Education depends on your property tax—not your potential.
Write. Laugh. Hope.
They said segregation ended.
They lied.
It just got a makeover and a mortgage.
Now it’s wrapped in district lines,
dressed up in “school ratings,”
and enforced by housing prices instead of hate signs.
The American classroom is still divided—
not by law,
but by lawn size.
By real estate agents who whisper things like
“good neighborhood,”
“strong district,”
“you know… the right kind of families.”
Translation:
If you’re poor, you don’t get opportunity.
You get underpaid teachers, overcrowded classes,
textbooks from 1993,
and metal detectors where the microscopes should be.
They say every child deserves a chance.
What they mean is:
every child whose parents can afford one.
And if you live in the “wrong” zip code?
You better hope your dreams come with a transfer slip
and access to someone else’s resources.
But kids don’t choose their address.
They don’t pick their parents’ income.
They just show up—bright-eyed, hopeful—
and the system teaches them exactly what they’re worth
by showing them what they’re not allowed to have.
This isn’t about failing schools.
It’s about engineered inequality.
A pipeline paved with standardized lies and unequal expectations.
Write. Laugh. Hope.
Because talent is everywhere—
but access is bought.
