400,000 Teachers Are Striking

By fitsnews • on April 24, 2008
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teacher strike

THIS IS WHY WE DON’T WANT UNIONS, REPRESENTATIVE WALKER

FITSNews – April 24, 2008 – Earlier this month, we criticized a bill from S.C. Rep. Bob Walker that would force our state’s taxpayers to subsidize the fundraising efforts of left-wing “pro-education” groups like the South Carolina Education Association. Why did we do that? Well, we don’t want a situation like the one happening right now in England, where over 400,000 teachers are currently on strike:

One in three schools in England and Wales were closed or partially shut, with up to 90% of schools affected in some areas. One estimate said the strike had closed or partially affected up to 9,500 schools, affecting up to 2.9 million children.

You know, if we could just get South Carolina’s worthless school administrators to go on strike, maybe some good might actually come to our worst-in-the-nation education system.

Seriously, if we just shut down the whole Ministry of Failure & Non-Competition for a few weeks, maybe teachers could actually do their jobs for a change …

Match.com

Comments

By Believe It Not (a.k.a. Sic Willie's Stalker) on April 24th, 2008 at 4:44 pm

sic(k) willie,

You’re a stain on S.C. and public education. This post is what makes BIN News parody the line from the old Saturday Night Live sketch:

“…sic(k) willie, you ignorant slut!” Seriously Will, you are a stain.

S.C. has a “minimally adequate” standard for public education. Fix that and the funding issues and the social issues.

willie, we have told you over and over and over what the real problems are facing public education.

Your SCRG money has blinded you, “…you ignorant slut.”

BIN News Editorial Staff

By PuppetBusters on April 24th, 2008 at 8:20 pm

BIN (aka Stainmakers-On-The-Dole),

Mama’s got the magic. Clorox II.

By T. Babb on April 25th, 2008 at 7:12 am

BIN –

Please enlighten us on your fix-all for education in South Carolina. Does it include more money and teacher’s unions? If so, please cite ONE study to show the effectiveness of such policies.

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