Revision of Had enough defending homeschooling? from 7 June 2007 - 9:08pm

This is the kind of media exposure that gives homeschoolers a bad name. Check out the 450+ comment thread over at LiveJournal's Oh No They Didn't and see for yourself.

Let's just say this is one of the most painful interviews I've ever watched. Someone ought to smack the parents of this child for putting him in front of a camera without any supervision.

As some people on the thread have said, he seems to have high functioning Asperger's Syndrome but without that context he comes across as both awkward and rude as a consequence of being homeschooled, not necessarily because he may have developmental disabilities.

Sigh.

Let me just state the obvious : What you will see is the exception not the rule when it comes to homeschooled kids.


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So the recent struggles about network neutrality have led me to recognize something I hadn't quite seen before. And that something in turn makes more puzzling the debates that have been raised around network neutrality. The something to recognize is that in a fundamental sense, fair use (FU) and network neutrality (NN) are the same thing. They are both state enforced limits on the property rights of others. In both cases, the limits are slight --the vast range of uses granted a copyright holder are only slightly restricted by FU; the vast range of uses allowed a network owner are only slightly restricted by NN. And in both cases, the line defining the limits is uncertain. But in both cases, those who support each say that the limits imposed on the property right are necessary for some important social end (admittedly, different in each case), and that the costs of enforcing those limits are outweighed by the benefits of protecting that social end. So from this perspective, it is easy to understand those who reject FU and NN (who are they?). And it is easy to understand those who embrace FU and NN. What gets difficult is understanding those who embrace one while rejecting the other --at least when that rejection is articulated in terms of "government regulation".

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