pull down to refresh

Remanding DoE back to the states is the constitutional base case, but just step 1:
From Agenda 47:
"As President, it was my honor to support America’s homeschool families—and to protect the God-given right of every parent to be the steward of their children’s education," President Trump said.
President Trump pledged to allow homeschool parents to use 529 education savings accounts to spend up to $10,000 a year per child, completely tax-free to spend on costs associated with homeschool education.
I currently pay 10-15k to a local school system we don't use, very few people are in a position to do that, yet we meet so many other parents that "wish" they could homeschool. The economics of public schools put so much undue stress on these families, usually because one parent is working a pointless frustrating fiat job just to break even outsourcing their childcare... that creates friction in the marriage and beyond. Public ed in its current form destroys so many households, can't wait to see us retvrn to real community.
I'm glad you're able to do that for your family. Hopefully, they make good on these promises.
reply
I think the Linda McMahon pick for secretary is a good indication of intent, it won't be business as usual... the question that remains is what kind of resistance will need to be dealt with.
Taking the totality of all things that need to be gutted, and the expected resistance to each, I'm under no illusion it'll just go smoothly. My bets have been on a constitutional convention at some point soon over the next few years and we're watching the staging.
Popcorn ready.
reply
I've wondered about the possibility of a constitutional convention, too.
The public is going to learn a lot about how entrenched these bureaucracies are. I hope they have more success gutting them than I expect. It's hard for me to imagine four years being enough time to get much accomplished, considering the resistance that's going to be faced.
reply
The public is going to learn
Exactly, let's look backwards to understand what we've learned already...
Ignoring all else, the debt issue alone is I think is a signal towards a constitutional convention:
They made the money laundering to the tune of hundreds of billions via Ukraine super obvious, despite how unpopular it was, presumably to open peoples eyes as to how this system works more broadly- and thus how most of our debt is illegitimate.
Sprinkle in the context of those billions under an illegitimate white house, where anyone rational had to question who was actually in charge, given the dementia patient on set, pandemic psyop election now resulting in 15+M missing dem votes... and so on... it's all a justification for a debt default, and a default = constitutional convention.
four years being enough time
Yep, now let's posit that it started pre-2016 when Trump won an election "by surprise". That's 8 years of setting the stage for a default... now in this 4 years the bandaid comes off... a bandaid we couldn't have removed 2016-2020
reply
There's a looming government shutdown. The smart thing for the Trump administration would be to inherit the shutdown and take the opportunity to push their reforms through. Only bring back the parts and personnel that they want to move forward with.
reply
Good point, and we've had a number of showdowns over the shutdown/debt ceiling over the years... actually the last one is how the speaker of the house changed hands.
Trump inheriting a shutdown government, what a coincidence timing wise ;)
reply
Wow, so instead of having a full educational system full of innovations to improve the future of the country, it has become an ordeal?
reply
The purpose of a system is what it does, and what the system does is protect rent-seekers from innovation and liability... this was always its intent.
reply