Student Loans the Next Bubble to Pop?

For decades American students were afforded low tuition rates and manageable college costs, however in the face of declining government revenues over the last decade, higher education has frequently been the target of budget cuts. At the same times more and more families have struggled to help their children pay for college. This has created a situation in which college costs are rising dramatically, at the same time that many working and Middle Class families are no longer able to support their children. Read the Rest of the Article

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The Decline of the U.S. Education System: Whose Fault Is It Anyways?

News recently broke that the largest test score scandal in U.S. history has been discovered in Atlanta, Georgia. According to the allegations, teachers and administrators have been changing student’s answers on standardized tests, causing test scores to rise. Since test scores are now the primary funding factor for most schools at both the federal and state levels, higher test scores equate to more funding. Lower test scores can lead to firings and even school closures. Read the Rest of the Article

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Dangerous Shift

Mr. Moore says it better than I can. Read the Rest of the Article

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Cultural Difference

As more and more pictures and stories arise from the tragedy in Japan, a few things become apparent. Firstly that the wake of destruction is beyond belief. Secondly, the Japanese as a people have delt with this in a manner that is foreign to almost anywhere else in the world, including Asia. Complete and utter peace, complete cooperation, complete unity. What is that gives them quality? Is this lack of outward sorrow healthy? How would other parts of the world react given the same circumstances? Read the Rest of the Article

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American Wars

With the onset of a third American middle eastern military engagement, by what virtue are we going to war? As world poilce, to protect our interests, to stemmy an impending attack? And what makes any of these reasons ligitamate in a global society? Are we honor bound by the UN to act as their attack hound or are we still in control? Read the Rest of the Article

Posted in International, Uncategorized | 13 Comments

The Decline of the Middle Class?

The unemployment rate, thankfully, has finally begun to drop in the United States, however evidence (linked below) suggests that the jobs being created are not high income Middle Class jobs but instead low wage, or part time, service jobs. This is important both for individuals struggling to pay their bills and for the economy as a whole. For decades the world economy has been drivien by the “consumer class” in the United States but now that class of people seems to be in decline. What ramifications could this have? Read the Rest of the Article

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Seeds of Failure?

I am coming to the general conclusion that the continued failures of our country lie in the fundamental flaws of our culture, specifically greed. Companies and corporates concern themselves only with short term profits, taxpayers concern themselves only with their immediate paycheck, politicians concern themselves only with their constituents and campaign supporters. General Motors, for example, kept building huge trucks and SUV’s because they had the highest profit margins, even though oil prices would inevitably rise with globalization, and past experiences with the Oil Crisis of the 70′s proved that high gas prices meant people would not buy gas guzzling trucks. GM failed, the government had to bail them out. But this leads to our next interesting example, many Taxpayers were up in arms about the bailout despite the fact that GM is one of the last few companies in the US providing hundreds of thousands of decent paying jobs to middle class people. Taxpayers were only concerned that their money, at the moment, was going to GM, even though the cost of unemployment for the hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of people who would have lost their jobs, would have likely outweighed the cost of the bailout. All the while politicians are only reacting according to party lines, and the wants of their biggest supporters. But will this really lead to a good society, or self destruction? What are your views on the matter? Read the Rest of the Article

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Protests in Wisconsin

Currently, the state legislators in Wisconsin is moving to essentially outlaw unionizing about government workers, which raises the question; Is such a move a violation of the fundamental freedoms of an individual? Personally, I am rather suspicious of unions in the United States, as they often emphasize a “me-me-me” attitude, and in my limited experience I have seen evidence of the assertion that unions promote lazy, over-protected, and consequentially overpaid workers. On the other hand, when unions were born during the battles for workers’ rights in the early 20th century they were essential. Further, a bill that out right unionizing seems, to me, to violate the individual freedoms that are granted to American citizens, and premise the entire existence of our nation. What do you think? Read the Rest of the Article

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The Health Care Catch 22

With health care reform coming back into the limelight soon because of the vote to repeal and the state lawsuits on the horizon, now seemed like a good time to break down the true nature of said reform and to ask a few questions about healthcare in general.
First lets look to our neighbors in the north and perhaps make some comparisons to ourselvs. Many people on both sides of the aisle have either demonized or given creedence to the Canadian system. While both have valid points and problems, it is a fact that their system is working now, but there is a substancial push for there to be more private industry involved. And there is a reason for it. In Ontario, average wait times for general surgery is 99 days, for breast cancer surgery 33 days, for angioplasty 18 days and for a knee replacement 181 days. In America, the wait is nill. But that being said, Canadians do not pay for seein their FP doctors nor their hospital stays. And their ER waits are compararable to ours. The rub is that you cannot change doctors once you have one.
So in America, we have a quite different situation. Canada has almost no immigration that they do not control, ie have tax procedures for. The US does. And they contribute in a large portion to those who are uninsured or on medicaid.
Perhaps the solution is lowering the amount of care given to patients on the government plan. Not the standard of practice, simply the scope. Life saving treatments and (within reason and proven method) prevenitive services. Leave the rest to industry. Read the Rest of the Article

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What Would A “Good” Government Look Like?

The debate around what type of government we should have almost always focuses on the size of a government. Should it be big? Should it be small? But why start with that question? Shouldn’t we ask what a good government should look like first, and then from there figure out the size of government? So then, what should a good government look like? What should its responsibilities be? What should its limitations be? Read the Rest of the Article

Posted in Theory | 22 Comments