Post #417,028
2/7/17 1:37:31 PM
2/7/17 1:37:31 PM
|
So long, public education.
It's increasingly becoming clear that we will find out what sort of people we are in 2018. If a single mo-fo who voted for her confirmation wins in 2018, that alone will demonstrate we deserve what we're getting. The DeVos appointment is to public education what the PATCO firing was to the union movement. If the majority of Americans take this lying down, we are officially cooked as a country and a people.
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
|
Post #417,030
2/7/17 1:56:00 PM
2/7/17 1:56:00 PM
|
If only we had known!!11
http://forum.iwethey.org/forum/post/412833/At stake is the existence of a Department of Education, Environmental protection, voting rights, union rights, immigrant rights, health and safety, abortion rights, threat of nuclear war and the Supreme Court to name a few. The Voting Rights decisions that just took place in the lower courts are just one indication of how important the Supreme Court is. (sigh) Cheers, Scott.
|
Post #417,032
2/7/17 2:44:40 PM
2/7/17 2:44:40 PM
|
I did know. And said so. In that very thread.
Electing Hillary will mean continued neo-fascist corporate hegemony and will only be delaying the inevitable, but only slightly. http://forum.iwethey.org/forum/post/412833/We just skipped ahead a few presidencies. The policies you're seeing today are *exactly* the sort of policies that you'd be seeing following another decade or two of Clinton/Bush/Obama policies. I've always believed that the slumbering Americans would have to be subjected to the natural end-game of the Neo-Fascist ideas both political parties embraced since 1992 before they'd ever try to do anything about them. Now we'll see what the majority are made of.
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
|
Post #417,033
2/7/17 2:55:00 PM
2/7/17 2:56:59 PM
|
Yeah, yeah. The choice was clear as day, but she wasn't pure enough... (sigh).
Kinda weird when the CPUSA could see the need to vote for Hillary but you couldn't, isn't it?
;-p
Cheers, Scott.
|
Post #417,035
2/7/17 3:01:40 PM
2/7/17 3:01:40 PM
|
They, apparently, believed the Duma could be reformed. It couldn't.
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
|
Post #417,040
2/7/17 5:32:22 PM
2/7/17 5:32:22 PM
|
Evidence doesn't support your assertion.
|
Post #417,031
2/7/17 1:59:10 PM
2/7/17 1:59:10 PM
|
Depends where you live
In some areas, you are simply late to the wake. So it is rational for some people to support her. Which is a very painful statement for me to make.
My wife grew up in Philadelphia. She worked to pay her own way through Catholic high school. She did this for the education, not the religion. She accepted 40 years ago that it would be idiotic to trust the local public school for her education. She is a 100 percent behind Devoss.
I made the corresponding choice for my 1st set of kids. I moved into an area of high property taxes specifically for the school system.
I had that choice, most people do not. They see top level admin heavy public school systems with unfirable crap teachers as something that can't be fixed. They want to burn it down and start over. Hmm, so what we are saying that we finally found something you don't want to burn down.
|
Post #417,034
2/7/17 2:59:31 PM
2/7/17 2:59:31 PM
|
If you look up "White Privilege" in the dictionary, you see her picture.
And she's a Christian. Christians should be barred from governmental appointments. Michigan now serves as one of the most prominent examples of what aggressive, DeVos-style school choice policies look like on the ground, especially when it comes to expanding charters. About 80 percent of the state's charter schools are run by for-profit companies—a much higher share than anywhere else in the country—with little oversight from the state. In 2011, DeVos fought against legislation to stop low-performing charter schools from expanding, and later she and her husband funded legislators who opposed a proposal to add new oversight for Detroit's charters. ... Charter schools and school choice are now accepted by nearly two-thirds of Americans, but almost 70 percent still oppose using public funding for private schools. With most states under wholly Republican leadership, though, and big-name charter advocates like former DC Public Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee now in support of sending public dollars to religious schools, the stage is set for a new effort to both lift state caps on charter schools (22 states have some kind of cap limiting the number of charters) and expand vouchers (14 states and the District of Columbia have active programs).
It's hard to tell how many more charter advocates will support (or simply overlook) the inclusion of vouchers for private schools in choice policies, but one thing is clear: The prospects for an aggressive policy push for "universal choice"—including funding more religious schools with taxpayer money—have never been better.
Most kids in this neighborhood go to public schools. In the two decades since school choice was implemented in Michigan, white student enrollment in Holland's public schools has plummeted 60 percent, with a nearby charter school becoming their top destination, according to an investigation by the Ann Arbor-based Bridge Magazine. Latino students are now the face of the system, and 70 percent of all its students are poor, more than double the district's poverty rate when school choice began. Bridge Magazine found a similar pattern across Michigan: White parents tended to use the choice system to move their kids into even whiter districts, while black parents gravitated to charter schools made up mostly of students of color. Meanwhile, the Holland Christian Schools are predominantly white. http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/01/betsy-devos-christian-schools-vouchers-charter-education-secretary
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
|
Post #417,039
2/7/17 5:15:13 PM
2/7/17 5:15:13 PM
|
Well, the choice was clear . . .
The more ignorant and uneducated (and stupid) people are, the more likely they are to vote Republican.
|