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“Robert
Taft” Notes That Bilingual Means Double-Tongued
English For The Children’s Ron Unz Comments On Joe
Guzzardi
From: Ron Unz,
Chairman
English for the Children
As someone who's unfortunately very
much in the middle of these endless bilingual battles, I
have to correct some of the details in Joe Guzzardi’s
column
View from Lodi, CA: “Bilingual Education” Surviving —
With Help From Bush.
(1) In general, the Davis people
have been pretty good on "English." In fact, just a few
weeks ago, Davis
vetoed a bill sponsored by Richard Polanco, head of
the
Latino Caucus, which would have slightly
watered down Prop. 227. (The bilingual activists had
apparently harassed Polanco into sponsoring the bill and
Polanco's deep personal support for bilingual ed is best
indicated by the fact that just a few days after the
Davis veto, he was all smiles at a big press conference
endorsing Davis for reelection.) Your concerns about the
California State Board are outdated; they wobbled
earlier in the year under pressure from the bilinguals,
but I counter-attacked them ferociously in the media and
forced them back into line.
(2) Although it's true that the
relentlessly fanatic bilinguals are gaining in some
parts of California, on balance, they've lost lots of
ground over the last four years. In particular, during
the last year or two, gigantic
Los Angeles Unified School District has finally
gotten rid of most of its remaining bilingual programs,
and by a
remarkable coincidence immigrant test scores
shot up soon afterward. Bilingual victories in
several small districts hardly compensate for their
collapse in their
central LA fortress.
(3) A significant part of the
bilingual counter-offensive in California seems to be
led by the Bush Administration, which has apparently
been pressing the Davis appointees on several fronts.
Unfortunately, it seems that Bush appointed several
particularly fanatic bilingual activists in his
Department of Education and they're causing me a great
deal of trouble. This is hardly surprising, since under
Bush, Texas had some of America's worst Spanish-only
"bilingual programs," and Bush constantly praised them.
(4) My own national strategy
relies on the impact of a big win a few days from now in
Massachusetts, possibly the most liberal Democratic
state in America and a very influential East Coast media
center. The local
coverage and ferment there has been
enormous---nearly twenty
Boston Globe and
Boston Herald stories in the last four days
alone---and seems to be generating more popular
excitement than the governors' race or anything else.
Thursday's statewide Massachusetts poll had us up by
43(!) points, and we haven't needed to spend a single
dollar on advertising.
(5) Colorado is much tougher. As
you may have heard, some nutty billionaire heiress named
Pat Stryker dumped
$3 million into the No campaign a few weeks ago,
funding the largest media blitz in state history, and
we're desperately scrambling to survive. Fortunately,
people in New York and D.C. pay much more attention to
what happens in Massachusetts than in Colorado. And if
we somehow do eke out a victory in Colorado against such
enormous odds, the impact could be considerable. Dick
Lamm, the three-term Democratic governor who originally
established bilingual education there, is
starring in our (limited) radio spots, and they seem
to be getting a good reception.
(6) Your mention of
Santa Ana is ironic, since after Massachusetts, it's
the second linchpin of my national strategy. I'm backing
some local Latino parents there in their effort to
overthrow the rather corrupt pro-bilingual Latino
political leadership, and I think they have an excellent
chance of success. Santa Ana is the most
Spanish-speaking city in America, as well as one of the
most heavily immigrant and Latino. If the group I'm
backing wins, with their campaign built around on the
"English" issue, I'm hoping for considerable national
media coverage of this "man bites dog" result, and
resulting political momentum elsewhere.
Overall, I think I have things
reasonably well in hand, though the very real
possibility of a loss in Colorado would be
disappointing.
The Bush people are far and away my
most troublesome obstacles. But I think I can gradually
gain the upper hand over them.
Unfortunately, I'm having to fight
this national campaign virtually alone, with almost no
substantial help from anybody else, and this is a huge
burden and aggravation.
You also just can't IMAGINE how
sick and tired I am of "English" after all these years
of campaigning, and I would much rather be doing almost
anything else. But there's really no one else out there
who has any effectiveness...
Joe
Guzzardi replies:
From my perspective as a teacher in the California
language trenches, waivers still seem a very big deal.
There are lots of ways to subvert the process,
especially in Los Angeles/Southern California.
As I
said, and Ron Unz confirms, Bush is very much in favor
of bilingual education; so his Education Secretary,
Paige, is in lock-step with him.
Among us friends, I will tell you that one very major
reason that all test scores have gone up recently is
that 1) teachers teach the test or 2) teachers give the
answers during the test. The latter is not pervasive but
more common that you would like to think. This
phenomenon is making all test results, and conclusions
drawn from them, unreliable. Kids do not know more at
all.
I
don't know anyone in southern California who feels that
English-Only is in the driver's seat, regardless of what
the law is.
October 28, 2002