Here’s One Big Reason Voters Are Angry and Turning to Trump
Here’s One Big Reason Voters Are Angry and Turning to Trump · The Fiscal Times

People, including some of our most prominent columnists, are still trying to explain the popularity of Donald Trump. Peggy Noonan says he appeals to the “unprotected”; Ross Douthat says Trump is a reaction to seven years of Obama. Both are right, but the rise of Trump is not really that complicated. While President Obama famously vowed to avoid doing “stupid stuff” overseas, he unfortunately failed to apply that guideline to domestic policy. The country is awash in “stupid stuff” – and Americans are sick of it.

Just this week, The New York Times reported on the struggles of an “Afrocentric” school in Chicago, which faces closing. The Barbara A. Sizemore Academy is failing to teach its mostly black students from its South Side neighborhood to read and write. Children in third through eighth grades scored in only the 14th percentile in reading in the most recent national exams, and in the 8th in math. These are not just dismal scores in the absolute. They also compare poorly with Chicago’s results overall. The city’s median scores were in the 48th percentile in reading and 52nd in math. By any definition, Sizemore is not getting the job done.

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However, the academy has its supporters – fans of its “Afrocentric” approach, which surrounds students with reminders of their African heritage. The concept was the brainchild of Carol Lee, a professor of education and social policy at Northwestern in the 1970s, and took hold in tandem with the rise of the Black Power Movement. Ms. Lee says students at such schools can “view the world through the perspective of the people of Africa. Africa is the mother of civilization."

The number of schools that adopted the approach peaked in the 1990s and has since declined, mainly because of poor results. The principal of Sizemore explains that the environment is aimed at helping kids suffering “all the ills of, you know, the residual effects of slavery,” saying, “Absolutely this is where they need to be.”

Sizemore embodies the goals of many black activists. Suspensions are rare and the courses include much celebration of black achievement – a curriculum intended to make the children proud of their heritage. The day starts to the pulse of African drumming, and the kids raise their fists to salute not only the American flag, but also the Pan-African banner. They chant “We are African people” and call their instructors Mama and Baba, Swahili for mother and father. The artwork in the hallways includes pictures of African nationalists like Dedan Kimathi, a controversial leader of Kenyan independence. First graders are taught Igbo, a language used in Nigeria.