Rebane's Ruminations
September 2013
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George Rebane


LavabitRIP Lavabit.
  Lavabit has demonstrably been one of the most secure email services on the internet.  It is now closing its doors much to the consternation of the feds who have not been able to hack into Lavabit’s emails and servers.  And this story is worth a consideration to all Americans who pay lip service to maintaining our freedoms.  According to the report in Xato.net Lavabit’s founder and CEO Ladar Levinson refuses to play along with the feds in opening up his email service to government spying.  The exact nature of the government threat has yet to emerge, but the high hard one is clear –  “The message here is that US courts can force a business to subvert their own security measures and lie to their customers, deliberately giving them a false sense of security.” (H/T to RR reader)

The damage by teachers unions is more severe than even I had anticipated.  This especially in California where the CTA has f&*#ed over the young people of the state for some decades now.  California teachers get paid at the highest rates in the country, and they produce students that rank among the lowest in literacy and numeracy in the nation.  But the story doesn’t end there,  as academic Jonathan Jacobs writes ‘As Education Declines, So Does Civic Culture’ in the 16sep13 WSJ.  He strongly underlines and extends the message that Charles Murray (Coming Apart) has delivered (covered much in these pages with more to come).

The bottom line is that we’re turning out millions of 2x4s with faces painted on them.  These students can neither read, write, cypher, nor reason.  And it all comes together in the workplace where “… employers attest, as college instructors will too if they’re being frank, that many college graduates can barely construct a coherent paragraph and many have precious little knowledge of the world—the natural world, the social world, the historical world, or the cultural world. That is a tragedy for the graduates, but also for society: Civic life suffers when people have severely limited knowledge of the world to bring to political or moral discussions.”


BushPricesLiberal history book guts second amendment.
 
As a footnote to the above, leftwing academics continue to do their
share in supplying students a distinctly ‘progressive’ perspective of
what went on before that got us to where we are (more here).

Played out daily in the public round is the truth of ‘a nation ignorant and free, that never was and never shall be.’  (Thomas Jefferson)

Bush2 ended the financial crisis before Obama took office.  As pointed out by an RR reader (here), let’s circle that barn again and take a careful look at what happened before that cold, garbage strewn January 2009 morning in Washington.  Stanford professors Keith Hennessey and Edward Lazear give a succinct accounting of the events and their aftermath (here).  But as we now know, this was a crisis too good to waste in advancing the American socialists’ agenda and fundamentally transforming the nation.

Ending on a high note and a conundrum for collectivist ideology, it turns out that long ago humans evolved brains built for charity.  This has been obvious to the celebrants of American exceptionalism for a couple of centuries or more, now science weighs in with some clinical evidence.  ‘Hard-wired for Giving’ presents the research story (here), but the bigger thrust is that we really don’t need the government gun to make us care for our neighbors and countrymen.  We did it before socialism, and we can do it again if the feds would back off a mite on their forced redistribution programs.  But that is not the progressive view, and the sheeple (see above) are quickly receding out of the reach of reason.

Finally, a little ‘pojetry’

The time has come, progressives say
    to speak of many things.
No not of Obama, the here and now,
    or what the future brings.
But of the past, the then and there,
    of Reagan’s sins and Bush laid bare,
    and the shape of Clinton’s wings.

[19sep13 update] … and a little food for thought.

We are told NOT to judge ALL Muslims by the actions of more than a few Islamic lunatics, but we are encouraged to judge ALL gun owners by the actions of a few lunatics.  Makes you wonder …

Posted in , , , , ,

78 responses to “Ruminations – 18sep13 (updated 19sep13)”

  1. Paul Emery Avatar

    So George reading your link to Hennessey and Lazear reveals that in their view TARP worked, something you have always been opposed to. In their view they humbly agree they were wrong.
    “Second, the TARP worked.
    In September 2008 we, on behalf of President Bush, were part of a team that asked Congress to write a $700 billion check on behalf of taxpayers to bail out the failing largest banks. President Bush didn’t want to do this. We didn’t want to do this. Congress didn’t want to do it (and said no the first time). Our reservations were based on the potential cost to taxpayers and the moral hazard created by bailing out failing institutions and some of their creditors. Even today this program is famously unpopular, but the evidence is that it worked.
    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2013/09/16/bush-ended-financial-crisis-before-obama-took-office-three-important-truths/#ixzz2fGep1H9n

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  2. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 1049am – Yes, TARP did provide an initial cushion, but my opposition to it was, and still is for the next round, on what such interventions give rise to in the sequel (and provided industry needed feedback to correct its errant operating policies). One medicine is never enough to such hubristic planners, they tend to pile on more treatments thinking that they finally understand the process (the system’s transfer function).
    Absent TARP, the dip would have been more pronounced but much shorter given the history of such economic burbles. That is why then and now I would still agree with Ludwig von Mises’ prescription for dealing with bubbles and panics, ‘Do nothing, sooner!’ The markets will clear, and more quickly knowing that there is no expectation that the cavalry will gallop in and attempt to save you.

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  3. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    How come that didn’t work in 1929?

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  4. fish Avatar
    fish

    Liberal history book guts second amendment. As a footnote to the above, leftwing academics continue to do their share in supplying students a distinctly ‘progressive’ perspective of what went on before that got us to where we are (more here).
    Too little too late! 70 million guns sold since the community activist in chief took office.

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  5. Russ Steele Avatar

    MA@ 11:18AM
    Short answer, Government monkeying with the money supply. Here is an interesting history from Christina Romer, Former White House Council of Economic Advisors for Obama, writing for the Encyclopedia Britannica.
    http://elsa.berkeley.edu/~cromer/great_depression.pdf

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  6. Paul Emery Avatar

    Interesting George you agree with Hennessey and Lazear that the initial TARP worked. I thought you were opposed to it from the start because it was proposed by the Dems. The TARP program originally authorized expenditures of $700 billion including billions to AIG. I wish I could have a business like that. Bet the farm and go to daddy for bailouts when the dice roll wrong. I’m really suprised you support that George.

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  7. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 102am – difficult to discuss with your all or nothing hyperbole. I said nothing about supporting it (you again misunderstood), I merely admitted my error in claiming that it did nothing to cushion the initial panic. Subsequent argument corrected my opinion of that, but, as stated in my 1100am, I still would have opposed it on the broader grounds stated. Maybe this thread is a bit too complex for us to pursue.

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  8. Gregory Avatar

    George, the near collapse of standards in California’s public K-12 is a tale that refuses to get traction. One of my son’s professors at Cal (physics, I think) asked him why his peers were doing so poorly before retracting it, saying he wouldn’t know, he was on top of things. It may well have been that my son’s cohort were the ones in the 1st grade that had both constructivist barrels, whole language and whole math, emptied on them courtesy of the disastrous state standards of that time, the mid ’90’s. Even UC Berkeley, receiving the cream of the crop of California’s schools and to a lesser extent, the rest of the country and the world, isn’t immune. We saved our son by moving him to Grass Valley’s lone St. Sensible before too much damage was done, but few parents can reach past the personalities of their children’s teachers and figure out what is being taught is a thin gruel compared to classrooms of the past.
    Local schools get most of their teachers from the lowest tier colleges; in a private meeting Ralf Swenson, one of the short lived Supes in our high school district sang the praises of CSU new grads as being his favorites. And what kind of students do our local CSU’s get?
    Test Scores — 25th / 75th Percentile
    CSU Sacramento
    SAT Critical Reading: 410 / 520
    SAT Math: 420 / 540
    SAT Writing: – / –
    [-/- probably means we’d rather not say]
    CSU Chico
    SAT Critical Reading: 450 / 560
    SAT Math: 460 / 570
    SAT Writing: – / –
    CSU ‘Frisco
    SAT Critical Reading: 440 / 560
    SAT Math: 450 / 560
    CSU East Bay
    SAT Critical Reading: 400 / 500
    SAT Math: 400 / 510
    For a comparison:
    UC Berkeley
    SAT Critical Reading: 600 / 720
    SAT Math: 650 / 770
    SAT Writing: 620 / 740
    UC Davis
    SAT Critical Reading: 520 / 640
    SAT Math: 570 / 690
    SAT Writing: 530 / 660
    Stanford
    SAT Critical Reading: 680 / 780
    SAT Math: 700 / 790
    SAT Writing: 700 / 780
    All stats above from about.com
    Past UC Berkeley grads might want to look at this link to decide if they’d make the cut nowadays:
    http://collegeapps.about.com/od/GPA-SAT-ACT-Graphs/ss/berkeley-admission-gpa-sat-act.htm
    What we don’t know is which CSU grads are being hired into our public schools; we can only guess. A recreational impossibility might be to craft a proposition to force school districts to publish, school by school, the average SAT Math, Verbal and Writing scores of their instructional and of their administrative staff. I suspect it would be an eye opener to upper-middle socioeconomic status (SES) parents wanting their children to have the same opportunities, and for lower SES parents doing all the right things expecting the schools to do their part.
    Personally, I suspect the biggest barrier to hiring graduates from UC and good private colleges is having to work for pointy haired bosses who were from the bottom of the CSU barrel and have figured out that age and treachery trumps youth and skill.

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  9. George Rebane Avatar

    Gregory 202pm – Agreed, especially with the publication of your kids’ teachers’ CVs and test scores. The school system is selling education, and the parent is the customer who needs to assess the quality of the agent(s) delivering the product. And that is doubly true when the product comes from a government monopoly which we all are required to support.

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  10. Gregory Avatar

    George, a CV or resume is going too far. Let’s for the moment just dream about knowing what the aggregate SAT M+V is, school by school. If we can’t know the performance of the kids because they don’t want to test them, we can at least know what sort of teachers and administrators the district hires to instruct and supervise.

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  11. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    Rebane states: Bush2 ended the financial crisis before Obama took office.
    Don’t try to wiggle out of this by saying it’s too complex. This matter is very simple. You recommended Hennessey and Lazear as a resource for claiming that the crisis was over before Bush left office and they commented that they were wrong in opposing TARP, something that you have always opposed. Pretty simple to me.

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  12. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 344pm – hard to continue this thread. I didn’t say it was too complex for me, but you apparently are demonstrating another perspective. Hennessey and Lazear did not embrace TARP for the same reasons I have stated. And their interpretation of the aftermath of that program is the same as mine (see my 1100am).

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  13. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    George, everybody was against TARP. It was supposed to buy up mortgages or something…aka: troubled assets. Bush as against it, Congress was against it, Nancy was against it, I was against it. Especially later when we found it it went to AIG and Goldman Slacks and evil financial institutions.
    Interviews of those that were in the know during those days goes something like this: “Mr. President, we have every ally on the phone and every finance minister on hold. It is not going to stop at Bear Stern going under. The entire house of cards is ready to collapse. The entire global banking system is a few days from going under. All banking, credit, and lending will cease in a few days and we can prepare for an total collapse with unhinged panic and chaos and runs on every bank in the US if we don’t act and act now. The people will be unable to buy or sale anything. The whole enchilada will shut down.
    Whether one likes Tarp or hates it, it does not matter. It was the lesser of 2 evils and the bigger evil was really big.

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  14. Paul Emery Avatar

    Well Bill it appears our host still believes we would be better off today if TARP would not have passed and we would’ve let the whole thing crash. That is also my basic instinct but too big to fail might actually be a reality.

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  15. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Today “too big to fail” is more like “too big to solve.”
    I can never speak for Dr. Rebane, but I was against the bailout for GM and still am. The normal bankruptcy proceedings would have netted the same result, IMHO, without the taxpayers getting screwed and pension funds (and little old ladies and John Q Public) getting 10 cents on the dollar. The unions made off like bandits, literally. I was against Tarp as well.
    Guess we will never know for sure if the whole thing would have crashed. When Bear Sterns went under, it sent unanticipated shock waves throughout the globe, like a tsunami. I felt Bear Sterns needed to go under since they were leveraged 30-35+ to 1 on mortgage back securities and that is a Bozo no-no.
    Glad Fannie and Freddie went into receivership. That deal that Fannie had with Country Wide was beyond immoral. There was once an old adage in real estate: “As goes Country Wide, there goes the country.” Why BofA ever bought Country Wide is beyond stupid. Now BofA is on the hook for billions of CW lawsuits, not to mention a lot of CW’s subprime slime that they now have to buy back from Fannie. Opps, Uncle Ben is still buying the slime. What a mess.
    The stimulus is a whole ‘nother story. Twice as big, 1/50th the results. At least Bush did the unpopular thing and got the hurricane to stop blowing. Cleaning up after the ravaging storm is another matter. 5 years later all we have accomplished is to stop sinking lower. Not going in the right direction yet, but not sinking deeper into the quicksand (we hope). Is the glass 1/2 full or half empty?

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  16. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    California is filled with highly successful people, many of whom can easily afford private schools. The public schools are not well setup to handle the gifted, and in San Francisco, if you don’t get into Lowell, then the race is on to get into one of the better private schools, of which there are many. Lowell is still the leading feeder school to UC Berkeley.
    The end result is that statewide, 8.5% of the parents send their kids to private school. In SF and Marin and San Mateo counties, the rates are much higher. Other end result is that the best and brightest of the state do not wind up attending the public schools, with a few notable exceptions.
    So as usual, Greg ignores the obvious fly in his statistical soup. It’s not that the best and brightest are being poorly educated in public schools. It’s (like his own kid) the fact that the best and brightest are not even in public schools! Since the right refuses to raise the taxes needed for quality public schools, the left sends their kids to private schools. No big mystery. The right sends their little dumplings to private school there, to make the most of what they’ve got, so they don’t drown altogether.
    San Francisco Bay Area parents weigh private schools after cuts.
    ************ by Amy Crawford ************
    With nearly a third of San Francisco children attending private school these days, it was no surprise to see thousands of students at the San Francisco High School Fair.
    About 2,000 students — and prospective students — packed into the cafeteria at Lick-Wilmerding High School on a recent afternoon to learn more about The City’s many high school options.
    “With budget cuts, they want to give their children a better opportunity,” said Nathan Lundy, the associate admissions director for the 116-year-old Lick-Wilmerding. “I’m not knocking public schools; it’s just the reality.”
    Lundy said attendance at the fair has grown substantially, from some 200 a decade ago. Most of the 42 high schools represented were private, but there were also two public high schools and a handful of charters. San Francisco has the highest rate of private school attendance of any county in California.”
    On to other classic boobooos in George’s latest shotgun blast in the morning.

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  17. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    Past grads did what it took to accomplish their goals back then, and might have pressed a bit harder if necessary, had they encountered more resistance, and certainly did have the ability to do so. Notice no repsonse to Greg’s totally misread of my brother, I guess it conflicts too much with his inner visions of engineerious superious.

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  18. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    “no response”

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  19. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    BTW, remember that racist truck with the derogatory doll heads I mentioned last fall? Lots of you poopooed it and thought that I had made it up. Guess what, it showed up in the parking lot at Habitat Restore. Pictures at 11.

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  20. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    Gotta give the Repubs lowering gas prices in time to try and elect Romney. If you go back six months earlier to June 2008, they were right where they are now, if not a bit higher, and that was where they had been for years.

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  21. Gregory Avatar

    Frisco public school teachers send their kids to private schools at a higher rate than the general public, giving lie to Keachie’s delusions. Even the underpaid dears can afford Frisco private schools.
    I tried to send my kid to public elementary school, but after K-1 it was clear 2-8 in the Grass Valley School District would have been a disaster for any child. Grass Valley’s St.Sensible pays their teachers about half of what the GVSD does, so it isn’t money that drove their quality.
    Let me repeat that for the Keachies who can’t read very well, Grass Valley’s St.Sensible pays their teachers about half of what the GVSD does, so it isn’t money that drove their quality.
    What drove the MSM quality was a pedagogy devoid of Ed college fads, based on reality not Faerie wings, excluding of course the Catholicism that crept in.
    There was no reasonable choice for a private high school, so Nevada Union was the only choice if we were to live here. Ended up having to hire a lawyer to get them to take a problem seriously. They did, but I really am not at liberty to discuss what they did to settle the complaint.
    Then it was back to public Ed for undergraduate school, since the private school which he wanted to attend (and would have been free) was out of the question with the fraudulent B’s that were on his grade report, the one thing the school wasn’t willing to fix, though they did decide to make all teachers from then on sign a statement that grades were based on the work of the student.
    Keach, there isn’t much wrong with public schools that abolishing tenure and putting subject matter academics in charge wouldn’t fix. There’s already plenty of money thrown at the schools, just too much to administration and too many incompetent teachers who should be chanting “Welcome to WalMart” for a living.

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  22. Gregory Avatar

    Oh, and there were a total of 17 kids on average in my son’s cohort at MSM. This was a small fraction of western Nevada County students of that age, as most parents thought all was well in our Lake Woebegon elementary and high schools and they were an average mix. Some struggling mightily to keep up, some not. It wasn’t the best and brightest.
    Keach, your fantasies never match reality, here or in Frisco.

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  23. Gregory Avatar

    “Notice no repsonse [sic] to Greg’s totally [sic] misread of my brother, I guess it conflicts too much with his inner visions of engineerious [sic] superious [sic]”
    Keach, there was no “misread of your brother”. Perhaps if you actually tried to cite the words of mine that you think did what you imagine. Shouldn’t be hard to find if it exists.

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  24. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Dr. Rebane: This is the best read of the week concerning the financial crisis of the fall of 2008. Enlightening and points out where I have erred. On topic in regards to your update, Set 18, 2013
    http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-09-12/hank-paulson-this-is-what-it-was-like-to-face-the-financial-crisis#p1

    Like

  25. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    Well I’m glad to see that Greg concurs with me that of the tow siblings, I am the more successful in life in general, despite older brother’s degree in engineering from Stanford. That settles that. I see you failed to note my catch of “response,” spelled incorrectly, and you should realize that MAKING FUN OF THE VISUALLY IMPAIRED besmirches your character. BTW, I also note that you have a [sic] sense of humor. Not bad for a grammar NAZI.
    Try this: “Shouldn’t be hard to find if it exists.” It should not be hard to find, if it exists. You left out your subject, and a comma.
    How many classes at NU’s feeder schools averaged 17 students? How many kids had parents with esteemed degree from 1st tier school, who majored in a subject that required he had mastered math forwards and backwards? More than ten? Out of a graduating class of how many? 800 plus? I think not. (There’s your softball, silly, swing and connect.)

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  26. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    “tow-headed siblings”

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  27. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    Greg’s SF numbers are fantasies. Half of SF does not even have a college degree, and only 18% of the families there even have school aged children, and a great many of the teachers commute in from other communities in the East Bay and Marin. The numbers of doctors and lawyers in SF easily outweighs the numbers of teachers, many of who are well past child raising days. They are the ones who provide the enrollments for the private schools, and in San Francisco, 30% of the school population attends private schools. Tat is a sizable number, as there are roughly 50,000 students in public schools. I don’t think that if you took every school aged child of the teachers of San Francisco you could meet 30% of that number, and that’s what you are shooting for,
    Where are you getting your favorite chestnut from, Greg, and is it valid today? Stand up and be manly with your stats, show all the details, not just your skankwise translation for the local yokels. If you can’t, slink away. Our daughter attended all but the last year and one half in the public schools of San Francisco. The last year was NU, sorta, as most of her time was spent at Sierra College.

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  28. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    As “Tat” was not underlined in red, I missed it. My glasses are in the shop for another two weeks.

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  29. fish Avatar
    fish

    BTW, remember that racist truck with the derogatory doll heads I mentioned last fall? Lots of you poopooed it and thought that I had made it up. Guess what, it showed up in the parking lot at Habitat Restore. Pictures at 11.
    Made it up? From your postings I have no doubt that you saw this evil truck. wink, wink!

    Like

  30. Ian Random Avatar

    I hope someday we put a law on the books that says the government will not lend money to any organization profit or non-profit. But it looks like Bush is a better investor than BO.
    “The government will surely lose money on its auto industry investments. GM may end up costing $15 billion. Chrysler was a much smaller loser, costing about $3 billion.
    But the biggest surprise in the the TARP portfolio turned out to be AIG. The Treasury and Federal Reserve had committed a combined $182 billion to prop up the insurer and ended up making a profit that works out to about 3 percent a year.”
    http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2012/12/21/federal-tarp-bailout-program-winding-down/CSMQSulXdUKKX4dLUae6TN/story.html

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  31. Gregory Avatar

    “Well I’m glad to see that Greg concurs with me that of the tow siblings, I am the more successful in life in general”
    I made no comment along those lines whatsoever. My expectation and comment remains that you’ve been harassing me for years primarily because of my similarity, educationally, to your brother made worse by him also being a pilot, at least in the past.
    Checking the FAA database, there’s a Steven Keachie, no address, no country specified, who has a commercial glider pilot certificate issued 6/25/2013 and a glider instructor cert issued in 1979. Is that him? If so, he’s not quite the basket case, is he? A freshly minted commercial pilot certificate.
    Wassamatta (word found in the Rocky & Bullwinkle dictionary), did mom love him best? Are we stuck in a bad Smothers Brothers routine?
    Regarding your 12:51 I’m having a hard time understanding the basis for your hallucinations. Here’s a quote from a story on a Fordham Institute study:
    “Nationwide, public school teachers are almost twice as likely as other parents to choose private schools for their own children, the study by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute found. More than 1 in 5 public school teachers said their children attend private schools… The same trends showed up in the San Francisco-Oakland area, where 34 percent of public school teachers chose private schools for their children.”
    You can’t blame them for not wanting their kids in those places.

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  32. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Tow head is a racist term. I throw the penalty flag and deeply resemble that remark. Boys, is it half time yet? I gotta pee bad.
    http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/09/10/Flashback-thirty-nine-percent-Chicago-teachers-private-school
    Shows here that a lot of teachers care deeply about their children.

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  33. George Rebane Avatar

    BillT 839am – thank you for that very relevant link Mr Tozer. That statistic about teachers sending their own kids to private schools needs to be repeated often, especially for the benefit of the government schools über alles crowd. But what the rest of us should also give a nod to is that at least some public school teachers are smart enough to recognize when children aren’t being taught, even if they themselves can’t teach. Maybe that’s a hopeful sign.

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  34. Gregory Avatar

    George, the 39% of Chicago area teachers, along with the similar percentage of Frisco teachers, who send their kids to private school may be the ones who have an appropriate content knowledge and actually can teach, and don’t want to risk their kids being in the clutches of the other 61%.

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  35. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    “There something happeniong here, what it is, ain’t exactly clear…”
    The Thomas B. Fordham Institute is an American conservative nonprofit education policy think tank with offices in Washington, D.C., Columbus,Ohio, and Dayton, Ohio. The Fordham Institute is not connected with Fordham University. Wikipedia
    Tax ID: 31-6032844
    Founded: 2007
    This is on the front page of their website
    Yet the report refers to a 2004 date?
    Just why should we trust these folks?
    Dayton itself, a town about the size of Berkeley, has actually had the Foundation around since its founding as a probably tax dodge for the wife of Fordham, and there is no connection to the university, Many years after the foundation of the Foundation, she finally passes away, and the Foundation finally gets a real dose of her cash, and a start of on its mission of improving education in Dayton, but also proclaims new turf in Washington DC as a national group. Now comes the fun part. Dayton has 89 public schools, and 166 private schools, and yet gets rated as a 4 out of a high of 10 in education. http://www.greatschools.org/ohio/dayton/ Yeah, these are folks we can believe in, even with the help of Fisher, Hewlett and Gates. No Koch visible, but where do you think Carnegie and other fronting organizations get their cash from?
    Does sending one kid for one semester to a private school once in their lives count as “private school user?”
    Think I’m going to have dig a little deeper into this “Foundation” and its self declared political slant. After all, do you believe Al Qaeda is manipulating their wiki listing, or is it they themselves?
    Glad to see Steve has renewed his instructors certificate, maybe the kick in the ass we gave him to pry him out of the house the three of us inherited finally got him to re-evaluate his options. He’s stopped talking to my sister as well, for all practical purposes, so little is known since 2010, when he was indeed darning socks and living rent free for 25 years in mom’s house, which he was supposed to be maintaining. He did nothing, and it was sold as a fixer. BTW, to hear him tell it, I was the “favored child” despite the whole family having to tiptoe around him him since the 1960’s, due to his violent episodes, against both my mom and dad. After I restrained him on the last go round, he’s never messed with me again.

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  36. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    “Checking the FAA database, there’s a Steven Keachie, no address, no country specified, who has a commercial glider pilot certificate issued 6/25/2013 and a glider instructor cert issued in 1979. Is that him? If so, he’s not quite the basket case, is he? A freshly minted commercial pilot certificate.”
    That’s odd, the FAA demands that you know the full social security number and address etc. to get any information, at least in my first pass through the site. How and where did you obtain the information? Did you really get it from the FAA, or from some other source?

    Like

  37. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    Second pass through site reveals it is poorly constructed, and did find that he let his flight instructor license expired back in 1981. That was a source of income for him at one time. Date of Issue: 5/14/1979
    Certificate: FLIGHT INSTRUCTOR Print
    Ratings:
    FLIGHT INSTRUCTOR
    GLIDER
    Limits:
    VALID ONLY WHEN ACCOMPANIED BY PILOT CERTIFICATE NO. . EXPIRES: 31 MAY 1981.
    Not clear if renewing the commercial glider pilot license required a check ride, or just filling out form and paying fee, buried even deeper, I guess.

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  38. Gregory Avatar

    Tozer, that’s amazing! 🙂

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  39. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie

    Greg is easily amazed, maybe he IS related to Ronald Reagan?

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  40. Douglas Keachie Avatar
    Douglas Keachie
  41. Gregory Avatar

    Keach, did Steve and your mom ever make that $200K loan/grant they were promising in 2001 to the Alameda Naval Air Museum for their hangar restoration?

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  42. fish Avatar
    fish

    Let’s hear it for the 2nd Amendment. Everyone should have a concealed carry permit….
    That was a source of income for him at one time….
    I was the “favored child” despite the whole family having to tiptoe around him him since the 1960’s, due to his violent episodes….
    Not bad for a grammar NAZI…..
    Stand up and be manly with your stats, show all the details, not just your skankwise translation for the local yokels…..
    remember that racist truck with the derogatory doll heads I mentioned last fall…….

    Welcome to another episode of The Random Thoughts of Douglas Keachie”.
    Oh Doug…you are the gift that just keeps giving.

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  43. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    Yeah, I have to say, Krugman has set it up beautifully: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/20/opinion/krugman-the-crazy-party.html?_r=0&hp=&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1379657436-IlTGi5b4HLzjtKZg190EMw
    Will the Republican Party even survive? That’s the big question in my mind. When your solid demographic are the knuckle-dragging counties in Third World countries like Alabama, what hope is there?
    All hands on deck! Prepare to collide!!

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  44. fish Avatar
    fish

    Ah Michael that’s thuper!

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  45. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    I would say MichaelA knows more about economic than Krugman.
    Regarding the R’s and the Obamacare shutdown. The R’s area actually in a much stronger position thean the D’s and will not be hurt politically. They were not huty in the following election in 1996 yet the democrat press made it seem as though they did. The maintained power for 10 years. EI am forced to watch CNN down here in PV and if anyone wants to watch why their viewership has tanked just watch their incfredibly biased news reports and their roundtables. Makes me want to puke.
    I wouls suggest the D’s are going to lose seats with their lame attempts to support the monstrosity. Via con dios or whatever fellows.

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  46. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Oh how I just love Krugman. Hang on, I have to get my vibrator to finish his reading his opinion. Now, where was I?

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  47. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    Thank you, Todd, for your prescience.
    And yes, Romney by 7 points, as you said.

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  48. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    prescience is my blessed abilty

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