speaker
41p13 comments posted · 0 followers · following 0
16 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · +1 points
My fingers are crossed!
16 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · +3 points
Just FYI, the entire speech was posted online at whitehouse.gov before he made it, complete with educational aids developed by teachers. He did not change it after the "uproar" started. How do you think the news media and NEA knew what was in the speech?
My husband and I eat dinner with our children after helping them with homework as well. It's a pretty common practice. Doesn't change the fact that the speech was a good one.
Keep politics out of it. The speech was a good thing. Honor the offices of your leaders. Do you read your bible?
16 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · +2 points
16 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · +5 points
I don't understand your reference to your kitchen table. I've never had the distinct honor of having any president sitting at my kitchen table, but you can bet your boots that I would be thrilled if it happened, no matter which president it was!
16 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 3 replies · +6 points
NancySmith's responses to this article have me outraged enough to chime in on this debate. I'm sorry Nancy, but politics have no place in education. As a teacher, I'm very pleased that this president cared enough about our future to address children. That has so much more weight than whatever political maneuvering might be occuring in Washington on any given day. I'm sure many children will remember this speech for the rest of their lives, the same way we remember the moon landing. Let's hope and pray that the speech does what it was intended to do - inspire children to be good students and productive future citizens.
16 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 2 replies · +5 points
17 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · -3 points
IF, the accusation is proven false, he still will not be able to return to his job as a teacher without sideways looks, snickered comments and whispers behind his back. Any future student with a grudge can make a similar false accuation, and then the comments will be something along the lines of "where there's smoke, there's fire" or certainty that because there's been two accusations it must be true. I sincerely hope he will come back, but if I were him I wouldn't. His family has been affected, his reputation ruined, and he's been publicly criticized and railed. This will follow him for as long as he lives in the community, even after being found innocent. Imagine for one minute the long term ramifications.
17 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · 0 points
17 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · +3 points
I wish everyone would remember that "innocent until found guilty" part.
Sometimes charges have to be filed because of certain laws and/or politics of a situation. An arrest is not the same as a conviction. Let's leave the execution until the rest of due process has run its course, shall we?
17 years ago @ SalisburyPost.com -- Y... - SalisburyPost.com - Ar... · 0 replies · -2 points
Yeah. Where do you think the investigator finds out the facts of the case? Hmmm.