Anonymous wrote:Karl's flyer arrived with the absentee ballots today. Quite ironic that his featured slogan on the flyer is: "Putting Students First."
I give him credit for knowing what his biggest flaw is, and trying to market himself as the opposite. I know the truth. Karl put students last.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:and completely untrue. There is definitely hate felt.
I guess if you feel that way it's probably projection. You tend to feel the hate you give
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, his entire career since HS has been as a political operative of some sort, so I would guess that he has more knowledge and connections into fundraising than many of the other candidates. This is also why I don't really trust him. He is not in it for the kids (especially since he does not have any of his own) but for himself.
You are totally out of line. I didn't have kids until I was 42 but I was fully invested in my community and fully committed to public education (even taught for 7 years before burning out) so I cared deeply about the school system long before I had kids. You don't have to spawn to care about good schools. In fact, since he isn't distracted by child rearing, he has more time to devote to the work.
Every time I see people commenting on Frisch not having kids, it reads to me like an anti-gay dog whistle.
FWIW, my understanding is that his husband is a teacher. So that gives him even more skin in the game than a parent, and more quality knowledge from the reality inside a school and the system at large. I'd take that as a personal family qualification more than being the random parent of a 5th grader.
+1 from a gay HS teacher who knows first-hand how these people work
It's disappointing that any teacher choosing to engage on Frisch's candidacy would use terms like "these people." You certainly wouldn't like that if such a derogatory phrase were applied across-the-board to LBGTQ activists.
+1 Sad that PP is teaching our youth. What are you teaching them? How to be more hateful and biased?
Anonymous wrote:and completely untrue. There is definitely hate felt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a young, gay local Democratic activists whom I won’t name, but who is on local D committees and is now an adult. He regularly posts things like “the GOP only cares about rich, straight, White evangelical Christian, conservative men.”
This seems to be how some of the local Ds running for School Board like Karl Frisch and Kyle McDaniel think and pitch their campaigns as well. They tout inclusivity yet promote division.
It's not divisive if it's true. You just don't like people stating the glaringly obvious out loud.
You want it to be true. It sure is convenient to have a group of people to use as scapegoats. It's become trendy to hate (as long as you are hating on rich, straight, white Christian conservatives).
NP: You misunderstand--saying that a group seems to care primarily about rich, straight, white conservative Christians is not the same as hating those people. It's calling out an exclusionary practice. Dems include many rich, straight, white Christians but aim to be inclusive. But you can't say "we're against LGTBQTIA+ and don't want reference to it anywhere for anyone" and when you're critiqued for that say "you're being exclusionary to us." We as a society have agreed that religion is separate from the state, but that is protective to religion--so everyone is free to practice their own religion and not impose it on others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a young, gay local Democratic activists whom I won’t name, but who is on local D committees and is now an adult. He regularly posts things like “the GOP only cares about rich, straight, White evangelical Christian, conservative men.”
This seems to be how some of the local Ds running for School Board like Karl Frisch and Kyle McDaniel think and pitch their campaigns as well. They tout inclusivity yet promote division.
It's not divisive if it's true. You just don't like people stating the glaringly obvious out loud.
You want it to be true. It sure is convenient to have a group of people to use as scapegoats. It's become trendy to hate (as long as you are hating on rich, straight, white Christian conservatives).
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a young, gay local Democratic activists whom I won’t name, but who is on local D committees and is now an adult. He regularly posts things like “the GOP only cares about rich, straight, White evangelical Christian, conservative men.”
This seems to be how some of the local Ds running for School Board like Karl Frisch and Kyle McDaniel think and pitch their campaigns as well. They tout inclusivity yet promote division.
It's not divisive if it's true. You just don't like people stating the glaringly obvious out loud.
Anonymous wrote:There is a young, gay local Democratic activists whom I won’t name, but who is on local D committees and is now an adult. He regularly posts things like “the GOP only cares about rich, straight, White evangelical Christian, conservative men.”
This seems to be how some of the local Ds running for School Board like Karl Frisch and Kyle McDaniel think and pitch their campaigns as well. They tout inclusivity yet promote division.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, his entire career since HS has been as a political operative of some sort, so I would guess that he has more knowledge and connections into fundraising than many of the other candidates. This is also why I don't really trust him. He is not in it for the kids (especially since he does not have any of his own) but for himself.
You are totally out of line. I didn't have kids until I was 42 but I was fully invested in my community and fully committed to public education (even taught for 7 years before burning out) so I cared deeply about the school system long before I had kids. You don't have to spawn to care about good schools. In fact, since he isn't distracted by child rearing, he has more time to devote to the work.
Every time I see people commenting on Frisch not having kids, it reads to me like an anti-gay dog whistle.
FWIW, my understanding is that his husband is a teacher. So that gives him even more skin in the game than a parent, and more quality knowledge from the reality inside a school and the system at large. I'd take that as a personal family qualification more than being the random parent of a 5th grader.
+1 from a gay HS teacher who knows first-hand how these people work
It's disappointing that any teacher choosing to engage on Frisch's candidacy would use terms like "these people." You certainly wouldn't like that if such a derogatory phrase were applied across-the-board to LBGTQ activists.