Usually it’s some stinking hippie or graying ponytail who whines about fascism, blaming the Right. It’s all an act, since in a real fascist state, such misfits and losers are rounded up and never heard from again.
In California the misfits and losers ARE the rulers and the threat to the State are honest, hardworking, intelligent citizens who, for the most part, play by the rules. They are the beasts of burden to which all the socialists, communists, illegal aliens, professional victims and other worthless parasites hitch their yokes. The beasts are also blamed for society’s ills on a scale that dwarfs the racism of old, yet without them the State would become another dirty, poverty-wracked province of Mexico almost overnight.
My theory as to why the smart, hard-working minority (ineligible for minority-based welfare BTW) of high-wage earners would stick around is the weather, which is so perfect it acts like a narcotic. Also, as minorities go, this one thrives in a hostile environment. To them, it’s worth it to have their income raped if they still get to keep their lifestyles.
I shouldn’t be surprised at faggotfornia’s fascistic move to ban home schooling. Home schooling is a weapon of the intelligent and determined, an antidote to the massive, expensive, crime- and ignorance-ridden failure that is the federal (and state) government school system.
This goes to show how fucking dumb the rulers there really are. “Enlightened” fascists would allow home schooling, as it’s no real threat to the government school bureaucratic machine. Every communist state needs a few yoked geniuses to hold the Lie together.
California will play a major role in the coming civil war. A villainous one.
I copied the whole article to have it as reference.
SFGate
Homeschoolers’ setback sends shock waves through state
Bob Egelko, Jill Tucker, Chronicle Staff Writers
(03-07) 04:00 PST LOS ANGELES —
A California appeals court ruling clamping down on homeschooling by parents without teaching credentials sent shock waves across the state this week, leaving an estimated 166,000 children as possible truants and their parents at risk of prosecution.
The homeschooling movement never saw the case coming.
“At first, there was a sense of, ‘No way,’ ” said homeschool parent Loren Mavromati, a resident of Redondo Beach (Los Angeles County) who is active with a homeschool association. “Then there was a little bit of fear. I think it has moved now into indignation.”
The ruling arose from a child welfare dispute between the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services and Philip and Mary Long of Lynwood, who have been homeschooling their eight children. Mary Long is their teacher, but holds no teaching credential.
The parents said they also enrolled their children in Sunland Christian School, a private religious academy in Sylmar (Los Angeles County), which considers the Long children part of its independent study program and visits the home about four times a year.
The Second District Court of Appeal ruled that California law requires parents to send their children to full-time public or private schools or have them taught by credentialed tutors at home.
Some homeschoolers are affiliated with private or charter schools, like the Longs, but others fly under the radar completely. Many homeschooling families avoid truancy laws by registering with the state as a private school and then enroll only their own children.
Yet the appeals court said state law has been clear since at least 1953, when another appellate court rejected a challenge by homeschooling parents to California’s compulsory education statutes. Those statutes require children ages 6 to 18 to attend a full-time day school, either public or private, or to be instructed by a tutor who holds a state credential for the child’s grade level.
“California courts have held that … parents do not have a constitutional right to homeschool their children,” Justice H. Walter Croskey said in the 3-0 ruling issued on Feb. 28. “Parents have a legal duty to see to their children’s schooling under the provisions of these laws.”
Parents can be criminally prosecuted for failing to comply, Croskey said.
“A primary purpose of the educational system is to train school children in good citizenship, patriotism and loyalty to the state and the nation as a means of protecting the public welfare,” the judge wrote, quoting from a 1961 case on a similar issue.
Union pleased with ruling
The ruling was applauded by a director for the state’s largest teachers union.
“We’re happy,” said Lloyd Porter, who is on the California Teachers Association board of directors. “We always think students should be taught by credentialed teachers, no matter what the setting.”
A spokesman for the state Department of Education said the agency is reviewing the decision to determine its impact on current policies and procedures. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell issued a statement saying he supports “parental choice when it comes to homeschooling.”
Brad Dacus, president of the Pacific Justice Institute, which agreed earlier this week to represent Sunland Christian School and legally advise the Long family on a likely appeal to the state Supreme Court, said the appellate court ruling has set a precedent that can now be used to go after homeschoolers. “With this case law, anyone in California who is homeschooling without a teaching credential is subject to prosecution for truancy violation, which could require community service, heavy fines and possibly removal of their children under allegations of educational neglect,” Dacus said.
Parents say they choose homeschooling for a variety of reasons, from religious beliefs to disillusionment with the local public schools.
Homeschooling parent Debbie Schwarzer of Los Altos said she’s ready for a fight.
Schwarzer runs Oak Hill Academy out of her Santa Clara County home. It is a state-registered private school with two students, she said, noting they are her own children, ages 10 and 12. She does not have a teaching credential, but she does have a law degree.
“I’m kind of hoping some truancy officer shows up on my doorstep,” she said. “I’m ready. I have damn good arguments.”
She opted to teach her children at home to better meet their needs.
The ruling, Schwarzer said, “stinks.”
Began as child welfare case
The Long family legal battle didn’t start out as a test case on the validity of homeschooling. It was a child welfare case.
A juvenile court judge looking into one child’s complaint of mistreatment by Philip Long found that the children were being poorly educated but refused to order two of the children, ages 7 and 9, to be enrolled in a full-time school. He said parents in California have a right to educate their children at home.
The appeals court told the juvenile court judge to require the parents to comply with the law by enrolling their children in a school, but excluded the Sunland Christian School from enrolling the children because that institution “was willing to participate in the deprivation of the children’s right to a legal education.”
The decision could also affect other kinds of homeschooled children, including those enrolled in independent study or distance learning through public charter schools – a setup similar to the one the Longs have, Dacus said.
Charter school advocates disagreed, saying Thursday that charter schools are public and are required to employ only credentialed teachers to supervise students – whether in class or through independent study.
Ruling will apply statewide
Michael Smith, president of the Home School Legal Defense Association, said the ruling would effectively ban homeschooling in the state.
“California is now on the path to being the only state to deny the vast majority of homeschooling parents their fundamental right to teach their own children at home,” he said in a statement.
But Leslie Heimov, executive director of the Children’s Law Center of Los Angeles, which represented the Longs’ two children in the case, said the ruling did not change the law.
“They just affirmed that the current California law, which has been unchanged since the last time it was ruled on in the 1950s, is that children have to be educated in a public school, an accredited private school, or with an accredited tutor,” she said. “If they want to send them to a private Christian school, they can, but they have to actually go to the school and be taught by teachers.”
Heimov said her organization’s chief concern was not the quality of the children’s education, but their “being in a place daily where they would be observed by people who had a duty to ensure their ongoing safety.”
The ruling: To view the ruling by the Second District Court of Appeal, go to links.sfgate.com/ZCQR.
Tags: beasts of burden, civil war, faggotfornia, fascism, graying ponytail, home schooling, losers, mexifornia, san francisco chronicle, socialism, stinking hippie
Tuesday, 11 March 2008 at 10:52 am |
Home schooling is fine for the most part. However, there needs to be some kind of social interaction with their peers built into it. Education is not all “just book learnin” as us hicks say.
Tuesday, 11 March 2008 at 5:14 pm |
Requiring a semester or two in a high school is a far cry from outright Prohibition. I wouldn’t consider the knuckleheads I went to school with any more adjusted thanks to “social interaction”.
Hell remains other people. Krav Maga is needed more than ever to deal with these feral subnormals.
Wednesday, 12 March 2008 at 10:33 am |
True. I see your point.
I guess what I worry about is some high school dropout parents who were straight D students teaching their kids things that are plain WRONG. Not wrong in any political or religious sense. Just things like: George Washington was the 16th President, 2+2=5, etc.
Wednesday, 12 March 2008 at 4:43 pm |
I’m not sure half of today’s high school kids even know who George Washington is until they plagiarize wikipedia.
Home-schooled kids must still take statewide tests–which they ace handily–and depending on local laws, are required to “check-in” with area schools or their local system.
Who do you really think is going to do a better job teaching, an overworked govt-paid babysitter with class loads upward of 40, crammed with girls dressed like whores (OK, I’m not arguing against that part), wannabe gangsta dipshits, drugs everywhere and a Black school population which is taught (at home!!!) that “learnin’ shit is playin’ the White Man’s Game”.
The State uses its schools to break the spirits of the young, to prepare more worker-drones for the future.
How does the joke go? “America offers a quality high school education to everyone, you just have to go to college to get it.”
Saturday, 22 March 2008 at 12:32 am |
motel todd here. I agree but some of this home schooling is scared white folks wanting to preach some twisted religion that the state would not allow. This is a place to teach religion and its called A CHURCH!
I find it ironic that these social darwins survival of the fittest, tough guys are so unsure of the quality of their superior DNA and parental skills that they don’t think their children can survive and learn in the typical public school environment.
Why only social darwinism in business but not in school?
Dealing with assholes is a part of life and children need to learn this from the get go rather than hiding out in lilly white land isolated in mommy & daddy’s home with little access to the rest of humanity.
regardless of schooling type, we are become worker drones.
Right Wingers pride themselves on being though but are whimps when in comes to their kids.
As far as quality – many home schools are not much better.
home schooling is white fear pure and simply raising whimps
Kids can also get their spirits broken by abuse home schools as well as religions schools – especially Catholic – i’ve known many ex-catholics who were abused by the priests/nuns.
abuse is abuse regardless from the teachers or students
Saturday, 22 March 2008 at 1:07 am |
we all become worker drones, right wingers pride themselves on being tough but are whimps when it comes to kids – corrections for above -needed to responded sober -hahahha
Saturday, 22 March 2008 at 6:03 pm |
Even if there were no asshole kids in the schools, the curriculum itself is a shit-ass wasteland. Teachers are unionized and have no incentive to work harder. Social studies and Civics are all but gone and American history is no longer taught…when some history does slip by it’s heavily edited in favor of the Big government point of view. Teachers in classes unrelated to history use the podium as a soapbox to bash Bush, etc.
I’d rather a generation or two forge ahead and make lots of mistakes homeschooling than be at the mercy of the Machine.
White fear? Everyone should fear government. And home schooling also means learning cool, useful shit like how to use guns and self-defense, first aid and financial literacy, the last topic one the schools have barely touched (why empower the drones to spend wisely)?
Two more things schools don’t teach: how to fail and yes, how to deal with people.
Failure has been made out to be this huge demon, but the reality is, nothing grows without it….weightlifting is working your muscles to FAILURE so they grow back stronger. Same principle must be applied to everything worthwhile. While there are a few “naturals” most pick-up artists got good by going out there and failing with women, over and over. As the saying goes, “You haven’t failed enough.” It takes balls to fail, and government schools’ only message is that “You will fail unless WE save your ass.”
Finding yourself in a pecking order of bullies and cretins is hardly what I would deem “socialization”. You, Howie and I are all literate and all of us have varying levels of hate for our fellow humans. We had to learn the hard lessons ourselves, on our own. You went thru a hell of a lot more than I did and came out alive and functional. Don’t give so much credit to the bullies and punkasses, you did the hard work on your own.
All the things that make a person a successful communicator are not taught in schools. Maybe a little bit in speech or debate classes, but that’s formal and not applied to everyday life.
I’m tired of government schools chaining everyone else to subnormals. The pure cynicism they preach is just as bullshit as pure optimism.
The fact I’m still alive attests to some things worth sticking around for.
One of those is seeing government lose more and more of its iron grip on society due to becoming irrelevant.
Monday, 24 March 2008 at 11:31 am |
Well I’m an old fart and haven’t been to public schools in 20 years. Most of what was taught in the stone age was neutral stuff. I’m sure you’re right that it is not that way today. I guess they had better quality teachers then who didn’t polarize one way or the other. They were like Joe Friday’s -just the facts, maam. Good retort by the way.
You are right, there is too much of ultra liberal agenda in public schools -especially in Cali.
As far as my intergration experience, the real problem was lack of funds and bad parenting on my friend’s part as well as many of the black ones and race was an easy scapegoat.
Man, this therapy is pretty damn cheap -ahhahaha!