I don't agree with everything this young man profounds, but over all his points are well taken.
From the Appalachian:
.Opinion: Board of Governors must work with education, not against
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Created on Wednesday, 27 March 2013 19:56
Austin Mann
Last week, the N.C. Senate elected eight new members to the Board of Governors.
The board is in charge of “the general determination, control, supervision, management and governance of all affairs of the constituent institutions,” according to the UNC website. It controls college campuses across the state, including our own.
The Board of Governors is responsible for appointing members to Appalachian State’s Board of Trustees, defining its powers and duties, appointing and compensating our chancellor, vice chancellors, administrative officers and more.
The Board of Governors is a very powerful force because it has a large degree of control over not only Appalachian, but other college campuses, too. It is very important who is on the board, and for the majority of its history both parties have had a say.
But with the recent election, the Republicans now have a majority on the board.
It bothers me that people in the state government who would rather privatize education than make it free. They would rather accept $135 million budget cuts than fight back.
Democrats would probably endorse cuts as well, although perhaps not as big. Does it matter that we have Democrats on the board? Also, the Board of Governors has no real power to object to budget cuts. The problem with the Board of Governors is that it is not responsible to a constituency, but to the state administration.
“The Republicans won the election,” Rep. Edgar Starnes, a Hickory Republican, said in the News & Observer. “We are in control. We intend to elect Republicans and appoint Republicans, and we make no apology for it.”
Communities are subject to the whims of politicians like Starnes whose only interest is in spreading a pro-market agenda.
The Board of Governors is a tool of the state administration, not the people.
But I see a bright future ahead. Students across North Carolina are aware of the things that affect them, and tomorrow I hope to see communities running their own education systems.
Mann, a freshman computer science major from Raleigh, is an opinion writer.
Now this student makes some sense
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Re: Now this student makes some sense
I guess I can see what he is saying except the implied assumption that Republicans are bad. I for one am conservative but believe in the check and balance system. So, if that is what he is saying its a good thing and I agree.
P.S.- I have to live with the other side at the federal level and in my mind that mindset of entitlements and paying for votes is GROSSLY worse.
P.S.- I have to live with the other side at the federal level and in my mind that mindset of entitlements and paying for votes is GROSSLY worse.

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Re: Now this student makes some sense
Wasnt it the liberal icon himself, Obama, that said elections have consequences?
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Re: Now this student makes some sense
Comment from local state rep at meeting I attended: "Public school teachers need to suffer." You're right. We got what we voted for.
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Re: Now this student makes some sense
You forgot his second sentence. ....Only if the democrats win.GlassOnion wrote:Wasnt it the liberal icon himself, Obama, that said elections have consequences?

"Some people call me hillbilly. Some people call me mountain man. You can call me Appalachian. Appalachian's what I am."-- Del McCoury Band
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Re: Now this student makes some sense
Partisanship has sucked the very last breath of reason and discretion from the decadent American politic. All that remains are warring factions, exclusively bent on screwing each other, far removed from the long-forgotten task of governing reasonably, responsibly and with regard for their constituents.
Res Ipsa Loquitur
Res Ipsa Loquitur