GorillaKing798 wrote:
Turquoise wrote:
GorillaKing798 wrote:
QFT, as Newt Gingrich said today in the Senate, we need to offer these kids a means of income that will keep these kids off the street, such as not charging them taxes on their income during the ages of 14-16 (as long as they are enrolled in public education and are passing), personally I believe we should continue that through maybe 18, and continue it the tax free income if they are enrolled in college, giving these kids an incentive to stay through their education.
It sounds like I actually agree with Newt on something. I just wish he and his buddies were more supportive of public education or at least willing to devote more time to crafting a system by which such education is promoted. Currently, the Republicans seem far too preoccupied with war and the social agendas of the Religious Right.
Well with Obama's plans for education I am much more in favor of a republican who will at least make some stride in public education than to continue citing race as the only reason public education is failing. Frankly, the lack of support for students in total regardless of race is what keeps driving the dropout rate higher and higher. A drop out rate of 1/3 is a train wreck. Especially in areas like Detroit, where the graduation rate of students is 21.7% and education in these areas is some of the most expensive in the nation. Newt admitted that race is a problem but he has ideas to reform public education and also help the issue of family support.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0621/p03s02-ussc.html
I only agree with Obama about half of the time, but that's still more than I agree with Hillary or McCain.
I'm against affirmative action, so I know what you mean here. Still, I personally think the problem with our education system is that we do it on the cheap. Detroit might have a comparatively expensive school system to say, my own here in Greensboro, NC, but it's still cheap compared to many European systems. If we spent the kind of money that the U.K. and Norway spend per student on education, we'd have a world class system, but we'd also have higher taxes.
The problem is that Americans want it all. Few of us seem to understand that lower taxes means not only more disposable income, but it also means crappier social and public education systems. You get what you pay for. We either need to socialize more or just take the privatized route.
Last edited by Turquoise (2008-03-27 16:56:10)