We can expect more of this from the left...

MonsterMark

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with a Kerry Presidency.

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/news/WABC_100304_middleschoolteacher.html

A school teacher gets kicked out of school after posting a picture of President and Mrs. Bush next to a lineup of other US Presidents. Enraged parents come in and tell her she has to put up a picture of Senator Kerry too.

If this kind of stuff wasn't so damn pathetic, it would be funny.

I can just hear the shrill of the lefties. I think the conversation went something like this.

Lefty parent: "its not fair, we demand you put a picture of Kerry up there also."

Teacher: "um, well, dumbass's, these were pictures of real PRESIDENTS, and adding a picture of your pretender doesn't qualify..."
 
MonsterMark said:
with a Kerry Presidency.

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/news/WABC_100304_middleschoolteacher.html

A school teacher gets kicked out of school after posting a picture of President and Mrs. Bush next to a lineup of other US Presidents. Enraged parents come in and tell her she has to put up a picture of Senator Kerry too.

If this kind of stuff wasn't so damn pathetic, it would be funny.

I can just hear the shrill of the lefties. I think the conversation went something like this.

Lefty parent: "its not fair, we demand you put a picture of Kerry up there also."

Teacher: "um, well, dumbass's, these were pictures of real PRESIDENTS, and adding a picture of your pretender doesn't qualify..."

School is such a wounderful place. . .
 
MonsterMark said:
with a Kerry Presidency.

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/news/WABC_100304_middleschoolteacher.html

A school teacher gets kicked out of school after posting a picture of President and Mrs. Bush next to a lineup of other US Presidents. Enraged parents come in and tell her she has to put up a picture of Senator Kerry too.

If this kind of stuff wasn't so damn pathetic, it would be funny.

I can just hear the shrill of the lefties. I think the conversation went something like this.

Lefty parent: "its not fair, we demand you put a picture of Kerry up there also."

Teacher: "um, well, dumbass's, these were pictures of real PRESIDENTS, and adding a picture of your pretender doesn't qualify..."

NO WORSE THAN:
Ticket ripped because of sticker
Teacher, 55, wanted to see a president
BY IAN C. STOREY
Record-Eagle staff writer
TRAVERSE CITY - Kathryn Mead wanted to see her first sitting president when George W. Bush visited the city.
Instead, Bush campaign staffers tore up the 55-year-old social studies teacher's ticket and refused her admission because she sported a small sticker on her blouse that touted the Democratic ticket of John Kerry and John Edwards.
"I had my ticket and photo identification, but they would not let me in because of this sticker," said Mead, a teacher at Traverse City West Senior High, who said she has seen Queen Elizabeth and Pope John Paul in person.
"I have never found this kind of screening anywhere in my travels around the world. I can't imagine being denied access to hearing the president of the United States speak."
Several people outside the campaign event tried to console Mead, who was visibly upset.
"It really is comedic," said a man holding a Kerry/Edwards sign. "What absolute nonsense."
Kate Stephan, chair of the Grand Traverse Republican Party, could not be reached for comment after the rally.
But Ralph Soffredine, a Traverse City commissioner, school board member and former police chief who worked security at the front gate, said it is part of the Bush campaign policy.
"We were told that anyone with stickers or shirts would not be let in if they would not take them off," he said. "(Mead) came to me after her ticket was torn up, but I told her there was nothing I could do.
"I know her and it was really too bad, but I would say that we had very few instances of that. I thought it went very well."
Lynn Larson, chair of the Grand Traverse Democratic Party, said the move is typical of other Bush rallies that only allow Republican supporters to see the president.
"The very reason that we are here protesting is to protect our First Amendment rights," she said. "When the Secret Service rips somebody's sticker off and takes their ticket away, it makes me even more determined to march to protect our rights."
Mead, who has taught for two decades, instead stood on the sidewalks with other John Kerry supporters, listening to Bush from behind a fence.
"I really, truly wanted to have the experience of having seen the president and hear him speak, which is very important to me as a social studies teacher," she said. "How can anyone in the United States deny someone entry? Isn't this a democracy?"
 
what does Kerry have to do with it? Why say: "We can expect more of this from the left with a Kerry Presidency."
 
Because a Kerry presidency will only empower people who supported him and who want to continue to act out like this. And Senator Kerry would be a poor role model for our children, as was President Clinton.

At the end of the day, the divide in this country will only continue to grow, Bush or Kerry.
 
MonsterMark said:
At the end of the day, the divide in this country will only continue to grow, Bush or Kerry.

On this - we can agree.

I would be agreeable to a "do over" for the primaries and let both parties pick better canidates
 
Officials discuss return to class for schoolteacher in photo flap
Wednesday, October 06, 2004
BY PATRICK JENKINS
Star-Ledger Staff

The South Brunswick middle school teacher who claims she was fired for hanging a picture of President Bush and the first lady on a bulletin board doesn't know whether she'll return to her classroom.

Shiba Pillai-Diaz said her lawyer negotiated with district officials, but they had not reached a resolution by late yesterday afternoon.
We are trying to resolve it in a way that is satisfactory to everyone, that helps the students and allows me to comfortably go back to the classroom," said Pillai-Diaz, whose classes have been taught by substitute teachers.

Her attorney, Brian Curley of Morristown, met with School Superintendent Gary McCartney and school board attorney David Caroll throughout the day yesterday.

Neither lawyer was available for comment. McCartney could not be reached for comment.

The flap has brought national media attention to Crossroads Middle School south campus, where Pillai-Diaz started teaching language arts to seventh- and eighth-graders in September.

Pillai-Diaz said she put a photo of the president and first lady on her bulletin board to honor America and the office of president.

But parents and students complained about the photo and claimed that Pillai-Diaz was engaging in partisan discussions, using her classroom time to support Republicans and denigrate Democrats and insulting students who voiced different opinions, according to a statement from McCartney.

"Students reported that she had made statements which denigrated one party over the other. The conversations included Ms. Pillai-Diaz telling some students who offered opinions contrary to her statements that she was 'glad they were not old enough to vote,'" McCartney said in the statement. "Other comments to students, including such statements as 'you should be ashamed to be a Democrat' have been verified through student interviews."

After a confrontation at a back- to-school night on Thursday, school officials told her the next day to take the photo of the president down.

Pillai-Diaz refused, and she left the school after thinking she was fired. School officials said they did not fire her, and that she left without authorization.

Pillai-Diaz said that statement, distributed throughout the school system as well as to the media, falsely portrayed her as a political zealot and made her fear she could not comfortably re-enter her classroom.

"That press release is the big issue now," she said. "They say they have supporting evidence, but I was never made aware of any complaints or allegations, and I never said any of that in school," Pillai-Diaz said.

"They paint me as someone who had political discussions in class and I vehemently deny that. I categorically deny that, especially the quote about being ashamed to be a Democrat. I don't think in those terms, and I would never use it," she said.

She said she fought against taking down the picture because she put it up to honor America and the office of the president.

"I would have been equally outraged if it was in the 1990s and they told me to take down Bill Clinton's picture," said Pillai-Diaz, who worked as a volunteer at the Republican National Convention in August.

McCartney, in his statement, said it was Pillai-Diaz's political proselytizing in class, not the picture on the bulletin board, that school officials found offensive.

He noted Bush's picture is widely displayed in schools throughout the district.

Patrick Jenkins works in the Middlesex County bureau of The Star- Ledger. He can be reached at (732)404-8090 or pjenkins@starle der.com.
 

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