Folks on the progressive left seem to see Joe Therrien’s story as a tragedy. I agree that it’s a tragedy, but for very different reasons than the ones laid out in the left-wing publication The Nation last week.
Therrien is a part of the Occupy Wall Street protests. Listen to his story and see if you can spot the tragic part.
Just a few years ago, Therrien had a full-time job as a drama teacher in a government-run elementary school in New York City. He was unhappy with the working conditions — too many students, not enough resources and lousy management — so he decided to go to graduate school instead. He spent the next three years studying his passion — puppetry — while he ran up $35,000 in debt.
After emerging from the University of Connecticut with a master’s degree in puppetry, he was apparently shocked to find that he couldn’t find a job. We all know that jobs for good puppeteers should be available pretty much anywhere, but the evil rich have dried up the market. Or something like that. Therrien says he couldn’t find a job, so he ended up applying for his old job at the NYC elementary school. As you might have heard, times are tough, so schools aren’t exactly creating new positions left and right, so he ended up taking a job as a full-time substitute teacher at his old school — at about half his former salary.
Money is a tool, and it’s useless without real motivation and vision
Obama’s delusion about ‘explaining’ illustrates all-too-common narcissism
Visit with high school best friend leaves me pondering my old fears
Our methods of selling politicians seem designed for mental defectives
My books are time machines that tell you where (and who) I’ve been
Deadly sugar-filled diet choices mean slow suicide for millions
Do great dreams really come true or do they just serve to haunt us?