rmnka447, on 2016-December-27, 16:09, said:
BTW, Ivanka isn't Donald's wife, it's his daughter. She was travelling with her young children and apparently handled the situation with great aplomb. The strongest reaction seems to have been from women. They were very concerned about the traumatic effect that such a confrontation would have on the toddlers.
Think of it this way, how would you react if you heard, say 2-4 years down the road, that Chelsea Clinton was travelling with her child on a commercial flight and was confronted by a right wing zealot ranting about what a crook, liar, and despicable person her mother was. It would be as entirely out of bounds as this incident was.
The airline handled it exactly right as there was no guarantee they'd be able to handle the situation if it flared up again during the flight, so they took the protesters off the plane. So the only real penalty the perpetrators of this instance paid was the time and inconvenience of taking a later flight.
Yes, daughter of course. I corrected it, thanks.
I did not, ad do not, want to much get into this dispute, mostly I think they can settle it without my help. I certainly agree, and said, that it is bad manners to accost a person on a plane to talk about their (or anyone's) political beliefs. If the incident took place as described, I have no problem with the passenger being escorted ff the plane. I have no plans to look into this further.
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As for Trump's policies, let's be realistic --
I can go with that.
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Repealing and replacing ACA has to include some viable means for most, if not all, people covered by ACA to have healthcare insurance. It would be political suicide to do anything different. So the contention of 25 million without any healthcare is just progressive propaganda. Clearly, ACA is in a death spiral now. People with family coverage for $1000 a month and a $12,000 deductible know that's not any real insurance just high cost catastrophic coverage. Certainly, it's not affordable care. Trump has already endorsed retaining "stay on family insurance til 26" and "no pre-existing conditions" and these are things a majority of Republicans have always been for. Any repeal would also include a several year transition period to whatever the replacement would be according to Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. Let's see what Trump and the Republicans come up with.
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I can also sort of go with waiting to see what they come up with.. The pre-election rhetoric strongly suggested that the wait would not be long.I know people who have run up against problems such as you mention above.I have no problem, and I have said it, understanding why some people at the low end have not been enthusiastic with the way the ACA has worked out for them Others have found it very helpful. I also have no problem understanding why some at the low end are more than a little worried about what happens next. I really have no idea of where this will go. Had the Ds and the Rs been able to work together on this in 2010 or whenever it exactly was, we might have a better system in place right now. Perhaps we agree on that. I put more blame on the Rs than on Obama for this lack of cooperation [Note I said more, not all], and there I gather we disagree. We will have to wait. I do not have a lot of faith in Trump. To put it mildly.
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On education, apparently you missed President-elect Trump's emphasis about wanting school choice for all. This would include a voucher system where student funding followed the student. The student could attend any school that had space for them. Apparently, some pilot programs have shown success with this approach, not only for students changing schools, but also for the schools students were leaving. These "underperformers" were forced to compete and therefore had to make changes that improved learning for all the students that remained. A Democrat, an ex-DC Councilman, who is a strong advocate for better education touted these results. Betty Devos, Trump's choice for Education Secretary, has long been interested in education and an activist in trying to improve our education system and strong advocate for educational choice. He thought she'd be a good choice to help implement this program.
Certainly, something has to change in our educational system to get better results. The US spends the most per capita for education of any country and we were something like 137th in the world. Just tossing more money at the problem isn't a real solution.
First, we might agree that nobody much has much to brag about in education. I recall we were to be number one in the world in math and science by the year 2000. Well, maybe 3000. So it has been a mess.
School choice for all? How would this work? I have modest direct experience, in two very different ways. becky and her sister: Becky, my wife, went to Lowell High in SF. She had to take an exam, or get recommendations, or both, to get in. She had a fairly long trip in via BART. It went very well. Her sister did not get in, but she was still able t go to a different school from the one that she would be automatically sent to. If another school had a specific program of interest you could go to that one, so her sister developed a sudden burning issue in studying Russian. After graduating, she went on to art school. Russian art, maybe. Now me: I lived on the dividing line between tow districts so I could choose, and I did. Wrongly. My parents were not at all involved in this choice. The only time I can recall my mother discussing what school I should go to was when I was in eighth grade. Her friend May was explaining that Kenny should transfer to Holy Cross because it was much better. May's daughter Shirley was in eighth grade and already studying algebra. Neither May nor my mother had the slightest idea of what algebra was, but no doubt it was good that Shirley was studying it. My mother pointed out the obvious, we were not Catholic and Kenny was not going to Holy Spirit. The discussion then switched to what my mother had against Catholics. Then they moved on to something else. My schooling was not further discussed. Btw, I am not in the least complaining about my upbringing. I was given a lot of independence, and this can be far more useful than algebra. The point is that we need the nearby schools to be good so that a long BART ride is not needed and mothers do not have to get involved in how to choose the proper school.
The teaching at the high school I attended ranged from quite good to godawful. The situation today, as near as I can tell, is that the best public high schools are far better than what was available to me, even if I had made the better choice, and the bad ones are far worse than what I attended. Letting kids, or their parents, choose could help some, but there are only so man spaces at the better ones, and the kids need a way to get there. Part of the basis for my choice of schools was that I could go a block and a half to a main street, hitch hike a ride, and get off a block from the school. The other, better, one was harder to get to. And I had no idea, when I chose, that it was better.
There is a lot that needs doing. And family life plays a strong role, a complicating fact. And a very subtle one, I think. My father once mentioned that if he had to read all these books I was reading it would drive him nuts. Yes, but he expected me to behave responsibly, not embarrass the family, and grow up to be self-supporting.This can be more important than help with algebra.
We have to get this right. My seventeen year old grandson goes to a good school in a good area taking AP this and AP that. Far more than what I had any access to and that's wonderful. This part of our education scene is very good. But we have to educate others as well. This part needs work. And it has to be solved without ruing the good stuff for my grandson or the kids who will come later. I wish us luck. I will treat a good idea as a good idea, wherever it comes from.