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Myth #2: All Serial Killers Are Caucasian. Reality: Contrary to popular mythology, not all serial killers are white. Serial killers span all racial and ethnic groups in the U.S. The racial diversity of serial killers generally mirrors that of the overall U.S. population. There are well documented cases of African-American, Latino and Asian-American serial killers. African-Americans comprise the largest racial minority group among serial killers, representing approximately 20 percent of the total. Significantly, however, only white, and normally male, serial killers such as Ted Bundy become popular culture icons. Considering that something like 75% of our population is White, it isn't a surprise that most serial killers are White, but considering the above statistic, I'd argue that your attempt at some racial aspect is false. |
"Significantly, however, only white, and normally male, serial killers such as Ted Bundy become popular culture icons."
White privilege!! |
No ****ing way this country is 75% white unless you're counting a good number of Hispanics as white.
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If AA are 20% of serial killers they'd be overrepresented in that group, not underrepresented. |
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...one of the toughest and best teachers I had in HS was a black woman..
you DID NOT mess around in her class... ....and we didn't have young teachers, and the line of inappropiateness rarely got crossed. Today, that line is fuzzy. |
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Well then. That makes more sense. |
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I was hoping this thread would turn into a discussion on demographics.
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Those damned Asians always keeping their noses clean
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Black dudes don't kiss & tell. |
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I see tons of teachers in elementary school these days that are in their 20s. I wonder why the difference? |
What the hell is happening? Too much caffeine making all these young women horny little rabbits that want young boys?
Amazing..... |
I wonder if there is a way to implement a forced vaccination on all female teachers to stop them from becoming audiofile slores?
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School costs so much now that you can barely pay back student loans and have a life as a young teacher. So instead of going into education, students go into other fields that pay much better than education. I'm married to a teacher, so I know. |
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I have 3 tfa teachers on my kickball team. The 2 cute under 25 females are quitting at the end of the year. Parents of the inner city kids and admins stressing them out. They both make low 40s. I told them to go to suburban but they want to enter corporate america.
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You have all these feel good stories surrounding inner city or rural impoverished schools about some teacher who comes in as part of TFA and changes lives and commits their heart and soul to teaching (thank Dangerous Minds, the movie) and puts in all these extra hours and shit. But the fact is that those people often burn out and last for a couple of years before moving on. We have a local charter school that uses TFA people up like crazy. They work insane hours and are all super passionate about their jobs... or appear to be. For some reason, though, their teacher turnover rate is through the roof. |
It's very simple. The young boys haven't developed intimacy issues yet. After they develop those then lets see the teachers get that winkie.
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Actually, I think that if you're not willing to actually put your college education to use, don't take the spot of someone who will. |
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Hell, I don't "use" my college education in my profession. In your eyes, I shouldn't have gone to college? Sorry, that just seems a little weird to me. |
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Not maddening to me. Helps them save up for the necessities of they are just waiting on having a baby. Their life |
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If your ultimate goal is to stay at home for the next 20 years after having your first kid, you aren't utilizing those skills; you're using college to marry up via a bait and switch technique, and you're taking the spot of someone else who actually intends to use the things you learn at college. That's quite a bit different than staying at home until the kids are toddlers, then rejoining the workforce. |
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I can sense that you're a bit jaded on this matter, but surely some of these women just meet someone that changes their plans, right? |
There's no expiration date for a college degree.
If a woman decides to stay at home, good thing to have in your back pocket down the road. |
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You should stop projecting what you want to be beneficial for your argument and actually focus on the issue at hand. You can certainly meet someone that changes your plans, but that's entirely different than, "I plan to work until I have my first kid, then stop and stay at home." The people that were brought up aren't changing their plans; they're acting them out. You've got it completely wrong. |
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Imagine if you got a degree in Computer Science in 1994, left the workforce in 1995 after you got pregnant, had two kids, and just sent the second one off to college. How relevant are those skills now? |
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I really don't have an argument, other than to apparently counter yours. You seem to believe that there should be a "use it or don't come" requirement for college students. I just don't see what you have against someone getting an education, whether they use it directly in their chosen profession or as a parent. I don't see the difference. |
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You can learn for the sake of learning on your own. You can also do it at colleges with open admissions. But if you're going to a semi-competitive school with limited spots and your full intention is to work in that field for as long as it takes you to get impregnated, you're not really intending to use your degree as anything more than a rung on the social ladder, or a quasi-dowry. Those seeking out Mrs degrees also **** over other young women, because there is an implicit assumption of risk among their employers that they made need to train a replacement within two years because they never really had any intention of pursing a career, just a placeholder job. That makes the women who actually want to put in the work appear less valuable to prospective employers. |
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Affirmative Action works! |
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It totally changes your view on the struggles of "education" once you watch it from our side. |
My mom got her teaching degree in the 60's. Married my dad, was a stay at home mom who helped 4 kids through school. **** you if you think she or we didn't get anything out of it. By the way, she went back to substitute teaching and finally full time after we all left home. I don't think she robbed anyone of their "chance" and I don't feel she wasted her efforts in college.
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From my understanding, it's becoming more difficult in the KC area as well. |
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It's been a while since I've been in the corporate world but even 10 or so years ago, we weighted people's long term goals. If someone couldn't quickly and adequately answer the "Where do you see yourself in five years", that person was no longer considered. If I'm hiring someone, training them, offering a competitive salary and benefits, I want to know that it isn't wasted time, money and effort. |
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I had a bright orange one, as well!!! With a hood!!! Jesus. That's not even the worst thing I wore back then. |
I thought I was the only one who would be worried about hiring a woman during her peak-pregnancy years.
I know it sucks to think that way, but business is business. |
Here's a new twist of a common story:
Lunch lady allegedly had sex with underage high school student and his older brother Quote:
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http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopo...a15n-3-web.jpg |
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This thread has degraded. Stay on topic folks - "Hot Teachers".
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http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v3..._hurley013.jpg |
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I shared your lack of motivation regarding high school, because I knew (as I'm sure you did) that you could show up on ACT day, do well, and get a fair amount of scholarship money. I think my class rank was like 48 out of 175 or something like that. I copied almost all of my homework and didn't study for a single test, ever. |
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You've got no game if you're in high school, and you end up doing the lunch lady instead of a classmate.
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That wasn't my point though nor was it Jenkins'. |
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Buckwheat? |
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Bump for research purposes.
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http://cold-fusion.us/wp-content/upl...-scientist.jpg |
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