Tuesday 23 December 2008

And how much sympathy do I have?

Quite frankly, bugger all:

Police are being called out to deal with 40 violent incidents in schools every day, research has found, prompting fresh fears over a breakdown in classroom discipline.


No part of the public sector carries more blame for the lentilisation of society and breakdown of standards and discipline than teachers. The useless fuckers don't want to discipline kids, don't want to teach the little scrotes anything, and whinge and bitch like stuck pigs while behaving like junior managers rather than educators.

Fuck 'em. I hope they all get knifed and tagged. Cunts.

Update: Blaney agrees. Kinda.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'd like to know the definition of 'violence' used...

Anonymous said...

I don't think it's logical or fair to expect people like Gordon Brown or David Cameron to be able to comprehend what is going on in our state schools.

It'd be like me trying to put together a mission to fly to the moon.

Ronnie Stooge said...

A well thought out and reasoned argument as usual Obo.

Jon said...

What puzzles me is that these buildings are still called "schools". "Holding pens" would be nearer the mark.

Anonymous said...

"Holding pens" is right. You are too hard on teachers, Obo. My wife worked with some intelligent, committed people - brighter and better read on average (or at least her friends were) than my professional colleagues. She (and most of her friends) gave up teaching because the "Senior Management Team" would never support teachers trying to maintain discipline. If you didn't persuade the ferals not to riot, it was your fault (likewise if the feral parents objected physically to your methods). Disruptive kids could not be expelled. Softness prevailed. Even her discretion to write her own comments on school reports was removed, with a pre-fabricated selection of "positive" comments being provided. I spent an hour or so speaking to one of the Education Minister's senior advisors on a train once. When I put it to him that, while it was great that we could offer universal free education, any kids who disrupted its provision should be sent home, he said I was right, but it was "politically impossible to do that because the voters expect a child-minding service." The voters are to blame. Labour's policies on education have been clear since the sixties and Conservative voters have never made it a priority to oppose them.

banned said...

Thanks Tom Paine " the voters are to blame ", nice to know that it's all my fault after all.