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BY: Hillary Linardopoulos

On Monday, we marched. We marched to affirm that our children matter. That immigrants matter. That black lives matter. That the environment matters. That the right to unionize matters. That community and solidarity matter.

Our march, the second ideation of the MLK Day of Action, Resistance, and Empowerment (MLK DARE) was 2,000 strong, beautiful individuals coming together to say: we fight on.

Students lead the march to Mother Bethel AME.

We fight on because this is not a new fight. As the inimitable Councilwoman Helen Gym said in her rousing remarks to the crowd, “The America we woke up to on November 9th was always there.”

For children in Philadelphia attending schools with lead in the water, the America of November 9th was always there.

For undocumented immigrants fearing for their safety in our city, the America of November 9th was always there.

For black and brown children wondering whether their lives would be upended should Donald Trump be elected, the America of November 9th was always there.

For the fast food worker trying to support her family on $7.25/hour, the America of November 9th was always there.

For the dedicated educator in Philadelphia’s schools who has gone without a raise for 5 years, gotten a second job, and wonders about leaving the profession, the America of November 9th was always there.

For the person of color who lives in fear that a broken tail light could result in death, the America of November 9th was always there.

For the mother of a child with disabilities, trying desperately to navigate a maze of advocacy to fight for her child’s right to a public education, the America of November 9th was always there.

Reverend Greg Holston, the executive director of POWER, said, “The reality is, people in our neighborhoods have been living in fear for years.”

Reverend Greg Holston addresses the crowd as Councilwoman Helen Gym cheers.

So when we wake up tomorrow and watch the inauguration of a President so far removed from the core values that so many of us hold dear, that fear is not new, just the face of it is.

The process of the Trump transition has been horrifying to watch. But we must watch. Watch, act, engage, resist.

Consider, for example, the Betsy DeVos hearing. DeVos, Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Education, is a particularly egregious choice; she is actually completely unqualified, unprepared, and has spent her career in philanthropy working to circumvent the very system she is now nominated to lead.

But alas, perhaps that is the point. Joe Lieberman praised her for her lack of experience (citing her not being part of the ‘education establishment’- meaning, teachers? Schools? Public school parents?) as perhaps “one of the most important qualifications you could have for this job.”

The hearing went on to expose a number of other mindboggling assertions. DeVos was unwilling to commit to enforcing the federal regulations under IDEA (Individual with Disabilities Education Act). IDEA is indeed a federal law that ensures that children with disabilities are entitled to public education that meets their needs. Senator Maggie Hassan spoke about her disabled son Ben, who attended the same public school as his sister, “because countless advocates and champions, before the Hassan family, worked so hard to make sure that he had the right to that education.”

The list of outrageous moments from DeVos’ hearing included a refusal to assert that guns have no place in schools, her refusal to commit to campus sexual assault guidelines, and her stunning belief that she is a voice for parents and children.

And Betsy DeVos is just one person in an administration filling out to be “very white, and very male.” A cabinet where leaders seem to oppose the very departments they are tasked to lead. It’s outrageous, it’s terrifying, but we must also remind ourselves that it’s not new.

Some may call this “new” approach to government just shaking things up. But I think it is important that we refuse to fall into that trap. We must recognize that what is unfolding before the world’s eyes is much more sinister.

But now, the America that has always been there has been exposed once more.

And so we march on.

AFT President Randi Weingarten and PFT President Jerry Jordan lead the 2000 marchers on January 17, 2017.
Rev. Mark Tyler explains the significance of choosing Mother Bethel as the end point for the Reclaim MLK DARE March.

MLK DARE COALITION
Marchers en route. January 17, 2017. Coalition photo.
Philadelphia Federation of Teachers members en route.
Leaders in the fight for justice: Philadelphia City Councilwoman Helen Gym; PFT President Jerry Jordan; AFT President Randi Weingarten.

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