Friday, January 30, 2026

MURPHY’S NEW LAW: IF IT CAN’T HAPPEN HERE, IT CAN HAPPEN HERE

     Let me begin with a digression to declare myself a “domestic terrorist.”  Others march and wave placards to protest police and other governmental abuses; I file complaints and write blogs to protest government misconduct.  To each, his own, I say.  I am safer; the police are not likely to claim that my desktop computer looked like a handgun.  But if the pen is mightier than the sword, then I attempt massacres.

At a time when the federal government is perpetrating outrages and trying to secure the cooperation of state and local governments, I write this blog as warning that, in New Mexico, state, county, and local governments seem predisposed to capitulate to federal pressures.  I cite previously discussed incidents to stress the failures of the legal establishment and law enforcement in Las Cruces, Dona Ana County, and New Mexico.  Some of these incidents resemble those which have occurred elsewhere and augur ill throughout all levels of government everywhere.  If New Mexican citizens do not take the threats seriously, the threats will assuredly take them seriously.

 

Few New Mexicans give much thought to law and order.  By not thinking about it, they do not have to do anything about it.  Their reason: they like to think that abuses at the local, state, and national level in the name of “public safety” do not happen in the Land of Enchantment or happen somewhere    else.  In a state noted for its persistent inability to address its major problems directly and effectively, such a response is entirely in character.  In other areas of public services—food security, health care, social services, public education, New Mexico ranks near or at the bottom of national assessments.  Seemingly, no one cares.

 

Elsewhere, many care.  The ICE and CBP killings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretty have aroused citizens in Minneapolis and St. Paul to take action to protect and support their neighbors who are people of color.  The killings are discrediting the Trump administration and the MAGA movement, probably because both victims were white and both killings were abundantly covered.  Obviously, many whites, in addition to people of color, now realize, if government thugs can kill innocuous whites on public streets in broad daylight, they can kill anyone anywhere for any or no reason.

 

One problem with public safety—law and order—is interlocking jurisdictions committed to protecting police officers from accountability.  One example: the response of the public safety community to LCPD Officer Jared Cosper’s killing of Sra. Amelia Baca in 2022.  First, LCPD Police Chief Miguel Dominguez responded with a pre-investigation creation of a highly edited recording and narrative which sought to justify the killing by representing Sra. Vega as a threat to Cosper.  Second, Dominguez convened the Multi-Agency Task Force to analyze the event.  According to a Memorandum of Understanding by the agencies involved—state, county, city, and campus police—, the LCPD, whose officer was the subject of the investigation—a clear conflict of interest ignored by all members of this group—led the investigation.  Third, the Task Force report went to Third Judicial District Attorney Gerald Byers for his determination whether to prosecute Cosper.  After promising a decision within a few days, Byers took several weeks before sending the case to Attorney General Raúl Torrez.  Fourth, Torrez hired Steve Ijames, an expert witness in use-of-force, who, in three-fourths of his cases, has defended officers charged with excessive use of force.  His report exonerated Cosper with problematic claims about mere possibilities to justify Cosper’s claims of fears for his life.  So, in a highly publicized case in which the unedited audio-visual recording persuaded most viewers that Cosper recklessly and aggressively killed Baca, public safety agencies rallied at all levels of government to protect the police officer.

 

In my far less dramatic case of police misconduct, local and state officials went out of their way to protect a police officer and to deny my constitutional rights.  Officer Juan Valles made five false allegations of code misconduct; the warning notice was placed in my file.  Internal Affairs took over five months to investigate my formal complaint; it found the allegations unfounded—that is, false.  But the LCPD hid the results; Police Chief Patrick Gallagher neither sent me IA’s report nor reported its findings, which I obtained only after filing an Inspection of Public Records Act request.  On the basis of that report, I filed a complaint with IA about a violation of due process; it was rejected.  I then filed a complaint with IA about bias-based policing; it was rejected on the grounds that it was no different from my previous complaint.  I filed both complaints separately with the New Mexico Office of the Attorney General, which did not acknowledge either complaint.  When I asked LCPD Police Chief Jeremy Story to remove the warning notice from my file, he first lied that there was no such file.  When I said that I could prove the file existed, he asked that I send him the proof; when I did, he promised to look into it, but he broke that promise and neither responded to me nor cleared my file.  I have to think that Story deals similarly with other citizens in minor matters and would very likely tell bigger lies and break bigger promises in major ones.  I pushed my case to make a point: police officials and senior attorneys go to great lengths to avoid accountability for themselves or co-professionals whenever possible.

 

Another instance of colleague protection: when I filed an 11-page complaint with 48 citations of supporting documents about Las Cruces City Attorney Jennifer Vega-Brown with the Disciplinary Board of the New Mexico Supreme Court, Deputy Disciplinary Counsel Christine E. Long took fewer than 20 days to reply that my complaint lacked “insufficient evidence to support allegations that Ms. Hays [sic!] has violated the Rules of Professional Conduct.”  The quality of the investigation is evident in the typographical error.

 

In short, the legal establishment and law enforcement exist to protect themselves before protecting public safety in matters large and small.  The New Mexico Office of the Attorney General investigates and prosecutes civilian and commercial violations of codes and laws; it avoids investigating or prosecuting violations by government officials.  Instance: I filed a complaint about evident violations of the Open Meeting Act by the three members of the Las Cruces City Council on the Public Safety Select Committee.  My complaint was first assigned to an intern.  Upon my criticism of that superficial treatment, my complaint was assigned to a regular attorney, who reported many citations to rationalize its secret meetings over a period exceeding 3 years.  However, the attorney did not address four major issues: the need for a secret committee; the failure to deliver, as chartered to do, information or recommendations to the City Council; an account of what the committee was doing instead; an explanation for its sudden closing after its secrecy was exposed.  I infer that the reason for rationalizing the committee’s secrecy was the threat posed by my complaint to the candidacies of two Democratic politicians running for office: former Las Cruces mayor Ken Miyagishima and current incumbent District 2 congressman (and former Democratic senator Martin Heinrich staffer) Gabe Vasquez., both of whom participated in this secret cabal.

 

Locally, in emulation of the federal law enforcement policies and practices, Dona Ana County Manager Scott Andrews, with the presumed  concurrence of County Commissioners, is allowing abuses at the Dona Ana County Detention Center which match or exceed those at ICE detention camps, including Camp Montana East at Fort Bliss, where the death of one internee was recently ruled a homicide.  Likewise, Story is emphasizing petty crime to justify militarizing the LCPD.  He requested state funding for five SWAT vehicles but refused to explain his reasons to me, City Councilor Cassie McClure, and State Representatives Joanne Ferrary and Nathan Small.  LCPD officers pointed rifles at Hispanic demonstrators last summer in the name of providing security to them.  He is exploiting Dominguez’s lowered recruitment standards—minimums: 19 years of age, high-school diploma, no college—by using film clips of police chasing fugitives to attract those, mostly young males, with aggressive propensities.  Worst of all, he invited federal police to help the LCPD deal with local crimes and justified it with the falsehood that such cooperation is commonplace.  In the context of current federal police policies and practices, I suspect Story of establishing his credentials for advancement with federal enforcement agencies.  I wish him well (elsewhere).

 

This reiteration of old facts and this revelation of new ones intend to suggest that the abuses of justice nationally have parallels at all levels of New Mexico government.  It is easy enough to point out the abuses by Trump and the agencies under the direction of his administration.  But it is more difficult to face up to such abuses and the potential for more abuses closer to home.  Because of the cultural propensity and the abundance of sand, New Mexicans are likely to bury their heads to avoid worrying about what can and seems increasingly likely to happen here.

Friday, January 23, 2026

IS ISRAEL A COLONIALIST OCCUPIER? TA-NEHISI COATES AND THE MESSAGE

     Ta-Nehisi Coates’s The Message is a widely acclaimed collection of four essays, one on journalism, three on problems in African and Asian countries.  The essay on journalism is a statement of Coates’s philosophy, which, as I understand it, boils down to the need for clear-eyed confrontation with the truth and its communication to serve social justice.  The problem with this philosophy is the potential conflict between truth, which is always assumed to be objective truth, and social justice, which cannot be assumed to mean the same thing to all people; a commitment to social justice might distort the truth.  In The Message, Coates tells the truth but not the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

The last and longest essay is a treatise entitled “The Gigantic Dream” on the Middle East conflict between Israel and the Arab-Muslim population in the West Bank.  The truth, as Coates presents it, is Israel’s efforts to colonize the West Bank and its brutal occupation.  The social justice which Coates seeks is the end of both.  But the truth is more complex, and social justice is likely chimerical.  Although Coates and Progressives generally regard Israel as a colonizer, they misconceive the concept of colonization and thus misapply it, yet differently.  Coates applies the concept to Israeli occupation of the West Bank; others apply it to Israel itself as well as the West Bank.  Although the fact of Israel’s brutal occupation is undoubted, its link to colonization is doubtful.  Most occupations are more or less brutal, but they need not precede or follow from colonization.  Coates’s analysis is marred by his bias in selected historical sources, his misconception of colonization, and his misperceptions of the occupation in his ten-day visit to Israel, the West Bank, but not Gaza.

 

•      •      •      •      •

 

In this ancient land, the old question—what is truth?—looms large and ominously.  Apparent facts might not be real facts.  Context in that place and in this time matters greatly in interpreting the “facts.”  Coates is unaware that context is hard to come by on a short visit, no matter how many conversations he had with Palestinian residents.  And he is less interested in the truth than his philosophy suggests.  Thus, he declares that he is not interested in listening to the rationales of what he regards as Israel’s colonial existence and oppressive occupation.  “I had no interest in hearing defenses of the occupation and what struck me then as segregation” (p. 148).  “What struck me” might be a long way from the truth, as impressions often are.  The result is not truth, but opinion, “facts” filtered through and shaped by preconceptions and biases, as suggested by his frequent references to slavery and segregation in the United States.

 

Coates’s comparison of the conditions of Palestinians under Israeli occupation to those of slaves under plantation regimes is more rhetorical than historical and more designed to smear Jews as if they were Simon Legrees.  But there are significant differences in these conditions.  Israelis control much in the lives of West Bank Palestinians but do not deprive them of all rights and property.  Slaveowners controlled every aspect of the lives of blacks, who had neither rights nor property, even possession of their own or their blood relatives’ bodies.

 

Without context and without background in both sides of the conflict, Coates can see and report details, but he cannot see—that is, understand—them.  For example, he notes the many checkpoints at which Palestinians must endure long waits and close inspections, while Israelis move through them unimpeded.  (A parallel might be more voting places in white areas than in black ones.)  He sees these checkpoints as instruments of occupation and segregation.  Yes, but he does not acknowledge the long history of Palestinian terrorism which has plagued Israel for decades and which makes checkpoints a sensible precaution against violence against its civilians, mainly Jews and some Muslims.  I doubt that there are many such instances, but I offer this one, not to exonerate Israel from the many and serious abuses of Palestinians in the West Bank, but to explain that observing something does not guarantee understanding it.  Coates sees the checkpoints and the different lines, but he does not see the reason for them, only their apparent similarity to Jim Crow practices in the United States.

 

Given the dynamics of conquest and occupation, the ways of rationalizing them and subsequently oppressing and exploiting the conquered, Israelis differ little from other conquerors who, throughout world history, have invaded other countries and dominated their populations.  Typically, they denigrate the indigenous populations and rationalize their abuses because they regard the natives as inferior.  Coates lacks this broader and unbiased historical perspective.  He thinks Israelis reflect a Euro-American mindset—conquest and occupation justified by white Christians suppressing savage and uplifting uncivilized natives—of the recent half millennium or so.  But the dynamics are universal and eternal, and not necessarily linked to colonization.  For instance, he apparently knows nothing about Japanese racist thinking prior to the end of World War II.  The Japanese thought themselves a master race and those whom they conquered and controlled inferiors, if not savages, who would benefit from Japanese domination.  But the Japanese established no colonies, at most enclaves to support exploitation of local resources.

 

•      •      •      •      •

 

In the current of present-day Progressive thought, Coates sees Israelis as colonizers in the tradition of European colonization.  He is not alone in this opinion; many demonstrating against Israel’s excessive reaction to the Hamas attack see Israel in the same way.  The point of the accusation is to discredit and reverse the Jewish project realized by the state of Israel—thus, the campus protesters’ rallying cry, “From the river [Jordan] to the sea [Mediterranean], Palestine will be free.”

 

To see Jews as colonizers implies that they are alien invaders, with no legitimate claim to the land.  The implication depends on the fact of the influx of European Zionists and Holocaust refugees into Palestine.  But these Jews supplemented the Jews living in Palestine as they always have.  Jews cannot be colonizers because they have held claim to the land by virtue of long residency.  There are two truths here.  One, since prehistoric times and long before Islam arose as a faith, Jews have lived in the “Holy Land,” which includes Judea and Samaria in the West Bank as part of “Greater Israel,” and have claims to it.  Two, non-Jews have always lived in this land, too, so their Arab-Muslim descendants have a solid claim to the land as well.  This situation in the “Holy Land” might be unique because of the multi-millennial coexistence, cohabitation, and contention of two peoples in the same land.  In short, Jews are not invaders and colonizers; they are developers.

 

In some sense, the land of Palestine belongs to no one and to everyone.  From time immemorial, invaders have conquered the land only to be evicted by other invaders or revolts by the residents.  From a historical perspective, the cycle seems never-ending and establishes a context which should qualify anyone’s claims to legitimate exclusive possession of the land and writers’—Coates’s—views of those claims to it.

 

In that cycle, Coates sees Israel’s emergence as a state, and its conquest and occupation of the West Bank as evidence of its imperialist/colonialist intentions from the beginning of the twentieth century.  He selects the writings of notorious but minority Zionists like Ze'ev Jabotinsky and incidental quotations from mainstream Jewish leaders to support his case.  But facts argue that Israel’s intentions were neither imperialist nor colonialist, at least not before 1967.  Although Israel routed larger Arab armies in its War for Independence in 1947-48, it retained only modest parcels of land beyond the boundaries of the UN Partition Plan for the division of the British Mandate.  For twenty years, it did nothing to extend its holdings into the West Bank or Gaza.  The tragedy of the Six-Day War in 1967 was that Israeli military power, justified by Egypt’s acts of war, succeeded in defending the country but corrupted it thereafter.  As they say, nothing fails like success.  As I have argued in a recent blog, Israel’s conduct in its occupation of the West Bank (Gaza held, then released) has betrayed the country’s and the Jewish religion’s principles and values.  Only slowly did Israel’s occupation of the West Bank evolve into incremental development.  Again, the concept of colonization does not apply, for Jews have always lived in this land and thus have a historical claim to the lands of Greater Israel.  Coates, in the myopia of a brief visit and little background, sees the present moment as typical.  What he does not see—he did not want to see—is that Israel, despite today’s grave flaws, still struggles to improve, as protests, legislation, judicial decisions, and law enforcement opposing the government’s conduct suggest.  Progress is not smooth, swift, or assured, but he nowhere recognizes the resistance to Israeli oppression and the efforts to alleviate or eliminate it.  Whether Israel of its own initiative will abandon the illegal settlements remains to be seen.

 

Coates offers no suggestion for going forward.  Instead, he offers finger-pointing and anger—“rage” is a word commonly used throughout—as if targeting one group or another can solve any problem or, according to his writer’s philosophy, reflect truth and promote social justice.  Is rage the message?  If so, he is one of many angry writers, especially self-righteous minorities and women, who justify themselves by expressing their anger and accusing someone else of exclusive responsibility for the world’s ills.  Even as an old, white man, I accept radical critiques of American society; even as a Jew, I accept radical critiques of Israel.  But I reject and resent anger- and hate-based ideological, especially Progressive, analyses which impede understanding, antagonize the parties to the conflict, and hinder them from negotiating their differences.  To put it bluntly, I think that writers like Coates, with pretensions to truth and social justice, should shut up or shape up, for right now they are in the way.

 

Otherwise, Coates might have suggested that the international community, which established the state of Israel and defined its borders, should enforce them and its other resolutions curtailing Israeli expansion by its illegal settlements.  Although the lands of the West Bank include the previous Jewish lands of Judea and Samaria, Israel must be enjoined to accept the loss of those lands to which it has some historical claim, not as colonists, but as residents, in order to restore peace in the “Holy Land.”  If a consortium of states can effect the return of Israel to the confines of the UN boundaries only by boycott, divestment, and sanctions, so be it.  The enforced end of Israeli occupation of the West Bank would be a small price to pay for that peace.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

“IN THE FIRST PLACE, GOD MADE IDIOTS. THAT WAS FOR PRACTICE. THEN HE MADE SCHOOL BOARDS.”

     Contrary to popular belief and AI summaries, Mark Twain must have been born and raised in Las Cruces.  He must have known the town, as it was then, to be “the first place.”  So it is no surprise that latter-day idiots recently returned three incumbents to the Board of Education who have no serious interest in public education.  Their interests are facilities, equipment, administrators, administrative staff, coaches, and teachers.  Their interest is not education; they are not concerned with policies about curriculum, teaching, or standards of educational achievement.  They have two concerns about students: attendance, which is the basis of some state funding, and graduation rates, which mean to placate parents and state officials.

Friday, January 9, 2026

A HAPPIER NEW YEAR?

Wishing for a happy new year is a stretch.

 

The revival of spirits on the Left and in the Middle because of Trump’s declining popularity and Democratic electoral successes in 2024 is the calm before the storm.

 

A recapitulation of Trump’s assaults on the Constitution and the country is superfluous.  His contempt for the rule of law and his corruption of the Department of Justice, including the FBI, are now well-known.  Trump has converted the Department of Homeland Security and its subagencies, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol (BP), into units of a national gestapo.  His foreign policy is a failure, alienating allies and undermining national interests.  Likewise, his domestic policy is demoralizing increasing numbers of Americans and harming the wellbeing of tens of millions. The non-legacy media has been doing an excellent job of describing and analyzing these assaults; the legacy media—New York Times, Washington Post, ABC, CBS, and NBC—not so much.

 

Assessments of Trump himself pre-occupy many but are pointless; they provide no means to curtail his impulses or arrest his conduct.  But the singularity of the man makes it necessary to at least characterize him in general terms: personally, a sociopath; socially, a vulgarian; and politically, a vandal.  His destruction of the East Wing and his debasement of the Kennedy Center say it all.  Altogether, he resembles nothing so much as a mob boss.  He surrounds himself with people who are or have been reduced to lickspittles.  How he will respond, if, as many expect, a “Blue Wave” in the November election overcomes their efforts to rig the outcome, is problematic.  He will do everything possible to reverse the results—to include the use of military forces to intimidate or interfere with votes, before the courts can act.  (My fear is that troops, in the event of protests, particularly election-related protests, will fire on civilians, ala Kent State, 1970.)  Failing his attempts, he will not only be angry at a loss of political power, but also afraid of revelations by House or Senate hearings.  Even if he pardons all of his political appointees, immunity from prosecution will not protect them from having to testify under oath without the refuge of the Fifth Amendment.

 

The original sins of SCOTUS should be laid to the machinations of Kentucky Republican Senator Mitch McConnell, now sidelined by the MAGA-aligned Congressional leadership of John Thune, who shepherded unqualified presidential nominees through confirmation.  But the real culprit is the Chief Justice John Roberts, a smirking preppie of privilege, who has, for two decades, bankrupted the law by increasingly corrupting legal reasoning and judicial conduct in favor of the rich, the white, and the well-born—and against the rest.  Under his leadership, SCOTUS has rendered decisions impairing democratic elections, civil rights, gender equality, abortion rights, and more, many curtailing or reversing precedents.  Recently, many such decisions have responded to administration claims of “emergencies” by resorting to and expanding the use of the “shadow docket,” by which the Court ignores legal reasoning or routine judicial processes and publishes diktats without justifications or hearings.  The accelerating drift of the Court in these decisions has been to embrace the “unitary executive theory,” which centers all power for running the government in the President.  What is surprising about this development is that the Roberts Court has embraced this theory during the presidency of the worst occupant of the office in American history; one can imagine realizing the theory during the crisis-riddled presidencies of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, or Franklin Delano Roosevelt—but Donald J. Trump?

 

Trump’s use of the military is frightening.  This aging, unwell man, unhinged to any cause higher than himself, has shown himself willing to abuse the military by deploying it against Americans, all the more so since he plainly deploys them against majority Democratic cities whose residents Trump deems “enemies of the state.”  Although he promised to end ongoing wars and not launch new ones, he has criminally bombed Iran because of its nuclear program, is criminally attacking civilian boats on the high seas, has criminally bombed Venezuela and abducted its president and his wife, is threatening criminal intervention in Iran in support of Iranian protesters, and is, no doubt, disposed to additional military adventures.  No less ominous is that, in the face of a real threat to our national interests and our allies and alliances, he is behaving erratically and unreliably in assisting Ukraine in its defense against Russian aggression.  Indeed, the parallels between Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and Trump’s incursion into Venezuela are obvious and ominous.  There can be little doubt that his misuses of the military, past, present, and future, reflect not only his authoritarian inclinations, but also his calculated use of these forces as a distraction from his political misfortunes, not least the unfolding and increasingly threatening revelations suggested by the Epstein files.

 

There is no reason to think that these conditions, developments, or propensities will not continue into the new year.  Indeed, Trump’s declining popularity even in his base from the pressures of the Epstein files, the rise in inflation and unemployment, the failed tariffs, and the increase in ACA insurance premiums, among other issues, will make him more, not less, reckless.  His losses on all fronts, though celebrated by his opponents, mean that he has less to lose by increasingly authoritarian actions and greater reliance on military and paramilitary government forces.

 

Unhappily, the likelihood that the Democratic Party will respond sensibly to electoral successes in 2026 and 2028 is slim, for three reasons.  The party, known for its demographic and political diversity, will not achieve a consensus on its priorities on basic issues.  Hopes that it can undo the damage done by Trump and his administration will be dashed by quarreling about which reforms matter most.  Moreover, Republicans surviving a “Blue Wave” will think themselves invulnerable if the electorate does not repudiate them for their allegiance to Trump; so, unless Democrats eliminate the filibuster in the Senate, Republicans will obstruct Democratic reforms.  Finally, an electorate which re-elected Trump to a second term after a 4-year interval allowing it to assess his performance is not an electorate which is smart or sensible enough to restore democracy under duress.  Trump’s re-election suggests to friends and foes alike that America is politically retarded, unstable, and untrustworthy.

 

Meanwhile, SCOTUS has set the example for at least one generation that the Constitution and the laws are malleable, even dispensable, and will thereby disillusion it about democracy and make it skeptical of its virtues.  SCOTUS reform will have no immediate effect in restoring confidence in the rule of law.  The result will be legal uncertainty, instability, confusion, and conflicts of all kinds for decades.  It would be naïve to expect anything else.  Needless to say, as a confidence-building measure in a restored government, all departments and agencies, especially Justice, Defense, Homeland Security, and State, must be purged of Trump’s political appointees and loyalists.

 

The election of a Democratic president in 2028 will be no assurance that the central feature of Trump’s presidency will not persist.  That feature is the expansion of presidential power consistent with the unitary executive theory.  Historically, every president has built on the expansion of his predecessor’s power.  The threat to democracy will remain if Trump’s Democratic successor retains the powers which Trump centralized in his office, even if that successor does not enlarge upon them.  To reduce that threat, the president must be willing to do the unprecedented: renounce and reverse the powers which Trump and some predecessors have amassed in the presidency.  The list of such powers is long, but we can give thanks that Trump’s abuses of his office have identified many weaknesses in the Constitution and the laws, and in SCOTUS.  Trump’s Democratic successor must encourage Congress to reduce the powers of the Executive Branch, especially the size and authorities of the White House.  He or she must encourage Congress to re-examine and revise the scope of SCOTUS’s authority in light of its illegitimate decisions and the corrupt conduct of its justices.  He or she must also encourage it to pass Constitutional amendments to redress those weaknesses which cannot be redressed by laws.  Without radical reforms of the Constitution and the laws of the land, democracy will remain vulnerable to anti-democratic forces which have undermined it for nearly half a century.  Like former confederates, who maintained their allegiance to the “Lost Cause” and metastasized in the KKK, MAGA devotees, even in defeat, will remain loyal to Trump and his political heirs.

 

The only way 2026 can be a happier year is work to fulfill the promises of the Declaration of Independence: the political equality of all people and their free and unfettered consent in their governance.  We now know that such work requires a willingness to support radical changes in the Constitutional and legal implementation of these promises.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

POLICE CHIEF’S ACTION UNDERMINES CITY COUNCIL’S POLICY

Friday, November 21, 2025

A BRIEF CRITIQUE OF THE LAS CRUCES PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT’S EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY

      I have read The Bulletin’s 21 November coverage of re-elected School Board members and their current thinking about educational problems to be addressed and the educational solutions to be adopted.  I am appalled.  Their greatest concerns are matters of accommodating students on the basis of their feelings of belonging and comfort.  So they decry the discomforts of students facing tests or having homework.  Not surprisingly, not one of them shows the least concern about the lack of educational attainment by K-12 students.  Not one mentions the persistent decline in proficiency scores in basic subjects, namely, reading and mathematics. 

An etymological note: “education” derives from a blend of two Latin words, “educare” (to bring up, rear, train) and “educere” (to lead out).  Semantically, the blend means a development from an exclusive responsiveness to one’s inner world (infantile narcissism) to a comprehensive responsiveness to and mediation of one’s inner world and the outer world (adult maturity).  The Las Cruces Public School District has no awareness of this meaning of “education.”  In fact, its philosophy amounts to a rationalization of infantilism.

 

The School Board and the Superintendent yield to the many parents who complain about the number of tests and the homework assigned to their children.  There is too much homework, it is too time-consuming, it is too hard—one re-elected Board member said that not all students can get the multiplication table and urged that the schools should settle for whatever learning happens—, it upsets their children, and it causes too many problems at home.  They also yield to the many teachers, especially elementary school teachers, who cannot teach what the state curriculum requires.  Past Superintendents Stan Rounds and Karen Trujillo admitted to me that none of them knows grammar; neither meant to remedy this professional deficiency.

 

As a result of accommodating these complaints, the standards of educational attainment are simply whatever the student does, without regard to subject-matter mastery.  Board members with many years experience as teachers have no more sense about education in public schools than people with none at all, and perhaps less.  Worse, these Board members act on the soft bigotry of low or, in their case, no expectations of a school population predominantly Hispanic.  They conceal their bigotry with a show of sympathy for the students facing tests and homework, not a commitment to them as future adults who will have lives to live as citizens with personal needs, social obligations, and economic responsibilities.

 

To show the slackness of the educational philosophy of the Las Cruces Public School District, I analyze and evaluate its overarching statements of vision, mission, and values.

 

First, its “Vision Statement: Where all learners thrive.”  This vision is blurred by its vagueness.  Thriving suggests to me potted plants in an environmentally controlled greenhouse.

 

     Second, its “Mission Statement: The Las Cruces Public Schools provides a safe, caring, equitable, and student-centered learning environment that cultivates civic and community engagement, promotes excellence, and honors diversity.”  This statement fails to state a mission usually expressed as a purpose, that is, to do something.  Providing a “learning environment” suggests ensuring only suitable classroom conditions, sufficient furniture, and functioning equipment.  Such environments per se do not cultivate engagement, promote excellence, and honor diversity; there is no need to encourage them.  Engagement and diversity are tangential to and distractions from education; they give teachers and students excuses to do something besides teaching and learning something.  The idea of promoting excellence in an education regime which has no standards other than accepting as good enough whatever the student does is risible.  For student-centered learning dilutes, filters out, or limits learning subject matter.  The main purpose of public education is the transmission of knowledge and skills from teacher to students; once students acquire them, they have enhanced capabilities to pursue their interests, without guidance, direction, or indoctrination by the schools.

 

Third, its “Core Values: Our expectation is that our schools are diverse, equitable and provide [sic] opportunities for the development of critical thinking and democratic ideals and that our schools will uphold these core values:

• Be accountable for every child.

• Foster growth and innovation, grounded in research and evidence.

• Guide all decisions through the lens of equity, sustainability, and respect.

• Commit to the inclusion and success of every student.

• Maintain a safe, healthy, and caring environment.

• Cultivate and maintain partnerships with parents, students, staff, and community members.

• Embrace the power of collaboration.

 

I note that this statement is devoid of any reference to the schools’ obligation to foster educational achievement in terms of knowledge and skills except for a reference to “critical thinking.”  I doubt that, at the moment of reading this blog, any member of the School Board or the Superintendent can give a cogent definition of critical thinking.  Moreover, they apparently assume that critical thinking can occur in the absence of knowledge or skills.  For nothing in these core values suggests that they believe in the importance of the acquisition of knowledge and skills in academic subjects, whether in the various trades, the various arts, history, literature, mathematics, or science.  Finally, their idea of “excellence” allows an anything-goes standard and accepts annual average proficiency scores in reading and math much below fifty percent.

 

The bankruptcy of the Vision Statement, the Mission Statement, and the statement of Core Values goes a long way to explaining the abysmal education provided by the Las Cruces Public School District.  So long as its leaders maintain their bovine indifference to an education focused on knowledge and skills, they will continue to support and defend teachers who are incompetent and unmotivated—in a word, not committed to teaching their subjects for the good of their students.  But it will celebrate the many LCPS graduates who will continue to lack the education to achieve personal enrichment, constructive civic participation, and professional satisfaction, and tout the teachers who make their educational deficiencies possible.

Friday, November 14, 2025

WHAT J. D. VANCE’S HOPE FOR HIS WIFE’S CONVERSION TELLS US

      I do not think that Vice President J. D. Vance is much good for anything but political self-advancement and expressions of retrogressive political views, personal attacks on opponents, and denigrations of multi-faceted bigotry.  He celebrates the robber-baron and KKK America of the 1920s and excuses the antisemitic and pro-fascist expressions of fellow Republicans. 

Vance’s perverse propensities make his public comment about his hope that Usha Vance, his Hindu wife, will adopt his Catholicism intriguing.  Many have wondered why he made this odd comment in public.  They wonder whether he was undermining his marriage.  They even wonder whether he meant to undermine it.  If so, they would have to wonder why he would.  After all, an annulment would be highly unlikely at this point, and adultery would be contrary to his professed faith and possibly detrimental to his political ambitions.  (I am unsure about the latter point since the MAGA tribe disregards misconduct on their side of the political divide and might approve of his discarding a Hindu wife.)  Some have implied that his public, seemingly intimate embrace of Erika Kirk, Charlie’s ex-wife, at a Turning Point USA gathering in Oxford, MS, on 29 October suggests that he might have an extra-marital romantic interest or intend a post-divorce courtship.

 

I believe that Vance’s remarks and conduct reflect lapses in judgment.  I also believe that they reflect tensions in his marriage arising from rapidly changing circumstances in the past dozen years of his life.  Consider his major life events of those years.  He graduated from Yale law school in 2013, married Usha in 2014, worked in different law and finance jobs, fathered three children born between 2017 and 2021, converted from atheism to Catholicism in 2019, was elected to the Senate in 2022, and became vice president in 2025.  Notable is his conversion after his marriage and between the births of his children.  Understandings and assumptions before his conversion and the birth of a child might change or lapse after them because of new perceptions of, feelings about, and relationships with his wife.  When he was an atheist and childless, his wife’s religion might not have mattered to him; his conversion to Catholicism and his fatherhood might have made her religion a matter of concern.

 

I have no idea how J. D. and Usha’s marriage will evolve.  It is none of my business, and it is none of yours.  It is only their business and the business of their families and perhaps their closest friends.  There I and we should leave it.

 

But for one thing: Vance brought his hope of her conversion into the public domain, not once as a slip, but several times: once, shame on us for making anything of it; more than once, shame on him for what is likely a political motive.  For marriage is a personal and private matter, not a political and public one.  By making his hope public, Vance is likely not only jeopardizing his marriage, but also attempting to advance his political standing.  He seems to be trying to be more than he is, more Christian than most by pushing his faith on his wife and presenting himself as the male head of the family—aspects of virtue to the MAGA tribe and evangelicals.

 

Vance is practicing what most or all of us do at one time or another, but he is practicing it at all times: fashioning oneself to give an advantageous appearance of himself to others.  Most of us have moments of weakness when we worry about how we present ourselves to others.  Do we pretend to be more successful than we are?  Do we give a false but favorable impression of ourselves on social media?  Do we worry that our clothes are not suitable for the occasion or that we speak ungrammatically?  Do we worry about which spoon to use for the soup?  (I recall the old joke about the punishments of those tortured eternally in Hell for their sins: Jews for eating pork, Catholics for eating meat on Friday, Episcopalians for using their salad fork to eat the entrée.)  What we do on a small scale, politicians do on a large scale.

 

Many, if not most, politicians like Vance—in fact, many politicians not like Vance—make a professional practice of fraudulent self-presentations.  The most notorious example is, of course, Donald John Trump, who would have us believe that he is the best at anything, smartest, most stable, most successful, most popular, and on and on.  Aside from the necessary hypocrisy of such self-presentation, there is the threat of self-delusion.  Trump probably does believe himself to be the “est-iest.”  The possibility that he might believe that “Trump is always right,” thereby mislead himself, and endanger all of us should scare the bejesus out of everyone.

 

Environmental influences can effect the same sort of self-delusion.  Rumor has it that, after acting in so many westerns, John Wayne came to adopt the proto-Republican philosophy and its “rugged individual” posture of the cowboy.  Likewise, Ronald Reagan, who began life as a Democrat but, hired as a salesman or spokesman for Republican-owned companies, came to believe his scripted lines and became a Republican.

 

The problem with adopted or induced identifications is a loss of true identity—will the real Vance or Trump or Wayne or Reagan please stand up—and a loss of integrity.  Again, Vance is an interesting specimen.  The many life changes in his short life, from hillbilly to high-tech entrepreneur, suggest his chameleon-like adaptability.  After being an atheist most of his life, he converted to Catholicism and makes a public display of it.  Yet his new-found faith gives no hint of benign influence on his political beliefs or conduct; his professed identity does not square with personal integrity.  Given his conversation, it is remarkable, the more so in view of his narrative of childhood abuses and deprivations, that he shows no concern for the disadvantaged and the discriminated against, and no respect, not to mention love, for his political opponents.  So the question is, who is J.D. Vance?  What is core except personal ambition?  We need answers to these questions because he is more than likely to be a candidate for the presidency in 2028 (and an occupant of the White House even sooner if impeachment or cheeseburgers do not remove Trump from office before then).