must be.Roc18 wrote:
This is some type of elaborate troll.War Man wrote:
I was excited with McCain's VP pick at the time.
if you open your mind too much your brain will fall out.
must be.Roc18 wrote:
This is some type of elaborate troll.War Man wrote:
I was excited with McCain's VP pick at the time.
Jay wrote:
So your view of fiscal conservatives is that they're there to ride to the rescue when little Sally maxes out her credit card because of stupid purchases? They shouldn't have any say in how that money was spent, merely find a way to pay for it? Sorry, that's not how it works.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Being fiscally conservative is running a surplus. Taking in more than you spend. Having modest debt. Saving for a rainy day. Having a small government isn't a necessary conditon.
No of course not, fiscal conservatives can only ever spend taxes on the military.Jay wrote:
Fiscal conservatism and social welfare spending can never work together
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2012-10-19 04:43:02)
Frank Reynolds wrote:
fuck sake aussies go to your little bugaloo gay thread and sod off
Cool story time:
This extends all the way through high school. During the last civics class I took there, my support of gun rights during one class discussion inadvertently outed me as a Republican or an individual with at least some right-leaning tendencies, and it haunted me for the remainder of the class. The teacher tried to use me as the focal point for everything he thought was wrong with the country ("so, what does our conservative have to say about this?"). Too bad he never really backed his accusations or viewpoints with even good liberal logic. After a discussion with school administration, I'm sure I got a much better grade than the one he wanted to apply.
This was a common theme throughout most history/political oriented classes in public school. However, "counter-culture" public school like AFJROTC didn't really have the opposite effect like you'd think. Generally, they were more professional about things and preferred to guide discussions away from the morass of political opinion and back to history. I wish it was a model more teachers had followed, or even been allowed to.
Left-wingers do it all the time just as much if not more.AussieReaper wrote:
Haha right-wingers. Always playing the victim card.
It's true. It was mandatory my senior year that the teachers read Obama's memoir to us. As if we were 5 year olds. Absolutely pathetic.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I'm not exactly a Romney supporter, but this is hardly surprising considering the massive amount of political indoctrination that goes on in schools, both subtle and unsubtle. I remember them painting a very black and white image of American politics, in general painting Republicans as pointy-toothed monsters who want to take away your stuff and Democrats as forward-thinking heroes who want to give you ALL THE STUFF.
YGBFSMSpearhead wrote:
It's true. It was mandatory my senior year that the teachers read Obama's memoir to us. As if we were 5 year olds. Absolutely pathetic.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I'm not exactly a Romney supporter, but this is hardly surprising considering the massive amount of political indoctrination that goes on in schools, both subtle and unsubtle. I remember them painting a very black and white image of American politics, in general painting Republicans as pointy-toothed monsters who want to take away your stuff and Democrats as forward-thinking heroes who want to give you ALL THE STUFF.
My parents are Democrats. I'm Republican. Albeit, that doesn't mean much these days.Ty wrote:
I'd suggest that parents would have more influence on a child's political outlook than any education system.
I think college profs have a huge impact on political beliefs. You're at the point where you can actually vote and start paying attention.Ty wrote:
I don't mirror my parent's political views either but I would definitely say they had an impact on my political outlook more than any teacher or lecturer.
Victim card? Whatever aussie, it's just a cool story. It would go against my own set of professional ethics to slam or try to humiliate kid for his political opinion in a classroom.War Man wrote:
Left-wingers do it all the time just as much if not more.AussieReaper wrote:
Haha right-wingers. Always playing the victim card.
I don't think he is. While laughably awful, it doesn't sound that far-fetched to me.FEOS wrote:
YGBFSMSpearhead wrote:
It's true. It was mandatory my senior year that the teachers read Obama's memoir to us. As if we were 5 year olds. Absolutely pathetic.
Looks like you rolled a 20 on some of those teachers. But to be fair, I did have two history classes that weren't politically-tainted.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
You guys must have had shitty teachers, or maybe mine were exceptional. I remember having mock elections in school where ross perot won. I also remember the teacher that got me interested in politics in high school making a concerted effort not to show bias one way or another. To this day I couldn't tell you where he was on the political spectrum.
Kids spend almost half of their weekdays at schools listening to their teachers. I guarantee any outward political bias shown by teachers is going to rub off if left unchecked.Ty wrote:
I'd suggest that parents would have more influence on a child's political outlook than any education system.
If anything, college has a worse reputation for this than lower schools.Jay wrote:
I think college profs have a huge impact on political beliefs. You're at the point where you can actually vote and start paying attention.Ty wrote:
I don't mirror my parent's political views either but I would definitely say they had an impact on my political outlook more than any teacher or lecturer.
Because political compass is a joke/myspace personality quiz.Funnily, political compass doesn't really think I'm right-wing anymore.
Quality vs quantity is very much a valid way to explain the size of any military.Macbeth wrote:
Pretty dickish way to explain to Romney why we have a smaller army. lol