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Politics : Evolution -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (34036)3/9/2013 4:11:31 PM
From: average joe  Respond to of 69300
 
Nice grub - notice how some things never change!

To: Lane3 who wrote (10119) 3/30/2001 4:03:48 PM
From: Greg or e Read Replies (2) of 82466
Scary is in the eye of the beholder to a certain extent. Tolerance has also taken on a new meaning, tolerance used to mean that everyone was entitled to hold their own beliefs, even though you might disagree with them. now it has somehow come to mean that we must embrace and even celebrate the practices and beliefs of others even when they are diametrically opposed to our own. Homosexual practices are just one example of this, although the to me the real battleground today is going to be fought over the issue of Pedophilia. today's pervert, is tomorrow's upstanding citizen. Frankly I think people who are truly intolerant of others in an evil way don't need to be exposed they manifest their hatred for all to see. People who stand around with signs that say "God hates Fags" hardly need to come with warning labels. It must be said however that hatred is not limited to the heterosexual population. Pendulums of hatred swing to both extremes. What bothers me is that we seem to be in a situation where we have eliminated any standard by which to judge any action to be "wrong". We are going to continue reaping the rewards of that kind of thinking. The USA is not immune to the Judgement of God, but I prefer to leave that judgement in His hands. All Laws are the legislation of some moral principal, but we have climbed out on a limb and proceeded to saw off the branch we're sitting on.

PS No reason for not capitalizing the word bible some times I do, sometimes I don't. Should I? My rules of grammar are shaky since I got stoned and missed most of the seventies, at least that's what I was told. :0)

Greg






To: 2MAR$ who wrote (34036)3/9/2013 4:42:30 PM
From: longnshort1 Recommendation  Respond to of 69300
 
Should New York City be applauded for its high spending on public education? At an average of $20,000-plus per student, many would say yes.

But results matter, and New York’s results are truly, shockingly bad. A recent CBS report claims that nearly 80 percent of NYC high school graduates don’t have the basic reading, writing, or math skills necessary to participate in the city’s Community College system. That’s 11,000 students with high school diplomas in need of remedial courses—at a cost of about $200 million dollars per year.

The City University of New York (CUNY) is trying to compensate with remedial courses, but filling the gaps in education is an uphill struggle:

“They get lost sometimes in the classroom and in CUNY Start [a program of new low-cost immersion classes] we give them a lot more one-on-one attention, small group work. It helps them achieve more in a short amount of time and so they’re able to get on with their credit classes,” Mason said. […]

Mayor Bloomberg has been an enthusiastic backer of education reform, so one might expect him to be hard at work on a solution to the embarrassing failure of his city’s schools to fulfill their most basic function. But true to form, the mayor has been focusing his attention elsewhere. In preparation for the implementation of his sugary beverage decree, the Nanny of New York is embarking on another “public health” crusade:

[Bloomberg] wants to stop New Yorkers from going deaf, so he’s put in motion an attack on ear buds, CBS 2’s Marcia Kramer reported Wednesday. […]

Officials say an iPod reaches 115 decibels at maximum volume. Doctors say sound has to be below 85 decibels to be safe.

New York can now add another item to its mayor’s already problematic legacy: A generation of lavishly over-funded students who are nevertheless unable and often afraid to step into a college classroom. Those vying to succeed him in November should take note: Spend more of your time and political capital on educating children and getting finances in order. Leave the candy and loud music to their parents.