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Separation of School and State

Scott J

Active Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by King James:
And you apparently don't have a heart for the poor and disabled.
Really? Please cite evidence of that in any of these posts. You liberals are amazing. You equate opposition to the nanny state with a lack of "heart for the poor".

As I have cited here before, conservatives in this country... those who oppose big government... give more to charity than liberals who claim moral superiority. The key difference between conservatives and liberals here is that liberals think the indigent should be relieved with OPM while conservatives give of their own.

People are poor for a number of reasons. When the churches and private citizens cared for the poor, they were discriminant. People got a hand up, not a hand out. The truly needy or disabled were helped. The lazy and immoral were not enabled to continue their errant ways.

Bureaucrats and politicians aren't motivated by kindness or charity. They are motivated by job security. They don't discriminate between the needy and the slothful. They discriminate between people who will help them stay in power and those who won't.

What about those people?
The US Gov't has spent billions on Great Society social engineering. What have we gotten? A permanent entitlement class, rampant illegitimacy, crime, divorce, drug abuse, declining school performance,... and according to our government, the percentage of people living in poverty has remained flat.

What about the people who can't get a job because they have no skills and it costs thousands of dollars to go anywhere to get any skills, and not be assured of a job when they get those skills?
Excuse me but "Please pull your head out of the sand."

In the US, we have millions of legal and illegal Mexicans. The vast majority of them are filling jobs that "the people" you are talking about turn their nose up at.

I have supervised some of "the people" that have no skills. They literally think that work is beneath them and have no appreciation for the privilege of employment. They were uncooperative. They sought to find out what the minimum expectation was and do no more. At the same time, they complained constantly and had terrible attitudes.

These aren't "skill" deficiencies. They are moral and ethical deficiencies... that aren't going to be solved by gov't sponsored training.

Somehow people have bought into the idea that we have a "right" to a certain standard of living. Immigrants from Mexico and other less wealthy countries do not operate under this misconception.

By contrast, our Mexican temps worked for less money, did easily twice as much work, and never complained. That is why I have mixed emotions on the immigration issue. The Mexicans I knew had more of the American working spirit than Americans do.

You want to know why someone can come to the US without knowing the language or having any particular skill then become successful? They see the opportunities and don't think they are above living in less than comfortable conditions until they can afford better. Many of the "poor" you refer to think that if they can't afford better that someone else should pay for it.

What about those people? Jesus cares for them.
Jesus cares first and foremost for their soul. Jesus never said "Go your way and do whatever you want to do... He said go your way and sin no more". Enabling someone to continue in sinful, self-destructive behavior (which slothfulness and being a poor servant are) is not Christlike, it isn't a fulfillment of the gospel, it isn't even kind...
Apparently, you don't. BTW...that would be SIN as well!
Actually I am just not deluded by the notion that welfare is the same as charity in any sense.

There is no genuine kindness involved in demanding that government take money from someone else and give it to the poor indiscriminately. That is feigned love at best. That is "love" that says "Something should be done because I have a guilty conscience but I don't want it to be done by me or at my personal expense."

IOW's, you love people so much that you want government to force someone else to give them money because you think they ought to :rolleyes: ... nope, you want find that in the commands or example of Christ or anyone in the NT.

[ September 27, 2005, 05:29 PM: Message edited by: Scott J ]
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by Johnv:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Dragoon68:
... I just have to believe that people typically send their children to private school because they want them to get an education of better quality than they can get from the public school.

I am one of those parents. Money was tighter when I was younger, so my children were in public school until 4th grade, and then I put them in a local Christian school until 8th grade. They then went to public high school (private high schools were too cost prohibitive). I might add that it was an RCA school, not a Baptist school, because the RCA school had a better quality of education overall.

Of course, now I'm dealing with college tuition. And to think I was actually complaining about money in gradeschool. Eeeeek!!!!
</font>[/QUOTE]I feel for you being at the point of facing college tuition, books, room and board, travel, etc. expenses. It's a tremendous cost! I pray you'll make wise decisions and it will be worth it for your child.

By the way, with respect to books which are increasingly expensive, why is it necessary to change books every couple of semesters for subjects that remain virtually unchanged?
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by Scott J:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> Originally posted by King James:
And you apparently don't have a heart for the poor and disabled.
The US Gov't has spent billions on Great Society social engineering. What have we gotten? A permanent entitlement class, rampant illegitimacy, crime, divorce, drug abuse, declining school performance,... and according to our government, the percentage of people living in poverty has remained flat.</font>[/QUOTE]

To add to this point, it most be noted that government schools have now had several hundred years to remedy the problem of poverty by providing "free" education to all. Could it be that the problem is not the provision of education at all?
 

Scott J

Active Member
Site Supporter
Oh and another thing King James.

Statistically, the number one cause for child poverty in America isn't oppression nor lack of educational/employment opportunities... it is being raised by a single mother (usually by way of illegitimacy). That is a moral problem FIRST. If the moral problem is not solved, no amount of government spending will fix it.

It is liberals who supported the "freedom" of the sexual revolution. It is liberals who gave us the welfare state that enabled poor women to be sexually irresponsible... and to pass that behavior on to their children.
 
O

OCC

Guest
Originally posted by Dragoon68:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by King James:
Some people are so scared of the government...and people like myself and others on here are labelled "conspiracy theorists"?
Some people value their liberty, realize how it can be lost, and desire to guard against it. To be wary of the government is not to disrespect its validity but rather to keep it within its bounds. </font>[/QUOTE]Isn't that the same thing the "conspiracy theorists" are doing though?

To kill two birds with one stone...I would rather parents taught their kids. I'm not a huge fan of public schools today. I just don't see it as a big deal. In the same way it is up to parents, it is also up to each individual to decide if public school and the government is an issue. I don't see it as one. Parents are responsible for their own kids. I'm not responsible for them.
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by Scott J:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> Originally posted by King James:
What about the people who can't get a job because they have no skills and it costs thousands of dollars to go anywhere to get any skills, and not be assured of a job when they get those skills?
Excuse me but "Please pull your head out of the sand."

In the US, we have millions of legal and illegal Mexicans. The vast majority of them are filling jobs that "the people" you are talking about turn their nose up at.

I have supervised some of "the people" that have no skills. They literally think that work is beneath them and have no appreciation for the privilege of employment. They were uncooperative. They sought to find out what the minimum expectation was and do no more. At the same time, they complained constantly and had terrible attitudes.

These aren't "skill" deficiencies. They are moral and ethical deficiencies... that aren't going to be solved by gov't sponsored training.

Somehow people have bought into the idea that we have a "right" to a certain standard of living. Immigrants from Mexico and other less wealthy countries do not operate under this misconception.

By contrast, our Mexican temps worked for less money, did easily twice as much work, and never complained. That is why I have mixed emotions on the immigration issue. The Mexicans I knew had more of the American working spirit than Americans do.

You want to know why someone can come to the US without knowing the language or having any particular skill then become successful? They see the opportunities and don't think they are above living in less than comfortable conditions until they can afford better. Many of the "poor" you refer to think that if they can't afford better that someone else should pay for it. </font>[/QUOTE]


These are excellent points!

As another illustration, I have had the blessing to very closely participate with a generation of Vietnamese - now loyal Americans - who arrived in this country with nothing save hope and will.

Many of these people took whatever jobs they could find, paid taxes on the earnings of their labor, attended night classes to learn a new language, retrained for new and better work, saved and spent carefully, encouraged their children, maintained family order and values, became naturalized citizens when eligible, participated in their local communities, and slowly but surely extricated themselves from the grip of poverty.

While there are negative examples among them as with any people, as a whole, they stand as a very recent highly positive example of what people can do when they want to do so.

They too represent the American spirit.
 
O

OCC

Guest
ScottJ...I am getting ready for work. I will address you tomorrow. But please...cite evidence that I am one of "you liberals". I have not voted for the liberal party in years. Even if I were, you did not "cite evidence". You just assumed and that is not cool.
 
O

OCC

Guest
Originally posted by Scott J:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by King James:


As for the "someone who is too lazy or immoral" comment...that doesn't even deserve a response....
That is up to you. Of course the NT tells us that if a man won't work he shouldn't eat. The Bible calls slothfulness, fornication, non-sobriety, violence, unfaithfulness, poor stewardship, and the like SIN. You apparently want the government in the name of "Christian values" to subsidize such behavior. </font>[/QUOTE]Now...would YOU please "cite evidence" that I want the government to subsidize "such behaviour"? Seein' as how you assumed. Thank you.

You said: "You liberals are amazing. You equate opposition to the nanny state with a lack of "heart for the poor"."
I say: Oh come on now. Do you see black helicopters chasing you constantly? You conservatives are amazing too. Only caring about yourselves and calling it being a Christian. Tell me dude...when Joseph gathered enough food for his people for a seven year drought was he the leader of a "nanny state"? I have yet to receive an answer from ANYONE when I bring up Joseph and the food. Why is that? ;)
 
O

OCC

Guest
"People got a hand up, not a hand out."

You mean...like I've been talking about for days and people thought I was wanting a handout? hmm...

By the way, my head is out of the sand. I'd pull yours out for you but hey...do it yourself. (look at me...I should be a conservative) :rolleyes:
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by King James:
Isn't that the same thing the "conspiracy theorists" are doing though?
There surely is "conspiracy" involved in using government schools to force teaching future generations the "proper" beliefs and there certainly are a lot of "theorists" in academia.
 
O

OCC

Guest
Originally posted by Dragoon68:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by King James:
Isn't that the same thing the "conspiracy theorists" are doing though?
There surely is "conspiracy" involved in using government schools to force teaching future generations the "proper" beliefs and there certainly are a lot of "theorists" in academia. </font>[/QUOTE]You may be right about that. But if you don't put your kids in there you have nothing to worry about. And...why is everything except for anything a conservative does...a conspiracy? :D
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by King James:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Dragoon68:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by King James:
Isn't that the same thing the "conspiracy theorists" are doing though?
There surely is "conspiracy" involved in using government schools to force teaching future generations the "proper" beliefs and there certainly are a lot of "theorists" in academia. </font>[/QUOTE]You may be right about that. But if you don't put your kids in there you have nothing to worry about. And...why is everything except for anything a conservative does...a conspiracy? :D </font>[/QUOTE]Perhaps it's because most conservatives don't try to mask their intentions.

I'm too old to worry about my kids now! It's the grandkids I worry about!

Hey, King James, you have a great day - seriously - and don't forget we may disagree but we can still be brothers in Christ. In the end only He knows the truth!
 
O

OCC

Guest
Hey Dragoon, thanks man. You have a great day too. Yes, we can disagree but you are still my brother. I will try to be respectful in how I disagree with everyone but I will still say what I believe. Off to my dead end job I go...
 

Johnv

New Member
Originally posted by Dragoon68:
I feel for you being at the point of facing college tuition, books, room and board, travel, etc. expenses. It's a tremendous cost!

You're not making me feel any better.
wavey.gif

I pray you'll make wise decisions and it will be worth it for your child.

Thank you. She's taken out a student loan, and I've taken out a home equity line of credit on the house. So now I have a sweatshirt that says "Cal State Fullerton Dad" that only cost me $22,000.
By the way, with respect to books which are increasingly expensive, why is it necessary to change books every couple of semesters for subjects that remain virtually unchanged?
It depends on the subject really. But whether they're new or a few years old, used books are hard to come by. Part of it has to do with the fact that most of the books are now printed in softback and formatted for the student to write in and take notes. They still run about $40 a piece, but a comparable hardcover would run $90 or more.
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by King James:
Well come on Scott, what ya waitin for? Researching Joseph?
Joseph was given authority among mankind under the government of Pharaoh, King of Egypt, by the near absolute authority, again among mankind, of the King. Few citizens would dare challenge that authority. The Pharaoh's decrees were the direct result of the visions interpreted by Joseph that God had put upon Pharaoh. The wisdom of Joseph came from God Almighty.

The governments in the USA are given their authority by the citizens as defined and limited by them in the constitutions of the individual state and federal governments. There is no King in this system and no single absolute authority among men. There is no one to interpret a King's dreams. The wisdom of these citizens, hopefully, also comes from God Almighty. Hopefully, the Holy Spirit guides our leaders and our citizens today.
 
O

OCC

Guest
Thanks for your post Dragoon. But does that validate what Joseph did and release a modern day government from doing likewise?
 

fromtheright

<img src =/2844.JPG>
Dragoon,

Thanks for the example re the Vietnamese. I remember during the summer I worked in San Antonio, 1979, that there were pockets of subdivisions that Vietnamese had moved into and there was a great deal of resentment by local folks. Of course, that was during the time of the boat people. It is wonderful hearing that they are another immigrant success story.
 
O

OCC

Guest
"I have supervised some of "the people" that have no skills. They literally think that work is beneath them and have no appreciation for the privilege of employment. They were uncooperative. They sought to find out what the minimum expectation was and do no more. At the same time, they complained constantly and had terrible attitudes.

These aren't "skill" deficiencies. They are moral and ethical deficiencies... that aren't going to be solved by gov't sponsored training."

This would not be me though. I am hardworking and the government sponsored training (which I earned the right to through my E.I. contributions) would have enabled me to better myself so I will have an excellent skill and will never have to depend on the government (while still contributing E.I. money to the thieves).


If your workers didn't want to work and had bad attitudes, then you get rid of them. You don't think in your mind that everyone is like that.
 

Dragoon68

Active Member
Originally posted by fromtheright:
Dragoon,

Thanks for the example re the Vietnamese. I remember during the summer I worked in San Antonio, 1979, that there were pockets of subdivisions that Vietnamese had moved into and there was a great deal of resentment by local folks. Of course, that was during the time of the boat people. It is wonderful hearing that they are another immigrant success story.
It's perfectly normal for folks to be suspicious of "newcomers" until they know them better. I know it was harder on some areas that others. The Louisiana and Texas fishing industries are examples where they were an "economic" threat to established workers.

Certainly not all Vietnamese Americans have become model citizens but, overall, they sure seem to have assimilated while retaining heritage, become very productive members of our society, and are very loyal to their new home land.

I must also make note that, as a community, they have been extremely generous in helping others. I've been reminded of this again by the responses to both Hurricane Katrina and Rita. Many of them know what it's like to be displaced from home with nothing and having to start over again. They have not forgotten the generosity of this great nation that was extended to them.
 
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