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Monday In Raleigh: Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol Analyzes Election Results

Posted November 7th, 2014 at 1:04 PM by Donna Martinez

Join the John Locke Foundation Monday for an analysis of 2014 midterm election results by the Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol.

Register here.

Renaissance Raleigh North Hills Hotel, 4100 Main at North Hills Street, Raleigh, NC 27609

Price: $40

Join us for a post-election analysis with one of the country’s most influential political analysts and commentators.

Bill Kristol is editor of The Weekly Standard, which, together with Fred Barnes and John Podhoretz, he founded in 1995. Kristol regularly appearances on ABC News “This Week”.

Before starting The Weekly Standard, Kristol led the Project for the Republican Future. Prior to that, Kristol served as chief of staff to Vice President Dan Quayle during the Bush administration and to Secretary of Education William Bennett under President Reagan. Before coming to Washington in 1985, Kristol taught politics at the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

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They have to be enticed with a “shirtless male model” to vote?

Posted November 3rd, 2014 at 10:04 AM by Donna Martinez

So much for maturity at NC State. 

Attention, students of North Carolina State University: The #CosmoVotes party bus is coming for you.

On Election Day, a bus decked out with snacks, swag, and models (hi, this is Cosmo) will roll up to North Carolina State University, the winner of Cosmopolitan.com’s first-ever party bus contest. The bus will shuttle students back and forth to a nearby polling location so students can vote.

More from the Cosmo contest website:

A party bus that will shuttle students to the polls, stocked with snacks, prizes, shirtless male models, and more. Because voting is important, but that doesn’t mean it has to be boring.

And get out the vote efforts don’t have to pander to the lowest common denominator either.

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Nonsensical Environmentalists: Fido Bad For The Planet

Posted at 9:47 AM by Donna Martinez

If you’ve ever had a dog you know how much pure emotion they produce in you every time they look into your eyes or get caught snuggled up on the bed when they’re supposed to be on the floor. Well, the Leftist environmental movement has decided that dogs — and the poop they produce — are bad for the environment. Environmentalist Judith Lewis Wernit writes for the LA Times:

And the environmental problems actually start long before a dog even produces a waste stream.

My 55-pound pit bull, for instance, consumes about 500 pounds of meat a year, half of it lamb. The production of one pound of lamb, says the Environmental Working Group, releases 85 pounds of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere , so just feeding my dog loads our warming planet with more than 21 tons of heat-trapping gases. Brenda and Robert Vales, in their controversial 2009 book “Time to Eat the Dog?” claim a dog’s ecological footprint is twice that of the average SUV.

As a conservative, I endorse making reasonable, wise decisions to ensure we don’t waste natural resources or pollute the air and water. But the important word here is “reasonable.” Saying that dogs are a problem to be addressed is nonsensical. My Tony and Johnny are family members, not problems to be addressed so that ultra-Leftists can feel good about themselves.

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“just very far from reality”

Posted at 9:13 AM by Donna Martinez

Fact of fiction? The Left’s narrative about education funding includes the notion that paring back the budget for the behemoth Department of Public Instruction damages the classroom. Not so, says Dr. Terry Stoops, the John Locke Foundation’s director of research and education studies. Stoops refuted the Left’s often-used attack on legislative fiscal reformers in this recent Carolina Journal Radio interview.

 

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What To Look For Tuesday Night

Posted October 31st, 2014 at 9:21 AM by Donna Martinez

JLF’s Becki Gray weighs in today on the midterm election, what’s at stake in terms of legislative action and policy decisions, and what the results could signal.

I believe if Republicans lose no more than eight seats in the House and four in the Senate, they can consider it a green light from voters to continue their momentum.

If Republicans lose their veto-proof majority in either chamber, McCrory will gain negotiating power with the General Assembly. The governor has largely gotten much of what he wants, but there have been some differences.

Without a veto-proof majority, McCrory will become an even bigger player when there’s an impasse. His policies, priorities, and approach to reforms will gain importance.

This referendum on General Assembly policies also will have a huge influence on the selection of the next speaker of the House. Will the caucus choose a leader to continue an aggressive reform agenda, one committed to maintaining the momentum, or someone who wants to let the dust settle a bit?

The direction of the General Assembly depends not only on numbers but also on the ideology of its members. Depending on the election’s outcome, the body could become more conservative, especially if the Republicans pick up new seats. It is less likely it will become more liberal. If the Democratic caucus becomes more conservative, it increases the likelihood of bipartisanship and could pull the body more to the middle.

Tuesday night will be consequential in many ways, most importantly, in which direction the state will head.

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Nov. 10 In Raleigh: Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol On Election Results

Posted October 28th, 2014 at 4:46 PM by Donna Martinez

You’re invited to hear election perspective from one of the most respected national analysts working today: Bill Kristol.

Monday, November 10, 2014, 12:00 p.m.
Renaissance Hotel, 4100 Main at North Hills Street, Raleigh, NC 27609 – View Map
Price: $40 – Purchase tickets here.

Join us for a post-election analysis with one of the country’s most influential political analysts and commentators.

Bill Kristol is editor of The Weekly Standard, which, together with Fred Barnes and John Podhoretz, he founded in 1995. Kristol regularly appears on Fox News Sunday and on the Fox News Channel.

Before starting The Weekly Standard, Kristol led the Project for the Republican Future. Prior to that, Kristol served as chief of staff to Vice President Dan Quayle during the Bush administration and to Secretary of Education William Bennett under President Reagan. Before coming to Washington in 1985, Kristol taught politics at the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

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Did UNC’s academic/athletic malfeasance start in 1993?

Posted at 2:48 PM by Jon Sanders

The staggering finding by Kenneth L. Wainstein’s investigation into UNC-Chapel Hill’s “shadow curriculum” for athletes — discussed in some detail by Jane Shaw at the Pope Center — was that it lasted not one year, not a few years, but an entire generation, from 1993 to 2011, involving (and I would say victimizing) thousands of student-athletes.

Perhaps the “paper class” system arose in 1993, but if so, it would merely have been the logical next step down the path that has led the once-proud university of the “Carolina Way” to its great shame. Consider these passages in autobiographies by two of UNC athletics’ favorite sons.

All-American linebacker Lawrence Taylor, who came to UNC-Chapel Hill in 1977 and was drafted by the New York Giants in 1981, wrote this in his 1987 autobiography LT: Living on the Edge (co-written with David Falkner):

There were a number of courses that were ready-made for football players. You know, large lecture classes, 1,200 people or more, with two tests – a midterm and a final – both multiple choice. In those courses, you’re gonna get what the guy sitting next to you gets. The only thing you have to do is remember not to copy the same name on your paper. But there are only so many of these courses.

I did take some courses I cared about and learned things from, but that didn’t get me through school. I learned every little bit I could about how things worked, and I took advantage of them. The rules, for example, said I had to take a full schedule of so many hours. I took half loads and made sure I had a good supply of add and drop cards, properly dated, for the end of the semester. Then I’d go around the school during exam week looking for those courses where 100 percent of the grade was based on that final exam. I’d sit next to somebody I knew, copy his paper, and hand in mine while slipping an add card into the pile of papers before I left the room. Simple. Any fool could grab a “C” that way.

Taylor called the system a “total fraud” that “doesn’t start with colleges” but whose ultimate fault rests with society.

Current men’s basketball coach Roy Williams was at UNC-Chapel Hill from 1968 to 1973. He played for the freshman team. He was not a student-athlete during the time he recounts here in in his 2009 autobiography Hard Work (written with Tim Crothers), pp. 51-52:

In the final summer of my graduate school year, I needed two more courses to get my degree. One was required and the other I wanted to be really easy. I heard about a guidance counseling course taught by Dr. Perry. I’d heard it had no tests, no papers, and no projects. That was my kind of class. My roommate, Roy Barnes and I went to find out about it and were told it was full. So I told Roy that we were going to see Dr. Perry at his house. Roy didn’t want to go, so he hid behind a bush when I knocked on Dr. Perry’s door.

When he opened the door, I said, “Dr. Perry, my name is Roy Williams. I’m in graduate school in health and physical education finishing my master’s. I need one more course to graduate. I would like to take your course, but they said the only I could get in was with professor approval. Dr. Perry, this is it for me. They told me your course has no tests, no papers, no projects — and I’m being honest with you, that’s what I want. I can contribute to the class with the best of them. Will you let me in?”

According to Williams, Perry allowed him into the class for having the “mighty big balls” to come over there and say that to him.

In other words, the system was broke well before 1993. To be sure, it is hardly a UNC-specific problem. As I wrote in 2011 (see comments) back when this was still beginning to unfold — years before Mary Willingham came forward about some athletes reading below a fourth-grade level:

The ongoing charade of college athletics requires, mostly in revenue sports, a pretense that functional illiterates who don’t know the past tense of arrive or the term ambidextrous belong in the same academic environment as, e.g., future brain surgeons (UNC) and rocket scientists (NC State). It is certainly an underlying problem here.

UNC’s downfall is the sheer, breathtaking, previously unheard of and nigh on unthinkable scope of the corruption of academics for athletics glory and money.

It is the bitterest of ironies that, in its annual quest for No. 1, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill achieved the top spot for worst athletics/academic fraud scandal of all time.

If anything good is to come from all this, it is that — in the weeks and months to come as this report’s revelations sink in, fester, and create upheaval — the nation’s institutions of higher learning will find a better way to offer athletics without harming a university’s first purpose. UNC can lead the way out. It offers a sobering, Terrie Hall-like cautionary example against athletics indulgence to the detriment of academics.

As I wrote earlier this year:

Beyond that, beyond the money, there is a long, sad train of barely literate athletes victimized by the universities and the NCAA’s system that “works to keep them on the field and get them through college, but it is a terrible failure at helping get them through life when the cheering stops.”

This situation has long been suspected, however — which means that the public has been willing to be blind to it, or at least to tolerate it insofar as it remains hidden. UNC is one of the top standard-bearers for college athletics, so this scandal resonates all the more.

By the same token, however, UNC can set a new course for student-athletes in revenue sports that could inspire other universities to follow. That should be the aim now.

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A Sure Sign Regulators Have Over-Stepped

Posted at 9:10 AM by Donna Martinez

Teeth whitening — who can provide the service in our state and who can’t — is now the subject of a U.S. Supreme Court case. The N.C. Board of Dental Examiners wants to keep non-dentists from providing the service. Carolina Journal reported on the case/issue in 2012.

The eight-member dental board was created by the General Assembly to regulate the practice of dentistry. The board has justified tougher enforcement by pointing to a subsection of state law that defines practicing dentistry as including the removal of “stains, accretions, or deposits from human teeth.” In the board’s view, teeth whitening is deemed a dental treatment that can be provided only by a state-licensed dentist.

Entrepreneurs, however, say they are being targeted unfairly and forced out of business for applying the same teeth-whitening products that are sold over the counter as cosmetics. Consumers can purchase the products — which are approved for use by the Food and Drug Administration — online or in stores and apply to their teeth at home without a prescription or professional supervision.

Joyce Osborn, president and founder of the Alabama-based Council f

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