Oh, cut the crap. No wonder you're a liberal. You can't keep simple arithmetic straight.
We were talking STATISTICS here, whaleboy. Numbers. Mathematics. 50% = 1/2. Period.
Go ahead. Deny that. Make an even bigger fool of yourself than you already have. You've already admitted you can't back up the claims you've made.
I never implied 50%...those are your words. You said "half the people". 1/2 = 50/100. Do you deny that? Or are you trying for a convenient weasel?
My, my, aren't we backpedaling fast now that we've been caught.
Do you wish to plead to lying or gross forgetfulness?
the Bush administration will not allow the Yuan to float Back it.
Yet we do not invest in education. Oh yeah?
At the primary level of education, Denmark, Switzerland, the United States, and Austria ranked at the upper end of public per pupil expenditures in 1999. For primary education per student, Denmark spent about $6,721 per student, Switzerland spent $6,663, the United States spent $6,582, and Austria spent $6,568. At the secondary level, Switzerland, Austria, the United States, Norway, Denmark, and France had expenditures over $7,000 per student. The governments of the United States, Switzerland, Canada and Sweden spent relatively large amounts per student in higher education. The United States spent $19,220, Switzerland spent $17,997, Canada spent $15,211, and Sweden spent $14,222 nces.ed.gov
nces.ed.gov In 1999, in primary education, we were #4 in funding. In 1999, in secondary education, we were #3 in funding. In 1999, in higher education, we were #1 in funding.
Want to try again? |