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May 18, 2024, 01:58:24 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

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 1 
 on: Today at 01:57:51 PM 
Started by Vice President Christian Man - Last post by Skill and Chance
A wrinkle is that while NM has a very low percentage of college grads, it actually has a very high percentage of postgrads, on par with some of the most educated NE states.  So I don't think it's "destiny" is clear in a world dominated by education polarization.

 2 
 on: Today at 01:48:49 PM 
Started by President Johnson - Last post by wnwnwn
I think they should be given the RT treatment (being labelled as state propaganda).

 3 
 on: Today at 01:48:39 PM 
Started by Frodo - Last post by jojoju1998
Most “Christian” schools in the south were founded by wealthy whites to keep their kids away from black.

I know most of my aunts/uncles were sent to one for that exact reason when schools were forced to integrate. Even while the school was 30-40 minutes away.

As the article said, they are usually worse than public schools. I got a much better education at a public school then when I was at a private “Christian” one, which is saying a lot for the rural south.

Are these schools as academically rigorous as the Catholic Prep Schools, the mainline protestant schools, and the old old school elite academies ?

 4 
 on: Today at 01:48:23 PM 
Started by Attorney General & PPT Dwarven Dragon - Last post by Mr. Reactionary
I move for a final vote.

 5 
 on: Today at 01:48:01 PM 
Started by TomC - Last post by Comrade Funk
I, Comrade Funk, do solemnly affirm that I will faithfully execute the office of Secretary of State and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the Republic of Atlasia, so help me Dave.

 6 
 on: Today at 01:47:41 PM 
Started by Frodo - Last post by Born to Slay. Forced to Work.
Most “Christian” schools in the south were founded by wealthy whites to keep their kids away from black.

I know most of my aunts/uncles were sent to one for that exact reason when schools were forced to integrate. Even while the school was 30-40 minutes away.

As the article said, they are usually worse than public schools. I got a much better education at a public school then when I was at a private “Christian” one, which is saying a lot for the rural south.

 7 
 on: Today at 01:47:12 PM 
Started by TDAS04 - Last post by Minnesota Mike
In a Surprise the MN GOP convention endorsed former NBA player turned InfoWars nut royce White for US Senate.

https://www.startribune.com/in-a-surprise-minnesota-republicans-back-royce-white-to-run-against-amy-klobuchar/600366972/?refresh=true

MN Democrats have to be laughing their asses off. White is a Steve Bannon backed former NBA player who gave up his career because he was afraid to fly. His only political experience is losing the GOP primary in MN-05 in 2022. The guy is a fringe character even by the standards of the modern Republican Party. It remains to be seen if anyone challenges him in the primary.

 8 
 on: Today at 01:45:57 PM 
Started by jojoju1998 - Last post by jojoju1998
From a Facebook friend:

Here's a theology lesson: For Christians,the teachings of Jesus and the New Testament presents (among other things) guidelines on how YOU should live... not on how you should control how OTHERS live. Any ‘church” that teaches otherwise is one you should run from.

     Did he say that women should be mandated to have children and be banned from working outside the home? And if not then how is him communicating Christian teachings at a religious institution all that different than Jesus doing the same? I get the sense that this person would have the exact same reaction to hearing Jesus speak, which makes this opinion entirely worthless to Christians.

He called women working a "diabolical lie." I get why you're defending that here given your own awful previous comments on how you view the role of women in society.
I can tell you it is very un-Christlike, which is common amongst especially zealous religious converts who are attracted to an ideology rather than a faith.

     I read it as him calling women focusing on careers over family a diabolical lie. And as I said above, his chief error was not extending that to men too. He did speak about the importance of men in the household, but mostly in the context of not being absentee fathers. A father should as a matter of course put his family before his career and not waste his life being a slave for corporate masters who don't care about him.

There were other concerning things in his speech about other matters.

 9 
 on: Today at 01:40:20 PM 
Started by jojoju1998 - Last post by Associate Justice PiT
From a Facebook friend:

Here's a theology lesson: For Christians,the teachings of Jesus and the New Testament presents (among other things) guidelines on how YOU should live... not on how you should control how OTHERS live. Any ‘church” that teaches otherwise is one you should run from.

     Did he say that women should be mandated to have children and be banned from working outside the home? And if not then how is him communicating Christian teachings at a religious institution all that different than Jesus doing the same? I get the sense that this person would have the exact same reaction to hearing Jesus speak, which makes this opinion entirely worthless to Christians.

He called women working a "diabolical lie." I get why you're defending that here given your own awful previous comments on how you view the role of women in society.
I can tell you it is very un-Christlike, which is common amongst especially zealous religious converts who are attracted to an ideology rather than a faith.

     I read it as him calling women focusing on careers over family a diabolical lie. And as I said above, his chief error was not extending that to men too. He did speak about the importance of men in the household, but mostly in the context of not being absentee fathers. A father should as a matter of course put his family before his career and not waste his life being a slave for corporate masters who don't care about him.

 10 
 on: Today at 01:39:52 PM 
Started by Frodo - Last post by Frodo
This puts the debate over school vouchers in a whole new light for most of us here:

Segregation Academies Still Operate Across the South. One Town Grapples With Its Divided Schools

Quote
(...) Divisions like this have long played out across the region. In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education, declaring public school segregation unconstitutional. As the federal courts repeatedly ruled against the South’s massive resistance, many white people pivoted to a new tactic, one that is lesser known and yet profoundly influences the Black Belt region today: They created a web of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of private schools to educate white children.

Now, 70 years after the Brown decision, ProPublica has found about 300 schools that likely opened as segregation academies in the South are still operating. Some have flourished into pricey college-prep behemoths. Others, like Wilcox Academy, remain modest Christian schools. Many have accepted more nonwhite students over the years, and some now come close to reflecting the communities they serve.

But across Alabama’s 18 Black Belt counties, all of the remaining segregation academies ProPublica identified — about a dozen — are still vastly white, even though the region’s population is majority Black. And in the towns where these schools operate, they often persist as a dividing force.

Even when rural segregation academies offer fewer amenities than their public-school counterparts, white parents are often unwilling to voluntarily send their children to majority-Black public schools. That can be to the detriment of all students, especially in struggling communities where money is tight. It means doubling up on school overhead costs, and fewer students at each school means neither one can offer the robust programs that they could provide if their resources were combined.

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