In San Diego, for example, you have a School District that caters to the wealthy neighborhoods. The schools in Del Mar are pristine and stocked with the latest tools while in the poorer neighborhoods the schools are in need of repairs. That sends a powerful message to the children and the parents.
Is it a measure of the resources put into the system or how well the system uses those resources?
I read an article about the per-capita amounts spent per child towards education (i.e. put into the school system) and the highest / lowest spending places were not what you would immediately imagine. Some of the places with the worst reputations actually had the most money spent but too much was wasted on lavish political promises (union pensions) or mismanagement.
I was surprised at the news that Michael Brown's mother was going to speak to the UN. To tell them what exactly - good parenting tips? Kind of bizzarre.
Apparently the clock is ticking down on the decision over whether to indict or not. Whatever the result, the outcome will be more unrest and violence I'm sure. Gun sales in the area have gone through the roof and thats unlikely to help the situation but it's hard to blame the people who have to live there wanting to protect their families and businesses. I'm sure if you're there you are pretty much trapped - who is going to buy your property right now?
The trouble is, I think it's gotten to a place where people are going to be unhappy even if they get justice becase they have already been promised the verdict which isn't always the same thing.
One thing I found really surprising is the (still) incredibly low voter turnout in the area. I forget the exact number but the turnout for the latest election was very low and only had 200 or so new voters registered. Since the mayor was elected with a 16% turnout there hasn't been an election with more than 12% (!)
The democratic process is what the leaders should be promoting for people to gain confidence in the system. As it is, unless the verdict is the one people want then they will simply refuse to believe anything is fair and nothing will convince them otherwise. But without more representation at the local institutional level they are never going to get that confidence.
So, no solution that I can see happening any time soon (hardly a surprise). The community doesn't appear to want to engage with or be part of the democratic process but just seems to want the end results to go their way in order to be satisfied. The evidence so far seems to support the officers version of events which means there is a good chance that they will be disappointed and dissatisfied whether or not the verdict is actually fair or not.
As the Kaieser Chiefs said: I predict a riot.