Archive for the 'All Politics' Category

Homeschoolers and Huckabee

BevK December 17th, 2007

Media Fans Flames of GOP Religious Divide

In an article that is ostensibly supposed to be about the many Iowa homeschoolers that are supporting Mike Huckabee, the Washington Post pins the reason to the fact that homeschooling parents must hate Mormons!

Home-School Ties Aided Huckabee’s Iowa Rise
Washington Post

Huckabee’s name is no longer a mystery to Iowa’s Republican voters, in large part because of an extensive network of home-schoolers like Roe who have helped lift his underfunded campaign from obscurity to the front of a crowded field. Opinion polls show that his haphazard approach is trumping the studied strategy of Mitt Romney, who invested millions only to be shunned by many religious conservatives such as Roe, who see the former Baptist preacher from Hope, Ark., as their champion.

Huckabee Conference Call

BevK November 26th, 2007

Michael van der Galiën blogs about questions asked to presidential candidate Mike Huckabee including one on homeschooling.

The first blogger who was allowed to ask a question - I forget her name right now - asked the Governor about his view on home-schooling, standards for schools, and what he did with it in Arkansas. She sounded critical in this regard. Huckabee defended his record by explaining that his opponents then, and the ones who were Governor before him, were incredibly harsh on home-schoolers. In short, he tried to limit the damage for home-schoolers / improve their situation as much as possible, but that wasn’t easy.

Read more at The Van Der Galiën Gazette.

Ron Paul’s Views On Home Schooling - If You’re Interested

BevK September 25th, 2007

If you were wondering what Ron Paul, Republican presidential candidate, thinks about homeschooling, he’s addressed the issue here.

Hat Tip: TransWorldNews

HSLDA Problem

BevK July 13th, 2007

The Federal Election Commission (FEC) is poised to open an investigation into the endorsement of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee by the Homeschool Legal Defense Association Political Action Committee, after email traffic and other materials from the group were passed to the Commission by several rival campaigns.

The HSLDA PAC last week planned to endorse Huckabee, but all of the internal email correspondence and notification of the endorsement took place, not via the HSLDA PAC, which can legally endorse, but the 501c3 HSLDA nonprofit, which is barred from overt political activity, such as fundraising for a candidate or endorsing.

More: American Spectator

An argument for unfettered school choice

BevK January 9th, 2007

Public Schooling Divides Far and Wide

What could possibly be the connection between school desegregation and the mystifying phrase “Bong Hits 4 Jesus?” Something critically important, it turns out. Both have spurred legal battles that have risen to the U.S. Supreme Court, and both demonstrate that a public school system that demands everyone’s support but can only reflect some people’s values will inevitably lead to conflict.

His conclusion:

Thankfully, since these battles have a common cause, they also have a common solution: Unfettered school choice, in which the public ensures that everyone can afford an education, but individual parents and autonomous schools decide what values they’ll embrace.

Want a racially diverse student body, as many parents, both black and white, do? Pick a school that has one. Not fond of kids talking up bongs? Choose a private institution where children check their speech rights at the door. Want to end the fighting? Let parents select the schools they like, and the underlying cause of combat will disappear.

Whether it’s an issue as contentious as race, or as strange as a kid’s sign about bongs, public education is beset by constant political warfare. But it doesn’t have to be. All we need to do is set people free.

Constitutional amendment for homeschoolers?

BevK December 6th, 2006

This campaign was started by HSLDA back in April 2006. Apparently the ban on homeschooling in Germany required this pot to be stirred again.

Michael Farris, cofounder of the Home School Legal Defense Association and chancellor of Patrick Henry College has called for an amendment to the U. S. Constitution to protect the rights of parents to educate their children at home. This is an unalienable, God-given right that is not recognized under international law.

Do ‘Unschooled’ Kids Really Learn? (7 Letters)

BevK December 1st, 2006

Responses to the article on unschooling in the New York Times. They start with the negative and move on to the positive.

Election Day - Remember to Vote

BevK November 7th, 2006

I’ll be voting later today, but vote I will. Recent close elections have shown that every vote really does count.

Fox has a track your races feature that lets you pick races and statewide ballot initiatives by state. Just the federal office races.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/youdecide2006/tracker/index.html

If you need more information try googling for the Secretary of State and elections for your state. You can also find information at GoVote.com http://www.govote.com/default.htm

Jay Nordlinger: Impromtus

BevK October 20th, 2006

If you haven’t discovered the ongoing National Review Online column written by Jay Nordlinger, Impromptus, you’re missing a treat. He always has interesting things to say about politics, the arts, culture, language, and especially about those being held as political prisoners in China and Cuba.

He’s a music critic in addition to being managing editor of National Review. So, we get links to his music reviews in addition to all kinds of interesting tid-bits about people and places.

Examples:

Sandy Koufax was talking the other day. He said his arm still felt pretty good. He added, Hell, I pitched shutouts on two days rest. Just think what Id be able to do after 40 years!

I didnt know that this gifted and principled man was so funny, too.

~~~~~~~

Lets have a little language. I was reading a speech by Prof. Harvey Mansfield, titled A New Feminism. And he speaks these sentences: Men . . . have a more abstract sense of importance than women that is also more egoistic. Women may be vain, but men are conceited.

Now, Mansfield is a careful user of words so that sent me scurrying (as scurry I can) to discover the distinction, precisely, between vain and conceited.

For vain, I find excessively proud of ones appearance or accomplishments; conceited. For conceited, I find holding or characterized by an unduly high opinion of oneself; vain. So, they are presented as synonyms. But I nevertheless sniff a distinction, and suspect that Mansfield knows what hes talking about.

~~~~~~~

To JFK Airport, Im driven by a man from Bangladesh (natch). He was in the towers on 9/11and he tells me the story of his escape (very dramatic). It reminds me of 9/11, of the WTC, of that dayI have rather forgotten about it, I hate to tell you. (And I have not seen that Pa.-plane movie.) Ive forgotten about the courage required, and demonstrated.

This fellow, after 9/11, went home to Bangladesh. But he discovered that he had ceased to feel Bangladeshi and had come to feel American, much to his surpriseso he returned to the U.S. Which I applaud: for we need his like. (Then again, so does Bangladesh, and just about every other country.)

Incidentally, the driver describes the person who led him and a clutch of others to safety on 9/11 as this white man. I find this sort of interestinginnocent and frank.

NC: Congressman goes to school

BevK August 14th, 2006

U.S. Rep. Patrick McHenry visited with home-school families Saturday at a town hall meeting at Henry River Fork Park.

McHenry said it was important to have options for education, and that competition in the marketplace - in the form of private, charter and home-school programs - would lead to better education across the board.

Home schooling is not for everyone, McHenry said. But I think that parents should have the choice about how to educate their children.

McHenry is a co-sponsor of several pieces of pro-homeschool legislation, including the Family Education Freedom Act, the Hope Plus Scholarship Act of 2005 and the Homeschool Non-Discrimination Act of 2005.

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