Author Topic: Florida pols to voters: you’re morons and conspiracy wackos for not loving Common Core  (Read 780 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline katzenjammer

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,512
Florida pols to voters: you’re morons and conspiracy wackos for not loving Common Core

http://dailycaller.com/2013/11/14/florida-pols-to-voters-youre-morons-and-conspiracy-wackos-for-not-loving-common-core/#ixzz2ke9eAZGk

A large number of seemingly intractable issues divide Republicans and Democrats these days. Nevertheless, two members of the Florida Senate have united to insult voters who disagree with the state’s adoption and implementation of the Common Core curriculum.

This week, state Sen. Jeremy Ring, who represents a ritzy sliver of Broward County, suggested that critics of Common Core are a bunch of simpletons who erroneously believe the curriculum is a massive federal government scheme, reports the Sun Sentinel.

“I think what’s been mistaken is Common Core still does allow for a lot of local control and a lot of local decision-making,” Ring said. “And I think the people that are opposed to Common Core for some reason think that the federal government is making all the decisions.”

Ring then asserted that the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, one of the signature pieces of legislation from George W. Bush’s first term, is a more accurate example of a federal program that causes a loss of local control.

“I am fine with Common Core,” Ring added.

Meanwhile, Florida Senate President Don Gaetz, a Republican from the state’s Panhandle, has demonstrated far less diplomatic acumen than his Democratic colleague. He flat-out ridiculed voters who opposed the Common Core—dismissing them as fringe political loons.

Earlier this month, Gaetz insisted that Common Core is a set of “good, solid standards”

“You can’t dip them in milk and hold them over a candle and see the United Nations flag or Barack Obama’s face,” Gaetz said, according to the Sunshine State News. “They’re not some federal conspiracy.”

Excerpted, read more at link.

Oceander

  • Guest
I'm fine with Common Core too; I'm not fine with the asinine way that states have been implementing the new standards, but the standards themselves are a step in the right direction.