TYPICAL case in point: AS the New York, Wall Street, City-of-London, and "multi-national" banksters WALLOW in their TRILLIONS of no-oversight "bailouts" dollars EXTORTED from American taxpayers (by the insanely corrupt Nancy Pelosi 110th &111th Congresses and Bush & Obama presidencies), the despicable Washington Post editors pretend that there is NO education or employment crisis for American teachers - or for the students dependent on those teachers for a quality education.
In this case, Huffington Post reporter Jason Linkins contrasts the Washington Post's SNEERING, DISMISSIVE "reporting" with the real facts of A NEW ROUND of teacher layoffs - 58,000 in September alone, by Linkins' account.
We have been enraged & disgusted by the despicable, ENTITLED Neo-Con PROPAGANDA LIARS at the despicable "PRAVDA ON THE POTOMAC" Washington Post for so long - nearly two decades of horrific "reporting" - that we can't even summon the energy to address how INSIDIOUSLY DESPICABLE those serial liars and nation-gutting Neo-Cons propagandists at the Post are, but they are nearly as efficient as the WWII Nazi media, in making the victims of their Neo-Con economic larceny DISAPPEAR - in this case, all but writing 58,000 laid off American teachers right out of the "news."
Washington Post Editors DISMISS Teacher Layoff Crisis [as "Liberal" entitlement spendning]DECONSTRUCTING the SERIAL LIES of the CHRONIC, entitled, despicable LIARS at the Meyer/Graham Washington Post in this manner is CHILD's PLAY, except that ENTIRE SWATHS of American press, media, academia, and political "leaders" are IN on the NEO-CON LOOTING of America, making articles like Mr. Linkins' the exception.
On Same Day Massive Teacher Layoffs Are Reported
by Jason Linkins, HuffingtonPost.com
October 8, 2010, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/10/08/wapo-editors-dismiss-teac_n_756426.html
Washington Post "reports" [our highlights]:
So urgent was the supposed need for Congress to forestall a catastrophic loss of teacher jobs that the House was called back from its summer recess and money looted from the food stamp program. That money is now flowing to the states, but since, for many, the crisis was less dramatic than had been described, local school districts are now looking for creative ways to use the money.
Jason Linkins, Huffington Post, responds: Oh? The "crisis was less dramatic than had been described?" Do tell! And could you maybe be a little sneering in your self-absorbed certainty?
WashPost:
Congress, egged on [snearing, demeaning term] by its Democratic leaders and the Obama administration, approved $10 billion in new education spending, ostensibly to save hundreds of thousands of imperiled teacher jobs. With schools in session, it's even clearer now than it was then that the numbers were exaggerated and that the measure was in no small part intended to motivate the powerful teachers unions for this fall's midterm elections.
Linkins: So, what to do? Could we maybe loosen up some scrilla to give deserving teachers compensatory raises? No, say the editors! That would be crazy, because it "would be foolish to use these one-time funds for a pay raise that will be baked into all future budgets." So, what, then? The editors suggest that everyone follow in the footsteps of Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley and just sit on the money and save it for a rainy day?
Speaking of! Let's check the weather today, shall we?
State and local governments laid off nearly 58,000 teachers in September, the government announced on Friday. The layoffs happened even though some have said the $26 billion bill passed by Congress in August was nothing but a sop for teacher unions. (cont'd)
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