http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/27/opinion/27friedman.html?hp
This speaks to what I have been thinking about lately: I can't understand why a person who supported President Obama in the last election would not vote for the Democrats this time; do they really want to go back to where we were? So what if he has not done enough and has tried too hard to get Republican support; his efforts are better than the alternative;
and
why don't Republicans understand that the current group of Tea Party candidates are not really interested in making our country the best it can be...why has the Republican Party let itself be taken over by the Glen Beck community? as Friedman writes, why are television preachers listened to more than our best scientists and engineers....good questions I think. I just wish more people would ask themselves some of these questions.
A dysfunctional political system is one that knows the right answers but can?t even discuss them rationally, let alone act on them, and one that devotes vastly more attention to cable TV preachers than to recommendations by its best scientists and engineers.
Here is a little dose of reality about where we actually rank today,? says Vest: sixth in global innovation-based competitiveness, but 40th in rate of change over the last decade; 11th among industrialized nations in the fraction of 25- to 34-year-olds who have graduated from high school; 16th in college completion rate; 22nd in broadband Internet access; 24th in life expectancy at birth; 27th among developed nations in the proportion of college students receiving degrees in science or engineering; 48th in quality of K-12 math and science education; and 29th in the number of mobile phones per 100 people.
?This is not a pretty picture, and it cannot be wished away,? said Vest. The study recommended a series of steps ? some that President Obama has already initiated, some that still need Congress?s support ? designed to increase America?s talent pool by vastly improving K-12 science and mathematics education, to reinforce long-term basic research, and to create the right tax and policy incentives so we can develop, recruit and retain the best and brightest students, scientists and engineers in the world. The goal is to make America the premier place to innovate and invest in innovation to create high-paying jobs.
You?ll have to Google it, though. The report hasn?t received 1/100th of the attention given to Juan Williams?s remarks on Muslims.
This speaks to what I have been thinking about lately: I can't understand why a person who supported President Obama in the last election would not vote for the Democrats this time; do they really want to go back to where we were? So what if he has not done enough and has tried too hard to get Republican support; his efforts are better than the alternative;
and
why don't Republicans understand that the current group of Tea Party candidates are not really interested in making our country the best it can be...why has the Republican Party let itself be taken over by the Glen Beck community? as Friedman writes, why are television preachers listened to more than our best scientists and engineers....good questions I think. I just wish more people would ask themselves some of these questions.
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but Newt Gingrich gets my nod for that position.