short takes

Feb. 8th, 2005 08:35 pm
cellio: (moon-shadow)
[personal profile] cellio
Prior to receiving an invitation to one I had not heard the word "webinar", but I instantly understood what it meant. That's a good sign in new vocabulary. (Contrast with, for example, "blog".) Not that I'm eager to start talking about webinars (let alone holding them), but still.

This week's episode of 24 included a PSA saying, essentially, "not all muslims are terrorists". Well duh. If the show were one of those fake documentaries I could see something like that, but doesn't everyone understand that 24 is fiction? And anyway, it looks like that's going to become very, very obvious next week, unless the previews are very misleading.

Someone posted "flushing 101" posters in the restrooms at work. I first saw the poster in a stall where the previous occupant had not flushed. I hope that wasn't the person who posted the sign.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-02-12 02:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sekhmets-song.livejournal.com
Yeah, from the comments I have heard, I do think it has been very different. I remember a news story, shortly after 9/11, when a white woman somewhere in the south (I don't remember where, other than it was a city along the I-75 corridor) called the cops because she saw two arabic guys having lunch at the diner she and her son were at. She said she heard them talking about "bringing something down" and assumed they were talking abut a plane or a building. So the state police chased these guys down, on nothing more sinister than that. CNN and FoxNews even carried the story as "breaking news." Once found, the two turned out to be medical students returning to school in Florida (mostly likely talking about bringing suitcases or some such down with them, if you even believe she didn't make that part up). The story was met with incredulity, here, and a lot of head shaking. No one would even take note of two arabic men in a diner, here, let alone assume that "bringing something down" had anything sinister in it. The arabic faces at the diner would just be one more variation in the incredible diversity that makes up the metro Detroit scene.
And that diversity is truly a marvelous thing. I wouldn't change it for the world! I went to a grade school, called Burton International, that allowed the students from bilingual households to spend some of their daily school time studying in their native tongues. Children from a wide array of backgrounds (Chinese, Singh, Arabic, Hispanic, Nigerian, to name the few I can remember off the top of my head) would, first, get involved in the program to ease their transition into an English speaking classes (assuming that they needed that particular help), but then were allowed to continue language studies in their own language. The result was that they were not required to be "homogenized" into some bland "Americanness," but could retain their native culture, while also being able to function within the dominant culture. It was viewed, by those of us from single-language homes, as something that added to the rich cultural environment of our school, enhancing the educational experiences for all of us there. I would say, from my experiences with other school districts, since, that this program was a thing unique to Detroit, one that the rest of the country's schools would benefit from!

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