Public education has long ago abandoned morals and ethics. There are a lot of good educators but the administrative/NEA side is morally bankrupt. There isn’t a liberal agenda too extreme for them to embrace. Parents need to be involved in their childrens education. Evil doesn’t thrive in the light of scrutiny.
I think they abandoned morals and ethics when they took God out of the schools. The division of church and state does not mean that state is devoid of God but only that a specific belief or religion cannot be imposed on people. The left has wrongly led people to believe that God must not be in politics but in actuality God and the Ten Commandments are central to a moral and just government. How lost we have become as a country.
Not just public education. Almost every part of society has as well. The medical profession being another example.
Also, I remember when there was a concept of the hero cop who risked his life to keep the community safe. Now, in the Texas incident, a group of cops were very comfortable loitering around the school and even preventing parents from going in to try to save their children. Not one of them took the initiative to go in and save the kids. Apparently, for some, being a cop is about collecting a descent salary and good benefits and not about protecting the community.
Unfortunately, this is true in a lot of public service. Friend of mine more than anything wanted to be a firefighter for SFFD and he waited six years before he was able to get into the academy. Asked to be assigned to one of the downtown houses because they saw way more action. He told me a lot of the people assigned to the houses in the western half of the city (which is more suburban-like) could care less if they ever saw a fire. It annoyed him.
Sorry to be nitpicky, but I don't think there are a lot of good educators. Now, when I was in school I never had any of these overt grooming and legitimately evil teachers, but I can honestly say, out of all the teachers I was ever stuck with, there were 3 who stood out as 'good'.
1 - Was in grade school, where I remember how he made even boring subjects engaging (while it now sticks in my mind more as a feeling than anything I can describe in specifics)
2 - High school English teacher who was the only teacher in my entire school career that wanted to push the idea of trying to show students how to think through things over the "what to think" that most teachers fall into.
3 - High school physics teacher, his focus was to get his students prepared for university, and felt that if his students needed to take an intermediary class before physics 101 that would represent his failure as a teacher. This made him an asshole, BUT, for a purpose (something that you hate in the moment but realize the favor it did later)
Public education has long ago abandoned morals and ethics. There are a lot of good educators but the administrative/NEA side is morally bankrupt. There isn’t a liberal agenda too extreme for them to embrace. Parents need to be involved in their childrens education. Evil doesn’t thrive in the light of scrutiny.
I think they abandoned morals and ethics when they took God out of the schools. The division of church and state does not mean that state is devoid of God but only that a specific belief or religion cannot be imposed on people. The left has wrongly led people to believe that God must not be in politics but in actuality God and the Ten Commandments are central to a moral and just government. How lost we have become as a country.
Not just public education. Almost every part of society has as well. The medical profession being another example.
Also, I remember when there was a concept of the hero cop who risked his life to keep the community safe. Now, in the Texas incident, a group of cops were very comfortable loitering around the school and even preventing parents from going in to try to save their children. Not one of them took the initiative to go in and save the kids. Apparently, for some, being a cop is about collecting a descent salary and good benefits and not about protecting the community.
Unfortunately, this is true in a lot of public service. Friend of mine more than anything wanted to be a firefighter for SFFD and he waited six years before he was able to get into the academy. Asked to be assigned to one of the downtown houses because they saw way more action. He told me a lot of the people assigned to the houses in the western half of the city (which is more suburban-like) could care less if they ever saw a fire. It annoyed him.
There are a lot of good educators but.....
And according to Sean Hannity 99% of FBI rank and file are good agents right?
Even though he himself was from a 3-letter agency lol.
Sorry to be nitpicky, but I don't think there are a lot of good educators. Now, when I was in school I never had any of these overt grooming and legitimately evil teachers, but I can honestly say, out of all the teachers I was ever stuck with, there were 3 who stood out as 'good'.
1 - Was in grade school, where I remember how he made even boring subjects engaging (while it now sticks in my mind more as a feeling than anything I can describe in specifics)
2 - High school English teacher who was the only teacher in my entire school career that wanted to push the idea of trying to show students how to think through things over the "what to think" that most teachers fall into.
3 - High school physics teacher, his focus was to get his students prepared for university, and felt that if his students needed to take an intermediary class before physics 101 that would represent his failure as a teacher. This made him an asshole, BUT, for a purpose (something that you hate in the moment but realize the favor it did later)