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Ken Starr: Homeschooling Can Undo Anti-American School Curriculum
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Marlow described the degradation of civic education in America as part of a design.
“I think, fundamentally, it was intentional,” he said. “I think that this is how the authoritarians get power, and the left not everyone, but a lot of them have authoritarian streaks and, in general, that they would love to see a citizenry that is less informed [and] less powerful, and that makes the central government more powerful.”
Starr replied, “I live in Texas, we’ve allowed a collapse of civic education. You’re right, there are very sinister courses out there, but we can’t just sit and be Cassandra-like and cry, ‘Oh, we allowed a collapse.’ We’ve got to now do something better. I am personally involved but everyone needs to be involved in how we restore civic education.”
Gov. Mike DeWine talks about death penalty, U.S. presidential election in year-end interview: Capitol Letter
Updated Dec 17, 2020;
Posted Dec 17, 2020
Gov. Mike DeWine discussed the death penalty, the recent presidential election, and filling two Public Utilities Commission of Ohio seats during an interview with cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer. (Ohio Governor s Office)
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What’s on the governor’s mind: Gov. Mike DeWine conducted his year-end interview with cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer on Wednesday. As Andrew Tobias reports, DeWine explained his rationale behind not taking a firmer public stance on the death penalty, expressed his opinion that the recent presidential election was a successful stress test of American institutions, and described his administration’s approach to filling one, if not two, seats on the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
7 Takeaways From a Senate Panel’s Hearing on Election Fraud
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Ron Johnson, R-Wis., speaks Wednesday at a hearing on election security and the 2020 election process. (Photo: Greg Nash/Getty Images)
The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee on Wednesday held its first hearing looking into the issues of vote fraud and other irregularities surrounding the 2020 election.
The committee’s chairman, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., defended the hearing against Democratic detractors.
Johnson said the hearing was about ensuring confidence in the electoral system and getting to the facts. The hearing included testimony from legal and election security experts, as well as from witnesses from the hotly contested states of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Nevada.
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