Red-tape, busywork, unnecessary regulations – are more polite terms for BS

To give a specific example of a recent policy update that even though it is an important issue, I would categorize as adding too much red-tape. The issue is the increase in amount of time schoolchildren are spending on the mandated testing that has been increased with the No Child Left Behind [3] and Race to the Top [1, 2] initiatives.

Research into how much time children were spending preparing for the mandated tests and taking them found that the total time was the most significant in only one of the school years when 2 or 3 tests were being taken (in 8th grade I think some areas had 2 or 3 tests). In that year students were spending 2.3%* of their time on the tests (*or some statistic near that number but I haven’t re-found that article. A different one: [4])

The policy that has been proposed to address the excessive time spent in mandated testing may end up making more busy work than necessary for administrators and teachers because it sets a limit based on a percentage. It states that no more than 2% of the student’s time will be spent on the mandated testing. This may have been based on the 2.3%* number from the research, but what is only a few sentences for a politician or other administrator to write in a policy, can sometimes ending up being a time intensive tracking job for all of the individual schools to have to add to their busy schedule.

Percentages require totals that are obtained from all the different time spent by the children in all the different types of activities for the whole school year in this case — which is a lot of data for one research study let alone all schools throughout the nation every year into the future.

During my career I had to do a time study for one week every three years in order to see whether the time the agency spent in total on breast feeding education was within federal goals. Doing the time study was laborious but educational regarding just how I did spend my time — some of it was on breast feeding education but I would have hated to have to do some sort of time tracking for the entire year — every year.

A much simpler policy that would also have been based on the school testing research would have simply set the cap at no more than two mandated tests per year or only one test per year for younger children and a maximum of two for students in older grades, and limits could be simply set on a maximum number of hours of preparation time allowed just as tests usually have a time limit for how long students can spend completing the tests — Counting the total number of tests would be much simpler to track and count — one — two — easy, compared to having to monitor how much time students are spending on tests compared to everything else they do in the whole school year.

Disclosure: This information is provided for educational purposes within the guidelines of fair use. While I am a Registered Dietitian this information is not intended to provide individual health guidance. Please see a health professional for individual health care purposes./

 

Ballot access takes time

A good bullsh!tter knows that the best kind is a thin layer spread evenly over all the empty blanks, none left empty and no piles too high and deep in any area. That might make it more obvious to the casual observer. The thin even layer turns it into fertilizer instead, which is a good thing. Ideas and crops can grow from different types of fertilizer. (This is a joke – the point being that if you have an answer for all of the blanks on a test then you basically are prepared. Bullsh!t is when answers are made up and don’t really answer the question that is being asked.)

Ballot access for write-in candidates varies and would need to be addressed early enough for the votes to count. For Plan Z to be fully operational ballot access would be needed for all of the states. Six states require candidates to be on the ballot, one may be as easy as filling out a form but the others would likely require petitions with a certain number of voter signatures. So a write-in campaign actually isn’t as easy as writing a name down – the vote would not be counted in my state unless the person had filed a Declaration of Intent in advance of the election day.

Third party candidates also have to work towards having their party’s nominees listed on the ballots for all of the states far enough in advance.

We already have a zombie problem but it is us — our loved ones with dementia or other severe health problems. My shovel is not going to help. Visit a nursing home and you’re likely to see listless people sitting in wheelchairs. Serious chronic problems are becoming common or even expected but often are more preventable than currently is recognized. However lifestyle and diet changes would probably be needed rather than a prescription pad.

I was reminded that there has been another female candidate running in this election for President and in the last one. Jill Stein is the Green Party nominee and her platform includes a goal of single payer Medicare public health insurance for all. [http://www.jill2016.com/]

See the Wikipedia section titled “Ballot Access” for more information about the vote totals from the 2012 Presidential election, Obama/Biden won with 51.9% of the counted votes, 65,915,796 out of roughly 128,736,080 total votes:  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_2012]

The U.S. population was  312,780,968 at the beginning of 2012.

Primaries for the main parties are where votes can count a lot.*

*In case you missed the point — that was the main point and has been the point that I’ve tried to make for years. I  care, but I can only do so much in a system that needs reform.

In the current system if you want your vote to count, then go vote in the primaries and vote in the general election for one of the two main party candidates. If we want to change that then we would need roughly 65,915,796 people to vote third party or independent party if we hoped to actually elect a President from a third party or one who was an independent candidate. Voting in new candidates that want to work together at all levels, will likely be necessary before we can change the current system that seems to be favoring corporate persons and big banks — and some Jewish people. People of Jewish background or faith make up 2.5% of the U.S. population but approximately 51% of the 2007 Vanity Fair magazine’s list of top 100 most influential people in the U.S..[http://rense.com/general78/jewishpower.htm]  Emotional manipulation is a skill that can be useful in a boardroom. But is being smart and manipulative something we should admire just because it is incredibly profitable for a few individuals?  [http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/46410/one-four-jewish-women-suffer-abuse-home] — This is about me and my perspective and about financial and media control over our opinions. This is not about the current candidates or religion in general –  I encourage looking at the candidates experience, voting records and platforms for guidance and to not discriminate due to age, race, gender, religion, place of national origin, or disability – this is an Equal Opportunity nation after all.

— And this is about the people’s choice being truly a choice rather than a two parties who are both supporting corporate goals — so the people can leap out of the two party system and all choose a different name for the top slot but it will take a lot of people working together, 65 million or so.

Disclosure: This information is provided for educational purposes within the guidelines of fair use. While I am a Registered Dietitian this information is not intended to provide individual health guidance. Please see a health professional for individual health care purposes./

Change takes time, talking about issues can be a place to start

Difficult issues change over time when enough people have worked through their own changes and then start raising the next generation to have different attitudes in the first place.

Teamwork between men and women is what sensible office standards strive for with a preference for moderate clothing and for professional topics of conversation during work hours. Biological instincts don’t have to be a problem if they are simply recognized and set aside for the moment. Think about cold showers and get on with the workday.

Of course we’re ready for female leaders, just some may be more ready than others. Talking about issues can be a start to recognizing a need for change. The following quote attributed to Jon Stewart says a lot:

Nobody says, hey, men should not drink. It’s all about women must dress differently, women must walk differently, women must drink differently. Why are we not able to hold men to account for this behavior?

– Jon Stewart (Source- a meme.)

Disclosure: This information is provided for educational purposes within the guidelines of fair use. /

Modern Art as CIA propaganda against the Cold War

A former CIA agent has confirmed rumors that the CIA had funded modern artists and art magazines during the Cold War. the goal was to show that the U.S. was a creative place open to new forms of art rather than being as rigid about old styles as was more typical of the Soviet Union at the time. So now we know who we have to blame/thank for some of the modern art world’s odder art – us, the taxpayers, thanks us. Read more: [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/modern-art-was-cia-weapon-1578808.html]

This project is also mentioned in the following recent TED talk: [http://www.ted.com/talks/taryn_simon_photographs_secret_sites?language=en]

/Disclosure: This information is provided for educational purposes within the guidelines of fair use./