tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post5504036638741633109..comments2024-03-14T11:09:32.759-05:00Comments on Falkenblog: Aspiring Politicians Learn to DissembleEric Falkensteinhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07243687157322033496noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-69782659656632447582011-11-09T21:35:36.179-06:002011-11-09T21:35:36.179-06:00Regardless of the circumstances, making strong cle...Regardless of the circumstances, making strong clear statements in front of a diverse audience is going to bring you more bitterness from those who disagree with you than support from those who do (which is something that we see every now and then on the comments section of your blog). It's a bad trade, in my view, because of human nature, rather than education.B. A.noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-37535998672320652322011-11-09T19:51:25.129-06:002011-11-09T19:51:25.129-06:00I generally also support smaller government, but y...I generally also support smaller government, but your reasoning is no good. <br /><br />Most petty businessmen have also learned to ape their betters and are strongly afraid of saying anything with actual content. It's a relic of our education and grading system for the upper middle class.Davenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-56467962543168995182011-11-09T10:07:00.244-06:002011-11-09T10:07:00.244-06:00Big government created the problem and now big gov...Big government created the problem and now big government is trying to solve it. We launched a pointless military action in Somalia. We then took tens of thousands of third-worlders who are illiterate in any language, not just English, and brought them over, at our expense, via the near open-borders refugee policy along with the heavily subsidized "non-profit" refugee industry. We then set them up in the welfare state where their food, housing and education is "free" or subsidized via Section 8, food stamps, etc. Without all these previously established big-government policies and the unelected Met Council pushing for more low-income housing (and "dissembling" politicians on the city council in the early 90's, some of whom are still there and one of whom is now mayor), there'd be no way that an "affluent" suburban school district would have been flooded with expensive-to-educate, low-scoring ESL/"special education" kids. They'd be mostly the kids of people who can afford to live in the area, not the children of one of the lowest-IQ nations on earth. There will always be an "achievement gap" when you have decades of big welfare bring together drastically different groups for totally unnatural comparisons. Sure, critics will say all of the above is racist, segregationist, anti-progressive, politically incorrect, offensive, etc. You can say all of that, but you can't say it's untrue... at least with any honest or logical argument.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-11998768832758551962011-11-09T08:39:26.260-06:002011-11-09T08:39:26.260-06:00Government at all levels is increasingly in busine...Government at all levels is increasingly in business for itself at this point. The vapid platitudes you cite are just acknowledgements that public education is primarily a jobs program for adults.<br /><br />Also, it always amazes me how abortion activists (in both camps really) can get away with being so disingenuous. Like many things in life sometimes it can plausibly (or not) be the lesser of two evils AND a morally fraught, disturbing business filled with unknown consequences. For instance, if it were legal in 1961 Obama probably wouldn't be around today.Mercurynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-10101112916523808272011-11-09T08:07:18.621-06:002011-11-09T08:07:18.621-06:00As someone who just won a seat on the local BOE, I...As someone who just won a seat on the local BOE, I resemble that.<br /><br />But seriously, while my goals are to improve education and make our kids competitive in this global economy by benchmarking better systems, as indicated by higher test scores. I have doubts. Specifically because the Obama adminstration has effectively implemented a national core curriculum. More of the one size fits all model of governance. <br /><br />Essentially this federal takeover was implemented via "Race to Top" funding, basically want your tax money back? Then embrace the federal program. That's extortion in anyone's book.<br /><br />A key characteristic of centralized power is one size fits all. We are all equal and therefore we are all mediocre.Drosshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17658125602877320129noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-46014700337304529262011-11-09T05:25:55.826-06:002011-11-09T05:25:55.826-06:00The smaller the domain of their realm the better t...The smaller the domain of their realm the better the world will be, because they must be much more deceptive and insincere than in business.Eric Falkensteinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07243687157322033496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-91315980013736961422011-11-09T05:02:29.532-06:002011-11-09T05:02:29.532-06:00Not sure how "smaller government" solves...Not sure how "smaller government" solves your problem here. How big is the Minneapolis school board? How small do you want it to be?<br /><br />Also, you are taking a simple first-order disagreement (you don't support busing) and writing as if your real objections are to "hypocrisy" and "false pretenses." (I read your book: when you write about hypocrisy and false pretenses within the business world, you write in a resigned matter, as a realist who understands that people often advance their interests through obfuscation.)Anonymous #5noreply@blogger.com