Archive for 2022

YES: The Biggest Education Innovation Is Growing Use of School Choice.

Just how much the world has changed came home to me when the tech at my eye doctor’s office asked about my son, who attended a charter school with her daughter when the kids were younger. I mentioned that he was thriving as a homeschooler and had just started a laboratory biology class at the community college. Her daughter was also homeschooled, she told me. The girl was technically enrolled in the public high school now, but that was mostly to gain access to community college courses. Her daughter already had two years of college credits put away.

“Northern Arizona University offered her a free ride for the last two years,” she told me.

This conversation would have been almost unthinkable when I was in school. But the world has morphed dramatically since then, especially when it comes to our attitude towards education.

Teachers who spent the better part of two years refusing to teach opened a lot of eyes.

WHAT STANDUP COMEDY AND BEING A LAW SCHOOL DEAN HAVE IN COMMON.

What Bob Saget practiced was emotional stage diving. He would fall face-first into the audience’s arms. If the audience didn’t trust him enough to catch him with their laughs, it would be worse than smashing onto a concrete floor.

The Beat poet Allen Ginsberg understood that this kind of gamble was intrinsic to great art. He is said to have said, “The poet always stands naked before the world.” I think there’s more to it. The artist must bravely say, “I am going to show the world who I am, and I trust that someone will understand.”

Real art, beautiful art, is always a scary act of trust. We look to art to see another person’s heart. That human connection is all that matters. For me, it is a reason to live.

I first got to know Bob when we were shooting The Aristocrats, an arty documentary from 2005 where we recorded comics telling the filthiest version they could of an inside comedy joke. …

Bob was as naked and vulnerable as any artist I’ve ever seen. He stripped down. He showed us his insides. His comedy proved his nice-guy image. Bob said the most offensive things anyone had ever heard, and we loved him not despite it, but because of it.

Another thing they have in common is that only a few people are really, really good at either, but a lot more attempt it.

BIDEN CAN BARELY EXPLOIT HIS PUDDING CUP: How Biden can exploit China’s weakness: Russia and China are more vulnerable than we think.

The problem isn’t America, but what passes for its leadership:

America’s cognitive elites may seem enamoured with China’s state-controlled political system, but for much of the country, this remains the land of Jefferson and Lincoln, not the Yellow Emperor. Despite the pandemic, new business formations rose from roughly 3.5 million in 2019 to 4.4 million last year. Self-employment, pummelled at first, has recovered more rapidly than conventional salary jobs; more than 500,000 Americans reinvented themselves as entrepreneurs.

Arguably the greatest test for American renewal lies in manufacturing, precisely the place China has based its ascendancy. Here Trump’s “America First” mantra is echoed in the demands of Biden’s progressive agenda: in just the past three months, Congress has passed The BuyAmerican.gov Act, The Make PPE in America Act, as well as recent legislation banning the import of good produced using slave labor in Xinjiang.

This is not only good policy but good politics; Americans, at least theoretically, are willing to pay higher prices for domestically produced goods; an overwhelming majority, according to one recent survey, would even fork out 20% more for products produced at home. No doubt this desire to reshore production reflects the pain associated with the mounting deficit on trade goods, which has enriched many of our leading manufacturing companies — notably Apple — but has also cost an estimated 3.4 million job losses since 2001.

That also goes some way to explaining why America’s industrial revival is occurring largely outside coastal affluent ‘mini-Europes’. Between 2017 and 2020, five states — Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Nevada — accounted for 30% of all manufacturing job growth. Perhaps more important is the fact that, along with reviving Midwest states like Ohio, Iowa and Indiana, these states tend to have lower taxes, housing costs and less regulation than their coastal counterparts. . . .

This industrial renaissance is critical if the West is to address its ruinous dependence on China — made all too evident during the pandemic and the current supply chain crisis. And yet it is also likely to elicit opposition from our own largely pro-China elites, who seem more willing to appease rather than confront Beijing.

Well, that’s because they’re bribed. And didn’t much like America, or most Americans, to start with. The question is why America, and Americans, allow them to remain in their places of influence.

MEANWHILE, OVER AT VODKAPUNDIT: Joe Biden: A Failing and Flailing President. “‘Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to f*** things up,’ former President Barack Obama is supposed to have quipped about Joe Biden during the 2020 primaries, and after his first year in office, no one will ever underestimate this failing and flailing president’s ability to do just that.”

Much more at the link.

EVERYTHING IS GOING SWIMMINGLY: The Coming “Spudpocalypse.”

A new advertising campaign warns of an impending “spudpocalypse,” chipping into potato supplies and driving price spikes in Massachusetts as Prince Edward Island tubers are hit with a moratorium on exports.

“Shelves will soon be bare … help us stop the spudpocalypse,” blares a video clip for the ad campaign’s new website — spudpocalypse.com. The spot that also features a hand labeled “USDA” swatting away cartoon potatoes as a crunchy rock guitar grooves.

The campaign, from the PEI Potato Board — an industry group for the Canadian province’s spud growers — is meant to gin up public pressure here in potato-hungry Massachusetts after Canadian and U.S. food safety authorities cut the export of potatoes from Prince Edward Island over fears of “potato wart.”

The Prince Edward Island version of Big Potato is targeting Massachusetts because the spud-loving Bay State accounts for an outsized number of Prince Edward Island potatoes in the U.S. One of the few big potato-packers in the area says they have a point.

Greg Maheris, who runs potato distributor J Maheris Co. in Chelsea, said he’s seen a drop of about 30% in the total number of spuds coming in. He normally sees upward of about 70,000 pounds of Prince Edward Island potatoes — so the lack of them is leading to fewer spuds at higher prices, especially in concert with a bad growing year out west in the midst of heat, fires and transportation issues.

“It’s going to be awful — store shelves are already empty,” said Maheris, who operates out of the New England Produce Center in an industrial area of the city sandwiched between the Mystic Mall and the old King Arthur’s Lounge.

He said there’s only a handful of people left in the region who do what he does, which is import potatoes, sort them, bag them up and send them to grocery stores.

“Potatoes always have been a cheap, good ingredient for people to put on the table, and now that could change,” he said.

Well, that’s okay, it’s not like food is getting more expensive in general.

SPINNING ROUND ROUND ROUND:  Round The Bend.

LET’S GO BRANDON: Pump sticker in Spokane, Washington today.

And if that were all…

REMEMBER OBAMA PICKED ZHOE BAI-DEN DUE TO HIS FOREIGN POLICY EXPERTISE:   State Department To American Civilians: Leave Ukraine.

And possibly his expertise putting weasels down his pants in public.

I want to apologize to everyone to whom I asked “Are you sure Biden is worse than Obama?” You were right, I was wrong.

K-12 IMPLOSION UPDATE:

Related:

Note the crazed reaction from the “professional educators.

UPDATE: Ouch:

Public school teachers — and unions — are the best argument against public education.

Related:

JULIETTE OCHIENG: Ukraine and the Bidens: Reviewing a Couple of Pieces of the Corruption Puzzle. “My purpose here is to remind readers of what went on with respect to Ukraine and the Bidens when Donald Trump was president. Remember: Ukraine was an integral part of Former President Trump’s first impeachment.”

If you like it, hit her tipjar.

#RESIST: A reader sends this and notes: “Saw this in Chantilly VA, near Dulles airport, tonight. $3.76 is near the top end for the past few years.”