One can only hope. But we face the long hard task of the individualistic libertarians out there coming together in large enough numbers to begin to make a difference.
The irony is that the one thing too many of the Republicans and Democrats agree on is that the citizens have too much liberty.
I do sense a growing swell of "leave us the fuck alone" coming from the citizenry in many aspects of life. It is a message neither the Dems or Reps will acknowledge.
Perhaps libertarians can rise, but I worry it won't happen.
I can't imagine that even with trucks driving themselves, that we wouldn't want or need someone being with the truck. For interactions with people for delivery, to handle mechanical problems or unexpected issues that would arise.
I just don't think it'll be the employment collapse everyone is imagining, I just think we'll move from truck driver to truck manager.
Of course at this point I should point out how much of a staunch conservative Governor Cuomo is....
As a parent I don't view this (especially at the local level) as a conservative vs. liberal issue. I think that detracts from the issue.
I personally think that charters are an interesting way to set up schools, a friend of mine (quite liberal himself BTW) raves about the charter school that his daughter is going to. Although I agree that we haven't figured out how to best utilize them and arrange them.
I know a key crux of the matter is parental involvement, its a HUGE thing which is why my wife and I have been heavily involved in the PTA from the point our children started school.
Yes, but if you get rid of tenure first you can start increasing teacher pay for the BEST teachers instead of the ones who have been there the longest.
That said, I have seen instances where the oldest teachers are the best, my son's 2nd grade teacher was IMHO literally worth her weight in gold, but has since retired. However, his pre-calculus teacher in high school was the worst teacher I'd ever seen at any level, and also had the most seniority, thankfully he finally retired too.
Umm, sorry to disturb your "conservatives are evil" rant, but then how do you explain the epically failing schools of many american inner cities? Cities that have been run top to bottom, city council to school district by liberals.
"Conservatives" are also for school choice, charter schools, school vouchers, all of which are designed to empower parents in those failing inner city districts some hope.
Now, I've kinda lambasted the liberal city government here, but their intentions aren't all bad. However, this is not a "throw money at" sort of problem.
I'll agree that Common Core has been combined with other items in order to criticize it. Common Standards are a "good thing", in fact we need to pull the standards back up from the constant lowering of them that has happened over time. I completely support this at the state level, from whence Common Core originated.
However, certain entrenched forces in the education community, and federal regulators glommed on to Common Core with the intent to have it drive curriculum and content. This was, and is, a mistake. The KISS principle should have driven the Common Standards, but they complicated it with federal mandates and absurd curriculum.
The "new" math they are trying to teach under the banner of Common Core makes me fear that we will end up with an upcoming generation that does't have the math skills to undertake a College Education in Engineering and Science.
Standards and levels of understanding are good. Demanding that everyone teach via the same methods (unproven ones at that) is not.
You likely got modded down because while it is popular to espouse that philosophy, the political philosophy "most" concern for the lives of the people also happens to be the one that piled up the most dead bodies last century.
I did not say that commonly shared myths aren't useful. I'll keep my money thank you, for as long as the people I give it to continue to believe it has value;-)
I seriously believe that Tesla's cars are beautiful electric cars and if I had enough money, I'd own one.
I also believe that Tesla's will get both better AND cheaper until more people (even most people) can afford them. Of course that also includes other manufacturers upping their electric car game too.
When superior electric cars (and the high range Tesla Model S's are superior) are cheap enough for everyone, people will flock to buy them.
Then we just need to build Nuke plants to power all these electric cars, shutter all the coal plants an viola! Problem solved.
Now you will argue that that won't happen, that its all pie in the sky, but I'm saying its inevitable -- given time. Because if we want to solve this problem without kneecapping the economy, its what HAS to happen.
Taxes, and rules and regulations are the things that seem like they'll solve the problem, but they really won't.
That's not a problem. In exchange for believing in an infinite number of universes with infinite instances of me, I'll gladly accept that there are also an infinite number of universes without me.
As long at the initial diesel creation from CO2 and Water used CO2 from the air, then you're just on the other side of the loop. The CO2 you capture doesn't have to be the same CO2 given off by combustion, it just has to be the same amount.
Well, talk is excluded because they don't play music outside of the bumper music going into and out of commercial.
You could argue that they should pay based on that, but then a talk station with less than $1 in revenue would be paying the same as a 24/7 music station, and that hardly seems fair. Plus if that happened, it could spell the end of bumper music and the talk stations would claim that they play no music, why are they being charged.
The religious exemption, I have no clue. Religious music publishing and radio works the same as regular music.
Yep. The most amazing part is that the EU has been duped to think Greece will pay them back this time for sure!!
Followed the link, searched for nuclear, didn't find it in the story. Closed the page.
If you are espousing 0 emission energy in the next 35 years, and you don't mention nuclear as a necessary component, then you are lying.
Or I could just buy the music I want DRM free and make my own damn playlists.
Streaming services are just that, services. If you want more control of your music, Buy it!
b.
Congratulations, you get the job!!
One can only hope. But we face the long hard task of the individualistic libertarians out there coming together in large enough numbers to begin to make a difference.
The irony is that the one thing too many of the Republicans and Democrats agree on is that the citizens have too much liberty.
I do sense a growing swell of "leave us the fuck alone" coming from the citizenry in many aspects of life. It is a message neither the Dems or Reps will acknowledge.
Perhaps libertarians can rise, but I worry it won't happen.
I can't imagine that even with trucks driving themselves, that we wouldn't want or need someone being with the truck. For interactions with people for delivery, to handle mechanical problems or unexpected issues that would arise.
I just don't think it'll be the employment collapse everyone is imagining, I just think we'll move from truck driver to truck manager.
Inner city schools do have access to federal and state funding to address this.
See here: http://www.coyoteblog.com/coyo...
Agree with you completely on the anti-gentrification and anti-development comments those activities are not helping.
Of course at this point I should point out how much of a staunch conservative Governor Cuomo is....
As a parent I don't view this (especially at the local level) as a conservative vs. liberal issue. I think that detracts from the issue.
I personally think that charters are an interesting way to set up schools, a friend of mine (quite liberal himself BTW) raves about the charter school that his daughter is going to. Although I agree that we haven't figured out how to best utilize them and arrange them.
I know a key crux of the matter is parental involvement, its a HUGE thing which is why my wife and I have been heavily involved in the PTA from the point our children started school.
Yes, but if you get rid of tenure first you can start increasing teacher pay for the BEST teachers instead of the ones who have been there the longest.
That said, I have seen instances where the oldest teachers are the best, my son's 2nd grade teacher was IMHO literally worth her weight in gold, but has since retired. However, his pre-calculus teacher in high school was the worst teacher I'd ever seen at any level, and also had the most seniority, thankfully he finally retired too.
Exactly, the feds aren't "mandating" tests per se, but they are tying actions to funding levels, which is a huge lever with the individual schools.
Umm, sorry to disturb your "conservatives are evil" rant, but then how do you explain the epically failing schools of many american inner cities? Cities that have been run top to bottom, city council to school district by liberals.
"Conservatives" are also for school choice, charter schools, school vouchers, all of which are designed to empower parents in those failing inner city districts some hope.
Now, I've kinda lambasted the liberal city government here, but their intentions aren't all bad. However, this is not a "throw money at" sort of problem.
I'll agree that Common Core has been combined with other items in order to criticize it. Common Standards are a "good thing", in fact we need to pull the standards back up from the constant lowering of them that has happened over time. I completely support this at the state level, from whence Common Core originated.
However, certain entrenched forces in the education community, and federal regulators glommed on to Common Core with the intent to have it drive curriculum and content. This was, and is, a mistake. The KISS principle should have driven the Common Standards, but they complicated it with federal mandates and absurd curriculum.
The "new" math they are trying to teach under the banner of Common Core makes me fear that we will end up with an upcoming generation that does't have the math skills to undertake a College Education in Engineering and Science.
Standards and levels of understanding are good. Demanding that everyone teach via the same methods (unproven ones at that) is not.
You likely got modded down because while it is popular to espouse that philosophy, the political philosophy "most" concern for the lives of the people also happens to be the one that piled up the most dead bodies last century.
I did not say that commonly shared myths aren't useful. I'll keep my money thank you, for as long as the people I give it to continue to believe it has value ;-)
Yeah, I somewhat misread your post.
Yes but again people denouncing climate change "deniers" don't shoot them.
Fiat currency is a shared myth. It works because so many believe it has value.
Yeah it's like the one side speaking back about its beliefs is TOTALLY the same as one side shooting back because of theirs
BTW in this country, sure some Christians speak out against gays, but again, that other religion is killing them instead.
Bbbbbbut crusades. You got an example that's not hundreds of years old?
Yes, but if your desktop fails it doesn't fall out of the sky.... most of the time
Actually it will.
I seriously believe that Tesla's cars are beautiful electric cars and if I had enough money, I'd own one.
I also believe that Tesla's will get both better AND cheaper until more people (even most people) can afford them. Of course that also includes other manufacturers upping their electric car game too.
When superior electric cars (and the high range Tesla Model S's are superior) are cheap enough for everyone, people will flock to buy them.
Then we just need to build Nuke plants to power all these electric cars, shutter all the coal plants an viola! Problem solved.
Now you will argue that that won't happen, that its all pie in the sky, but I'm saying its inevitable -- given time. Because if we want to solve this problem without kneecapping the economy, its what HAS to happen.
Taxes, and rules and regulations are the things that seem like they'll solve the problem, but they really won't.
Technology WILL.
That's not a problem. In exchange for believing in an infinite number of universes with infinite instances of me, I'll gladly accept that there are also an infinite number of universes without me.
I'm sure there's a universe out there where John Noble doesn't get constantly cast as a crackpot.
As long at the initial diesel creation from CO2 and Water used CO2 from the air, then you're just on the other side of the loop. The CO2 you capture doesn't have to be the same CO2 given off by combustion, it just has to be the same amount.
Well, talk is excluded because they don't play music outside of the bumper music going into and out of commercial.
You could argue that they should pay based on that, but then a talk station with less than $1 in revenue would be paying the same as a 24/7 music station, and that hardly seems fair. Plus if that happened, it could spell the end of bumper music and the talk stations would claim that they play no music, why are they being charged.
The religious exemption, I have no clue. Religious music publishing and radio works the same as regular music.
Republicans have a incredible chance to capture a huge part of the IT vote by coming out strong against H1B visas.
Because this is a smart idea, they will of course not do this.