G
Guest
Guest
He's flinging poo again.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
He's flinging poo again.
Still. Always.
But don't take it personally. Again, I don't think he can do anything differently.
It matters when it's someone who otherwise exhibits reason and a basic belief that kindness and compassion aren't myths. If you were to say something like that, I'd worry.
People only fling poo after they leave the trees and start wearing underpants and shoes. Stay in the trees if you want, its a free country.
Actually I hate that idea.
I really do. Children get desks because we want them to grow up and be healthy and strong and have respect for themselves. Childhood is the time to be protected by adults. Not held responsible for adult behavior.
It's way too early to be giving them a social inferiority complex. That'll hit somewhere around junior High.
Ick. I'd pull my kid out of that class or tell the school board to take away her desk until she joins the fire department or the EMT squad and stops terrorizing little kids.
These people(the vets) protect our freedoms every day.
This is what I hate and detest about these types of articles. Here's Diva, worked up to the point where she's going to ignore any extra information-- and there was no extra information there in the first place. The facts were carefully chosen to make a BIG POINT-- at the expense of the rest of the facts, which together make a more truthful picture.Diva: The students themselves, after the class had continued and their interest did not diminish, lauded her for shocking them out of their stupor. Granted, it wasn't the way any of US would have done it, but it worked. And, all things considered, one day's worth of shock value to wake up a student for the rest of his or her life could well be worth it, IMO.
Cloudy: You're right. She didn't teach history that day. But she taught a hell of a lot of it for the rest of the year. What she taught sunk in and stayed there. What she did on that one day - again, not something any of us would do - opened her students' minds to the history she DID teach for the rest of the year.
I never said anything about agreeing with exactly what she did, or how she did it. There are plenty of other ways she could have gotten that same shock value with less of a pro-military stance and more of a truly historical context. However, she has been painted as a rather close-minded and shallow person in this thread for having done this exercise. She is neither. She is a very intelligent person that wanted to make a difference. How she chose to do that - using veterans and lack of desks - was probably not the best way to do it, but it worked.
What it seems that none of you realise is that she does mildly regret having used that exact method. I worked with her and volunteered in her classroom after this happened. She and I spoke about it a bit, and she did express her regrets for having used the veterans as an example, and she taught those students that the government and the military structure within the government have screwed up many, many times. Like I said, she tries to teach both sides.
No, they are just guys that were in the armed forces. Some of them fought for just reasons, some wanted to kill gooks, some got screwed by our government.These people(the vets) protect our freedoms every day.
Diva: I had a response typed up when the cable modem crashed this morning, then had to go to work and forgot most of it.But what it boiled down to is that I respect this particular teacher, and would like my children to take her classes if they were in that district.
Cloudy: You should know by now that I'm on your side with this. We've had quite a few discussions on the topic of how the natives were - and are - treated, and have agreed on almost every single point. No need to talk to me on it, remember? I admitted you were right on this one. She very well could have made her point in a very different and better manner.
If the chance ever comes again, I will. And I will ask if she would integrate that into her class, just as she has integrated how the military fucked over your people and took the rights they should have always had.
It seems you're still judging her a bit harshly for this one act. I don't blame you for that at all. She should be judged for it. Hell, she judges herself for it, and has admitted that she should have done something different. But she does try to teach both sides of any topic she covers. That includes the military actions against the natives.
Diva: I had a response typed up when the cable modem crashed this morning, then had to go to work and forgot most of it.But what it boiled down to is that I respect this particular teacher, and would like my children to take her classes if they were in that district.
Cloudy: You should know by now that I'm on your side with this. We've had quite a few discussions on the topic of how the natives were - and are - treated, and have agreed on almost every single point. No need to talk to me on it, remember? I admitted you were right on this one. She very well could have made her point in a very different and better manner.
-nods- I gotcha. No worries on the rambling, it actually made it a bit clearer.I probably am judging her a little harshly, however, if you only realized how many times I see something like "If you can do XXXX, thank a soldier," and how that hits a lot of people....she probably didn't even tack that on the end there, but the men and women in the military are people, just like you and me. As 3113 said earlier, it's almost like there's this cult of military worship going on. We saw it earlier when people are parroting statements like "Our military is protecting our freedoms." I'm so sick of that.
It's not the soldiers that are at fault. I realize they have a difficult job, but that's exactly what it is - a job. But people tend to forget that it IS a job; they ARE getting paid to do it. Yes, it's difficult. Yes, it's hazardous, but it is also something they chose to do.
As far as "protecting our freedoms" go - that's the kind of thing people say when they're just too damn lazy to think for themselves.
Forgive me, I'm rambling because it's late, but I think you, if no one else, will understand my conflict over what she did, and how thoughtless it seems to me.
Diva: I think you're judging a bit harshly as well, but there's not a whole lot that can be said at this point. My arguements for her have been made. Your opinion is your own, and you're more than entitled to it.
Hold your toes on a minute, here. There was no irony in what I was saying from my particular point of view. At least there was no intended irony. Words don't come through as they should sometimes.That's okay. I'll take harsh and on point compared to well meaning headed the wrong way.
I'm tolerant of ignorance in general existing in the world. I'm not tolerant of someone teaching it to my kids, and I will fight that.
And being passionate and interested and willing to fight for something was what this teacher was trying to teach. However, if I'm actually doing it, I'm "harsh."
Ironic.
Hold your toes on a minute, here. There was no irony in what I was saying from my particular point of view. At least there was no intended irony. Words don't come through as they should sometimes.
Nowhere did I say that you were wrong in being intolerant of somebody teaching idiocy to your children. Nobody should teach them to be sheep, and take for granted that "they" will always take care of you. You're perfectly in the right to be fighting for that. However, it seems you've missed the entire point behind my arguements for this particular teacher.
Yes, she taught that the military fought to give us certain rights. At least on that particular day. Maybe it was a little bit of hero worship.
Then she taught that the military has taken certain rights from other people. Not on that day, no, but on several others.
Again, she teaches both sides. She lets the students draw their own conclusions about who was right and wrong. She's trying to get rid of the ignorance of these people, and teach them to gather all the information they can and think for themselves. That seems to be what you would want your children to learn.
If you want harsh and on point, it can be put this way: You're being blind. You've closed your mind to the fact that this teacher used a bad example on one day, but tried to make up for it later. She is doing what it sounds like you're fighting for, and you could see that if you'd open yourself and reread my arguements for her, since she's not here to argue for herself. THAT is irony.
I agree that her message that day was garbled at best. Always have. But, in a sense, she was correct. We are able to pay the taxes for things like desks partially in part because of military actions. Not wholly, not by a long shot, but partially. So in a way she was partially correct. And, after teaching about how other things have played a part in earning the rights and privileges which we have here that many people elsewhere in the world don't have, she did teach a good lesson. Unfortunately, only a small part of this lesson was covered in the article.
I also agree that she should have been called out for screwing this one up. She wasn't, though, and was actually lauded for it. Which she regrets. Much like having children scribble on the walls instead of doing homework. Their artwork may be held in high regards, but they tend to regret their actions when the grades come in. Her standards on this are actually higher than the people responsible for the article and the people higher up on the food chain at the school who applauded her for it.
Unfortunately, it seems the words that would explain this in a good way just aren't coming. That happens sometimes. The words are THERE but simply won't form into something that makes sense. I'm sorry for wasting your time with the arguement when the mental capacity just isn't there right now on my end.
Then your opinion and mine differ. Such is life.
It's my opinion that she did give a full and right answer, but it took the course of the class to do so. It's also unfortunate both that it took so long to get that full answer and that this one part was highlighted by some goober who was bored with the rest of the local news. If I didn't know her personally, I would probably be fully with you.
As it is, I was serious about not having the mental capacity to argue this further right now. I'm sorry.
That's correct. It's a right provided to them from the civilian legislature, which in turn got its power to do so from the civilian people of the United States.'You didn't earn the right to sit at these desks.'
There is a difference between owing respect and owing awe. In my opinion, this story's moral leans far too far toward "you owe me awe" than makes me comfortable.'These heroes did it for you.'