T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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709.1 | your power is your own. Don't give it to govt. | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Sun Feb 07 1988 10:50 | 39 |
|
The solution is; NO MASS SOLUTIONS !
Over and over and over, we have tried to solve public problems with
political solutions mandated for everyone, and funded through taxes.
This is *NOT* the way! If people were not taxed so much, they
would have more resources for solving thier own problems. They
would get to apply their own creativity, and would feel ownership
and control with their own solutions. What is more, the money
would be spent more efficiently.
You can't fix the schools by lobbying washington, or even by
voting in a better school administration. The schools for our
children can *ONLY* be fixed by people, the people with children,
taking command of the course of their own children's education !
Each child is *seeking* knowledge, but of course each one is
different, so we need to *look* at each child with care and deep
perception, to help provide for the unique needs of each one.
There is no "program" that can provide "equal" benifits of education
to all these differing children. Education cannot be mandated
from an ivory tower, this is the basic failure of the system we
have today. Our quality of education declines as power is taken
from the parent or teacher, and is passed to the administration, or the
designers of mandated educational "programs". The teacher or
parent are the *only* persons who can see and respond to the needs
of each individual child. We have to give them the power to do so.
It's a basic mistake to assume that the government can help
us solve all these problems. By assuming this we give away the
power we need to apply our own solutions. There are some things
we can all do to help people reclaim these powers, but the first
step is to realize that *we* have the power ! We have the power
to provide our children with opportunities. We have the power
to recognize the forces which block and frustrate them. And we
have the power to help the children deal with these blocks and
frustrations, one at a time, without resorting to mass solutions
or government mandated programs.
Alan.
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709.2 | We'll start with decentalize... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven - a perfectly useless state. | Sun Feb 07 1988 14:56 | 78 |
| Reply to .0,
Please let me preface this by saying that a pure anything type answer
will probably not work. That is a pure liberterian, pure socialist,
pure democratic, and pure republician answers are purely theoretical,
maybe not even practical in the everyday world.
I'll start with decentralization, which has been brought up already.
We should decentralize the money process. Taxes, seen and unseen,
flow through Washington for many different purposes. This has pros
and cons for women:
In regions where women are active in the governmental process women
will fare better. In regions that are more conservative women will
play the parts their local culture dictates, at least, until they
take part in the governmental process.
As the money begins to flow back into the local community away from
Washington the community will have to take direct responsibility
for their fisical actions. Women could approve and support community
sponsored day care. Even this opens great bags of worms. Those problems
will have to be dealt with at sometime in the near future anyway.
Laws should be pased to promote clean and clearly defined channels
for money to flow through. If 1 million dollars is collected for
10 community day cares centers, those centers should get 95% of
the collected monies, not 10%.
Perhaps the place to start the decentralization would be to look
at the Constitution and find what Washington is directly responsible
for. At last look Washington was responsible for only 18 things
plus the mysterious general welfare clause. We could decentralize
or privitize all the rest of the funtions.
It all revolves around money. Take most of the money out of Washington
and put it back into the states and counties where it belongs. Of
course this will require a shift in thought. This may not happen
in 10 or 20 years but I think it will happen before say 2020.
An idea that has been proposed to do this is called the State Rate
Tax. Basicly the idea, thought not new, is to have the states collect
federal/state taxes in proportion to their populations. For example
Colorado would have less than 1/50th of the federal budget and
California and New York would have greater than 1/50th. The cons
side of this would be census metrics.
When the taxes get too high the residents of the states have direct
access to their elected state reps, who inturn, have more efficient
access to federal officials than you or me.
Money will be easier to watch if it flows through the State houses.
Washington has too many different pigeon holes, smoke screens and
lobbiests for John Doe to figure out. For example Colorado is not a big
oil state, we have coal, uranium, gold and timber questions that need
solutions. Coloradians wouldn't need to expend time and energy
convincing an oil state senator that forest resources in Colorado were
being squandered. We could go to state reps who will have access to
more money in this model.
The second and most important resource we have is people, not money.
Along with Alan I think we should teach children to be responsible
with their resources, all of them. We should also teach them how
to guide the governmental process themselves, not to depend upon
a coached tv personage in the Federal House or Senate.
Basicly it boils down to letting the Feds deal with international
questions and letting the states deal with domestic questions.
Women are the unknown here. In the last mayoral election in Colorado
Springs, population approx. 350,000 only about 10,000 people voted.
Who knows what would have happened if a female activist ran for
mayor.
Just like others I'm fed up with B.S. When the hole we dig doesn't
surrender the treasure it's time to dig a hole some where else.
When our way of government doesn't meet the needs of people, we
need to change the government till it meets the needs.
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709.3 | Do we have the time? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Sun Feb 07 1988 18:48 | 15 |
| I want to talk about a specific issue. The two replies are a general
concept of how taxes should be collected and distributed.
Many women and men have made decisions not to have children. It
is a growing reality that there is a large amount of children being
born to parents who do not have the resources either emotional or
financially to prepare these children for adulthood.
These two factors bring into focus the fact that in twenty years
the majority of the population will be over 55 and that there will
not be enough young people to provide the services of a mature
community.
How do we solve this problem? Replies .1 and .2 are very idealistic
and not practical in my opinion.
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709.4 | Let's pass the buck... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven - a perfectly useless state. | Sun Feb 07 1988 20:40 | 3 |
| Reply to .3; JLamotte,
So you don't like .1 and .2. B^) What do you propose?
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709.5 | the unborn have no spokesman | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Sun Feb 07 1988 21:28 | 23 |
|
With schools having such problems, and with the fears of
war or economic havoc, perhaps it is an intelligent response
to not have children. I think this is sad. I, too, have doubts
about helping to bring a child into this world.
In financial terms, it used to be that having children was
an asset. Now it's a liability. Why should they bother having
kids, after all, they have their own pension plans and won't need
the support when they're old? Such economic disincentives are
something the government *could* do something about. I don't
need any young helping hands on the farm I don't own. For a
fine analysis of the new economics of aging, and the disincentives
being given to the "baby boomers", I just read a good book I can
recommend; "Born To Pay" by Phillip Longman.
Old people have "the Grey Panthers" to lobby for their
interests, but who lobbies for the interests of the next
generation's children? No one. They have no spokesman.
I hope then, that women (and *all* of us) can use their power
to protect the rights of future generations.
Alan.
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709.6 | my ideas | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Mon Feb 08 1988 09:26 | 18 |
| Well, instead of encouraging "good" parents to have more
children, we should make more "poor" parents "good". Teach
more about child rearing in high school. Include classes
on what's involved having children, and the kids could help
with a daycare to give them practical experiance with children
(they could get certificates as qualified babysitters too :-))
Teach about birth control. Then when they start having sex
they won't necessarily have children. I'm not just talking
about unwed teenagers here, when they do graduate and get
married, they should still know that they have choices about
whether to have children.
And teach women that they have choices with their life. Getting
married and having children is no longer the only goal for
women.
...Karen
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709.7 | excuse me if this is off the topic, but.... | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Feb 08 1988 12:01 | 6 |
|
...how do we decide who's a "Good" parent?...who "ought" to have
children?....and what "Good" means in the first place...?
--DE
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709.8 | I don't know what good is, but... | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Mon Feb 08 1988 12:18 | 21 |
| re .7
I don't think we should decide who is a 'good' parent or who should
have children.
I see a lot of children being born in the '80s that will probably
not be productive adults. Their home environment and classroom
environment is not adequate to support learning or the development
of behaviors that produce individuals that can cope with society.
We have children being born, the process is simple. We don't shove
these kids in a one-room hotel suite @$1400 a month, we subsidize
housing @400 a month. We supplement income only if the recepients
attend training classes. We get the children into early development
programs so that when they attend the first grade they are ready
to learn. We develop incentive programs for high school students.
We work on programs that incourage good nutrition and good health.
We don't know what a good parent is and I don't think we can judge
that. But we do know that good nutrition, good schooling and basic
shelter needs promote positive behavior and learning.
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709.9 | not off the topic as far as I'm concerned | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Feb 08 1988 12:19 | 22 |
| re: .7 --
Amen.
I resent deeply the base note's implication that middle-class parents
are good parents and that all poor people are incapable of providing
nurturing, healthy homes for their children.
I won't for a minute try to argue that it's better to grow up poor;
having money has let me give my kids advantages they would never have
had growing up in a household like the one I grew up in. But having
money is only one tiny aspect of raising healthy, happy, open-minded,
sensitive, responsible adults.
I don't think my nice normal and approved of middle class neighbors
whose daughter [straight-A student interested in engineering] will have
to pay for her own education at whatever school she can afford because
her parents have broken the budget to send her barely-passing brother
to Dartmouth are exactly the kind of people I want to see perpetuating
society!
--bonnie
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709.10 | There is a lot of resentment! | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Mon Feb 08 1988 12:38 | 22 |
|
re: .9 --
Could you point out to me in the base note where there is an
implication
1. Middle-class parents are good parents.
2. Poor people are incapable of providing nurturing, healthy
homes for their children.
Then we need to figure out how the good parent who happens to be
poor can get together $1500 to rent an adequate apartment right
here in Massachusetts. $500 first month, $500 last month and $500
security.
I resent deeply the way many people poof off the problems of the
poor and our next generation. It is a very different world. We
cannot say my parents were poor and I am productive. The circumstances
have changed and financially poor people have a lot more to cope
with then the prior generations.
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709.11 | Start by shifting values | LDYBUG::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Feb 08 1988 12:44 | 27 |
| We could start by making birth control and abortion available to
all of those women who feel that they are not able to properly care
for a child at that specific time in their lives. Then people start
having choices.
We could then focus government priority on the quality of life in
*this* country and work to improve conditions for us all. If mothers
didn't *have* to work to ensure their children's survival, many
would opt to stay home and raise their children. The single mothers
who do get government assistance so that they can stay home and
take care of their kids live well below the poverty level and are
generally objects of scorn in society... so we must decide what
our values are.. 30 billion to feed, clothe and shelter the Contras
but what of those needy American children? American children take
a very low priority in our country. Teenagers are expected to work
long hours in jobs that are designed to burn them out (fast food
restaurants) for wages that are ridiculous. Why?
Children should be (as they are in Russia) a precious
natural resource to be cherished. The tone of this note disturbs
me in that children are not objects to bear the burden of a society
that appears not to care very much about the individuals that comprise
it. If we are seeing the decline and fall of the great American
empire then perhaps short-sightedness, lack of values and poorly
thought out priorities have brought about a destiny that can't be
avoided. If we change those things now, then we will all benefit
and those future children will have a society worth living in.
|
709.12 | | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Mon Feb 08 1988 13:08 | 6 |
| re .11
Your reply is very articulate and says far better what I have been
trying to say so many times on this and similar issues.
Thank you!
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709.13 | OK, I think I understand the subject now | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Feb 08 1988 13:09 | 36 |
| RE: .11
American *children* are a low priority?!?!?!? *Americans* are a
low priority! No, no, I'm not trying to say "Buy an American Car".
I'm in total agreement with .11 - The $$$$$$$<etc> we are sending
to Nicaragua and God-knows-where-else for killing people could
well be used to help those people who are living on the go**amn *STREETS*
in this country! Adults, *and* kids.
What else would this money buy? School lunch programs, early
eduaction programs for disadvantaged kids,... we can all name
something, I'm sure.
I suppose if there were Zillionz of dollars available for the
3-piece-suits to use in playing chess with smaller countries on
the largest gameboard ever....well, OK , fine amuse yourselves...
(We'll talk *those* moralities later)
...But migod! They're hollering about national debt and deficit
budgets....sending money to other countries for killing...and allowing
citizens of *this* country to scrape a daily existence off the
streets....and telling the disadvantaged to pull themselves up
by their bootstraps...?!?!?
How do we change this mind-set? How do we change the mind-set of
disadvantaged folks who've given up and have passed that on to the
kids? How do we change the mind-set of the *advantaged* folks who
disadvantage their own kids?
Shifting values, yes. But how?
--DE
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709.14 | | LDYBUG::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Feb 08 1988 13:22 | 25 |
| Very simple... we care. We care about people again and we insist
that our representatives care too. Too many politicians look at
government as a way to enrich themselves and their croonies, to
implement their own personal philosophies and opinions, and to
plan the power game... the most dangerous game of all. We spend
so much money of defense that soon we won't have a nation worth
defending. Carl Sagan's article in Parade Magazine most eloquently
described the situation the people of the world find themselves
in. This situation exist in almost every country to one degree
or another. The politicians are so busy throwing stones at each
other to perpetuate the situation that gives them power that the
real objectives of government... to care for and ensure the
continuation of a nurturing society.. are totally overlooked. Its
time to face the fact that we are all first and foremost citizens
of the world.
We must begin by cleaning our own house and we must
start seeing each other as brothers, not enemies. A lot of the
world leaders are in their seventies and have the attitudes and
mindsets that came from growing up before WWII. Well times have
changed and people have changed. We now have the technology to
totally distroy the human species and we have leaders who cannot
be trusted with that technology. We must have the courage and
personal integrity to put special interests aside and work for the
common good of mankind.
|
709.15 | unfortunately I don't believe it can be done anymore | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Feb 08 1988 13:29 | 52 |
| Oh, now I see what we're talking about! I'm sorry, Joyce, I completely
misunderstood your base note. I took your remark about the decreasing
number of children being born to good parents (your phrase) and an
increasing number of children being born in unfortunate economic
circumstances to implicitly assume that middle-class parents make
better parents (since it's the middle class that's having fewer kids)
and that if we could wipe out poverty, we'd wipe out child-raising
problems.
I also didn't mean to say that because I made it from a poor
background, everybody can make it without help. For one thing,
I had plenty of help.
The trouble is, I'm a lot less sanguine about the prospects of doing
anything for the children that isn't a drop in the bucket. The
experiences I've had as a mother, the way I've seen my daughter's
friends treated and the way people react to perfectly reasonable
requests for help for our most precious resource, has convinced
me that this society, as a whole, hates and fears children.
Everything that a young person does is automatically seen as wrong.
They're treated as nonpersons in stores and public places, they're
assumed to be hostile, oversexed, and drug dependent, and now they've
even been denied the basic rights of citizens (Supreme Court decisions
have upheld restrictions on their freedom of speech and their right
to reasonable search and seizure; don't even get me started on teh
juvenile injustice system in this country).
I suspect that this phenomenon is closely related to the incredible
number of adults who were raised in dysfunctional families, who
were abused, beaten, and generally hated when they were little.
How can they be expected to love and treasure children when they
can't love and treasure themselves?
I'm sorry, I'm afraid that there's nothing political that can be done
at this point. You might be able to get some superficial legislation
through to buy more butter and less guns, though in the present climate
that's debatable, but you aren't going to be able to legislate love and
compassion. I wish you could, but you can't.
Maybe what individual women decide can have an impact, though.
I've decided that I'm going to do what little I can -- be present
as a shoulder to cry on and an alternate role model for my daughter
and her friends, work in the school system (I'm coaching an OM
team right now; maybe next year I can find something even more
useful.)
Maybe if some of us care, and help?
--bonnie
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709.16 | Is Israel better? | YODA::BARANSKI | Bozos need not apply... | Mon Feb 08 1988 13:49 | 24 |
| RE: .11
"We could start by making birth control and abortion available to all of those
women who feel that they are not able to properly care for a child at that
specific time in their lives. Then people start having choices."
My version of that (*mine*, get it???) would read "Birth control and
adoption"...
"Children should be (as they are in Russia) a precious natural resource to be
cherished."
How are children treated better in Russia? I think if I were going to pick a
country where children are treated valuably, I would pick Israel.
RE: .13 EVANS
"How do we change the mind-set of the *advantaged* folks who disadvantage their
own kids?"
I find this even sadder then disadvantaged people producing nonmotivated
children... Having everything seems to be nonmotivating as well...
Jim.
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709.17 | invisibility | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Mon Feb 08 1988 17:02 | 25 |
| Lest anyone forget (I know some of us can't),
it's never "They're poor; I'm not."
You can go from comfortable to poverty in a nightmarishly brief
period. All it takes is for your job to vanish--and yes, this happens
even to middle-class, white-collar, engineer-types--or your health
to change even briefly due to illness or accident or the health
of some other family member to be affected. I know, I've seen it.
If you haven't, I suggest you read the two part article by Kozol
in recent New Yorkers about the homeless. (If you don't subscribe
and can't obtain it through a library, write to me.)
Part of the reason that many people ignore these homeless families
seems to me to be that it reminds them too much of how fragile their
hold on the good life is. If we can ignore those it happens to,
we can pretend it won't happen to us.
Which is just not true.
Everybody wants a good life for their kids, even if they didn't
get a good one for themselves (yes, it *is* possible to love and
treasure children even if you weren't so happy as a child yourself).
Every child deserves a good life. Treating poor people like dirt,
especially poor people who are kids, doesn't inspire them to aspire
one bit.
|
709.18 | We could all be winners | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Feb 08 1988 17:21 | 13 |
| Fer sure, Lisa. "there but for the grace of <whatever>..etc."
The thing that really gets to me is there's enough money and wealth
of all kinds for *everyone* to "have the good life". Unfortunately
we live in a society whose mind-set is "winners-losers", not
"winners-winners". I see the latter as a very "Yin" (if you will)
philosophy, and the former as very "Yang" (again, not totally
accurate, but you get the idea,...)
Women may hold the key to this...who knows?
--DE
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709.19 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven - a perfectly useless state. | Mon Feb 08 1988 23:58 | 5 |
| Reply to .13; Dawn,
How do we change the mindset? I think we'd have to change the system.
The heart of the solution is to get money flowing to the states
and counties and away from Washington.
|
709.20 | nice in theory but what do we DO? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Tue Feb 09 1988 08:57 | 25 |
| Dawn, Lisa, I agree with you 100 per cent.
But what are we going to DO about it?
Money flowing from the federal government to the cities and counties
isn't going to help. City councilmen, who have on the whole forgotten
that there for the grace of God go each and every one of us, are
every bit as hard-hearted as the worst Washington bureaucrat. Maybe
worse. Ever read what goes on in your city council meetings (or
whatever form of government your town/city has)? It's depressing.
Group homes and shelters denied variances that would allow them to
function in the neighborhoods they serve. (I was going to speak at one
of these hearings; at the last minute they changed the meeting time.
Isn't politics wonderful?)
School budgets cut, or items that are never added, because programs to
provide breakfast for needy school kids are "frivolously wasteful."
That from a man I know and respect and thought would never say a thing
like that even if he had to bow to hard realities of inadequate
funding.
Money doesn't change the condition of a heart. I'm not sure what does.
--bonnie
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709.21 | civics | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Tue Feb 09 1988 10:20 | 3 |
| This is somewhat of a tangent, and only of interest to some of us,
but: today is the last day to register to vote in the primaries
for Massachusetts.
|
709.22 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Feb 09 1988 16:40 | 13 |
| Things cannot continue on as they are. The system will defeat itself
by it's own inbalance. The system is predicated on tax money
obtained from the people. The definition of a depression is that
the bulk of the money rests in the hands of the few as it is now,
protected by law in tax shelters.
Well my friends, whether we realize it or not, we are balanced on the
brink of the worst recession/depression this country, no.. this world,
has ever known. It has come about through greed, indifference and
dishonesty and it will force much needed change both in this country
and the rest of the world. Unfortunately those who will suffer
the most are those who have always suffered the most... and it ain't
the politicians.
|
709.23 | Creating our own reality? | VINO::EVANS | | Thu Feb 11 1988 12:18 | 16 |
| Not to beat a dead horse, here, but on some level, we've
created the government problem. I don't mean us-right-thinking-types
here [;-)] but "us" human beans in this here country.
*My* feeling is that if the *thinking* changes, the government
priorities will change. I believe the problem is "how do you
change people's...err..ideas?....perceptions?...whatever.
Then there's the old military saying "Get 'em by the b**ls and
their hearts and minds will follow" :-}
Maybe we can just work on our little corner of the world and let
the rest be what it is...wish I knew...
--DE
|