Do you know Ron Paul?
Posted on May 12th, 2009 at 9:32am by bile Tags: Department of Education, FED, Federal Reserve, food, Food and Drug Administration, foreign aid, foreign intelligence surveillance act, gold, gold standard, immunizations for children, intelligence, International Monetary Fund, IRS, marijuana, NAFTA, Ron Paul, surveillance, Texas, The PATRIOT Act, U.S. military, United Nations, War on Drugs, world bank, World Trade Organization 2 Comments »http://www.doyouknowronpaul.com/
It’s a site recently launched by Jeff Cherry who is apparently looking to replace Paul as the Texas 14 representitive.
Do you know what Ron Paul really stands for?
- Wants to get rid of the Federal Reserve and return to the Gold Standard
- Wants to get rid of the Department of Education
- Wants to get rid of the IRS
- Voted against and does not support the Patriot Act.
- Voted against the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
- Wants to bring home all troops from Iraq immediately and shut down U.S. military bases
worldwide. - Wants to pull us out of the United Nations
- Wants to cut off ALL foreign aid to ALL countries
- Wants to pull us out of the World Trade Organization
- Wants to pull out of the World Bank
- Wants to pull out of the International Monetary Fund
- Wants to pull out of NATO
- Wants to pull us out of NAFTA
- Wants to end the war on drugs and legalize marijuana.
- Is opposed to making immunizations for children mandatory.
- Opposes the Food and Drug Administration
Uh… yeah? That’s great stuff. Keep it coming.
I particularly enjoy the “Powered by WebSite Tonight from GoDaddy.com” advert at the bottom of the page. Very professional.
Home schooling on the raise
Posted on January 5th, 2009 at 11:11am by bile Tags: America, Brian Ray, Department of Education, education, Gail Mulligan, government indoctrination camps, homeschool, Indiana University's School of Education, national center for education statistics, National Home Education Research Institute, online instruction, quality education, Robert Kunzman, standardized testing, unschooling movementThe ranks of America’s home-schooled children have continued a steady climb over the past five years, and new research suggests broader reasons for the appeal.
The number of home-schooled kids hit 1.5 million in 2007, up 74% from when the Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics started keeping track in 1999, and up 36% since 2003. The percentage of the school-age population that was home-schooled increased from 2.2% in 2003 to 2.9% in 2007. “There’s no reason to believe it would not keep going up,” says Gail Mulligan, a statistician at the center.
Traditionally, the biggest motivations for parents to teach their children at home have been moral or religious reasons, and that remains a top pick when parents are asked to explain their choice.
The 2003 survey gave parents six reasons to pick as their motivation. (They could choose more than one.) The 2007 survey added a seventh: an interest in a “non-traditional approach,” a reference to parents dubbed “unschoolers,” who regard standard curriculum methods and standardized testing as counterproductive to a quality education.
“We wanted to identify the parents who are part of the ‘unschooling’ movement,” Mulligan says. The “unschooling” group is viewed by educators as a subset of home-schoolers, who generally follow standard curriculum and grading systems. “Unschoolers” create their own systems.
The category of “other reasons” rose to 32% in 2007 from 20% in 2003 and included family time and finances. That suggests the demographics are expanding beyond conservative Christian groups, says Robert Kunzman, an associate professor at Indiana University’s School of Education. Anecdotal evidence indicates many parents want their kids to learn at their own pace, he says.
Fewer home-schoolers were enrolled part time in traditional schools to study subjects their parents lack knowledge to teach. Eighteen percent were enrolled part time in 1999 and 2003, compared with 16% in 2007. Kunzman says this might be because of the availability of online instruction.
The 2007 estimates are based on data from the Parent and Family Involvement in Education Survey of the National Household Education Surveys. Brian Ray, president of the National Home Education Research Institute, says the estimates are low because home-schooling parents “are significantly less likely to answer government-sponsored surveys.”
Note how the National Center for Education Statistics only provided 6 canned responses for motivations for home schooling. Makes it much easier to skew the numbers and their meaning. And how they refer to a portion of those who choose to homeschool as “unschoolers” which I think obviously has a negative connotation. “You want to un/not school your kids?! That’s horrible.”
H/T laur
NYTimes: Ron Paul answers your questions, Part 1
Posted on November 14th, 2008 at 4:28pm by bile Tags: America, Barry Goldwater, Bob Barr, Congress, Department of Education, energy policy, federal government, Federal Reserve System, foreign policy, freakonomics, G.O.P., Germany, jeff flake, Latin America, Libertarian Party, libertarianism, Middle East, Paul Broun, Republican Party, Robert Taft, Ron Paul, Ronald Reagan, United States, walter jones, Washington 2 Comments »http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/…
Do you love the smell of libertarianism in the morning? If so, today is a good day for you.
Ron PaulLast week we solicited your questions for Congressman Ron Paul.
There was such a big response (more than 400 comments) that we have split Paul’s answers into two batches, the first of which is posted below.
Thanks to Paul for his answers and all of you for your good questions.
Q: What was your first thought when you found out McCain chose Palin as his running mate?
A: At first, I thought it was a pretty savvy choice from a political perspective. I also knew that she had said some nice things about me in the past. At the same time, I knew that to be on the ticket, she would have to toe the line on foreign policy and the war, so that tempered a lot of my enthusiasm.
Q: Who in Congress would you consider to be your closest peer(s)?
A: There are a lot of members who I work with on a variety of different issues. Walter Jones is a good friend and works with me on foreign policy. Often on spending, if there is a 432-3 vote, the other two congressmen voting with me are Jeff Flake and Paul Broun. A lot of times, I work with Democrats on civil liberties issues.
I guess my point is that people from all over the political spectrum can side with liberty and the Constitution. The goal is to get a majority to vote that way most of the time.
The efficiency of government schools
Posted on August 18th, 2008 at 6:27pm by bile Tags: Army, DC school district, Department of Education, Washington DC 1 Comment »Unless We Start Busing Kids to Mars…
We’ve all been told that school districts around the country are feeling the pinch from higher fuel costs. What’s never mentioned is that districts are supposedly suffering budget crunches despite spending more than twice as much – in real, inflation-adjusted dollars – as they did in 1970.
According to the Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics, districts spent an average of $5,247 per pupil in 1970 (in 2008 dollars). Today, the average is about $12,000. How is it possible that districts could have trouble covering higher gas prices when they have an extra $6,500 to spend per pupil? One reason is that the public school bureaucracy has been doing what bureaucracies do best: growing. Since 1970, total public school employment has nearly doubled to over 6.1 million people, while total enrollment has increased by less than 9 percent. It is to support this army of new public school employees that taxpayers are being asked for more and more funding each year. If the public schools were to return to the student/staff ratio they had in 1970, they would have an extra $100 billion per year with which to fill the tanks of the nation’s school buses. And unless we start busing kids to Mars, that should probably cover it.
Of course, taxpayers might be willing to foot this lavish bill if the smaller class sizes and larger bureaucracies of recent years had led to improved student outcomes. They haven’t. Students at the end of high school score no better in reading and math today than they did in 1970, according to the Long Term Trends tests administered as part of the National Assessment of Education Progress. In science, their scores today are lower.
I was surprised to hear on NPR this morning that a public school in Washington, DC was renovated to the tune of $65 million. So I checked to see what the annual budget for the DC school district is ($773 million) and found this:
With 23 schools slated to close starting next school year, monies allocated for schools increased to $537 million from $493 million in FY ’08.
Economic realities be damned, the prison education industrial complex must grow.
Ron Paul is no compassionate conservative when it comes to Burma?
Posted on May 16th, 2008 at 7:14am by bile Categories and Tags: Uncategorized, Andrew Malcolm, bureaucracy, Burma, Burmese government, Congress, Dallas, debate, Department of Education, elections, Federal Reserve System, FedEx, free will, fucking retarded, Google, House of Representatives, House of Representives, Houston, Kansas, Myanmar, New York City, New York Giants, Nick Curran, politics, Rachel Mills, Ron Paul, Texas, United States of America, University of Kansas, voting, Wilsonianismhttp://latimesblogs.latimes.com/…
Rep. Ron Paul of Texas is proud of what he sees as his truly conservative credentials. He’s for smaller government, much smaller. He’s for foreign trade but not foreign military involvement. He wants to spend that money wasted on empire-building right back here in these United States of America. He’d also get rid of the Education Department and the Federal Reserve.
His followers, who reverently call him Dr. Paul, like the way he would strictly adhere to the Constitution as he sees it and return more freedoms to the little guy in the face of big government.
Paul fans — regularly called Paulites, Paultards or Paulunteers — also see a gentle humility in the weathered but wise hands of the 72-year-old ob-gyn, who reputedly has delivered some 4,000 infants into life in this wondrous world.
But there seems to be another side to Paul. A mean, vicious, cruel and uncaring side. A side that sees millions of humans — albeit Burmese who are not registered to vote in Texas — afflicted with an historic cyclone, countless thousands of lives lost, devastation everywhere.
And the doting grandfather could care less.
This week when a Congressional resolution came up for a vote merely offering “condolences and sympathy” to the people of Burma affected by the recent deadly cyclone, Ron Paul, the millionaire, was the only member of the entire House of Representatives to vote “No.”
The Myanmar resolution, like all those goofy pieces of symbolic legislation, would have done absolutely nothing for the stricken millions. Not even provided one paper towel. It’s a cheap publicity trick that elected legislators waste countless hours on each session.
Such worthless resolutions don”t even get much publicity anymore. And, to put it in blunt political terms, exactly how strong is the Burmese vote around here anyway?
So Paul’s symbolic stand against symbolic silliness looks good.
But then along come the sharp-eyed folks over at Radaronline.com, specifically Nick Curran, who finds out that Paul’s stand against symbolic silliness when it comes to Asians whose huts and hovels were erased by cyclone, is not quite so principled and a whole lot more enthused about dumb statements of sentiment when the silliness is closer to home.
Come to find out Paul has voted in favor of similar empty resolutions to congratulate the University of Kansas football team for a swell season and winning the 2008 FedEx Orange Bowl, to the Louisiana State football team for, golly, winning the 2007 Bowl Championship Series and to celebrate the New York Giants for their come-from-behind victory in Super Bowl XLII.
Seriously, what Texas congressman near Houston wouldn’t want to get on the official Congressional record wishing all the best to every one of the good folks up in New York City?
Wait til the Houston Texans find out about that one. Or, worse for Paul, some Dallas fans.
–Andrew Malcolm
As I posted to Andrew’s blog… Less then 30 seconds on Google News search would have rewarded you with: ‘Paul spokeswoman Rachel Mills said the congressman objected to a sentence in the resolution calling on Burma’s ruling generals to postpone a scheduled referendum in order to concentrate their resources on disaster assistance. “It interferes with the internal affairs of another country,” Mills said. “It’s just none of our business.”‘The pointlessness of the resolution itself was not the reason for the vote. It was the fact it tried to instruct the Burmese government on what it should do. As minor as it may appear it’s only a matter of degrees from other interventionist language we place in other resolutions which represent the actual interventionist actions we take. If you want to stop being to bully you ought to stop talking like one too.
As for the other votes on pointless resolutions… there is nothing you can do. Anyone in Congress can bring up any damn resolution they want or talk about whatever they want. If Paul is already in attendance he can vote NA, YAY or not vote. Nothing changes any which way and there is nothing unconstitutional about pointless resolutions. Voting no or not voting sends no message in those cases. In this case however it can. Only reason to vote against the pointless resolutions would be to save the ink given NA is shorter then the other options or to hold an absolute stance against wasting time. The congressmen get paid yearly anyway so I’d much rather them take up their time with pointless congrats resolutions than messing with things that actually effect the real world.






