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Working to insure natural term limits by removing all incumbents from office.

September 28th, 2007

President Clinton You Are Not

Back in 1992, Bill Clinton visited the MTV studios and captivated millions of young voters with his unprecedented candor and started a media revolution of sorts. In the years since, several party nominees from all sides have embraced the alternative media as well as utilized the internet while campaigning for political office.

Recently, John Edwards participated in an open forum held by MTV and MySpace in New Hampshire. I’m not going to say outright that MTV or MySpace has any credibility as being a serious outlet for journalism (or any information for that matter), but it is a supposed bastion of independence and alternative media, and as opposed to looking at talking heads on CNN projection televisions there are unfortunately many similarities in quality.

Edwards, faced with a series of predetermined and pre-selected questions, merely issued a recitation that came across as a stump speech instead of a true open forum. Would he or any other candidate be able to achieve what President Clinton achieved all those years ago when faced with the spontaneity of a natural open forum?

Some Additional Perspective

September 23rd, 2007

Hillary Has Waffled and that is OK

In the last major Presidential elections many candidates in the primaries and the actual elections were attacked for waffling on issues.  They were beat up and beaten out of office for changing their mind.

This was perceived as a move away from principles, a move away from sincerity, a move towards hypocrisy.

Well, there is a gift that President George Bush has given America.  Its possibly the greatest legacy that George W Bush has given us and maybe the biggest gift he will ever give.  It could go down in history as a turning point in American politics even. 

George Bush has proven that it is not only OK to waffle and change your mind, but there are times when it is absolutely essential.  Now, unfortunately George W Bush has taught us this lesson not by preaching the practice of changing your mind, not by walking the walk and actually changing his own mind.  No instead he has taught us that this is an essential skill for a President by not doing it.  In Texan terms, his Pig Headed downright stubborn attitude has taught the country that staying the course and damning the consequences is bad for the country.

Hillary seems to have learned that lesson and is now amazingly (drum roll please) against the war that she voted for 10 times.  She is now promising that she will no longer vote to fund the war (while she is a Senator).

Now, I do not support Hillary.  For other reasons, I think she is the wrong person for the job.  (I think she is as corrupt as Bush.)

However, I do think she is doing the right thing by changing her mind.  I do think its OK for Senators and Congress people to vote against funding the Iraq war.  I am a Veteran and I do believe that this war needs to be capped off and we need to bring the majority of our people home.  If voting to drop the funding will give the Pentagon and the White House the message and let them know that this baby is cooked its time to send out the birth announcements, This war is over. 

Then more power to the Congress!

 

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September 17th, 2007

Pay For Performance for Teachers After Pay For Performance for Politicians

Last month, I mentioned a cause de jour floating around Washington like a unknown and unwanted item floating around loose in a street with no public sewers.  The cause de jour was the concept of establishing Pay for Performance for Teachers and Principals in our school system.  This is a great example where the principle of an idea or the ideal of the idea is well intentioned, however, it is also one that can not be successfully executed in the school systems of the United States today.  It would be a quagmire to attempt to overlay the broken educational system of the United States with a Pay for Performance scheme.

Its akin to paying the US soldiers in Iraq for the successful keeping of the peace.  If they can’t keep the civil war in check, then no pay check.  If they can reduce car bombings month after month until there are none, then they get some percentage of their pay rate.

Its just a stupid idea not because the goals are not admirable, but because the accountability is placed on people that do not have the responsibility of fixing root cause problems.

Same goes for teachers.  Many teachers, especially in title one school systems are in essence trying to keep up the educational standards in a system that has been decimated by the No Child Left Behind Act, which emphasizes test scores at the expense of real education. 

When I heard about the Pay for Performance Plan for teachers, I said to myself, there is a place where this model should be used first, Capital Hill!  Congress and the Executive Branch should be compensated based on Performance.  I say give them a thousand to two thousand dollars for every point of approval they get in the polls and let that guide their salary.  If they don’t perform or get low results, sorry about that less pay for you Mr President, less pay for you Mrs. Speaker of the House. 

Matching teacher salaries (already far too low - but not as low as soldier pay) to performance when performance can not be measured with solid metrics is a non-starter.  Successful education can not be measured like a radar gun measures the speed of a moving vehicle.  There are too many factors that can also obfuscate the metrics that are out there.  School districts around the country are essentially cooking the books now to insure that their school funding is not left behind by the Federal Government like so many people left behind in the Superdome or on roof tops or worse drowned in attics in New Orleans.  Furthermore, teachers have no advocates to qualify the metrics that do come in.  If a teacher helps their students memorize test answers and another teacher shows a child how to read, the first teacher is often rewarded and the second penalized. 

The metrics are harming instruction like a police officer trying to make a speeding ticket quota.  Its a strange abuse of power and results from a broken system.  Teachers can’t even defend themselves when an over zealous system labels them as failed teachers, its not like they can go out and look for the teacher equivalent of radar detector reviews and protect themselves with something that shows they are doing the right thing by their students.  I just moved my children out of one of the ‘best’ grade schools in the State of Georgia.  The school taught to the test and didn’t teach much else.  Important things like, how to write!  Memorization and cheap test taking gimmicks were the rule of the day as opposed to teaching kids problem solving skills and other valuable commodities needed to compete in the world today.  Children in this school, one of the best schools in the state are being left behind everyday, under the goals and mechanisms of the No Child Left Behind Act.  The Bush Administration has leant its ineffectuality focus to education and their attempt to once and for all settle The Education Problem has resulted in a genocide of education.

Change the system and things could be different a Pay for Performance mechanism might work if the system were not broken and not run by an ineffectual Executive Branch.  Apply that type of fix to a broken system and things will just get worse. 

Positive Response from Congressman John Linder of Georgia

Now, I didn’t stop at just talking out loud on my blog.  I wrote to my Congressman and voiced my displeasure at this suggested idea.  I was happy to receive a response from him and happier to see that he too feels that the concept is a non-starter as no version of metrics could be applied to the current broken system.

To avoid misquoting him, I am including his response below.  I encourage you to speak out regularly to your own Senators and Congress people and let them know what you stand for and why. 

Dear Mr. Bumeter:

Thank you for contacting me to express your thoughts on House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller’s (D-CA) recent proposal regarding “pay for performance” standards for public school teachers and principals. I appreciate hearing from you.

On July 30, 2007, Chairman Miller held a press conference in Washington, D.C. at which he discussed a number of possible initiatives that he is planning to incorporate into his reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act. According to Chairman Miller, “[n]o factor matters more to children’s educational success than the quality of their teachers and principals.” In order to insure this quality, therefore, Chairman Miller is developing a “pay for performance” program in public schools. At this time, however, there is no concrete plan describing how principles and teachers will be evaluated for pay incentives.

In general, while I agree that good teachers should be rewarded for their hard work, I do not believe that a Federally-regulated incentive system will be successful. Teacher effectiveness cannot necessarily be quantified accurately or consistently. There are many wonderful teachers who work in schools where students show little achievement from year to year because of lack of modern materials in the school or difficult family environments, to name a few. Conversely, there are below average teachers in affluent areas whose students have every advantage, and who will excel regardless of the teacher’s abilities, or lack thereof. Since the core of the incentive and punishment system already in place in the NCLB Act is based largely on student achievement, I can only assume that student achievement will have a large role in deciding teacher “pay for performance.”

Additionally, contrary to what Chairman Miller believes, I consider parents to be the key factors influencing a child’s education success. Naturally, teachers are integral to a student’s education, but they are not substitutes for highly motivated and involved parents. Instead of empowering the Federal government with greater control over our local schools and teachers, I would like to see this power given to parents and local school boards.

Ask any parent with school-age children who the best teachers in their child’s school are, and you are sure to hear a long list of names complete with a litany of evidence as to why that parent views certain teachers more favorably than others. Parents know the teachers who deserve pay incentives because they spend hours after school every week helping children with extra math problems or quizzing them on American history - all of which are entirely unquantifiable by the Federal government. Our best teachers, the ones who are most involved and who are willing to give of their time and energy may never reap the rewards of a “pay for performance” system, unless it is administered at the local level. As such, I would be inclined to oppose a Federally-regulated “pay for performance” program, but would be interested to see a similar program administered by local school boards.

Thank you again for contacting me. If I may be of any further assistance to you, please do not hesitate to call on me.

Sincerely,
Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet.
John Linder
Member of Congress

September 16th, 2007

Democrat Gambit-Require the President to Equally Abuse Members of the Military

 Democrats are waging a very steady and exceptionally careful war against the President and Republicans.  They are taking baby steps when most Americans expect them to break out into at least a sweaty jog if not a full on sprint to start fixing the situation in Iraq and curbing the excesses of Bush gone wild.Protect-our-troops-from-bad-politicians

Their latest micro gambit is one that is forming on the heels of the Patraeus testimony.  The Democrats hope to tie up the President and the Pentagon with the concept of limiting troop deployment in Iraq.  Their method for doing this would require that troops would not be allowed to spend more time in Iraq than they spend at home. 

Many troops have spent multiple tours of duty in Iraq and to say that some of them are war weary is just an understatement that fails to come to terms with the effort and heart that American troops have put into the War in Iraq.  Bush has paid for the war with political capital and sacrificed Generals.  The real troops have paid with their lives, their limbs, their families, their finances, their health and their future.

Democrats think they may have enough Republican support on this micro move to actually get some legislation passed.  That could help some of the troops that have already been pushed to the limits, but at the end of the day it doesn’t solve the root cause problem and only insures that more if not all American troops will be pushed to maximum overdrive before the draft is launched again. 

damn-the-priceThe draft is really what we are talking about here after all.  The war in Iraq can not continue without a draft.  Democrats are going to be the likely benefactors of the Bush doctrine as they will inherit a war that was lost after it was so decisively won.

The Democrats move to tie up the President now, will really only force them to offer up a slightly more fair approach when Americas sons and daughters are drafted into the military to fight in Iraq.  There are just not enough troops to wage a war for a full decade and win or even keep those troops, let alone an entire country safe from an enemy that is inspired by the presence of the troops in the first place.  Making sure that all existing troops get equal time in the bunk beds versus the cots and mats on the ground will not fix anything.

President Bush is abusing the military.  This cannot be solved by providing the President with the requirement to abuse the military equally.  Its like complaining to an abusive parent to beat both children equally.  The parent needs to be stopped and in this case the President needs to be replaced.  Impeach Bush now, there is still time.