Back in 2020, the State of California no longer required the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) or any alternatives for students to get into California’s government-run, tax-funded universities and colleges.
Just before Christmas, the Wall Street Journal tells us, “Now arrives the dispiriting result: Many freshmen at one of its top public universities can’t do middle-school math.”
Oh, dear. The WSJ is talking about the University of California at San Diego, supposedly one of the top six universities in the Fifty States. (We very much have our doubts about that claim, here at TPOL.) And it is not “that bad” according to a very recent Forbes report. Only one in eight freshmen lack high school math skills. That means that 87.5% of freshmen DO have “high school math skills.” (We calculated that in our head, but then, we went to trade schools; one ag and one engineering.)
In just five years, the number of freshmen “below the high school level” increased nearly thirtyfold. (Assuming that the MSM writers can do math, that means that only about one in 240 incoming students could not do it. But what is not discussed is how ridiculously low California’s standards for high school math are: only two math classes are required to get a diploma: and only one has to be “equivalent” to Algebra I. Apparently, the other class can be a remedial class to overcome deficiencies in learning grade school and middle school math. That, in our opinion, is an incredibly low standard.
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Politics, combat, and the Christ
Who would Jesus bomb?
That question, of course, is meant less literally than morally.
To answer it, we must first understand who Jesus Christ was—the revered preacher, teacher, radical, prophet and (to those of us who follow Him) the Son of God—born into a police state not unlike the growing menace of America’s own police state. Born into a world at war. A multilayered government including the Judean Sanhedrin, a semi-constitutional monarchy (the Herodian client kings/tetrarchs), and an empire pretending to still be a republic. Does that sound familiar?
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