An old Chinese saying tells us, “If you are planning for one year, grow rice; for 20 years, grow trees; for 100 years, grow men.” For too long now, Missouri has been growing nothing but rice.
We are near the bottom of the states in funding for higher education. We are near the bottom of the states in funding for a number of services that advance the capabilities and resilience of the population.
We have legislated that no surplus be held in reserve, so that every deficit is a crisis. A greedy electorate, devoid of the conscience of strong leadership, has legislated itself out of any future for its children.
In the name of minimal state taxes, we are rearing our children with minimal education; our poor receive minimal nutrition and shelter; our sick and lame receive minimal health care; and our elderly minimal care of any kind. This so that the most well-to-do families can retain more of their discretionary spending money for SUVs, 70-inch televisions, vacations in Vegas, breast implants, cheek implants and hair implants!
We can turn this state around! We can educate our young; we can treat our sick and injured; we can feed our hungry, and provide dignified care for our elders; and we can still live a good life in Missouri. Moreover, we will have some assurance that our children and grandchildren will be able to do the same!
Missourians must re-establish our goals: to become the best-educated work force in the country; to provide the best health care, the best child care, the best elder care in the country. Missouri could be the state where businesses want to grow because it’s the place where the most capable work force wants to work, to live and to raise their children.
To continue down the road of minimal taxes and minimal education will only further our slide down the path to truly becoming the Show-Me State:
“You’ll have to show me, because I won’t be able to do anything for myself!”
Stephen Schiavo
Joplin
Opinion
Voices: Missouri’s slide
- Opinion
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Our View: Santorum's Achilles' ear
Rick Santorum knocked everyone for a loop this week, not just with his victory in Missouri but with the landslide size of the thing.
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Our View: Are school loans next 'debt bomb'?
The late American middle class struggled for decades to keep pace with an American dream slipping from its grasp.
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Our View: A better way of limit terms
A Missouri House committee on Tuesday endorsed a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow lawmakers to serve 16 years in the state Legislature, either the House or the Senate.
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Your View: Is it our fault?
When did coveting things and money take over character? What happened?
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Your View: No way to run a school
All throughout the state of Missouri, you’ll hear much discussion about teacher tenure and the indefinite contracts that go along with that. Most — if not nearly all — jobs in the private and public sectors have no such career protection.
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Your View: Prime suspects
If it’s too cool in the house, you can turn up the heat if you think you can afford it.
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Our View: Worldwide concern
There is growing concern worldwide that Israel might launch an attack on Iranian nuclear plants.
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Other Views: FAA deal up in air five years
The Federal Aviation Administration bill was delayed 23 times, but the agency finally has a law giving it $63 billion and full operating authority for the next four years.
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Don Ray, columnist: Obama's pipeline excuse an election-year cop-out
On Jan. 18, President Barack Obama announced he was rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline project — a project that had its beginnings some 40 months ago (September 2008).
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James Whitford, guest columnist: Broken people or broken system?
Are the people broken or is the system broken? If you walk into Watered Gardens, our rescue mission, it may seem the people are broken. But it’s a rescue mission. It just feels that way. And sometimes, it just looks that way.
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