Yet Saudi Arabia is suffering from similar problems regarding poverty, starvation, and a sinking economy based on the oil industry. They're not socialist.
I'd think that parents would want their kids to investigate ALL of the factors (natural resources, workforce demographics, physical location, trading partners, and government structure) and not just merely paint with a broad brush these countries as socialist = bad.
When attacking me with ad hominem attacks, perhaps you should be more specific as to what truly horrifies you about teaching students to critically think? This time come out of your safe place snow flake, be specific and use real facts, not alternative facts or lazy bumper sticker slogans like your first post in this thead.
Posts like these are what terrifies me as a parent. You either didn't read what I posted, or you lack the cognitive abilities to figure out what I said. I can't tell if you're that dogmatic about your political/social views, or if you just don't/can't reason.
1) I repeat, I never referred to "countries". I only referred to Venezuela, even using personal, singular pronouns hoping to get the point across. I figured a teacher would be able to recognize that. Guess I was wrong. I am only talking about Venezuela.
2) I did use facts. You failed to respond to them. Now you may ignore them, but that doesn't change the fact that they are facts. Another reason I would be terrified to have my children taught by you.
3) I didn't compare Saudi Arabia and Venezuela bc they are different situations, with many complex details that factor into their situations. However, since you keep on bringing it up, let's compare them.
Saudi Arabia:
Inflation Rate: 1.7
CPI: 136.8
Food Inflation: -4.3
Producer Prices: 160.80
Producer Prices Change: 3.7
Inflation Rate Mom: -0.5
Cpi Transportation: 121.1
Govt Debt to GDP: 5.9%
Food inflation: -4.3%
Venezuela:
inflation Rate: 800
Inflation Rate Mom: 8.7
CPI: 2146.1
Core Consumer Prices: 594.3
Core Inflation Rate: 60.3
Food Inflation: 315
CPI Transportation: 1995.1
Govt Debt to GDP: 49.8%
Numbers courtesy of tradingeconomics.com
Those enough facts for you? I'll let you figure out which set of numbers is better, and maybe you'll realize the issues they're both currently facing are similar in name only, and not numbers.