For anyone who needed to gauge just how far the demonization of teachers unions has gone, the final episode last spring of TV's "Law and Order" -- the real one, not the new L.A. knock-off -- was instructive. Bracketed by the customary soundtrack "cha-chungs," the story concerned a loony former substitute teacher bent on blowing up the high school where he'd subbed. But the real heavy was a weaselly union lawyer who blocked the cops' access to the teacher's whereabouts, on the grounds of -- well, something like Marx's labor theory of value, or Walter Reuther's argument for co-determination at General Motors; it wasn't entirely clear which. Said weaselly lawyer crumbled, of course,
"Republicans, before the Donald Trump cult took hold, frequently railed
(rightly so) against communist and fascist regimes that nationalized
industry, indulged in crony capitalism, and substituted propaganda for the
free flow of reliable information. Well, well. How times have changed"
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Sadly, but predictably, rather than reject these practices when they come
from the Oval Office, corporate America, like Republicans more generally,
has g...
39 seconds ago