lapel, or has a magnetic ribbon on the bumper of her car. I think it’s time to have a real conversation in this country as to what it means to be a patriot. In my opinion, what we’re seeing right now on the part of the super-wealthy in America is nothing short of treason.

Posted in Economics, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 19 Comments

Peeing women discuss MarkMaynard.com

This comic was left for me at the Corner Brewery tonight… If I’m understanding it correctly, two MarkMaynard.com readers happened to be urinating at the same time, in adjacent stalls, when a conversation about this site was struck up, and a friendship was formed.

[The lesson here, of course, is that, if you’re looking for new friends, all you need to do is talk about this site while excreting your various toxins… If you have a story about peeing, vomiting, or taking a dump while talking out loud about this site, we’d love to hear it. Please send in comics, videos, oil paintings, or what have you, and I’ll post them here… Extra points if the documented conversation takes place across a trough urinal.]

Posted in Mark's Life, Other, Ypsilanti | Tagged , , , , , , , | 38 Comments

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