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From: Thomas Jr., Landon
Sent: 11/10/2016 10:55:01 PM
To: Jeffrey Epstein [jeeyacation@gmail.com]
Subject: Fwd: Responding to yesterday's election
Importance: High
Look what has happened to your borough..
----------Forwarded message----------
From: Dr. Bruce L. Dennis <
Date: Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 10:14 AM
Subject: Responding to yesterday's election
To:
>
Dear Packer Families,
Like many of you, I am writing this message on very little sleep. Last night was like no other in our
political memory, defying the predictions of the most erudite pundits and political
prognosticators.
Today, we are spending a great deal of time unpacking the election results with our students
across the three divisions — during morning meeting and throughout the day in Lower School
classrooms, in Middle School advisories, during Upper School Community time, as well as in
many individual classroom conversations. I write to assure you that we will do our best to handle
these discussions with balance, sensitivity, and fairness.
Given that last week's mock election among Packer's Upper School students showed that over
8o% favored Secretary Clinton, I don't think it's a huge leap to assume that there was more
disappointment than joy in Packer households as results unfolded last night. At the same time,
there are certainly Packer families who support Mr. Trump and are pleased with this outcome. As
a school community, we have an obligation to recognize that there will be a broad array of feelings
generated by the election results, and it is our responsibility as a school to make space for these
feelings to be expressed thoughtfully and compassionately, as well as to model the tolerance and
acceptance of difference that are among our core values. No doubt, we have our work cut out for
us, but I am confident in the good that we can do as a community.
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There are abundant lessons to be learned from this election: that experts can be wrong; that our
country is even more deeply divided than many of us had thought; and that abundant numbers of
our fellow Americans feel a deep sense of despair and disaffection with the status quo of
government. For us here at school, we will use this as an opportunity to talk with your children in
age-appropriate ways about demographics, the economy, social policy, our democratic system,
and the rule of law. We will also talk about the world's response to yesterday's election results, our
individual responsibilities as citizens to continue to give voice to our beliefs, and appropriate
channels of political activism. On a more basic level, we will stress the importance of not being a
gloating winner or a sore loser, and about the strength of our nation, its history of responding to
dramatic political change, and the hopefulness of the future.
As for you, our families, I offer two resources. Last week at a NYSAIS heads-of-school conference
that I attended, the University of Pennsylvania educator Ali Michael spoke about advancing our
national dialogue about race. This morning Dr. Michael wrote a Huffington Post piece, "What Do
We Tell the Children?", a moving yet direct reminder of how we, as adults, can model our
responses for the young people around us. Next Wednesday, November 16, from 6:3o to 8
p.m., Semeka Smith-Williams and the PA Diversity Committee are holding a "Post-
Election Healing" evening here at Packer.
Please reach out if you have questions, suggestions, or simply would like to share your thoughts,
and take good care.
Best regards.
Bruce L. Dennis
Head of School
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Landon Thomas, Jr.
Financial Reporter
New York Times
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/t/landon jr thomas/index.h
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