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  • No ammo at the local gun store?

    No ammo at the local gun store?

    If you haven’t started thinking about reloading your own ammo, you should.

    I’m not going to try to cover every facet of reloading here, just some of the basics and the pros and cons of reloading your own ammo.

    The choices start with do you shoot enough to make it worthwhile?

    1. If your main calibers are 9mm, 45 ACP, 38/357 mag or .223/5.56, bulk purchasing may make more sense for you than reloading. I belong to one of the largest gun clubs in the state, current membership is about 500 members. We have relationships with a couple of wholesalers and make bulk ammo purchases a couple of times a year, currently it’s mostly 9mm and .22LR. We can generally get 10% to 15% off of most ammo, sometimes more.
    2. If you live in a place that you don’t have a lot of choices for local purchase, look to online purchases, I use a couple of outlets Target Sports USA, Natchez Shooters Supply, and Academy Outdoors all three offer free shipping with most orders over $50 or $99. Get on their email list, and watch for specials in the calibers you shoot. A word of caution, it’s my opinion only. I don’t shoot steel cased ammo in any gun no matter how cheap it is, two reasons, it’s hard on guns and it’s not practically reloadable. I save just about all the brass I shoot, even if I don’t reload a particular caliber, one of my friends probably does.
    3. When I first started competition shooting, the volume of ammo that you go through is astounding to most people. Until I had my own progressive reloading setup I did structured purchases with a couple of shooting friends and used one guy’s Dillon progressive press for loading thousands of rounds of 45 ACP and 38 Special. We all bought the same components and saved as much brass as we could. One or two nights a week would cover most of our needs, 3 or 4 guys taking turns loading and boxing up ammo makes it go a lot faster.
    4. If you live behind the Iron Curtain of gun rights (especially CA, NY, NJ etc.) , soon you may not have much choice. CA is testing the limits of the 2A and Interstate Commerce Clause with their latest bs, hopefully it will be overturned by the federal courts, but that may take years. In the meantime reloading and components haven’t been included yet.
    5. If you shoot the rare or unusual calibers, reloading is your friend. I can typically load a box of 44 Magnum for about $8 with cast lead bullets, retail is about $40 per/50 box. Reloading 45LC, 10mm, S&W 500, 45-70 etc. can realize substantial savings. Reloading also allows you to generate custom ammo for a particular application, such as hard cast bullets for hog hunting.

    Basic reloading kits start at $150 for a single stage press, to about $250 for a progressive press kit.

    https://www.amazon.com/LEE-PRECISION-Breech-Lock-Challenger/dp/B003ISVWC6/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=reloading+kit&qid=1568300056&s=sporting-goods&sr=1-5

    https://www.midwayusa.com/product/1013020237?pid=785993

    Don’t be hesitant about buying used presses or dies, they are practically indestructible. If it looks to be in good shape, it probably is. I have a couple of presses that have been in use for 20 years or more, a Hornady 366 shotshell reloader and a Lee Turret press, both have loaded thousands of rounds without any trouble. I always buy carbide dies when possible especially for pistol calibers. If you hit yard or estate sales once in a while, keep an eye out for reloading tools and presses frequently you can buy it for pennies on the dollar.

    Things not to skimp on.

    1. Get a digital micrometer, you can load with out one but don’t. It will save you a lot of trouble in the long run. All rifle and pistol cartridges have a minimum and maximum OAL (Over All Length), too short and you will get light primer strikes to FTF (Failure To Fire), too long and it won’t chamber or go into battery. It doesn’t have to be an expensive one, these work fine https://www.amazon.com/Frankford-Arsenal-Electronic-Caliper-Reloading/dp/B0018E9FVC/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=franklin+arsenal+micrometer&qid=1568301292&s=gateway&sr=8-2
    2. Use a digital scale, trust me on this one, it’s just faster than using a balance beam scale and is just as accurate. They don’t have to be expensive, a $35 one is fine if you are just checking charge weights. https://www.amazon.com/Hornady-050106-Battery-Operated-Electronic/dp/B017S6PPNU/ref=sr_1_9?keywords=franklin+arsenal+digital+scale&qid=1568301468&s=gateway&sr=8-9
    3. If you are reloading pistol rounds, get a case tumbler/cleaner. It’s a lot easier to reload precision rounds in clean cases. It’s not a must have and there’s plenty of kits/plans on how to make one online if you don’t want to buy a commercial one.
    4. Get a relatively recent reloading manual, all of the powder companies have them as well as bullet makers and reloading tool makers. I use the Sierra manual mostly, as I like the layout and its in a 3 ring binder that I can add pages to. These run $10+ on eBay, you don’t necessarily need a new one unless the caliber or components you want to use are not covered in an older one. For the Sierra manual the 5th Edition is the most current and runs about $30 online. You should also make use of the online guides from the powder suppliers and bullet makers.

    Now for the don’t do it part.

    1. If you have ADHD, skip it, reloading requires attention to detail. Likewise drinking alcohol, smoking pot, watching tv while you are reloading is a bad idea. I generally listen to the radio while reloading.
    2. Use the manual, it’s there for a reason. Nobody wants to be known as Old Three Finger, use some common sense.
    3. Do not substitute components, yes I know people do it and survive. If you are reading this and thinking about starting reloading, you don’t have enough experience to know what you can get away with and what you can’t. This especially applies to primers, never substitute pistol primers or powder.
    4. Have a safe place to work and store your components. Again use some common sense, I don’t have kids at home anymore, but gunpowder is an explosive, store it correctly and out of reach for children, same with primers. Wear safety glasses or at least shatter proof prescription glasses, nothing gets your attention like setting off a primer two feet from your face, it doesn’t happen often, but don’t lose an eye over it.
    5. Realistically if you are mostly shooting 9 mm and .223/5.56, it’s cheaper and easier to just buy the ammo, it would take forever to make up the savings after shelling out $300-$500 for a complete progressive reloading setup. The only reason I would do it now was lack of availability. You can get a basic reloading kit going for about $100 with some judicious shopping and some eBay scrounging, if it’s just to load some ammo for the expensive calibers, jump in. Paying $1/round really shortens up the fun time shooting big pistol calibers. Do I actually save a lot reloading? Not really, but I do shoot a lot more for the same price.

    Times have changed, depending on your outlook, this is the 3rd or 4th ammo shortage in the last 10 years. Don’t forget the Democrats constantly sponsor bills that would increase the sales tax on ammo from 30% to even 50%, which on the cheaper ammo wouldn’t keep anybody from shooting, but it would seriously dent big caliber shooting, 44 Mag runs almost $45 per box for hunting ammo, it would suddenly cost $60 or more.

  • Supreme Court Rules on Trump Records

    Supreme Court Rules on Trump Records

    The Supreme Court delivered rulings on a pair of requests for President Trump’s financial records. Both cases were remanded back to the lower courts.

    https://twitter.com/SCOTUSblog/status/1281230006283382790?s=20

    In a 7-2 decision, the Supremes ruled that the request from Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance can go forward with the majority noting that blanket immunity does not apply in this case to stop the subpoena. It wasn’t a complete loss for the President though, the Court provided a roadmap on how the Trump team could challenge the subpoena going forward. This should drag the case out until after the election.

    https://twitter.com/AndyGrewal/status/1281246156618633218?s=20

    In the second case the Court ruled the lower courts did not give enough weight to the separation of powers, and remanded the case back to the lower courts for more deliberation.

    This is a major setback for the House Democrats.

    https://twitter.com/SCOTUSblog/status/1281232714012778500?s=20

    The President had this to say about the decisions:

    https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1281236214646034432?s=20

    Regardless of how this is spun in the media, both rulings are a win for the Trump team. Neither case will be resolved prior to the November elections. And in this case, delay is as good as an outright win.

  • Back to School? “No Thanks”

    Back to School? “No Thanks”

    Back to School?
    “No Thanks” Say Millions of New Homeschooling Parents

    With dehumanizing COVID-19 restrictions awaiting students at schools, many parents are opting to keep on homeschooling.

    Kerry McDonald Wednesday, July 8, 2020

    Next month marks the beginning of the 2020/2021 academic year in several US states, and pressure is mounting to reopen schools even as the COVID-19 pandemic persists. Florida, for example, is now considered the nation’s No. 1 hot spot for the virus; yet on Monday, the state’s education commissioner issued an executive order mandating that all Florida schools open in August with in-person learning and their full suite of student services.

    Many parents are balking at back-to-school, choosing instead to homeschool their children this fall.

    Gratefully, this virus seems to be sparing most children, and prominent medical organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics have urged schools to reopen this fall with in-person learning. For some parents, fear of the virus itself is a primary consideration in delaying a child’s return to school, especially if the child has direct contact with individuals who are most vulnerable to COVID-19’s worst effects.

    But for many parents, it’s not the virus they are avoiding by keeping their children home—it’s the response to the virus.

    In May, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued school reopening guidelines that called for:

    • Strict social distancing tactics
    • All-day mask wearing for most students and teachers
    • Staggered attendance
    • Daily health checks
    • No gym or cafetaria use
    • Restricted playground access and limited toy-sharing, and
    • Tight controls on visitors to school buildings, including parents.

    School districts across the country quickly adopted the CDC’s guidelines, devising their reopening plans accordingly. Once parents got wind of what the upcoming school-year would look like, including the real possibility that at any time schools could be shut down again due to virus spikes, they started exploring other options.

    For Florida mother, Rachael Cohen, these social distancing expectations and pandemic response measures prompted her to commit to homeschooling her three children, ages 13, 8, and 5, this fall.

    “Mandated masks, as well as rigid and arbitrary rules and requirements regarding the use and location of their bodies, will serve to dehumanize, disconnect, and intimidate students,” Cohen told me in a recent interview.

    She is endeavoring to expand schooling alternatives in her area and is currently working to create a self-directed learning community for local homeschoolers that emphasizes nature-based, experiential education. “There is quite a lot of interest,” she says.

    According to a recent USA Today/Ipsos poll, 60 percent of parents surveyed said they will likely choose at-home learning this fall rather than send their children to school even if the schools reopen for in-person learning. Thirty percent of parents surveyed said they were “very likely” to keep their children home.

    While some of these parents may opt for an online version of school-at-home tied to their district, many states are seeing a surge in the number of parents withdrawing their children from school in favor of independent homeschooling. From coast to coast, and everywhere in between, more parents are opting out of conventional schooling this year, citing onerous social distancing requirements as a primary reason.

    Indeed, so many parents submitted notices of intent to homeschool in North Carolina last week that it crashed the state’s nonpublic education website.

    Other parents are choosing to delay their children’s school enrollment, with school districts across the country reporting lower than average kindergarten registration numbers this summer.

    School officials are cracking down in response.

    Concerned about declining enrollments and parents reassuming control over their children’s education, some school districts are reportedly trying to block parents from removing their children from school for homeschooling.

    In England, it’s even worse. Government officials there are so worried about parents refusing to send their children back to school this fall that the education secretary just announced fines for all families who keep their children home in violation of compulsory schooling laws. “We do have to get back into compulsory education and obviously fines sit alongside as part of that,” English secretary Gavin Williamson announced.

    When school officials resort to force in order to ensure compliance, it should prompt parents to look more closely at their child’s overall learning environment. Parents have the utmost interest in ensuring their children’s well-being, both physically and emotionally, and their concerns and choices should be respected and honored.

    After several months of learning at home with their children, parents may not be so willing to comply with district directives and may prefer other, more individualized education options. Pushed into homeschooling this spring by the pandemic, many parents are now going willingly, and eagerly, down this increasingly popular educational path.

    Original: fee.org: Back to School? “No Thanks” Say Millions of New Homeschooling Parents

    AUNTIE SAYS: Hurray for these parents taking back their responsibility for their children. One excellent thing has come from the forced quarantine of citizens. 

  • Rocky Balboa Statue Goes 15 Rounds Against Rioters

    Rocky Balboa Statue Goes 15 Rounds Against Rioters

    PHILADELPHIA, PA—First, the rioters came for Andrew Jackson. Then, they came for Ulysses S. Grant. Then, they came for the Fonz for some reason. But finally, they came for the ultimate racist statue: the famous monument to Rocky Balboa in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. It’s not clear why they thought it was racist, but the guy in the statue seemed to be happy, so he was probably a conservative of some kind whenever he existed, they reasoned.

    But the statue survives to fight another day, as it went a full 15 rounds against rioters and was still standing after the bout.

    The weak, sissy rioters charged the statue and started punching it, hurting their little man-baby hands and running away to cry to their parents, whom they probably still live with. A second wave came in, but Rocky stood strong. Things got a little dicey in the seventh round, when one rioter threw a rope around the statue and suggested everyone start rocking it back and forth, but then their soft, buttery smooth hands got chafed by the rope and they had to call it quits to nurse their wounds with coconut oil.

    “Balboa was a real champion out there,” said one witness. “It was incredible.”

    Finally, after 15 waves of angry rioters charged the statue, the dust settled, and Balboa won again, having gone for a full 15 rounds without breaking a sweat. Balboa was declared the winner in a unanimous decision as the judges were appalled at the rioters’ lack of form, indicating they had never punched anything before, except maybe customers’ buy-six-get-one-free cards at Jamba Juice.

    Original Here: babylonbee.com-Rocky Balboa Statue Goes 15 Rounds Against Rioters

  • The View From Here

    The View From Here

    Well, I guess I saw this coming. The Country band formerly known as Lady Antebellum has filed suit against the blues singer Lady A. Oh, and by the way, the blues singer Lady A, is black.

    https://twitter.com/WatchChad/status/1280995188651982849?s=20

    That’s pretty woke if you ask me.


    President Trump invited Mexican president Obrador and Canadian PM Justin Trudeau to the White House to celebrate the start of the new trade deal. Seems as if little potato had better things to do in Canada. Like trying which culture he plans on appropriating next. So Trump and Obrador celebrated without him.


    Ostensible NATO ally Turkey is up to some nefarious stuff in Libya. They have been credibly accused of attacking actual NATO ally France’s troops there. For those who don’t follow events in the Magreb, Libya is in the midst of a civil war, and Erdogan’s turkey supports the islamist rebels there.


    There’s more coming out about the witch hunt that LTG Flynn was subjected to. It seems that some new documents were just found by the DOJ and given to Sydney Powell, Flynn’s attorney. Look for a more detailed post on the whole fiasco tomorrow or Friday.


    In Supreme Court land, the justices delivered a 7-2 decision in the Little Sisters of the Poor case. They held that the Sisters did not have to certify, in accordance with Obama care. Which means that they do not have to provide or even offer insurance coverage for contraceptives. It’s good news for religious liberties.


    On a personal note, your managing editor is suffering thru a heat wave. It’s been in the low to mid 90s since Saturday, and it’s not supposed to drop below 90 until Saturday. Thank God for aircon.


    The editorial team here doesn’t like to do mass tags. We have a push notification system on the site ( mash that bell!) But it doesn’t work on all platforms or devices. If you don’t see the bell, please bookmark the site and/or follow us on Disqus. If you have any suggestions or content ideas, drop a comment below. We’re always looking for new contributors as well. If you want to write something for us, just sign up for an account on the site.

  • Alexander Vindman to retire

    Alexander Vindman to retire

    Resistance hero and key factor in the Impeachment farce LTC Alexander Vindman has announced his retirement from the Army.

    A statement from attorney David Pressman said Vindman was leaving the Army after more than 21 years after it had been made clear “that his future within the institution he has dutifully served will forever be limited.”

    “Through a campaign of bullying, intimidation, and retaliation, the president of the United States attempted to force LTC Vindman to choose: Between adhering to the law or pleasing a President. Between honoring his oath or protecting his career. Between protecting his promotion or the promotion of his fellow soldiers. LTC Vindman’s patriotism has cost him his career.”

    Army veteran Sen. Tammy Duckworth; D-IL said last week that she would put a hold on more than 1,000 military promotions until she was assured by Defense Secretary Mark Esper that Vindman’s promotion would not be blocked.

    I say good riddance to bad rubbish. That he thought, as a Lieutenant Colonel, he could dictate policy was ridiculous.

  • The Duckworth conundrum

    The Duckworth conundrum

    Over the weekend, Senator Tammy Duckworth; D-IL, was on CNN with Dana Bash. During the course of the appearance, Bash asked about the current trend of tearing down statues of those the left finds problematic. Duckworth voiced her support for that:

    President Trump gave a speech at Mount Rushmore Friday night. He talked about the importance of preserving historical monuments. Take a listen.(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

    TRUMP: Our nation is witnessing a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values, and indoctrinate our children.

    (END VIDEO CLIP)

    BASH: Senator, I know that you support change in the name of military bases named after Confederate leaders. But there are leaders like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson who were slave owners, and some people are demanding that their monuments come down, too. So, in your view, where does it end? Should statues, for example, of George Washington come down?

    SEN. TAMMY DUCKWORTH (D-IL): Well, let me just say that we should start off by having a national dialogue on it at some point. But, right now, we’re in the middle of a global pandemic. And our — one of our ally — one of our — countries that are opposed to us, Russia, has put a bounty on American troops’ head. What really struck me about this speech that the president gave at Mount Rushmore was that he spent more time worried about honoring dead Confederates than he did talking about the lives of our American — 130,000 Americans who lost their lives to COVID-19, or by warning Russia off of the bounty they’re putting on Americans’ heads [09:45:03]

    I mean, his priorities are all wrong here. He should be talking about what we’re going to do to overcome this pandemic. What are we going to do to push Russia back? And, instead, he had no time for that. He spent all his time talking about dead traitors.

    BASH: So, that might be — be true, but George Washington, I don’t think anybody would call him a traitor. And there are…

    DUCKWORTH: No.

    BASH: … moves by some to remove statues of him. Is that a good idea?

    DUCKWORTH: I think we should listen to everybody. I think we should listen to the argument there. But remember that the president at Mount Rushmore was standing on ground that was stolen from Native Americans who had actually been given that land during a treaty.

    And, again, let’s talk about the greater context of where we are in our country right now. We should be talking about the fact that COVID- 19 is experiencing a resurgence, and both this president and the man he put in charge of the pandemic response team, the vice president, have both failed miserably at their jobs. I’m more worried about the 130,000 who have lost their lives recently and the thousands and thousands more Americans who are currently sick than I am about the — our historical past. We need to talk about what we’re doing now to bring this country off of the brink of chaos that it’s in.

    Watch:

    Ok, so she’s voicing her opinion, and that, while I strenuously disagree, is fine. What’s not fine is her reaction when Tucker Carlson called her out for being unpatriotic. She immediately hopped on Twitter with this gem:

    https://twitter.com/SenDuckworth/status/1280313123887603712?s=20

    Then Captain Duckworth lost both legs after getting her Blackhawk shot down by an RPG while in Iraq. She also suffered debilitating injuries to her right arm. She was awarded the I forgot to duck medal for her injuries and was promoted to major while in Walter Reed.

    The implications of that tweet are astonishing to me, as a combat vet and an American Patriot. The good senator seems to think that she’s above any criticism because of her injuries. That she can hold up her Purple Heart and combat service as a shield.

    Tucker, and I by extension, aren’t questioning her service. What’s being questioned is her current state of mind and the lack of patriotism and historical perspective. Service, and honorable service especially, is not and never has been something to hide from criticism behind.

    As everyone who ever wore the uniform knows, the military is a microcosm of the United States. Admittedly, while there is a higher proportion of Patriots in the military than in the general population, my point still stands. You find all sorts in the military.

    Senator Duckworth, while she may not have started this way, is an unpatriotic, uneducated fool. I knew a couple of individuals like that during my term of service.

    That when given an opportunity to confront Tucker directly, he has a standing offer for her to appear on his show, she declined says a lot about her.

  • Destroy the ‘Public’ Education System

    Destroy the ‘Public’ Education System

    David Harsanyi for National Review

    July 7, 2020 6:30 AM

    It’s largely a left-wing propaganda machine that funds Democratic politicians and entrenches racial segregation.

    ‘Public” schools have been a catastrophe for the United States. This certainly isn’t an original assertion, but as we watch thousands of authoritarian brats tearing down the legacies of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, it’s more apparent than ever.

    State-run schools have undercut two fundamental conditions of a healthy tolerant society. First, they’ve created millions of civic illiterates who are disconnected from long-held communal values and national identity. Second, they’ve exacerbated the very inequalities that trigger the tearing apart of fissures.

    If you’re interested in ferreting out “systemic racism,” go to a big-city public-school system. No institution has fought harder to preserve segregated communities than the average teachers’ union. And I don’t mean only in the schools.

    Prosperous Americans already enjoy school choice — and not merely because they can afford private schools. Anyone who has ever tried to buy a suburban home in a major metro area can tell you how acutely school districts influence home prices. Many middle-class and working-class families are priced out of areas with good schools because of inflated home values and high property taxes. And families who might otherwise choose to live in more diverse areas are kept out because of failing schools.

    This entire dynamic is driven by the antiquated notion that the best way to educate kids is to throw them into the nearest government building. It’s the teachers’ unions that safeguard these fiefdoms through racketeering schemes: First they funnel taxpayer dollars to the political campaigns of allies who, when elected, return the favor by protecting union monopolies and supporting higher taxes that fund unions and ultimately political campaigns. So goes the cycle, decade after decade, one failed student after the next.

    Even in cities where limited choice exists, most poor parents, typically black or Hispanic, are compelled to send their kids to inferior schools, even if there are better-suited schools within walking distance. More than a decade ago, I sat in a Denver auditorium with a single Hispanic mom who was, quite literally, praying that her kid’s number would be picked in a charter-school lottery. The mother wept as her number was passed over, not because she was a partisan reactionary — she didn’t care about politics — but because she knew her son would now be forced to attend a subpar and unsafe high school rather than one specifically designed to help first-generation kids assimilate.

    It was a heartbreaking scene. And it’s only gotten worse. Colorado has since become a blue state, and Democrats have killed or obstructed numerous school-choice initiatives once supported by moderates in their party. In Denver, schools systems have helped solidify segregated communities, and the achievement gap between white and minority students is one of the worst in the country.

    Nevertheless, Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden says he’ll create not a child-oriented Department of Education but a “teacher-oriented Department of Education.” By teachers, Biden means unions. Teachers unions spent $30 million on federal elections alone in 2016 — virtually all of it on Democrats. It’s about more than the money they give, however. Unions organize, campaign, and march for liberal causes. As a Washington Post piece (“Teachers’ unions may not raise pay — but they do bolster the Democratic Party”) aptly put it not long ago:

    But teachers’ unions do accomplish something politically notable: They are a vital part of liberal coalitions and the Democratic Party. Teachers’ union organization and mobilization, like that of other government workers’ unions, have long compensated for the declining membership in traditional organized labor. What’s more, they’ve advanced the causes of women’s and LGBTQ rights — rights that are important to many or most of their members. They’ve done that by delivering money, mobilization and organization to both the Democratic Party and to feminist groups.

    It’s likely that left-wing ideologues run your school district. They decide what your children learn. They are the ones who decide that your kid can protest the Second Amendment of the Constitution, but never, not in a million years, march for any cause the Founders might have championed.

    Anecdotally speaking, I can confirm that the teaching of American history in at least one D.C. suburb — perhaps a better way to put it would be the un-teaching of American history — is detestable. Most events are couched in relativism; or, worse, the textbooks accentuate every sin and downplay every accomplishment. It would be one thing if this kind of ideological shading were relegated to history class, but it has infected plenty of other things.

    If you have no interest in funding campaigns for “women’s and LGBTQ rights” (euphemisms for pro-abortion and anti-religious-liberty causes), well, that’s too bad. If you can’t homeschool your kid or send her to a pricey private school, you lose.

    The embedded left-wing nature of big school districts is so normalized that parents rarely say a word. Mom and Dad can buy virtually anything from anywhere in the world, but they can’t use their tax dollars to buy Timmy an education that aligns with their values.

    It was one thing when these schools were producing mere Democrats, and it’s quite another now that they’re churning out hordes of chillingly ignorant voters.

    A recent study found that 60 percent of Americans couldn’t pass a U.S. Citizenship Test. It comes as no surprise that those 65 or older scored the best, with 74 percent correctly answering at least six out of ten questions. Of those 45 and younger, only 19 percentpassed the exam — and the younger the test-takers, the less likely they were to pass. Sixty percent of those tested didn’t know which countries their grandparents fought during World War II. And only 24 percent knew why Americans colonists had fought the British.

    Now, I’m under no illusion that higher education is the sole driver of common sense and patriotism — intellectuals are susceptible to some the dumbest ideas ever conceived–– but if state-run schools can’t even teach the Founding, how are we going to move forward as a nation?

    Some pundits point out that elite private schools have even worse problems with progressivism than the average public schools. That’s probably true — and also largely irrelevant. But a voucher system creates opportunities for all kinds of students, not just wealthy ones. It stands to reason, when one considers virtually every other marketplace in existence, that competition in education would generate a diverse array of schools offering an array of teaching methods and cultures to meet the needs of consumers. It would also pressure traditional public schools to do a better job retaining students.

    There is no panacea. School choice won’t instantaneously fix our problems. Yet without closing the gap in educational achievement, it seems unlikely we’re going to fix inequality. Without fixing the corrosion of civic education, it’s unlikely that American liberalism is going to survive. We can’t fix either problem without smashing “public education” as it exists. It might already be too late.

    nationalreview.com: Destroy the Public Education System

    AuntiE Says: My feelings on public education are well known. I consider it child abuse and endangerment to send a child to ‘public school’.

  • QUIZ: Famous Military Leaders

    QUIZ: Famous Military Leaders

    Famous generals and commanders from ancient times to World War II

    Source: funtrivia.com

    Look forward to seeing a new Quiz every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

    The topics will vary widely and randomly, so we will enjoy finding out what YOUR brain holds most dear in its banks of knowledge and trivia!