Why is the Wall Street Journal featuring this? I mean they're a bunch of peace-nic hippies. I have a lot of trouble buying something that exacerbates green-tech coming from them.
There are also a huge honey pot with a lot of piggies firmly planted in those pies. Recent history has taught us that a couple of well lucrative contracts = a couple of helpful politicians.
If textbooks were online, I would think OLPC or netbooks (even if they only lasted a couple of years) could probably be used for the same, or less cost. They would also add a lot of utility. Hopefully it is not just a would-be-cool thought.
I guess you're right. Candy bars are the real political currency in this country. All that campaign crap is just a smoke screen. 1 Snickers is worth 1 electoral vote.
It's really a sad state of corruption fueled by the American Dental Association.
This is all part of an elaborate scheme to get the cute new lab assistant to sleep with the head researcher. A little open and honest communication would have saved a lot of funding.
He died at a ripe old age, but after years of Alzheimer's which was most clearly evidenced as wild-assed paranoia. I somehow think strangers knowing where he was in his own house would have been a little much for him.
He was always convinced of secret conspiracies. I guess he was from that generation. I don't think I would have had the heart to make his nightmares come true. Hell, I'm reasonably rational and this would wig me out.
They probably won't have to do much. They've sent a letter stating that my personal information has gone missing three times in two years. In the age of data mining, I don't think this will be as much of a challenge.
White collar vocational training is sort of a new concept. Like last 50-90 years concept. Engineering became human engineering became business school. This is the university level vocational training alluded to.
I think the thought behind that may be a well rounded education will help you to make better decisions (ethical and moral decisions). You've heard that people study history to avoid repeating it. After a liberal education, then you work for a company where you learn how to do your job.
Really this is so different from the way things are done that it is hard to conceptualize, but was the way of the world for much of the world's history. You became an asset instead of an unskilled (or just as skilled as anyone else) minion. You also have a little perspective, not just an ability.
Of course there are lots of situations that this makes no sense. I want my doctor to know his vocation before he starts cutting or putting fingers in dark places. If, for example, you make me something that I need to depend on, I want every minute of your BSME behind it.
However, I wouldn't mind if someone handing out loans had spent a few years thinking and arguing about what is right and wrong. Give that CEO The Republic and get him to think about it. There is a lot of power in some jobs and sometimes it seems like we just gave monkeys bigger guns.
It is situational, but the thought behind education (think public education) is that it makes better citizens. It helps people know that they need to use their brains before voting/buying/whatevering and not just do what the tv box says, or what they can get away with.
A lot of this is because of funding. If kids are failing then they strip funding, classes get bigger, material gets outdated, and they loose quality teachers to universities and private schools. The high school kids don't buy it, loose hope and make bad decisions because there is no incentive not to. The school diverts funding to metal detectors and security. Then the process repeats itself and you end up with a school and "graduates" that are a drain on local economies. which means less property taxes... are you getting me?
Money buys college and kids know that and will just fill a seat until they can drop out or "graduate." Administrations tell teachers to send them through so they can keep the school open next year (or hire another administrator amiright). All of that and you end up with precisely what you said: a worthless diploma.
It is getting to a point where either radical (radically different not the same crap with twice the fervor) change has to occur or we call the whole public education thing a wash. Big cities have a lot of students and carry a lot of statistical weight and are much worse than most of us would be comfortable to admit.
Isn't the anti-tea-party-at-the-Lincoln-Memorial kind of a tongue in cheek tit for the mosque-at-ground-zero tat?
This level of irony can't be coincidence.
*fade to dramatic fanfare*
Why is the Wall Street Journal featuring this? I mean they're a bunch of peace-nic hippies. I have a lot of trouble buying something that exacerbates green-tech coming from them.
I used to get that, it was technically before wifi. I guess it was like a premonition or something.
Come to think of it, that's probably what gets to me on Mondays too.
What is a good way to refute a straw man argument?
I for one welcome our new corporate overlords. I offer them my undying devotion, loyalty, and worship.
Oh, and I just reported all of you.
If someone breaks into my trailer...
I will rape them while screaming that they are liberals.
After the police come to clean up my mess, I am going to take more of those pills from the internet that make my wiener bigger
There are also a huge honey pot with a lot of piggies firmly planted in those pies. Recent history has taught us that a couple of well lucrative contracts = a couple of helpful politicians.
If textbooks were online, I would think OLPC or netbooks (even if they only lasted a couple of years) could probably be used for the same, or less cost. They would also add a lot of utility. Hopefully it is not just a would-be-cool thought.
Training would be a bitch though.
lol, I thought mine was a groaner.
Fine, just don't get it in our hair.
I guess you're right. Candy bars are the real political currency in this country. All that campaign crap is just a smoke screen. 1 Snickers is worth 1 electoral vote.
It's really a sad state of corruption fueled by the American Dental Association.
This is all part of an elaborate scheme to get the cute new lab assistant to sleep with the head researcher. A little open and honest communication would have saved a lot of funding.
Escorting Haliburton trips to nowhere?
It could also be due to large fire breathing lizards.
How is this flamebait?
Breaking the law would mean he was a citizen.
Once you fall into the wrong hands you are no longer a citizen or an enemy. You are completely outside of any law available to mankind.
Officials from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the US Army then told him he was not under arrest but was being detained.
Some of the most horrific words the war on terror has produced.
*shudders*
Where you just racial profiled and tortured... oh wait this wouldn't replace that just be added on top of it.
He died at a ripe old age, but after years of Alzheimer's which was most clearly evidenced as wild-assed paranoia. I somehow think strangers knowing where he was in his own house would have been a little much for him.
He was always convinced of secret conspiracies. I guess he was from that generation. I don't think I would have had the heart to make his nightmares come true. Hell, I'm reasonably rational and this would wig me out.
There is absolutely nothing super creepy about this.
Honestly though, I don't know if the British have nursing homes better than us. Creepy as it is it may be a little better than what we've got.
What isn't obvious is that if banks are too big to fail why are there so many around my house?
lol
They probably won't have to do much. They've sent a letter stating that my personal information has gone missing three times in two years. In the age of data mining, I don't think this will be as much of a challenge.
Imagine if you didn't have a squishy suburban primary education and actually went to a bad school.
Mod this one down. I disagree with it's sentiment.
White collar vocational training is sort of a new concept. Like last 50-90 years concept. Engineering became human engineering became business school. This is the university level vocational training alluded to.
I think the thought behind that may be a well rounded education will help you to make better decisions (ethical and moral decisions). You've heard that people study history to avoid repeating it. After a liberal education, then you work for a company where you learn how to do your job.
Really this is so different from the way things are done that it is hard to conceptualize, but was the way of the world for much of the world's history. You became an asset instead of an unskilled (or just as skilled as anyone else) minion. You also have a little perspective, not just an ability.
Of course there are lots of situations that this makes no sense. I want my doctor to know his vocation before he starts cutting or putting fingers in dark places. If, for example, you make me something that I need to depend on, I want every minute of your BSME behind it.
However, I wouldn't mind if someone handing out loans had spent a few years thinking and arguing about what is right and wrong. Give that CEO The Republic and get him to think about it. There is a lot of power in some jobs and sometimes it seems like we just gave monkeys bigger guns.
It is situational, but the thought behind education (think public education) is that it makes better citizens. It helps people know that they need to use their brains before voting/buying/whatevering and not just do what the tv box says, or what they can get away with.
A lot of this is because of funding. If kids are failing then they strip funding, classes get bigger, material gets outdated, and they loose quality teachers to universities and private schools. The high school kids don't buy it, loose hope and make bad decisions because there is no incentive not to. The school diverts funding to metal detectors and security. Then the process repeats itself and you end up with a school and "graduates" that are a drain on local economies. which means less property taxes... are you getting me?
Money buys college and kids know that and will just fill a seat until they can drop out or "graduate." Administrations tell teachers to send them through so they can keep the school open next year (or hire another administrator amiright). All of that and you end up with precisely what you said: a worthless diploma.
It is getting to a point where either radical (radically different not the same crap with twice the fervor) change has to occur or we call the whole public education thing a wash. Big cities have a lot of students and carry a lot of statistical weight and are much worse than most of us would be comfortable to admit.