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WAS BARACK OBAMA TALKING TO PARENTS?
Published on Jan 31, 2010Email To Friend    Print Version

I'm not surprised. When has my viewpoint been mainstream? When's the last time I saw things the same way as those who are paid handsomely to shape public opinion?

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PRESIDENT Barack Obama's State of the Union address was longer, I hear, than any other from a United States president in our nation's history. In that lengthy speech from Wednesday night, the man dispensed a bit of parental advice among his many words detailing where the country is and where it should be going.

While his words on education didn't really call us rulers of the household clan by name, but whenever I hear education reform mentioned it includes parents without so much as saying so. Advice? I think so. But Obama phrased it differently - "reform" was the word he used. But can there really be educational reform "that raises student achievement, inspires students to excel in math and science," without putting parents on notice?

That's what I see as advice.

OK, the pundits in their ongoing analysis of what the president said don't quite see things my way as they were too busy reporting on how the focus groups perceived the speech, and how many Republicans in the chamber slept, didn't applaud or jump to their feet like the Democrats did.

I'm not surprised. When has my viewpoint been mainstream? When's the last time I saw things the same way as those who are paid handsomely to shape public opinion?

How are we going to, as Obama proclaimed, "turn around failing schools that steal the future of too many young Americans, from rural communities to inner cities?" While President Obama spoke emphatically about higher education, students cannot get there without a concrete foundation and that begins at home.

Parents you've been advised. Are you listening?

What must we think the man in the White House was talking about when he said: "In the 21st century, one of the best anti-poverty programs is a world-class education. In this country, the success of our children cannot depend more on where they live than their potential." Reform can be seen as the answer and the word, but I'm going to claim that like charity beginning at home, recognizing a child's potential begins in the same place.

It was advice to parents but it was couched in the words, " ... the best anti-poverty program is a world-class education." I took that to mean stop letting the lack of money and where one lives be the excuse for parents not making sure their kids have a good education.

Maybe I was reading into the State of the Union address something the president had said when he was on the campaign trail in Beaumont, TX. "It's not good enough for you to say to your child, `Do good in school,' and then when that child comes home, you got the TV set on, you got the radio on, you don't check their homework, there is not a book in the house, you've got the video game playing."

OK. OK. I give! I'll call it parents being advised to reform.