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Discuss the US Presidential Election & Education

In 24 hours, many of you will be able to vote. So as we come down to the wire, this is really our last chance to talk about the issues. We've already discussed Health Care, the War, and the Economy. Today I'm opening up the floor to discuss education. Perhaps no other issue will matter more in 50 years. Which candidate will make the next generation smarter?

38 of 1,515 comments (clear)

  1. Vote by mfh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nuff said. (These issues are a stimulus to trigger a voting response, and have NOTHING to do with policies that will exist post-election.)

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    1. Re:Vote by symbolset · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you don't vote:

      • Your opinion doesn't count.
      • you're not entitled to complain
      • you'll have several years to regret it

      So get off your lazy butts and vote! You are not too busy.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    2. Re:Vote by cl0s · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What if you're complaining about the system as a whole? Voting would be quite hypocritical then. Unless your voting for a guy thats running on the basis of changing the system, but running within the system... I guess.

    3. Re:Vote by fprintf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, if I don't vote it will make no difference whatsoever. I live in a state that will definitely go Democratic. Unlike 2 years ago, there is no one running for office that is contested. Given our electoral system, my vote cannot do anything other than possibly give an independent candidate enough votes to receive election funding and a place on the ballot next time. Unfortunately this time, there is no Ross Perot to get my vote.

      I will vote, as my civic obligation. But if I chose to not vote, please do not assume it is because I am too lazy to do so. It has nothing to do with it, and none of your points make any sense to me.

      1. My opinion really doesn't count anyway, my vote can't help anyone get elected unless I change residence to a more independent state.
      2. The two party system gives me every right to complain
      3. Every time I vote for a candidate I regret it anyway, cause all we get is more of the same - bigger government, more taxes & more intrusion. Ross Perot got my vote twice and I have regretted he didn't win each time. I can't remember the name of the independent candidates the last two times, and regrettably we ended up with W.

      --
      This post brought to you by your friendly neighborhood MBA.
    4. Re:Vote by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If you do vote
      • Your opinion barely counts.
      • If your guy wins, you're not entitled to complain because you voted for him
      • If your guy loses, you're not entitled to complain because you accepted the results of the democratic system by voting
      • You'll have several years to regret it

      So vote if you'd like, but don't fool yourself into thinking you're morally superior because you did, or that you really had an effect. In Wyoming, your vote is about 1 in 150,000 of a share in electing 3 electors, who are a 3 in 538 share of electing the president. And that's the best you can do. Every other state is worse.

    5. Re:Vote by Stile+65 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Voting for the "lesser of 2 evils" is still voting for evil.

      Vote for Cthulhu! Why settle for a lesser evil?

      --
      I claim first use of "Error No. 0B" - or "No. 0B error." It'll be the new ID 10T!
    6. Re:Vote by tbannist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you want to change the system, vote for anyone except a Democrat or Republican. Any time another party looks like it might be competitive it will scare both parties into better behavior.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    7. Re:Vote by drsquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's say I go to a restaurant, the only place to eat in town, and there are two dishes on offer. One is a rotten fish, full of maggots. The other is a burger made from cow shit. If I walk out, do I not have the right to complain about being hungry?

    8. Re:Vote by pmbasehore · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, there are four "Ross Perot" (read: 3rd party) candidates in this election:

      Bob Barr / Wayne Root: Libertarian Party
      Charles Baldwin / Darrell Castle: / Alaskan Independance Party, Reform Party
      Cynthia McKinney / Rosa Clemente: Independent, Green Party
      Ralph Nader / Matt Gonzalez: No Party Affiliation

      You can check the facts yourself at VoteSmart.org

      --
      $> man woman $> Segmentation fault. (Core dumped)
    9. Re:Vote by Belial6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Seriously, an uninformed voter is FAR worse than a non-voter. I am becoming convinced that the whole "everyone should vote even if they don't know what they are voting for" combined with "voting third party is throwing your vote away" is a way to keep out third parties. People are becoming more and more disillusioned with the two party system. The chances of a third party making a real go of it becomes more and more feasible. So, what do you do? you work to get everyone out to vote. The uniformed voter is going to randomly pick from the two primary candidates, as he doesn't know anything about any of them, but those are the two that are not "throwing away his vote". Since the uninformed votes, being random, will for the most part split evenly down the middle between the Democrats and the Republicans, it becomes a wash for them, but massively increases the number of informed voters that the third party candidates have to pick up.

      So, IF you must be an uniformed voter, and are going to vote. Vote third party. Since you don't know who you are voting for anyways, you were already going to throw your vote away. Since there is not yet a chance for the third party candidates to win, you do not run the risk of accidentally electing a kook, AND you help to put a scare into the two primary parties.

      Heck, if you were not going to vote because you don't like either candidate, vote third party for the same reason.

    10. Re:Vote by gfxguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You might be joking, but if you voted for the person you felt was the best choice, you have nothing to apologize for.

      As I look back on my presidential voting record, I've voted 3 times for a third party, and 3 times for one of the two major parties because I felt the election was "too important." As I reexamine my record, the only ones I regretted were the ones that I voted for the mainstream party.

      Here's what you can expect with either McCain or Obama: at least $4 trillion more in debt by the end of the first term (McCain worse than Obama) and increased income redistribution (Obama worse than McCain).

      As far as education goes, since that's the topic at hand, I don't believe taking money from people to pay for other people's college education is exactly "fair." I support vouchers, but that's a state matter, so neither candidate (even if they supported it, which Obama doesn't) can actually do anything about vouchers. Obama also hates home-schooling, which goes right along with what a lot of slashdotter's seem to believe.

      Both will make energy cost more. Nuclear is expensive. Obama is now promising to "bankrupt" any coal power provider if they wanted to build a new coal power plant.

      I'm not going to say they are the "same," but frankly, there isn't much of a choice.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    11. Re:Vote by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not a believer in the whole "one person, one vote" thing huh?

      No, not in a federation. You have to make the federation appealing to states with low populations or they won't join (which we did). Now that they've joined, it's not really fair to change the rules without protecting their interests.

      There's already a system to "protect" smaller states; the Senate.

      And there's "already a system to protect smaller states"; the electoral college. Both have been there since the beginning. Why is the Senate a good idea and the electoral college a bad one?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    12. Re:Vote by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If I'm a sheep, I'm arming myself with big guns. If I'm going to die for dinner, I'm taking someone with me.

      THAT's the reason for the 2nd amendment.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    13. Re:Vote by robably · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Have you ever tried to reach a consensus with 300 million people? You can't

      And yet, when two countries are on the brink of war, we use diplomacy to come to a mutually agreed outcome, not voting. Huh. It would be absurd to vote - what if the population of one country was twice that of the other? How come in that situation it is instantly obvious that "winner takes all" voting is unfair, while within a country it's seen as fair?

      My preference is not for laws to govern millions of people, anyway. It is for localised governance at a scale that people can join in and actually have a say that makes a difference to their own community. As a country expands and a population increases, the size of each council should stay the same, but there should be more of them. So you don't have one law for the entire country - so what? Many of the problems in society are due to the fact that there is nowhere else to go - everywhere is the same. I'd like to live somewhere with sane drug and privacy laws, and I don't want to have to leave my country to do that. We need to wake people up to the fact that laws are made up, and we can change them if we want to.

    14. Re:Vote by jamesborr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You don't really believe the myth of "$250,000" do you? The latest from the Obama surrogates was $120,000 a year (Gov. Richardson), but I don't think many believe they will stop there. At the minimum, they will be increasing the capital gains rate, which will effect everyone with capital gains (more folks then you would think), and they will let the 2001 and the 2003 tax cuts sunset (which they will somehow classify as "not raising taxes"). Lastly, there is also a strong possibility they will eliminate the social security ceiling (i.e. if you make more then $104,000 a year, they will continue to deduct the social security tax, without giving you a corresponding increase in benefits when you retire -- i.e. turning social security into just another welfare program). But hey, you keep believing the $250,000 fairy tale, just like those who voted for Clinton to get that middle class tax cut -- NOT!

    15. Re:Vote by Count+Fenring · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree here.

      For one, the founders disagreed wildly on exactly who should have full citizenship and the vote. Where they agreed on, was that each citizen should have full human rights, including the right to full representation in the government that represents them. That's not a priviledge, because it's "We the people," not "We, the property of the government."

      I find your argument especially flawed because, for YEARS now, the Republican party has aimed more and more of its efforts at portraying itself as anti-intellectual. I mean, it's not a mistake that we have a yale graduate who pretends to be a simple-minded cowboy, is it?

      Also, I would imagine as many, if not more, people are voting for McCain on account of the color of his skin.

    16. Re:Vote by Count+Fenring · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The founders also gave us a staggering amount of protected freedoms and legal mechanisms to fight tyranny. The reason being that armed insurrection is horrible, leads to much higher casualties on the side that isn't an established military, and is more likely to fail the more developed a society is. Not to mention that it leaves the country open to outside attack in a way nothing else does.

      It's in everyone's interests to see that it doesn't come to that.

  2. It's the teachers, and the parents. by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If I had to make on comment on the presidency and eduction, it would be that education has to be reformed from the bottom up, not from the top down. It's the parents, and the teachers, that are important here-- not the president.

    The federal government really isn't the appropriate place to deal with any kind of primary educational policy.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  3. McCain... by Notquitecajun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MAYBE Obama will get rid of NCLB, but I don't see him getting away from the typical left position of supporting the teachers' unions goals and just throwing money at education without real standards. We spend more money - under left and right administrations - per student and don't see the results, which means the overall system is broken.

    I don't see him actively supporting homeschooling as well, and we know he's going to be against vouchers.

    The biggest problem, however, will NEVER be government involvement. I don't care who is in power, but the ONLY real influence on children's education is PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT. It doesn't matter what teachers, principals, politicians, and everyone else does if a parent doesn't care about how well their kid is doing in school - it's nearly too great a hurdle to overcome.

    I think that the only thing that I have ever seen that may do something is a performance-based state-sponsored tuition program (like Louisiana TOPS or Georgia HOPE) which is directly tied to secondary school performance with college tuition on the line - there are a LOT of parents in those states that I know of who pushed their kids to get good grades simply because there was a near-free college tuition at stake (it's what paid for my own tuition at Louisiana Tech).

  4. Intelligent Design by Sasayaki · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... belongs in the philosophy class, not science. Science is a set of facts seeking a conclusion to support them- Intelligent Design is a conclusion seeing a set of facts to support it.

    In a philosophy or comparative religions class? Absolutely- go nuts! Be sure to include a whole bunch of other religious theory, including Hindu creation myths etc. Would be a fun class.

    But as science? ... Do not want.

    --
    Check out my sci-fi book "Lacuna" at http://goo.gl/MVxX8
  5. Re:Make them Pay by jbeaupre · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We are within 2 days of making the Republican party pay for it's failure, dishonorable behavior, and fraud.

    How long before we can do the same with Democrats?

    --
    The world is made by those who show up for the job.
  6. Not the Federal Government's Job by Thelasko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you are concerned about the education in the United States, voice your concerns to your state and local government. The only thing the federal government has authority over concerning education is the ability to tax you and decide how it will spend that tax money. Looking to solve education issues at the federal level is a farce.

    --
    One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
  7. Err.. by brian0918 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why should the president, or the government, have a role in "making everyone smarter"? I also don't see how people can be "made smarter" when they are spoon-fed a pre-packaged education and are not driven to learn on their own - something they would be more motivated to do if we moved away from our current nanny-state that lets us get by without being informed about the choices we make.

  8. Re:Looking from afar... by AvitarX · · Score: 5, Funny

    Speaking of unscrupulous things to win:

    It should be known (the media is hiding the fact), that there is a special second polling day for registered republicans. This is to help alleviate lines. This Wednesday is a special extra day o voting only for you.

    Don't let the unscrupulous liberal media get away with hiding this fact, stand up for your right to vote without lines on Wednesday November 5th!

    Remember this special day is for registered republicans only, democrats and independents must vote tomorrow.

    --
    Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  9. It's easy, just think logically. by m4cph1sto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why can't McCain properly defend his education policy? It is the most important issue facing our nation, and it is where McCain is leaps and bounds ahead of Obama!

    We have the best private education system in the world. We have the best college education system in the world, both public and private. We have one of the worst public school systems in the developed world. Why? What's the difference between our tremendously successful college system and private system, and our horrendous public school system? Guess what, it's NOT MONEY. Per-student spending in public schools is almost DOUBLE what it is in private schools! Surprised? You certainly didn't hear that in tonight's debate. Only the absolute top most elite private schools cost more per student than we spend on our public schools, and the difference is not much, just 10-20% more. And students at those elite schools get WAY more in return for that extra 10-20%. Oh, and public school teachers earn more than private school teachers, so that's not it either.

    So what's the difference between how our public, government-run schools operate, and how our colleges and private schools operate? Here are the differences:

    1. No teachers unions in private schools and colleges.

    2. School choice: private schools and colleges must compete for your dollars. Public schools don't; the government decides which school you must attend, based on what neighborhood you live in.

    Let's go into #1.

    The teachers union is the most dangerous organization on the planet. They are more of a threat to our nation than Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea combined. They are ruining the education of our children and destroying our only hope of maintaining our prosperity and peace.

    The teachers union has made it impossible to fire teachers for poor performance. To be fired, a teacher basically has to break the law or molest a student. They can't be fired for simply being a terrible teacher. It's gotten so bad that at public schools across the country, bad teachers are paid full-time salaries to simply sit in the teachers' lounge all day and not teach! Schools are forced to do this because they don't want these bad teachers anywhere near their students, but they haven't done anything that the union says they can be fired for.

    In private schools and colleges, teacher pay is based on performance. In public schools, because of teachers union demands, pay is based on seniority (i.e. how long they've been working there). You can't pay good teachers more and bad teachers less, and therefore you can't attract and reward the best teaching talent. Public teachers as a whole lose the motivation that drives the private sector to work harder and better: more money.

    Finally, the teachers union is 100% opposed to school choice. Why? Because it would force all public teachers to work harder and compete for their job, just like everyone does in every job in the private sector.

    And this leads directly into Point #2.

    It is school choice, in the form of vouchers, that will save our public education system. The way our system works now, schools tell the government how many students they have each year, and the government funds them with X amount of dollars per student. The way school choice will work is this: instead of the government giving those dollars to the school, that money will be given directly to the parents in the form of a voucher. The parents can then take that voucher and use it to send their kids to any school they want, public or private.

    What affect will this have? Competition. The same thing that makes our private schools and colleges perform so well. They'll have to wise up, stop wasting money, become more efficient, and start teaching better, or else they'll start losing students. Parents will choose to send their kids to better-performing schools.

    Cue the teachers union yelling "But you'll be taking money away from already struggling schools!". Of course, that's the point, and that's a good thing - because the struggling schoo

    1. Re:It's easy, just think logically. by SlamMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you're missing the corollary of #2. You also have to compete to stay in private school. If you screw up to badly, don't show up, or don't perform, the private school can get rid of you. Public schools really don't have that as an option, so disruptive, lazy, and sometimes dangerous students stay in the schools, in the classrooms with everyone else. Private school can just kick them back to the public school. You also need to have a certain degree of perental involvement to even be at a private school to begin with, as oppsed to public schools being a free baby sitting option for some parents.

      --
      Mod point free since 2001
  10. Re:Looking from afar... by fprintf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Looking at it from this side of the pond, it is not quite so clear. Compared with socialist-leaning political types we see in Europe, Obama is seen as a very centrist politician. However compared with the usual types of politicians we are used to in this country, it will be a significant shift toward the left if Obama gets the presidency and the Democrats keep control of congress. While this may be only a 2 year shift in power, looking at what happened to Bill Clinton and the Democrats previously, it is nevertheless makes me very nervous to think what might happen in those 2 years.

    There is no candidate or their party that represents my more libertarian views on the world. Small government is not represented by either major party, personal gun ownership is shakily represented by the Republicans, and freedom of self-expression is shakily represented by the Democrats (for some history on the changes to what that party represents - look at what the Democrats did to the students in Chicago in the early 60s).

    Obama may look right to you. However, I feel he represents the lesser of two evils between him and Senator Clinton. McCain would have been perfect 10 years ago. Now he just seems like a bitter old-man-puppet, who picked a hot "young" thing as his running mate and now will make all of us pay the price of a Democratic President due to his inability to pick a good VP candidate.

    It is with pride that I go to the polls tomorrow, especially as a non-native citizen allowed the priveledge to vote via my naturalization. It is with some amount of shame that I pick a candidate that I agree less than 50% with on my topics of interest (including McCain, Obama, Bob Barr and Bill the Cat).

    --
    This post brought to you by your friendly neighborhood MBA.
  11. Re:Great plan you have for being competitive w/ Ch by kingramon0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is not the government's job to plan things for us. It is hilariously bad at it, anyway. It is the government's job to protect our liberties so we can do things ourselves.

    We are perfectly capable of organizing our own local educational systems. Some of them won't be as good as others, but they can learn from the ones that are successful.

    Having the government plan it, and run it, will just guarantee that the quality continues to degrade universally.

  12. Re:Looking from afar... by east+coast · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unless you happen to believe in creationism (like many do in the USA) then this is the trigger to vote for McCain/Palin.

    Let's be honest here. Unless Palin is actually teaching the class her outlook on evolution has zero to do with her relation to education. Infact, keeping her in as a governor is probably more likely to get creationism pushed on more students than her being a vice president. On the federal level all she's going to do is go on and on about budgets. That's it.

    If every intelligent person voted, these elections would never be too close to call.

    Intelligent by who's standards? If your idea of intelligent is the normal Slashdot "everyone who thinks like me" kind of thing than I'm sure you're right. As for me? I know tons of vastly intelligent people who have some ideas that are far from my own. Enough to make me question who's really right. And out of these same tons of people many probably think creationism has some glimmer of truth to it. It doesn't bother me because I'm not asking them to teach biology to me.

    Even if I were the difference between the evolutionist camp and the creationist camp means jack shit in the real world. How about we leave that stupid little debate behind and work on the idea that we're graduating kids that can't balance a checkbook. A fucking checkbook has a lot more to do with how this country progresses than whatever theory you have on the origins and progression of life. I bet you that if everyone in this country believed in creationism but could balance a checkbook we'd be a lot better off. We haven't even go an acceptable majority of the kids graduating to cover the basics of everyday life and we're busy bickering over evolution? Huh?

    Also the nefarious involvement of unscrupulous people doing bad things to win, decreases the predictability of an outcome, when both sides are doing it.

    It's just another reason to reject the two party system if you ask me. When we can finally shed ourselves of the "us or them" maybe we'll also let go of the hate that accompanies it.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  13. If I don't vote I can't complain? by Morris+Thorpe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Silly me. I thought the First Amendment allowed me to bitch until my heart is content.

    I'm tired of hearing that I can't complain if I don't vote. Who made up this mantra? The people who want you to vote for them.
    And the masses have bought it. They think they really have a say in what happens in government. Ha!

    By choosing not to vote I *am* making my statement: I don't like the candidates or the system.

    Enough with Groupthink.

  14. Re:Looking from afar... by m4cph1sto · · Score: 5, Informative

    Palin's stance on creationism? You mean that evolution should be taught exclusively in science class, as it is in Alaska? And that there's nothing wrong with discussing alternative views, in an appropriate context, without putting them in the curriculum? What's wrong with that?

    I'm a scientist. I think that intelligent design and creationism are hogwash. But because of America's foundation in religion, they are concepts that anyone will come across outside of school. I think they should be discussed, at the teacher's discretion, especially if a student brings up the question, but should not be mandated in the curriculum.

    Palin said in one interview "teach both... don't be afraid of information". The next day she went on to clarify her position by saying that they shouldn't be part of the curriculum, but it's ok to discuss them if a student brings it up. Actually here's the exact quote: "I don't think there should be a prohibition against debate if it comes up in class. It doesn't have to be part of the curriculum."

  15. Re:Looking from afar... by canUbeleiveIT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If every intelligent person voted, these elections would never be too close to call.

    Intelligent != ability to make good choices. There are plenty of folks of average intelligence who excel at making good decisions and plenty of brilliant ones who continually fuck up their decisions. Intelligent people are subject to irrationality, self-interest and bias, just like everyone else.

    I'm sure that this isn't the popular opinion among the alpha dorks who worship on the altar of IQ, but so be it.

  16. Re:Make them Pay by kingramon0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    They may have originated with those banks, but because Fannie and Freddie were buying up those mortgages and they had an implicit government guarantee. If Fannie and Freddie didn't exist, those private investment banks would not have had an irresponsible gov't entity to sell their questionable loans to, so they would have had to scrutinize their borrowers more.

  17. Really? Education? by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Over the last 30 years I've watched well-funded lobby groups essentially take over the entire political process. Since these groups are generally better funded when connected to commercial interests, the political process has once again become beholden to big industrial concerns (it was even more so 100 years ago). It's not that lobby groups are bad, pre se, its that they are, by definition, lopsided; they present a single view of the world that may or may no be countered by the "other side" of the issue. As elections become more and more expensive, this process has accelerated to its own quasi-democratic existence.

    Obama managed to use Dean's model to rally the individual for his funding. He's still beholden to large groups, but so much less so than any presidential candidate over the last decade or so. This is a wonderful opportunity to mute down the influence of lobby groups, because he won't be committing political suicide by doing so.

    And no-one's talking about it. It's completely off the radar.

    Maury

  18. Re:Looking from afar... by Bartab · · Score: 5, Insightful

    how can we be free while subjected to Palin's version of Genesis?

    Because, as you quoted, it is freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

    Neither Palin nor McCain has ever expressed a desire to force either you or your children to follow their religious choices.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
  19. Re:Looking from afar... by DavidTC · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That is, frankly, because your libertarian views are stupid.

    No, seriously. "Libertarianism' is a scam invented by the rich, who want the government to only do things that benefit them and no one else. (Like run a police force and court system, to keep people from stealing their shit or living on their land for free.)

    They hide this by making claims about the 'original' purpose of government, which is, in fact, exactly that, to protect the rich, although they won't come out and say that.

    More to the point, they then make the rather absurd claim that they should get this while paying as little taxes as possible.

    While a large percentage of Americans haven't figured out the premise of the party and have a sort of grudging respect for it as the underdog, under no circumstances do they actually want to implement those policies.

    Thus libertarians who actually show up and debate on their views for the general election get smashed, and that normally applies to the primaries too, although we saw a fun exception with Ron Paul doing pretty good with some viewers because the GOP has gone so spectacularly off the rails in a different way.

    But if Ron Paul had show up against Obama, he would have been crushed. Probably more than McCain, even with the advantage of being able to actually present himself as separate from the Republican Party and without making such a dumb VP choice.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  20. Re:Looking from afar... by jandersen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Compared with socialist-leaning political types we see in Europe, ...

    You have some curious notions, I think. A bit like saying that the Archbishop of Canterbury leans towards Satanism because he is not as far to the extreme right as the average American Creationist. And the funny things is, quite a lot of Americans I know seem to agree with a lot of Socialist ideas, as long as it isn't called Socialism. As far as I can see, you Americans are distributed politically exactly like people in Europe, only you call it something different, because you have grown up fearing the words "socialism" and "communism".

    I don't think European scepticism about McCain has as much to do with him as with Sarah Palin; she may have put the "hot in hot", as I heard recently, but she's also put the "alas" into "Alaska". You are probably right - it doesn't matter much whether it is one or the other; except for the threat of Palin getting into power. Because to a great extent, the situation in the world is going to dictate which decisions the next president will make, if he has any common sense. McCain has, Obama has, Biden has, but I am not sure what Sarah Palin has.

    I don't know what it is with you guys about "small government"; I mean, you do want public roads, education for all as well as judicial system, police and military, don't you? I doubt that many would prefer all those things to be privatised. And you cling to your guns like a drug addict to his next fix; it isn't even as if people who wanted to own a gun wouldn't be able to. I mean, if I want to own a gun in UK, I can do so legally; it is just not something you can buy in the local car boot sale.

  21. You're a... wrong person by Glothar · · Score: 5, Informative

    (Note my restraint)

    In most districts, schools have a mandatory 165-180 day school year. With holidays and spring break, this makes for a school year of at least 9 months and often closer to 10. I know of no teacher that gets 4 months off for summer vacation. I have to believe you're just totally lying. Add to this, the fact that most teachers require a couple weeks to prepare for the start of the school year.

    However, that doesn't really count here, since in most cases they're not paid for it.

    I also knew a teacher who taught three classes and a study hall. He was getting paid $18K a year. Most teachers have a mandatory 7 hour work day with a 30 minute lunch. However, its common for teachers to spend 2-4 hours of time after the end of the school day preparing for the next.

    I know a few teachers who'd love to show you where to put your head for implying that they were too lazy to try and get a second job to fill out those last four hours of spare time they have a day.

    I suspect the real problem here is that you simply don't have a clue what you're talking about. You cherry picked an example which made you bitter and never used another neuron to think about it.