05-22-2011, 05:52 PM
If you think none of this affects you because you don't have kids in school, think again.
Schools are a reflection of their respective communities and society as a whole.
Who makes the policies in this country? Is the middle represented? Are citizens encouraged to be all they can be? Is success rewarded?
The low groups, who grow into the low group of adults, want to have the same houses, same cars, same clothes, same vacations. But, like in our schools, they don't want to have to work for it or earn it. They want it given them. The 60% grades teachers are FORCED to give non-working students is the 60% benefits we give them out of our own pockets. If you think about it, lazy motherfuckers live off about 60% of what average people do if you count their housing, medical, food, utility, and monetary benefits.
This shit matters. We are training a whole new generation to be pieces of shit the rest of us have to support for their entire fucking lives.
Hopeless, isn't it?
(This was going to be the subject of my dissertation, but the college didn't like it. Too close to home, I guess.)
Schools are a reflection of their respective communities and society as a whole.
Who makes the policies in this country? Is the middle represented? Are citizens encouraged to be all they can be? Is success rewarded?
The low groups, who grow into the low group of adults, want to have the same houses, same cars, same clothes, same vacations. But, like in our schools, they don't want to have to work for it or earn it. They want it given them. The 60% grades teachers are FORCED to give non-working students is the 60% benefits we give them out of our own pockets. If you think about it, lazy motherfuckers live off about 60% of what average people do if you count their housing, medical, food, utility, and monetary benefits.
This shit matters. We are training a whole new generation to be pieces of shit the rest of us have to support for their entire fucking lives.
Hopeless, isn't it?
(This was going to be the subject of my dissertation, but the college didn't like it. Too close to home, I guess.)