Category: Class War
Critique
Of what Obama said about education in his SOTU speech, and his comparing our results to South Korea’s:
No matter that according to OECD data, South Korean kids are the unhappiest in the world, and according to many studies, have high suicide rates. US parents should be just as demanding more of their kids, even if their happiness and mental health be damned.
I’ve written before about Duncan’s misplaced envy of the South Korea, where 20% of the average family’s disposable income is spent on private tutoring, and even the Prime Minster has warned us against emulating their educational system. Many Korean families in fact move to the United States in order to save their children from the horrible pressures of their system. But now Duncan and the President appear to have taken this fixation even further.
Graciously, Obama started his State of the Union praising teachers: “today in America, a teacher spent extra time with a student who needed it and did her part to lift America’s graduation rate to its highest levels in more than three decades.” But then he went on to say:
“Race to the Top, with the help of governors from both parties, has helped states raise expectations and performance. Teachers and principals in schools from Tennessee to Washington, D.C., are making big strides in preparing students with the skills for the new economy — problem solving, critical thinking, science, technology, engineering, math. Now, some of this change is hard. It requires everything from more challenging curriculums and more demanding parents to better support for teachers and new ways to measure how well our kids think…”
Good he and Arne have changed their line – at least temporarily – by saying that teachers need more support. But now they are accusing parents of not having high enough expectations. Can’t we get over this blame game? Or am I being too sensitive?
‘Monkeys in business suits’
Our betters
Peter Schiff might be one of the biggest assholes in the world:
Preview
Isn’t that nice?
People struggling just to hang on, and politicians get to go skiing at five-star resorts with lobbyists.
Got your pitchfork yet?
The wingnuts are trying to finish turning PA into Alabama
Call your state reps and senators, don’t let them:
HARRISBURG — A conservative group looking to pass legislation that would cut off automatic dues deductions from public sector unions is turning up the heat on lawmakers in the state Capitol.
Bills proposed in the state House and Senate would bar the state and municipal governments from deducting union dues or political contributions from the paychecks of most public employees — though prison guards, police officers and firefighters are excluded from the bill.
Neither piece of legislation has yet to move out of committee, although backers of the bills — as well as a number of unions strongly opposing the bills — have stepped up their lobbying and public relations efforts in recent weeks.
Lawmakers supporting the bill had a news conference Monday, and a Pennsylvania AFL-CIO event is scheduled for today to highlight opposition to the legislation.
The Commonwealth Foundation, a free-market think tank that has been one of the most outspoken proponents of the legislation has sent out two statewide mailings to those who vote regularly on the issue, one in December and one this month.
ACTION: Find your legislator here.
No. 5

Ronald Reagan, No. 5 in a series of men who fucked America. Via Political Garbage Chute.
Poor, poor bankers
When are they even exposed to the news that people are bashing them? They don’t consort with the likes of us!
Wingnut logic
No birth control, no abortion — and no welfare if you get pregnant one too many times. Yeah, that makes sense!
Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) suggested the possibility of cutting government benefits for unwed mothers who have multiple children.
“Maybe we have to say ‘enough’s enough, you shouldn’t be having kids after a certain amount,’” said Paul, who opposes legal abortion and has criticized the federal health care law’s contraception mandate as a violation of religious and economic liberty.
The likely 2016 presidential candidate made the remarks during a luncheon in Lexington, reported the Lexington Herald-Leader, in response to a question about workforce development.
The conservative senator said communities or families should be responsible for the prevention of unplanned or unwanted pregnancy, but he said government policies could discourage unwed mothers from having additional children. “Married with kids versus unmarried with kids is the difference between living in poverty and not,” Paul said.






