Tonkyhonk wrote:and where do you claim you dug into "Nitty Gritty" in there? it doesnt seem like you understood how equal outcomes could be problematic. if i use your logic, having equal outcome means giving others inequal opportunities. your responses were ignorant advice(?) of "you should" "they should", without seeing the reality, introducing your background or experience whatsoever to fake your words legitimacy.
(and you must be joking with what you said about this thread being advanced.)
now, i also have a bit of experience in JSL (Japanese as a second language, my major) programs and wouldnt deny american ESL programs being huge (along with huge issues). but i know that such programs do not represent the notion of "Equal Access to Opportunity" no matter how ESL staff want to believe that. It does help their demand of language acquisition when they wish, but it is merely for the convenience for both people around them and themselves living there, not to give them real equal opportunities for jobs. dont you talk to your students?
Tonkyhonk wrote:i still despise your minstrel acts, poop.
Claeyt wrote:Perhaps Women are weaker politically in your country to need such special treatment. If women had dominated politics for hundreds of years and men were seen as unable to be in politics, then I would hope that your country would make such a law. The U.S. national politics falls far below 40% but local politics is around that %. A better question to ask about this is "Why would they make a law to empower women, when clearly it takes power away from men?'
Procne wrote:Now, I'm all for equal opportunities. But if you don't do it right then you only get an illusion, and in some cases it may backfire and only make it worse. Every sword has 2 edges. Making lifts / slopes for wheel-chair people near stairs to a school is ok, because it makes their handicap matter less in the education process. Giving special benefits to handicapped people, whose handicaps directly impact their education (I don't know - inability of logical thinking, dyslexia etc.) only creates double standards and makes rating process... unequal. If someone can't count then he shouldn't be rated good in mathematics just because he says certificate showing he has some brain disfunction.
JohnCarver wrote:anybody who argues to remove a mechanic that allows "yet another" way to summon somebody is really a carebear in disguise trying to save his own hide.
Tonkyhonk wrote:It does help their demand of language acquisition when they wish, but it is merely for the convenience for both people around them and themselves living there, not to give them real equal opportunities for jobs. dont you talk to your students?
jwhitehorn wrote:You tell em' ManyLetters
Procne wrote:Need special tretment? What does that mean? What does "weaker politically" mean? To me it means that either voters trust such candidate less or such candidate does not have required will / skills / knowledge to run in the elections. And you plan to fix it by granting such people seats? So they can have even less will / skills / knowledge? It's not like there is some glass ceiling or male lobby that stops women from being succesful politics.
In their quest of fixing inequalities they create new, artificial ones. They give special rights to one gender.
Now, what equal opportunities is about? About giving everyone equal chances in fullfiling some goals, and it's up to people's will, skills and talents, which are relevant to the goal, to reach those goals. And in this example gender is made, by law, to affect someone's chances, even if it's not that relevant.
Procne wrote:The only real way of removing inequalities is to make causes for them disappear. Turn men into women. Give legless people new legs or cut legs of everyone else. Make all people of one race / religion / nationality / sex orientation etc.
Procne wrote:Anything else is just increasing inequalities. Before you had men and women, and now you have men and "women with extra rights". Before there was unequal representation by men and women, and now you have it confirmed by the law, that women are "weaker".
Procne wrote:Now, I'm all for equal opportunities. But if you don't do it right then you only get an illusion, and in some cases it may backfire and only make it worse. Every sword has 2 edges. Making lifts / slopes for wheel-chair people near stairs to a school is ok, because it makes their handicap matter less in the education process. Giving special benefits to handicapped people, whose handicaps directly impact their education (I don't know - inability of logical thinking, dyslexia etc.) only creates double standards and makes rating process... unequal. If someone can't count then he shouldn't be rated good in mathematics just because he says certificate showing he has some brain disfunction.
jorb wrote:(jwhitehorn) you are an ungrateful, spoiled child
Claeyt wrote:As I taught ESL and Special Ed for years, I know something about this.
I do. Or rather, I ignore differences that are irrelevant (subjective, I know). I don't care if politician / policeman / teacher is male or female. Christian or not. As long as he does his job and has proper skills. But I will still prefer a woman who has her own babies as a babysitter for my hypothetical baby.Why don't you try and make them disappear by accepting the rights of others.
This I won't do. I won't support / vote for women just because they are women. I won't provide special treatment for them. In my opinion it only deepens the differences by admitting that they are weaker indeed. If women are good enough then they'll make it. As far as I know there is no glass ceiling in my country, or some raging discrimination against women in my country. Besides what's so draconian about my ideas?Instead of your draconian ideas about the end point of equality try these instead: support women in politics
These are very broad expressions. For some people "fight religious intolerance" equals fighting any religions in general and discriminating anyone who is not atheist. That's also part of the problem. Some people take fight with discrimination as fight with the group, whose members tend to discriminate. Fighting with discrimination of women = fight with men. Fight with discrimination of blacks = fight with whites. But that's a topic for another discussion.fight racism/fight religious intolerance/understand other cultures/fight homophobia.
I have no hardened demands. What hardened demands do you mean?Hardened demands are never the answer.
It's not removing differences - it's living with them and common sense. And I agree with that.There's another way of removing the cause of inequalities, by understanding our differences, accepting them and letting others participate
Do you think 50 years ago anybody imagined a black president in the U.S., yet that president had already been born. Think how 50 years ago Blacks in the U.S. were barred and harassed from voting in the Southern states. Congress Passed a law, and now the Supreme court has ruled that law past it's usefulness. Equality achieved, no, but I feel we're better off today than in 1965 when they passed the 'Voting Rights Act'.
Women aren't defined as 'weaker' because 40% of seats are assigned by sex, instead the society has determined democratically that women have faced historic obstacles to political participation and that at that moment in the country's history that law is required.
In this country I've never known anybody diagnosed with a special requirement that didn't need it, and I was on the team of teachers, doctors, and counselors that did the diagnosing in our school.
That extra time for the kid with dyslexia, who's taking a test is exactly like that wheel chair ramp you mentioned. It's an easier way for that guy to get there. Just like a button that the kid in the wheelchair pushes to open that door, the dyslexic guy is getting a button to push so that he can enter. Once he gets that door open, he still has to meet the qualifications of the job and have the abilities to advance, but getting that door open is where 'Equality of Opportunity' is taking place.
Claeyt wrote:How is teaching kids English not giving them more opportunities in America? I see former students all the time. Some are productive members of society, some aren't.![]()
Tonkyhonk wrote:Claeyt wrote:How is teaching kids English not giving them more opportunities in America? I see former students all the time. Some are productive members of society, some aren't.![]()
you are so typical, Claeyt. thats all you managed to say?
yeah, i have met quite a few ***** aids like yourself who can only see things they want to see and ignore everything else like no problems can exist in front of them at all and believe they are great. who needs to have open mind?
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