Thursday, November 30, 2023

Yes, Thanksgiving Dinner Did Cost More

Biden claims this year’s Thanksgiving dinner was the 4th cheapest ever. (It is maybe the 4th cheapest of his 3-year presidency). But facts are hard things to deny, and we’re all facing facts every time we go to a grocery store.


Thanksgiving dinner tasted great, whatever it cost this year.

On his Wednesday night program, Glenn Beck said, “No matter how hard the government tries to gaslight, these things we know. We experience them every day.” 

Beck listed a number of items, and the percentages or amounts they have risen during the Biden presidency:

·        Airfare up 25%

·        House purchase price up 42%

·        Mortgage rates up 4%

·        Rent up 24%

·        Water up 16%

·        Electricity up 25%

·        Electricity in California up 51%

·        Major appliances up 12%

·        Natural gas up 29%

·        Used cars up 35%

·        Car insurance up 33%

·        Gasoline up from $1.80/gal to $3.00/gal

·        Big Mac combo meal $10.00

·        Restaurant food up 24%

·        Ground beef up $2.00

·        Coffee up $2.00

·        Fruits and Vegetables up 14%

·        Dog and cat food up 17%

He compared the weekly grocery bills:

·        2020 $238/week on groceries

·        2023 $315/week on groceries

So groceries overall are up 25%.


Glenn Beck went over some rising prices on his chalkboard,
November 29, 2023, screenshot from here
(also on YouTube here)

That seems to be about what I’m experiencing, but I wondered whether there was data beyond my gut feeling.

It so happened that last week, during the three days before Thanksgiving, without my usual assignments, I cleaned and cooked like crazy. I even took care of the jar where I stuff my grocery receipts (in case I need the receipts later). I hadn’t cleared that out in quite a while—it turned out, more than a year. I had thrown away some from time to time, but there were quite a few there. Since some of our trips to Sam’s Club this year surpassed $400, I wondered if I might see what really happened. So I organized the receipts by store and date and put them in a bag, to look at later.

When Glenn Beck talked about grocery prices rising on his Wednesday night show, I thought, what better time than now to go through those receipts. So I spent some time putting them on a chart and doing some math.

The way I shop is pretty regular—so regular that I have printed up grocery lists, arranged by how I walk through Kroger (weekly) and Sam’s Club (every other week), so I just have to highlight what I want that week, and check them off as I go through the store. In other words, I buy the same stuff over and over. I don’t buy vegetables that I let die in the fridge (except sometimes cilantro, which doesn’t last long, if I don’t get around to making pico de gallo). I eat vegetables regularly. We have a routine, and not a lot of waste. Our pantry is pretty well stocked, and so is our freezer.

The point is, I can compare many of the same items over time.

It also happened that I came across a couple of receipts, stuck behind some cookbooks, from February and March of 2020—just before the shutdown that so badly messed with a thriving economy. Those were shorter trips to Sam’s Club, with only a few items. But I can compare those to the same items today.

A few items have stayed essentially the same:

·        Almond milk up 0% from 2020

·        Canadian bacon up 0% from 2022

·        Sweet potatoes up 0% from 2022

·        Toilet paper up 0% from 2022

·        Mixed nuts up 2% from 2022

·        Romaine lettuce up 3% from 2022

·        Tomatoes down 2% from 2022

Vanilla went down, by 45% from 2020. We were, back then, dealing with a sharp rise in vanilla prices (related to a shortage I’m assuming) that has since subsided.

But many items went up significantly:

·        Avocadoes up 39% from 2020 (45 months: .87%/month)

·        Baby carrots up 46% from 2022 (12 months: 3.83%/month)

·        Frozen chicken tenderloins up 36% from early 2023 (10 months: 3.6%/month)

·        Clementines (small easy peel oranges) up 43% from 2020 (45 months: .96%/month)

·        Navel oranges up 35% from 2020 (45 months: .78%/month)

·        M&M peanuts up 46% from 2020 (45 months: 1.02%/month)

·        Raisins up 9% from 2020 (45 months: .2%/month)

·        Strawberries up 26% from 2020 (45 months: .58%/month)

I was trying to find a way to measure general prices. So I looked at the number of items and divided that into the cost for that shopping trip for an average price per item. I then divided these into manageable time periods and averaged the cost per item for those periods.

Sam’s Club cost per item:

·        Sam’s Club 2020: $7.32

·        Sam’s Club 2022: $9.03

·        Sam’s Club 2023 first half: $10.21

·        Sam’s Club 2023 second half: $10.59

Sam’s Club cost per item is up 45% from early 2020 (45 months: 1%/month).

Kroger cost per item:

·        Kroger 2023 first quarter: $3.98

·        Kroger 2023 second quarter: $4.31

·        Kroger 2023 third quarter: $4.63

·        Kroger 2023 fourth quarter: $4.61

Kroger cost per item is up 16% from the first quarter this year (8 months: 2%/month).

So, I’m convinced I haven’t been imagining it; prices are rising (while our income is not). I don’t know what Biden is imagining, but it isn’t related to hard reality.

 

 

Thursday, November 16, 2023

A Thanksgiving, Covenant People

the first and sixth definitions of covenant 

I got out my 1982 dictionary to see what covenant has meant all my life. The pertinent definitions are the first and the last:

1.    A binding and solemn agreement made by two or more individuals, parties, etc., to do or keep from doing a specified thing; compact.

6.    Theo. The promises made by God to man, as recorded in the Bible.

The other definitions were legalistic and/or related to specific places. So these will do.

There’s an ancient covenant, the Abrahamic covenant, in which Abraham promises to worship and obey the One True God, our Father and Creator, and God promises Abraham three things: posterity, priesthood (the authority to use God’s power and to preach God’s word), and property—a promised land.

In that posterity blessing, Abraham is promised that all the peoples of the world will be blessed by his seed, which will be as numerous as the sands of the sea. That must have seemed impossible when he was a nonagenarian—and his wife was nearly so—and they still hadn’t had a child. Abraham remained faithful nonetheless.

As covenant is phrased in more recent scripture, Doctrine and Covenants 82:10: “I, the Lord, am abound when ye do what I say; but when ye do not what I say, ye have no promise.” So, if you want to bind the creator of the universe to do something for you, you make a covenant with Him—and then you keep your part. If you don’t keep your part, the covenant is broken.

But the Lord does not easily give up on a covenant. The whole book of Hosea is an allegory for how the Lord keeps his covenants. In that book, the chosen people are metaphorically an unfaithful wife, who leaves her husband, but he waits faithfully, and eventually she comes back. And rather than punish her, he accepts her and continues to love her, despite the lost years.

He wants to be in covenant with us. But that is up to us.

This nation—as we should remember in this season of Thanksgiving, started with a covenant: the Mayflower Compact. It was signed by the people on the Mayflower on November 21, 1620 (or November 11, if you use the “old style” Julian calendar, which they were using at the time).

Here’s what they signed:

IN THE NAME OF GOD, AMEN. We, whose names are underwritten, the Loyal Subjects of our dread Sovereign Lord King James, by the Grace of God, of Great BritainFrance, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c. Having undertaken for the Glory of God, and Advancement of the Christian Faith, and the Honour of our King and Country, a Voyage to plant the first Colony in the northern Parts of Virginia; Do by these Presents, solemnly and mutually, in the Presence of God and one another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil Body Politick, for our better Ordering and Preservation, and Furtherance of the Ends aforesaid: And by Virtue hereof do enact, constitute, and frame, such just and equal Laws, Ordinances, Acts, Constitutions, and Officers, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general Good of the Colony; unto which we promise all due Submission and Obedience. 

Mayflower Compact manuscript, image from here

They formed a new “body politick” by covenant, with God as their witness.

When the 13 colonies were founded, that was by covenant. And the new nation under the Constitution was likewise formed by covenant.

George Washington renewed the covenant with the fledgling nation’s first Thanksgiving declaration in 1789:

It is the duty of all Nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God. Both Houses of Congress requested me to recommend a day of public thanksgiving and prayer. Now therefore, I do recommend and assign Thursday the 26th day of November to be devoted to the service of that great and glorious Being. That we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech Him to pardon our national and other transgressions. To enable us all to perform our several duties. To render our national government a blessing to all people by being a Government of wise, just, and constitutional laws. To protect and guide all Sovereigns and Nations. To promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and the increase of science among them and us. And generally to grant unto all mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as he alone knows to be best.

 And Abraham Lincoln renewed it, twice, during the Civil War, in separate Thanksgiving declarations:

1863

In the midst of a Civil War of unequaled magnitude and severity, population has steadily increased, notwithstanding the waste that has been made in the battlefield. The country, rejoicing in the consciousness of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect continuance of years with large increase of freedom. No human counsel hath devised nor hath any mortal hand worked out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing with us in anger for our sins, hath nevertheless remembered mercy. I do, therefore, invite my fellow citizens to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise for such singular deliverances and blessings, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to restore it to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and Union.

1864

It has pleased Almighty God to prolong our national life another year. It has also pleased our Heavenly Father to favor our citizens in their homes as our soldiers in their camps. Moreover, He has been pleased to inspire our minds and hearts with fortitude, courage, and resolution sufficient for the great trial of Civil War into which we have been brought by our adherence to the cause of freedom and humanity. Now, therefore, I, Abraham Lincoln, do hereby appoint and set apart the last Thursday in November as a day to be observed by all my fellow-citizens as a day of thanksgiving and praise to Almighty God. And I do further recommend to my fellow-citizens that they do reverently humble themselves in the dust and from thence offer up penitent and fervent prayers and supplications to the Great Disposer of Events for a return of the inestimable blessings of peace, union, and harmony throughout the land which it has pleased Him to assign as a dwelling place for ourselves and for our posterity throughout all generations.

 We remained a covenant nation—until the year we took prayer out of schools. Schools were instituted in the first place to teach the upcoming generations to understand their religious social obligations—the covenant. To remove God from the covenant was a mistake. See more details about this in Jonathan Cahn’s Return of the Gods, which I talk about here. As Cahn explains, once you break the covenant—you open the door to the pagan gods of old, which will return with more power than when they were originally expelled. And it has gotten ugly.

Glenn Beck explained today on radio about his Renew the Covenant project, which has included a 40-day Bible covenant study, as well as a 15-day American covenant study. (He included the Washington and Lincoln quotes above, here, where you can access all the materials.)  He says that when he was baptized (into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), he told God that he would do whatever the Lord asked of him in exchange for the forgiveness he was getting. The challenge has been figuring out what the Lord wants him to do. But he has felt a need, since around 2010, to do an event to renew America’s covenant. He tried several times, but the timing wasn’t right. He had an event planned in 2020, with a lot of resources already going toward it, that got cancelled because of the pandemic, which was frustrating.

Then this summer he started feeling a strong push to do something to make it happen. He was thinking, how can I bring together a large enough group? And, as he told it one day, when he was announcing this project, the Lord said to him, “I don’t know. Where could you come up with, say, 12 million people willing to listen to you?” which was the number of listeners he has on radio daily. So there it was. Nothing like this had been done on radio before. But he—and a team—put together the materials for the forty days of preparation. And today he presented the covenant, written for us to print out, sign our names to, and keep or frame or whatever. It might be something you'll want to go over and sign with your families on Thanksgiving Day.

But he warns—as Cahn has—don’t make a covenant with God unless you plan to keep it. God will not be mocked. You’ll make the country worse off, if you sign it and don’t mean to keep it.

What happens if there aren’t enough of us that Renew the Covenant? I don’t know. I assume we personally will be better off than if we didn’t do it. And maybe enough will do it. Glenn’s listeners have done remarkable things before, in humanitarian aid and rescue, and just in doing our civic duty. The Lord would have saved Sodom and Gomorrah if Abraham had been able to find only 50, or 40, or 30, or 20, or even 10 righteous people. (See Genesis 18:26-33.) I don’t know what percentage of the two cities 10 people were, but it had to be just a comparative handful. The Lord is generous.

As I read through the wording of the renewal covenant (see below), I could see that I am already a covenant keeper. I have been, as well as I have known how, all of my life, and I made the baptismal covenant at age 8 (also into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). While I didn’t do Glenn’s daily reading for 40 days, I did several catch up days. But I was reading quite a lot of scripture daily in addition—as I have done for many decades. And prayer is already part of my daily life—I can’t remember a single day when it wasn’t. And I have shared my faith with my family. As Joshua says (Joshua 24:15) the people should choose whom they will serve, “but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” Later in the chapter (verses 24-25) the people promise to serve the true and living God, “So Joshua made a covenant with the people that day.” Then he set up the laws of the land based on that covenant.

People are blessed when they live in a covenant relationship with the Most High God.

So here is the covenant that Glenn Beck has drafted for us—in what I hope will be a worthwhile effort to renew the covenant upon which America was founded. (You can get a pdf. version here.) 

 

The Covenant

I, STATE YOUR NAME, alongside my fellow countrymen, and as a witness to my nation and the Almighty, now come forward in humility to covenant that the Lord is my God. I further covenant to remember to regularly commune with Him through prayer; to turn away from sin and error; to rear my family in righteousness, in patience, love, and kindness; to discern and sustain the law; and to perform my several duties properly, punctually, and to the utmost.

Now, if the Lord shall please to hear us, and inasmuch as we honor this covenant, then shall His bounty be poured down upon us as has never been seen.

We humbly implore and beg His protection and favor; that we may experience His everlasting peace and concord; that our own sins, those of our family, those of our nation may be pardoned; that the disunity in our country and suffering may be healed, that once again our family shall delight in each other, and we shall rejoice together, mourn together, and increase together. The Lord will be our God and delight to dwell among our families, so that we partake of His wisdom, power, goodness, and truth. Love and solidarity shall reign within our households.

May our nation unite in rendering unto Him our sincere and humble thanks for His kind care, for His protection, that He may promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue. He shall grant unto this nation temporal prosperity as He alone knows to be best. No human counsel hath devised, nor hath any mortal hand created this great nation. It is the gracious gift of the Most High God. Only his tender care shall heal this nation's wounds. He will raise it to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility, union, and plenty.

He has made us a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us. We enlist His almighty hand that we may once again choose life, that we and our seed may live by obeying His voice and cleaving to Him. He is our life and our prosperity. May my family and this country ever stand in solemn testimony of the most High.


Amen.

Thursday, November 9, 2023

What We Can Do with a Majority

In this week’s election our school board went from a 4-3 conservative minority to a 6-1 conservative majority. That’s a great win!

It could have been better. It could have been a clean sweep. I’ll talk a bit about that, for future reference and strategy. Then I’d like to be looking at what this new board can get to work doing.

My husband and I worked the election on Tuesday. It’s an off-off-year election (non-presidential and non-congressional year). The only things on our ballot were the school board races and propositions. I estimated we’d get maybe 150 voters for the day; we got 392. We were steadily busy all day. I think that means people were more interested in voting than in a usual low-turnout election. It was still low turnout, but much better than I expected.

Things went surprisingly smoothly, compared to the last several elections. No paper jams or failed scans. No running out of ballot paper. We had plenty (more than enough) election clerks, and we didn’t encounter any provisional ballots or ballot-by-mail surrenders (people who get a ballot by mail but change their minds and decide to vote in person must surrender their unused mail-in ballot, which is set aside to make sure it isn’t counted). We had no drive-up voters (which is a service for people who have mobility issues, but the process is a pain for election clerks because of frequent equipment failure, and it's time consuming), so that is a win. And the weather was beautiful.


Our Cy-Fair ISD school board candidates,
from left, Todd LeCompte, Justin Ray, Christine Kalmbach, and George Edwards
image from Christine Kalmbach's Facebook

 

What Happened in the Election

There were four school board trustee positions on the ballot. These are supposedly non-partisan positions. No political parties are on the ballot. It ought to be that people of differing political parties can come together to think through what is best for our kids in our schools. That may have been the case in some bygone decade, but it is clearly not the case now.

Two years ago, we had seven anti-parent board members. Three races were on the ballot. We, the precinct chairs within the school district who were willing to put in the effort, vetted candidates and came up with our top three, who then chose which position they would run for. The purpose was to coalesce all conservative voters around those three. The opposition had never faced that kind of organization. We surprised them. And we won all three seats.

This was in spite of another quite conservative candidate who refused to step out of the race, despite it causing a split in the conservative vote, risking a loss in that position. But, because the opposition (in that case, the 20-year incumbents) weren’t prepared for us, we were able to get out the votes for our side.

This time they weren’t surprised. However, three of the four incumbents decided to retire. Two retired for age and health reasons, perfectly reasonable. The other had served long enough, but was somewhat younger and could have served longer. I don’t know his reasons for not doing so. That left one incumbent. But, after the worst of the worst was ousted in 2021, this incumbent was the ringleader of opposition to parents and the champion of LGBTQ and SEL agendas. We really wanted her gone.

That was the race where we had the vote split, unfortunately, and we lost.

It’s not that either of our conservative candidates in that race was either incapable or not conservative enough. We had a process, and we had expected—because it was made clear in every forum—that whoever the group chose as the top four, we would all support. The one who split the vote never got into the top four, in any straw poll at any time.

We would have won all four seats if she had stepped down. Our group of four candidates got the endorsement of Harris County Republican Party, the Republican Party of Texas, and an additional endorsement from Senator Ted Cruz. I don’t think that any school board candidates in the state have ever gotten the endorsement of a US senator before. The group worked together, campaigned together, had forums together.


Ted Cruz endorsement of our candidates,
image from Todd LeCompte's Facebook

Meanwhile this fifth candidate went about her campaign. I thought she campaigned well. Her message got clearer and less confrontational. And it’s obvious she knew much about the goings on in the school district—which we knew from her many testimonies at school board meetings. But she knew she was going to split the vote and did it anyway. And she had a number of supporters, who abandoned their commitment to the precinct chairs’ process, because they wanted her on the ticket.

In 2021, Todd LeCompte ran, not knowing about our process. But when he recognized that his campaign would split the conservative vote, he stepped down. And he improved his message and viability so that this time he got elected. I wish our fifth candidate this year had done the same.

With that said, I hope she realizes that the ultimate goal was not for her to be on the board, but for our community to get a board that would be responsive to parents and taxpayers in the district, to get the results we want for our kids—and the protection from the woke agenda. If she continues to work as she has done, we all benefit. And there may come a future time when she will be the right person to run for a board position. That is, if people can set aside hurt feelings on both sides. She says she will continue to maintain her website detailing many of the problem practices in our district.

I have not heard a word from George Edwards, our candidate who should have won but didn’t, because of the split vote. He is a personal friend. He is a gentleman—and a gentle man. He was consummately prepared to be a board member—on par I think with Natalie Blasingame, who won in 2021, being the most qualified school board candidate I had ever seen. (She had run two times previous, before finally winning—because we coalesced and worked together.) I thank George for his effort. I wish I’d be seeing him on the board, instead of the incumbent we worked so hard to oust.

 

The Data

Here's the voting data. My source is Harris County

Position 1

Affiliation

Votes

Δ (diff between us and them)

%

My Precinct

votes

Δ

%

Todd LeCompte

Our 4

24,149

 

43.69

289

 

47.3

Tonia Jaeggi

Woke 4

21,062

3,087

38.11

170

119

27.82

Cleveland Lane, Jr.

Other D

10,062

14,087

18.20

152

137

24.88

Total Votes

55,273

 

 

611

 

 

Total Conservative

24,149

-6,975

 

 

 

 

Total Democrat

31,124

 

 

 

 

 

Position 2

Affiliation

Votes

Δ (diff between us and them)

%

My Precinct

votes

Δ

%

Julie Hinaman

Woke 4 (i)

25,078

-1,433

45.57

246

46

40.59

Ayse Indemaio

Other R

6,311

17,334

11.47

68

224

11.22

George Edwards, Jr.

Our 4

23,645

 

42.96

292

 

48.18

Total Votes

55,034

 

 

606

 

 

Total Conservative

29.956

+4,878

 

 

 

 

Total Democrat

25,078

 

 

 

 

 

Position 3

Affiliation

Votes

Δ (diff between us and them)

%

My Precinct

votes

Δ

%

Leslie Martone

Woke 4

21,339

2,374

39.15

194

83

32.34

Michelle Fennick

Other D

9,458

14,255

17.35

129

148

21.50

Justin Ray

Our 4

23,713

 

43.50

277

 

46.17

Total Votes

54,510

 

 

600

 

 

Total Conservative

23,713

-7,084

 

 

 

 

Total Democrat

30,797

 

 

 

 

 

Position 4

Affiliation

Votes

Δ (diff between us and them)

%

My Precinct

votes

Δ

%

Frances Ramirez Romero

Woke 4

26,829

1,177

48.93

283

42

46.55

Christine Kalmbach

Our 4

28,006

 

51.07

385

 

53.32

Total Votes

54,835

 

 

608

 

 

Total Conservative

28,006

+1,177

 

 

 

 

Total Democrat

26,829

 

 

 

 

 

 

I added my precinct data, mainly for my personal record. There are parts of the district targeted for GOTV more than mine—because they are more solid red. I’m not an ideal precinct chair; I do not do a lot of block walking, which is essential for GOTV. But I do keep in touch with a pretty sizable number by email and text. I write here and share my views (it looks like that was a valuable tool, by the numbers in my stats for that piece). And I did spend an afternoon electioneering at an early voting location, which was actually kind of fun. So, anyway, I’m pleased that my precinct contributed to the winning margins. Our candidates all won in my precinct, including position 2, and with a higher percentage than the district overall. But I also want to recognize those who put in a lot of time, treasure, and heart beyond what I was capable of doing.

the candidates and the team leaders, from left, George Edward, Justin Ray,
Terry Wheeler, Christine Kalmbach, Clark Denson, Bill Ely, and Todd LeCompte
image from Christine Kalmbach's Facebook

Note that, in every race with a third candidate, it split the vote for that party’s candidates. Without extra candidates in positions 1 and 3, we likely would have lost those races. Let’s hope the woke coalition doesn’t catch on next time and eliminate their vote splitters.

We did, however, win solidly in the race with only 2 candidates; that means it’s a matter of messaging, and Christine Kalmbach got it right.

One more detail. Although I thought our vote splitter, Ayse (pronounced I-shay), was running a strong campaign, she garnered the fewest votes and lowest percentage of any non-coalition candidate. So it is unlikely she would have won if our candidate, George, had not been in the race. But it is highly likely George would have won without her in the race.



 

What Now

Now I’d like to get to what we want this new school board to do. I’m sure there are others with more to add to this list. I hope they do. And I hope they share their lists with our new board. There are so many things we were frustrated about, because of being a minority on the previous board. With a solid majority, now is the time to show real improvement.

These are not necessarily in order of priority; they’re in the order I thought of them, and are grouped into administration, indoctrination, academics, and teacher care.

Administration

·        Rename the Mark Henry Administration Building. How about something like the building it replaced: the Cy-Fair ISD Administration Building?

·        Suspend the newly chosen replacement to Superintendent Henry, so that the superintendent will be one in alignment with the new board, and who will carry out their will.

·        Reconsider every employee filling that new administration building and keep only essential ones; their salaries mean less pay for teachers in the classroom. No school district should have enough employees who do not work in schools to require a building of that size.

·        Consider renting out the unused administration building space to lessen the cost to taxpayers for this extravagant building.

·        Put parental input up front in board meetings. No more 6-hour meetings that seem designed to get parents to go home, rather than wait to speak for a brief minute or two near midnight—after the board has made decisions (often in closed meetings) before even hearing the people. Make it clear you want to hear from the community, and that you value their ideas.

Indoctrination

·        Get rid of the pornographic and sexualizing books in the school libraries. No need to wait until courts decide whether the legislation requiring this is to be allowed.

·        Reconsider the contracts of each and every librarian and principal who insisted the pornographic and sexualizing books were educationally appropriate—after parents brought them to their attention and they saw the inappropriate materials and then defended them. These people are groomers—normalizing sexual perversion and abuse, and sexualizing younger and younger children, all of which can traumatize children and psychologically damage them. Such people should not be allowed near children.

·        Get rid of SEL. Schools are not families. If a child has an emotional problem, the school can suggest to parents that the child needs help, and could even point the parents toward possible resources, but should otherwise get out of the way of parents. This includes getting rid of therapy counseling in the schools, as well as medical care—other than first aid. No prescribing and dispensing of abortion drugs, ADHD meds, vaccines, or anything else schools have no business doing.

Academics

·        Teach reading in the way that works for the vast majority of learners: phonics. Occasionally there is a child with a brain problem that may need an alternate strategy, but that is no reason to deprive what works best for all the other students. And for those few—find the brain exercises that will help the child overcome the issue, not just get a label to excuse lowered expectations for life.

·        Teach math in a way that works. Memorize math facts. Practice basics. Don’t have a child move on until the child has mastered the skill. This may require adapting to have students working at their own pace—rather than what is either too fast or too slow for most students.

·        Get shop classes back into schools. Maybe add some certifications for various skills. Not every student is meant for college. And colleges are less and less capable of educating instead of indoctrinating. So let’s give our students plenty of alternatives.

·        One candidate assured me that special ed and gifted classes are much improved over when we pulled our kids out two decades ago. I hope that is so. Over the years I have seen too many candidates who want to concentrate efforts on children without a lot of family support. OK, but if you are announcing you’re going to ignore my child—or any gifted child—I’ve got a big problem with you. You might also note that the best methods for teaching gifted children are often the best methods for teaching all children.

·        Let’s see some innovation. The factory method of sitting bodies in chairs until a bell rings—like a factory—is stultifying. There are better ways. Families use better ways all the time. Kids are different ages, learning at different rates; that’s OK. And it can be done in a classroom

Teacher Care and Keeping

·        A teacher ought to have a life outside of the job. If you’re burdening them with re-certifications, improvement classes, paperwork, and requirements galore, you’re going to keep losing teachers. You can’t pay teachers enough to tolerate the abuse.

·        And, speaking of teacher abuse, that includes all the rules you have about not disciplining students that are disrupting the learning environment for all students. This includes students who harm and threaten one another and the teacher. Teachers deserve protection from a hostile work environment.

·        Teachers should be set free to teach, creatively. We have to exempt from that any attempt to indoctrinate our kids with LGBTQ, SEL, and any other flavor of woke agenda. Maybe you should only hire teachers you can trust. But once you have a good teacher, let them do what they love to do: teach.