DOE is getting a DOSE of DOGE

How will cuts to education programs make education more efficient?
The cuts aren't just toward the needless and destructive DEI programs that the Left has unfortunately leveled on
our school children. No, the major cuts are to the useless and wasteful taxpayers money going to the employees of
the government run Education Department. Trump will get our schools back to the state localities where they belong,
and where they will get the proper education to where they'll start to improve their failing ratings in math, English et. al.
No more leftist teaching of CRT or of having teachers take control over the sexual identification and or the trans surgery
of these young children by keeping it away from the kids' parents.
 
The cuts aren't just toward the needless and destructive DEI programs that the Left has unfortunately leveled on
our school children. No, the major cuts are to the useless and wasteful taxpayers money going to the employees of
the government run Education Department. Trump will get our schools back to the state localities where they belong,
and where they will get the proper education to where they'll start to improve their failing ratings in math, English et. al.
Prove it. I won't ask you to prove your honesty and Christian beliefs since you've proved you don't have any, Hater.
 
The cuts aren't just toward the needless and destructive DEI programs that the Left has unfortunately leveled on
our school children. No, the major cuts are to the useless and wasteful taxpayers money going to the employees of
the government run Education Department. Trump will get our schools back to the state localities where they belong,
and where they will get the proper education to where they'll start to improve their failing ratings in math, English et. al.
Where the blue states will do the destructive brainwashing on the children?
 
Prove it. I won't ask you to prove your honesty and Christian beliefs since you've proved you don't have any, Hater.

The DOE wastes taxpayer money every single day. It's been a drain on our country since its creation by Jimmy Carter in 1979. It was never about reform--it was a political payoff to the National Education Association (NEA), bought in exchange for their endorsement and political support.

From the very start, DOE has been a failure. Despite its skyrocketing budgets-now exceeding $79 billion a year--student performance hasn't improved. In fact, its gotten quite worse.
 
The DOE wastes taxpayer money every single day. It's been a drain on our country since its creation by Jimmy Carter in 1979. It was never about reform--it was a political payoff to the National Education Association (NEA), bought in exchange for their endorsement and political support.

From the very start, DOE has been a failure. Despite its skyrocketing budgets-now exceeding $79 billion a year--student performance hasn't improved. In fact, its gotten quite worse.
Prove it. I know you can't since all you do is regurgitate the same dumbass White Nationalist shit you are fed.
 
The DOE wastes taxpayer money every single day. It's been a drain on our country since its creation by Jimmy Carter in 1979. It was never about reform--it was a political payoff to the National Education Association (NEA), bought in exchange for their endorsement and political support.

From the very start, DOE has been a failure. Despite its skyrocketing budgets-now exceeding $79 billion a year--student performance hasn't improved. In fact, its gotten quite worse.
So reform DoE.

Reforming the Department of Education could improve it, but it depends on what "reform" means and how it’s executed. The Department’s been around since 1980, with a budget of about $68 billion in recent years, mostly funneled to K-12 schools, student loans, and grants. Critics—especially from libertarian or conservative angles—argue it’s a bloated bureaucracy that meddles too much in local education, pointing to stagnant test scores (like NAEP reading and math flatlining since the ‘90s) despite rising spending. They’d say slashing it or devolving power to states could cut waste and tailor education to local needs—think Texas vs. New York.

On the flip side, supporters—often progressives—say it’s vital for equity, ensuring poor districts get funding (Title I alone is $16 billion annually) and enforcing standards like special ed protections under IDEA. They’d argue reform should fix inefficiencies, not gut it—maybe streamline grant processes or rethink loan programs, which ballooned to $1.6 trillion in debt by 2023.

Data’s mixed: U.S. ranks mid-tier globally in education (PISA scores hover around 500, below top dogs like Singapore at 570), but states with more local control—like Massachusetts—often outperform centralized systems. Reform could mean anything from tweaking accountability (No Child Left Behind’s legacy still lingers) to a total overhaul. Without specifics, it’s a coin toss—could make it leaner and sharper, or just shuffle deck chairs on a sinking ship.

@Grok

Hope Linda McMahon makes the right decision.
 
So reform DoE.

Reforming the Department of Education could improve it, but it depends on what "reform" means and how it’s executed. The Department’s been around since 1980, with a budget of about $68 billion in recent years, mostly funneled to K-12 schools, student loans, and grants. Critics—especially from libertarian or conservative angles—argue it’s a bloated bureaucracy that meddles too much in local education, pointing to stagnant test scores (like NAEP reading and math flatlining since the ‘90s) despite rising spending. They’d say slashing it or devolving power to states could cut waste and tailor education to local needs—think Texas vs. New York.

On the flip side, supporters—often progressives—say it’s vital for equity, ensuring poor districts get funding (Title I alone is $16 billion annually) and enforcing standards like special ed protections under IDEA. They’d argue reform should fix inefficiencies, not gut it—maybe streamline grant processes or rethink loan programs, which ballooned to $1.6 trillion in debt by 2023.

Data’s mixed: U.S. ranks mid-tier globally in education (PISA scores hover around 500, below top dogs like Singapore at 570), but states with more local control—like Massachusetts—often outperform centralized systems. Reform could mean anything from tweaking accountability (No Child Left Behind’s legacy still lingers) to a total overhaul. Without specifics, it’s a coin toss—could make it leaner and sharper, or just shuffle deck chairs on a sinking ship.

@Grok

Hope Linda McMahon makes the right decision.
No the annual budget for 2024 was a bit higher than the $79 billion I first quoted. Last years DOE budget was $268 billion dollars. Out of the top 40 nations, America was rated 40th in the student's ratings for math and English.

 
What is the religion? LGBT?
Trans Ideology is just about the most important thing to the WOKE Death Cult....for reasons that gets argued about on my grapevine.

I myself suspect that it is because it is a virus to traditional western values, which the death cult is working on strangling, in order to make it easier to enslave the masses.
 
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