"The Empire State Building to glow Red and Yellow"
We claim to defend human rights and freedom yet light up one of our most iconic symbols of American spirit in celebration of the deaths of 75 million people.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,557823,00.html?mep
How far we have fallen from grace. American ethics, American vision are now the domain of Mao, Stalin, Hitler, and Gaddafi.
And no, I'm just trying to be sensationalistic. I'm telling the truth as it is clearly seen across the pages of history and current events.
This is what America is about NOT our president.
From the Battle Hymn of the Republic
COMMENTS
Glenn Beck is a tool
Maybe but that's not exactly the point now is it?
I get your meaning though.
I cannot, for the life of me, understand who would butcher that song and sing it to praise his accomplishments.
I am sorry, but what exactly has Obama accomplished, other than being the first black president?
Don't get me wrong, I am not one to pick at this at most times, but that video, made me a tad bit sick and I can not grasp why they felt they should have children singing about this to the tune of the Battle Hymn of the Republic.
Oh.. wait...
The children don't know any different... I get it now.
Obama, Saviour of America has totally missed the mark, yet again.
"Obama says American kids spend too little time in school, putting them at a disadvantage with other students around the globe."
The facts?
"Kids in the U.S. spend more hours in school (1,146 instructional hours per year) than do kids in the Asian countries that persistently outscore the U.S. on math and science tests — Singapore (903), Taiwan (1,050), Japan (1,005) and Hong Kong (1,013). That is despite the fact that Taiwan, Japan and Hong Kong have longer school years (190 to 201 days) than does the U.S. (180 days)."
The problem isn't to little time required for school it's the curriculum, school administrations and parents.
Parents, be responsible, make sure your kid(s) get up and out to school, make sure they complete their homework, spend time with your kids. I don't care if it's hard it's your job.
I was raised, with my brother, by a single mother who never made more than $8/hr. We got to school, did our homework, had food, a roof over our heads and even a nice Christmas. It can be done.
Kids, stop being little punks. You don't know everything and you're destroying your life before it's really begun by skipping class, not doing homework, not paying attention and thinking that the ideas portrayed in rap (for example) has anything to do with a reality which might lead to a good life.
Parents, kids and teachers, make sure the kids are actually in class. It's the law, it shouldn't be that difficult to enforce if you really take the time.
Parents, stay on top of your kid's schools, teachers etc.
So many schools teach reading by "sight reading" and not phonics (learning by the sounds letters make etc) leaving many students ill equipped to adapt and setting them up for many embarrassing moments. (I've seen it happen a lot)
They also fail to teach in depth and REAL history, opting to focus on things like the vast importance of electing a black president (honestly that doesn't actually matter in 2009) or why the war on terror is wrong.
Math, history, English, geography, these are far more important than sports or the delicate feelings of someone who may be offended by the FACT old white men wrote the Constitution.
The problem is our schools, curriculum and parents. Not how many hours the kids are in class as those facts prove. Many believe that students actually spend to much time at school and to little time at home, I for one believe this.
I am blown away by the ignorance if not pure stupidity this administration has shown. Sadly the root of this isn't Obama but the American people who actually don't play a role but should, which coincidently...means most of you who read this.
Rant over.
COMMENTS
Kids and school...one of my pet topics. In my city right now, there is an uproar because the high school suddenly realized that minority students...read "african-american".....were scoring lower on tests and have generally poorer grades than the white students. So..guess what happened? They called an assembly for the entire student body...then dismissed the students by race until only the black males were left. They then had a motivational speaker come on and speak to the black males.
Needless to say most parents were outraged. If they had dismissed the black students and had an assembly for white students only, there would have been riots!
Nothing is given or guaranteed to you in this life. When I was 12, a teacher wrote in my autograph book, "Remember, you own the world, but no one owes you a living."
Get off your rear, get in gear, study HARD.
I think you totally misread that. "He" is ME and I don't think I showed any ignorance of the situation.
Ahh, I see... you are right.
I misread and misinterpreted the entire thing. :P
I meant no offense by it, at all.
I just know, not just the teachers and the parents should be blamed for it, the "kids" and "students" should also be accountable for it. I mean, how can one learn if one if not willing to do so? :)
But then again, you did state that. Heh heh.
I was, of course, an idiot and completely misread this entire thing.
*smacks forehead*
Definitely will focus on doing one thing at a time next time hun. ;)
It's ok :)
You're right the kids do have a large part in this but how a kid acts is often, not always but often, based on how and what their parents teach them or allow them to do (Like watching certain shows or hanging out with negative influences).
Yes there's plenty of kids who hate school, don't wanna study etc but many of them just need extra guidance and discipline.
Now, sometimes it's bc a student is highly advanced or has a legit. mental disorder but there are still ways of getting them through school with a world class education.
Just a random reality check.
The current total US public debt: $11,816,450,533,723
The current US population: 307,521,390
Each citisens share of the debt: $38,424!
Thats $38,424 per person, not per household. In order for the government to pay off all of our debit it would mean that every person would have to work 1.3 years (earning an avg of $28,567/yr) and then give it all to the gov to pay it off.
Personally that seems to much.
The avg personal income in the US is $28,567/yr and the avg person has less than $60,000 in debt. So that works out to a totalincome to debt ratio of about 1:2.
The gov has a debt of $11.8 trillion and an avg income of $2 trillion making a total income/debt ratio of almost 1:6!!!
Now for the year 2009 alone the US deficit will reach $1.85 trillion. This means that the gov will bring in $2.06 trillion in revenue and spend $3.93 trillion. Basically when our deficit reaches and surpasses our revenue the US will be officially bankrupt (although we've technically been bankrupt since the early 1990's).
So all the money we owe today $11.8 trillion.
The money we have pledged to pay (in debt, SS payments, Medicare payments etc) is $60 trillion.
We may be the most powerful nation on Earth but we need a lesson in how to balance a check book.
And you think we can pay for healthcare...HA!
Sources:
www.census.gov
www.usgovernmentrevenue.com
http://www.marktaw.com/culture_and_media/TheNationalDebt.html
www.seekingalpha.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States
COMMENTS
Well damn... That is some terrifying number crunching:(
Awhile back, due to an asshole ex-husband who spent all my money (and then some!) and left me drowning in debt, I owed a total of $25,000. By working 3 jobs, not taking any time off and working every shift I was offered, I managed to pay my usual bills and get that debt cleared in under 5 years.
The government is in a mess, that's fo sho.
This saddens me.
Schools Phasing out Cursive Writing
By TOM BREEN, Associated Press Writer Tom Breen, Associated Press Writer – Sat Sep 19, 9:44 am ET
CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Charleston resident Kelli Davis was in for a surprise when her daughter brought home some routine paperwork at the start of school this fall. Davis signed the form and then handed it to her daughter for the eighth-grader's signature.
"I just assumed she knew how to do it, but I have a piece of paper with her signature on it and it looks like a little kid's signature," Davis said.
Her daughter was apologetic, but explained that she hadn't been required to make the graceful loops and joined letters of cursive writing in years. That prompted a call to the school and another surprise.
West Virginia's largest school system teaches cursive, but only in the 3rd grade.
"It doesn't get quite the emphasis it did years ago, primarily because of all the technology skills we now teach," said Jane Roberts, assistant superintendent for elementary education in Kanawha County schools.
Davis' experience gets repeated every time parents, who recall their own hours of laborious cursive practice, learn that what used to be called "penmanship" is being shunted aside at schools across the country in favor of 21st century skills.
The decline of cursive is happening as students are doing more and more work on computers, including writing. In 2011, the writing test of the National Assessment of Educational Progress will require 8th and 11th graders to compose on computers, with 4th graders following in 2019.
"We need to make sure they'll be ready for what's going to happen in 2020 or 2030," said Katie Van Sluys, a professor at DePaul University and the president of the Whole Language Umbrella, a conference of the National Council of Teachers of English.
Handwriting is increasingly something people do only when they need to make a note to themselves rather than communicate with others, she said. Students accustomed to using computers to write at home have a hard time seeing the relevance of hours of practicing cursive handwriting.
"They're writing, they're composing with these tools at home, and to have school look so different from that set of experiences is not the best idea," she said.
Text messaging, e-mail, and word processing have replaced handwriting outside the classroom, said Cheryl Jeffers, a professor at Marshall University's College of Education and Human Services, and she worries they'll replace it entirely before long.
"I am not sure students have a sense of any reason why they should vest their time and effort in writing a message out manually when it can be sent electronically in seconds."
For Jeffers, cursive writing is a lifelong skill, one she fears could become lost to the culture, making many historic records hard to decipher and robbing people of "a gift."
That fear is not new, said Kathleen Wright, national product manager for handwriting at Zaner-Bloser, a Columbus, Ohio-based company that produces a variety of instructional material for schools.
"If you go back, you can see the same conversations came up with the advent of the typewriter," she said.
Every year, Zaner-Bloser sponsors a national handwriting competition for schools, and this year saw more than 200,000 entries, a record.
"Everybody talks about how sometime in the future every kid's going to have a keyboard, but that isn't really true."
Few schools make keyboards available for day-to-day writing. The majority of school work, from taking notes to essay tests, is still done by hand.
At Mountaineer Montessori in Charleston, teacher Sharon Spencer stresses cursive to her first- through third-graders. By the time her students are in the third grade, they are writing book reports and their spelling words in cursive.
To Spencer, cursive writing is an art that helps teach them muscle control and hand-eye coordination.
"In the age of computers, I just tell the children, what if we are on an island and don't have electricity? One of the ways we communicate is through writing," she said.
But cursive is favored by fewer college-bound students. In 2005, the SAT began including a written essay portion, and a 2007 report by the College Board found that about 15 percent of test-takers chose to write in cursive, while the others wrote in print.
That was probably smart, according to Vanderbilt University professor Steve Graham, who cites multiple studies showing that sloppy writing routinely leads to lower grades, even in papers with the same wording as those written in a neater hand.
Graham argues that fears over the decline of handwriting in general and cursive in particular are distractions from the goal of improving students' overall writing skills. The important thing is to have students proficient enough to focus on their ideas and the composition of their writing rather than how they form the letters.
Data from the National Center for Education Statistics show that 26 percent of 12th graders lack basic proficiency in writing, while two percent were sufficiently skilled writers to be classified as "advanced."
"Handwriting is really the tail wagging the dog," Graham said.
Besides, it isn't as if all those adults who learned cursive years ago are doing their writing with the fluent grace of John Hancock.
Most people peak in terms of legibility in 4th grade, Graham said, and Wright said it's common for adults to write in a cursive-print hybrid.
"People still have to write, even if it's just scribbling," said Paula Sassi, a certified master graphologist and a member of the American Handwriting Analysis Foundation.
"Just like when we went from quill pen to fountain pen to ball point, now we're going from the art of handwriting to handwriting purely as communication," she said.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090919/ap_on_re_us/us_cursive_angst
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Have we truly forgotten what a wonderful gift writing is? The ability to take our thoughts, dreams, fears, loves, passions, ideas that are trapped in our minds to flow through our hands and on to paper so that others may share in them. Something as simple as a strong magnate or electrical surge can erase all of our petty electronic scribblings. However it takes far more to remove words, placed down on paper, stone, wood, glass and the written word can last centuries, the best a CD can do is maybe a hundred years.
Language, writing, communication, words they are more than just a form of expression they are god. Without them nothing in human civilization is possible.
We shouldn't be so disrespectful as to relegate it to "note taking" and leave it as nothing but a shadow in it's most basic form....writing in print.
COMMENTS
Dude you copied me...I posted this first...but I agree...it is sad that most kids today can barely write their names in cursive.
And to think, Charleston is just a few minutes away from me.... at least we're moving before our daughter starts school, and that's if we don't home school her.
It really doesn't suprise me though, education in this area is horrible. I've been in college english classes with people who graduated high school and could only read at about a third grade level.
Seriously? Third grade???
What the hell? When I was in school we started learning cursive in second grade and continued throughout sixth grade. All of written work had to be in cursive. We were graded on it, 15% of our grade was based off of the technique that was used for cursive. Even in high school, if your printed it you were made to rewrite it into cursive.
I like cursive, I love the forming it takes when written properly. This is saddening.
Now this is worth the read!
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Now, in a strict sense it's actually a sin to use this service because it's rewarding those who are sinners for their sin BUT it sure is darn funny!
COMMENTS
That is too funny.
Figures someone named Brad would be involved in something so unethical and immoral... but with the number of stupid people in this country, these guys will be millionares...
Nice to see there are such good hearted souls in my area. Geez, lol.
COMMENTS
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LadyKrystalynDarkstar
20:39 Sep 30 2009
Don't get me started on Fox News!
NocturnalMistress
20:55 Sep 30 2009
Oh wow... Honoring something like this, makes me wonder about the American ethics and morals in this country.
Viridian
21:04 Sep 30 2009
9/11 was awesome
Lets hope for more like that in the future
Well, against these kinds of Americans at least, the cool ones are alright
Viva la bomb the living shit out of the US!