I say YES. YOU say NO....Numero Tre! Enjoy!

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  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited April 2022

    The GQP playbook is to make up stuff in order to provoke visceral fear reactions among parents of school-age kids and stoke straight-white-Christian fear & resentment, especially among rural and exurban voters who feel "left out" and "left behind" by the perceived "woke agenda." It's more than "political correctness" and "wokeness:" it's about change. Change is scary, especially when it shakes up assumptions about what one has been taught for generations about this country's history.

    I hate the term "woke." When it was first used back in 2014, many of us wore it in smug self-congratulation as a badge of intellectual & moral honor; but now the right-wing has turned it against us to mock us as conceited and rigidly (and even illogically) doctrinaire.

    I prefer "enlightened," "reconsidered" or "evolving." (Emphasis on the "-ing"). Acknowledging that, ever since the first European colonists brought the first kidnapped enslaved Africans to our shores, this country's early history through the first "Juneteenth" was shaped by slavery and thereafter by Jim Crow is not the same as "hating America" or "making white people feel guilty about ourselves." It is an incontrovertible fact that even many Northern colonists not only "impressed" (i.e., forcibly "imported" from the British Isles) and employed indentured servants but also owned slaves--including Ben Franklin before he became an abolitionist (yet nonetheless never freed his enslaved couple during his lifetime). Slavery is mentioned in the Bible, and not just the fact that "we were slaves in the land of Egypt" (as we Jews recite from the Haggaddah at every Passover Seder). Both Leviticus & Deuteronomy even set forth rules regarding treatment of not just one's "laborers" but also of one's slaves. That doesn't make slavery morally acceptable of course, but neither does it make every one of our forebears and Founding Fathers who owned slaves (as well as employed brutally-indentured servants) evil and unworthy of our lauding their contributions to our history, much less require us to assertively negate those contributions and strip them of all honor.

    It takes some intellectual heavy lifting to shed our binary notions of 100% moral vs. 100% shameful and recognize that times change and those people were creatures of their times. We now know better, but that doesn't make them worse nor us better. The mental gymnastics involved in nuanced thought are difficult. We tend to look at life and morality through a 20th-21st century lens. How many modern people, when first learning World History as kids, identify with the free landed gentry, nobility or even royalty--and then get the "bucket of ice water" dropped on their heads to learn that the odds are overwhelming that 99% of us, had we lived in pre-Renaissance Europe, would have been serfs leading nasty, brutish and short lives? How many of us didn't know till recently that settlement of the West involved starving indigenous peoples by slaughtering the buffalo in order for 19th century beef barons to graze cattle on the land for eventual sale as meat? But acknowledging that part of our history doesn't mean we should feel guilty or blame ourselves ("the sins of the father...."). It means that there are lessons to be learned, things to do and not to do...going forward.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Affliction comes to us not to make us sad, but sober; not to make us sorry, but wise; not to make us despondent, but by its darkness to refresh us, as the night refreshes day; not to impoverish, but to enrich us, as the plough enriches the field; to multiply our joy, as the seed, by planting, is multiplied a thousand-fold. -Henry Ward Beecher

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Really seems like the Reps. are just stumbling all over themselves. I'm sure there is a method to their madness as far as they are concerned. All I really see is madness though.

    May be an image of text that says 'Middle Age Riot @middleageriot It's only a matter of time before Republicans ban the Constitution in schools because the 13th Amendment mentions slavery.'

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Another peek at insanity.

    May be a cartoon of text

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Would like rules and laws not to apply to him -- above it all like the Loon.

    May be a cartoon of 1 person and text that says 'It appears Ron DeSantis didn't read the law before trying to dissolves Disney's special district. State law says that can't happen until the district's bond is paid off. @ADRIENNELAW IS GOVERNOR DESANTIS AN IGNORANT, AN IDIOT, OR BOΤΗ? OCCUPY DEMOCRATS'

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Disrespectful to onions.

    May be an image of 1 person and text

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022
  • Nsbrown54
    Nsbrown54 Member Posts: 908
    edited April 2022

    BCO upgrade? Sorry couldn’t resist sharing.

    image

  • Nsbrown54
    Nsbrown54 Member Posts: 908
    edited April 2022
  • Betrayal
    Betrayal Member Posts: 1,374
    edited April 2022

    cardplayer: Love the cartoon and it does apply to this boondoggle of an upgrade that seems really a step backward. We now have a wider left margin so it can reduce the size of the type abd type space, an ultra white background that is not only hard on the eyes but makes the print appear dull, and the sloooooooooooower load time and a ridiculous balloon that pops up all the time to remind us that they are still updating this site. How many weeks has it been and I haven't seen any updates that are pleasing.

    Love the above sign as well. Shame on them.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    I'm in heavy duty like with the last cartoon too. No one seems to think there will be reason to notice the Loon's period and after during the next elections. I'm not sure they will be individually named so much as hopefully thrown out on their ear along with what passes right now for the Reps. party. So, that being in our history a bit over 200 yrs. after the fact with much of the Reps. party reverting to total morons like their Loon leader of 4 yrs. duration and 2 impeachments -- proves their morons if they don't mind their ancestors reading all this. They will remain the moronic scorned throughout.

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited April 2022

    Great post, Sandy, and great memes from everyone else.....although comparing Rick Perry's IQ to that of an onion is an insult to onions (who at least serve a worthwhile purpose)!

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited April 2022
  • exbrnxgrl
    exbrnxgrl Member Posts: 12,424
    edited April 2022

    Ruth,

    😂 I have had my own struggles with Al Gebra 😂

  • Betrayal
    Betrayal Member Posts: 1,374
    edited April 2022

    Me, too, and a male chauvinist teacher who thought "girls" were wasting their time learning Al Gebra and consigned us to sit in the far back of the room. Now imagine all the "boys" sitting front and center and at least 2 rows of empty separating them from us. I did not do well, did great with Plane Geometry but never took another math class after that. Yet, I taught Nursing Mathematics and Dosages for about 20 years so I wasn't totally turned off on math, just male teachers teaching math.

  • Miriandra
    Miriandra Member Posts: 1,327
    edited April 2022

    For Girls, Teachers’ Gender Matters, Study Says

    "Female elementary school teachers' comfort with mathematics has an outsize effect on the girls they teach, according to new research. Girls taught by a female teacher got a learning boost if that teacher had a strong math background, but had consistently lower math performance by the end of the school year if she didn't, according to a study presented at the American Economic Association's annual conference here."

    Young girls seem to be very sensitive to role modeling for math aptitude. If they get to see a math-savvy woman teacher, they feel confident at tackling math themselves. If they see a math-phobic woman teacher, or a male math teacher of any variety, they are more likely to associate math=male. This is a major reason for why we need more female STEM teachers, and higher visibility for women in STEM fields.

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited April 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Ruth -- such an apt description of MTG. Fits like a glove.

  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited April 2022

    Yes to the MTG meme.

    Betrayal, how horrible to have a teacher like that. I feel such outrage even reading about him.

    I had a great Al Gebra teacher. He was a man and was in fact one of the high school football coaches. He was well organized so the students knew what to expect. Lessons Monday thru Thursday, test every Friday, graded tests back every Monday except during football season when we got tests back on Tuesday and we went over all the answers. I had him for pre-Algebra, Algebra I and Algebra II and I aced all the classes. The teacher showed no favoritism, treating boys and girls all the same, no class pets. He had a loud voice but never yelled. No one goofed off in his class but no one was afraid of him, either. He simply commanded the class and taught. One of my all-time favorite teachers. Mr. Marinnaci.

    Have I mentioned the Netflix documentary “Picture A Scientist”. It’s excellent and uses several women’s personal stories to discuss gender inequality in the sciences. I highly recommend it. You will find it extremely interesting and insightful. The personal stories draw you in and the data supporting the claims is indisputable.


  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited April 2022

    Lucky you, Divine, to be taught math by a Master Teacher! Anyone who says that scripted learning, virtual learning etc. etc. is the way of the future, has never had a teacher like that. I had a couple teachers like that in English & History, which is no doubt why I liked and was good in those subjects. I didn't have a good math teacher until college, when I was forced to take a math class for the elementary part of my teaching degree. I was SHOCKED when it all made sense!

  • Nsbrown54
    Nsbrown54 Member Posts: 908
    edited April 2022

    I've blocked out most of my high school experience, but do remember my female Geometry teacher referred to me as Randy's little sister, never by my first name. Math and most subjects were a challenge for me. Guidance counselor said I wasn't college material and signed me up for secretarial classes my senior year. I said no, wanted college prep classes. Graduated from colleg, moved away from my home town. I ended up in IT, mostly supporting financial applications. Just a late bloomer I guess.

  • Nsbrown54
    Nsbrown54 Member Posts: 908
    edited April 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    Truth is like the stars; it does not appear except from behind obscurity of the night.
    Truth is like all beautiful things in the world; it does not disclose its desirability except
    to those who first feel the influence of falsehood. Truth is a deep kindness that teaches us
    to be content in our everyday life and share with the people the same happiness.

    Khalil Gibran

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    So true about the garbage trucks, cardplayer. I could not agree more.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    So Reps. are in disarray it seems. Everyone still trying to be a good insurrectionist while running the other way from that label. I think I read where some are really giving it to McCarthy for the leaked tapes proving how much so many of the Reps. participated in different ways to keep the Loon in power -- even though they secretly hated him. Moscow Mitch sure did, but he like many of his comrades just couldn't bring themselves to do away with Loon when they had the chance. Too afraid they would become a sacrifice and lose the Loon voters. Jellyfish spines took over. So, here we are.

    I still haven't figured out quite if we ( Democrats ) are benefiting or not. One media outlet says we are and the next one says no indicating that the Reps. are going to wipe us out. I certainly hope not. I am hoping that Jaine Raskin is right -- and such bombshells will soon be out that it hopefully will totally inspire the '22 and '24 voters. We would still have to be highly concerned about the cheating and suppressions and the fact that the GOP openly says they will just nullify the elections if they are not to their satisfactions. All scary to me to say the least.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited April 2022

    The Loon no longer goes to the bigger more 'known' places -- they don't want him. He doesn't pay and he would likely be being even more apt to ignore a payment now that he is a used up, has been that never really was anyway.

    May be an image of one or more people and text that says 'HAVE YOU NOTICED Trump's rallies are always in sparsely populated or even rural areas? His April 23, 2022 rally was in Ohio. NOT Columbus, Cleveland, or Cincinnati but DELAWARE OHIO. On April 5th, he held a rally in North Carolina. NOT Charlotte, Greensboro or Raleigh, but SELMA NORTH CAROLINA. He knows his racism, revisionist history, and alternative facts would flop with a more diverse, well-educated audience. So he sticks to places with audiences of easily- asily-duped, Fox-viewing rubes. American News X'

    Still a joke, after all this time. Glad when he is gone for good.

  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited April 2022

    I had a good Geometry teacher who was a woman. She came from a family of money but she was very low key. If you forgot your protractor, she begrudgingly loaned you one of hers. The Caryl Simon song “You're So Vain" was popular at the time, and we would joke about the teacher by singing, “she gave away the things she loved, and one of them was protractors". We thought we were so clever.

    But I digress. I liked figuring out geometry problems. We had an xyz theory and had to figure out how to find the hypotenuse. Or we had an xyz hypotenuse and had to find out how to arrive at the correct theory. I liked working through the problems and got A's in class. I just couldn't figure out the point of it. One day, very perplexed, I asked, “How is something like this ever going to be useful in the real world?"

    Without skipping a beat, she said, “You're going to find there will be times where you want to get from point A to point B in your life and you will have to figure out the steps you need to take to get there. Geometry teaches you how to think through the problem to find the solution one step at a time."

    She was like a master gardener planting a seed of wisdom right into the most fertile part of my brain. Her words were some of the most insight ones I've ever been given. Growing up in a very dysfunctional household, I began to see I had to figure out what I needed to do to get out of that situation and create a better future for myself. No one at home was giving me these kinds of life lesson instructions.

    Mrs. Coultraps. Her family lived an hour away inanother county and they donated a huge parcel of land for a new school to be built there. They were all about education.

  • Miriandra
    Miriandra Member Posts: 1,327
    edited April 2022

    I love math, algebra, and logic. (I don't care for calculus, though. It's rude to numbers.) I love watching mathematical patterns lay themselves out in beautiful manifestations of numbers dancing in fugues. I love how algebra is basically puzzles to be poked at and played with until they're at their simplest state.

    I'm currently crocheting a blanket for my Dad. The pattern is a fractal called a Seirpinski carpet. Well, I guess this will be a Sierpinski blanket. :D

  • Nsbrown54
    Nsbrown54 Member Posts: 908
    edited April 2022

    illinoislady - I always worry that the Dems will fight among themselves, not pass infrastructure, and not take advantage of the GOP idiocy. Biden would do well to get rid of student loans (get the young voters).

    Midterm elections can be pretty dicey. See what happened in our last Virginia Governor election. Weak candidate for the Democrats against a rich, inexperienced republican. Glen Youngkin ran on CRT in our schools and other made up culture issues. Got parents riled up. Now we’re stuck with Youngkin. It’s a playbook for the republicans that you’ll prosee used in other area.

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