Smart gun laws
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There are no smart gun laws
I think you've stated my assertion incorrectly. It should be less government education is better. Educational quality improves on the private market (just like everything else). So would the volume of education. Mars' data is a red herring. Sure spending is greater in wealthier countries, that doesn't mean it's even correlated with outcomes (not even addressed in the study Mars cited).ABYUFAN wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 10:07 amThat kind of cuts both ways. If you had any data to support the idea that less education is better I'd love to see thatjvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 1:13 amBecause you have data to back that up? Go check the data on individuals, even very poor ones, who pay for their own education. Then come back and let us know what you find. it can be like one of those reports you did in one of your government schools.
How about you back up any of your knee jerk reactions with a shred of data showing they'll have the slightest impact and then rejoin the conversation.
My real point is there is more data that privatizing education will decrease school violence than there is that enacting any gun laws will decrease violence at schools. It is simple fact that less violence occurs at private schools - there are fewer fights, less bullying, fewer gang members, fewer threats against and attacks on teachers, and, of course, fewer shootings (https://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo. ... id=2014042).
I had a post with a bunch of studies from Africa outlining the benefits of having parents (and the kids themselves) pay for part of their education in terms of educational outcomes (lost most of it when i tried to post this the first time). Liberia is currently the big experiment and you can look up how the country is outsourcing education to private contractors. The initial reports are that kids in private schools perform far better than those in public schools (despite teachers in the private schools only taking a five week course in teaching). I don't think charter schools are the best idea but any step toward privatization is better than what we currently have.
Of course, the teacher's unions in Uganda and Kenya (and the teacher's unions in Liberia are trying the same thing) have been able to repress the private schools there with ridiculous barriers to entry, but that is an example of the current system of government schools barring entry into education at the behest of union thugs. The private schools are refusing to close in Uganda and Kenya despite the government mandates because the parents recognize what's going on.
There isn't a ton of good data in the US regarding parents paying for schools - everyone will say it's skewed due to socioeconomic disparities among students at private schools. But here's an article that says that college students who pay for their own schooling get better grades than those whose parents pay for their schooling.
In Africa the data is compelling for parents, even very poor parents, who pay for their children's primary and secondary education. In places like Kenya, though, even though private primary school students perform better than public schools in poor neighborhoods, acceptance into secondary schools is limited to 1/4 from private schools and 3/4 from public schools. Good on the union thugs for preserving their piece of the pie though, right Mars?
The real benefit of private schools is that they are accountable to their customers. Government schools not so much. There's a reason people go after gun manufacturers and not government employees. Make the schools and teachers financially responsible for the safety of the students and you'd see a huge change in student safety. You don't even need that - imagine if there were a shooting at a private school and parents found out the kid who did it was a known troublemaker to the school. That school would shut down in a minute as all the parents would withdraw their children. You need some sort of financial responsibility from the school. There is none at the government school.
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Re: Smart gun laws
Missed this gem. Why don't you tell us how the guys with semiautomatic weapons are faring against the guys with tanks, helicopters, and drones in Afghanistan and Yemen?
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Re: There are no smart gun laws
How much of this is due to what you said previously?jvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 1:56 pm
My real point is there is more data that privatizing education will decrease school violence than there is that enacting any gun laws will decrease violence at schools. It is simple fact that less violence occurs at private schools - there are fewer fights, less bullying, fewer gang members, fewer threats against and attacks on teachers, and, of course, fewer shootings (https://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo. ... id=2014042).
If you're a problem child at a private school you quickly find yourself out of private school.jvquarterback wrote: ↑Tue Feb 20, 2018 6:45 pm You don't hear about this sort of thing at private schools and there's a reason for that. People should evaluate those reasons. At the very least we should expect the children being educated to pay for their education. There is ample evidence that when people are invested in their learning they perform better scholastically. The private schools in my area tout the fact that they will immediately expel anyone involved in a gang. And gang violence at schools is a much bigger deal than these one off shootings. The chances of being attacked by another student or the victim of any crime is much lower at private schools.
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Re: There are no smart gun laws
Do you believe that a private education system would result in more educational opportunities than government run education? If not, then I've stated your position correctly.jvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 1:56 pmI think you've stated my assertion incorrectly. It should be less government education is better. Educational quality improves on the private market (just like everything else). So would the volume of education. Mars' data is a red herring. Sure spending is greater in wealthier countries, that doesn't mean it's even correlated with outcomes (not even addressed in the study Mars cited).ABYUFAN wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 10:07 amThat kind of cuts both ways. If you had any data to support the idea that less education is better I'd love to see thatjvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 1:13 amBecause you have data to back that up? Go check the data on individuals, even very poor ones, who pay for their own education. Then come back and let us know what you find. it can be like one of those reports you did in one of your government schools.
How about you back up any of your knee jerk reactions with a shred of data showing they'll have the slightest impact and then rejoin the conversation.
My real point is there is more data that privatizing education will decrease school violence than there is that enacting any gun laws will decrease violence at schools. It is simple fact that less violence occurs at private schools - there are fewer fights, less bullying, fewer gang members, fewer threats against and attacks on teachers, and, of course, fewer shootings (https://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo. ... id=2014042).
I had a post with a bunch of studies from Africa outlining the benefits of having parents (and the kids themselves) pay for part of their education in terms of educational outcomes (lost most of it when i tried to post this the first time). Liberia is currently the big experiment and you can look up how the country is outsourcing education to private contractors. The initial reports are that kids in private schools perform far better than those in public schools (despite teachers in the private schools only taking a five week course in teaching). I don't think charter schools are the best idea but any step toward privatization is better than what we currently have.
Of course, the teacher's unions in Uganda and Kenya (and the teacher's unions in Liberia are trying the same thing) have been able to repress the private schools there with ridiculous barriers to entry, but that is an example of the current system of government schools barring entry into education at the behest of union thugs. The private schools are refusing to close in Uganda and Kenya despite the government mandates because the parents recognize what's going on.
There isn't a ton of good data in the US regarding parents paying for schools - everyone will say it's skewed due to socioeconomic disparities among students at private schools. But here's an article that says that college students who pay for their own schooling get better grades than those whose parents pay for their schooling.
In Africa the data is compelling for parents, even very poor parents, who pay for their children's primary and secondary education. In places like Kenya, though, even though private primary school students perform better than public schools in poor neighborhoods, acceptance into secondary schools is limited to 1/4 from private schools and 3/4 from public schools. Good on the union thugs for preserving their piece of the pie though, right Mars?
The real benefit of private schools is that they are accountable to their customers. Government schools not so much. There's a reason people go after gun manufacturers and not government employees. Make the schools and teachers financially responsible for the safety of the students and you'd see a huge change in student safety. You don't even need that - imagine if there were a shooting at a private school and parents found out the kid who did it was a known troublemaker to the school. That school would shut down in a minute as all the parents would withdraw their children. You need some sort of financial responsibility from the school. There is none at the government school.
this is the best line from your post above " But here's an article that says that college students who pay for their own schooling get better grades than those whose parents pay for their schooling."
Let that sink in - you're proposing that not only do we have private schools, but that Johnny should be forced to work to pay for his time in the second grade, because he'll be perform better.
Also when you kick the trouble maker out of grade school under your new system - where does that trouble maker go? Are we sentencing 6 year olds to a lifetime with no education because their parents beat them up the night before?
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Re: Smart gun laws
1- You didn't read my link if you think it didn't explicitly make the correlation I stated. It did. The statistic is percentage of GDP spent on education, not total spending.
2- Your first argument is that kids in private school do better than kids in public schools. That is true. It's the same thing as saying kids with rich parents have better opportunities than kids with poor parents. But it doesn't support the crazy jump in logic you make next.
3- You are claiming that no education is better than public education. Those without money to pay for private school would receive no education at all. This is simply foolish, and easily refuted (as I've already done).
If my main goal in life is not to eat poisoned food, I could starve myself to death. That's not really useful though. Destroying public education to stop school shootings is equally illogical.
2- Your first argument is that kids in private school do better than kids in public schools. That is true. It's the same thing as saying kids with rich parents have better opportunities than kids with poor parents. But it doesn't support the crazy jump in logic you make next.
3- You are claiming that no education is better than public education. Those without money to pay for private school would receive no education at all. This is simply foolish, and easily refuted (as I've already done).
If my main goal in life is not to eat poisoned food, I could starve myself to death. That's not really useful though. Destroying public education to stop school shootings is equally illogical.
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Re: There are no smart gun laws
First, let me reiterate my point once again. There is more data supporting the idea that closing government run schools will decrease school violence than there is evidence any changes to gun laws will reduce school violence. So why are people only talking about gun control and not changes to schools? You know the answer.
Imagine for a moment government schools in Utah were abolished. How many kids would be turned away from the elementary and secondary schools the church would begin to operate (much more efficiently than the current government schools)? Do the same thing in California and you would see a huge improvement in BYU recruiting, not to mention the societal changes we all know are more important than any gun control measure.
Absolutely. I'll wait for you or Mars to give me one example of a good that the government yielded to private markets that has decreased in volume produced. Airplanes, telephones, you name it, when the government gets out of any business, options improve tremendously. And somehow even the poorest of the poor in Africa can afford their $30 smartphones.
I am proposing no such thing. I admit there is little data for this in the US, but there is ample data from developing countries that parents, even those in abject poverty, who contribute monetarily to their children's education have children who perform significantly better than those attending government schools. Many of these children receive significant tuition assistance from private donations, much as happens at private Catholic schools in the US. I'm not sure if having Johnny work for his supper will help at younger ages, but making his parents work for it sure will. And no one can argue parents in the US are even close to facing the financial difficulties of parents in Africa.
Imagine for a moment government schools in Utah were abolished. How many kids would be turned away from the elementary and secondary schools the church would begin to operate (much more efficiently than the current government schools)? Do the same thing in California and you would see a huge improvement in BYU recruiting, not to mention the societal changes we all know are more important than any gun control measure.
I think you underestimate humanity here. In a church run school people would rush to help that kid in a way no government school could replicate.
And how does that spending correlate to outcomes? Rich countries spend more on education - sounds like something the government would spend several billion dollars to figure out. The study you cite doesn't address outcomes. You're welcome to post any of the graphs from the study you like.
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Re: There are no smart gun laws
do you mean like hospitals, railroads and the US Mail?jvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 4:58 pm
Absolutely. I'll wait for you or Mars to give me one example of a good that the government yielded to private markets that has decreased in volume produced. Airplanes, telephones, you name it, when the government gets out of any business, options improve tremendously. And somehow even the poorest of the poor in Africa can afford their $30 smartphones.
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Re: There are no smart gun laws
Write me back when the government leaves those to private businesses. Even with government subsidies, surgery centers charge significantly less for better care than hospitals, private railroads still thrive, and believe it or not there is a lot more communication these days facilitated by private email servers at google than were sent in the history of the US Mail at a fraction of the price.ABYUFAN wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 6:04 pmdo you mean like hospitals, railroads and the US Mail?jvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 4:58 pm
Absolutely. I'll wait for you or Mars to give me one example of a good that the government yielded to private markets that has decreased in volume produced. Airplanes, telephones, you name it, when the government gets out of any business, options improve tremendously. And somehow even the poorest of the poor in Africa can afford their $30 smartphones.
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Re: There are no smart gun laws
Surgery centers provide significantly less services than hospitals. Surgery centers clearly as you say "decreased in volume produced".jvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 6:22 pmWrite me back when the government leaves those to private businesses. Even with government subsidies, surgery centers charge significantly less for better care than hospitals, private railroads still thrive, and believe it or not there is a lot more communication these days facilitated by private email servers at google than were sent in the history of the US Mail at a fraction of the price.ABYUFAN wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 6:04 pmdo you mean like hospitals, railroads and the US Mail?jvquarterback wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 4:58 pm
Absolutely. I'll wait for you or Mars to give me one example of a good that the government yielded to private markets that has decreased in volume produced. Airplanes, telephones, you name it, when the government gets out of any business, options improve tremendously. And somehow even the poorest of the poor in Africa can afford their $30 smartphones.
You say that private railroads "thrive." If by "thrive" you mean we have no non-government commuter rail travel (outside of the Disneyland Railroad) and that we have fewer actual rail companies than we did 50 years ago we may agree on that point. However, your original statement was that government getting out of a business increases "options improve tremendously" In the rail business that is simply not true.
And google was not able to deliver a package for me to my son on his mission. But it was awfully nice of me to take a picture of my Christmas gift that I bought him and then email that picture to him of his gift. I also had him sign his driver's license renewal and then googled it over to the DMV for him. There are other options for parcel and letter delivery all of which cost more and were no more efficient.
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Re: Smart gun laws
And although students have to pay for a college education, shootings take place at colleges as well.