Max Boot writes in the Washington Post. In this article, he says that people always thought that James Buchanan was the worst president because of his failure to prevent the Civil War, the most deadly conflict in American history. But he now believes Trump has edged out Buchanan for the dubious title of The Worst President Ever. By the way, the Queen of England gave a lovely speech yesterday, thanking Britons for their service and their spirit; she never once mentioned herself or her ratings. She said: Better days will return. We will be with our friends again. We will be with our families again. We will meet again.” I was reminded of the World War II song, “We’ll meet again, don’t know where, don’t know when, but I know we’ll meet again some sunny day.” How lovely to have an articulate leader who speaks of “we” not “I.”
Max Boot writes:
The situation is so dire, it is hard to wrap your mind around it. The Atlantic notes: “During the Great Recession of 2007–2009, the economy suffered a net loss of approximately 9 million jobs. The pandemic recession has seen nearly 10 million unemployment claims in just two weeks.” The New York Times estimates that the unemployment rate is now about 13 percent, the highest since the Great Depression ended 80 years ago.
Far worse is the human carnage. We already have more confirmed coronavirus cases than any other country. Trump claimed on Feb. 26 that the outbreak would soon be “down to close to zero.” Now he argues that if the death toll is 100,000 to 200,000 — higher than the U.S. fatalities in all of our wars combined since 1945 — it will be proof that he’s done “a very good job.”
No, it will be a sign that he’s a miserable failure, because the coronavirus is the most foreseeable catastrophe in U.S. history. The warnings about the Pearl Harbor and 9/11 attacks were obvious only in retrospect. This time, it didn’t require any top-secret intelligence to see what was coming. The alarm was sounded in January by experts in the media and by leading Democrats including presumptive presidential nominee Joe Biden. Government officials were delivering similar warnings directly to Trump.
A team of Post reporters wrote on Saturday: “The Trump administration received its first formal notification of the outbreak of the coronavirus in China on Jan. 3. Within days, U.S. spy agencies were signaling the seriousness of the threat to Trump by including a warning about the coronavirus —the first of many—in the President’s Daily Brief.” But Trump wasn’t listening.
The Post article is the most thorough dissection of Trump’s failure to prepare for the gathering storm. Trump was first briefed on the coronavirus by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Jan. 18. But, The Post writes, “Azar told several associates that the president believed he was ‘alarmist’ and Azar struggled to get Trump’s attention to focus on the issue.” When Trump was first asked publicly about the virus, on Jan. 22, he said, “We have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China.”
In the days and weeks after Azar alerted him about the virus, Trump spoke at eight rallies and golfed six times as if he didn’t have a care in the world. Trump’s failure to focus, The Post notes, “sowed significant public confusion and contradicted the urgent messages of public health experts.” It also allowed bureaucratic snafus to go unaddressed — including critical failures to roll out enough tests or to stockpile enough protective equipment and ventilators.
Countries as diverse as Taiwan, Singapore, Canada, South Korea, Georgia and Germany have done far better — and will suffer far less. South Korea and the United States discovered their first cases on the same day. South Korea now has 183 dead — or 4 deaths per 1 million people. The U.S. death ratio (25 per 1 million) is six times worse — and rising quickly.
This fiasco is so monumental that it makes our recent failed presidents — George W. Bush and Jimmy Carter — Mount Rushmore material by comparison. Trump’s Friday night announcement that he’s firing the intelligence community inspector general who exposed his attempted extortion of Ukraine shows that he combines the ineptitude of a George W. Bush or a Carter with the corruption of Richard Nixon.
Trump is characteristically working hardest at blaming others — China, the media, governors, President Barack Obama, the Democratic impeachment managers, everyone but his golf caddie — for his blunders. His mantra is: “I don’t take responsibility at all.” It remains to be seen whether voters will buy his excuses. But whatever happens in November, Trump cannot escape the pitiless judgment of history.
Somewhere, a relieved James Buchanan must be smiling.

The gravest worldwide threat since World War II, and the worst president ever is making it even more of a disaster every day. Heckuva job there, Donald.
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Exactly. You nailed it.
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The incoming trump administration was warned about the real threat of a pandemic much earlier that 1/19. The warning was ignored. https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/16/trump-inauguration-warning-scenario-pandemic-132797
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The worst possible President at one of the worst times in history.
This vile, profoundly ignorant, cretinous, pathologically narcissistic, criminal, corrupt, vain, predatory, racist, sexist, utterly inept con man, mobster, and would-be fascist autocrat, Jabba the Trump, needs to get a max boot in November.
The judgment of history will also fall upon this moron’s enablers–his toadies and sycophants–McConnell, Gaetz, Meadows, Nunes, Paul, Ghouliani, Barr, Hannity, Limbaugh, Kellyanne CONway, Sarah HUCKSTER-bee Sanders, etc.–it will fall, in fact, on almost the entire Repugnican Limbo Party, which was willing to follow Trump to any depth. How low, how low, how low can we go? And a little bit lower now. And a little bit lower now. . . .
As a direct result of the stupidity, ignorance, complete lack of interest in anything or anyone but himself, inaction, and ineptitude of this loathsome subhuman in the now Offal Office in the now Whiter House, MILLIONS OF AMERICANS WILL DIE WHO DIDN’T HAVE TO.
It’s long past time to invoke the 25th Amendment. WHAT ON EARTH DOES IT TAKE!?!?!?!?!!? Millions of unnecessary American deaths as a direct result of a President’s malfeasance and negligence aren’t enough? Then what exactly is?
Any CEO of a company so badly run would long ago have been booted.
And all of this was completely predictable. This is the man who called his secretary of Homeland Security, in a meeting, “Honey” while he was yelling at her for not SHOOTING poor, unarmed refugees at our border. But to the Repugnicans, that sort of person in the highest office of the land is, evidently, just fine.
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Elections have consequences. This is what happens when you elect to the most powerful position in the world a man who thinks that Belgium is a city; that Alabama is on the coast; that climate change is “just weather”; that when we place tariffs on a country’s goods, that country pays them–a man who doesn’t read and never has–one who is deeply, abysmally ignorant and uneducated but thinks himself the world’s foremost expert on everything from technology to defense to disease, who has, as his own Secretary of Defense said, “The understanding of a fifth- or sixth-grader.”
We do a better job of vetting someone to run the local Sonic drive-in french fry and coney dog stand than we do of vetting candidates for President of our country. Exhibit A, there: this moron. QED.
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And now, to borrow the language of Trumpty Dumpty’s twitterings: The “Prince of Whales” has the “caronavirus.”
This is the man (if one can use such a term) whose first instinct, when the fact that COVID-19 could be a problem started to sink into his thick head, was to see if he could blame it on immigrants and foreigners to help him, again, to marshal racism to get himself elected.
Vile. A novelist could not invent a person this vile and ignorant.
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IQ45 to IQ45: “I know, I can call this the ‘China virus.” That’ll work.”
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Not a Trump Fan (at all). Minor editorial quibble though: having friends in Mobile Alabama has taught me that Alabama is indeed on the coast.
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Good point, Jason! East coast.
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Gulf Coast actually, Bob. Geography teacher here.
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My intended comment was that Trump assumed that Alabama was on the East Coast. I was typing hastily. Trump made a comment about the hurricane that was expected to skirt the East Coast of the U.S. affecting Alabama.
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In other words, Trump thought that Alabama was on the East Coast.
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Did you seriously think, Threatened, that I too thought that Alabama was on the East Coast? Unlike our President, I do know most of what the average third grader does.
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I was typing hastily, late at night, and wrote that Trump thought that Alabama was on the coast when what I intended was to say that Trump thought that Alabama was on the East Coast. I hope that I have cleared this up.
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There are a great many things that I don’t know, infinitely more than those that I do, but third-grade geography is not among those things.
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But my general point is the important one. Occupying the White House, right now, is one of the most generally ignorant people in politics in the world, and this is an enormous problem. How does a person this ignorant become president? Clearly, our media did not do their job, in debates, for example, of probing the depth of knowledge, or lack thereof, of the candidates. We cannot afford to have a person this ignorant in this office.
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https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/03/bill-de-blasio-had-his-worst-week-as-new-york-city-mayor.html
It’s always about people vs. the economy – and sadly, the people always lose.
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He is the worst.
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Bizarrely, this piece by Max Boot is labeled as “opinion.”
Opinion: Circles are round.
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How much more damage can Don the Con do between now and January? Putin is certainly getting his money’s worth out of his Asset Orange.
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Imagine the Idiot decided, and had the luck, to make every correct decision since Jan. 3. After 4 plus years of lies and deception, no one would have believed him. His cult minions would have said, “Aw, shucks, he can’t be right all the time.” If he did everything right from today through election day, still no one would believe him. And yet I still think he’ll be where he is now on Jan. 20, 2021, possibly the last Inauguration Day in American history.
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Bob Shepherd places the blame at the door of Repugnicans. Clearly the Repugnicans are not a group one would admit belonging to but if the shoe fits Cinderella has her man. Man, if America get to the end of the year finish off the Repugnicans. Humanity needs a friend it does not need Repugnicans
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He’s got tiny hands
And tiny feet
And a tiny brain
That goes tweet, tweet, tweet
First the China flu
Was goin’ away
Now throughout the land
There’s hell to pay.
Beginning to look
Like Judgment Day.
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Title
Notes toward a Rap Song: “My Corona”
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I would have thought of “My Corona” as a good title, but somehow “My Tecate” kept popping up in my mind.
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On February 28, as the pandemic spread in the U.S., IQ45 held a rally in North Charleston, South Carolina, in which he called COVID-19 the Democrats’ “new hoax.
Was he really so dumb as to think that the Democrats got together and promulgated a fake story about a pandemic virus? A story that would very soon be proved to be false?
Yes, he was THAT dumb. Is THAT dumb.
Dumb + Powerful = Dangerous
in the same way that
Ignorance + Fear = Racism = Trump and Miller
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The irony of that declaration (which will be ignored by most people because history these days is long ago after 15 minutes) is that the Matdi Gras was busy spreading Corona in New Orleans on Fat Tuesday, Feb 25.
Any political aspirant who recalls this relatively easy to understand fact will now be accused of breaking the solidarity needed to make it through this “Pearl Harbor” moment.
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Just heard from my cousin in Kentucky that what Trump meant when he said that this was a “hoax” was that Democrats would find a way to blame a natural phenomenon, this virus, on Trump. “I could shoot someone one Fifth Avenue. . . .” The one true thing I remember Trump ever saying.
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Donald Trump is the worst president but perhaps the best thing to happen to America.
The very forces of Trump’s and his administration’s corruption and incompetence will not only yank the clothes and underwear off the American psyche, but will also put it under an x-ray machine, a CAT scan, and an electron microscope to reveal the inequities that millions could not or did not want to see or feel.
And therein lies a verdant and nascent opportunity for change, growth, and a permanently better America through redistribution and reprioritization of power and wealth . . .
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Robert, people are dying because of this fool’s incompetence. It’s a high price to pay.
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Yeah, and that’s very sad. Sort of like the alcoholic or drug addict who could have entered treatment at any point but didn’t until they were face down in the gutter, unemployed, divorced, homeless, and estranged from everyone before they finally accepted they have a problem.
I have a good friend who has trained me in various fighting techniques over the years. Whenever we used to spar, he was always pretty merciless on me. When I’d whine about it, he would tell me, “When it hurts badly enough, you’ll make it stop.”
Maybe Trump – or the combination of Trump and a pandemic – is what it takes to make it hurt badly enough that we will finally make it stop. That remains to be seen. So far, all we’ve done is respond to it the same way we responded to September 11 and the crash of 2008 – by transferring even more wealth upward. Until that wealth gets distributed back downward where it belongs, it will continue to hurt.
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Watch “The Tiger King.”
You will see Trump’s base, who vote with something other than their brain, if they vote at all. I remember during the campaign, he said that he was bringing out a new kind of voter, people who didn’t have a candidate until he came along. He’s right.
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“…he said that he was bringing out a new kind of voter, people who didn’t have a candidate until he came along. He’s right.”
Yes, he is, but not quite the way it seems on the surface. He speaks to people that no one else was speaking to. The people that Hillary called “deplorable”. People who are economically marginalized (often because of being un- or undereducated), people in small town, rural America who have watched their towns and cities dry up and their jobs moved off-shore and their prospects for a decent middle class life evaporate. Those people are frustrated and angry, but no one had been addressing that anger, only blaming them for it.
Trump came along and channeled that anger in ways it tends to go anyway when not offered relief: scapegoating of the “other” (Muslims, immigrants, gays, etc.) Yes, some people are just plain old racist, but many others turn to racism/hatred when they’re feeling disenfranchised and hopeless. The Democrats – especially Obama after Bush – had great opportunities to speak to those people by protecting small businesses and jobs and providing all kinds of human dignity, but that would have cost their donor class, so instead they thumbed their noses at the “deplorables”
When Trump offered the “deplorables” a way to thumb their noses right back at those smug, big-city elite limousine liberals, they took it and this is where we are. Democrats still have an opportunity (if anything, a bigger opportunity than ever) to reach out to those people and genuinely revitalize the country (to actually Make America Great (I won’t say “again”, as we never have been “great”)), but instead they are, like the apocryphal Einstein quote, doing the same thing and expecting different results. More neoliberalism. More “no we can’t”. More bailing out the big corporations and the rich while the poor and working class die in the streets.
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Please watch “The Tiger King.” It hit home for me because I had relatives who ran a wild animal farm in Flor-I-duh (Bob Shepherd’s word).
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I watched that this weekend. Had no idea what it was about before watching it. Wow.
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Diane,
It is a high price to pay and may no one have to pay it!
But the tragedies are a sobering wake-ip call to the nation, a veritable clarion that is playing the loud, clear tune of inequity and injustice. What is the alternative? Bloody revolution? A people’s coup?
Until the GOP changes their tune to revert back to being real conservatives, until Democrats stop being so corrupt with money, and until the average person is truly represented in D.C., this plague will catalyze new mindsets and hopefully new political parties rising out of Millennials, Generation X, and Zoomers . . .
I hope I live to see the day . . . . I hope you do too.
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I’m really sick and tired of people defending those who keep voting for Trump. If they are drawn to his racism and white supremacy, that is on them. Instead of rightly calling those who love Trump’s lies and racism as “deplorable”, I hear people defending those supporters and blaming the Democrats for why the white racists are drawn to Trump.
Trump was enabled by the long time Republican Party that spent lots of time spewing hatred at everyone but white people and blaming everyone else but themselves for their policies.
“It’s all the Democrats fault” its the cry of right wing Republicans and a few people who claim to be Bernie supporters but say things that are in direct contrast to everything that Bernie Sanders stands for.
Bernie isn’t saying “those people who support Trump’s racism and lies are all the fault of the Democrats”. Bernie isn’t saying “it’s the Democrats’ fault that Trump is in power.”
Talk about blaming the victim. It is disgusting.
I despise Andrew Cuomo and his policies, but he is responding the way that someone who is a normal person responds You don’t have to like Cuomo’s policies to respect that he is trying to his best for the state. Are the evil Democrats to blame for Cuomo?
You also don’t have to like the Governor of Ohio to understand that he is trying to save Ohioans’ lives by listening to science. Are the evil Democrats to blame for the Ohio governor listening to science?
The evil Democrats aren’t to blame for Trump. The people who refused to see how dangerous Trump was are to blame. Those Trump enablers and Trump normalizers are still looking for a scapegoat for their own delusions that this crisis has a silver lining because if we had the evil Hillary Clinton who they hate so much she might be acting like Andrew Cuomo and that would be something they would absolutely hate.
There are so many people dying and those who hate the Democrats more than Trump will STILL blame the Democrats for it all. They are the real deplorables.
The reason Joe Biden is so popular should be a lesson to those who blame the Democrats for Trump. Thankfully, most Americans don’t agree with those who are still blaming the Democrats for Trump instead of the people who are actually to blame — the Republican party that enabled Trump and his racist supporters who don’t care how much Trump lies as long as he still makes sure to tell them that white people are victimized by Democrats who don’t agree with white supremacy.
Trump was empowered because of people who scapegoated the Democrats for everything and excused the Republicans whose policies are really to blame.
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^^^And by the way, Hillary’s full “deplorable” comment specifically addressed what her haters claim to be concerned about so I find it very revealing that they always refer to “deplorables” without noting that — it seems like faux concern since they ignore the part of HRC’s speech that addresses just that. Instead they embraced and promoted the out of context phrase that misled people into thinking HRC did NOT want to help those people and that Trump was offering them something. Was it always just an anti- HRC talking point to pretend to care about those people in rural America that she actually cared about? Read the WHOLE quote, instead of the out of context phrase.
“You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right?
The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic — you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up. He has given voice to their websites that used to only have 11,000 people — now how 11 million. He tweets and retweets their offensive hateful mean-spirited rhetoric. Now, some of those folks — they are irredeemable, but thankfully they are not America. But the other basket — and I know this because I see friends from all over America here — I see friends from Florida and Georgia and South Carolina and Texas — as well as, you know, New York and California — but that other basket of people are people who feel that the government has let them down, the economy has let them down, nobody cares about them, nobody worries about what happens to their lives and their futures, and they’re just desperate for change. It doesn’t really even matter where it comes from. They don’t buy everything he says, but he seems to hold out some hope that their lives will be different. They won’t wake up and see their jobs disappear, lose a kid to heroine, feel like they’re in a dead-end. Those are people we have to understand and empathize with as well.”
Unlike most politicians, HRC actually came from that background and understood and wanted to help those people. HRC distinguished Trump supporters drawn to his racism — the “deplorables” – from Trump supporters who had been left behind by the economy. While Bernie Sanders’ policies might have helped those Americans MORE, HRC would have certainly done a lot more for them than Trump. But I’m old enough to remember when HRC was attacked for being too left wing, back when it wasn’t useful to paint her as someone who planned to govern only for the rich. In fact, governing only for the rich describes Donald Trump to a T. It describes the Republican party to a T. And yet those people blame the Democrats for not being “good enough”.
We are in this position because people who should have known better decided that Trump blowing up the system was their preferred way to get a more progressive system. It was not. It was the best way to get to fascism and this country is STILL in danger.
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And it should be noted that despite the dire human and economic costs Trump still found some time to specifically praise Russia and its midget dictator Putin.
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He still found plenty of time for golf which cost the taxpayers many millions.
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Imagine that: he was warned about the approaching pandemic, and he did two things: he denied that it was dangerous, and he went golfing.
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What can I add without getting locked up.
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LOL. Best comment ever!
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Max Boot is a conservative who can’t stand Trump. But his politics have always leaned way to the right. I’m beginning to think that the biggest problem with trump and the repubs (and many dems too) is that they have always hated govt. and have done what they could to make it small enough so it can “be drowned in a bathtub.” Well like they say, in a pandemic, everyone is a socialist. What do you think of the $500 billion welfare handout to corporations. Interest rates are zero. Why don’t they just borrow the money and not put US taxpayers on the hook. You can’t imagine a 20% unemployment rate, which is where we’re heading. And no small businesses have gotten a dime yet. That’s a total fiasco, also predictable.
On Sun, Apr 5, 2020 at 11:35 PM Diane Ravitch’s blog wrote:
> dianeravitch posted: “Max Boot writes in the Washington Post. In this > article, he says that people always thought that James Buchanan was the > worst president because of his failure to prevent the Civil War, the most > deadly conflict in American history. But he now believes Trum” >
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The next failure will be the Trump Administration mismanagement of the federal economic rescue.
They are incompetent and they won’t magically become competent in time to administer rescue funds. That’s putting aside the fact that they’re also incredibly corrupt and they now have a huge tranche of federal funds to distribute to their relatives, cronies and political backers.
It’s a dual disaster- public health and the economy. They won’t be any better at the second than they were at the first.
They’re already all pushing snake oil “cures” hoping to cash in. We’ll see new depths of depravity now that there’s a profit motive.
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Since we know medical and safety equipment was distributed based upon political support for the Trump Administration I think we should assume economic aid will also favor Donald Trump’s political backers.
We desperately need some grownups watching the money. If we don’t get that, the Trump people will steal it all.
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Ed reform’s effort on coronavirus:
https://fordhaminstitute.org/covid-19-home-learning
Success Academy, Catholic schools and three charter schools in Indianapolis.
Not a single public school mentioned.
If you read ed reformers exclusively and never left the echo chamber you would not be aware that public school students exist in the United States, other than in the context of how they’re all “failing”. There is simply no work performed on behalf of public school students or families at all.
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As theocracy and its partners, the richest 0.1%, want it.
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Read here, skip the echo chamber. They are wrong again and again.
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Here’s their “analytic” coverage of one of the private schools they favor:
“The Oaks Academy is a classical-model, purposefully racially and socio-economically diverse, private school in Indianapolis educating more than 900 students across three campuses. It has routinely been ranked as one of the highest performing schools in Indiana on the state’s ISTEP exam.
As a classical school that focuses on great books and big ideas, technology has not be at the forefront of their pedagogical model. COVID-19 changed that.
In less than a week, The Oaks Academy purchased 600 Chromebooks and started learning the Google suite of products (Google Classroom, Google Meetings, YouTube, etc.). They began rolling out a distance-learning model for their middle school just three days after the state closed schools. They are still using a paper-based model for elementary-age students but are working to launch a digital model in mid-April.”
Compare this to the coverage of public schools- all our schools are lumped together in their usual “failing” frame with no differentiation at all, and ALL are compared unfavorably to private and charter schools.
Public schools will NOT be treated fairly by the Trump Administration. The ideological bias against public schools and public school students in ed reform is baked in.
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Chiara,
We have to crack that anti-public school mindset. I’m betting that most parents are longing for their public schools to reopen soon. Students too. Everyone is bored with distance learning.
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I am still arguing for Buchanan. Sorry, Mr. Boot. We are not far enough away historically to compare the two. We are only now to the point that the receding memory of such notables as Warren G. Harding (who used to go down on K street and play cards instead of running the country) and Calvin Coolidge (the business of America is business” president ultimately paved the way for the Great Depression by ignoring the financial health of the country). Maybe Trump makes the list. Carter certainly does not make the list, as Boot asserts, at least not in the mind’s eye of very many serious historians. But we will have to let the next generation decide that. If my daughter has anything to do with it, Trump will top the list, so already, she is out as an unbiased observer required by good history. I am unqualified as well.
Perhaps we should not be arguing about good or bad presidents. We are to blame. We did not work hard enough to keep this clownish man from the highest office in the land. The political parties refused to get together to assure that disparity between popular sentiment and electoral process would not be perverted.
Let us, therefore, work toward unseating all those we do not like due to bad policy. Leave the judgement of history to the next generation.
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“…who used to go down on K street….”
Um, I probably shouldn’t say this in Diane’s living room, but going down on K Street has been a major problem – perhaps the major problem – of all presidential administrations for a very long time. If you know what I mean.
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Sly humor passes the test…
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LOL!
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I agree with you about Carter. Boot equates Carter with that vile George W. Bush who got us into 2 horrible wars, unnecessary wars that could have been avoided. Bush lowered taxes during a time of war and he tried to privatize Social Security. Carter didn’t do anything close to that. Bush is many magnitudes worse than Carter by far.
Carter did create the Department of Education.
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Thanks Roy (RT) for that historical perspective.
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The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis explains the “consequences when control of government is given to people who have no idea how it works”.
The problem is compounded when administrations bring corporate interests into government. Trump inherited a functioning government that existed with a base of knowledge but, the legacy and debacle of the Gates Foundation in federal and state education decisions (and, possibly healthcare) was also inherited by Trump
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That anyone still takes this man seriously, let alone approves of his actions, is a very, very bad sign. LIkewise the coterie of ideological hacks, sycophants, family members and in-laws with whom he surrounds himself.
Yesterday I found myself wondering about the role of the Murdoch family in all of this–speaking of ideological hacks and sycophants: at this point, NewsCorp is the propaganda organ for tyrants across the globe. When the history of our epoch is written, the Murdochs will need to answer for much (and yes, I am optimistic that we will return to some sort of world where facts drive the writing of history) of what is happening right now, as well as the run-up to this social, economic, and cultural disaster.
Now, can I get anyone a beer? I know it’s early, but what the hell….
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I’ll take a beer. Make it a Corona.
Oh, wait….
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I’m in Vermont, Dienne–I can offer you some of the good local craft stuff, if you want….
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I’m down for that. Thanks!
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Sure, Pres. Trump is the worst but, which journalist is going to take a look at the private, independent CDC Foundation that has “greater speed and flexibility”, can “scale up” and “leverage” to “complement government investment”?
A former Board chair of the of CDC Foundation was also formerly the chair and CEO of the Koch’s Georgia Pacific. Also, the co-founder of Home Depot was a former board member.
“The government has limitations” so, they need a “strategic implementing partner”, which is where the CDC Foundation steps in to “manage collaborations between the CDC and others so that CDC experts can focus on science”.
This all sounds very familiar. Let’s guess you might be a CDC partner. How prepared was the U.S. for a pandemic?
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Reagan is the worst president ever because without Reagan, Trump would not be possible (neoliberal democrats either).
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SCOTUS proved it is a court of malice partisanship. The majority, conservative
justices voted to disenfranchise Wisconsin voters. The decision is described as one of the most brazen acts of voter suppression in modern times- citizens robbed of their democracy by the highest court in the land.
Check out the religion of the man who is responsible for the conservative court.- Leonard Leo.
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