under-18 crowd
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Be kind. No government, state, or local politics allowed. Admin has final decision for any/all removed posts.
- TMurphy
- 4 valves
- Posts: 831
- Joined: Sun Mar 21, 2004 11:29 pm
- Location: NJ
This is what I, as a 23 year old, feel I am supposed to come away from this thread with:
-My parents don't love me because they put me in public school.
-My education obviously was poor, because I attended public school, and a public university.
-I, and all of my peers, and nothing but druggies and drunks, and will not e fit to run the country when our time to do so comes.
Now, I realize I am over-generalizing a bit, and please excuse my hyperbole. It just really seems as though every time I see a post like this, it's just a bunch of negative, pessimistic "gloom-and-doom" nonsense designed to make me see the error and evils of my ways. It's a bit upsetting.
I won't delve much into the issue of homeschooling (as I don't want to steer this into the forbidden.) I also care not to delve into my own life too much, only to say that I do not for one second regret attending public schools, nor do I think my parents made any sort of error sending me there. I learned a lot, not just about math and science but also about life.
I loved my college experience. I made some very dear friends for life, and helped to set myself along the path for my career. I would not give up any minute of that experience.
I have never, EVER used any sort of illegal drug. I did not drink a single drop of alchohol until I was 21, and even then, only in moderation (and on the rare occasions where I went to excess, was never in the position to do something stupid, like drive.) This remains true for the vast majority of my friends--both from high school AND college. Certainly, I knew many people who did get involved in those things. I tried then (and try now) now to associate myself with those people. Television, movies, and the internet have NOTHING to do with the decisions I have made in my life. I was raised to understand what is right, and what is wrong, and I allow my own morals and values to guide my decision making. This is what I got from my parents, the same people who put me in public school.
I'm starting to ramble a bit, but the point is, it is silly to blame public schools for the "degredation of society" (which, I believe is imagined), but if you really have a problem with the younger generation, look at the people in YOUR generation, who failed to instill the essential sense of right and wrong in their children. I believe, however, that the situation is greatly overstated and that things are not nearly as awful as you would make them out to be.
Cheerfully and respectfully,
Tim Murphy
-My parents don't love me because they put me in public school.
-My education obviously was poor, because I attended public school, and a public university.
-I, and all of my peers, and nothing but druggies and drunks, and will not e fit to run the country when our time to do so comes.
Now, I realize I am over-generalizing a bit, and please excuse my hyperbole. It just really seems as though every time I see a post like this, it's just a bunch of negative, pessimistic "gloom-and-doom" nonsense designed to make me see the error and evils of my ways. It's a bit upsetting.
I won't delve much into the issue of homeschooling (as I don't want to steer this into the forbidden.) I also care not to delve into my own life too much, only to say that I do not for one second regret attending public schools, nor do I think my parents made any sort of error sending me there. I learned a lot, not just about math and science but also about life.
I loved my college experience. I made some very dear friends for life, and helped to set myself along the path for my career. I would not give up any minute of that experience.
I have never, EVER used any sort of illegal drug. I did not drink a single drop of alchohol until I was 21, and even then, only in moderation (and on the rare occasions where I went to excess, was never in the position to do something stupid, like drive.) This remains true for the vast majority of my friends--both from high school AND college. Certainly, I knew many people who did get involved in those things. I tried then (and try now) now to associate myself with those people. Television, movies, and the internet have NOTHING to do with the decisions I have made in my life. I was raised to understand what is right, and what is wrong, and I allow my own morals and values to guide my decision making. This is what I got from my parents, the same people who put me in public school.
I'm starting to ramble a bit, but the point is, it is silly to blame public schools for the "degredation of society" (which, I believe is imagined), but if you really have a problem with the younger generation, look at the people in YOUR generation, who failed to instill the essential sense of right and wrong in their children. I believe, however, that the situation is greatly overstated and that things are not nearly as awful as you would make them out to be.
Cheerfully and respectfully,
Tim Murphy
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- 4 valves
- Posts: 886
- Joined: Wed Oct 19, 2005 7:55 am
Don't take it either too hard or personally, Tim.
Calling out the younger generation for immaturity and idiocy has been a favorite pastime for since Plato. Probably since the Neanderthals. In time, you'll probably make your own observations about how the younger generation is screwed up.
Just like I'm sure that at this stage of your life you see all kind of ills associated with the older generation. It's all just the human condition.
We all start the same and for sure we all end up the same.
Jim Wagner
Calling out the younger generation for immaturity and idiocy has been a favorite pastime for since Plato. Probably since the Neanderthals. In time, you'll probably make your own observations about how the younger generation is screwed up.
Just like I'm sure that at this stage of your life you see all kind of ills associated with the older generation. It's all just the human condition.
We all start the same and for sure we all end up the same.
Jim Wagner
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- 4 valves
- Posts: 598
- Joined: Thu Feb 23, 2006 5:02 pm
....i voted for around 6..5???????? bah cant even remember now. All I know is that it is extremely high. alcohol abuse is at least 75%........and this area (town) is drug central in this region of my province. .......................I know the number isnt high but for drugs its definitely way too high. Id say at least 25-30%
- TMurphy
- 4 valves
- Posts: 831
- Joined: Sun Mar 21, 2004 11:29 pm
- Location: NJ
That's actually precisely the point I'm getting at. All this talk about the degredation of society is way overstated. I don't take it personally at all (as I said, a bit of hyperbole on my part just to make my point). Really, I think we have people looking at the present and observing only what's negative, while looking backwards at the past through the rose-colored glasses of memory, believing they grew up in a simpler time where everything was wholesome and pure. You didn't, and it wasn't. You just weren't as aware of it as you are now (not to mention the afore-mentioned rose colored glasses).
Ah, well. The sky still above, and the ground still below. Nothing is really changing.
Ah, well. The sky still above, and the ground still below. Nothing is really changing.
- LoyalTubist
- 6 valves
- Posts: 2647
- Joined: Sun Jan 29, 2006 8:49 pm
- Location: Arcadia, CA
- Contact:
Today, for my job, I had to visit Don Quy High School, a public school here in Saigon. This is a country where most parents don't have a choice where to send their kids. For 45 minutes, it was just me and the kids. I had a little spiel I was supposed to do--it only took about 20 minutes, which left me with 25 minutes to spend with the kids.
I think the best thing I left them with was something I learned in the Army: Whenever any teachers ask, as they leave, "Are there any questions I didn't answer?" the reply is,
WHY?
...which the class shouts in unison!
I think the best thing I left them with was something I learned in the Army: Whenever any teachers ask, as they leave, "Are there any questions I didn't answer?" the reply is,
WHY?

...which the class shouts in unison!
________________________________________________________
You only have one chance to make a first impression. Don't blow it.
You only have one chance to make a first impression. Don't blow it.
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- 4 valves
- Posts: 886
- Joined: Wed Oct 19, 2005 7:55 am
Re: Comments
You entirely missed the point. I meant a blank slate and a pile of dust.bloke wrote:No. We absolutely do not. We are being encouraged more and more (and at a faster and faster rate) to accept and embrace mob rule...and the mob isn't particularly moral, nor is it particularly clever, nor is it particularly judicial.We all start the same and for sure we all end up the same.
What you do in between is up to you.
- tubafatness
- 4 valves
- Posts: 543
- Joined: Sat Jun 26, 2004 9:12 pm
I think that, at least as I see it, there is a lot of unfair bias against public schools in this thread. To say that public schools are hotbeads of drug use and stupidity is, for the most part, a complete load of crap. Sorry for the harsh language, but I have to deal with the elite private/home schooled kids and parents on a daily basis. And, from my experience, the most extremely messed-up kids are the same private/home schooled kids that I have to deal with. To say that public schools do nothing to support and enhance the children of today is just a complete lie. Yes, the public schools may sometimes be a little lax in its enforcement of drug and alcohol-use policy. But that shouldn't be the school's responsibility; if anyone's it should be the parents that enforce those rules. No, I don't think that all smart kids come from private schools and all dumb kids come from public schools. For the last 5 years, my [public] school has had one of the top 3 scores for math students in Illinois, with the number 1 student having attended just last year. The same goes for English, History and Science. I'm only ranked 16 at my school of 1200, and I still get mainly A's with a 31 ACT and membership with the National Honor Society, (not really to brag, a lot of people got in that program.) So, to say that public schools are "bad for our children" or that they are "a part of the morally degraded current-day society" is just crap. Sorry again for the language, but I have some very strong opinions on this subject.
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- 4 valves
- Posts: 886
- Joined: Wed Oct 19, 2005 7:55 am
Re: Comments
OK, I'll come at this from a different direction.bloke wrote:I got the point. I dunno about you, but I don't concern myself with that state of my earthly development and eventuality.lgb&dtuba wrote:You entirely missed the point. I meant a blank slate and a pile of dust.
The main concern here is that in between the "dust" stages we are all sheep...and who shall be our shepherd(s)?
My 2 kids are both products of the public school and university systems. According to the Rush Limbaugh's of the world we did everything wrong. We let them watch tv, play video games, listen to rock 'n roll, read comics, sent them to day care (working mother), never sent them to church, didn't censor what they read or saw, and never spanked them - I'm sure you all know the litany. They certainly weren't raised the way the conservative right says is the only "right" way (pun intended). But neither did we raise them according to the liberal left's rules. They weren't allowed to just run wild and were held accountable for their own actions. They were taught to think for themselves and be very very wary of anyone telling them how they should think.
My daughter has a masters in forensics and works as a forensic scientist. She's married and is now raising her own family. My son has a B.S. in computer science and is out working now and on his own. Neither drink, smoke or do drugs. They've both made it safely to adulthood and are shaping up to be very good and responsible adults who still talk to their parents.
How could that possibly be since they went to public schools? If public schools are to blame for the "wasted younger generation", then it follows that they can also be credited with the successes, doesn't it?
Of course the truth is that there is no single reason for either the successes or failures in this life. Blaming or crediting the public school system for what you perceive to be the state of today's youth, be that state good or bad, is just looking for simple answers to complex questions.
The bad certainly gets more press than the good, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's accurate when you look at the whole picture of today's youth.
Just like at any point in human history you can identify good people and bad people. And crotchity old men only seeing the bad kids has been a cliche as long as there have been old men and young kids.
As for me, I see both types of kids.
Jim "old but not so crotchity, about kids anyway" Wagner
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- bugler
- Posts: 137
- Joined: Sun Jul 31, 2005 12:50 pm
- Location: Houston, TX
To be honest, many people that I know (if not all of them) drink at least
.I can't really afford to drink anyways, my gpa needs to be higher than what it is (3.7 on a 5.0 scale). I can barely spell helleburg without major focus, let alone a major exam paper. I think the only people that really don't drink are my girfriend and I. It's really a shame, one has their entire life to drink, no need to rush into as a teen..
I didn't even know there were alot of teenagers on tubenet besides myself and richland tuba and about 3 others...
Hope I'm one of the nice kids.


I didn't even know there were alot of teenagers on tubenet besides myself and richland tuba and about 3 others...
Hope I'm one of the nice kids.

BB flat Mira 186
Sidey Helleberg
U. of H Cougar Band
Sidey Helleberg
U. of H Cougar Band
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- 4 valves
- Posts: 886
- Joined: Wed Oct 19, 2005 7:55 am
Of course not. Guess you didn't actually read the whole post and missed:bloke wrote:Certainly not all TV, video games, rock 'n' roll, comic books, day care centers are "bad", and not all churches are "good". Please don't try to lead me to believe that you just allowed your children to "run".We let them watch tv, play video games, listen to rock 'n roll, read comics, sent them to day care (working mother), never sent them to church, didn't censor what they read or saw, and never spanked them - I'm sure you all know the litany.
bloke "Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum. I smell the bullsh!t stench of d./r. p*******, so I'm OUTAH HERE. (' see ya in OTHER threads, though)"
If you're going to call b.s. then at least be sure you've actually read, and understood, the post you're doing it on.But neither did we raise them according to the liberal left's rules. They weren't allowed to just run wild and were held accountable for their own actions. They were taught to think for themselves and be very very wary of anyone telling them how they should think.
- bububassboner
- pro musician
- Posts: 648
- Joined: Wed Jan 03, 2007 1:16 am
- Location: Sembach, Germany