Jump to content
Bills Fans Gear Now Available! ×

School Kids - Pawns in Social Reform and their Domestic Terrorist Parents


Foxx

Recommended Posts

TakeYouToTasker 2.0
1 hour ago, Billsandhorns said:

So, in essence, a back-door mandate 


So, you’re a fan of “back door” man dates?

 

Keeping the bath houses in business, are you now?

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, TakeYouToTasker 2.0 said:


So, you’re a fan of “back door” man dates?

 

Keeping the bath houses in business, are you now?

 

image.png.9f935235e1aff704ab4f6e9474872edc.png

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Billsandhorns
1 hour ago, TakeYouToTasker 2.0 said:


So, you’re a fan of “back door” man dates?

 

Keeping the bath houses in business, are you now?

Not at all

Link to comment
Share on other sites

TakeYouToTasker 2.0
4 hours ago, Billsandhorns said:

Not at all


Listen, I’m just out here picking low hanging fruit, sir.

 

Stay clear of the Monkey Pox!

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, TakeYouToTasker 2.0 said:


Listen, I’m just out here picking low hanging fruit, sir.

 

Stay clear of the Monkey Pox!

 

What you pick out of the back door is your business.

  • Haha 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Despite what you hear, parents aren't in charge of schools. That's a good thing. (msn.com)

 

Parents aren't in charge of our public schools – and they shouldn't be.

That's not a problem; it's a best practice, and one that has prevailed in this country for a hundred years. It also happens to be the law.

 

Maybe you don't like that law. Maybe you believe that parents alone should dictate what goes on in the classrooms their children attend. If so, you're in luck: Dozens of private and parochial schools are in frenzied competition for your tuition check. Almost certainly you can find one whose curriculum, library catalogue and hiring practices are compatible with your own political views, religious values and cultural preferences.

 

But my concern here is public schools, which Merriam-Webster defines as "free tax-supported schools controlled by a local governmental authority" (emphasis mine).

 

See? Not a word there about moms, dads or legal guardians. Because public means everyone – or at least, every citizen eligible to vote in the election for whatever local government authority calls the shots in the school district they reside in.

 

That includes plenty of moms and dads with school-age children, but also those whose children are grown, or dead, or living in foreign countries. Not to mention the legions of voters whose households, whether by choice or circumstance, include no children at all.

 

 

 

  • Angry 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/lawyers-prepare-sue-any-state-requires-covid-19-vaccination-attend-school

 

“ICAN has told us it will financially support a challenge against any state. So, if all 50 states require it to attend school, ICAN will support challenging the mandate in every single one of those states,” Siri told The Epoch Times.

 

The pledge comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) advisory panel on Oct. 20 recommended adding COVID-19 vaccines to the child and adolescent immunization schedules.

 

The CDC still has to accept the recommendation, but is expected to do so given its stance on vaccines throughout the pandemic. The agency did not respond to a request for comment.

 

Some states require most vaccines on the immunization schedules for school and daycare attendance, including Virginia, though none require annual influenza vaccines for school attendance, according to Immunize.org.

 

Some governors and gubernatorial hopefuls have vowed to block COVID-19 vaccine mandates for children, including the governors of Florida, Colorado, Tennessee, and Virginia.

 

Other states are expected to mandate the vaccines, including California.

 

Authorities there were preparing to require the vaccines for schoolchildren but have delayed the statewide mandate until at least July 2023. Some local governments started to mandate the shots, but at least one mandate was blocked due to a legal challenge—from Siri.

 

The updated CDC schedules won’t take effect until 2023, and Siri expects any mandates would not take effect until the start of the 2023–2024 school year.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Spartacus said:

https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/lawyers-prepare-sue-any-state-requires-covid-19-vaccination-attend-school

 

“ICAN has told us it will financially support a challenge against any state. So, if all 50 states require it to attend school, ICAN will support challenging the mandate in every single one of those states,” Siri told The Epoch Times.

 

The pledge comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) advisory panel on Oct. 20 recommended adding COVID-19 vaccines to the child and adolescent immunization schedules.

 

The CDC still has to accept the recommendation, but is expected to do so given its stance on vaccines throughout the pandemic. The agency did not respond to a request for comment.

 

Some states require most vaccines on the immunization schedules for school and daycare attendance, including Virginia, though none require annual influenza vaccines for school attendance, according to Immunize.org.

 

Some governors and gubernatorial hopefuls have vowed to block COVID-19 vaccine mandates for children, including the governors of Florida, Colorado, Tennessee, and Virginia.

 

Other states are expected to mandate the vaccines, including California.

 

Authorities there were preparing to require the vaccines for schoolchildren but have delayed the statewide mandate until at least July 2023. Some local governments started to mandate the shots, but at least one mandate was blocked due to a legal challenge—from Siri.

 

The updated CDC schedules won’t take effect until 2023, and Siri expects any mandates would not take effect until the start of the 2023–2024 school year.

We're in serious trouble if Siri is, not only, mounting legal challenges, but they are being heard...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, Foxx said:

We're in serious trouble if Siri is, not only, mounting legal challenges, but they are being heard...

wait till Alexa gets involved

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 10/20/2022 at 11:59 PM, TakeYouToTasker 2.0 said:


Listen, I’m just out here picking low hanging fruit, sir.

 

Stay clear of the Monkey Pox!

 

Too long since the last Bills game?

Admin Admin Here GIF - Admin Admin Here Someone Called ...

  • Like 1
  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ron DeSantis says children shouldn’t be taught that US is built on ‘stolen land’: ‘It isn’t true’ (msn.com)

 

Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida said during a debate with Democratic challenger Rep Charlie Crist that “it’s not true” that the United States is built on stolen land.

 

Mr DeSantis’ claim came in the midst of a broader tirade against so-called critical race theory, a catch-all term for education that deals with the country’s history of racism, colonialism, and inequality.

 

“You have people that are teaching — and actually his [Mr Crist’s] running mate has said this in the past — that teaching the United States was built on stolen land,” Mr DeSantis claimed. “That’s inappropriate for our students. It’s not true.”

 

In fact, the United States was built on land violently seized from Indigenous Americans by European settlers. The entirety of land we now know as the US was inhabited by Indigenous nations for centuries prior to the arrival of Europeans, who perpetrated what many experts consider a genocide against them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Crap Throwing Clavin
1 hour ago, Spartacus said:

Ron DeSantis says children shouldn’t be taught that US is built on ‘stolen land’: ‘It isn’t true’ (msn.com)

 

Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida said during a debate with Democratic challenger Rep Charlie Crist that “it’s not true” that the United States is built on stolen land.

 

Mr DeSantis’ claim came in the midst of a broader tirade against so-called critical race theory, a catch-all term for education that deals with the country’s history of racism, colonialism, and inequality.

 

“You have people that are teaching — and actually his [Mr Crist’s] running mate has said this in the past — that teaching the United States was built on stolen land,” Mr DeSantis claimed. “That’s inappropriate for our students. It’s not true.”

 

In fact, the United States was built on land violently seized from Indigenous Americans by European settlers. The entirety of land we now know as the US was inhabited by Indigenous nations for centuries prior to the arrival of Europeans, who perpetrated what many experts consider a genocide against them.

 

It's true...but irrelevant.  You won't find a country, state, tribal region, or any other sort of land occupancy that wasn't stolen from someone else, going back at least 3500 years (and probably much, much longer).

  • Like 2
  • Wow 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Crap Throwing Clavin said:

 

It's true...but irrelevant.  You won't find a country, state, tribal region, or any other sort of land occupancy that wasn't stolen from someone else, going back at least 3500 years (and probably much, much longer).

what- no participation trophies?

when do invaders sing Kumbayae?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

https://www.city-journal.org/recapturing-higher-education

 

Last week, DeSantis raised the stakes and proposed, for the first time, a strategy for reversing the long march through the institutions, beginning with what Marcuse believed was the initial revolutionary institution: the university. The governor appointed a slate of new trustees to the board of the New College of Florida, a notoriously left-wing campus, similar to that of Evergreen State in Olympia, Washington. DeSantis tasked the new board with transforming it into, to quote the governor’s chief of staff, the “Hillsdale of the South”—in other words, a classical liberal arts college that provides a distinctly traditional brand of education and scholarship.

The Florida state legislature has long been frustrated with New College, the state’s smallest public university, for repeatedly failing to meet recruitment targets, achieve financial stability, or improve its dismal dropout and graduation rates. The college accepts almost anyone, with a 74 percent admissions rate, but few choose to attend: the “yield,” or matriculation rate, is a grim 13 percent.

In recent years, legislators have contemplated shutting down the college altogether and transferring its assets elsewhere in the public university system. But, in a dramatic move, DeSantis proposed a last-ditch alternative: bring in a new board of reformers and turn the school around.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

what say you.

be a good Republican and avoid taking on the libtard educators because in the future the Ds could make education 1 sided? 

 

Ron DeSantis is fulfilling his promise to oust the 'woke mob.' Is he taking it too far? (msn.com)

 

A few weeks ago, DeSantis sent a letter to the state’s public universities, requesting information about programs related to diversity, equity and inclusion as well as critical race theory. The governor wants to know whether these efforts are being funded with state dollars, and if so, how much.

 

It’s fine for a governor or legislature to seek information about how taxpayer funding is used. Lindsey Burke, education policy director at The Heritage Foundation, recently wrote that the average American university “has more than 45 individuals with jobs devoted to promoting so-called diversity, equity, and inclusion.” She argues it’s not only fair but also important for DeSantis to call out this bureaucratic bloat. 

 

A federal judge on Thursday, however, ruled in the DeSantis administration's favor that it could go through with the information gathering without violating the court order. 

 

“You have a fundamental problem of requiring people to pay for the propagation of ideas and often values that they don't like or they disagree with,” McCluskey told me. “And DeSantis in his reelection captured the dissatisfaction of a lot of people in Florida who are saying, ‘Why should we keep paying for these things that we don't agree with and we find morally problematic?’ 

 

“And so you have an incompatibility between the idea of government-run institutions with forced taxpayer support and academic freedom, the idea that academicians should be totally in charge of governing themselves but they should be funded by other people who don’t have a choice in the matter.”

 

 

DeSantis' frustration is understandable, but using the government to force a more level academic playing field comes with risks. Even if you’re sympathetic to DeSantis’ mission, if he can limit expression in this way, so could a very different governor. 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

55 minutes ago, Cinga said:

R9vueMD5UpKl.jpeg

 

As a matter of fact, no to all the above

that's because kids in the 70s were not jabbed 72 times before kindergarden with magic to "protect" them 

  • Like 2
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue., Guidelines