Teachers in Chicago's public schools went on a one-day strike on April 1.
Barack Obama's recent attempt to teach us how our country should behave, with particular emphasis on improvement of human rights issues, is still echoing around Havana's Alicia Alonso Theater.
It just goes to prove the old saying about the person who sees a speck in their neighbor's eye but is blind to the plank in their own. In this case we are talking about a human right, the right to education.
The strike called by the Chicago Teachers Union affected 400,000 pupils in the United States' third biggest school district and was caused by the scant attention paid to public education by the Chicago mayor's office. Public schools lack the funds they need to operate normally. A number of schools have also been closed, with the remaining schools have been obliged to increase class sizes and suffer the adverse effects on their ability to teach effectively.
Who is responsible for all of this? The mayor of Chicago.
And who is the mayor of Chicago? Rahm Emanuel.
And who is Rahm Emanuel? A close friend of Obama and a key figure in Obama's 2008 election campaign. As Obama's first appointment as president-elect, Emanuel was named to work alongside him as White House chief of staff.
As with all protests, the striking teachers took to the streets and interrupted traffic on Lake Shore Drive, causing serious disruptions to the already congested Chicago city traffic. Some of the protesters were arrested without major incident, according to police spokesman Kevin Quade in a statement to CNN. Several of the protesters saw it somewhat differently, especially those who received blows to the head and were dragged along the street in the interests of clearing the way for traffic. Maybe the spokesman was referring to the police when he said there had been no major incidents.
Bearing in mind the good relations between Obama and Emanuel, and the fact that Obama lived for many years in Chicago, surely nobody would object if Obama were to visit the city and address public servants on human rights, putting the focus on education and those freedoms so close to his heart, such as freedom of expression — a freedom the Chicago police must not use violence to repress.
El dÃa 1 de abril los maestros de las escuelas públicas de Chicago se declararon en huelga.
Aún resuenan en el Gran Teatro Alicia Alonso de la Habana las palabras de Barack Obama donde trataba de enseñarnos como debemos conducir nuestro paÃs y en especial, señalando, que debÃamos mejorar el tratamiento que se da en Cuba a los derechos humanos.
Eso ratifica aquel viejo dicho de que hay quien ve la paja en el ojo ajeno y no ve el ladrillo en el suyo. En este caso estamos hablando de un derecho humano, el derecho a la educación.
Cómo toda protesta, los maestros tomaron las calles e interrumpieron el tráfico en la avenida Lake Shore Drive, lo que causó serias interrupciones al congestionado tráfico de la ciudad de Chicago. Algunos de los que protestaban fueron arrestados, según declaró el vocero de la policÃa Kevin Quade a la agencia de noticias CNN, sin mayores consecuencias. Sin embargo varios de los que protestaban no tienen la misma opinión, sobre todo los que recibieron golpes en la cabeza y fueron arrastrados fuera de la avenida para poder restablecer el tráfico. Quizás el vocero se referÃa a que fue la policÃa la que no sufrió mayores consecuencias.
Venezuela is likely to become another wasted crisis, resembling events that followed when the U.S. forced regime changes in Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq.
Venezuela is likely to become another wasted crisis, resembling events that followed when the U.S. forced regime changes in Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq.
We are faced with a "scenario" in which Washington's exclusive and absolute dominance over the entire hemisphere, from Greenland and Canada in the north to the southern reaches of Argentina and Chile.