The following is from an interview with John Kerry on ABC by reporter Katie Couric on the subject of the State of Union speech:
Kerry: “I think that if you look at, look at education and competitiveness. What he did last night was timid compared to what we need to do. Of course we need to improve-”
Couric: “He said he wanted to train 70,000 additional teachers in math and science.”
Kerry: “And that’s terrific, Katie, but 53 percent of our children are not graduating from high school. Kids don’t have after-school programs. Only nine percent of the people eligible in America will be able to get Pell grants this year and for the fifth year in a row they’re not gonna raise the amount of money to help kids who have a 57 percent increase in, in their cost of education to be able to pay for it.”
Of course 53% is way wrong, the real number is anywhere from the low 70’s to 85% depending on exactly how long you give students to graduate. Potentially he meant MINORITY students that are Black or Hispanic, in which case he may have been close. The key point however is that there was never any question of what it was that he meant by Couric, or as far as I know, any other media outlet to date. One has to be a “radical” to even go to any web sites where the gaff is reported.
Why bring it up? For starters, it is a bit more egregious than not being able to spell “potato”, and we know that was serious enough to bring down the political career of Dan Quayle. He brought it up, I suspect that nearly everyone would agree that education is highly important, yet a statistic as shocking as less than half of US students graduating from High School wasn’t enough to bring even a follow-up from an extremely well known reporter on a major network. The level of credulity given to some bozo with a “D” next to his name is shocking.
I find it hard to believe that he simply “mis-spoke”, although we will never know in this case it seems. Republicans get very little slack when it is completely obvious that they just said the wrong thing. No reason to copy that treatment, if he just didn’t say the right thing … meant minorities, or something else, then I have no problem with that. HOWEVER, since he brought it up, it seems very odd that he would have it wrong … after all, we are constantly told how smart and capable he is, and he certainly is a lot smoother vocally than say, Bush.
Let’s consider that Kerry (and Couric for that matter) may actually believe that less than 50% of US students graduate High School. Does anyone else find that incredible? How could they possibly support the NEA and the existing system of public education that is spending vast sums of money but by their stated number for results providing the minimal result of a diploma to only 47% of the students. That would be a DISASTER … even 85% success, where 15% fall through the cracks is bad enough, and the low 70’s is distinct cause for alarm, but around 50%? In a global enconomy? That is the kind of number that ought to make the hair stand up on the back of your head, damn the politics, and demand RADICAL CHANGE in a system that could fall to such a low result. Throwing a few extra dollars at it would not be an example of the kind of change required.
Of course, the fact is that at least Black minority students have rates very close to that 50/50 graduation chance travesty, and they are the students most locked in to the “plantation” of public education with no other options, along with being the most saddled with single parent households and the millstone of a victim culture. Something radical … like vouchers, private and church schools certainly needs to be tried to fix those kinds of numbers, but a John Kerry isn’t going to be the guy to see that.
Having a D next to your name means that you can quote any kind of stupidity you want and the MSM won’t so much as bat a pretty eye. So the vast majority of the population of sheep remain so out of touch that the idea of them voting is a pretty scary thought.
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