STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S

STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S t1_j60risl wrote

Lol that shirt is cringe, surely he can change into this outfit after school before going to whatever protest he's going to. Just let school be school, jeez o wheez. Not sure what he's trying to accomplish. I wish people would just shut the fuck up and let the kids learn. People need to touch some grass, get off the cable news and internet.

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STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S t1_j5pd68n wrote

> Henrico Circuit Judge Richard S. Wallerstein Jr. convicted Williams after accepting his pleas and set sentencing for April 14. The boy’s plea agreement caps at 60 years the active prison term to which he can be sentenced.

Hopefully he's in there the full 60. He sounds like he had a horrible upbringing such that he's an inherent danger to society.

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STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S t1_j2y6nt6 wrote

> Explain to me how we have the fan and entry price is twice as high as the suburbs and has a worse school long term.

Because elementary schools pull from a smaller area than middle and high schools. For elementary, students come from just the Fan, but for MS and HS they also come from impoverished areas surrounding the Fan. Same scenario is true of Tuckahoe Elementary in Henrico county.

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STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S t1_j2xz2xj wrote

What about middle and high school? The sad fact is that as long as you have education-focused parents with the means (wealth) to remove themselves from poor students, they will continue to do so, and currently that means moving away from the poor students. Implementing school choice would remove the necessity of moving away.

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STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S t1_j2x27jg wrote

> We should be adding more due to more demand but we lack the ability to build enough.

> If we built more stuff there could be more for everyone

Are you referring to housing or businesses? If you continue building, is there a risk you erase what is currently nice about a place? What if the low density is what makes a certain place desirable? I know this will get downvoted because most Redditors would like to live in 100 sq ft apartments built 80 stories high, but I'm actually curious what you're saying.

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STREAMOFCONSCIOUSN3S t1_j1uybet wrote

From the article you would think Richmond is stuck in the 1860's with a bunch of slave owners still. Jeesh. Is that really how big city people view us?

> Over the years, Richmond has drawn me back multiple times, each visit a deeper dive into Civil War history — with plenty of breaks for cramming in all the delicious food I can. On my most recent trip, as I scouted out museums, restaurants and historic neighborhoods, I was curious to feel the city’s pulse, to see how it was recovering.

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