just curious, what regions of china are we talking about? in the rural regions they relied on rationing (b/c before that, all they had was an agrarian life anyway, no stores going back to the dawn of time). the cities have always had stores. i mean, ive been interested in china for a long time, and every book ive read about the cultural revolution mentioned markets, shops, you name it, and that was during the peak of Mao's Cult. These were all firsthand accounts too. The CR was shitty, as is Maoism, but the only parts of China that underdeveloped were the rural parts, and theyre just now starting to improve for the first time since, well, the dawn of Chinese civilization. im not gonna touch this religion thing. you bring up christianity, but when was China EVER christian? they banned it supposedly after the Taiping Rebellion in the early 1800s, but missionaries were able to make it back in once the Quing fell. Then came the Nationalists, they never did anything about it. Then came Mao, we know what happened there. You can thank him for the current repression.China's a tough nut to crack. On one hand, Mao was a bastard. On another hand, their current success and position to possibly move into superpower status can be attributed to Xiaoping, a man who I see as an economic genius and a political tyrant. Socialist modernization has finally brought back at least some success to a country which used to be the center of civilization. do i like their tactics? id prefer that they have better labor practices and environmental controlls (then again, they seems to care more about emissions than we do!), and i despise them for continuing the dictatorship and repression of democracy. Basically, if theyd could give up the old authoritarian comm. gov. charade, have free elections, stay the course economically, improve work conditions, and balance out this trade/currency issue, they could be the next superpower.oppressive tax burden? do we live in the same country/planet?and LoneSnark, dont be silly, everyone knows only the British can fly!did this guy just advocate mandatory, christian school prayer? i mean, im all for optional prayer in school to whatever god you worship, but come on, thats silly.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 5:47 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 5:42:47 PM
12/12/2005 5:51:05 PM
AMERICAN HERITAGE FIRSTHERITAGE NOT HATEWHITE POW...err, nevermindseriously, im christian, but i know that if they mandated it anywhere, it would be just as useless as spanish explorers converting native americans by reading them the bible in castillian.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 5:58 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 5:53:06 PM
sounds like.........fascism!one extreme to the next is the way to go!
12/12/2005 6:20:04 PM
sounds like.........a double post![Edited on December 12, 2005 at 6:22 PM. Reason : !!!!!]
12/12/2005 6:22:11 PM
12/12/2005 8:24:41 PM
12/12/2005 8:37:37 PM
yeslets allow everyone to run off all willy nilly and teach their kids whatever they want, with not standards or even requirements (why keep paying for education departments if we don't have schools?)yes, i enjoyed America being dominant in the worldbut you're right, fuck all that, we needs us some religious (i mean Christian) freedomyou're exactly why I thank God we live in a country where you don't have religion in the public schoolsas guth said, i appreciate the freedoms we have to worship and learn about our faith on our own termsi'd hate to force my beliefs on anyone, and i'd hate to have someone elses beliefs forced on me or my childrenbut hey, i guess i'm just not a close-minded fool
12/12/2005 8:46:53 PM
btw mathman, are you a student at NCSU?if so, stfui don't want to pay for a zealot like you to go to school
12/12/2005 8:48:12 PM
and to add to that[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 8:54 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 8:54:41 PM
12/12/2005 8:57:12 PM
orsend your kid to a private school and avoid the war over you wanting to force this on everyone b/c you want it for yourself.heres why i dont want more private schools: b/c eventually there will be one run by scientologists, and NOONE should be subjected to that.V w0rd. im a deist. im tired of people thinking they were evangelicals, when that movement didnt exist till the 1800s.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 9:04 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 8:58:26 PM
hows this sound to you?
12/12/2005 9:03:17 PM
Wasn't he the Vice-President at the time of the Boxer Rebellion?
12/12/2005 9:07:55 PM
12/12/2005 9:09:42 PM
^^nope, he was still gov. of NY at the time, didnt get sworn in till 1901.^yes, id venture to say i like savage even less.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 9:11 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 9:11:21 PM
12/12/2005 9:16:50 PM
^^just checking
12/12/2005 9:17:54 PM
ive been ignored twice
12/12/2005 9:25:36 PM
because you keep your cool and don't use profanity
12/12/2005 9:30:06 PM
YOU HAVE TO TYPE LIKE THIS TO GET NOTICED
12/12/2005 9:35:24 PM
ok hows this,THE FOUNDING FATHERS WEREN'T CHRISTIANSDON'T FOOL YOURSELF SAYING YOU WANT FREEDOM, THATS NOT WHAT YOU ARE PROPOSING. YOU WANT TO MANDATE CHRISTIANITY.
12/12/2005 9:37:22 PM
Guth, hold your horses, I'm gettin to you.
12/12/2005 9:55:19 PM
how can you be free to chose if you are being taught it in schoolsare you just posting one thing at a time and not thinking it through?that link is hilariousBJU has a textbookahahahahathats hilarious[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 10:07 PM. Reason : haha at bju]
12/12/2005 10:05:02 PM
so if a gov. does not promote your religion, you dont want to pay taxes. by not favoring any religion, this gov. is hostile towards your religion. thats like saying that since i dont have a favorite NFL team, I'm hostile towards the Dallas Cowboys.wait, if the public schools are so horrible and hostile towards christianity, then why are you attending one?
12/12/2005 10:13:16 PM
^thats the type of Christianity that I don't mind oppressing
12/12/2005 10:20:28 PM
YOU DO REALIZE YOU ARE LIKE A CHIRISTAN VERSION OF THOSE WHACK-JOB MUSLIMS THAT KEEP THE MIDDLE EAST A REGION THAT CANNOT ADVANCE, RIGHT, YOU REALIZE THIS DON'T YOU?
12/12/2005 10:21:58 PM
NO I DID NOT. BUT STFU BECAUSE IM TYPING IN CAPS AND I MUST BE RIGHT.
12/12/2005 10:26:16 PM
^^^^^I meant free to choose Christianity, I was not intending any inference to the schools, just to soceity at large. For example, I don't think citizenship should be predicated on confessing Christ. On the other hand I don't think I should have to pay thousands of dollars to misinform my kid, or somebody elses kid.Certainly some of them were diests but many more were Christians, and I doubt many of you feel as strongly about the postive role of Christianity in government as did some of those deists. For example,http://www.wallbuilders.com/resources/search/detail.php?ResourceID=121[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 10:32 PM. Reason : ^^^^^]
12/12/2005 10:32:09 PM
um, what is your kid being misinformed of?
12/12/2005 10:33:39 PM
WELL I SHOULD HAVE TRIED THIS HOURS AGO
12/12/2005 10:34:35 PM
12/12/2005 10:41:21 PM
soooo....why do the testimonials of these people matter? does not being taught about them in the public schools harm anyone? i mean, what harm is done by sending your kid to a public school that does not advocate any religion, and then telling him this stuff at home?i dont think telling someone "john adams really liked jesus" is going to improve anyone's education. this is why we have, you know, church.not to mention what i see as the REAL benefit of the public schools: it forces you to interact with all kinds of people in all kinds of situations. news flash: not everyone believes what you believe, and they never are. your kid is going to have to get out on his own some day and live amongst people who dont like what you believe in or just dont care what you believe in. for your kid to be successful in ANY field, they will have to know how to interact with everyone, from outstanding christians to godless heathen riff-raff.unless you send your kid to a school like BJU or force them to be a monk. and forcing religion down your kids throat and not letting them decide their course for education will only make them rebel. all my friends from private school ended up more fucked up than i did *shrug*.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 10:53 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 10:52:58 PM
man, its not a shock that you're a hypocriteOPRESSIVE TAX BURDEN(THAT I ATTEND)ps, i didn't go to a public university[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 11:05 PM. Reason : Campbell what what]
12/12/2005 11:04:34 PM
I wouldn't force a kid to go to BJU, nothing wrong with it, I just think by college people should be free to make up there own minds because they ought to behave as adults. As far as socialization goes, I'm not going to keep them from having friends, I just won't let them have bad friends. I hope you'll do the same, peer pressure is not usually a positive thing for kids. And I am by no means suggesting that I will isolate them from all influence of the outside world, I just will not let wrong philosophies go unadressed in as much as I can do that. Clearly, this is not something that can be realized entirely, rather I will attempt to explain as best I can what I believe and why I believe it, then allow them to extrapolate to issues as they confront them in life. Hey, wait a minute, none of you are at all concerned about what is happening in California to Christian schools? Let me post the article here for the lazy among you:Strange standardsEDUCATION: The University of California system is trying to force Christian schools to use the same textbooks that lower-scoring public-school students use. An association of Christian schools is fighting back | by Lynn VincentMURIETTA, Calif.— It's a mid-October test day in Hao Tiet's physics classroom at Calvary Chapel Christian School (CCCS) in Murietta. Ubiquitous southern California sunshine beams through the windows as his 12 students, most clad in board shorts and flip-flops, weigh in on whether they're ready."Let's do this," says one boy, whipping his bangs out of his eyes with an expert jerk of the chin."Let's not do this," says another boy in a brown surf-logo hoody. "Let's delay!"Some students watch carefully as Mr. Tiet sketches dry-erase vectors on a whiteboard and calls out review questions on Newton's First Law of Motion. Others scour their textbook, Prentice Hall's Conceptual Physics (2002), willing last-minute scraps of data to cling to their brains.Topics in the textbook they're using would give most people the willies: rotational mechanics, thermodynamics, special relativity, nuclear fission and fusion. The textbook they're not using, Physics for Christian Schools from Bob Jones University (BJU) Press, teaches all the same lessons, only more of them and in more detail. But CCCS no longer can teach physics using the BJU text. Nor can any Christian school in California if it wants to keep its students academically eligible for admission into the University of California system.The university's Board of Admissions and Relations with Schools claims that private-school students who take physics courses based on the BJU text "may not be well prepared for success" at its schools. The same goes for courses and textbooks that approach four other disciplines—history, government, literature, and biology—from a Christian perspective.Now, CCCS, the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI), and several parents are fighting back. The group in August filed suit alleging that the university's actions violate their 14th Amendment right to equal protection under the law, as well as First Amendment rights to freedom of speech, religion, and association.The University of California (UC) on Oct. 28 filed a motion to dismiss the case, saying that "most of Plaintiff's federal constitutional claims fail as a matter of law."What plaintiffs claim, specifically, is that the California state university system is mounting a campaign to "methodically and ominously" exclude courses with a Christian viewpoint from its "a-g requirements," a group of core studies high-school students must complete in order to gain admission. The university is unlawfully expanding its own authority, ACSI and CCCS claim, pressing "onward from deciding admissions guidelines to determining what viewpoints may and may not be taught in secondary school classrooms, which books may and may not be used, and what students with the same test scores are and are not eligible for admission."As evidence, plaintiffs cite an incident in October 2004, when CCCS submitted for approval a course called "Christianity's Influence on American History." The course featured a widely used college history textbook, but added the content of a BJU text with a Christian viewpoint. Five days later, the University of California rejected the course. "'Christianity's Influence'" was "too narrow/too specialized," its form letter read, teaching a viewpoint "not consistent with empirical historical knowledge generally accepted in the collegiate community."Meanwhile, the University of California has approved a long list of other specialized history courses, such as "Western Civilization: The Jewish Experience" and "American Popular Culture," as well as narrow courses—including "Feminist Issues Throughout U.S. History and Race" and "Class and Gender in Modern America"—whose content may be "accepted in the collegiate community" but scarcely anywhere else.The university also nixed the proposed CCCS course "Christianity and Morality in American Literature," which used a textbook from A Beka, one of the two largest Christian publishers, along with BJU Press. The course outline adds a conservative Christian viewpoint to a lengthy selection of American lit standards, including Benet, Sandburg, Twain, Poe, Hawthorne, and Wilder, most of whom struggled with Christianity or rejected it outright. Still, the state school system said the course lacked "a non-biased approach," and "insufficient academic/theoretical content."The university "routinely approves courses that add viewpoints such as a non-Christian religion, feminism, or a political viewpoint," said Robert H. Tyler, an attorney with Advocates for Faith & Freedom in Temecula, Calif., who is co-counsel for the plaintiffs. "But the university disapproves courses that add viewpoints based on conservative Christianity." The university told CCCS that if it removed scripture verses and theological prefaces opening each chapter of Physics for Christian Schools, the textbook would be acceptable.Particularly ironic, said Wendell Bird, an Atlanta-based business attorney and co-counsel for ACSI, is the university's assertion that students taking rejected courses "may not be well prepared" for state university success. On the Stanford Achievement Test in spring 2005, students from ACSI-member schools outscored students from public and private schools by 18 to 26 percentile points, depending on grade and subject matter, according to Harcourt Assessment Services."Why is UC telling ACSI schools to do what public schools are doing when standardized testing data show better-educated students coming from ACSI?" Mr. Bird said.In its motion to dismiss, the university says it is "not stopping Plaintiffs from teaching or studying anything. . . . [A]lthough the University does not accept every high school class as college preparatory, it also does not penalize students for taking additional classes that are not so accepted."But Mr. Bird points out that with California's growing exclusion of Christian courses, ACSI students—and parents of state residents whose tax dollars support the university—face an extra burden when applying for admission. Students electing to take classes UC has rejected would either have to take extra, UC-approved courses, or be admitted to the university "by exception" to the school's standard policies.After ACSI and Calvary Chapel Christian School filed suit in August, some mainstream media quickly painted the case as the Scopes trial revisited. CNN Headline News filled television screens nationwide Aug. 27 with a huge graphic: "Creationism Suit." That same day, David Rosenzweig of the Los Angeles Times cast the suit against the backdrop of the "mixing of science and religion," and wrote that "University of California admissions officials have been accused in a federal civil rights lawsuit of discriminating against high schools that teach creationism and other conservative Christian viewpoints.""This is not a creationism case," said Mr. Bird. "This is a case about all major subject areas in high school, where the state of California has taken it upon itself to reject textbooks and courses because of Christian content." Mr. Bird noted that, to his knowledge, no other states practices similar censorship.While the majority of school parents support the school's legal action, the case has caused some disruption. In the category of "minor annoyance," Superintendent Des Starr said he has received a smattering of postcards and e-mails from as far away as Kansas, accusing him of being backward and small-minded. Of more serious concern have been parents who, learning of UC's disapproval of proposed courses, worried about their children's university eligibility."They've said, 'Well what are we going to do now? What if we want our kids to go to UC schools?'" Mr. Starr said.He has had to reassure parents that the school is not using the disapproved courses or textbooks, in order to ensure students remain fully eligible for admission. That hampers the school from fulfilling its mission, he said: not simply to teach academic subjects, but to teach a Christian worldview."We teach to the whole child, to that spirit that may be lying dormant within them," he said. "We want them to understand that Christ upholds the universe and we want that thinking to become second nature to them."For the University of California, that may be precisely the problem. A hearing on the university's motion to dismiss is set for Dec. 12.•Copyright © 2005 WORLD MagazineNovember 26, 2005, Vol. 20, No. 46 Say what you want about BJU, but that physics textbook is quite adequate. This is pure politics.
12/12/2005 11:14:48 PM
and speaking of eminent domain:I'M NATIVE AMERICAN. GIVE ME BACK MY LAND YOU BASTARD. IM THE RIGHTFUL OWNER.
12/12/2005 11:25:09 PM
holy shit, this guy is either a Mormon, in Triangle Cult, or Grace Community Cult.
12/12/2005 11:27:09 PM
that article doesnt really have that much to do with what we are talking aboutyou can post it a few more times but its not going to change that
12/12/2005 11:27:43 PM
I'm (1/64)th american indian, I got dibs as well.
12/12/2005 11:28:04 PM
12/12/2005 11:28:47 PM
if he did, i suspect he would exercise rational thought.
12/12/2005 11:29:32 PM
i'm so glad that the Christian founders of this nation (sure i'll give them to you, whatever) set this nation up free of gov't mandated/supported/run religionso i have the choice to never sit in a pew next to you, or let my kids' beliefs be sculpted in your ideals
12/12/2005 11:32:38 PM
^^^^^No, it is precisely what I was talking about, the fact that the american education establishment is trending towards eradicating the Christian worldview in education. That article clearly indicates that there are very real threats to Christian religious freedom in this country. The schools in California are in effect making it illegal to teach a Christian world view in certian classes. If that is not pertinent to the discussion here then I give up.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 11:35 PM. Reason : ^^^^^]
12/12/2005 11:33:41 PM
^^^^the fuck you dontim, like, 1/2. we fought your oppressive union army to keep our land and lost it. your oppressive gov. took my land, give it back.and i wouldnt want my kid going within 10 feet of any BJU related stuff. im with UC on this, keep that inferior garbage out of the schools. its physics, not philosophy, dont go changing it.V if you believe in righting the case of a gov. taking the private property of citizens, then you wouldnt say that. you lose.[Edited on December 12, 2005 at 11:37 PM. Reason : .]
12/12/2005 11:34:30 PM
the other 63/64 of me says get over it you lost.
12/12/2005 11:36:25 PM
Those, folks, are the words of a good christian.
12/12/2005 11:38:28 PM
all that article shows is california trying to standardize a curriculum and prevent people from using a shitty book
12/12/2005 11:39:00 PM
hehe, triangle church
12/12/2005 11:40:02 PM
12/12/2005 11:40:07 PM
public schools here in nc had no problem sponsoring the reading of the koran
12/12/2005 11:41:59 PM