Teachers are among the smartest people in the world, if their unions support a certain party over another I have to assume they have been smart enough to make the right decisions
SBGold said:
Teachers are among the smartest people in the world, if their unions support a certain party over another I have to assume they have been smart enough to make the right decisions
Golden One said:
We should encourage more widespread use of vouchers to create competition for the overly bureaucratic public school systems.
bearister said:
"I await everyone's snarky remarks."
I think only fans of Cormac McCarthy's writing style are going to comment.
"A legion of horribles, hundreds in number, half naked or clad in costumes attic or biblical or wardrobed out of a fevered dream with the skins of animals and silk finery and pieces of uniform still tracked with the blood of prior owners, coats of slain dragoons, frogged and braided cavalry jackets, one in a stovepipe hat and one with an umbrella and one in white stockings and a bloodstained wedding veil and some in headgear or cranefeathers or rawhide helmets that bore the horns of bull or buffalo and one in a pigeontailed coat worn backwards and otherwise naked and one in the armor of a Spanish conquistador, the breastplate and pauldrons deeply dented with old blows of mace or sabre done in another country by men whose very bones were dust and many with their braids spliced up with the hair of other beasts until they trailed upon the ground and their horses' ears and tails worked with bits of brightly colored cloth and one whose horse's whole head was painted crimson red and all the horsemen's faces gaudy and grotesque with daubings like a company of mounted clowns, death hilarious, all howling in a barbarous tongue and riding down upon them like a horde from a hell more horrible yet than the brimstone land of Christian reckoning, screeching and yammering and clothed in smoke like those vaporous beings in regions beyond right knowing where the eye wanders and the lip jerks and drools."
Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian
Golden One said:
California politicians have believed that the solution to the state's declining test scores is just to throw more money at the problem,
Golden One said:
Obviously, that hasn't worked.
Golden One said:
School curriculum in K through 12 needs to place more emphasis on the basics--Math, English, Science, writing skills, etc. and less time spent on social engineering.
BearlySane88 said:SBGold said:PAC-10-BEAR said:Katie Miller: “What’s a conspiracy theory that you believe in?”
— PatriotTakes 🇺🇸 (@patriottakes) May 21, 2026
Liz Wright, wife of Trump Energy Secretary Chris Wright: “…The teachers unions want to keep the students stupid so they can control them and turn them into Democrats.” pic.twitter.com/x84c6saOFz
Definitely a wacko conspiracy theory. They made her dumb yet she turned out to be a Repub.
VOTE BLUE AND VOTE GAVIN
You'd think it was a lot less wacko if you worked in schools. There are several teachers I work with who openly spout hate filled rhetoric towards conservatives, some even violent. Every school I've worked at has had similar. I have never seen it happen the other way around. The only teachers, that I know of, who put their own feelings and beliefs onto the students are liberals.
concordtom said:BearlySane88 said:SBGold said:PAC-10-BEAR said:Katie Miller: “What’s a conspiracy theory that you believe in?”
— PatriotTakes 🇺🇸 (@patriottakes) May 21, 2026
Liz Wright, wife of Trump Energy Secretary Chris Wright: “…The teachers unions want to keep the students stupid so they can control them and turn them into Democrats.” pic.twitter.com/x84c6saOFz
Definitely a wacko conspiracy theory. They made her dumb yet she turned out to be a Repub.
VOTE BLUE AND VOTE GAVIN
You'd think it was a lot less wacko if you worked in schools. There are several teachers I work with who openly spout hate filled rhetoric towards conservatives, some even violent. Every school I've worked at has had similar. I have never seen it happen the other way around. The only teachers, that I know of, who put their own feelings and beliefs onto the students are liberals.
When it happens the other way around you recognize it as plain common sense.
concordtom said:Golden One said:
California politicians have believed that the solution to the state's declining test scores is just to throw more money at the problem,
Can you prove, or back up, this assertion?
Well, first of all, can you identify "the problem" you refer to?Golden One said:
Obviously, that hasn't worked.
Can you back up this claim?
wifeisafurd said:
Why is enrollment dropping so dramatically at CA public schools?
SBGold said:
Teachers are among the smartest people in the world…
concordtom said:SBGold said:
Teachers are among the smartest people in the world…
I don't think they are too smart if when they leave work they go smoke a "spliff" to get high and escape the stressors of their day. Like, maybe if that's what they need to do they should just get a different job.
I hear posting on chat boards is not very stressful - and there may be some way to get paid for it.
Oh!! I hear there's a slush fund available for propagandists. Maybe people can get in on that. And not have to smoke weed to de-stress.
How smart is someone that stays in a job that causes them so much stress - from kids mind you, the most resilient, adaptable and inspiring age group of all - that they need to use mood altering substances to cope?
concordtom said:wifeisafurd said:
Why is enrollment dropping so dramatically at CA public schools?
Uh, I think the answer to your initial question is PRETTY FLOCKING SIMPLE!
1. Fewer children per woman is something happening in California, in the United States, in north, central, and south America, in Europe, in Africa, in Asia. I have made many posts and several threads about this phenomenon.
2. Fewer immigrants.
Did you know that there are two ways to increase population (irrespective of lifespan)? Childbirth and Immigration.
That's it.
There's so much more I could say, but I think I'll just let these simple facts sit with people. Y'all can argue about it while I'm gone today. I'll return to see more stupid things people say.
SBGold said:
Teachers, like most of us have free will and will do the right things for their industry
SBGold said:
Teachers are among the smartest people in the world, if their unions support a certain party over another I have to assume they have been smart enough to make the right decisions
concordtom said:Golden One said:
California politicians have believed that the solution to the state's declining test scores is just to throw more money at the problem,
Can you prove, or back up, this assertion?
Well, first of all, can you identify "the problem" you refer to?Golden One said:
Obviously, that hasn't worked.
Can you back up this claim?Golden One said:
School curriculum in K through 12 needs to place more emphasis on the basics--Math, English, Science, writing skills, etc. and less time spent on social engineering.
What is this social engineering you speak of?
And isn't education itself, like "the basics--Math, English, Science, writing skills, etc.", a form of social engineering??
Muckieeye said:
So, the answer is: " No, I can't provide any evidence to support my claims."
Muckieeye said:
Ah, test scores! The sacred cow of anti public education conservatism.
Psst: all standardized testing reveals is how good a student is at taking standardized tests. This is not a complete measure of a student's success. It is merely one part of the overall student assessment process.
Students with learning disabilities, as well as immigrant and first generation students, are at a disadvantage when taking these tests.
So, simply pointing at test scores dismissively, as if that proves your point, reveals your ill informed bias.
Muckieeye said:
Ah, test scores! The sacred cow of anti public education conservatism.
Psst: all standardized testing reveals is how good a student is at taking standardized tests. This is not a complete measure of a student's success. It is merely one part of the overall student assessment process.
Students with learning disabilities, as well as immigrant and first generation students, are at a disadvantage when taking these tests.
So, simply pointing at test scores dismissively, as if that proves your point, reveals your ill informed bias.
Muckieeye said:
So, the answer is: " No, I can't provide any evidence to support my claims."
PAC-10-BEAR said:Muckieeye said:
Ah, test scores! The sacred cow of anti public education conservatism.
Psst: all standardized testing reveals is how good a student is at taking standardized tests. This is not a complete measure of a student's success. It is merely one part of the overall student assessment process.
Students with learning disabilities, as well as immigrant and first generation students, are at a disadvantage when taking these tests.
So, simply pointing at test scores dismissively, as if that proves your point, reveals your ill informed bias.
A recent report from UC San Diego revealed a sharp decline in math and writing skills for incoming students:
-1 in 8 incoming freshman can't do basic math
-1 in 5 fail the entry-level writing test
Meanwhile, San Diego Unified high schools require students to take ethnic studies courses.
concordtom said:Golden One said:
We should encourage more widespread use of vouchers to create competition for the overly bureaucratic public school systems.
What do you think… is a flat tax a good idea, too?
Big C said:
it is pretty much documented that student learning in the US began to decline several years before the pandemic... right about when kids started all having smart phones and access to social media.
Regarding teacher unions, their primary role is to advocate for increased pay and working conditions for their members (teachers). That's what unions do. The problem is when their views about how to improve education in general become mingled into that. Teachers are an important voice on how to improve education, but that should be separated from their unions' attempts to garner higher salaries and a better workplace.
Golden One said:concordtom said:Golden One said:
We should encourage more widespread use of vouchers to create competition for the overly bureaucratic public school systems.
What do you think… is a flat tax a good idea, too?
Definitely. Gives everyone skin in the game and if properly implemented forces the super rich to pay their share. But it will never happen. The lower 50% and the upper 1% don't like the idea.
Quote:
What percentage of California k-12 students are children of immigrants and how does that rank historically ?
In California today, roughly 44%46% of children have at least one immigrant parent, according to recent demographic estimates. Because most children attend public schools, that translates to roughly about 45% of K-12 students being children of immigrants as well.
Historically, that is very high by California standards, but probably not the absolute peak.
A few important historical points:
* California has had repeated immigration waves:
* Chinese, Irish, Italian, Japanese, and other European immigration in the late 1800s/early 1900s.
* Large Dust Bowl migration in the 1930s (domestic migrants, not immigrants).
* Massive Latin American and Asian immigration after the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act.
* Demographers generally describe the current era as one of the highest sustained shares of children from immigrant families in California history. The modern difference is that immigrant-origin children are now spread across essentially the entire statewide school system, not concentrated in a few cities or industries.
* The foreign-born share of California's total population is currently about 28%, which is among the highest ever recorded for the state and the highest of any U.S. state today.
So the short answer is:
* Current percentage: about 45% of California K-12 students are children of immigrants.
* Historical ranking: likely near the highest level in state history, though California also had extremely immigrant-heavy periods around the early 20th century.


concordtom said:Golden One said:concordtom said:Golden One said:
We should encourage more widespread use of vouchers to create competition for the overly bureaucratic public school systems.
What do you think… is a flat tax a good idea, too?
Definitely. Gives everyone skin in the game and if properly implemented forces the super rich to pay their share. But it will never happen. The lower 50% and the upper 1% don't like the idea.
What's your opinion of a progressive tax system. Why does it exist (in theory, if there weren't special loopholes)?