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kraznayazvezda's comments:
on The Future of Journalism
I think it was great that the Oregonian published that DVD. Why wouldn't you want to learn more about the Islamist terrorist threat to this country, and to western civilization in general? You won't like it if the Taliban comes and stuffs you into a burka.
posted 3 years, 7 months ago
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on Referendum Signatures
Interesting, how many people are on this discussion under pseudonyms. They like their anonymity, but anonymity on petition signatures? Not so much...
posted 3 years, 8 months ago
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on March Show Suggestions
This article is based on a report from the National Academy of Sciences. It describes a disaster (a strong solar storm) that could knock out electrical power in this country for years.
It'd be nice to see this "go viral" to ensure that measures were taken to protect the electrical grid and prevent this disaster.
posted 4 years, 1 month ago
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on Measure 60: Teacher Pay
Really? It's easy for me to imagine. The administrator observes the classroom and can see whether the teacher is working with energy, commitment, and talent. That's not allowed by current bureaucratic rules, but I think it's actually the [i]only[/i] way to actually make that determination.
posted 4 years, 7 months ago
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on Measure 60: Teacher Pay
This is the point I keep trying to make. Perhaps Measure 60 isn't the way. But who else is proposing the necessary change? Certainly not the teachers' union or the school boards. And given that, frustration builds to the point where anything that's offered looks better than the status quo.
posted 4 years, 7 months ago
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on Measure 60: Teacher Pay
But I think it's [i]also[/i] really important to break the "iron rice bowl" enforced by teachers' unions. I think that principals need more authority to hire and fire. Sure, by doing this you open up the possibility of abuse by bad principals. But if you [i]don't[/i] do it, you allow the deadwood to accumulate. I'd like to see schools run more like startup companies and less like giant, inflexible bureaucracies.
In that tradeoff, my priority is to see the kids get what they need. Good principals aren't going to persecute good teachers. Bad principals will need to be weeded out, just like bad teachers should be.
But you've got to break the hold of bureaucratic rules and open up some space for the flexibility and creativity of human intelligence.
posted 4 years, 7 months ago
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on Measure 60: Teacher Pay
posted 4 years, 7 months ago
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on Discussing Race on Campus
That said, programs like Act Six in particular, and affirmative action in general, generate negative feelings among white people who rightly feel that they're being discriminated against.
The civil rights movement's goal was supposed to be "Black and white together, we shall not be moved." Instead, sometime in the late 1960's, it morphed into "Now it's [i]your[/i] turn to be discriminated against, whitey."
It's unrealistic and wrong to expect white people to take abuse that no one would even [i]think[/i] about handing out to members of other groups.
posted 4 years, 7 months ago
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on Measure 60: Teacher Pay
But [i]people[/i] can tell. You can walk into a classroom and see if it's alive or dead. If there is a connection between the teacher and the students. If that connection is being used to do something useful.
Our current K-12 educational system is set up like a car manufacturer. Pay is based on seniority and coursework, neither of which can compensate for a lack of the basic talent. The system is set up to "stamp out" students, but too often stamps out human initiative and the joy of learning instead.
I don't know if Measure 60 is the right answer, but I'm inclined to vote for it because our current K-12 system is the wrong answer. We need something talent-based, not a giant bureacracy.
posted 4 years, 8 months ago
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on Measure 65: Open Primary
For some Multnomah County position, 10 D's and 2 R's run in the primary. The 10 D's split the (let's say) 70% of the voters in Multnomah County who are D's and each gets about 7% of the vote. The 2 R's split the 30% who are R's so they each get about 15%.
Come November, you get 2 R's running for the position in Multnomah County. The moaning, wailing, and rending of garments will be a sight to behold...
posted 4 years, 8 months ago
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on The White State
You should learn some history before you start believing conspiracy theories. The Vanport flood [i]was not[/i] an intentional act.
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
I've got no problem going after people who do racist acts. I've got a [i]huge[/i] problem being accused of that myself, even though I don't do any of that.
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
The problem is, there are probably more "people of color" who would be offended if their "color" was not paid attention to.
How's anyone supposed to know?
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
Maybe when [i]everyone[/i] starts thinking of themselves as Americans we'll move forward. I'm from a religious minority background, which is my own personal thing. I don't need to impose it on everyone or have some effect on everyone because of it.
I'm an American.
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
I am. Too many victims of white guilt fall for this stuff.
There's a great book, [i]White Guilt[/i] by Shelby Steele (who is half black, half white -- and the fact that I have to mention this is proof of how toxic race relations are in this society). I highly recommend the book.
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
The racial atmosphere in this country has become poisonous, thanks in part to the acts of racial arsonists like Al Sharpton. It's time to straighten this all out.
To me, the word "racist" brings up images of Bull Connor attacking civil rights demonstrators with firehoses and attack dogs. Anyone wielding that word should have something to back up an attack like that. I think that terms like "institutional racism" are dishonest manipulations, designed to attach the emotions associated with Bull Connor, etc to entirely other things which do not deserve that association.
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
This whole "white privilege" thing is a manipulation. It's an attempt to make "everyone a minority." But everyone isn't, and that's just a fact about life.
It seems to me that there are more productive things to do than to cut-and-paste long lists like this into the discussion. If I'm willing to treat everyone I meet with initial kindness and respect, [i]that ought to be enough[/i].
What else do you want? Please reply with specificity. What do you want us to [i]do?[/i]
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The White State
I don't pick on people based on what color they are. I try to treat everyone I meet with respect and kindness. That's what I'm supposed to do, and I do it.
If that's not "enough," then too bad. I don't choose to be "drafted" into anyone's ideological project.
posted 4 years, 9 months ago
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on The Race Has Just Begun
Speaking as an older person who used to be younger, I would advise you that if all you have is "hope," you're more likely to change things in a [i]destructive[/i] way than in a [i]constructive[/i] way. Positive change requires, in addition to hope, [i]competence.[/i].
Be careful what you wish for. Social movements have gone wrong over and over again throughout history, even if they had positive motivations going in. Communism, for example. It didn't work out so well, to put it mildly.
When I was young, I was not into listening very carefully to those who were older than me. My generation thought it "knew better." We wasted a lot of opportunities because of that.
Your generation is going to be running the country someday. Try not to create a mess. Try to think about how [i]deadly serious[/i] all of this is. Try not to get swept up in the emotional waves that roll through society every now and then.
Watch out for meaningless but exciting rhetoric like "We are the change we've been waiting for."
posted 4 years, 11 months ago
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on The Race Has Just Begun
Again, remembering the '60s:
It was [i]exciting[/i] being part of the "new consciousness." It was fun. The other people were so [i]clueless[/i].
But it turned out that we didn't have what it took to change the entire society. We didn't have a [i]plan[/i], just a [i]feeling[/i].
Same thing with Obama and his followers. It's all a wave of emotion.
Obama's going to have to answer some questions this fall, like what exactly he wants to do. So far it's all airy rhetoric and the excitement of him being the first black nominee.
posted 4 years, 11 months ago
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