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Archive for January 5, 2010

Texas government school teachers warned against being "heterosexist"

January 5, 2010 Leave a comment

Candidates for certification to teach in public schools in Texas are being told that they will be held accountable for any “heterosexist” leanings and must become agents working to change society, according to one candidate who was alarmed by the demands.

The applicant, who requested anonymity for fear of repercussions, told WND part of the teachings on multiculturalism required him to read several online postings about the issue inside the education industry.

One warns that “teachers and administrators must be held accountable for practices deemed to be racist, sexist, heterosexist, classist, or in any other way discriminatory.” And a second warned that educators must not define education as the basic skills.

“How do we create a better world? How do we do more than simply survive? As educators, we must help people to become committed to social change,” the article demanded.

The teacher candidate told WND the studies were mandated by the Region 10 service center for the public school educators’ program.

Reason # to homeschool.

WorldNetDaily

Categories: Government Schools, RTHS

Judge Andrew Napolitano: Health care is not a right

January 5, 2010 Leave a comment

In the continually harsh public discourse over the President’s proposals for federally-managed healthcare, the Big Government progressives in both the Democratic and the Republican parties have been trying to trick us. These folks, who really want the government to care for us from cradle to grave, have been promoting the idea that health care is a right. In promoting that false premise, they have succeeded in moving the debate from WHETHER the feds should micro-manage health care to HOW the feds should micro-manage health care. This is a false premise, and we should reject it. Health care is not a right; it is a good, like food, like shelter, and like clothing.

What is a right? A right is a gift from God that extends from our humanity. Thinkers from St. Thomas Aquinas, to Thomas Jefferson, to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to Pope John Paul II have all argued that our rights are a natural part of our humanity. We own our bodies, thus we own the gifts that emanate from our bodies. So, our right to life, our right to develop our personalities, our right to think as we wish, to say what we think, to publish what we say, our right to worship or not worship, our right to travel, to defend ourselves, to use our own property as we see fit, our right to due process—fairness—from the government, and our right to be left alone, are all rights that stem from our humanity. These are natural rights that we are born with. The government doesn’t give them to us and the government doesn’t pay for them and the government can’t take them away, unless a jury finds that we have violated someone else’s rights.

What is a good? A good is something we want or need. In a sense, it is the opposite of a right. We have our rights from birth, but we need our parents when we are children and we need ourselves as adults to purchase the goods we require for existence. So, food is a good, shelter is a good, clothing is a good, education is a good, a car is a good, legal representation is a good, working out at a gym is a good, and access to health care is a good. Does the government give us goods? Well, sometimes it takes money from some of us and gives that money to others. You can call that taxation or you can call it theft; but you cannot call it a right.

A right stems from our humanity. A good is something you buy or someone else buys for you.

Now, when you look at health care for what it is, when you look at the US Constitution, when you look at the history of human freedom, when you accept the American value of the primacy of the individual over the fleeting wishes of the government, it becomes apparent that those who claim that healthcare is a right simply want to extend a form of government welfare.

When I make this argument to my Big Government friends, they come back at me with…well, if people don’t have health insurance, they will just go to hospitals and we will end up paying for them anyway. Why should that be? We don’t let people steal food from a supermarket or an apartment from a landlord or clothing from a local shop. Why do we let them take healthcare from a hospital without paying for it? Well, my Big Government friends contend, that’s charity.

They are wrong again. It is impossible to be charitable with someone else’s money. Charity comes from your own heart, not from the government spending your money. When we pay our taxes to the government and it gives that money away, that’s not charity, that’s welfare. When the government takes more from us than it needs to secure our freedoms, so it can have money to give away, that’s not charity, that’s theft. And when the government forces hospitals to provide free health care to those who can’t or won’t care for themselves, that’s not charity, that’s slavery. That’s why we now have constitutional chaos, because the government steals and enslaves, and we outlawed that a long time ago.

ObamaCare
Facebook.com

Categories: ObamaCare

Obama embezzled from former employer and CNN thinks it’s cute

January 5, 2010 Leave a comment

Despite threat from AlQueda against US, Obama not planning to expand terror fight in Yemen

January 5, 2010 Leave a comment

Obama Akbar

As predicted. How’s that Hope and Change workin’ for ya?

FoxNews

Piqua vocational school teacher arrested after police find him in park with female student

January 5, 2010 Leave a comment

An Upper Valley Joint Vocational School teacher was arrested and charged with one count of sexual battery on Thursday, December 31.

Capt. Chris Anderson of the Troy Police Department said that Eric Williams, 32, was found alone with a juvenile female student inside a car at Duke Park after dark, when it was closed. Anderson said both Williams and the student came to the police department for questioning. The students was released to her parents.

Williams was booked into the Miami County Jail and is charged with sexual battery.

Anderson said he expects Williams to be arraigned on Monday.

I would strongly suggest that the powers that be at Upper Valley JVS reacquaint themselves with page 122 of the JVS Policy Manual concerning terminating employees for “sexual battery”.

Reason # to homeschool.

WDTN-TV
WHIO-TV
Dayton Daily News

Update: 4 January 2010 / 9:11 PM

A former teacher accused of sexual battery pleaded not guilty on Monday in Miami County Court.

Eric Williams, a former electrical trade instructor at the Upper Valley Joint Vocational School in Piqua, was arrested after being found at Paul G. Duke Park in Troy with a juvenile female student. Police found the two around 7 p.m. on December 30, after the park was closed.

The 32-year-old Williams, of Pitsburg in Darke County, faces up to five years in prison if convicted. He has been placed on administrative leave from the school pending the outcome of the trial, and remains in Miami County Jail on a $15,000 bond.

WDTN-TV
WHIO-AM/FM
Dayton Daily News