VP deserves incarceration in bunker

More on (or moron) the Democrat Lunatic front. We all remember that after 9/11, occasionally Dick Cheney was said to be in an "undisclosed location". The purpose was to preserve the chain of command authority of the federal government and the military in case the leadership was otherwise decapitated. Well, the location of this secret bunker has now been divulged over casual dinner conversation by the VP himself, Joe Biden. Eleanor Clift of Newsweek says that he blabbed this classified information to his dinner companions.

Now Biden may think that it is of no major consequence if he is taken out. He is wrong. If something happens to Obama, then Joe Biden is the only bulwark standing between us and a Nancy Pelosi presidency. This is a serious matter indeed. Joe Biden must be protected at all costs!

Now if disclosing the identity of Valerie Plame, a defunct CIA spy, was a prosecutable offense, then surely this is two orders of magnitude more serious. However, when the prosecutors begin investigating, at least there won't be much of a mystery about who the leaker was. Perhaps the VP bunker in its newly-disclosed location can double as Biden's prison cell until the president pardons him.

Ironically, during the recent presidential primary campaign Joe Biden told CNN's Candy Crowley that he might "save the world" if voters elected him president. What a dunce.

I designate Joe Biden as Democrat Lunatic #9.

Dems' arrogant money grab worsens

If legislative Democrats in 2007 were devious for passing Gov. Ritter's infamous property tax hike without voter approval, the 2009 crop plunges to new depths. In an act of sheer arrogance, this year's Democrat majority poked taxpayers in the eye just for spite.

Recall that the aforementioned property tax hike increases the burden on local property owners while reducing the state's obligation to fund K-12 education.

Recall also that Colorado's constitution says that no "tax policy change directly causing a net revenue gain" can be enacted without a vote of the people and that this policy change increased property tax revenues by $117 million in the first year alone.

Finally, recall that crafty Democrats hinged permission for their tax hike on 174 separate, previous votes by taxpayers in all but four of the state's 178 school districts. Never mind that those voters were repeatedly assured by school and state officials that their taxes would not increase as a result.

Not satisfied that the Colorado Supreme Court slipped this nonsense through a previously undiscovered loophole in the state constitution, Democrats added arrogance to insult by swiftly passing bill to now prevent any of those 174 school districts from reconsidering.

That's arrogance, plain and simple.

For 13 years after voters adopted the Taxpayers Bill of Rights (TABOR), the Department of Education and local school districts reassured property owners that they could loosen revenue limits on their local schools without making themselves vulnerable to a tax increase by the legislature.

They took this position not because CDE or local school boards are staunch defenders of TABOR but because they were following state law.

Then in 2007, the legislature unilaterally decided to change the law, to impose an immediate tax increase on property owners - and to retroactively change the result of those 174 local elections, all the while arguing that it was precisely those elections that permitted the tax hike in the first place.

As a result, property owners in those districts are now paying higher taxes - not so their schools can receive more money, but so the state can take the money it previously spent on K-12 education and spend it on social welfare programs instead.

However, the four districts that never waived their school's revenue limits remain exempt from the legislature's shenanigans. In those districts, the growth of local property tax revenues is limited and the state must provide any additional money necessary to fully fund those schools.

A reasonable taxpayer - or school board member - in one of the school districts now being soaked by the state might see this disparity and decide that the local school district should reconsider its decision to waive all revenue limits. After all, it's one thing for property owners to permit local school to "keep the change" and quite another to permit the state to raise taxes, too.

Now thanks to Senate Bill 291, which was opposed by every Republican at the state capitol, districts that loosened the tax limits under the old law are forbidden from reinstituting those limits now that the law has changed. If they do, the state will punish their children by withholding funds from their school.

This from the party that claims to do everything "for the children." In reality, the Democrats do everything "for the government" and aren't above using your children as hostages in their extortion racket.

It's hard to imagine how the state's constitutional mandate to provide a "thorough and uniform system of free public schools" could be interpreted to allow one school to be penalized solely because of the way its residents vote.

However, Colorado Democrats have already proven that they will ignore the constitution when it's inconvenient and that the state supreme court can be counted on to back them up.

Mark Hillman served as senate majority leader and state treasurer. To read more or comment, go to www.MarkHillman.com

Teacher's Desk: Grads but Barely

May means seniors looking forward to impending graduation, and we teachers looking forward to no more of their “senoritis.” Maturity blooms at last; what a relief! The sad thing is for me, that many of our graduating seniors are 19, 20, and 21 years-old. While their peers are finishing up their sophomore or junior year of college, these students are just now graduating high school.

I’m glad our students returned to school after dropping out, being expelled, or incarcerated. I agree with Jeremy Myer’s report in Sunday, May 17th’s Denver and the West Section of the Denver Post regarding the state website, collegeincoloradot.org, a website developed after legislation to help students plan for post-secondary options. Too many middle school students enter high school totally clueless as to why they are there or what they need to do. Our returning dropouts are no different.

This past week, I developed four Individual Educational Plans and assessed eight senior presentations. All had the same common future goals: cosmetologist, justice career, culinary arts, or massage therapy. I’m saddened that there weren’t plans to be doctors, nurses, lawyers, teachers or scientists. They dreamed no further than their comfort zone and experiences allowed them.

When I worked in the middle school classroom as a Gear-Up counselor several years ago, I too was surprised that middle school students hadn’t thought about what happens after high school, and didn’t know what a student needs to do to earn a high school diploma.

High school students learn a harsh reality: teachers don’t give grades---students earn them and the credits to graduate. Social promotion stops at high school. I made it a point to make sure the middle school and high school students I influenced understood what it takes to graduate and that they became part of the goal-setting process. I made sure they learned how to calculate a G.P.A. Even though I work with students 16 and older now, I’m still helping them learn these lessons.

I worry about our graduates; too many struggled to make our minimum benchmark, eighth grade literacy. These are the students that if they do attend college (all our seniors are accepted into a post-secondary institution or program), they will be part of the third of all college students needing remediation before taking 100 or greater level courses in college.

We have a tremendous task upon us every year at our school: improve students’ academic circumstances, students who are four or more years behind grade level. We prepare them for high school graduation and beyond in one or two years. Our school improvement committee continues to weigh which best practices will be the best to meet our challenge.

Kathleen Kullback is a licensed special educator at Colorado High School Charter with an M. A. in Educational Leadership and is a former candidate for the Colorado State Board of Education.

Rise of the soft despots

Slated on Backbone Radio, May 17 Listen every Sunday, 5-8pm on 710 KNUS, Denver... 1460 KZNT, Colorado Springs... and streaming live at 710knus.com.

In return for some of our liberty, writes Michael Barone in a powerful column this week, Obama's band of "would-be soft despots are offering Americans money and the promise of security against economic distress." That's a chilling prospect, and Barone is not one to sensationalize. Nor did the warning about soft despotism originate with him. It's a vulnerability Tocqueville foresaw long ago. Michael Barone is my guest on Backbone Radio this Sunday.

** Plus an Obama report card from Ed Feulner of the Heritage Foundation and a primer on our country's Judeo-Christian beginnings from author William Federer.

** Plus a tribute to the Greatest Generation from the pages of "The Old Man and the Harley," a newly published family memoir by Coloradan John Newkirk..

America without apologies, our theme on the air these past five years, is more relevant than ever as PC liberalism keeps spreading. I'm fired up about it after a week in Washington with CCU students, capped by an all-day seminar in the freedom shrine that is our US Capitol. Don't miss this Sunday's show.

Yours for self-government, JOHN ANDREWS