KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6632|949

Cybargs wrote:

first amendment rights don't apply to the workplace and uni. mchrystal got fired for talking shit about bama.
our favorite constitutional scholar strikes again!  C'mon cybarg, you know you want that  US citizenship SO SO badly.
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6717
you act like the US is the only country with the cooncept of freedom of speech
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

SuperJail Warden wrote:

Literally the only vaguely left group supporting the frat.
Leftists only support speech they agree with. Everything else is to be banned because it might offend someone and hurt their feelings or 'act as a trigger'. The herd preaching tolerance are violently intolerant towards those they've chosen to exclude. It's kind of funny really.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq
Member
+492|3453

Jay wrote:

SuperJail Warden wrote:

Literally the only vaguely left group supporting the frat.
Leftists only support speech they agree with. Everything else is to be banned because it might offend someone and hurt their feelings or 'act as a trigger'. The herd preaching tolerance are violently intolerant towards those they've chosen to exclude. It's kind of funny really.
that's liberals actually. the doctrinal line of the left is that emphasising difference – identity politics – is an ideological deadend. their rhetoric tends to emphasise commonality rather than 'respecting difference' or pussyfooting around issues. the basis of all analysis begins with Marxian economics and the concepts of labour/capital/property, and the engine is dialectical materialism rather than social progressivism, per se. so you're talking about liberals.
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6632|949

Cybargs wrote:

you act like the US is the only country with the cooncept of freedom of speech
how do you come to that conclusion? I am simply pointing out your penchant for talking about the US constitution and your subconscious desire to be a citizen of the greatest country on earth!
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6632|949

Jay wrote:

SuperJail Warden wrote:

Literally the only vaguely left group supporting the frat.
Leftists only support speech they agree with. Everything else is to be banned because it might offend someone and hurt their feelings or 'act as a trigger'. The herd preaching tolerance are violently intolerant towards those they've chosen to exclude. It's kind of funny really.
that whole "act as a trigger" line is utter bullshit.  The amount of internet complaining about tumblr SJWs is strictly that - internet grumbling.  That shit does not exist in real life anywhere near what people on the internet pretend it does.  Sure, people are hypocrites - and that is not endemic to the "left" only.  It's like so-called free-market proponents doing everything possible to make sure governments interfere in markets.

Have you ever heard of anyone in real life complaining about an event acting as a trigger?
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Jay wrote:

SuperJail Warden wrote:

Literally the only vaguely left group supporting the frat.
Leftists only support speech they agree with. Everything else is to be banned because it might offend someone and hurt their feelings or 'act as a trigger'. The herd preaching tolerance are violently intolerant towards those they've chosen to exclude. It's kind of funny really.
that whole "act as a trigger" line is utter bullshit.  The amount of internet complaining about tumblr SJWs is strictly that - internet grumbling.  That shit does not exist in real life anywhere near what people on the internet pretend it does.  Sure, people are hypocrites - and that is not endemic to the "left" only.  It's like so-called free-market proponents doing everything possible to make sure governments interfere in markets.

Have you ever heard of anyone in real life complaining about an event acting as a trigger?
Yeah last week one of my wife's friends was visiting from Colorado and brought up triggers in casual conversation. Sure she's a hippie but the offhand usage let me know it's completely normal in whatever circle she normally hangs around in (if it was abnormal you'd expect her to emphasize it or explain it. She took for granted that I knew what she meant). It's become completely normal on college campuses too.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

SuperJail Warden wrote:

Literally the only vaguely left group supporting the frat.
Leftists only support speech they agree with. Everything else is to be banned because it might offend someone and hurt their feelings or 'act as a trigger'. The herd preaching tolerance are violently intolerant towards those they've chosen to exclude. It's kind of funny really.
that's liberals actually. the doctrinal line of the left is that emphasising difference – identity politics – is an ideological deadend. their rhetoric tends to emphasise commonality rather than 'respecting difference' or pussyfooting around issues. the basis of all analysis begins with Marxian economics and the concepts of labour/capital/property, and the engine is dialectical materialism rather than social progressivism, per se. so you're talking about liberals.
There's really no difference here. Progressive, Marxist, Anarchist, Stalinist, they all vote blue and pick and choose paradoxical mixtures of the belief systems. The right wing does it too, but they're not sitting there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are for believing in failed economic systems that killed a hundred million people last century while espousing anti-vaccination theories, gluten free lifestyles, and applauding the destruction of GMO crops that could cure illnesses for a billion poor people.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3720
Anarchist, Progressives, Marxist and Stalinist (???) are all the same thing if you view everything through the lens of the U.S. electoral system. The joke among leftist is that they never accomplish anything because the various sects hate each other more than they hate the right wing. This happens commonly in parliamentary systems.

Say what you want about the Marxist but their ideology is at least a lot more developed and consistent than libertarianism. Take any libertarian and ask him some solutions to some negative freedom vs positive freedoms questions and you end up realizing that the libertarian answer for any given situation is the thing they personally like the most.

It is a silly system and why it has never and will never be implemented.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
uziq
Member
+492|3453

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

Leftists only support speech they agree with. Everything else is to be banned because it might offend someone and hurt their feelings or 'act as a trigger'. The herd preaching tolerance are violently intolerant towards those they've chosen to exclude. It's kind of funny really.
that's liberals actually. the doctrinal line of the left is that emphasising difference – identity politics – is an ideological deadend. their rhetoric tends to emphasise commonality rather than 'respecting difference' or pussyfooting around issues. the basis of all analysis begins with Marxian economics and the concepts of labour/capital/property, and the engine is dialectical materialism rather than social progressivism, per se. so you're talking about liberals.
There's really no difference here. Progressive, Marxist, Anarchist, Stalinist, they all vote blue and pick and choose paradoxical mixtures of the belief systems. The right wing does it too, but they're not sitting there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are for believing in failed economic systems that killed a hundred million people last century while espousing anti-vaccination theories, gluten free lifestyles, and applauding the destruction of GMO crops that could cure illnesses for a billion poor people.
well, jay, i'm just telling you that any 'left' ideology will not emphasize difference or positive discrimination and end up in the political cul-de-sac you just outlined (cf. the culture-wars between first-wave feminism and the beret-wearing campus marxists in the mid 20th century; the whole argument consisting of a fundamental disagreement in the cause of 'patriarchy': is it something that can be remedied within liberal democracy through policy and changing institutions, or is it all a consequence of capitalist economics itself). the former analysis, which today cashes out as mostly bickering over 'triggers' and getting hopelessly embroiled in identity politics, and tip-toeing around various segmented political micro-issues, is not a feature of any left discourse. the over-riding ethos of nearly all leftist discourse is solidarity or commonality of some sort, not endlessly promoting the individual's rights and feelings (again, that's liberalism by definition).

also a little puzzling how you say 'there's no difference here' and then ascribe to all political philosophy left-of-centre the catastrophic results of two badly interpreted marxist dictatorships. that's a bit like criticising a senator in wisconsin by talking about a military junta in burma. again: if the political scale in america is so distorted that anything left of the centre-right democratic norm is a scary 'Left' that ends in the gulag, then that's a perspectival slant you should correct, not vice versa. that is not the way political philosophies are discussed in normal discourse. just sounds like your own confusing rhetorical gloss.

and yes, that entire group of the american populace who mix-and-match disparate political views in a hodgepodge of pragmatism to suit their own selfish, immediate needs. you mean like the big government army career handout babies who are more familiar with toting voluminous ayn rand books than heavy ordnance? does sound familiar, actually. oh, how intellectually bankrupt those lefties are!!!

Last edited by uziq (2015-03-17 15:12:50)

Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:


that's liberals actually. the doctrinal line of the left is that emphasising difference – identity politics – is an ideological deadend. their rhetoric tends to emphasise commonality rather than 'respecting difference' or pussyfooting around issues. the basis of all analysis begins with Marxian economics and the concepts of labour/capital/property, and the engine is dialectical materialism rather than social progressivism, per se. so you're talking about liberals.
There's really no difference here. Progressive, Marxist, Anarchist, Stalinist, they all vote blue and pick and choose paradoxical mixtures of the belief systems. The right wing does it too, but they're not sitting there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are for believing in failed economic systems that killed a hundred million people last century while espousing anti-vaccination theories, gluten free lifestyles, and applauding the destruction of GMO crops that could cure illnesses for a billion poor people.
well, jay, i'm just telling you that any 'left' ideology will not emphasize difference or positive discrimination and end up in the political cul-de-sac you just outlined (cf. the culture-wars between first-wave feminism and the beret-wearing campus marxists in the mid 20th century; the whole argument consisting of a fundamental disagreement in the cause of 'patriarchy': is it something that can be remedied within liberal democracy through policy and changing institutions, or is it all a consequence of capitalist economics itself). the former analysis, which today cashes out as mostly bickering over 'triggers' and getting hopelessly embroiled in identity politics, and tip-toeing around various segmented political micro-issues, is not a feature of any left discourse. the over-riding ethos of nearly all leftist discourse is solidarity or commonality of some sort, not endlessly promoting the individual's rights and feelings (again, that's liberalism by definition).

also a little puzzling how you say 'there's no difference here' and then ascribe to all political philosophy left-of-centre the catastrophic results of two badly interpreted marxist dictatorships. that's a bit like criticising a senator in wisconsin by talking about a military junta in burma. again: if the political scale in america is so distorted that anything left of the centre-right democratic norm is a scary 'Left' that ends in the gulag, then that's a perspectival slant you should correct, not vice versa. that is not the way political philosophies are discussed in normal discourse. just sounds like your own confusing rhetorical gloss.

and yes, that entire group of the american populace who mix-and-match disparate political views in a hodgepodge of pragmatism to suit their own selfish, immediate needs. you mean like the big government army career handout babies who are more familiar with toting voluminous ayn rand books than heavy ordnance? does sound familiar, actually. oh, how intellectually bankrupt those lefties are!!!
It's just the consequence of having two parties. They try to squeeze as many conflicting ideologies as possible under one tent in order to win elections. It's how you end up with a party full of people who scoff at religion, tell the world they believe in science, and then propagate myths about vaccines and GMO crops. Or people who want to legalize marijuana on the one hand under the banner of freedom and justice but who then demonize nicotine addicts to the point that they're ostracized from polite society. Or those that want to be inclusive and add Muslim religious holidays to the school calendar but ban all mention of Christmas. Or those that want cops in every school in order to prevent school shootings but become outraged when those same cops are used by the school principal to break up fights and their kid ends up in handcuffs and with a criminal record.

I could go on, the contradictions are nearly endless... but you get the point. There's no rational basis, and there's certainly no pure ideologies.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
pirana6
Go Cougs!
+682|6291|Washington St.

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

There's really no difference here. Progressive, Marxist, Anarchist, Stalinist, they all vote blue and pick and choose paradoxical mixtures of the belief systems. The right wing does it too, but they're not sitting there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are for believing in failed economic systems that killed a hundred million people last century while espousing anti-vaccination theories, gluten free lifestyles, and applauding the destruction of GMO crops that could cure illnesses for a billion poor people.
well, jay, i'm just telling you that any 'left' ideology will not emphasize difference or positive discrimination and end up in the political cul-de-sac you just outlined (cf. the culture-wars between first-wave feminism and the beret-wearing campus marxists in the mid 20th century; the whole argument consisting of a fundamental disagreement in the cause of 'patriarchy': is it something that can be remedied within liberal democracy through policy and changing institutions, or is it all a consequence of capitalist economics itself). the former analysis, which today cashes out as mostly bickering over 'triggers' and getting hopelessly embroiled in identity politics, and tip-toeing around various segmented political micro-issues, is not a feature of any left discourse. the over-riding ethos of nearly all leftist discourse is solidarity or commonality of some sort, not endlessly promoting the individual's rights and feelings (again, that's liberalism by definition).

also a little puzzling how you say 'there's no difference here' and then ascribe to all political philosophy left-of-centre the catastrophic results of two badly interpreted marxist dictatorships. that's a bit like criticising a senator in wisconsin by talking about a military junta in burma. again: if the political scale in america is so distorted that anything left of the centre-right democratic norm is a scary 'Left' that ends in the gulag, then that's a perspectival slant you should correct, not vice versa. that is not the way political philosophies are discussed in normal discourse. just sounds like your own confusing rhetorical gloss.

and yes, that entire group of the american populace who mix-and-match disparate political views in a hodgepodge of pragmatism to suit their own selfish, immediate needs. you mean like the big government army career handout babies who are more familiar with toting voluminous ayn rand books than heavy ordnance? does sound familiar, actually. oh, how intellectually bankrupt those lefties are!!!
It's just the consequence of having two parties. They try to squeeze as many conflicting ideologies as possible under one tent in order to win elections. It's how you end up with a party full of people who scoff at religion, tell the world they believe in science, and then propagate myths about vaccines and GMO crops. Or people who want to legalize marijuana on the one hand under the banner of freedom and justice but who then demonize nicotine addicts to the point that they're ostracized from polite society. Or those that want to be inclusive and add Muslim religious holidays to the school calendar but ban all mention of Christmas. Or those that want cops in every school in order to prevent school shootings but become outraged when those same cops are used by the school principal to break up fights and their kid ends up in handcuffs and with a criminal record.

I could go on, the contradictions are nearly endless... but you get the point. There's no rational basis, and there's certainly no pure ideologies.
I think you're putting a lot of ideas about those types of people under the "liberal" umbrella. I myself am pretty liberal but think most of those ideas are as stupid as you. For example, anti-vaccination people aren't necessarily "liberal" as they are necessarily "completely fucked in the head".
Yes, we NEED GMO crops because we need more food in the world. If/when we find potatoes that grow like weeds in the plains of africa and help ebb world hunger, we've progressed as a society.
How about, in public school, exclude all holidays that aren't government days. You want muslim holidays? Make them official.
etc.
etc.

And yes the right wing must assuredly "sits there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are". There's roughly a quarter billion dead horses flogged by those who make the argument against conservatives who:

Want smaller government but can't wait to make sure it tells a woman what to do with her body.
Cannot understand why having the 10 commandments outside the capital building is a bad thing, only to seemingly have no clue what that whole revolutionary war was fought for.
etc.
etc.

Contradictions exist aplenty on both sides.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

pirana6 wrote:

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:


well, jay, i'm just telling you that any 'left' ideology will not emphasize difference or positive discrimination and end up in the political cul-de-sac you just outlined (cf. the culture-wars between first-wave feminism and the beret-wearing campus marxists in the mid 20th century; the whole argument consisting of a fundamental disagreement in the cause of 'patriarchy': is it something that can be remedied within liberal democracy through policy and changing institutions, or is it all a consequence of capitalist economics itself). the former analysis, which today cashes out as mostly bickering over 'triggers' and getting hopelessly embroiled in identity politics, and tip-toeing around various segmented political micro-issues, is not a feature of any left discourse. the over-riding ethos of nearly all leftist discourse is solidarity or commonality of some sort, not endlessly promoting the individual's rights and feelings (again, that's liberalism by definition).

also a little puzzling how you say 'there's no difference here' and then ascribe to all political philosophy left-of-centre the catastrophic results of two badly interpreted marxist dictatorships. that's a bit like criticising a senator in wisconsin by talking about a military junta in burma. again: if the political scale in america is so distorted that anything left of the centre-right democratic norm is a scary 'Left' that ends in the gulag, then that's a perspectival slant you should correct, not vice versa. that is not the way political philosophies are discussed in normal discourse. just sounds like your own confusing rhetorical gloss.

and yes, that entire group of the american populace who mix-and-match disparate political views in a hodgepodge of pragmatism to suit their own selfish, immediate needs. you mean like the big government army career handout babies who are more familiar with toting voluminous ayn rand books than heavy ordnance? does sound familiar, actually. oh, how intellectually bankrupt those lefties are!!!
It's just the consequence of having two parties. They try to squeeze as many conflicting ideologies as possible under one tent in order to win elections. It's how you end up with a party full of people who scoff at religion, tell the world they believe in science, and then propagate myths about vaccines and GMO crops. Or people who want to legalize marijuana on the one hand under the banner of freedom and justice but who then demonize nicotine addicts to the point that they're ostracized from polite society. Or those that want to be inclusive and add Muslim religious holidays to the school calendar but ban all mention of Christmas. Or those that want cops in every school in order to prevent school shootings but become outraged when those same cops are used by the school principal to break up fights and their kid ends up in handcuffs and with a criminal record.

I could go on, the contradictions are nearly endless... but you get the point. There's no rational basis, and there's certainly no pure ideologies.
I think you're putting a lot of ideas about those types of people under the "liberal" umbrella. I myself am pretty liberal but think most of those ideas are as stupid as you. For example, anti-vaccination people aren't necessarily "liberal" as they are necessarily "completely fucked in the head".
Yes, we NEED GMO crops because we need more food in the world. If/when we find potatoes that grow like weeds in the plains of africa and help ebb world hunger, we've progressed as a society.
How about, in public school, exclude all holidays that aren't government days. You want muslim holidays? Make them official.
etc.
etc.

And yes the right wing must assuredly "sits there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are". There's roughly a quarter billion dead horses flogged by those who make the argument against conservatives who:

Want smaller government but can't wait to make sure it tells a woman what to do with her body.
Cannot understand why having the 10 commandments outside the capital building is a bad thing, only to seemingly have no clue what that whole revolutionary war was fought for.
etc.
etc.

Contradictions exist aplenty on both sides.
Oh of course, they're both full of terrible conflicting ideas and zealots. I'm just picking on democrat leaners here because they always bleat about how much more educated and intelligent they are. Just as stupid, just stupid about different things imo.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6106|eXtreme to the maX

Jay wrote:

There's really no difference here. Progressive, Marxist, Anarchist, Stalinist, they all vote blue and pick and choose paradoxical mixtures of the belief systems. The right wing does it too, but they're not sitting there trying to convince everyone how smart and superior they are for believing in failed economic systems that killed a hundred million people last century while espousing anti-vaccination theories, gluten free lifestyles, and applauding the destruction of GMO crops that could cure illnesses for a billion poor people.
The right wing doesn't try to convince anyone, they shout them down and sulk if that doesn't work.

Are you still saying you can't grasp the difference between social democracy and marxism?
Using GM crops to help the poor would indeed be a social democratic policy, but the profit motive is the real thing here.

Only a few decades ago we would have been arguing about poor people's right to a western lifestyle - starting with the freedom to take up smoking and the right of tobacco companies to export their toxic and damaging products to uneducated peoples.  Monsanto aren't doing better, and don't have any great ideals either.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3720
Thousands of families across the Empire State said no to standardized testing, boycotting the state-mandated English Language Arts exams which began Tuesday.

While accurate figures were hard to come by, testing opponents, parents groups, and school officials from Boerum Hill, Brooklyn, to Buffalo all agreed the number is likely to far exceed the 60,000 students who refused to take the test last year.
...
“Essentially I see no diagnostic educational benefit to my child,” she said. “I see no compelling evidence this is a fair and accurate way to assess children or teachers. All this emphasis on testing actually interferes with meaningful learning and assessment.”

Other parents whose kids opted-out echoed Cohen’s complaints that teachers are being forced to “teach to the test” to preserve their jobs — and their kids were being short-changed as a result.
http://m.nydailynews.com/new-york/educa … -1.2185411



I don't see the problem with standardized testing. If the kid is going to college they probably will have to do a placement test. If your kid joins the military, they have to take a job test. If you have a technical job or one that needs a license, you are going to take test occasionally. The parents are shortchanging their kids by not getting them used to testing
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6632|949

all those tests you just mentioned don't have specific funding incentives tied to the people who are responsible for teaching the test.  There are job-related and financial consequences for the people administering standardized testing as part of the NCLB legislation.  They are incentivized in the form of performance reviews and funding allowances to teach to the test.  The goal is not to get people familiar with taking tests for future benefit.  The goal is to create some sort of benchmark to score both teachers and students so there is a baseline for comparison and ultimately, to improve the education of American youth.  However, tying funding and job performance reviews is putting an undue burden on teachers and administrators

In other words, you're dumb and your comparison is apples to oranges.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England
Also, whenever it comes to the education system you have to understand that teachers are the whiniest sonsofbitches to ever walk the earth. I spend a lot of time in schools because of my job and the universal takeaway is that teachers bitch about everything, all day, nonstop, to anyone who will listen to their complaints. This includes the captive audiences in their classrooms. In this case, teachers don't want to be graded on their students performance, and honestly, it's a valid complaint because they have no control over the most important part of education: the attitude of the child's family and the importance they place on education. But you have to have some way to assess teachers, and it can't be based on the biased opinion of the school's principals. Until someone comes up with a better idea, testing is the least crappy solution.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3720

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

all those tests you just mentioned don't have specific funding incentives tied to the people who are responsible for teaching the test.  There are job-related and financial consequences for the people administering standardized testing as part of the NCLB legislation.  They are incentivized in the form of performance reviews and funding allowances to teach to the test.  The goal is not to get people familiar with taking tests for future benefit.  The goal is to create some sort of benchmark to score both teachers and students so there is a baseline for comparison and ultimately, to improve the education of American youth.  However, tying funding and job performance reviews is putting an undue burden on teachers and administrators

In other words, you're dumb and your comparison is apples to oranges.
I know the financial stakes tied to standardized testing. And I am sure the people who are getting test waivers don't give a shit about the burdens put on teachers and administrators.

Most of these people are helicopter moms who don't want to stress their kids or put the kid in a situation that proves that they aren't as dumb as 99% of other kids.

The remainder are people who are reflexively opposed to anything the government does whether state, local, or federal.

And they are all being led along by people who want to dismantle the Department of Education and privatize all the schools because so they can save or make money.

So if you could please address my specific comments about the parents instead of trying to impress everyone with your common knowledge of the financial system regarding testing that would be great.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6632|949

your comment was - the parents are shortchanging their kids by not letting them learn how to take tests.  OK, bro. If that's your main concern, cool.  There's way more important things to worry about than little Jimmy not getting his test-taking reps in.  There is a valid argument to be made against standardized testing, and the methods and incentives around it need to be addressed.

Your and Jay's anecdotal comments about teachers complaining and helicopter parents are just that - opinions and comments.  For Jay specifically, here's a little bit of reality for you - a lot of people everywhere hate their jobs.  It's a reality that is not exclusive to teaching.  Two of my best friends' wives are teachers and my experience is different than yours - but I'm not dense enough to ascribe my experience to the general population like you two weirdos do.  But MacB, I laugh how you reduce the people into two distinct groups - helicopter moms and anti-government weirdos.  Good stuff.

Please don't ever change, you two.
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3720
I know the financial system around testing is broken. Some Bush era neo-liberal economist probably thought adding profit incentives to school scores was the most rational way to increase grades. But I agree with Jay, that testing as a method isn't ideal but the best idea anyone has come up with. I also agree that the education problems we have is mostly influenced by poverty and culture. I think he would agree that our education system was never anything to brag about in the first place anyway though.

What do either of you think of the Georgia judge who sentenced the test cheating teachers to 20 years in prison? I think that was a huge over sentencing. That judge is another law enforcement jerk that needs a bullet to the back of the neck. The teachers are getting more time than they would have if they put a bullet in the back of a student's neck.





P.S. Fuck you Kennings
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

your comment was - the parents are shortchanging their kids by not letting them learn how to take tests.  OK, bro. If that's your main concern, cool.  There's way more important things to worry about than little Jimmy not getting his test-taking reps in.  There is a valid argument to be made against standardized testing, and the methods and incentives around it need to be addressed.

Your and Jay's anecdotal comments about teachers complaining and helicopter parents are just that - opinions and comments.  For Jay specifically, here's a little bit of reality for you - a lot of people everywhere hate their jobs.  It's a reality that is not exclusive to teaching.  Two of my best friends' wives are teachers and my experience is different than yours - but I'm not dense enough to ascribe my experience to the general population like you two weirdos do.  But MacB, I laugh how you reduce the people into two distinct groups - helicopter moms and anti-government weirdos.  Good stuff.

Please don't ever change, you two.
I was sitting in the teacher's lounge at a school i was redesigning last summer when a bunch of them came in and sat down. De Blasio had negotiated a 15% retroactive pay raise for them plus guaranteed yearly increases for however many years the contract was negotiated, and they were bitching it wasn't enough! Like holy shit, I want my salary to go up 15% on the whim of the mayor.

My views aren't based on two teachers, but hundreds. I have a lot of teacher friends and they're generally nice people and mean well, but if they start talking about work, run for the hills. So, anything regarding education, salaries, tests, whatever, the last person I'd ask for their opinion are the teachers themselves because they're so fucking jaded.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6106|eXtreme to the maX
You have a monocular view, based on limited information, of pretty well every subject though.

I wouldn't want to be a teacher, I see no pluses and many minuses in the value proposition. The people who end up in that career aren't generally going to be creative, active go-getters, bad luck for them. If people don't like their job I suggest they should go find another, that generally shuts them up.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2015-04-18 00:48:02)

Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6632|949

Jay wrote:

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

your comment was - the parents are shortchanging their kids by not letting them learn how to take tests.  OK, bro. If that's your main concern, cool.  There's way more important things to worry about than little Jimmy not getting his test-taking reps in.  There is a valid argument to be made against standardized testing, and the methods and incentives around it need to be addressed.

Your and Jay's anecdotal comments about teachers complaining and helicopter parents are just that - opinions and comments.  For Jay specifically, here's a little bit of reality for you - a lot of people everywhere hate their jobs.  It's a reality that is not exclusive to teaching.  Two of my best friends' wives are teachers and my experience is different than yours - but I'm not dense enough to ascribe my experience to the general population like you two weirdos do.  But MacB, I laugh how you reduce the people into two distinct groups - helicopter moms and anti-government weirdos.  Good stuff.

Please don't ever change, you two.
I was sitting in the teacher's lounge at a school i was redesigning last summer when a bunch of them came in and sat down. De Blasio had negotiated a 15% retroactive pay raise for them plus guaranteed yearly increases for however many years the contract was negotiated, and they were bitching it wasn't enough! Like holy shit, I want my salary to go up 15% on the whim of the mayor.

My views aren't based on two teachers, but hundreds. I have a lot of teacher friends and they're generally nice people and mean well, but if they start talking about work, run for the hills. So, anything regarding education, salaries, tests, whatever, the last person I'd ask for their opinion are the teachers themselves because they're so fucking jaded.
again - the large majority of people hate their job in general.  Talk to a cashier about her job.  Talk to a fucking pipe layer.  Talk to an IT guy.  It's not endemic to teaching.

And your sample size of "hundreds of teachers" (LOL) doesn't matter dude. That's still just, like, your opinion man.  You keep offering anecdotal evidence (and even increased your number to HUNDREDS of teachers, as if you're going door to door surveying them) but it doesn't solidify your point.

MacB, I acknowledge the need for testing here

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

The goal is to create some sort of benchmark to score both teachers and students so there is a baseline for comparison and ultimately, to improve the education of American youth.  However, tying funding and job performance reviews is putting an undue burden on teachers and administrators
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6106|eXtreme to the maX
One of the teachers I know, and I don't know hundreds, has a class of 40 and is allowed a 1% failure rate, ie 0.4 of a pupil is allowed to fail each year, and his career progression and salary is tied to it.

In general, across job types, people who have only had one kind of job and no experience of switching careers see no way out and do tend to be pessimistic and morose, and often 'entitled' with it as its the only way they see to progress. If they really do have only one marketable skill, and only one industry interested in that skill then bad luck for them.
I've seen it with factory workers, construction workers etc 'I've been doing this work for five years and I'm due a promotion' - nope.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5359|London, England

Dilbert_X wrote:

One of the teachers I know, and I don't know hundreds, has a class of 40 and is allowed a 1% failure rate, ie 0.4 of a pupil is allowed to fail each year, and his career progression and salary is tied to it.

In general, across job types, people who have only had one kind of job and no experience of switching careers see no way out and do tend to be pessimistic and morose, and often 'entitled' with it as its the only way they see to progress. If they really do have only one marketable skill, and only one industry interested in that skill then bad luck for them.
I've seen it with factory workers, construction workers etc 'I've been doing this work for five years and I'm due a promotion' - nope.
That's the primary gripe I believe, "I have a master's degree I deserve more money and respect!" Yeah well you knew exactly what you were buying into, now you're stuck teaching with your bachelor's in English literature and your masters in primary education
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat

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