Sunday, August 8, 2010

From the Gulf of Mexico to Coxsackie-Athens High

Regular readers of this blog are well aware that my blogging activities sort of ran off the rails in early April and that my blog posts since then can be counted on the digits of one hand—with a couple of thumbs to spare. Getting my various projects back on the rails and back up to speed has been a long, slow process, so when Barbara O’Brien (The Mahablog) asked me if I could post one of her articles on my other blog (Petey’s Pipeline) I readily agreed. I might be too proud to ask for help, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that I’m too proud to accept help if it’s offered.

After you’ve read Barbara’s most excellent and insightful piece about the Gulf Oil Disaster, do yourself a favor and read Coxsackie-Athens High School valedictorian Erica Goldson’s graduation speech in which she makes a scathing condemnation of institutionalized education. Larry Hamelin (The Barefoot Bum) believes that Erica’s profound and moving speech deserves the widest dissemination, and I concur. It is, after all, hard to be smart if you can’t think.

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2 comments:

  1. And yet, we have a whole country that thinks it is.

    As they sit mesmerized by Beck and Limpbaugh media.

    Glad to have you back, Phil!

    S

    It is, after all, hard to be smart if you can’t think.
    _____________

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  2. Thanks, Suzan, it's good to be back, although posting is liable to be sketchy for the next month or so, as I have four more book reviews to write (The Queen of Patpong, by Tim Hallinan; First of State, by Robert Greer; and Lost Dog and Chasing Smoke, both by Bill Cameron). Once those are done, regular blog posting will resume.

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