You aren't that bright are you? WTF does the Japanese internment have to do with protesting? Absolutely nothing. No one is talking about rounding up an ethnic group and imprisoning them. You're nuts. Just like nutty trumpsy!Anonymous wrote:For all the supporters of this common sense move, Happy February 19th! You're clearly feeling inspired by FDR's legacy!
Seventy-four years ago today Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, leading to the imprisonment of over 100,000 persons of Japanese ancestry (as well as thousands of German and Italian ancestry) for the duration of World War II.
It was for "the children".
A group of students who survived the Wednesday mass shooting at a Florida high school is organizing a nationwide march to demand lawmakers make ending gun violence a priority.
The “March For Our Lives” is planned for March 24 in Washington, D.C., with sister marches expected to break out in other major cities across the country, five students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School announced on Sunday during several TV appearances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Explain the logic? How or why would the NRA care? Maybe politicians would care? I really want to support this but it needs to be effective. Help me!
The NRA will never care. But congress might.
I'm not OP, but my idea would be that the teachers would continue to do childcare in the classrooms but refuse to actually teach. Since an uneducated population affects everyone (not just parents and students), theoretically the government should care about it. Was that what you had in mind, OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't want my kid's teachers to strike. He's a senior and has five AP exams to prepare for.
And I don't think it will make one bit of difference if they strike. It's not going to make our so-called representatives care.
Or maybe it will push parents like you, who care about AP classes for your kid, to take some ACTION. YOU should be striking. YOU should be doing something.
NP here - I am going to March, because I am happy to fight against the current gun crazy culture, but I can’t teach my DC AP Chem. Would rather we all do what we can do best. Teachers not teaching students isn’t going to help. We need parents to step up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d support that and be willing to take my vacation to watch other people’s kids who didn’t have coverage
+1
I proudly live in a neighborhood that would coordinate childcare
+1
+2 as do I, for out elementary school kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d support that and be willing to take my vacation to watch other people’s kids who didn’t have coverage
+1
I proudly live in a neighborhood that would coordinate childcare
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't want my kid's teachers to strike. He's a senior and has five AP exams to prepare for.
And I don't think it will make one bit of difference if they strike. It's not going to make our so-called representatives care.
Or maybe it will push parents like you, who care about AP classes for your kid, to take some ACTION. YOU should be striking. YOU should be doing something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Explain the logic? How or why would the NRA care? Maybe politicians would care? I really want to support this but it needs to be effective. Help me!
The NRA will never care. But congress might.
I'm not OP, but my idea would be that the teachers would continue to do childcare in the classrooms but refuse to actually teach. Since an uneducated population affects everyone (not just parents and students), theoretically the government should care about it. Was that what you had in mind, OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Teachers can be reprimanded for even using work email to lobby the school board. My entire career I've known we shouldn't present our own political views in class. That's one of the biggest things people complain about,teachers politicizing their classroom, yet you think it's ok now to pull a group of second graders out of class in protest?
The teachers aren't pulling the second-graders out of class. The teachers are pulling themselves out of class. Who will supervise the second-graders? Well, if I were a school administrator, I'd start making plans.
Even in that case, using the school day in protest, won't go over well.
Of course it won't go over well. Since when are protests about keeping people happy and making life easier for those with whom you disagree?
No one is suggesting pulling second graders out of class. If you're a teacher and you are in favor of the NRA an unfettered access to guns, then don't walk out on that day. Easy peasy.
Nice spin.
I'm a teacher. I don't favor unfettered access to guns.I also don't favor walking out of class.
+1 PP trying to twist your comments,