Should Betsy DeVos be confirmed as Secretary of Education?
Comments
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No
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
NoSchool Psych here
Let's do this simply
1. your tax dollars go to pay for public education, which have standards (no common core isn't perfect but it's what we've got)
2. with school choice "vouchers" whatever, you can pick whatever school you want, and take your funding with you
3. these private school have no standards, can hire anyone and pay them nothing, can teach religion (church / state anyone?) and provide no protection for students, especially those with disabilities. For example your kid has autism, sorry we aren't taking them. Your kid pissed off the wrong teacher, gone. Your kid needs extra help? an IEP? tough
4. When these kids take their funding to go to these private schools the public schools then have less resources to educate, which will end up being mostly students with disabilities who need the most resources.
That's very short but hopefully makes some people think
Wouldn't it be funny if the world ended in 2010, with lots of fire?0 -
unsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487
So thinking is now religious?HughFreakingDillon said:
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.0 -
No
no, my point was, how do you know if someone is praying on school property? not everyone that prays has the palms of their hands together in front of their face.unsung said:
So thinking is now religious?HughFreakingDillon said:
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
Exactly I don't need a church for me to pray or have to be on my knees , I pray all the time when I'm walking thru a forest or swimming or walking on the beach !HughFreakingDillon said:
no, my point was, how do you know if someone is praying on school property? not everyone that prays has the palms of their hands together in front of their face.unsung said:
So thinking is now religious?HughFreakingDillon said:
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.jesus greets me looks just like me ....0 -
unsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487
Maybe you are right, after seeing some of the products out of public education lately cleary thinking is already banned.HughFreakingDillon said:
no, my point was, how do you know if someone is praying on school property? not everyone that prays has the palms of their hands together in front of their face.unsung said:
So thinking is now religious?HughFreakingDillon said:
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.
Use your head, clearly someone sitting somewhere quietly and is not dusturbing anyone isn't a threat. Obvious actions are exactly that. I am sure the ACLU will take up the first case of someone not being allowed to roll out their rug all the while shitting on the guy carrying a Bible.
Or do you prefer government develop some sort of brain scanner to ensure pure, unreligious thought?
Your argument implies educators are incapable of discretion nor capable of making a decison.Post edited by unsung on0 -
Seems to work fine where I live.unsung said:
Good luck with that.oftenreading said:Religion, all religions, should not be the base or the reference point for public education. However, it's completely permissible to teach about religions, as long as you don't bias it for or against any particular religion.
my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
unsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487Yeah, an overhaul is definately required.
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Your stance suggests some sort of Christian victimization is happening. Be careful, you're who they want on their side. My point earlier was about school sanctioned prayer. I can see schools trying to get that going.unsung said:
Maybe you are right, after seeing some of the products out of public education lately cleary thinking is already banned.HughFreakingDillon said:
no, my point was, how do you know if someone is praying on school property? not everyone that prays has the palms of their hands together in front of their face.unsung said:
So thinking is now religious?HughFreakingDillon said:
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.
Use your head, clearly someone sitting somewhere quietly and is not dusturbing anyone isn't a threat. Obvious actions are exactly that. I am sure the ACLU will take up the first case of someone not being allowed to roll out their rug all the while shitting on the guy carrying a Bible.
Or do you prefer government develop some sort of brain scanner to ensure pure, unreligious thought?
Your argument implies educators are incapable of discretion nor capable of making a decison.0 -
No
Shehas no education experience apparently... She can run for chairperson!unsung said:Yeah, an overhaul is definately required.
0 -
Nounsung said:
Boom!
HR899 has just been introduced to eliminated the Federal Dept of Education!
The Bill is one sentence long.
There, no Dept, no jobs for Betsy. Happy?
Clearly again, you have no kids in public schools. And you have no developmentally disabled kids in public schools. We have federally mandated programs that allow them a fair treatment and education (FAPE, IDEA). That DeVos knows nothing about. But that's OK because she's gonna be busy funneling money from public school funding to her private charter schools that are failing, because there are no regulations. Why not? She's making out big-time here Financially, and that's all she and her family care about.unsung said:Boom!
HR899 has just been introduced to eliminated the Federal Dept of Education!
The Bill is one sentence long.
There, no Dept, no jobs for Betsy. Happy?
0 -
Can you imagine if you walked into bank job interview and the 1st ? Is ..
Do you have any experience working for a bank and you stated no I just use the ATM machines !jesus greets me looks just like me ....0 -
No
0 -
No
The Post is a tabloid. I'm actually against teachers unions. There is no need for teachers to have a union anymore, and I still call bullshit.HughFreakingDillon said:
I am inclinded to call bullshit.unsung said:http://nypost.com/2017/02/05/the-war-on-betsy-devos-is-all-about-the-teachers-unions/
I am inclined to agree.0 -
Thank you thank you ! I hope voters take into account this info ...Free said:jesus greets me looks just like me ....0 -
unsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487
0 -
No
Good luck getting a rational response to this.Free said:unsung said:Boom!
HR899 has just been introduced to eliminated the Federal Dept of Education!
The Bill is one sentence long.
There, no Dept, no jobs for Betsy. Happy?
Clearly again, you have no kids in public schools. And you have no developmentally disabled kids in public schools. We have federally mandated programs that allow them a fair treatment and education (FAPE, IDEA). That DeVos knows nothing about. But that's OK because she's gonna be busy funneling money from public school funding to her private charter schools that are failing, because there are no regulations. Why not? She's making out big-time here Financially, and that's all she and her family care about.unsung said:Boom!
HR899 has just been introduced to eliminated the Federal Dept of Education!
The Bill is one sentence long.
There, no Dept, no jobs for Betsy. Happy?
0 -
No
use MY head? YOU stated you wanted the act of prayer abolished on school grounds. I asked a perfectly sound question, addressing the obvious flaws, not only in principle, but in enforcement.unsung said:
Maybe you are right, after seeing some of the products out of public education lately cleary thinking is already banned.HughFreakingDillon said:
no, my point was, how do you know if someone is praying on school property? not everyone that prays has the palms of their hands together in front of their face.unsung said:
So thinking is now religious?HughFreakingDillon said:
you think you shouldn't be allowed to pray on school property? so anyone deep in thought could be accused and expelled?unsung said:
Well I am not touching the God on side thing but I believe there should be a separation, but it must be for all religions. You can pray, you just can't do it on school property. I would be against teaching of any religion and that includes Islam. Nothing allowed on any of it.Go Beavers said:
I hope it's far fetched, but I'm guessing first up will be school sanctioned "prayer time", incorporating creationism in the curriculum, and Bible based values and mission statements for schools. The fundamentalist have been preparing and waiting for this. They see it as their prayers being answered. And hey, you can't be wrong if God is on your side!unsung said:
Well it seems like a far fetched chance that would happen, at least to me. But I could get on board with keeping religion out of public education. But only if it was all religion, not just Christianity.Go Beavers said:
If you know any Christian fundamentalists, they have been quietly excited about trump being president, and of course many voted for him. They're excited, not because they see him as some sort of religious guy, but because they see his policies as a way of facilitating some sort of Christian uprising and God being able to make a presence on earth like never before. It's hard to describe as an outsider, and the fundamentalists are intentionally vague about it, but they are definately excited. It ties into trump's isolationalism and anti- globalism, and also less federal gov involvement in local/state affairs. They see these things as an enemy to their religion somehow. They are also strongly anti-Muslim. They see local control of schools as opening the door to having Christianity in the classroom and will push this through different "religious freedom" policies. You'll see much more of this being pushed very soon. Pence is totally on board with this stuff, and he's the fundamentalist main guy.unsung said:
In what way?Go Beavers said:Jesus will be coming to a public school near you!
It's hard to watch individuals who believe this talk about it, because they're very passive aggressive. They claim to filled with the love of Jesus, but they're full bore buying into fear oriented beliefs where they're engaged in some mythological struggle of Christianity against everything else. They'll support policies that discriminate and will limit others freedoms because they think they're entitled by God. At the same time, they think they're doing good.
I have no issue with teaching the history of religion, but not religion itself.
Use your head, clearly someone sitting somewhere quietly and is not dusturbing anyone isn't a threat. Obvious actions are exactly that. I am sure the ACLU will take up the first case of someone not being allowed to roll out their rug all the while shitting on the guy carrying a Bible.
Or do you prefer government develop some sort of brain scanner to ensure pure, unreligious thought?
Your argument implies educators are incapable of discretion nor capable of making a decison.
who the fuck is shitting on a guy walking around with a bible? it's very simple: don't teach religion, but practice it yourself wherever the fuck you want. I'm not sure what's so problematic about that.
basically your prayer in schools stance is the exact same as trump's travel ban. no muslim praying disguised as equal ban for all.
and to your last question: where did I advocate for no religious thought? that was actually your idea. at least no on school grounds, anyway.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
No
It really was never a question about qualification. She paid each and every Republican senator for their vote and that was after giving Trump $200 million.josevolution said:Can you imagine if you walked into bank job interview and the 1st ? Is ..
Do you have any experience working for a bank and you stated no I just use the ATM machines !
0 -
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