The U.S. Department of Education: spending $1 billion a year to promote practices at odds with the Constitution https://t.co/DGIBwYM8bD
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) December 27, 2024
Thirty countries now outperform the United States in mathematics at the high school level. Many are ahead in science, too. ACooperation and Development, the millennials in our workforce tied for last on tests of mathematics and problem solving among the millennials in the workforces of all the industrial countries tested. We now have the worst-educated workforce in the industrialized world. Because our workers are among the most highly paid in the world, that makes a lot of Americans uncompetitive in the global economy. And uncompetitive against increasingly smart machines. It is a formula for a grim future.
The idea of significantly boosting the achievement of the average American high school graduate and making American workers once again the best educated in the world, coming from the bottom of the pack, seems like a pipe dream. After all, there has been no improvement in high school math and reading scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress after more than 40 years of trying every “proven practice” we can think of.
In honor of Jimmy Carter passing away, so should the Department of Education and national teachers unions.
— TimOnPoint (@TimOnPoint) December 29, 2024
As a presidential candidate in 1976, Carter promised the National Education Association that he would push for a separate education department, a goal the NEA had sought for a century. In return, the nation’s largest teachers’ union made the first presidential endorsement in its then-117-year history.
No Child Left Behind did more to hinder education. AP classes were discontinued. STEM was not promoted. Mediocrity was achieved.
— theoiler 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@PebvVan) December 27, 2024
As the tributes roll in before America bids farewell to Jimmy Carter, current global turbulence provides fresh reminders that the decisions the late 39th president made in office continue to impact the world four decades later and present both challenges and opportunities for the man about to assume the White House for a second term.
Many of the issues confronting President-elect Donald Trump – Iran, the Panama Canal, the Education Department and appeasement diplomacy – have their roots in the Carter presidency, a reality that can’t be erased by the significant humanitarian achievements the former president aggregated after he left office or the widely recognized kindness of the God-fearing, Navy-serving peanut farmer who lived to be 100.
“I don't think there's anyone that would say a bad thing about him, personally,” said Nicholas Giordano, a political science professor at Suffolk Community College and a popular podcaster. “He was genuinely a good and decent human being.
“But it shows you that sometimes being good and decent isn't necessarily equating to success as president,” he added.
Many are trying to gloss over that unsuccessful presidency by touting Carter's "decency" and humanitarian efforts and thinking they should outweigh the barnacles and poisonous policy he created that is still destroying America and American lives.
With impeachments and Russia nonsense, President Donald Trump 1.0 could do little to try and reform the DOE. However, President-elect Donald Trump will be inaugurated in 20 days. In the Trump Presidency 2.0, the President-elect has made a Day One promise to abolish Carter's DOE.
WATCH:
Washington bureaucrats have had their chance, and they’ve failed. It’s time to let states lead the way.
— Dawn Buckingham (@DrBuckinghamTX) December 29, 2024
Local control means better schools, less red tape, and more opportunities for our kids.
Eliminating the Department of Education is a step toward empowering states and… pic.twitter.com/ClaoElFnRA
Washington bureaucrats have had their chance, and they’ve failed. It’s time to let states lead the way. Local control means better schools, less red tape, and more opportunities for our kids. Eliminating the Department of Education is a step toward empowering states and communities to decide what’s best for their students.
And with the recent social media throw-down over H1-B visas and America's lack of educational prowess being the reason why we need to import foreign workers, it's pretty apparent the abolishment of the Department of Education could not come soon enough.
Jimmy Carter - R.I.P. 2024
— Robert Bortins (@TheRobertBshow) December 31, 2024
Department of Education - R.I.P. 2025
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