![]() he's not happy unless he's bitching about something, and he's double-plus-happy if that something = Texas.
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![]() http://action.aclu.o...4QkZi4Lzgzy9eQF9A..
ACLU recent note re "Keep Texas's biased curriculum out of our schools"
This is not merely a 'in the Texas republic' issue, obviously. It's about vulture-capitalism in the publishing game: Why have a Blue- Red- duelling-States version -- when you can push: One Size Fits All == it's cheaper.. too. {sigh} |
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![]() but the majority of Texans don't agree with what's going on either. I'm not surprised in the least that linc would ignore this in his rants.
http://www.chron.com...look/7028348.html Our schoolchildren deserve far better, and a Greenberg Quinlan Rosner poll for the Texas Freedom Network Education Fund shows that the vast majority of Texans agree. The May 4-12 poll found that 72 percent of Texas likely voters, including 78 percent of parents, want teachers and scholars, not elected state board members, to be responsible for writing curriculum standards and textbook requirements for public schools. |
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![]() on these shenanigans!
Sincerely glad to see such clear evidence that the Whole State of Texas is not some surreal spawning ground for Reactionaries (claiming to be 'conservative' -- universally now.) I was wondering how such a radical and patent political rewrite of textbooks could pass with no significant outcry anywhere !? I calls '78% of parents' == SIGNIFICANT. Now let's get that fossilized committee replaced, before ennui sets in, eh? (Send each one home to retirement with a lifetime subscription to Human Events and a copy of the US Constitution.) Thanks; good news is rarer than hens teeth these days.. |
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![]() where the average joe is too busy having a life than to wonder what the squirrels and hacks on these obscure boards are actually doing and show great umbrage when their noses are rubbed into the mess.
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![]() why did the Neocons on the board who represent only 28% of Texas likely voters win?
"Chicago to my mind was the only place to be. ... I above all liked the city because it was filled with people all a-bustle, and the clatter of hooves and carriages, and with delivery wagons and drays and peddlers and the boom and clank of freight trains. And when those black clouds came sailing in from the west, pouring thunderstorms upon us so that you couldn't hear the cries or curses of humankind, I liked that best of all. Chicago could stand up to the worst God had to offer. I understood why it was built--a place for trade, of course, with railroads and ships and so on, but mostly to give all of us a magnitude of defiance that is not provided by one house on the plains. And the plains is where those storms come from." -- E.L. Doctorow |
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![]() Do the politicians you voted for do 100% of the things you expect them to? I highly doubt it.
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