Sunday, April 25, 2010

North American Union: The Rise and Fall of America

NEW ISSUE: The Security & Prosperity Partnership, North American Union: Global Elite Bide Their Time, A Nation in Decline, Update: Real ID, Understanding the Enemy, Congress Resolution S.416, The NAFTA Superhighway: Where the End of the Road Begins, America’s Growing Surveillance Society and More… Get Your Limited Edition Copies Now! SHIPS IMMEDIATELY!!! Get Your Copies and Get Active!

Watch this video from Gary Franchi...



Most Americans have no clue about the NAU and it is our job to WAKE THEM UP before we're all using the Amero to pay for cheap garbage shipped to the Mexican shores from China then transported up the NAFTA Super Highway!

Today we launch our assault on the North American Union in a nationwide awareness campaign. We need you to join us!

Use the latest issue of Republic Magazine: NAU: Rise and Fall of America as your info bomb... get a stack of magazines at RepublicMagazine.com and pass them out at pizza parlors, doctors offices, beauty salons, auto body shops, and barber shops in your town... every magazine left has a statistical reach of over 8 people!

If you can't afford a stack go to the site and DOWNLOAD it for FREE!!!

RepublicMagazines.com

Have fun with it get your friends or your local group and join us!

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Obama Admits He Is A Muslim

In this video, Barack Obama admits that he is a Muslim!

Obama bows before a Muslim king, talks about his Muslim family, quotes from the Koran, defends Islam, and many more clips of Obama and his Muslim connections...

Saturday, April 10, 2010

What is the "Rubber Room"?

Simply put, "The Rubber Room" is a room where hundreds and hundreds of New York City schoolteachers presently sit, being paid full salary to do absolutely nothing.

But, like so many things, it's not quite so simple...

Watch the Rubber Room Movie Trailer:



What Happens?

Each year in New York City hundreds of schoolteachers are suspended. Their teaching privileges are temporarily, but indefinitely, revoked.

Accused of a wide range and varying degrees of misconduct, these teachers are no longer allowed in the classroom. Instead, while awaiting a lengthy adjudication process, they are compelled to report to an off-campus location commonly referred to as The Rubber Room.


Annual Costs in Excess of $35 Million

Teachers assigned to a Rubber Room can spend months and often years there. Though they continue to collect their full salaries, they are not asked or allowed to perform work of any kind, instead sitting idle day after day.

The annual cost of the New York City Department of Education's Rubber Room is estimated to be in excess of $35 million, with some estimates ranging as high as $65 million. In addition, there is a general consensus that this cost is rising steeply with each passing year.


The Rooms

There exists, at any given time, at least one Rubber Room in each of New York City's five boroughs. The rooms are often medium-sized, non-descript administrative spaces with chairs and sometimes tables. Because almost no one in the New York City public education system is willing to discuss the issue on record, it is difficult to obtain a figure regarding the total number of teachers housed in these rooms, but educated guesses usually place it at a population of approximately 600 to 900 occupants, a population that, according to most, is steadily and even dramatically increasing.


The Documentary

The Rubber Room, a Five Boroughs Productions documentary film, is an in-depth, unbiased exploration of the New York City Department of Education's teacher suspension process.

The Rubber Room asks the tough questions about "the room" itself, but also relates those questions to larger trends in both New York City and national education. It closely examines the lives of teachers, students, parents and administrators; and glimpses the future of one of society's most important institutions, that of our public education system.

Learn More: RubberRoomMovie.com


NYDailyNews.com - Teachers in trouble spending years in 'rubber room' limbo that costs $65M