Subj : Re: FAILURE To : richardw From : Finnigann Date : Tue Oct 04 2005 08:30 am -=> richardw wrote to Finnigann <=- ri> Re: Re: FAILURE ri> By: Finnigann to Tracker1 on Fri Sep 30 2005 11:06 pm > Tr> Okay, this is utter crap.. there are plenty of private schools that do > Tr> *WAY* better then public schools... for that matter colleges are > Tr> jointly funded, public and private, and compete very well... people > Tr> tend to care more when it's their money on the table... that aside, I > Tr> think it is a civic responsibility to have public education. That > Tr> doesn't mean it needs to be controlled by a bureaucracy. > > But it remains the first duty of a private company to turn a profit. CEO's t > ignore this, soon are busy looking elsewhere for employment. ri> You keep reverting back to this as though it was a BAD thing?!? OF Of course not. It's a great thing... most of the time. ri> COURSE they should turn a profit! And the very best way to do that, is ri> to turn out the very best possible product... a highly educated child! Cutting costs seem to be the preffered method. Product evaluation isn't high on the list. I hear it on th enews all the time. Bad turn of events causes stock prices to drop... answer? Cut costs and fire people. Maybe that's not the best way to get news, but it's all I have. Your notion is more wishfull thinking than anything else. ÕÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ ³ "We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, ³ in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology." ³ - Carl Sagan ³ .... In Texas when we cut the grass, we reward ourselves. --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.46 þ Synchronet þ Bits-N-Bytes BBS Onehellofa BBS bnb.dtdns.net .