Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The concern I have about Youngkin is that too many voters are too stupid to realize how crazy and craven he is. I'm really worried that he's going to win.
Terry McAuliffe isn’t doing himself any favors when he says things like parents shouldn’t control what their children are being taught in school. I’m honestly not happy with either candidate and don’t know what to do on voting day. They’re both appalling.
But parents shouldn't. If you only want your child taught in school what you want your child taught in school, then you need to homeschool. Should flat-earther parents control what their children are taught in public school? How about creationist parents? How about parents who want their children to be taught a curriculum that includes the 1619 Project and Critical Race Theory?
Ideally I would like actual education experts deciding what is taught - not a partisan school board. Ugh.
The school board doesn’t decide the curriculum.
I would listen if you feel like telling my how it is selected. I’m in FCPS.
I’m responding to my own question that I don’t think anyone has answered - I think because I was right in the first place. From an NYT article on the VA Gov election:
“ Mr. McAuliffe shot back that he did not believe “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” In the weeks since, he’s stood by those remarks, saying that the state Board of Education and local school boards should determine what is taught in the classroom.”
What’s wrong with that? Parents don’t write curricula. The don’t design a scope and sequence or pacing guide. They don’t decide on standards. They can serve on the local, state, or national decision making bodies that do…but no, parents don’t get to tell teachers (directly) what to Teach. How can this be in dispute?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The concern I have about Youngkin is that too many voters are too stupid to realize how crazy and craven he is. I'm really worried that he's going to win.
Terry McAuliffe isn’t doing himself any favors when he says things like parents shouldn’t control what their children are being taught in school. I’m honestly not happy with either candidate and don’t know what to do on voting day. They’re both appalling.
But parents shouldn't. If you only want your child taught in school what you want your child taught in school, then you need to homeschool. Should flat-earther parents control what their children are taught in public school? How about creationist parents? How about parents who want their children to be taught a curriculum that includes the 1619 Project and Critical Race Theory?
Ideally I would like actual education experts deciding what is taught - not a partisan school board. Ugh.
The school board doesn’t decide the curriculum.
I would listen if you feel like telling my how it is selected. I’m in FCPS.
I’m responding to my own question that I don’t think anyone has answered - I think because I was right in the first place. From an NYT article on the VA Gov election:
“ Mr. McAuliffe shot back that he did not believe “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” In the weeks since, he’s stood by those remarks, saying that the state Board of Education and local school boards should determine what is taught in the classroom.”
What’s wrong with that? Parents don’t write curricula. The don’t design a scope and sequence or pacing guide. They don’t decide on standards. They can serve on the local, state, or national decision making bodies that do…but no, parents don’t get to tell teachers (directly) what to Teach. How can this be in dispute?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The concern I have about Youngkin is that too many voters are too stupid to realize how crazy and craven he is. I'm really worried that he's going to win.
Terry McAuliffe isn’t doing himself any favors when he says things like parents shouldn’t control what their children are being taught in school. I’m honestly not happy with either candidate and don’t know what to do on voting day. They’re both appalling.
But parents shouldn't. If you only want your child taught in school what you want your child taught in school, then you need to homeschool. Should flat-earther parents control what their children are taught in public school? How about creationist parents? How about parents who want their children to be taught a curriculum that includes the 1619 Project and Critical Race Theory?
Ideally I would like actual education experts deciding what is taught - not a partisan school board. Ugh.
The school board doesn’t decide the curriculum.
I would listen if you feel like telling my how it is selected. I’m in FCPS.
I’m responding to my own question that I don’t think anyone has answered - I think because I was right in the first place. From an NYT article on the VA Gov election:
“ Mr. McAuliffe shot back that he did not believe “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” In the weeks since, he’s stood by those remarks, saying that the state Board of Education and local school boards should determine what is taught in the classroom.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The concern I have about Youngkin is that too many voters are too stupid to realize how crazy and craven he is. I'm really worried that he's going to win.
Terry McAuliffe isn’t doing himself any favors when he says things like parents shouldn’t control what their children are being taught in school. I’m honestly not happy with either candidate and don’t know what to do on voting day. They’re both appalling.
But parents shouldn't. If you only want your child taught in school what you want your child taught in school, then you need to homeschool. Should flat-earther parents control what their children are taught in public school? How about creationist parents? How about parents who want their children to be taught a curriculum that includes the 1619 Project and Critical Race Theory?
Ideally I would like actual education experts deciding what is taught - not a partisan school board. Ugh.
The school board doesn’t decide the curriculum.
I would listen if you feel like telling my how it is selected. I’m in FCPS.
I’m responding to my own question that I don’t think anyone has answered - I think because I was right in the first place. From an NYT article on the VA Gov election:
“ Mr. McAuliffe shot back that he did not believe “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” In the weeks since, he’s stood by those remarks, saying that the state Board of Education and local school boards should determine what is taught in the classroom.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbors two houses down the street also has one up. When I saw it, I just said, “Hmmm.” Made a note of it in my mind and went on with my life😉
^^^We are an AA family..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God forbid two people have differing points of view on politics and actually live peacefully next to each other...heck, maybe even get together and discuss why each of you look at things differently over a glass of wine?? Maybe both of you would actually learn a thing or two and be better people for it.
No, sorry. It’s not 1990 anymore. If you vote R, you vote for the Trump party, and we have absolutely nothing whatsoever to “learn” from you. Your vote told us everything about you we needed to know.
So you believe all R’s supported Trump? And all Dems support AOC? Sanders?
Or…could there possibly be moderates on both sides that could agree on like 75% of the issues? I’m an R (not the poster) and have plenty of Dem friends. Good friends. Family friends. Travel together. The whole thing. While I didn’t vote for Trump, I have voted R prob 80% of my life, including the last cycle. I have no idea if my Dem friends have ever voted R and I don’t really care. Won’t change how I feel about them either way.
More to life than politics. And devise, dramatic, sensationalized takes don’t change anyone opinions, it only hardens the side that each person is on.
There were primaries. Trump won his (not Virginia’s, but most of them) and Sanders didn’t. 90%+ of elected Republicans support Trump. This isn’t hard.
So you are assuming that all R's voted? Wrong assumption. And shocker...pretty sure the vast majority of a party in power supports the president. Even a guy like Trump.
Trump isn’t the president anymore. When has a party supported the President that just lost the last election for the next election?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The concern I have about Youngkin is that too many voters are too stupid to realize how crazy and craven he is. I'm really worried that he's going to win.
Terry McAuliffe isn’t doing himself any favors when he says things like parents shouldn’t control what their children are being taught in school. I’m honestly not happy with either candidate and don’t know what to do on voting day. They’re both appalling.
But parents shouldn't. If you only want your child taught in school what you want your child taught in school, then you need to homeschool. Should flat-earther parents control what their children are taught in public school? How about creationist parents? How about parents who want their children to be taught a curriculum that includes the 1619 Project and Critical Race Theory?
Ideally I would like actual education experts deciding what is taught - not a partisan school board. Ugh.
The school board doesn’t decide the curriculum.
I would listen if you feel like telling my how it is selected. I’m in FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:When they've lost their bloody mindsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God forbid two people have differing points of view on politics and actually live peacefully next to each other...heck, maybe even get together and discuss why each of you look at things differently over a glass of wine?? Maybe both of you would actually learn a thing or two and be better people for it.
No, sorry. It’s not 1990 anymore. If you vote R, you vote for the Trump party, and we have absolutely nothing whatsoever to “learn” from you. Your vote told us everything about you we needed to know.
So you believe all R’s supported Trump? And all Dems support AOC? Sanders?
Or…could there possibly be moderates on both sides that could agree on like 75% of the issues? I’m an R (not the poster) and have plenty of Dem friends. Good friends. Family friends. Travel together. The whole thing. While I didn’t vote for Trump, I have voted R prob 80% of my life, including the last cycle. I have no idea if my Dem friends have ever voted R and I don’t really care. Won’t change how I feel about them either way.
More to life than politics. And devise, dramatic, sensationalized takes don’t change anyone opinions, it only hardens the side that each person is on.
There were primaries. Trump won his (not Virginia’s, but most of them) and Sanders didn’t. 90%+ of elected Republicans support Trump. This isn’t hard.
So you are assuming that all R's voted? Wrong assumption. And shocker...pretty sure the vast majority of a party in power supports the president. Even a guy like Trump.
Trump isn’t the president anymore. When has a party supported the President that just lost the last election for the next election?
When they've lost their bloody mindsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God forbid two people have differing points of view on politics and actually live peacefully next to each other...heck, maybe even get together and discuss why each of you look at things differently over a glass of wine?? Maybe both of you would actually learn a thing or two and be better people for it.
No, sorry. It’s not 1990 anymore. If you vote R, you vote for the Trump party, and we have absolutely nothing whatsoever to “learn” from you. Your vote told us everything about you we needed to know.
So you believe all R’s supported Trump? And all Dems support AOC? Sanders?
Or…could there possibly be moderates on both sides that could agree on like 75% of the issues? I’m an R (not the poster) and have plenty of Dem friends. Good friends. Family friends. Travel together. The whole thing. While I didn’t vote for Trump, I have voted R prob 80% of my life, including the last cycle. I have no idea if my Dem friends have ever voted R and I don’t really care. Won’t change how I feel about them either way.
More to life than politics. And devise, dramatic, sensationalized takes don’t change anyone opinions, it only hardens the side that each person is on.
There were primaries. Trump won his (not Virginia’s, but most of them) and Sanders didn’t. 90%+ of elected Republicans support Trump. This isn’t hard.
So you are assuming that all R's voted? Wrong assumption. And shocker...pretty sure the vast majority of a party in power supports the president. Even a guy like Trump.
Trump isn’t the president anymore. When has a party supported the President that just lost the last election for the next election?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God forbid two people have differing points of view on politics and actually live peacefully next to each other...heck, maybe even get together and discuss why each of you look at things differently over a glass of wine?? Maybe both of you would actually learn a thing or two and be better people for it.
No, sorry. It’s not 1990 anymore. If you vote R, you vote for the Trump party, and we have absolutely nothing whatsoever to “learn” from you. Your vote told us everything about you we needed to know.
So you believe all R’s supported Trump? And all Dems support AOC? Sanders?
Or…could there possibly be moderates on both sides that could agree on like 75% of the issues? I’m an R (not the poster) and have plenty of Dem friends. Good friends. Family friends. Travel together. The whole thing. While I didn’t vote for Trump, I have voted R prob 80% of my life, including the last cycle. I have no idea if my Dem friends have ever voted R and I don’t really care. Won’t change how I feel about them either way.
More to life than politics. And devise, dramatic, sensationalized takes don’t change anyone opinions, it only hardens the side that each person is on.
There were primaries. Trump won his (not Virginia’s, but most of them) and Sanders didn’t. 90%+ of elected Republicans support Trump. This isn’t hard.
So you are assuming that all R's voted? Wrong assumption. And shocker...pretty sure the vast majority of a party in power supports the president. Even a guy like Trump.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God forbid two people have differing points of view on politics and actually live peacefully next to each other...heck, maybe even get together and discuss why each of you look at things differently over a glass of wine?? Maybe both of you would actually learn a thing or two and be better people for it.
No, sorry. It’s not 1990 anymore. If you vote R, you vote for the Trump party, and we have absolutely nothing whatsoever to “learn” from you. Your vote told us everything about you we needed to know.
So you believe all R’s supported Trump? And all Dems support AOC? Sanders?
Or…could there possibly be moderates on both sides that could agree on like 75% of the issues? I’m an R (not the poster) and have plenty of Dem friends. Good friends. Family friends. Travel together. The whole thing. While I didn’t vote for Trump, I have voted R prob 80% of my life, including the last cycle. I have no idea if my Dem friends have ever voted R and I don’t really care. Won’t change how I feel about them either way.
More to life than politics. And devise, dramatic, sensationalized takes don’t change anyone opinions, it only hardens the side that each person is on.
There were primaries. Trump won his (not Virginia’s, but most of them) and Sanders didn’t. 90%+ of elected Republicans support Trump. This isn’t hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God forbid two people have differing points of view on politics and actually live peacefully next to each other...heck, maybe even get together and discuss why each of you look at things differently over a glass of wine?? Maybe both of you would actually learn a thing or two and be better people for it.
No, sorry. It’s not 1990 anymore. If you vote R, you vote for the Trump party, and we have absolutely nothing whatsoever to “learn” from you. Your vote told us everything about you we needed to know.
So you believe all R’s supported Trump? And all Dems support AOC? Sanders?
Or…could there possibly be moderates on both sides that could agree on like 75% of the issues? I’m an R (not the poster) and have plenty of Dem friends. Good friends. Family friends. Travel together. The whole thing. While I didn’t vote for Trump, I have voted R prob 80% of my life, including the last cycle. I have no idea if my Dem friends have ever voted R and I don’t really care. Won’t change how I feel about them either way.
More to life than politics. And devise, dramatic, sensationalized takes don’t change anyone opinions, it only hardens the side that each person is on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm. My first reaction was this post is simply designed to stir the pot.
I can and have been friends with people whose voting choices differ from mine. I've even let them drive my kids places without incident.
Guess you have been living under a rock
This is huge if the Lying Criminal GOP win in VA Democracy dies.
Some of you idiots want to live like people in Turkey or Russia the rest of us understand Democracy and in now way support the death of America
Authoritarianism equals Youngkin equals Trumpism
Get ready for bread lines morons you have ruined the best thing in the world for what? Lying GQP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are POC. Would never mention it to them, but should we be more careful in our interactions going forward?
Lt Gov candidate is AA. AA is in the POC category so I would not be concerned. https://winsomesears.com/
She has an impressive background. Thanks for sharing!