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Dan Proft Commentary
as heard on the Don Wade & Roma Morning Show on WLS AM-890.

You know how I know I’ve been in Illinois politics too long?

The comedy troupe of Sam Adam Sr. and Jr. was starting to make some sense to me.

For example, during his post-verdict floor show, Sam Adam Sr. said that US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald thinks Illinois is a banana republic.

Isn’t it?

A banana republic is marked by a politically unstable government ruled by a small and corrupt elite who use the power of the state to collude with favored monopolies in order to line their pockets.

If the fruit fits…

Adam Sr. criticized Fitzgerald’s prosecution of Scooter Libby where, as in the Blagojevich case, a conspiracy was alleged but none was proven. I share his view that the Libby prosecution was an overreach into the realm of criminalizing politics.

Both Adam boys constantly denigrated their client during the trial describing Blagojevich as both a terrible judge of character and dumb. Who could argue with those assessments?

But then I caught myself.

Skilled street hustlers are very good at identifying one or two glaring deficiencies of their adversary while admitting one or two of their own to get you nodding along in agreement. That’s when they try and slip the fastballs by the jury.

And so came Sam Adam Sr. the fiscal hawk who doesn’t want to see precious taxpayer dollars squandered on a retrial. And then Sam Adam Jr. presented himself as a Neighborhood Watch block captain to lament gang violence and, hey John Q. Public, don’t you think the US Attorney’s Office should be concerning itself with prosecuting drug kingpins?

As if the only thing standing between us and safer neighborhoods is foregoing the retrial of Rod Blagojevich.

In Illinois when it is one branch of the government versus another branch of the government, it is sometimes difficult to figure out which side to trust the least.

However, whatever the failures of prosecutors in the first trial and whatever the cost to be incurred for the second trial, justice demands Blagojevich be re-tried.
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Dan Proft (dan@danproft.com) is a talk show host and political commentator for WLS-AM 890 (wlsam.com) in Chicago.

For other Dan Proft commentaries (radio & print), please visit: http://www.urqmedia.com/proft/

For other recent Don Wade & Roma interviews, commentary, and discussions visit: http://www.wlsam.com/sectional.asp?id=16410

© All Rights Reserved

Dan Proft commentary

Washington, DC public schools have an acute problem with juvenile delinquency.

Trouble is, the problem isn’t with the students but rather the supposed grown-ups in charge of the Washington Teachers Union (WTU).

Once thought to be an unlikely laboratory for school reform, the District’s success with school vouchers, begrudgingly recognized even by the Obama administration, its high incidence of children attending charter schools (35 percent) and its outspoken Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee have made Washington, DC a bellwether for K-12 reform.

But none of these gains have come without incident. And the latest battle between Rhee and the WTU over the firing of bad teachers is no exception.

IMPACT Leaves a Mark

Last year Rhee worked with rank-and-file teachers to develop a new system for evaluating teacher performance called IMPACT, which ties teacher retention in part to student performance on standardized tests. But only in part.

At the time, WTU boss George Parker grumbled, “[IMPACT] takes the art of teaching and turns it into bean counting.”

Unfortunately, the sort of artistry practiced in DC’s public schools was producing a 49 percent graduation rate. The system’s failure is even more glaring when compared with the 82 percent graduation rate among the District’s school voucher students.

It was hardly surprising the WTU would blanch at holding teachers to account for their students’ academic progress. But it was a surprise the WTU agreed in June to a contract providing significantly more money for teachers-including merit pay incentives-in exchange for empowering Rhee to fire bad teachers, regardless of seniority, under the new IMPACT evaluation criteria.

And when Rhee announced at the end of July that 241 DC teachers would be fired, suddenly WTU officials became the bean counters.

“They’ve gone too far too fast,” Parker complained to the Washington Post. He said the WTU would appeal every termination and likely file a federal unfair labor practice complaint for good measure.

Rhee Changes Paradigm

Rhee should continue to challenge the WTU’s “money for nothing” attitude. Rhee’s willingness to trade more money for better teachers and greater flexibility in removing bad teachers highlights her sophistication as an education reformer.

She is aiming to secure teacher accountability through the back door when politicians-local and federal-inhibit competition that would bring it through the front door.

Rhee’s policy choices indicate she understands two important truths about K-12 education. First, teacher quality is paramount. Second, it is both very difficult and very costly to remove bad teachers under the accepted paradigm of collective bargaining agreements. So Rhee has set out to abide by the first truth by rewarding quality teachers and changing the accepted paradigm.

The scholarship on teacher quality is clear: It is the most important school-related factor in student achievement. Some studies suggest the difference between having a good teacher and having a bad one can exceed one grade-level equivalent in annual achievement growth.

Tough to Fire Bad Teachers

The data on firing bad teachers is equally stark. A Newsweek report published in March found:

“In New York City in 2008, three out of 30,000 tenured teachers were dismissed for cause. The statistics are just as eye-popping in other cities. The percentage of teachers dismissed for poor performance in Chicago between 2005 and 2008 (the most recent figures available) was 0.1 percent. In Akron, Ohio, zero percent. In Toledo, 0.01 percent. In Denver, zero percent.”

Newsweek further observed: “Year after year, about 99 percent of all teachers in the United States are rated ‘satisfactory’ by their school systems; firing a teacher invites a costly court battle with the local union.”

How costly?

A study by the Small Newspaper Group in Illinois found in the years 2001-2005, Illinois school districts spent an average of more than $219,000 in legal fees each time they attempted to terminate a tenured teacher.

Administrators Cowed

The study found the costs of firing bad teachers are so prohibitive in Illinois an average of only two are dismissed each year for cause out of the more than 95,000 tenured teachers in the state,

And that doesn’t begin to account for the time involved.

It took the Los Angeles Unified School District seven years to fire a high school teacher who had been removed from the classroom in 2002 amid allegations of sexual misconduct. The teacher received full salary and benefits during that period.

By comparison, it took four years to build the Golden Gate Bridge.

The teachers’ unions may jawbone the idea that they are not in the business of protecting bad teachers. The unions may attempt to shift the blame onto principals, administrators, and school boards who are “not doing their jobs” in ridding schools of bad teachers. But the costs imposed by the teachers’ unions induce administrators to take the path of least resistance through non-solutions such as New York City’s notorious “rubber rooms.”

Advancing ‘Rhee-form’

It may be economically rational to capitulate to the unions, but reformers such as Rhee recognize appeasing the unions means conceding failure, a failure directly visited upon the students. Remember them?

By maintaining a focus on increasing teacher quality and making calculated tradeoffs designed to get bad actors to do the right thing in spite of themselves, Rhee has DC schools on the right path.

Dan Proft (dan@danproft.com) is a talk show host and political commentator for WLS-AM 890 (wlsam.com) in Chicago.

For other Dan Proft commentaries (radio & print), please visit: http://www.urqmedia.com/proft/

For other recent Don Wade & Roma interviews, commentary, and discussions visit: http://www.wlsam.com/sectional.asp?id=16410

© All Rights Reserved

To All it Should Concern;

As an American, an Illinois Resident, a Constitutional Conservative Republican and as a father of six children, I am writing out of concern for our educational institutions and their ability to remain significant. My children will be attending schools within Illinois as my wife and I had. The absolute bias against our First Amendment rights when a institution cowers to either avoid the appearance of exclusion or to further the broad agenda of those that use the Constitution when it is convenient for them, yet ignore its presence when it provides them no benefit is appalling.

The University of Illinois should open their fragile eyes to view the entire spectrum of what is happening in America. It is a reawakening of values and of our Constitution. As a proud American, I am grateful to see steadfast and honorable companies being rewarded. The University of Illinois does not need to look far or wide to notice the direction and the flow of American money. Without which, the University of Illinois shall struggle.
Companies such as Ford Motor Company, profitable because Americans realize that which deserves to be saved.

I am writing my Congressmen, Congresswoman and Senators to ask for State & Federal Funding to be halted to the University. The violation of the First Amendment is cause enough.

I ask you, whilst knowing the answer. Would the University of Illinois fire a Muslim teacher for teaching the Koran in an elective class? The Bible in the toilet would be considered art, yet the Koran in the toilet falls into a hate crime?

Kristopher P.
Homer Glen, IL

Love it!! Let’s keep them talking.
Means they are terrified !

My family supports Homer Township
And only wishes the rest of this corrupt
State would do the same!!

From Anna

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Right on Homer Township – now we need to go farther – Sheriff Kaupas, what is it about illegal you do not understand.

From Mel

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

I don’t understand what needs to be defended we live in America we speak English I called ComEd today and twice had to ask them to speak English Don’t like it go where they speak Spanish

From Diane

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Good for Homer … they’re showing some kahones!
YES.
Speak up, America!!!!

The *** rule the world. Look at what obama is letting the black panthers get away with. You’re only racist if you’re white. The other folks get away with murder, literally.

From Gramwk

Editors’ Note: this is a reprint of a classic Thomas Sowell column. Enjoy!

Every year about this time, big-government liberals stand up in front of college commencement crowds across the country and urge the graduates to do the noblest thing possible– become big-government liberals.

That isn’t how they phrase it, of course. Commencement speakers express great reverence for “public service,” as distinguished from narrow private “greed.” There is usually not the slightest sign of embarrassment at this self-serving celebration of the kinds of careers they have chosen– over and above the careers of others who merely provide us with the food we eat, the homes we live in, the clothes we wear and the medical care that saves our health and our lives.

What I would like to see is someone with the guts to tell those students: Do you want to be of some use and service to your fellow human beings? Then let your fellow human beings tell you what they want– not with words, but by putting their money where their mouth is.

You want to see more people have better housing? Build it! Become a builder or developer– if you can stand the sneers and disdain of your classmates and professors who regard the very words as repulsive.

Would you like to see more things become more affordable to more people? Then figure out more efficient ways of producing things or more efficient ways of getting those things from the producers to the consumers at a lower cost.

That’s what a man named Sam Walton did when he created Wal-Mart, a boon to people with modest incomes and a bane to the elite intelligentsia. In the process, Sam Walton became rich. Was that the “greed” that you have heard your classmates and professors denounce so smugly? If so, it has been such “greed” that has repeatedly brought prices down and thereby brought the American standard of living up.

Back at the beginning of the 20th century, only 15 percent of American families had a flush toilet. Not quite one-fourth had running water. Only three percent had electricity and one percent had central heating. Only one American family in a hundred owned an automobile.

By 1970, the vast majority of those American families who were living in poverty had flush toilets, running water and electricity. By the end of the twentieth century, more Americans were connected to the Internet than were connected to a water pipe or a sewage line at the beginning of the century.

More families have air-conditioning today than had electricity then. Today, more than half of all families with incomes below the official poverty line own a car or truck and have a microwave.

This didn’t come about because of the politicians, bureaucrats, activists or others in “public service” that you are supposed to admire. No nation ever protested its way from poverty to prosperity or got there through rhetoric or bureaucracies.

It was Thomas Edison who brought us electricity, not the Sierra Club. It was the Wright brothers who got us off the ground, not the Federal Aviation Administration. It was Henry Ford who ended the isolation of millions of Americans by making the automobile affordable, not Ralph Nader.

Those who have helped the poor the most have not been those who have gone around loudly expressing “compassion” for the poor, but those who found ways to make industry more productive and distribution more efficient, so that the poor of today can afford things that the affluent of yesterday could only dream about.

The wonderful places where you are supposed to go to do “public service” are as sheltered from the brutal test of reality as you have been on this campus for the last four– or is it six?– years. In these little cocoons, all that matters is how well you talk the talk. People who go into the marketplace have to walk the walk.

Colleges can teach many valuable skills, but they can also nourish many dangerous illusions. If you really want to be of service to others, then let them decide what is a service by whether they choose to spend their hard-earned money for it.

About the time our original thirteen states adopted their new constitution in 1787, Alexander Tyler, a Scottish history professor at the University of Edinburgh , had this to say about the fall of the Athenian Republic some 2,000 years earlier:

‘A democracy is always temporary in nature;
it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government.’

‘A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury.’

‘ From that moment on, the majority always vote for the candidates
who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship.’

‘The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations from the beginning of history, has been about 200 years’

‘During those 200 years, those nations always progressed
through the following sequence:

1. from bondage to spiritual faith;

2. from spiritual faith to great courage;

3. from courage to liberty;

4. from liberty to abundance;

5. from abundance to complacency;

6. from complacency to apathy;

7. from apathy to dependence;

8. from dependence back into bondage’

Professor Joseph Olson of Hemline University School of Law, St. Paul , Minnesota points out some interesting facts concerning the
2008 Presidential election:

Number of States won by:
Democrats: 19
Republicans: 29

Square miles of land won by:
Democrats: 580,000
Republicans: 2,427,000

Population
of counties won by:
Democrats: 127 million
Republicans: 143 million

Murder rate per 100,000 residents in counties won by:
Democrats: 13.2
Republicans: 2.1

Professor Olson adds:
‘In aggregate, the map of the territory the Republican won was mostly the land owned by the taxpaying citizens of this great country. Democrat territory mostly encompassed those citizens living in government-owned tenements and living off various forms of government welfare…’ Olson believes the United States is somewhere between the ‘complacency and apathy’ phase of Professor Tyler’s definition of democracy, with some forty percent of the nation’s population already having reached the ‘governmental dependency phase.

If Congress grants amnesty and citizenship to twenty million criminal invaders called illegals and they vote, then we can say goodbye to the USA in fewer than five years.

If you are in favor of this, then by all means, delete this message. If you are not, then pass this along to help everyone realize just how much is at stake, knowing that apathy is the greatest danger to our freedom.

WE LIVE IN THE LAND OF THE
FREE, ONLY BECAUSE OF THE BRAVE

Source: Homer Horizon

Fifth Tea Party event to be held

April 10
Rep. candidate for governor Bill Brady headlines speakers

by Ryan Terrell

March 24, 2010

Republican candidate for governor Bill Brady headlines a list of speakers scheduled to address what’s expected to be a crowd of thousands at the Homer-Lockport Tea Party’s next event Saturday, April 10.

Presented on the lawns of St. John Serbian Orthodox Church, 13847 S. Bell Road, the Homer-Lockport Tax Day Tea Party event will kick off at 11 a.m.

“We’re expecting it be the biggest event yet and last time we had more than 2,000 people come out,” said Vivienne Porter, an organizer of the Homer-Lockport Tea Party, which has hosted four Tea Party events. “This time it will be especially big considering the healthcare bill that just passed.”

In addition to Brady, keynote speakers will include Dan Proft, local political commentator and former Republican candidate for governor, Dr. Steve Spontak, who will address healthcare issues, Tom Bernicky and Corey Singer.

“We’re definitely going to address the healthcare bill,” Porter said, calling the day President Barack Obama signed the bill a “sad day” in the United States. “We’re going to have a petition available to sign to send to [Illinois Attorney General] Lisa Madigan to let her know we want Illinois to be part of the injunction against the bill.”

Porter added that a voter registration table will be set up at the event, as well informational booths, including one regarding healthcare for seniors.

“[The Tea Party movement] is a long, ongoing process. We’re just trying to educate everyone about the different issues going on. People need to be informed about the issues in this country,” she said, adding that Megan Fox will sing while a host of vendors will offer food.

Porter said the Homer-Lockport Tea Party has grown by leaps and bounds over the past half-year — from drawing 400 people at its inaugural event last Fourth of July to 2,000 at a forum featuring candidates for Illinois senator in March.

“We’ve been growing through word of mouth but we’re also taking advantage of social media, such as our Web site, Facebook and Twitter,” she said. “Whatever we have to do to get the word out we’re trying.”

Residents of the community and surrounding areas are invited to the April 10 event.

“Anyone who loves their country and their freedom and cares about the future of their country for their children and their grandchildren should come out,” Porter said.

Parking will be available at the church or on side streets near the church, she added.

For more information regarding the event, visit homerlockportteaparty.com.

WHAT: Homer-Lockport Tax Day Tea Party

WHERE: The lawns of St. John Serbian Orthodox Church, 13847 S. Bell Road in Homer Glen

WHY: To protest the overall state of the country

WHEN: 11 a.m. Saturday, April 10

WHOA! Hang on to your socks, boys and girls, you gotta
see this one. Have you seen this clip?

http://downloads.cbn.com/cbnnewsplayer/cbnPlayer.swf?aid=11991

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