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And this omission is common to John McCain, Hillary Clinton, and
George W. Bush as well. But I'm picking on Barack Obama for two reasons. In his statement on space policy, he did at least address the area I'm discussing. He talked about the need to improve science education in America, and he related that to NASA. He spoke of such things as a plan to recruit teachers with science backgrounds, and certain other measures. The other reason is that I was reminded of this issue from a web site, not officially related to Obama's campaign, but by a supporter of his. One item on that site expressed annoyance that Hillary's campaign was now asking pledged delegates to switch their votes. Another noted that Obama should emphasize why he stands ahead of Hillary Clinton and John Edwards instead of focusing on common ground and the general election - so that was an old item. On the bottom of that page was an item about a 14-year-old girl from Brazil who was very bright, but was being failed by the school system. It was noted that just as we mainstream the mentally-retarded these days, at least since the mid-1980s, gifted students are not being skipped grades any more; everyone is kept in classes by age. While an Obama supporter might realize this is a problem, the idea of using Federal funding for education to put a stop to that - perhaps even to set up a system of special schools for students gifted in science and engineering related abilities, so as to create the manpower the nation urgently needs - well, the Soviet Union did that sort of thing, but if *we* did it, it would be primitive and fascistic, I suppose. Even G. W. Bush doesn't dare propose such notions. So one can hardly expect them from Obama, I fear - and, of course, those are the measures that would be genuinely effective, instead of just looking pretty. Ah: here's the original item. An article entitled "Failing our Geniuses" by John Cloud, quoted in Laura Cole's pro-Obama blog. http://my.barackobama.com/page/community/blog/lauracole John Savard |
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On 22 May, 20:06, Quadibloc wrote:
And this omission is common to John McCain, Hillary Clinton, and George W. Bush as well. But I'm picking on Barack Obama for two reasons. In his statement on space policy, he did at least address the area I'm discussing. He talked about the need to improve science education in America, and he related that to NASA. He spoke of such things as a plan to recruit teachers with science backgrounds, and certain other measures. The other reason is that I was reminded of this issue from a web site, not officially related to Obama's campaign, but by a supporter of his. One item on that site expressed annoyance that Hillary's campaign was now asking pledged delegates to switch their votes. Another noted that Obama should emphasize why he stands ahead of Hillary Clinton and John Edwards instead of focusing on common ground and the general election - so that was an old item. On the bottom of that page was an item about a 14-year-old girl from Brazil who was very bright, but was being failed by the school system. It was noted that just as we mainstream the mentally-retarded these days, at least since the mid-1980s, gifted students are not being skipped grades any more; everyone is kept in classes by age. While an Obama supporter might realize this is a problem, the idea of using Federal funding for education to put a stop to that - perhaps even to set up a system of special schools for students gifted in science and engineering related abilities, so as to create the manpower the nation urgently needs - well, the Soviet Union did that sort of thing, but if *we* did it, it would be primitive and fascistic, I suppose. Even G. W. Bush doesn't dare propose such notions. So one can hardly expect them from Obama, I fear - and, of course, those are the measures that would be genuinely effective, instead of just looking pretty. Ah: here's the original item. An article entitled "Failing our Geniuses" by John Cloud, quoted in Laura Cole's pro-Obama blog. http://my.barackobama.com/page/community/blog/lauracole John Savard I must say I have written on similar lines myself, particularly with reference to Maths. I am British and my remarks are therefore biased to a British context, although it is relevant elsewhere. The impression I get is that if a student is going to "nmake it" in mathematics - Make it here means getting a good class of Maths degree in a school with a good standard - Like Yale, Cal Tech and Oxford (UK), they witll have the capacity to sit GCSE maths at 12. Every single Maths student in a good university is at least 2 - 3 years behind where they should be - in many cases a lot more. Maths I understand is being taught like a game with various levels. If students are being provided with thier own computers one can easily see what level they are at. Computers maight well be the one thing that could break down the PC educaton establishment. "We don't like PCs - We ARE PC!". Still I suppose they could use the schools censorship (we must protect our young people) to obstruct progress. Another possibility is to broaden the outlook of students. There is a violent video game that has potential. If instead of shooting people up you had to read and write Arabic and convince tribal elders to support you rather than Al Qaeda. That was the way you won and got to the next level. With Barack Obama I have another very specific comment. I know I have mentioned tis before. He has a preacher that is quite extreme. How this will affect his views on Evolution and Stem cell research I don't know. The British Pariament has recently voted overwhemingly in favor of such research. Barack is I feel someone who is a wonderful orator, when you look closely at what he is offering he is in actual fact offering less than either of the other two candidates. - Ian Parker |
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On May 23, 7:03 am, Ian Parker wrote:
Barack is I feel someone who is a wonderful orator, when you look closely at what he is offering he is in actual fact offering less than either of the other two candidates. If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. John Savard |
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On Fri, 23 May 2008 17:29:58 -0700 (PDT), in a place far, far away,
Quadibloc made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: On May 23, 7:03 am, Ian Parker wrote: Barack is I feel someone who is a wonderful orator, when you look closely at what he is offering he is in actual fact offering less than either of the other two candidates. If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. Hitler's oratory inspired a lot of people, too. What's your point? |
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On May 23, 7:29 pm, (Rand Simberg)
wrote: On Fri, 23 May 2008 17:29:58 -0700 (PDT), in a place far, far away, Quadibloc made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. Hitler's oratory inspired a lot of people, too. What's your point? Barack Obama doesn't seem to be inspiring people to do bad things with his oratory. I was thinking more along the lines of John F. Kennedy. Substance is more valuable than oratory, but I would very much like to see a President who inspires Americans to faith in their country and its future in a positive and unifying manner. Of course, Ronald Reagan could have done that too, if the media had only been on his side. John Savard |
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On Fri, 23 May 2008 18:46:01 -0700 (PDT), in a place far, far away,
Quadibloc made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: On May 23, 7:29 pm, (Rand Simberg) wrote: On Fri, 23 May 2008 17:29:58 -0700 (PDT), in a place far, far away, Quadibloc made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. Hitler's oratory inspired a lot of people, too. What's your point? Barack Obama doesn't seem to be inspiring people to do bad things with his oratory. It seems to be inspiring them to vote for Obama. Isn't that bad enough? ;-) |
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![]() If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. Hitler's oratory inspired a lot of people, too. What's your point? That strikes me as a fairly insulting comment. So Obama is like Hitler, right? What's YOUR point? C'mon Rand, you can do better than that. |
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On Fri, 23 May 2008 19:14:36 -0700 (PDT), in a place far, far away,
made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. Hitler's oratory inspired a lot of people, too. What's your point? That strikes me as a fairly insulting comment. shrug So Obama is like Hitler, right? Apparently, insofar as he "inspires people." What's YOUR point? My point is that simply "inspiring" people is hardly a basis for wanting them to be president. What they're inspired to do is important, too. |
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On May 23, 10:14*pm, wrote:
If his oratory inspires people, that at least is a change we've been waiting for for a long time. Hitler's oratory inspired a lot of people, too. *What's your point? That strikes me as a fairly insulting comment. So Obama is like Hitler, right? What's YOUR point? C'mon Rand, you can do better than that. Can he? I think you're new around here. This Rand comment was a typical Rand comment. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Barack Obama Continues to Disdain Space Exploration | Mark R. Whittington | Policy | 55 | May 23rd 08 08:38 AM |
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