June 30, 2011
June 29, 2011
'Gore's Final Solution'
From an editorial in Investor's Business Daily:
Former Vice President Al Gore has a new idea for saving us from global warming: fewer babies. It's scary to think this man was a heartbeat away from the presidency.
June 28, 2011
Okay Now She's Gone to Meddlin'
Andrée Seu just flat brings it today.
I have developed a distaste for the word "struggling"—as in "I am struggling with anger" (or lust, or homosexuality, or a bad temper, etc.).
It is a perfectly good word, and I know there are some people who are really "struggling." But many other people are spoiling the word for everybody. They are using "struggling" to mean something more like "repeatedly giving in"—which is almost the opposite of "struggling," seems to me.
Labels:
Devotional
June 27, 2011
June 25, 2011
June 24, 2011
Breaker 1-9, Me and the O.L. Comin' Through in the Hammer Lane
What to Expect When You're Expecting is pretty much the go-to book for pregnant women. Susie's tattered copy has served her well for -- gosh, apparently quite a long time. I'm reading here on page 277, "If you're in your own car and delivery is imminent, pull over. If you have a CB or car phone, call for help. ... If someone stops to help, ask him or her to get to a phone and call 911."
Hopefully it won't come to that. In any case, we're getting pretty excited to think Susie's going to have a baby. Third decade in a row.
Hopefully it won't come to that. In any case, we're getting pretty excited to think Susie's going to have a baby. Third decade in a row.
Endowed by Whom, Mr. President?
Can't blame him for not wanting to drag the Creator into this.
Labels:
Culture Wars
June 23, 2011
Tuition Going Up (Again)
"With Oklahomans facing higher prices on everything from gasoline to groceries, this is no time for Oklahoma's wealthy and highly profitable universities to raise tuition," some of us argued today. "Rather, if they would reduce administrative overhead, set priorities, and require professors to teach more, they could afford to do what some of their private-sector counterparts are doing in these tough economic times: reduce tuition."
Regrettably, this is not the path the state regents chose today.
Regrettably, this is not the path the state regents chose today.
Labels:
Public Policy
June 22, 2011
Question: When Has Early Childhood 'Education' Officially Gone Off the Rails?
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| Because you're never too young to be a Jenks Trojan |
Let us review for a moment. Oklahoma's state constitution originally required compulsory school attendance for children "between the ages of eight and sixteen years, for at least three months in the year." The legislature later expanded the school year and lowered the age to seven, then to five. Today, an astonishing 71 percent of Oklahoma’s four-year-olds are in state-funded prekindergarten and, incredibly, 2,325 three-year-olds were in pre-K classrooms last year. One is reminded of the fire captain’s remark in Ray Bradbury’s dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451: “We’ve lowered the kindergarten age year after year until now we’re almost snatching them from the cradle.”
Almost? Feh. The Jenks Public Schools will gladly enroll your six-week-old scholar in an "education" program (6:30 AM to 6:00 PM if you like) whose "curriculum" encourages "language enrichment" and "problem solving." Jenks schoolteachers also strongly emphasize "the development of language skills," which is why they are careful to wipe their students' gums with a clean washcloth after feeding.
Labels:
Education,
Public Policy
June 20, 2011
Cinderella
I haven’t been very good about blogging lately. It seems like all winter and spring we have been busy with one thing or another. I intended to blog birthday pictures, school activities and pictures, things the kids have been doing, and so on, but life has kept us busy. I plan to go back and post some of those things, but for now here is our most current happening.
June 11 was our girls' ballet performance in Cinderella. Every other year the studio where they take ballet puts on a full-length production of a ballet. It seems like each performance is better than the one before.
It takes quite a bit of effort to get ready for this performance, but it’s always worth it in the end. As this year's program stated, “Taking into account our time spent in choreography, rehearsals, music editing, costume preparations, and the countless other tasks involved in our performances of Cinderella, our grand total is 12,243 human hours! That breaks down to 510 days or 72.87 weeks ... much more than one year.” So there is a lot of time invested in this ballet. There are times I know my girls hear me complain about having to get new pointe shoes or having to run back and forth to ballet in between trying to get Jack Henry to his baseball games on time, but when I see them on stage and see how much they love it, it is worth it. The ballet was beautiful and I always love watching not only my girls dance but also so many of our friends from the same studio.
Here are some pictures from this year’s Academy of Ballet and Theatre Arts production of Cinderella.
Behind the scenes:


Warm-up before the production:

Mary Margaret:





Lillie:


This year the prince was played by Alfonso Martin, who is a principal dancer with the Tulsa Ballet:



After the ballet:


The girls with Miss Lisa, their teacher and director of ABTA:

There were a few things that brought tears to my eyes during the performance: seeing how hard everyone had worked and the fruit of it; watching my girls dance and how beautiful everything was; and this:
June 11 was our girls' ballet performance in Cinderella. Every other year the studio where they take ballet puts on a full-length production of a ballet. It seems like each performance is better than the one before.
It takes quite a bit of effort to get ready for this performance, but it’s always worth it in the end. As this year's program stated, “Taking into account our time spent in choreography, rehearsals, music editing, costume preparations, and the countless other tasks involved in our performances of Cinderella, our grand total is 12,243 human hours! That breaks down to 510 days or 72.87 weeks ... much more than one year.” So there is a lot of time invested in this ballet. There are times I know my girls hear me complain about having to get new pointe shoes or having to run back and forth to ballet in between trying to get Jack Henry to his baseball games on time, but when I see them on stage and see how much they love it, it is worth it. The ballet was beautiful and I always love watching not only my girls dance but also so many of our friends from the same studio.
Here are some pictures from this year’s Academy of Ballet and Theatre Arts production of Cinderella.
Behind the scenes:


Warm-up before the production:
Mary Margaret:



Lillie:

This year the prince was played by Alfonso Martin, who is a principal dancer with the Tulsa Ballet:



After the ballet:
The girls with Miss Lisa, their teacher and director of ABTA:
There were a few things that brought tears to my eyes during the performance: seeing how hard everyone had worked and the fruit of it; watching my girls dance and how beautiful everything was; and this:
Labels:
Baby,
Friends and Family
June 19, 2011
Protecting Bureaucratic Overhead
Oklahoma paid state employees some $42 million in bonuses last year regardless of their performance, the Tulsa World reports today. But we mustn't let that news -- as indefensible as it is unsurprising -- distract us from the most important fact regarding state employees: We've got too many of them.
Recently in The Oklahoman, OCPA adjunct scholar Russell Jones, a marketing professor at the University of Central Oklahoma, used U.S. Census Bureau data to demonstrate that Oklahoma ranks 14th among the 50 states in the number of government employees as a percentage of the population. "Oklahoma governments have 18,048 more full-time equivalent employees than our population justifies," he wrote. "These employees are paid $709,018,036 per year."
Adding insult to injury, Oklahoma’s public employees earn higher average pay and benefits than the private-sector workers who are paying their salaries, according to a news report March 2 in USA Today, a newspaper which is not part of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy (at least they never come to the meetings). Using data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, USA Today reported that average public-sector compensation (including salaries and benefits) in Oklahoma in 2009 was $47,258, which was $1,667 greater than the compensation of Oklahoma’s private-sector workers.
That's why all the recent state-budget talk of "protecting core services" misses the point. Government is too big. It needs to get smaller.
Recently in The Oklahoman, OCPA adjunct scholar Russell Jones, a marketing professor at the University of Central Oklahoma, used U.S. Census Bureau data to demonstrate that Oklahoma ranks 14th among the 50 states in the number of government employees as a percentage of the population. "Oklahoma governments have 18,048 more full-time equivalent employees than our population justifies," he wrote. "These employees are paid $709,018,036 per year."
Adding insult to injury, Oklahoma’s public employees earn higher average pay and benefits than the private-sector workers who are paying their salaries, according to a news report March 2 in USA Today, a newspaper which is not part of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy (at least they never come to the meetings). Using data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, USA Today reported that average public-sector compensation (including salaries and benefits) in Oklahoma in 2009 was $47,258, which was $1,667 greater than the compensation of Oklahoma’s private-sector workers.
That's why all the recent state-budget talk of "protecting core services" misses the point. Government is too big. It needs to get smaller.
Labels:
Public Policy
June 18, 2011
June 17, 2011
Great Moments in Poverty-Fighting
I couldn't help but notice this interesting comment which was posted over at one of Oklahoma's liberal blogs:
I worked with TANF [Temporary Assistance for Needy Families] clients for 2 1/2 years as an alcohol/drug treatment counselor. These women used their TANF money to purchase spiral perms, and balloon bouquets for their "illegal" boyfriends, just to mention a few examples. I would try to discuss birth control and was usually met with angry stares. The "illegal" (who had just fathered his 12th child) became very belligerent when I delicately tried to discuss birth control with him. He would not hesitate to benefit from our state's assistance, but we were not to interfere in his business. This experience, plus my 26 years as a Probation/Parole Officer, tainted my view of the "needy" Oklahomans our tax dollars are supporting.Which reminds me, Oklahomans (by an overwhelming margin) believe that our welfare policies which discourage marriage should be changed.
Labels:
Public Policy
June 15, 2011
Jack Henry and I, Kickin' It Old School
When our family was home over the Memorial Day weekend, Jack Henry and I jumped on a four-wheeler Saturday morning and made our way to a distant pasture where I showed him the remains of an old schoolhouse. As you can see, all that's left is some of the foundation and a cellar. I'm somewhat embarrassed to admit I don't know much about the school. A friend of mine at the Bartlesville Area History Museum thinks it might be the old Hillsdale School [est. 1907?] and is going to check into it further.
In any case, Jack Henry and I had a great time practicing some amateur archaeology. We found pieces of old bricks with an imprint ending in "VILLE" (we're pretty sure that's for Coffeyville rather than Bartlesville). It was fun to be transported back in time, pretending that I was walking him to school more than a hundred years ago, trying to imagine what our conversation would have been.
If any of you Washington County historians out there know anything about the school (it's on the old Tyler spread, five miles east of Bartlesville), please enlighten us in the comments section below.
In any case, Jack Henry and I had a great time practicing some amateur archaeology. We found pieces of old bricks with an imprint ending in "VILLE" (we're pretty sure that's for Coffeyville rather than Bartlesville). It was fun to be transported back in time, pretending that I was walking him to school more than a hundred years ago, trying to imagine what our conversation would have been.
If any of you Washington County historians out there know anything about the school (it's on the old Tyler spread, five miles east of Bartlesville), please enlighten us in the comments section below.
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| Click photos to enlarge |
Affirmative Action? Well, Yeah, Of Course -- But Don't Go to Meddlin'
On November 6, 2012, Oklahoma voters will decide whether or not to put an end to discrimination and preferential treatment in state government. Before going to the polls, I would encourage Oklahomans to watch this video.
Labels:
Public Policy
June 14, 2011
Great Moments in Performance
One Oklahoma bureaucrat gets a raise and a performance bonus for adding more people to the welfare rolls, while another brings home a quarter-million dollars for seeing to it that a full six percent of students graduate from her four-year university in four years.
Labels:
Public Policy
June 12, 2011
Charity Swipe
He's not meaning to steal anyone's thunder, but I think my son does a pretty good Kevin Durant impersonation.
June 11, 2011
Shining a Spotlight on Government Spending (Higher Ed Edition)
Earlier this week in The Wall Street Journal, economist Richard Vedder suggested that we could cut tuition in half if college professors would simply teach more classes. As it happens, Dr. Vedder wrote the foreword for a new OCPA report, which Michael Carnuccio and I discuss in this brief video clip.
June 09, 2011
'Our State's Education System Is Changing'
I had an opportunity to take part in a very meaningful bill-signing ceremony yesterday, and to talk to Channel 4 reporter Tina McGarry about Oklahoma's newest school-choice legislation and a new ad campaign. I'm pleased to report that, unlike the Associated Press, McGarry understands that private donations to charity are "not state tax dollars."
Labels:
Education,
Public Policy
June 08, 2011
June 07, 2011
Oklahoma Taxpayers Deserve Better Than This
"No bureaucracy as sclerotic as the higher education industrial complex will change on its own," Forbes.com columnist Jerry Bowyer correctly observes. Fortunately, the microchip and bandwidth are forcing the issue, and help is on the way for parents who are losing sleep trying to figure out how to pay for college.
In the meantime, Oklahoma legislators should reduce higher-ed appropriations until colleges start doing a better job with the money they're getting now.
In the meantime, Oklahoma legislators should reduce higher-ed appropriations until colleges start doing a better job with the money they're getting now.
June 05, 2011
Scenes from Basketball Camp
Jack Henry and I had a great time at basketball camp this weekend. Here are a few pics.
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| Jack Henry and his dad with coach Lon Kruger |
| Listening to the coach |
| Jack Henry Dutcher and Longar Longar (not the first time they've met) |
| Jack Henry watching his big brother shoot a 3-pointer |
June 04, 2011
Union Boss Makes It Official
Bloomberg reports that AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka "said he’d like to see the U.S. become more like a European nation that provides pensions and health care for all its citizens. He said he is accustomed to criticism and doesn't mind if conservatives call that socialism." The head of the nation's largest labor organization added, "Being called a socialist is a step up for me."
Labels:
Public Policy
June 02, 2011
Lincoln's Commencement
Lincoln graduated from high school last month. I'm telling you, the kid's in a class by himself.
He did, however, have a joint commencement ceremony with his friend Hunter Quinn, and it was a wonderful occasion. Here's a video that we played:
Then Lincoln's heroic teacher got up to say a few words:
On the back of the commencement program, the graduate shared a few words:
He did, however, have a joint commencement ceremony with his friend Hunter Quinn, and it was a wonderful occasion. Here's a video that we played:
Then Lincoln's heroic teacher got up to say a few words:
Our homeschooling journey began a long time ago. Even before we had children or were even married, your dad and I both knew we wanted to homeschool. So we never had any long discussions about whether we should or shouldn’t homeschool. We just knew when the time came that it was something we were going to do. And yet, even though we knew this, we still didn’t exactly know how to homeschool. We didn’t really know anyone else who homeschooled or what it would look like through the years -- it was all new for us.
Since you are our oldest child, you have, in a way, been our homeschool guinea pig. You have had to endure lots of things that your brother and sisters never did. For instance, on your first day of school we dressed you in your "school uniform" -- navy pleated shorts and a little white polo shirt. Your dad wanted you to wear this every day. Needless to say, that didn’t last long -- and you have been our only child who has had to wear a school uniform. Jack Henry started his first day of school in gym shorts and a tee-shirt, and some of us have been known to stay in our pajamas. But even with all of our ups and downs and mistakes along the way, I am thankful that you don’t seem to be too much worse for the wear. And I also can't remember you ever questioning or complaining about your workload or what we required of you.
There is a lot that I want to say to you at the end of our homeschooling journey. I want you to know how proud I am of you and how much I love you -- not because of any particular gifts that God has given you, but just because you are our son. I realize that we are here today because of God’s grace and mercy to us, and that it is because of God’s work in your life and not because of any great teaching or parenting skills on my part that you are the man of God that you are. God has been gracious to us and we are thankful.
I guess if I had to pick what I want to leave you with at your graduation it would be these two things.
First, of all the things you have learned these past 12 years and all the knowledge you have gained and will gain, I hope that what you have learned most is to trust God’s sovereign plan. And I believe you have and are continuing to learn this. You have had some years that have been harder than others and through it all I have seen that God has softened your heart rather than hardening it. I pray that He will continue to soften your heart and that you will always trust and know that "all things come not by chance but by his Fatherly hand."
Second, I want you to know that homeschooling you has been one of the greatest joys in my life. I am afraid that many times I have taken it for granted and haven't remembered to be grateful that God allowed me to homeschool. And I hope that in God's mercy and grace you don't remember the times I have complained about long days and lesson plans. These are not the things that stand out in my mind. What stands out in my mind is that I was able to spend time with you. I am grateful that I got to be the one sitting next to you on the couch, listening as you slowly sounded out letters, words, and sentences. It was I who got to be the one to hear you read for the very first time. I got to be the one who gave you your assignments, graded your papers, and did your lessons with you. I got to be the one to take you on school field trips and fix your lunch and watch you sitting with your sisters and brother at the kitchen table. We come to the end our homeschooling journey and it feels like it went way too fast. I have heard people say that with children the days can be long, but the years are fast. We have had some long days and yet the years have gone by so fast. I send you off to college on the one hand sad that we are at the end of homeschooling you, and yet so, so grateful for the time we had with you. Homeschooling allowed us to have this time with you.
I'm closing with a quote I have used before, but I'm using it again because it is so appropriate and sums up how I feel. Clarence Thomas, in his memoir, says his son "has always been a better son than I deserved. I have loved him since I first set eyes on him, and will do so until my last breath."Next, 16-year-old Lillie stepped to the podium to talk about her brother:
A couple of days ago my dad was telling some stories about Lincoln and me when we were younger. When I was three and Lincoln was five, mom was driving us through McDonald's. Lincoln decided to get a cheeseburger instead of getting chicken nuggets, which was unusual because we both always got chicken nuggets. And so I said, "Yeekun, please get nuggets, come on Yeekun please." And my mom said, "Lillie you can get nuggets and Lincoln can get a cheeseburger." I said, "No. Yeekun pleeeeease get nuggets." Lincoln said, "No Lillie, I want a cheeseburger." And so I sighed and said, "OK Yeekun. Mommy, I want a cheeseburger."
When I was younger I wanted to be exactly like Lincoln. And even though I don't remember them all, there are a lot of stories like the McDonald's one to prove it. Looking back I can see why I looked up to him so much. Even mini-Lincoln was very smart, and he was always teaching me things from the Bible and things about God. One time when I was only a year old he grabbed me and said, "Lillie. Lillie. Look at me, listen to me! Lillie, look at me, this is very important: God loves you." I loved to play with Lincoln and I thought he had the coolest ideas of things to play. One of our favorite games was one where we'd get our swimsuits on and drag the bar stools from the kitchen into the middle of the living room and play lifeguards. We don't play that game anymore, but I still like to hang out with Lincoln and hopefully he doesn't mind too much hanging out with me. He takes me to the mall and different places and we like to watch House together every week. And I am always hoping that he'll be the one to pick me up from ballet because we roll down the windows and turn up the radio and I’ll beg him to take me to Sonic and he'll say, "No, we're not going to Sonic." And I'll keep asking and he'll keep saying no and then at the last second he'll turn in.
As many of you know, Lincoln is still very, very smart and I don't brag on him a lot but I've always been proud of how hard he has worked to achieve his goals, whether they're for school, football, guitar, or anything that he sets his mind to. I remember a couple of years ago he wanted to learn to play the guitar, so he went and got videos on how to play the guitar and the next week he was playing. And I'm definitely going to miss him strumming on his guitar at night. I know that he'll continue to work hard and someday become a great doctor or become whatever God leads him to be.
Lincoln also still teaches me, even though he doesn't grab my arm and say, "Lillie, Lillie, God loves you." He teaches me through his actions. One thing that I've noticed about Lincoln is that he's always joyful. Even if he's not happy with his circumstances he still seeks to trust in God and be joyful through it. When I see Lincoln helping Jack Henry with basketball or telling Mary Margaret he likes her outfit, he's teaching me what it looks like to be a good sibling. And when I see him mowing the lawn he's showing me what it looks like to be a good son. And when I look at Lincoln I see a guy who is striving to follow the Lord.
I can't remember saying I want to be like Lincoln when I was three. But I can remember thinking it these past months and days as I spend time with him, as I see how talented and hardworking he is, and as I learn from him.Then it was dad's turn:
Lincoln was a strong-willed child. He was a sweet kid, really a sweet kid. But he could be a handful. When he was four years old, one day Susie asked him what he wanted for breakfast. His answer: "[Corn] flakes with honey but don’t pour my milk until I sit down. And I want two napkins -- one wet and one dry. And don’t put my spoon in yet. And orange juice with no strings."
Lincoln received many spankings during his childhood. Again, one day when he was four years old I had to administer three swats. Through tears he declared: "None of them hurt. They didn't hurt at all, except the last one hurt a little bit."
I'm thinking, well, I can't let the child openly defy me. So I asked him, "Do you want me to do it again, and make it hurt this time?"
Much to my surprise, he said yes -- not defiantly, but quite earnestly. A bit confused, I asked: "You mean you really want me to spank you again so it will hurt?"
"Yes."Susie and I then presented Lincoln with his diploma.
"But why?"
"Because the three didn't hurt. And they're supposed to hurt, to drive the foolishness out."
That, of course, is nothing but the pure, undiluted mercy of God, to act on and in a child’s heart like that. And that, more than anything else, is what Susie and I hope and pray for as Lincoln goes forth. We're proud of you and proud of your accomplishments. But to say "we're proud of you" doesn't exactly capture it. What we are is grateful that God has been at work in your life. It's because of God’s mercy -- and, frankly, because of your mom -- that you've turned out better than I deserve.
And so this is what we hope and pray for as you go forth in the world. Sure, we want you to study hard and do great things and conquer the world -- all that stuff that people normally say at commencement. But more importantly, well, again I think back to when you were four (four was a good year for you). You came up to your mom and me one day and announced: "I want God to work on me with his tools. I don't want Satan to work on me with his tools." And that's precisely what your mom and I want for you now. We want you always to remember that God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble. That your life must consist of repentance and faith, every day. Repentance and faith, every hour -- maybe several times an hour -- repentance and believing God’s promises, believing that he will work on you with His tools.
On the back of the commencement program, the graduate shared a few words:
Being homeschooled has been a huge blessing in my life, and I am extremely thankful for the Christian education I have received from an early age. Throughout the course of my childhood and high school years, I have grown close to my family and to God, thanks to the amazing environment homeschooling has given me. I want thank my parents for the tireless work they have put in through the years, and for the rock-solid foundation that they have given me as I look to the future. It is with great gratitude that I see the way God has used them to shape me into the person I am. I am excited to see how He will continue to mold me and work in my life. Finally, I would like to thank all my friends and family for their wonderful presence in my life, and for being here today to celebrate my graduation and journey into the next phase of my life.
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| Lincoln Tyler Dutcher |
June 01, 2011
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