ATLANTA (AP) — A rare open U.S. Senate seat in Georgia promises a scrambled 2014 campaign that already has some Republicans quietly nervous about retaining it.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Senate intelligence committee on Wednesday postponed until next week a vote on the confirmation of White House aide John Brennan to be CIA director, dashing hopes of Democratic leaders who had hoped to have a vote on Thursday. The committee's Republican vice chairman, Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, said the panel expects to hold the vote on Tuesday. No explanation for the delay was immediately available. …
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Senate panel delays CIA nominee Brennan’s confirmation vote
According to Viral Read, Representative Paul Broun is in for Georgia’s 2014 Senate race . Tonight was a night of surprises for anyone who attended the Georgia C.H.A.R.G.E. (Citizens Helping America Restore Government Ethics) meeting in Gwinnett county. Luckily, ViralRead was on the scene with a front row seat to all the fireworks. The surprise, however, didn’t come from the keynote speaker, former Secretary of State and 2010 gubernatorial candidate Karen Handel . Moments before the meeting was underway Congressman Paul Broun (R-Athens) shocked the crowd as he walked into the room with his wife, Niki Broun, and a top-level staffer. Keep reading this post . . .
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The Early Outlines of Georgia’s 2014 Senate Race
Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia said that he plans to retire from Congress in 2014 and won’t seek a third term.

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Georgia’s Chambliss to Retire From Senate
This year, I’ll be using my syndicated column and blog space to expose how progressive “reformers” — mal-formers — are corrupting our schools. One of my New Year’s resolutions is to provide you in-depth coverage of this vital issue that too often gets shunted off the daily political/partisan agenda. While the GOP tries to solve its ills with better software and communications consultants, the conservative movement — and America — face much larger problems. It doesn’t start with the “low-information voter.” It starts with the no-knowledge student. This is the first in an ongoing series on “Common Core,” the stealthy federal takeover of school curriculum and standards across the country. As longtime readers know, my own experience with this ongoing sabotage of academic excellence dates back to my early reporting on the Clinton-era “Goals 2000″ and “outcome-based” education and extends to my recent parental experience with “Everyday Math” . The good news is that grass-roots education and parental groups, brave teachers, and professors are fighting back. See the resource list/links at the bottom of this column and stay tuned for much more. *** Rotten to the Core: Obama’s War on Academic Standards (Part 1) by Michelle Malkin Creators Syndicate Copyright 2012 America’s downfall doesn’t begin with the “low-information voter.” It starts with the no-knowledge student. For decades, collectivist agitators in our schools have chipped away at academic excellence in the name of fairness, diversity and social justice. “Progressive” reformers denounced Western civilization requirements, the Founding Fathers and the Great Books as racist. They attacked traditional grammar classes as irrelevant in modern life. They deemed ability grouping of students (tracking) bad for self-esteem. They replaced time-tested rote techniques and standard algorithms with fuzzy math, inventive spelling and multicultural claptrap. Under President Obama, these top-down mal-formers — empowered by Washington education bureaucrats and backed by misguided liberal philanthropists led by billionaire Bill Gates — are now presiding over a radical makeover of your children’s school curriculum. It’s being done in the name of federal “Common Core” standards that do anything but raise achievement standards. Common Core was enabled by Obama’s federal stimulus law and his Department of Education’s “Race to the Top” gimmickry . The administration bribed cash-starved states into adopting unseen instructional standards as a condition of winning billions of dollars in grants. Even states that lost their bids for Race to the Top money were required to commit to a dumbed-down and amorphous curricular “alignment.” In practice, Common Core’s dubious “college- and career”-ready standards undermine local control of education, usurp state autonomy over curricular materials, and foist untested, mediocre and incoherent pedagogical theories on America’s schoolchildren. Over the next several weeks and months, I’ll use this column space to expose who’s behind this disastrous scheme in D.C. backrooms. I’ll tell you who’s fighting it in grassroots tea party and parental revolts across the country from Massachusetts to Indiana, Texas, Georgia and Utah. And most importantly, I’ll explain how this unprecedented federal meddling is corrupting our children’s classrooms and textbooks. There’s no better illustration of Common Core’s duplicitous talk of higher standards than to start with its math “reforms.” While Common Core promoters assert their standards are “internationally benchmarked,” independent members of the expert panel in charge of validating the standards refute the claim. Panel member Dr. Sandra Stotsky of the University of Arkansas reported, “No material was ever provided to the Validation Committee or to the public on the specific college readiness expectations of other leading nations in mathematics” or other subjects. In fact, Stanford University professor James Milgram, the only mathematician on the validation panel, concluded that the Common Core math scheme would place American students two years behind their peers in other high-achieving countries. In protest, Milgram refused to sign off on the standards. He’s not alone. Professor Jonathan Goodman of New York University found that the Common Core math standards imposed “significantly lower expectations with respect to algebra and geometry than the published standards of other countries.” Under Common Core, as the American Principles Project and Pioneer Institute point out, algebra I instruction is pushed to 9th grade, instead of 8th grade, as commonly taught. Division is postponed from 5th to 6th grade. Prime factorization, common denominators, conversions of fractions and decimals, and algebraic manipulation are de-emphasized or eschewed. Traditional Euclidean geometry is replaced with an experimental approach that had not been previously pilot-tested in the U.S. Ze’ev Wurman, a prominent software architect, electrical engineer and longtime math advisory expert in California and Washington, D.C., points out that Common Core delays proficiency with addition and subtraction until 4th grade and proficiency with basic multiplication until 5th grade, and skimps on logarithms, mathematical induction, parametric equations and trigonometry at the high school level. I cannot sum up the stakes any more clearly than Wurman did in his critique of this mess and the vested interests behind it: “I believe the Common Core marks the cessation of educational standards improvement in the United States. No state has any reason left to aspire for first-rate standards, as all states will be judged by the same mediocre national benchmark enforced by the federal government. Moreover, there are organizations that have reasons to work for lower and less-demanding standards, specifically teachers unions and professional teacher organizations. While they may not admit it, they have a vested interest in lowering the accountability bar for their members. …This will be done in the name of ‘critical thinking’ and ’21st-century’ skills, and in faraway Washington, D.C., well beyond the reach of parents and most states and employers.” This is all in keeping with my own experience as a parent of elementary- and middle-school age kids who were exposed to “Everyday Math” nonsense. This and other fads abandon “drill and kill” memorization techniques for fuzzy “critical thinking” methods that put the cart of “why” in front of the horse of “how.” In other words: Instead of doing the grunt work of hammering times tables and basic functions into kids’ heads first, the faddists have turned to wacky, wordy non-math alternatives to encourage “conceptual” understanding — without any mastery of the fundamentals of math. Common Core is rotten to the core. The corruption of math education is just the beginning. *** A starter list of resources/background/related links: Truth in American Education is a blog devoted to watchdogging Common Core across the country. The MA-based Pioneer Institute is the leading think tank tracking and fighting Common Core. Pioneer’s Jim Stergios has an education blog, Rock the Schoolhouse , on Boston.com. Hoosier Moms Say No to Common Core is Ground Zero for the parental revolt against Common Core in Indiana. Utah moms against Common Core have a great blog. A Mother Speaks Out: Children For Sale – Guest Post by Alyson Williams. Stanley Kurtz has written about Common Core at NRO here and here . Mary Grabar has written about Common Core and Team Chicago’s lefties here . Phyllis Schlafly, as always, sounded the alarm here . This must-read piece by James Shuls connects Common Core, math corruption, and the need for school choice. Heritage resources on Common Core. Videos: APP’s full video series on Common Core here. Here’s part one to get you started. Cato’s Neal McCluskey dissects the Common Core folly:

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Rotten to the Core: Obama’s War on Academic Standards (Part 1)
A welcome sign to Spring City is shown Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2013, in Spring City, Utah. Officials in a small Utah town are urging citizens and teachers to arm themselves for everyone’s safety against any aggressor. One member of the Spring City council wants to make the edict mandatory, but police are urging restraint. Councilman Neil Sorensen says he’s drafting a measure that will go before the full council in February. At first, Sorensen wanted to mandate a gun in every household in the town of 1,000. Credit: AP SPRING CITY, Utah (TheBlaze/AP) — Officials in a small Utah town want to make sure every head of household has a firearm and knows how to use it, and they want to give school teachers training with guns too. Spring City Councilman Neil Sorensen first proposed an ordinance requiring a gun in every household in the town of 1,000. The rest of the council scoffed at making it a requirement, but they unanimously agreed to move forward with an ordinance “recommending” the idea. The council also approved funding to offer concealed firearms training Friday to the 20 teachers and administrators at the local elementary school. “It sends a statement that criminals better think twice,” Sorensen told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “If a teacher would have had a concealed weapon in Sandy Hook, I think the death loss would have been fewer. If sane, trained people had guns, they could have shot back.” The measure, which will go before the full council in February for further review, seems to have the support of the council’s five members and many residents in the farming community about 90 miles south of Salt Lake City. North Sanpete School District Superintendent Leslie Keisel makes remarks during an interview Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2013, in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Keisel doesn’t think arming teachers will keep children safer and isn’t encouraging teachers to attend Friday’s concealed weapons training in Spring City. Officials in a small Utah town are urging citizens and teachers to arm themselves for everyone’s safety against any aggressor. One member of the Spring City council wants to make the edict mandatory, but police are urging restraint. Credit: AP Some school administrators don’t think arming teachers is wise, and they are not encouraging teachers to participate in Friday’s training. “The more guns you have in the school, the more dangerous it is,” said Leslie Keisel, superintendent of the North Sanpete School District. Councilman Noel Bertelson said making guns in every house mandatory was too much, but he agrees the town would be safer if everyone was armed. With only a part-time police force, he said, response time is not like it is in a big city. “If a person is able to take care of themselves for a while, it would probably be a good thing,” Bertelson said. The community is still reeling from the double-murder on New Year’s Eve 2011 of an elderly couple in nearby Mount Pleasant. Sorensen said what used to be a peaceful, quiet town has been sullied by increasing criminal activity. Thefts of metal for scrap and other property also have become a problem, Councilman Boyd Mickel said. “We are kind of tired of people breaking in and taking stuff,” said Mickel, explaining why he voted to urge every house to have a gun. Timm Thompson, a coal miner and father of four girls who lives in Spring City, backs the council’s measure. Timm Thompson makes remarks during an interview on Main Street in Spring City, Utah, Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2013. Thompson supports the council’s ordinance to recommend guns in all households, saying drugs and crime are rampant in Spring City. He doesn’t support arming teachers in the elementary school, though., in Spring City, Utah. Credit: AP “People think small towns are a good place to live,” Thompson said. “But there is more crime and drugs than you can imagine.” Thompson, who owns 78 guns he keeps locked in a safe, doesn’t want teachers to act as police officers. He said some kids are “hooligans” and could overpower teachers for the guns. Sisters Katy Harmer and Caroline Lott, however, say arming teachers would make them feel better about sending their children to the Spring City Elementary School. The co-owners of the town’s coffee shop, Das Coffee, said most Spring City residents keep guns for hunting, leaving only a handful without weapons. Angela Johnson, owner of the Sinclair gas station, said she doesn’t like guns but backs the council’s proposal. “If criminals knew they would be fired against, I think it would cause pause,” Johnson said. Because the Spring City Council is stopping short of a law requiring gun ownership, elected officials won’t run afoul of state law, former Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff told KSL.com. Shurtleff said that when the Washington County town of Virgin enacted a local law in 2000 requiring households to keep guns, he warned them against trying to enforce the measure. Spring City leaders say they got the idea from a city in Georgia that passed a similar law. In 1982, Kennesaw, Ga., made headlines by requiring heads of households to own a gun and ammunition. On its website, Kennesaw boasts that its burglary rate declined after the law took effect. Teachers at Spring City Elementary School won’t be required to attend Friday’s concealed weapons training, but can if they wish, Principal Mark Thomas said. “I don’t think there is anything wrong about being educated how to use a gun,” Thomas said. But Thomas doesn’t believe having more armed teachers would necessarily prevent or mitigate the damage in mass shootings. Utah law allows teachers to have concealed weapon in classrooms, but the district doesn’t advocate for that, Thomas said. “By bringing weapons into school, are we creating more problems than we are solving?” he asked. “It could create a new problem. We don’t want to deal with that problem.” The proposed ordinance will be discussed at the Feb. 7 City Council meeting. A public hearing will be held three weeks later. Follow Jason Howerton on Twitter Read more stories from TheBlaze Alex Jones Goes Ballistic Debating Gun Control With Piers Morgan: ’1776 Will Commence Again If You Try to Take Our Firearms!’ Poll: Where Do You Stand On Guns, Gun Rights, And The Second Amendment? Iowa Lawmaker: Ban Semi-Automatic Weapons, Then ‘Start Taking Them’ From Gun Owners if Needed Bank of America Allegedly Freezes Gun Manufacturer’s Account: ‘You Should Not Be Selling Guns and Parts on the Internet’ Gawker Publishes Complete 446-Page List of ‘All the A**holes Who Own Guns in New York City’

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Officials in Utah Town Want Every Head of Household to Own a Gun — And Know How to Use It

