Sunday, March 30, 2008

Babies are punishment?

He-whose-middle-name-must-not-be-spoken has weighed in with his particular slant on abortion . . . if they make a mistake, I don't want them punished with a baby.


Class, the lesson for today is CAUSE and EFFECT.


ACTIONS BRING CONSEQUENCES


Learn this and early and save yourself future pain.

- Drop a rock on your foot and it will hurt!

- Commit yourself to a home loan you can't afford and you lose your house.

- Have unprotected teen sex outside of marriage and you can end up pregnant, broke, and living off of government assistance for the rest of your life. -- Or you could end up dead from an STD.

Fail to learn this and you will end up a useless, hedonistic fool.

Fail to teach this to your children and you breed hate and contempt.

ALTERNATE LESSON:

Apparently, it is OK to kill someone if they "punish" you - or if they simply inconvenience you. This is a terrible lesson to be teaching to our children, but it IS what they are learning. An example of this fact was played out at a Denver school, this year, where a young child brought a gun to school in order to shoot his teachers. His explanation was that they would be "nicer" to him when they came back. --- Came back from where? --- This is what happens when human life is cheapened. And how can you defend anyone from being wantonly killed when it becomes morally acceptable for our officials to willfully fail to protect the most defenseless of all - babies: born or unborn. Instead, parents provide training to their children - intensive training - in the form of role-playing games such as Grand Theft Auto, so that children can become as proficient as possible in committing violent assault and robbery against innocent people.

I thought about this, the other day, when I saw a pretty Colorado license plate with the slogan "RESPECT LIFE" and I thought that it was too bad that these weren't produced until the lack of respect for life had played out to its logical conclusion at Columbine High School.

---dan

Sunday, March 16, 2008

A semla on Fat Tuesday

The World According to Pia: A semla on Fat Tuesday

My wish list for Lent:
- Semlor (plural) . . . . . . . Where can I find them in Colorado?

---dan

Friday, March 14, 2008

School pays students to take test

School-pays-students-take-test

I probably have better things to do, but I was prompted to step into the blogosphere by the announcement of this story.

Denver schools have a scheme that pays kids at Manual High School to take the CSAP test. This is paid for by private donors. The principal calls it bribery and reluctantly admits that it works.

~~~"I don't believe in it, but it works," Stein said Thursday.~~~

Paying students to show up for the state mandated testing has resulted in 100% attendance. Some people might call this pay for performance. But, of course, this would be anathema to the teachers' union who resist any attempt to associate performance with rewards.

I wonder if they view the payment of salaries as a form of bribery.
Should we bribe employees to show up for work?
Perhaps.
How else will we be able to continue funding the "entitlement" programs that pay people for doing absolutely nothing, which, of course, is exactly what the "union thugs" want.

---dan