[PovertyRaceWomen 94] Re: economic impact of earning a GED
TraceyAssociates at aol.com
TraceyAssociates at aol.com
Mon Dec 4 11:54:39 EST 2006
Greetings:
In fairness, one has to sadly admit that discrimination by race, color, and
a million other measures is certainly not a uniquely American phenomenon, but
a universal problem among almost all peoples since the dawn of time. (Anyone
who bothered to join this web site is well aware of this, but it helps to be
reminded now and then to temper ones anger at the blind injustice and mess
we have made of the world we live in.)
We are primates with clothing and better tools - but still primates.
To paraphrase Carl Sagan, the amount of time man has been walking the Earth
since the beginning of the universe can be measured in the blink of an eye.
These and other social ills will not be solved in our lifetime, or perhaps any
lifetime considering the accelerating pace of nuclear proliferation. One just
does what one can.
As for prisons, it should be no surprise that most rehab programs are poorly
conceived, underfunded, and often ineffective. It will always be so if there
is no $$ in it for the special interest lobbies. When it becomes more
profitable to run community-based prison rehab problems with meaningful performance
measures, they will be everywhere.
As the Irish say, It tis what it tis. Accepting this fact helps us get on
with the business of doing whatever they can with whatever tools we have
available at the time.
Carpe diem.
Paul Tracey
_www.learningaboutdiabetes.org_ (http://www.learningaboutdiabetes.org/)
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