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Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
My family is quite well-off and I think it is completely fair that we pay a higher percentage of our income in taxes than those less well off.
But super fundamentalist states will still exist, and that will just make the education there worse. We'll end up with states that outlaw teaching evolution in schools and such, seeing how that almost happened multiple times in the past...
...I think I might actually support the South seceding. It would make the rest of America a better place.
This isn't really about what works and what doesn't; the problem is with the attitude of the American people. I mean, just take a look at Europe and you'll see there's nothing wrong with secularism, welfare and making it illegal to walk around with guns.
Fixed![The northeastern US and west coast are] fairly secular, at least in the public sphere, though of course not on par with modern Europe.
Nothing is taken nearly as seriously to the degree that it is in the Bible Belt.(Though don't a lot of European countries have state religions?) America has had welfare since the '30s. As for guns, that's a whole 'nother can of worms.
Well, yes. If you have more money, you should pay more overall taxes. I mean, you have more money. And even after taxes you'll still have more money.It's still a good idea, though
'meddle'? The problem is that they aren't resolved internally. Look at Texas re: texbooks last year. Clearly the state education program would be in shambles if the board had its way entirely. Also, the US is waaaay bigger than most other countries. Things cost money. A lot of money. 50 states is a lot for one central government to handle, though. Particularly because the south refuses to progress with the rest of the nation.But you've yet to prove why (1) a federal department is needed to meddle in state affairs or (2) why it needs funding of $70 billion a year. These are state issues than can be resolved internally. Even if it were to stay, why does it need so much fucking money?
We Britishers like to have a go at the US for mixing religion and politics, but the sad truth is that we're far worse off than you guys. There's 26 unelected Church of England tosspots sitting in the House of Lords right now with no claim to represent the people of the UK (in England, about 1.1 million people regularly attend CoE church services out of a total population of about 51 million; furthermore, the Scots, Northern Irish and Welsh don't have any representative bishops). They can and have meddled with legislation against the will of the general population, such as the 2006 pro-euthanasia bill.(Though don't a lot of European countries have state religions?)
This is just so irritating, you don't even know.
Seriously, it happens in every debate. Someone who's not very recognisable comes along, says something a little off, and someone always always responds with something along the lines of either 'everybody disagrees with you, therefore you're wrong' or 'lurk moar jackass'.
You did both.
Kudos.
Fake Edit: You did it twice in the same thread. Well done.
1) Because not all states are created equal. Given the chance, a lot of the Southern states will find ways to dance around the Constitution and segregate people/do other crappy stuff. The government is needed to create a minimum education standard that the states need to follow, else some states will ending up teaching their high-schoolers what other people learn in first grade*But you've yet to prove why (1) a federal department is needed to meddle in state affairs or (2) why it needs funding of $70 billion a year. These are state issues than can be resolved internally. Even if it were to stay, why does it need so much fucking money?
Though don't a lot of European countries have state religions?
"The flat tax isn't designed to help the wealthy, it's designed to make it easier for the rest of us to be better off. Some investors and entrepreneurs will pay lower tax rates, to be sure, but a lot of rich taxpayers will pay more since they'll lose access to all the loopholes and tax shelters. And let's be clear about one thing: the IRS data unambiguously show that the vast majority of tax deductions go to the wealthy. A flat tax, by contrast, treats everyone equally. If Bill Gates makes 100,000 times more money than I do, he should pay 100,000 times more in taxes."
As I've said before, the government needs to intervene in state affairs because I really don't want the super conservative states left to teach their children whatever crap the states wanted.
The problem is that, since the Department was created, the quality of public schooling has decreased dramatically, and the cost has shot up the roof. In addition, schooling in D.C. is one of the worst and most expensive in the nation: $13,000 per student!
When pointing out a few examples of states radically changing their curriculum, you imply that a federal department is the only solution; however, you neglect to include the democratic process already mentioned,
You also neglect alternative schooling, such as private and home schooling. Unfortunately, I know from experience that those seeking to indoctrinate their children with religious ideals often opt for private school or home schooling. But on the other side of the coin, private and home schools perform a hell of a lot better than public schools.
What I am saying is that the Department of Education should be kept around because it's needed.
Let's see if we can agree on my line of logic:
1) We generally do not want people to be extremely fundamentalist and conservative because they tend believe in somewhat outdated and horrible ideas such as white supremacy and that homosexuality is a sin.
2) There are a lot -- a majority -- of extremely fundamentalist and conservative people in many of the Southern states.
3) By democratic process, these people will elect similarly fundamentalist and conservative people into their state's Education Board and other positions of power.
4) These fundamentalist and conservative people will create an educational system based on fundamentalist and non-liberal ideas.
5) The children growing up under these fundamentalist and conservative influences will be similarly conservative
Well, gee, if moving was that easy or protesting is that effective, why am I still here? States are called states because they are just that -- states. Part of a whole, that is the country. When you have states that can't comply with the federal government, then there are separate issues to address.Yes, I agree to that logic. Unfortunately, though, as a state, it's their right to regulate education as they see fit. Those who disagree have every right to protest, sue, move, or choose alternative education for their children.
Fluttershy ♥;484302 said:Well, gee, if moving was that easy or protesting is that effective, why am I still here? States are called states because they are just that -- states. Part of a whole, that is the country. When you have states that can't comply with the federal government, then there are separate issues to address.
And how does the federal government have "no right"? No other developed country has nearly the amount of unrest and disparity between their governments on the state and federal levels. Which leads back to: the United States is entirely too big and can never make the south happy.When you have a federal government that's addressing issues it has no rights to address, you have states with no need to comply. Or at least no need to refrain from lawsuit.
Fluttershy ♥;484357 said:And how does the federal government have "no right"? No other developed country has nearly the amount of unrest and disparity between their governments on the state and federal levels. Which leads back to: the United States is entirely too big and can never make the south happy.
Fluttershy ♥;484398 said:The Constitution doesn't say a lot of things. That's because it was written over 200 years ago and things have changed immensely since then. It's not relevant to today and nobody seems to get this. Amendments are like trying to patch up an ancient, raggedy quilt instead of just making a new one.