Post Tribune (Sunday)

True democracy is loving your country enough to criticize it

- By Esther J. Cepeda Esther Cepeda is a columnist for the Washington Post.

The orator and abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass once noted the disconnect between the words of our nation’s founding fathers and their deed of allowing, perpetuati­ng and profiting from slavery in America.

“What have I, or those I represent, to do with your national independen­ce? Are the great principles of political freedom and of natural justice, embodied in that Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, extended to us?” Douglass said at an Independen­ce Day celebratio­n in 1852.

He came to the conclusion that “I am not included within the pale of glorious anniversar­y! Your high independen­ce only reveals the immeasurab­le distance between us. The blessings in which you, this day, rejoice are not enjoyed in common. The rich inheritanc­e of justice, liberty, prosperity and independen­ce, bequeathed by your fathers, is shared by you, not by me.”

Douglass was not criticizin­g his homeland because he disdained it.

He, in fact, believed in the promise of true democracy — one that made good on the declaratio­n that “all men are created equal.”

His lament seemed topical as news reports spread last week that an 11-year-old boy in Florida was arrested after arguing with a substitute teacher who was incensed that the student declined to stand for the Pledge of Alle- giance.

The teacher allegedly told the sixth-grader, who is AfricanAme­rican, “Well, you can always go back, because I came here from Cuba, and the day I feel I’m not welcome here anymore, I would find another place to live.” Let that sink in for a moment. An adult — presumably vetted by the school and required by the Florida Department of Education to be certified to substitute teach — told an 11-year-old child that, basically, he should go “back” to ... where, exactly? ... if he didn’t like the way America was treating him.

Our children live in a country in which African-Americans die at the hands of police at the rate of 7.2 per million (whites’ rate, by comparison, was 2.9 per million) according to an analysis of data from 2015 and 2016.

An America in which the median earnings gap between white men and black men is as large as it was in 1950 — over a decade before the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Even if the kid had the ability to simply decide to relocate to a friendlier country, his parents would hardly be expected to have the resources to pick up and move.

Plus, the fact that an immigrant from Cuba, with her privileged immigratio­n status, said this to a child of color is beyond repugnant.

The worst of it is that the story is playing out like the student did something wrong. But court precedents give students the right to refuse to participat­e in reciting the pledge without fear of punishment or retaliatio­n.

In fact, according to news reports, the substitute teacher was uninformed about the school district’s policy allowing students to take a pass on the pledge as long as they have written authorizat­ion from a parent, which the student had.

Yet, it was the 11-year-old who was treated like a criminal when he reacted poorly — you might even say he behaved childishly — to the violation of his school permission­s, constituti­onal freedoms and unprofessi­onal treatment by his teacher.

This arrest is a prime example of what is called the school-toprison pipeline.

“The approach to highly publicized school shootings has been to put law enforcemen­t who were not trained to work with children into schools,” said Beatriz Beckfords, campaign director at MomsRising, a national advocacy organizati­on focused on women’s economic empowermen­t.

“This response is based in fear and it doesn’t even work, according to school safety data,” she told me. “We should be having dynamic conversati­ons about how school safety can and should be increased by providing teachers with resources to teach socialemot­ional learning, and providing schools with social workers, fulltime nurses and other resources to achieve the overarchin­g goal of keeping students in school instead of criminaliz­ing them.”

For those whose ancestors were not brought to this country chained, to be bought and sold as chattel, or ripped from their land and families as Native Americans were, it’s inconceiva­ble that someone would not want to honor our flag or our anthem.

But that’s easily remedied by a few history lessons. And a primer on what it means to exercise democracy by loving your country enough to criticize it and strive to make it better.

 ?? SIMON & SCHUSTER ?? The cover of David W. Blight’s “Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom details the life of the orator and leading abolitioni­st.
SIMON & SCHUSTER The cover of David W. Blight’s “Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom details the life of the orator and leading abolitioni­st.

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