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RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/6/2014 10:47:53 PM   
subrosaDom


Posts: 724
Joined: 2/16/2014
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata


quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy

the GOP’s main tenets: wealth worship, war worship, and the permanent culture war

http://www.salon.com/2012/08/05/republicans_slouching_toward_theocracy/

Well that's that then. If you read it in Salon, it must be true.

Move along folks, nothing more to see here.

K.



Give him credit, Kirata. Unlike many teachers in the American educational system, cloudboy correctly referred to tenets rather than to the ever-more-popular tenants. And, yes, I've seen more and more young people use that malapropism. You think they learned that in public school? 'Cause there is the Democrats' war on learning.


_____________________________

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- Nietzsche

(in reply to Kirata)
Profile   Post #: 41
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 4:29:20 AM   
joether


Posts: 5195
Joined: 7/24/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom
quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata
quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy
the GOP’s main tenets: wealth worship, war worship, and the permanent culture war

http://www.salon.com/2012/08/05/republicans_slouching_toward_theocracy/

Well that's that then. If you read it in Salon, it must be true.

Move along folks, nothing more to see here.

Give him credit, Kirata. Unlike many teachers in the American educational system, cloudboy correctly referred to tenets rather than to the ever-more-popular tenants. And, yes, I've seen more and more young people use that malapropism. You think they learned that in public school? 'Cause there is the Democrats' war on learning.


There exists no 'Democrats War on Learning'. There is however 'The Republican War on Science' written by Chris Mooney (2006). You can obtain the book from Amazon.com for $11.85 (plus shipping).

An oh look....IT ACTUALLY.....relates to the subject matter of the thread.

Way to FAIL subroseDom!!!!!

(in reply to subrosaDom)
Profile   Post #: 42
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 5:31:09 AM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant


quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy

Having observed politics up close and personal for most of my adult lifetime, I have come to the conclusion that the rise of politicized religious fundamentalism may have been the key ingredient in the transformation of the Republican Party. Politicized religion provides a substrate of beliefs that rationalizes—at least in the minds of its followers—all three of the GOP’s main tenets: wealth worship, war worship, and the permanent culture war.

--

The religious right’s professed insistence upon “family values” might appear at first blush to be at odds with the anything but saintly personal behavior of many of its leading proponents. Some of this may be due to the general inability of human beings to reflect on conflicting information: I have never ceased to be amazed at how facts manage to bounce off people’s consciousness like pebbles off armor plate.


http://www.salon.com/2012/08/05/republicans_slouching_toward_theocracy/

Kind of a fun read....
Tell me, cloudboy...just out of my own insatiable curiosity...does that have to do with this thread?

Biggggg surprise...somehow, someone managed to find a GOP deserter who saw the light about how NOTHING is RIGHT about the right. In fact, it is jussssst how the left (including websites like Salon) says it is. How absolutely astounding their gift of prescience must be....right before an election.

Actually if you read either the article or the book Lofgren is critical of both sides. but don't let that get in the way of your strawman.

(in reply to CreativeDominant)
Profile   Post #: 43
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 6:40:11 AM   
LetstalkboutRAP3


Posts: 49
Joined: 9/30/2013
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quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel


quote:

ORIGINAL: ElChupa
OH NO, NOT THOSE PESKY 'PUBLICANS AGAIN WITH ALL THEIR QUESTIONS! Haven't they heard of settled science? I mean, nobody questions, especially if leading scientists like biden, obama, and algore all agree on stuff! Questioning settled science like global warming/cooling just confuses people! All those other scientists who question should be sent to re education camps and stuff and be made to listen to Barack Hussein 0bama's (AKA, "The Big Zero") greatest speeches and then watch a blooper reel from Vice Emperor "Crazy Uncle Joe" Biden!


Hey critical thinking is great and I wish a very significant portion of conservatives would learn how to do it however that's not the same thing as trolling for Jesus. The time to "teach the controversy" is when there's an actual scientific controversy.


And what uncontroversial science isn't being taught? Catastrophic global warming caused by a human induced runaway greenhouse effect? Disproven. Global temperature anomaly fell outside of the IPCC's own error bars, and has continued to fall further outside of those error bars. That means that theory is disproven. The theory that race is a social construct? That's a rejection of the well established scientific concept of phenotype, and the underlying cause of phenotype, genotype. In other words, anyone who claims that race doesn't exist is a DENIER of science (or in all fairness, is scientifically ignorant, and that isn't really their fault, most people simply don't have the capacity to understand science and it's implications).

quote:

ORIGINAL: dcnovice


quote:

ORIGINAL: LetstalkboutRAP3

@Joether

It's not my article. Unless I'm mistaken, It was written by an Indian woman. I haven't even read it yet, I just stumbled upon the link to it a little while before I saw this thread. Figured it was relevant, so I thought I'd share. Also, you have too much time on your hands...

@DomKen

Piss off, commie!

Emphasis mine.

Nothing says "I'm a credible poster" quite like linking to pieces you haven't bothered to read.


Gee I don't know, jumping into a thread for the sole purpose of discrediting another poster sorta reeks of ideological blindness, but whatever. The guy who wrote this http://www.singularity2050.com/2010/01/the-misandry-bubble.html recommended it. Anyway, now that I've read it, I didn't like it very much, though I think it was worth reading. It was short at least.

Right in the beginning she claims Bill Maher is a germ theory denier, but to the best of my knowledge, that's not true. I don't watch his show much anymore, so it's possible that he has denied the germ theory of disease and I missed it, but I kinda doubt it. I got plenty of issues with Bill Maher, but the fact that he isn't sycophantically enthralled with western allopathic medicine isn't one of them. He's a proponent of naturopathic medicine, which I think she is equating with germ theory denier, but that's just wrong. It's perfectly reasonable to subscribe to both schools of medicine, they aren't mutually exclusive.

@ Joether

I find your point about Medicaid dubious, at best. You act as if improved health outcomes for those that could not afford healthcare without Medicaid aren't the primary goal of Medicaid. What exactly is the point of getting people access to health care if that access doesn't improve health outcomes? The fact that it reduced financial strain is great and everything, but the fact that it isn't improving health outcomes (according to the article, and apparently several leftist journalists acknowledged this, I don't know if it's true though, I haven't looked at the actual data) doesn't bode well for the program and warrants reexamining the policy.

@DomKen

Are you actually defending Common Core? I was under the impression that NOBODY thinks Common Core is good program. It's basically No Child Left Behind (Bush administration policy) on steroids. Both of these programs have the effect of hurting funding for inner city schools, because inner city schools have the most trouble meeting the goals of the program. Failure to meet those goals then causes those already financially starved school districts to be punished with even greater lack of funding. I'm not intimately familiar with sentiments among the black community in Chicago, but it seems to me they are acknowledging that Chicago Public Schools have utterly failed to deliver positive educational outcomes to their communities (and that this has gotten even worse under the leadership of Obamanite, Rahm Emmanuel), and they are embracing charter schools and voucher programs as a result.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/rahm-emmanuel/ <----- And that's what's being reported in leftist media




< Message edited by LetstalkboutRAP3 -- 9/7/2014 7:34:23 AM >

(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 44
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 6:51:23 AM   
cloudboy


Posts: 7306
Joined: 12/14/2005
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It's written by a GOP insider who pretty much acknowledges that a major part of the Republican party is bonkers because of fundamentalist religious views. For instance a secular citizen who was pro choice could never energize the Republican base and hence can never really be a GOP candidate. It's that wing, the fundamentalist wing, that's in a culture war with science.

It is not a news piece. It's just someone's POV.

(in reply to CreativeDominant)
Profile   Post #: 45
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 8:37:09 AM   
CreativeDominant


Posts: 11032
Joined: 3/11/2006
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy


It's written by a GOP insider who pretty much acknowledges that a major part of the Republican party is bonkers because of fundamentalist religious views. For instance a secular citizen who was pro choice could never energize the Republican base and hence can never really be a GOP candidate. It's that wing, the fundamentalist wing, that's in a culture war with science.

It is not a news piece. It's just someone's POV.
Exactly...a point of view. By a disgruntled former member. And while he may have been critical of both sides, as DK pointed out, the fact remains that someone in his position usually is.


(in reply to cloudboy)
Profile   Post #: 46
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 9:30:33 AM   
Zonie63


Posts: 2826
Joined: 4/25/2011
From: The Old Pueblo
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63
It could be due to the fact that Democrats are more inclined to support social programs and mental health treatment, so those who already have those conditions might tend to support the Democrats out of self-interest. Being mentally ill does not make one stupid or completely out of touch with reality.

Of course, both sides might make a lot of hay about the other side being mentally ill, simply because they hold opposite viewpoints. I don't really view it as a serious argument or a positive advocacy of either a conservative or liberal position. Disparaging the other side is too easy.


I'd also worry about self reporting skewing the survey as Evangelical Christians (a significant portion of the republican party) are the most prone to over reporting their mental health and well being. Which is why studies that rely on self reporting find a mental health benefit to religiosity where as actually checking up on participants mental health records finds the opposite that religiosity correlates with depression: http://epiphenom.fieldofscience.com/2013/05/religion-doesnt-seem-to-protect-against.html


I've run across a number of Christians who have spoken at length about how much of a mess their lives were - a life of "sin," drug abuse, alcoholism, and other self-destructive behaviors which might be associated with mental illness. And then they were "saved" by Jesus Christ and turned over a new leaf, living a life of purity, goodness, and (self) righteousness. Perhaps they see religion as a "cure" to mental illness. Many people still seek out members of the clergy for counseling. It's cheaper than going to a psychologist or psychiatrist, and it's more accessible than behavioral health services for those who can't afford it.


(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 47
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 9:46:39 AM   
Gauge


Posts: 5689
Joined: 6/17/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

There is no way even a skilled therapist could determine in a dozen questions if you had a mental and/or emotional health problem.



Yes, they can establish a baseline within a dozen questions to formulate a diagnosis, a quick glance through the DSM 5 should outline that easily enough. There are often secondary diagnosis that take place over time and do not likely present or are apparent upon the first evaluation, but a skilled therapist, psychologist, or psychiatrist can make a primary diagnosis in short order. Most people think that mental health treatment is like treating the flu, it is not that simple.

quote:

Unless they had some evidence to say something was wrong before hand.


Most people do not go to professionals unless they have a reason to go to seek treatment.

quote:

Those with Depression are also more likely to lash out violently. Either to themselves or others.


Credible citations (established, respected, medical publications) for this statement please... not just your word. Violent outbursts associated with depression are actually quite uncommon. There are, however, other mental illnesses that are directly associated with violence and violent outbursts.


I am sorry for the thread derailment, but I cannot just let statements like this simply go unaddressed.

_____________________________

"For there is no folly of the beast of the earth which is not infinitely outdone by the madness of men." Herman Melville - Moby Dick

I'm wearing my chicken suit and humming La Marseillaise.

(in reply to joether)
Profile   Post #: 48
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 12:31:31 PM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: LetstalkboutRAP3

@DomKen

Are you actually defending Common Core? I was under the impression that NOBODY thinks Common Core is good program. It's basically No Child Left Behind (Bush administration policy) on steroids. Both of these programs have the effect of hurting funding for inner city schools, because inner city schools have the most trouble meeting the goals of the program. Failure to meet those goals then causes those already financially starved school districts to be punished with even greater lack of funding. I'm not intimately familiar with sentiments among the black community in Chicago, but it seems to me they are acknowledging that Chicago Public Schools have utterly failed to deliver positive educational outcomes to their communities (and that this has gotten even worse under the leadership of Obamanite, Rahm Emmanuel), and they are embracing charter schools and voucher programs as a result.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/rahm-emmanuel/ <----- And that's what's being reported in leftist media

All I'm doing is actually reading the standard as a mathematics professional. They are quite good. That is the opinion of many other math people. The math standards were written by the best math educators in the country with the single goal of improving math education and that certainly looks like what they did. the rest looks like hype by people with vested interests in opposing change.

No, the left in Chicago is not embracing charter schools. We are campaigning against Rahm and are going to support the head of the Chicago Teachers Union if she runs against Rahm for Mayor this spring.

(in reply to LetstalkboutRAP3)
Profile   Post #: 49
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 5:28:56 PM   
GotSteel


Posts: 5871
Joined: 2/19/2008
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quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy
It's that wing, the fundamentalist wing, that's in a culture war with science.


I don't think it's really fair to characterize the quest to suppress knowledge about reality by the extremely superstitious as a culture war.

(in reply to cloudboy)
Profile   Post #: 50
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/7/2014 9:25:59 PM   
Kirata


Posts: 15477
Joined: 2/11/2006
From: USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

All I'm doing is actually reading the standard as a mathematics professional. They are quite good.

Interesting that you should think so, but not really surprising. As it happens, however, there was only one actual mathematician (Ph.D. in Mathematics) on the standards evaluation committee -- James Milbank, Professor Emeritus in Mathematics, Stanford University -- and he thinks they're a disaster.

K.




< Message edited by Kirata -- 9/7/2014 9:27:23 PM >

(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 51
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 1:09:54 AM   
joether


Posts: 5195
Joined: 7/24/2005
Status: offline
First allow me to greet you to the forum. Second, it might help you to understand...why...I tore into you. Lets just say life has been...unpleasant...on my end for the last few days, and usually I'm more patient. Second, that this forum does see individuals from time to time that try to 'hide' their identity, support their original comments, and try to slink away. This is known as 'sock' or 'sock puppet' on here. Maybe in my....frustration of life....I figured you were such.

quote:

ORIGINAL: LetstalkboutRAP3
quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
quote:

ORIGINAL: ElChupa
OH NO, NOT THOSE PESKY 'PUBLICANS AGAIN WITH ALL THEIR QUESTIONS! Haven't they heard of settled science? I mean, nobody questions, especially if leading scientists like biden, obama, and algore all agree on stuff! Questioning settled science like global warming/cooling just confuses people! All those other scientists who question should be sent to re education camps and stuff and be made to listen to Barack Hussein 0bama's (AKA, "The Big Zero") greatest speeches and then watch a blooper reel from Vice Emperor "Crazy Uncle Joe" Biden!

Hey critical thinking is great and I wish a very significant portion of conservatives would learn how to do it however that's not the same thing as trolling for Jesus. The time to "teach the controversy" is when there's an actual scientific controversy.

And what uncontroversial science isn't being taught? Catastrophic global warming caused by a human induced runaway greenhouse effect? Disproven. Global temperature anomaly fell outside of the IPCC's own error bars, and has continued to fall further outside of those error bars. That means that theory is disproven. The theory that race is a social construct? That's a rejection of the well established scientific concept of phenotype, and the underlying cause of phenotype, genotype. In other words, anyone who claims that race doesn't exist is a DENIER of science (or in all fairness, is scientifically ignorant, and that isn't really their fault, most people simply don't have the capacity to understand science and it's implications).


And I suppose you can give us links to each of these ideas, right?

The last one, 'race', is a social construct. Where does it exist in your brain, filtering out all you have learned of the world, to treat someone whose skin color is different from yours? Do you treat the opposite or same sex differently? When I see a black person, I see a person. Yes, they are black. They are also short, alittle on the over-weight side, with glasses, short black hair, and missing a finger. Should I treat this individual any differently due to any of these features? In your view, 'yes'. But I do not accept your view. I've known plenty of individuals from all different ethnic and regions of the world whom are really gifted, skilled, and intelligent. You might look at someone and assume a stereotype; I would not. Since I've known many individuals that look dumb as shit, but were very insightful, intelligent, and wise. A person that judges another based on the skin color tells me the person is of low education and intelligence. And that has more to do with their social upbringing than any physical genetics to date.

quote:

ORIGINAL: LetstalkboutRAP3
quote:

ORIGINAL: dcnovice
quote:

ORIGINAL: LetstalkboutRAP3
@Joether

It's not my article. Unless I'm mistaken, It was written by an Indian woman. I haven't even read it yet, I just stumbled upon the link to it a little while before I saw this thread. Figured it was relevant, so I thought I'd share. Also, you have too much time on your hands...

@DomKen

Piss off, commie!

Emphasis mine.

Nothing says "I'm a credible poster" quite like linking to pieces you haven't bothered to read.


Gee I don't know, jumping into a thread for the sole purpose of discrediting another poster sorta reeks of ideological blindness, but whatever. The guy who wrote this http://www.singularity2050.com/2010/01/the-misandry-bubble.html recommended it. Anyway, now that I've read it, I didn't like it very much, though I think it was worth reading. It was short at least.

Right in the beginning she claims Bill Maher is a germ theory denier, but to the best of my knowledge, that's not true. I don't watch his show much anymore, so it's possible that he has denied the germ theory of disease and I missed it, but I kinda doubt it. I got plenty of issues with Bill Maher, but the fact that he isn't sycophantically enthralled with western allopathic medicine isn't one of them. He's a proponent of naturopathic medicine, which I think she is equating with germ theory denier, but that's just wrong. It's perfectly reasonable to subscribe to both schools of medicine, they aren't mutually exclusive.


Its a good idea to read what you are posting on here. Many of us will read the information, and NOTHING sinks arguments better than finding information from the article that disproves or counters the argument the original post of the link stated.

So, sharing something can be good; but not reading it when making an argument is the 'Kiss of Death' around here!

quote:

ORIGINAL: LetstalkboutRAP3
@ Joether

I find your point about Medicaid dubious, at best. You act as if improved health outcomes for those that could not afford healthcare without Medicaid aren't the primary goal of Medicaid. What exactly is the point of getting people access to health care if that access doesn't improve health outcomes? The fact that it reduced financial strain is great and everything, but the fact that it isn't improving health outcomes (according to the article, and apparently several leftist journalists acknowledged this, I don't know if it's true though, I haven't looked at the actual data) doesn't bode well for the program and warrants reexamining the policy.


The quality of healthcare can be improved if the logistics engine tied and intertwine with it, is also improved. There is nothing in these government programs to improve one's personal medical health. That is for the individual and their medical health people to handle on a personal level. What it does do, is keep costs down, since medicine is expensive. And when you are in deep levels of pain and suffering.....you'll sign anything....to make it stop. That is to keep the unscrupulous types from exploiting the frail, weak, and defenseless.

Improving the quality of care to an individual is not something easily accomplished. The many factors, complications, degrees of difficulty, and how the human body behaves differently in individual cases, is hard to create a system that works. Let me give you alittle story here, to help you understand...

In Massachusetts, those without a job or health insurance through some entity (employer, Mass Exchange, etc), can obtain Mass Health. Mass Health is a state run insurance program for only Mass Residents (6+ months) and are US Citizens (be they over or under 18 years of age). When a person had a problem and the only medication was not covered under Mass Health, that person would be screwed, under a corporation's rules. That person can contact their state rep, explain their case and situation. Most of the time, there are work-arounds for poor financial health or ability to pay all together. For the remainder, they can take the case to Boston and see if a change can be made to allow Mass Health to pay for the treatment. This has happened on a few occasions that I'm aware on, but can not for the life of me remember the particulars to google it. So here we have government, listening to the people, to adjust a medical plan, that benefits the citizen without fucking them over at the same time.

The important question to be answered: Does the quality of medicine, improve with the actions of the US Government and the many 'cogs' (for lack of a better word here) employed?

I would answer 'yes'. Its not perfect, and there are screw ups. People, unfortunately, fall through the cracks. And there is waste. Yet, we have within us, the ability to fix these sort of problems, and improve upon them. They are not immediately corrected to the wishes of the 'instant gratification' crowd; but they do get fixed with time and effort.

Argue as you like of it. Better than the system this nation had before the ACA, hands down! Back in 2008, I was getting better medical coverage and health insurance being unemployed, than many Americans busting their chops at 50-60 hours a week. The folks in Mass found ways for it to cost very little with huge benefits. If it could be successfully done here, could we do the same to the other 49 states of our nation? Thereby improving American's lives and health. A rather noble quest....



(in reply to LetstalkboutRAP3)
Profile   Post #: 52
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 1:52:18 AM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

All I'm doing is actually reading the standard as a mathematics professional. They are quite good.

Interesting that you should think so, but not really surprising. As it happens, however, there was only one actual mathematician (Ph.D. in Mathematics) on the standards evaluation committee -- James Milbank, Professor Emeritus in Mathematics, Stanford University -- and he thinks they're a disaster.


You understand that the evaluation committee and the standards writers are different? or are you actually really that dumb?

After some looking Professor Milbank's complaint seems to be that the standard doesn't go far enough at the high school level. And I agree with that. There should be a pre calculus standard and a better trigonometry standard. But that will effect a relative handful of students and schools and hopefully those schools will hire good enough math teachers that those advanced students will get a better grounding in trig and calculus than I got in high school, which was pretty lousy.

< Message edited by DomKen -- 9/8/2014 2:04:30 AM >

(in reply to Kirata)
Profile   Post #: 53
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 2:17:23 AM   
subrosaDom


Posts: 724
Joined: 2/16/2014
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Gauge


quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

There is no way even a skilled therapist could determine in a dozen questions if you had a mental and/or emotional health problem.



Yes, they can establish a baseline within a dozen questions to formulate a diagnosis, a quick glance through the DSM 5 should outline that easily enough. There are often secondary diagnosis that take place over time and do not likely present or are apparent upon the first evaluation, but a skilled therapist, psychologist, or psychiatrist can make a primary diagnosis in short order. Most people think that mental health treatment is like treating the flu, it is not that simple.

quote:

Unless they had some evidence to say something was wrong before hand.


Most people do not go to professionals unless they have a reason to go to seek treatment.

quote:

Those with Depression are also more likely to lash out violently. Either to themselves or others.


Credible citations (established, respected, medical publications) for this statement please... not just your word. Violent outbursts associated with depression are actually quite uncommon. There are, however, other mental illnesses that are directly associated with violence and violent outbursts.


I am sorry for the thread derailment, but I cannot just let statements like this simply go unaddressed.


To second Gauge, unless you include suicide, depressives are not more likely to have violent outbursts. Now, people on PCP? Yes. People on anabolic steroids? Yes. Now anabolic steroids can among other things cause cyclothymic or bipolar depression, and in the midst of such a depression, yes, there could be an outburst. But the depression there is secondary to the steroid use which is the etiology of the problem.

_____________________________

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- Nietzsche

(in reply to Gauge)
Profile   Post #: 54
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 2:28:52 AM   
subrosaDom


Posts: 724
Joined: 2/16/2014
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom
quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata
quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy
the GOP’s main tenets: wealth worship, war worship, and the permanent culture war

http://www.salon.com/2012/08/05/republicans_slouching_toward_theocracy/

Well that's that then. If you read it in Salon, it must be true.

Move along folks, nothing more to see here.

Give him credit, Kirata. Unlike many teachers in the American educational system, cloudboy correctly referred to tenets rather than to the ever-more-popular tenants. And, yes, I've seen more and more young people use that malapropism. You think they learned that in public school? 'Cause there is the Democrats' war on learning.


There exists no 'Democrats War on Learning'. There is however 'The Republican War on Science' written by Chris Mooney (2006). You can obtain the book from Amazon.com for $11.85 (plus shipping).

An oh look....IT ACTUALLY.....relates to the subject matter of the thread.

Way to FAIL subroseDom!!!!!



First, I am sorry life has recently been unpleasant for you. Unless Kim Jong-un joins the forums, very few of us wish unpleasantness on another.

That aside, I did not fail. Since 95% of the media are Democrats, is it any surprise that there exists no "Democrats' War on Learning"? Perhaps the Democrats defunding of the Washington DC charter schools that African-Americans sent their kids to -- parents who were then forced to send their kids back to the worst public schools possible. Republicans wanted to keep funding, but the Democrats and Obama knew better. That is but one small example of the Democrats' War on Learning. Want another. Bill De Blasio, the Communist Mayor of NY, basically trying to defund/eliminate the greatest high schools for the gifted, among them Bronx High School of Science and Stuyvesant High School (which, btw, Eric Holder attended, proving that Holder is evil, not stupid). De Blasio wants to allocate admissions not by merit but by political correctness, basically turning the schools away from merit and into cauldrons of affirmative action at best (unless you're Asian of course). The fact that no book exists on this means nothing.

As far as Mooney goes, he conflates global warming "denial" with creationism. Guess what? Surveys show about 55% of Republicans are creationists -- and -- get this, 45% of Democrats (my percentages might be slightly off, but not by much). In other words, stupidity knows no bounds. How about those Democratic vaccine-deniers? Oh, wait he doesn't cover them. The global warming charade is falling apart, let alone the anthropogenic global warming charade. Real scientists reject this so-called "science." Creationism is ludicrous and is equivalent to the Flat Earth Society.

Mooney, incidentally, has a BA in English. He seems like a smart guy and probably knows a decent amount about science. But he's no climatologist. According to Wikipedia, he is currently a correspondent for Mother Jones. There's some objectivity for you.


_____________________________

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- Nietzsche

(in reply to joether)
Profile   Post #: 55
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 2:45:46 AM   
maidheather


Posts: 44
Joined: 12/27/2004
From: Portland, OR
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom

First, I am sorry life has recently been unpleasant for you. Unless Kim Jong-un joins the forums, very few of us wish unpleasantness on another.

That aside, I did not fail. Since 95% of the media are Democrats, is it any surprise that there exists no "Democrats' War on Learning"? Perhaps the Democrats defunding of the Washington DC charter schools that African-Americans sent their kids to -- parents who were then forced to send their kids back to the worst public schools possible. Republicans wanted to keep funding, but the Democrats and Obama knew better. That is but one small example of the Democrats' War on Learning. Want another. Bill De Blasio, the Communist Mayor of NY, basically trying to defund/eliminate the greatest high schools for the gifted, among them Bronx High School of Science and Stuyvesant High School (which, btw, Eric Holder attended, proving that Holder is evil, not stupid). De Blasio wants to allocate admissions not by merit but by political correctness, basically turning the schools away from merit and into cauldrons of affirmative action at best (unless you're Asian of course). The fact that no book exists on this means nothing.

As far as Mooney goes, he conflates global warming "denial" with creationism. Guess what? Surveys show about 55% of Republicans are creationists -- and -- get this, 45% of Democrats (my percentages might be slightly off, but not by much). In other words, stupidity knows no bounds. How about those Democratic vaccine-deniers? Oh, wait he doesn't cover them. The global warming charade is falling apart, let alone the anthropogenic global warming charade. Real scientists reject this so-called "science." Creationism is ludicrous and is equivalent to the Flat Earth Society.

Mooney, incidentally, has a BA in English. He seems like a smart guy and probably knows a decent amount about science. But he's no climatologist. According to Wikipedia, he is currently a correspondent for Mother Jones. There's some objectivity for you.



Wait a second ... shall we take a few pages out of the history books that the right wing conveniently forgets? The media is 95% liberal? You really mean to say that Faux News, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, et al, only covers 5% of the media market? And don't forget that charter schools were originally created as a way to bypass the anti-discrimination laws on the books so that white guys could keep the blacks out of their schools. And nowadays, so many charter schools have singular religious components, making them (in my opinion) legally questionable on the idea of vouchers or any government funding due to 'separation of church and state'

(in reply to subrosaDom)
Profile   Post #: 56
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 3:03:50 AM   
subrosaDom


Posts: 724
Joined: 2/16/2014
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: maidheather


quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom

First, I am sorry life has recently been unpleasant for you. Unless Kim Jong-un joins the forums, very few of us wish unpleasantness on another.

That aside, I did not fail. Since 95% of the media are Democrats, is it any surprise that there exists no "Democrats' War on Learning"? Perhaps the Democrats defunding of the Washington DC charter schools that African-Americans sent their kids to -- parents who were then forced to send their kids back to the worst public schools possible. Republicans wanted to keep funding, but the Democrats and Obama knew better. That is but one small example of the Democrats' War on Learning. Want another. Bill De Blasio, the Communist Mayor of NY, basically trying to defund/eliminate the greatest high schools for the gifted, among them Bronx High School of Science and Stuyvesant High School (which, btw, Eric Holder attended, proving that Holder is evil, not stupid). De Blasio wants to allocate admissions not by merit but by political correctness, basically turning the schools away from merit and into cauldrons of affirmative action at best (unless you're Asian of course). The fact that no book exists on this means nothing.

As far as Mooney goes, he conflates global warming "denial" with creationism. Guess what? Surveys show about 55% of Republicans are creationists -- and -- get this, 45% of Democrats (my percentages might be slightly off, but not by much). In other words, stupidity knows no bounds. How about those Democratic vaccine-deniers? Oh, wait he doesn't cover them. The global warming charade is falling apart, let alone the anthropogenic global warming charade. Real scientists reject this so-called "science." Creationism is ludicrous and is equivalent to the Flat Earth Society.

Mooney, incidentally, has a BA in English. He seems like a smart guy and probably knows a decent amount about science. But he's no climatologist. According to Wikipedia, he is currently a correspondent for Mother Jones. There's some objectivity for you.



Wait a second ... shall we take a few pages out of the history books that the right wing conveniently forgets? The media is 95% liberal? You really mean to say that Faux News, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, et al, only covers 5% of the media market? And don't forget that charter schools were originally created as a way to bypass the anti-discrimination laws on the books so that white guys could keep the blacks out of their schools. And nowadays, so many charter schools have singular religious components, making them (in my opinion) legally questionable on the idea of vouchers or any government funding due to 'separation of church and state'



You mean the way gun laws were created to prevent blacks from owning weapons? Interesting.

And, yes, Fox News included, out of all journalists, about 95% vote Democrat. Fact. As for Faux News, I think MSNBC, coupled with some of the NY Times's greatest gaffes, lean more in that direction. The fact that more people watch Fox News, because it's more accurate and more reasonable than the leftist media is a different matter. I'm counting journalists. Want consumers? Check with Nielsen.

Many charter schools are secular. Public schools on the other hand, teach only one religion: All worship the Government. Whatever reason charter schools were originally created for, the fact remains that black parents who give a damn about their kids are turning to them because the public schools are cesspools and failing their children.

_____________________________

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- Nietzsche

(in reply to maidheather)
Profile   Post #: 57
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 3:17:16 AM   
BitYakin


Posts: 882
Joined: 10/15/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: maidheather


quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom

First, I am sorry life has recently been unpleasant for you. Unless Kim Jong-un joins the forums, very few of us wish unpleasantness on another.

That aside, I did not fail. Since 95% of the media are Democrats, is it any surprise that there exists no "Democrats' War on Learning"? Perhaps the Democrats defunding of the Washington DC charter schools that African-Americans sent their kids to -- parents who were then forced to send their kids back to the worst public schools possible. Republicans wanted to keep funding, but the Democrats and Obama knew better. That is but one small example of the Democrats' War on Learning. Want another. Bill De Blasio, the Communist Mayor of NY, basically trying to defund/eliminate the greatest high schools for the gifted, among them Bronx High School of Science and Stuyvesant High School (which, btw, Eric Holder attended, proving that Holder is evil, not stupid). De Blasio wants to allocate admissions not by merit but by political correctness, basically turning the schools away from merit and into cauldrons of affirmative action at best (unless you're Asian of course). The fact that no book exists on this means nothing.

As far as Mooney goes, he conflates global warming "denial" with creationism. Guess what? Surveys show about 55% of Republicans are creationists -- and -- get this, 45% of Democrats (my percentages might be slightly off, but not by much). In other words, stupidity knows no bounds. How about those Democratic vaccine-deniers? Oh, wait he doesn't cover them. The global warming charade is falling apart, let alone the anthropogenic global warming charade. Real scientists reject this so-called "science." Creationism is ludicrous and is equivalent to the Flat Earth Society.

Mooney, incidentally, has a BA in English. He seems like a smart guy and probably knows a decent amount about science. But he's no climatologist. According to Wikipedia, he is currently a correspondent for Mother Jones. There's some objectivity for you.



Wait a second ... shall we take a few pages out of the history books that the right wing conveniently forgets? The media is 95% liberal? You really mean to say that Faux News, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, et al, only covers 5% of the media market? And don't forget that charter schools were originally created as a way to bypass the anti-discrimination laws on the books so that white guys could keep the blacks out of their schools. And nowadays, so many charter schools have singular religious components, making them (in my opinion) legally questionable on the idea of vouchers or any government funding due to 'separation of church and state'



http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/Media-Bias-Is-Real-Finds-UCLA-6664

Of the 20 major media outlets studied, 18 scored left of center, with CBS' "Evening News," The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times ranking second, third and fourth most liberal behind the news pages of The Wall Street Journal.


Another finding that contradicted conventional wisdom was that the Drudge Report was slightly left of center.




_____________________________

"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." - Albert Einstein

(in reply to maidheather)
Profile   Post #: 58
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 3:58:43 AM   
subrosaDom


Posts: 724
Joined: 2/16/2014
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: BitYakin


quote:

ORIGINAL: maidheather


quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom

First, I am sorry life has recently been unpleasant for you. Unless Kim Jong-un joins the forums, very few of us wish unpleasantness on another.

That aside, I did not fail. Since 95% of the media are Democrats, is it any surprise that there exists no "Democrats' War on Learning"? Perhaps the Democrats defunding of the Washington DC charter schools that African-Americans sent their kids to -- parents who were then forced to send their kids back to the worst public schools possible. Republicans wanted to keep funding, but the Democrats and Obama knew better. That is but one small example of the Democrats' War on Learning. Want another. Bill De Blasio, the Communist Mayor of NY, basically trying to defund/eliminate the greatest high schools for the gifted, among them Bronx High School of Science and Stuyvesant High School (which, btw, Eric Holder attended, proving that Holder is evil, not stupid). De Blasio wants to allocate admissions not by merit but by political correctness, basically turning the schools away from merit and into cauldrons of affirmative action at best (unless you're Asian of course). The fact that no book exists on this means nothing.

As far as Mooney goes, he conflates global warming "denial" with creationism. Guess what? Surveys show about 55% of Republicans are creationists -- and -- get this, 45% of Democrats (my percentages might be slightly off, but not by much). In other words, stupidity knows no bounds. How about those Democratic vaccine-deniers? Oh, wait he doesn't cover them. The global warming charade is falling apart, let alone the anthropogenic global warming charade. Real scientists reject this so-called "science." Creationism is ludicrous and is equivalent to the Flat Earth Society.

Mooney, incidentally, has a BA in English. He seems like a smart guy and probably knows a decent amount about science. But he's no climatologist. According to Wikipedia, he is currently a correspondent for Mother Jones. There's some objectivity for you.



Wait a second ... shall we take a few pages out of the history books that the right wing conveniently forgets? The media is 95% liberal? You really mean to say that Faux News, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, et al, only covers 5% of the media market? And don't forget that charter schools were originally created as a way to bypass the anti-discrimination laws on the books so that white guys could keep the blacks out of their schools. And nowadays, so many charter schools have singular religious components, making them (in my opinion) legally questionable on the idea of vouchers or any government funding due to 'separation of church and state'



http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/Media-Bias-Is-Real-Finds-UCLA-6664

Of the 20 major media outlets studied, 18 scored left of center, with CBS' "Evening News," The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times ranking second, third and fourth most liberal behind the news pages of The Wall Street Journal.


Another finding that contradicted conventional wisdom was that the Drudge Report was slightly left of center.





But that was from UCLA. And we all know UCLA is run by Christian right-wing creationists who believe Obama is Satan incarnate (rather than the reality: an America-hating, Muslim-loving, Communist!)


_____________________________

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- Nietzsche

(in reply to BitYakin)
Profile   Post #: 59
RE: Gop trying to break science education again - 9/8/2014 4:31:22 AM   
DaddySatyr


Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011
From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: subrosaDom

But that was from UCLA. And we all know UCLA is run by Christian right-wing creationists who believe Obama is Satan incarnate (rather than the reality: an America-hating, Muslim-loving, Communist!)



Yes! UCLA! That bastion of neo-conservative thought! The university that does not support theories on global warming, a woman's right to "choice", racial equality, or political correctness; a place that is renown for its professors being knuckle-dragging troglodytes that want to move our country back to the era of Jim Crowe laws and non-suffrage for ladies and minorities.

Sorry. I couldn't resist.

Anyone who doesn't realize that up until the internet explosion of the 90s, almost all mainstream journalism was made up of college (liberal) indoctrinated graduates of some of the most left-leaning institutes of higher learning to be found must not have been alive in the 70s.







Screen captures still RULE! Ya feel me?

_____________________________

A Stone in My Shoe

Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me?

"For that which I love, I will do horrible things"

(in reply to subrosaDom)
Profile   Post #: 60
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