Born in Los Angeles, California, to a Chinese-American father and a Thai-American mother, Djou grew up in Hawaii. He graduated from Punahou School and earned a Bachelor of Arts in political science and a Bachelor of Science in finance from the University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania graduating magna cum laude. He earned his law degree at the University of Southern California Law School.
Djou is a captain in the United States Army Reserve.[2] He teaches as an adjunct professor at the University of Hawaii.
Djou served as the Vice Chairman of the Hawaii Republican Party from 1998 to 1999. He was named legislator of the year by Small Business Hawaii in 2002, 2004, and 2006. In 2006 he was selected as one of the 40 most promising leaders in Hawaii under age 40 by Pacific Business News, and in 2005 was named by Honolulu Weekly as the “Best Politician” in the state.
He’s 40 years old!
Why is it that the Republicans have all the grown-ups?
Guest Janine Turner: (Founder of “Constituting America”)
children need to learn about the founding documents of the USA
children need to understand what America unique
children need to understand the notion of limited government
the founding documents are basic to understanding everything else
Guest Colin Hanna: (Founder of “Let Freedom Ring”)
the Constution is very important for people to read out loud
it’s also good to read it with others
Part 4: (A debate! Between Michelle Rhee and some lazy union thug!)
Guest Michelle Rhee: (Superintendent of Washington, D.C. schools)
public school tenure means having a job life regardless of performance
you can judge how teachers are performing look at test score improvement
you can’t look at teacher performance reviews they are always good
you have to look at the test score improvement year over year
it is almost impossible to get a teacher fired even if they are awful
Rhee fired lots of administrative people and costs went down
scores went up, and now DC is no longer the worst school system
more money doesn’t make students learn better
DC used to spend the MOST money, and had the WORST performance
the key to improvement is holding people accountable to perform
Guest Noah Gotbaum: (NYC Local School Board President/son of a union boss)
teachers aren’t to blame! most of them are excellent!
firing bad teachers is a bad idea! that won’t solve anything!
the DC schools haven’t improved! test scores don’t measure improvement!
we need more money! money will solve everything! it’s for the children!
you’re scaring the poor teachers when you talk about firing them!
Michelle Rhee is evil! Evil! She’s a witch! Burn her! Burn her!
those gains in test scores are not real! You can’t measure results!
test scores going up doesn’t mean that the students are doing better
the causes are more complicated and systemic but give us more money!
(I snarkified everything the union guy said – he didn’t really say that stuff like that)
Part 5: (Q&A)
Question for Noah: How much money is enough?Noah: well, other schools spend lots of money!
Question for Ben: Where does more money go?Ben: its impossible to tell how much is spent on administration vs teachers
Question for Noah: What about a voucher system?Noah: no! don’t let parents choose! that would deprive bad teachers of lifetime jobs!Noah: vouchers aren’t enough to cover a private school education!
Ben: top private schools cost 10,000 a year less than half of NYC public schools
Question for Andrew: Is there any legislation to provide vouchers?Andrew: yes there is legislation to create voucher projects
Question for Ben: Are you cherry-picking the best students?Ben: every kid who applies is accepted there is no cherry pickingBen: we have more poor students than the average school
(I snarkified everything the union guy said – he didn’t really say that stuff like that)
Part 6:
John Stossel:
Americans spend way way more than other countries and we score much lower
teacher unions are still complaining for more money
teachers average 50,000 in salary a year for 9 months of work
teachers make way more than chemists, computer programmers and nurses
and school administrators waste tons of money on school
we spend four times as much per pupil since 1974
the real problem is lack of competition
the public school system is a government monopoly
monopolies are bad for consumers: less competition = high cost and low value
monopolies create worthless junk that no one wants
competition makes service/product providers accountable
Awesome! Down with government monopolies! The segment on online schools gives me hope – maybe there is a way to turn the young people away from secularism (= moral relativism) and socialism. This is another sign that there may be a way to turn this thing around if we can just get the government out of the education business and let parents choose schools that produce marketable skills. How did we ever let these union thugs produce worst test scores that poor countries with a billion times more money spent? Is this the United States of America? These unions are UNAMERICAN. They should be outlawed. First the public sector unions, then any private sector union that influences politics.
One of the more memorable moments from the Obama CNBC town hall came when an African-American woman — a military veteran and mother of two — told the president she was “exhausted of defending” his administration:
“I’m one of your middle-class Americans, and quite frankly I’m exhausted. I’m exhausted of defending you, defending your administration, defending the mantle of change that I voted for, and deeply disappointed with where we are right now. I had been told that I voted for a man who said he was going to change things in a meaningful way for the middle class. I’m one of those people and I’m waiting, sir. I’m waiting. I don’t feel it yet, and I thought that — while it wouldn’t be in great measure — I would feel it in some small measure.”
The woman than talks about the impact of the recession on her family, her worry about being able to pay her two daughters’ tuition, and her fear that her family may be heading back to their “hot dogs and beans days.”
“Quite frankly Mr. President, I need you to answer this honestly: is this my new reality?”