Rebane's Ruminations
February 2017
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[Mr Norm Sauer, a retired attorney who lives in Nevada City, is a member of The Union Editorial Board and  a contributor to these pages.  This submitted piece also appears in the 8feb17 issue of the newspaper (here) and has garnered its expected vituperation from the usual suspects.]

Norm Sauer

A topsy-turvy upheaval characterized the start of Donald Trump’s presidency. Everything is in flux not seen since 1932 when Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated and distanced himself from Herbert Hoover. Mainstream Democrats and even Republicans are either infuriated or vexed over the outsider Trump.

Giving President Trump his due, his inaugural speech recognized ‘the forgotten man,’ and reminded us that “… a nation exists to serve its citizens … When you open your heart to patriotism, there is no room for prejudice …”

The media collusion with the Clinton campaign was endemic in the WikiLeaks email disclosures. The complicity destroyed any idea that establishment journalists are disinterested and principled. The press has turned from eight years of obsequiousness to frenzied hostility toward the White House: Senate filibusters are no longer subversive, but vital, and if Trump follows Obama’s example of presidential fiats, he will be considered seditious.

Meanwhile, Democrats remain concerned that Obama’s legacy has destroyed the party. How can they continue to advocate identity politics but capture the irredeemable deplorables that cost them the Rust Belt states? Civil war exists between the party leaders, but it seems lessons have not been learned, nor are Democrats getting the message.

Take, for example, the hearing vetting Betsy DeVos, Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Education.

DeVos, a billionaire from Michigan, has endeavored as a dedicated philanthropist for 30 years to fulfill the goal that all parents, and primarily low-income parents, have the opportunity to choose the best educational setting for their children so that all children have the opportunity to fulfill their God-given potential. She is a natural champion for the voucher-based policies Trump has promoted to help poor families afford to send their children to private schools.

My watching her being vetted in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee was instructive of political divide. While each Republican senator focused on the best interests of America’s children, the Democrat senators expressed no such concern.

In an effort to appease teachers union bosses, the Democrats were tripping all over themselves to smear DeVos, each attack more bizarre than the next. An example is Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who questioned whether DeVos had ever run a bank: “Do you have any direct experience running a bank? Have you ever managed or overseen a trillion-dollar loan program?”

DeVos politely answered no, and pointed out that neither of President Obama’s Education Secretaries, Arne Duncan and John King, had ever run massive banks either.

Now, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) promises for himself and all Senate Democrats not to vote for DeVos based on an over-the-top claim that she would “single-handedly decimate our public education system if she were confirmed.”

In discussing the state of public education in America, U. S. News & World Report offered a bleak and candid assessment: “In urban school districts across the country,” an education reporter wrote in 2015, “student performance is flat, poor, and minority students are experiencing staggering inequalities, and the picture is especially troubling for black students.”

Is this the status quo Schumer and the Democrats want to protect? Why do they stand in front of the doors of failing schools to keep minority and other children in? Sadly, Democrats know where their bread is buttered, and as long as teachers’ union bosses keep doling out cash to Democrats, they will continue to treat America’s students as second-class citizens.

President Trump and DeVos represent a new way of thinking. It is time to stop playing politics with our nation’s children, especially minorities and those of low income.

Consider that many sectors in our economy are moving away from old business models and trending toward more personalization, service, and flexibility. People who pick up an iPhone, summon an Uber, or order concert tickets online don’t understand why they can’t choose from a menu of school options. As technology has become ubiquitous, we have been trained to expect more choices and more options.

This trend toward individualism and choices has collided with the traditional district public education system and the powerful teachers unions that fund the Democrat Party. The education choice movement should consider vouchers, tax credits, education savings accounts, home schooling, charter schools, and private schools.

We should all work together for reform that does something big and bold to help our nation’s greatest treasure — the next generation. Let us all work together to make an American education great again.

Posted in ,

93 responses to “The Democrats are blocking the way to make education great”

  1. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Russ I believe education is the responsibility of our culture not the government How is it in your mind that the federal government has the power to make all those changes you are proposing ? As a conservative I thought you were for less federal involvement in education

    Like

  2. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    ‘our culture’? What culture are you talking about there PE, druid, lefty, Nevada city, what? 😉

    Like

  3. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    culture? Like remove the White Privileged authors like Steinbeck, Twain, Hemingway, and Shakespeare and replace it with Timmy Has Two Mommies and The Day Uncle Harry Became Aunt Suzanne?

    Like

  4. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    OK then it seems like all of you believe that it’s the governments job to educate am I getting that right ? I thought you guys were for less government involvement in our lives and now you are assigning the responsibility of education to government
    My credo as a green libertarian is that we have as much government as we deserve

    Like

  5. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Let’s look at Norm’s article. It’s about failing schools, specifically failing schools with failing students in failing areas. We don’t live in crime infested areas, so comparing Beverly Hills High and Palto Alo High and even our local schools to inner city schools or “average” public education school systems is a red herring. Think beyond our playground nestled on the western slope of The Sierra..
    The bottomline is the schools are failing our children from sea to shining sea. Dropout rates, high school grads unprepared for college bonehead math and writing…..the list of bad juju is long. The promised fixes always say the same thing year after year, i. e., “Give us more money!”. We pay more and get less for 45 straight years. It ain’t working, the system is broke. We are dooming too many youth to a eek out a meager existence. Participation trophies just don’t cut it.
    Before you all go off on youth on drugs, bad parenting, burned out teachers, poor nutrition and other factors to explain why our schools have been steadily underperforming for decades, let’s ask ourselves one simple question. That question is “Why not try something different?”
    It won’t help every single student, but what is wrong with school choice? What is wrong with competition for our dollars and for our children’s education?
    You keep doing what you are doing and you will keep getting what you are getting. The Left has had a monopoly on public schools via the powerful teacher union lobbies for decades. A virtual lock on public education. Why not think outside the box? Cannot be any worse than the status quo. Let the Right take a crack at it and we will take all the blame. If there is poop in the box, you turn it over.

    Like

  6. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    Still the ccc on my 944 PE. 😉

    Like

  7. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Bring back more shop classes. College is not for everyone, nor will it ever be.
    Another thing. The solution to runaway tuition at our public colleges and universities is not cheaper interest on college loans. It is not making more loans available and easier to get. The solution is to make college more affordable and control the escalating costs that have spiraled out of control.

    Like

  8. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    Real men don’t read hufpo. 😉

    Like

  9. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    I never have opened a Cross link. Might get some airborne virus. That is a job for Dr. Rebane to labor with. He has the patience of Job.

    Like

  10. MikeL Avatar
    MikeL

    Re R Cross….
    Let me see if I have this correct… Obama is an idiot, has mental disorders, randomaly calls military advisors at 3AM to ask questions about what shade of blue to paint the White House press room and is mentally unstable.
    It is so refreshing to see articles that throw out that ol’ confirmation bias problem.

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  11. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    Don’t bother opening that link from Mr Cross. It has nothing to do with the topic at hand. Just more nit picking and name calling re our president.
    The left has only 2 concerns about our nation’s educational system.
    The first is maintaining the largely unionized governmental monopoly on education. And making sure the main curriculum is slanted towards left-leaning points of view.
    That is why the Dems and the useful idiots on the left are so up in arms over DeVos. To answer Mr Emery – it is quite simple – it is the power to undo the many edicts and rules of the prior dept of eds. Whether or not that will happen has yet to be seen. I would like to simply abolish the dept of education as it seems to have no positive effect on our nations ability to educate.

    Like

  12. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    1) The outcry (Devoys is going to murder our children!) is more about the teachers unions than the students or teachers. Nothing puts the fear of God in the Union bosses terrified hearts like school choice. Nothing gets the teachers riled up as the topic of grading them on student performance. Accountability is the deal breaker and well as breaking up the monopoly.
    2). The Feds don’t teach. The only place in our constitution that the federal government is responsible for teaching kids (interpreted in court cases) is on the Rez for the savages. Yes, you need not wonder. They run it like the Feds run just about everything.
    http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2015/11/06/native-american-students-left-behind
    More if you are in to it, but off topic. Or is it? There are more Native Americans than there are Transgenders.
    http://www.edweek.org/ew/projects/2013/native-american-education/running-in-place.html
    http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/failing-americas-most-forgotten-children

    Like

  13. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Re Don-my 9:55
    Show me where in the Constitution states it’s the federal governments responsibility to Manage schools

    Like

  14. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    The left and their union lackeys are apoplectic on the DeVoss confirmation. Watching them foam at the mouth makes me giddy. The swamp is being drained and perhaps the feds can get out of the education business and put the money into protecting Americ from the liberals.

    Like

  15. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Todd just a reminder :
    It was Bush and the Republican Congress that gave us No Child left behind in 2001 If that’s any indication as to what the Republicans might do we’re in big trouble

    Like

  16. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 1019pm – Paul, your logic remains a delightful artifact to behold in these pages. Humor goes a long way and we all need a laugh in these tense times; don’t change a thing.

    Like

  17. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    George was that a response to my 8:52? No Child Left Behind was Republican all the way with a Repup House, Senate and Presidency. It’s a respectable question to ask if that’s what we have to look forward to this time around.

    Like

  18. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Paul Emery I never supported NCLB so your attempt a equivalency falls on my deaf ears to you.

    Like

  19. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Nevermind it was the Lion of the Senate Drunk Teddy that got Bush’s ear to pass No Child Left Behind. It is still in operation, albeit they change the name of it every so often. Federal dollars going to our precious children and assorted misfits. I once attended a briefing on No Child Left Behind after its first name change. Costed the local schools nothing, except maybe the cost to light and heat a room.
    I liked Drunk Teddy. Grabbing those waitress at restaurants and being so drunk he would fall over on top of them was good times. Oh, he wasn’t copping too many feels and most of the time he was too sideways to get it up. My favorite Teddy story was when he was running for Prez. A news crew walked right up to his front door and rang the doorbell. Mrs. Teddy opened the door and stood there stark ass naked holding a martini glass in her hand. No, she did not have her make up on.
    Oh, yeah….Loopy, never change. I know, we both voted for Carter. 🙂

    Like

  20. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Bill it was a Republican President and Congress that passed NCLB. It;s hilarious that you try to blame it on Teddy. Were the Republicans that impetant? Is this what we have to look forward to?

    Like

  21. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    BuillT is right. Teddy was the democrats hero for it. Sorry PaulE you are simply wrong.

    Like

  22. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Oh, , Paul, Paul, Paul. Yep, No Child Left Behind passed the House 385-45. In the Senate Drunk Teddy co-authored it. Blame to go around. What gave a good program a bad name was the bill’s mandate to hold teachers accountable for student performance. That was the dagger in the heart of it.
    https://ballotpedia.org/No_Child_Left_Behind_Act
    Oh yeah. When the bill was signed in the Congress in Jan, 2002, the Senate had 50 R’s, 48 D’s, 1 Indie and 1 wacko Indepence Party (Minn). Basically 50/50. The House was about 222-210 R, with one guy dying or something as it became 223 later in the year.
    https://ballotpedia.org/No_Child_Left_Behind_Act
    Paul, are you always this ignorant, or is today your special day. Oh, I will always blame Drunk Teddy, the Kion of the Senate. Noticed Bobby Byrd has Teddy’s back and Teddy had the Grand Wizard’s back as well at the time.

    Like

  23. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Opps, double posted link. Ah hell, just look up the 107th Congress.

    Like

  24. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Paul Emery equals fake news.

    Like

  25. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Only 8 Senators voted against NCLB. They must have left Loopy behind. 🙂

    Like

  26. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    I think the two libertarians in the Senate voted for it too. The non-aligned liars that caucused with the demoncrats.

    Like

  27. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Glad to see Bush Derangement Sydrome still lies beneath the surface waiting to lurch at the opportunity. Whoever said “the only constant in life is change” did not meet our Brother Paul. Come to think of it, Will Rogers never met Brother Paul either.
    https://www.facebook.com/PawsInTheCityDallas/photos/a.408444389459.199725.45659049459/10155358276729460/?type=3&theater

    Like

  28. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Todd, Bill Thanks for verifyint No Child Left Behind wa a Republican bill. It is a matter of concern that we may see more legislation like this from the Republican majority.

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  29. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    You are welcome Paul. Heaven forbid we hold teachers and schools accountable for student performance. Obliviously , It’s not about the students. It’s all about keeping the status quo, which Joe Sixpack finds rather unpalatable. .
    Well, since we cannot fire bad apples or reward good teachers and are stuck dumping tons of money into the Titanic, might was well try getting the kids the hell out of the bloated broken system. Some things you just can’t salvage. School choice will murder our children!
    Paul, what do you care. You only care about growing pot, playing music in hole in the wall restaurants, and hating on the R’s. Fuck our kids, right?

    Like

  30. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    “I think the two libertarians in the Senate voted for it too.”
    Todd 1006
    Todd, are you dropping peyote again today? Please turn off your computer and go to the window to watch the raindrops fall.
    Yes, NCLB was a bipartisan love fest.
    No, charter schools for all who want them will not make education great again but it will fragment teacher’s union funding of Democrats for as far as the eye can see. Whether or not that is a good thing is in the eye of the beholder.
    Let’s look at our own charter schools in Nevada County… only Ghiddotti is worth a damn and that’s largely due to their cherry picking students and teachers (hollowing out the district’s comprehensive high school in the process) and leveraging the instructional staff from Sierra College who are more qualified in the subjects being taught than the average secondary teacher, where a real Master’s degree is rare.
    School of the Arts, Yuba River, Forrest Charter, not to mention the Grass Valley Charter and it’s companion SAEL are all at the bottom of the barrel when it comes to providing adequate mathematics instruction. Yuba River Charter is particularly distinguished by being at the absolute bottom of their 100 Similar Schools list, an ‘honor’ it only earned after the only other Waldorf charter on the list went belly up. For this, it has been rewarded by taxpayers it’s own campus to be built to suit complete with effective anthroposophic iconography to reinforce the magical effects of a Steiner education (but remember, it’s legally not a religion so public monies can be used for it).
    The big problem with k-12 education (besides that teachers are largely from the bottom of their classes) is the belief at the top, like the colleges of education, in the efficacy of discovery or inquiry methods that are unsupported by experience. This is the core of the problem with the Common Core team, the problem with the New New Math of the 1990’s. The true believers in the failed Romantic notions of whole language and whole math remain at the top, and rust never sleeps.
    [a note to the reader, one school name above is intentionally misspelled for the benefit of Mr. Pink who just loves to find typos in words he knows how to spel]

    Like

  31. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Oh that’s right Gregory, those two are Indies. Not libertarians. And since I don’t drink or do drugs I must say your humor is a hoot.

    Like

  32. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    “What gave a good program a bad name”
    Tozer 947
    No Child Left Behind was horribly flawed in concept and in name. Sorry, but some children will always be left behind; some because they just can’t learn, some because their parents never learned, some because they just don’t care.
    Some get lousy teachers and it is generally understood that two or three incompetent teachers in a row in their formative years probably sets them behind so far that they may never catch up.
    Teachers rightfully object to judging their work by the aggregate of their student’s test scores (even when there were good tests, before the current Common Core abominations). This is counter intuitive to many of the citizens carrying torches and pitchforks into the town squares, but how well a classroom does on a test has even more do to with the preparation of the kids by all the teachers that came before them, not to mention the competence of the administrations who assign teachers and children to their assigned classrooms. There are methods that have been developed to tease a particular teacher’s performance out of a history of a few years’ of testing (google “value added modeling” for additional reading), but teachers don’t trust advanced statistics to determine their pay or employment status (especially the ones who still can’t fathom the arithmetic of fractions), and unions like the current system of using seniority, which plays to their own raison d’être.
    Education in the US has been broken far longer than the system for delivering health care and getting it paid for. There is no panacea, there is no quick fix. Not only will eggs need to be broken but the undead hens and roosters will need to be systematically hunted down and fricasseed.
    A century ago, a Harvard President described his college of education as a kitten that needed drowning. Unfortunately, that kitten (and the kitten at Columbia’s School of Education) has had yearly litters of growing sizes since then, who were met by growing education budgets from coast to coast, willingly paid by parents and other taxpayers who expected competent educations for all students.
    How’s that working for everyone?

    Like

  33. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Oh Gregory, I was being kind to NCLB considering it’s intentions. That’s all that matters. Well, NCLB did throw more money to the schools for handicap toilets and drinking fountains. 🙂
    One Independence Party Senator. From Minnesota. Maybe the ghost of Hubert Horacio Humphrey mixed in with some McGovern, the Grange Hall and Jesse “The Body” Ventura. Not Independent, but Independence Party. There was already an Indie in the Senate. Do you think it could have been Colonel Sanders? Do ya Wally?
    Bottomline with public education. You walk twenty miles in the woods, you got to walk twenty miles out.

    Like

  34. Bonnie McGuire Avatar

    Charter schools evolved for a reason. One of our daughters is a teacher who decided to home school because she had active children who would have been bored in public school. I was amazed at the discipline and all they accomplished. At first people poked fun that those poor children would miss out until I mentioned their mother was a teacher. Another nice thing was that they were always smiling, compared to kids in public school. Understandably, it wasn’t long before many who were against charter schools were sending their kids to them because the kids were bored and couldn’t get anything done. The charter school rule is personal discipline, do your studies, or get out. That’s what I’ve learned from those involved who want to learn.
    Years ago I remembered a young woman from South America working as a checker in a local store who had attended Sierra College. What she said was shocking. She said that grammar school kids in her former country were farther ahead educationally.

    Like

  35. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Miss Bonnie. My sister (my 7th most favorite feminist author) went down to the Capital steps and protested for homeschooling. Small band of women. Underground types. Gov. George Deukmejian had a bill on his desk to outlaw homeschooling, all ready to sign and then he stepped out and actually talked with those respectful, yet quite firm and articulate moms. Don’t know what happened next, but George walked back inside and tore up the bill. And the rest is history. Don’t know why the call themselves feminists. They are just kinda take no BS from the Gov kind of gals. Never want to stand in the way of mother hen feathering her youngins.
    Rules were different but my sis had the entire public school year curriculum done and aced and mastered by both kids by November each year. Got the involved in PAG and bunches of stuff, in Sierra College for a class or two @ 16. My sis was on a mission and very pragmatic. Schools would not pay for $300 in textbooks she ordered. Rather adversarial to homeschool types. She cut a deal. Seems the daughter was watching PBS about a story contest. Took it upon herself to write and send in a story. It won the 1st prize in Reading Rainbow National Contest and next thing you know they were driven around in a limo at Universal Studios, on the set of PBS, given an Apple Boat Anchor Buck Rogers looking new computer. My sis told the school district that they can keep the property tax money, use her homeschooled daughter’s name in promoting the school district, and she would tell the media that the golden child was a second grade student at so and so elementary. Now, if you could be so kind to order these books for me now. Oh, sis got anything she needed after that, no problem. My other sis homeschooled 5. 4 were juniors at Cal @ 18 years of age.
    But, some charter schools are worse than public schools….by far. However, not all kids are cut out for the huge high school social/football/gangsta wannabe culture. It’s a mixed bag out there nowadays, Miss Bonnie. Not like it was went they first popped up here and there in yuppie town and near communes.

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  36. Russ Avatar
    Russ

    Bonnie@01:13 When we moved from Nebraska after five years, our children were so far ahead of the students in Nevada Union Schools it was a real problem, they had already done the work and were bored, it was a real challenge. We worked with the high school for our oldest daughter to attend some Sierra College courses rather than plow old ground in high school. The discipline in Nebraska was extraordinary, our K-8 school principal was a retired Marine Colonel.

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  37. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Calm down Bill. (10:51) I sense an episode coming on with bad language and all that. I seem to be able to make you do that. Foam is starting to dribble out of your mouth. I recommend a time out and some fresh air. Perhaps stay away from this blog till you calm down.
    For the record I am a strong supporter of Charter schools and was one of the early proponents and organizers of the Yuba Charter School.

    Like

  38. Norm Sauer Avatar
    Norm Sauer

    Dear bloggers:
    I am encouraged by the extent of the participation on George’s blog with respect to school choice, etc. There are many ways to handle giving parents choices of schools, etc. for their children and a few were mentioned in my article and in your comments.
    Until the last two months school choice was supported by both Dems and Reps. For me, the focus must be our children and giving parents educational choices, including private/parochial schools.
    My disdain is for Senate Democrats who seemed not to care about our children’s education and betterment, and consequently the betterment of our country. Their conduct was staggering me when I watched them on CSPAN. Consider the two-faced Cory Booker:
    http://www.nationalreview.com/node/444738/print.

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  39. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Paul… did you ever attend a college? Do you think you have the ability to judge whether even an elementary school even is doing their job for kids who expect to be able to use calculus as a freshman at Chico state?
    Yuba River Charter isn’t.

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  40. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Charter schools didn’t “evolve”… they were created to get around the monopoly of our mainstream public schools that, because they were outright monopolies, had a tendency to not be responsive if particular students, parents or even teachers were unhappy.
    A continuing problem is that if you aren’t a standard public school, or (at least in California) a chartered public school, your funding comes only from parents who have to leave the tax monies that had been prised from the taxpayer base for the education of their children. Personally, I didn’t put my kid in our local St.Sensible for religion, I did it because Hennessey Elementary School was literally incompetent in the teaching of mathematics, language and science, and the worst of those incompetents are still teaching in the same building as the Grass Valley Charter School using the same fatally flawed pedagogies they learned in the schools of education that are still teaching the same Educational Religion they’ve been peddling for years. Somehow, Mt.St.Mary’s Academy was able to teach their religion (not mine), math, language and science when the Grass Valley School District could not distinguish between educational shit from educational shinola, and that remains the case. I would have preferred an affordable secular organization that believed in curriculum centered instruction, but those do not exist in this county, even now.
    The money spent by the state on the education for a child should follow the child to whatever school the child’s parents (or legal guardian) chooses.

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  41. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Paul: I foaming Big time, future generation hater. NCLM was a small, but very scary band aide on a big problem, The schools screamed and hollered and the Chicago teachers went on strike. The strike never was about money really. It was about grading schools and classrooms. And Yuba River Charter is a step backwards. But, your heart was in the right spot.
    https://www.facebook.com/RowdyConservatives/photos/a.217983685002343.55586.217926015008110/1023364641130906/?type=3&theater
    Yes, I done forgot. The jest of all your posts is to attack, not discuss. Anything with a Trumpster or R on it must be bad. Except Flyboy McCain and his girlfriend Lyndsey. Playing politics with children’s dreams is shameful. You are a bad dog.
    .

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  42. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Semi-serious question… what are our local comprehensive, continuation and charter high schools doing to prepare students to enter the competitive world of pot trimming?

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  43. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Gregory
    Why don’t you ask the parents of Yuba Charter Students what they think of the education their children receive. It’s possible you wouldn’t respect their opinion If so do you propose a State of Federal standard to make an evaluation rather than their parents and family? Sounds like big government intrusion to me. I can arrange for you to meet a couple of Yuba Charter school parents if you would like to get direct information.

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  44. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Also Gregory most Yuba Charter graduates (K-8) breeze through high school and do fine in whatever direction they plan to go in after that. There are people I can connect you with if you’d like to know more.

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  45. Walt Avatar

    Good Lord. Paul wants to make hay about Bush and No child left behind. BFD.
    Nixon gave us the EPA..OH JOY!!.. It started out “well intended”,, then when LIBS got control of it,,, well I rest my case.

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  46. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Walt
    I just have legitimate concerns about the Repubs being in charge of education based on their previous record which included NCLB, supported by the Bush Administration. I’m hoping they can do better this time around because that was a disaster.

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