Posted on 07/31/2007 11:26:37 AM PDT by CutePuppy
Link only due to copyright restrictions
http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070731/METRO/707310344&imw=Y&template=printart
“knows much about the true graduation rate”
Gingrich was probably being kind.
Clickable link:
http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070731/METRO/707310344&imw=Y&template=printart
Correction. Detroit is not a disaster. It is a Samuel L. Jackson motherf&cking disaster.
-Eric
The middle American metropolises should model themselves on Chicago.
I live in the suburbs of Detroit and the reason it never changes is nobody listens when someone tells the truth.
Right on Newt!
“Correction. Detroit is not a disaster. It is a Samuel L. Jackson motherf&cking disaster.”
Yep.
And it also demonstrates that a Black Stalinist run city could kill and ruin more Black lives, hopes, and aspirations than the wettest Klansman’s fantasies.
Anybody thats actually driven through downtown Detriot knows this is true.
Newt is smart. Fred's not.
Think Borg.
The problem is, by calling it a disaster, Gingrich is making it a disaster. Remember, if you close your eyes and wish hard enough, all your dreams can come true!
rofl.
My dad worked in the auto industry for 35 years. He HATED traveling to Detroit, and had three of his closest friends leave after less than two years living in its suburbs. A rather depressing place and a cultural wasteland. The CITY, of course, should be evacuated and turned into a national park.
http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,291301,00.html
WALLACE: All right. So people are going to say, "All right, Newt Gingrich, you come up with some ideas." You're putting together what you call the American Solutions Conference where you're going to come up with big ideas. It's going to be in late September. Give us an example. What is the kind of bold, transformational change that you're talking about that would really shake up Washington? GINGRICH: Well, let's start with education. The Detroit public school system currently graduates 22 percent of its entering freshmen on time and fails to serve 78 percent of the young people in Detroit. And if you're an African-American male, you have a 73 percent unemployment in your 20s if you drop out of school and a 60 percent chance of going to jail. Now, faced with a catastrophic collapse of that scale, we should basically fundamentally replace the Detroit school system with a series of experiments to see if they'll work. I would include paying kids in very poor neighborhoods the equivalent of working at McDonald's if they took math and science and got a B or better. I would include the system, which is a private school system that graduates — 85 percent of its students in the inner city go to college. Instead, because of the unions — and let's be clear. This is entirely about the unions. It's about . Because of the unions, in San Diego, I was briefed yesterday, there's a school that has great scores that is a charter school that's going to be closed because the teachers aren't unionized. And you look at Detroit, which is a disaster. Just one quick thing. Detroit in 1950 had 1,800,000 people and the highest per capita income in the United States. Today, Detroit is at the 62nd per capita income with 950,000 people. WALLACE: And is that the kind of thing that you as president would want to get involved in and run, or is it the kind of thing, I mean, that you would leave — most people would say you'd leave that to the city of Detroit and the state of Michigan. GINGRICH: Well, first of all, I think that the reason we created — and we're having workshops nationwide online in late September — is because there are 513,000 elected offices in the United States. And the reason that I've chosen to focus on creating a nationwide movement is precisely your question. I think we ought to challenge the Detroit school board. We ought to challenge the Detroit city council. We ought to challenge the Michigan legislature. We ought to challenge the governor of Michigan. But by the way, while you're doing that, if you don't challenge the union and the education bureaucracy, and you don't challenge the UAW, you are not going to save Michigan. Michigan has lost more jobs than any state in the United States except the impact of Katrina on Louisiana. And nobody stops and says, "What is the systemic reason for this collapse?" I do think a president has an obligation to say to the country, "You can't compete with China and India if your education system is failing," and that has to be solved locally. And frankly, I think the federal Department of Education is not a useful asset in trying to solve that. WALLACE: Not surprisingly, your comments this week drew some pushback. You compared yourself to French General de Gaulle being asked in the '50s to join the pygmies, and here's what someone on the American Spectator blog wrote. Take a look. "Newt is brilliant. Unfortunately, Newt knows he is brilliant. As a result, he has little control over his ego." Mr. Speaker, how do you plead? GINGRICH: Well, look. I was a child living in France in 1958. My dad was serving in the U.S. Army. We lived in Orleans. And I experienced what happened in France. I watched the die, literally killed by the paratroopers after the Algerian war. I watched President de Gaulle, who had been the savior of France after World War II, who had retired to get out of politics because he thought it was a hopeless mess, brought back to create the Fifth Republic, which just elected a new president, the longest serving French system since the monarchy. And my reference was as a teacher. I mean, I find it fascinating in the city that if you actually studied something and you actually know about something, you must be egocentric because you're actually talking about facts as opposed to what my consultant advised me that the focus group said last night that I should memorize. I was relaying the systemic failure of the American system, Democrat and Republican, systemic in Sacramento, systemic in Detroit, systemic in Albany, systemic in Washington, D.C., and the fact that neither political party is producing the kind of campaign and the kind of candidates not just for president but across the system. We are not coming to grips with how big our problems are.
That's like calling The Black Plaque a major disappointment.
The truth is always the biggest enemy of leftists. They simply cannot tolerate truth.
Well, just in this one article there are three different graduation rates mentioned. If they can't even count and figure a ratio in Detroit, I'd say they have an educational problem. Further, I can't find one thing Gingrich said that seems untrue.
Any place you can buy several houses for the price of a new midrange ‘detroit iron” car is a disaster.
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