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@unitedistheway

Katılım Şubat 2021
485 Takip Edilen208 Takipçiler
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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
These 2 along with all the others who are putting it all on the line...will be known as Global Heros some day! Thank You @petermccullough and @PierreKory
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Students for Amy Acton
Students for Amy Acton@students4amy·
Kent State? University of Akron? Central State? Ohioans deserve to know which other schools are in his sites.
Vivek Ramaswamy@VivekGRamaswamy

Ohio’s state-funded universities face an enrollment cliff, tuition is going up, and the value of a college degree is going down. We can’t ignore the problem & I’ve offered an actual solution to fix it, while my opponent @amyactonoh offers what she always does: absolutely nothing. My piece in the Columbus Dispatch this week: The race for governor of Ohio can be a positive opportunity to give voters a choice between competing policy visions for our state – and to have a healthy debate about the right way to improve Ohio. But we risk missing that opportunity in 2026: While I aim to offer clear policies to improve the lives of Ohioans, my opponent offers little more than cheap criticisms of my ideas while offering no solutions of her own. The recent debate about Ohio’s publicly funded universities continues that growing pattern. Ohio’s higher education system faces a severe enrollment cliff that threatens the future of our state-funded universities, and rising tuition costs are becoming unsustainable for Ohio families. The next governor of Ohio needs a real plan to address this growing problem, and ignoring it isn’t a solution. The facts are stark. America is aging fast, and Ohio is aging faster. The number of high school graduates in Ohio has peaked, hitting our highwater mark in 2024 with roughly 149,000 graduates. But by 2041, that number falls to about 124,000 – a 17% decline in as many years. Meanwhile, fewer Ohio students are choosing four-year universities – and understandably so. Graduate salaries aren’t keeping pace with climbing tuition and student debt. Just 47.6% of Ohio graduates in the class of 2021 enrolled in higher education within two years of graduation, down from 59% in 2015, while the total cost of attending Ohio's public universities has increased by nearly 50% over the past 15 years. Families across the state are feeling the strain. Despite these headwinds, Ohio still operates one of the most fragmented public university systems in the country, enrolling roughly 313,000 students across 14 public universities, 24 regional branch campuses and 22 community colleges. Florida, with about twice our population, only operates 12 public universities. That means Ohio is spreading its limited state dollars across too many bloated bureaucracies, and alarms are already blaring. Just last week, Lourdes University became the fifth private college to close since 2020. Meanwhile, public universities that receive hundreds of millions in taxpayer funding are feeling the impact of fewer students. In recent years, Cleveland State has cut staff and eliminated NCAA sports programs. The student count at the University of Akron inched up this past year but is at half of its 2010 enrollment level. Kent State launched a "Transformation 2028" restructuring plan last year in search of administrative efficiencies. Central State University remains on “fiscal watch.” While universities struggle to get by, other states have benefited from commonsense reforms. Consider Georgia, which adopted a sensible plan that reduced the number of state universities from 35 in 2011 to 26 by 2018. Notably, their process didn’t start with an agenda of consolidation for its own sake, or with targets set on certain universities. Instead, it began with a set of principles. Their leadership decided they wanted to expand access, reduce duplication, improve attainment and strengthen regional economic development. The results were better retention and more on-time graduation, without increasing tuition. That is what real reform looks like. Ohio should go further. As governor, I intend to lead a pragmatic reform that guides certain state-funded universities that suffer from under-enrollment to instead become “centers of excellence” – national leaders in a specific field – with the goal of offering a higher-quality education to students at a lower cost. Specialization creates distinction, and distinction attracts students. This will push our state-funded universities to work together, instead of in separate siloes. My first budget will propose to empower the Chancellor of Higher Education to conduct a statewide review, guided by clear statutory criteria, not backroom favoritism. It will identify where missions overlap, where enrollment collapse has made independence untenable, and where administrative functions can be unified without harming students. The chancellor will then return to the General Assembly with a concrete plan on a fixed timeline. Critics will say this threatens campus identity. This is an understandable concern, but it does not justify inaction. Georgia’s experience shows that campuses and local identities need not vanish, even if excess overhead costs do. A campus can keep its traditions and its local role without carrying the full cost of an outdated administrative hierarchy. The purpose of a university isn’t to sustain a legacy bureaucracy; it’s to educate students. When the structure stops serving that mission, the structure should change in a positive way. My plan will ensure that the dollars saved from administrative duplication go back to benefit students. Options abound for how to achieve this goal: Ohio could reinvest these dollars through the State Share of Instruction formula and tie that formula more directly to affordability, or improve the quality of instruction, academic experience and tuition relief in other ways. Skyrocketing tuition, cratering enrollment and declining quality of education are real problems that demand thoughtful solutions. While my opponent sneered on social media at my ideas, she offers absolutely no alternative solutions to help Ohioans. By contrast, I’m willing to start the challenging conversations we need to lead Ohio to new heights, in higher education and beyond. My plan will create a more competitive, increasingly affordable and rightsized higher education system for taxpayers and students. As other states have demonstrated, thoughtful reform can attract and retain more students, keep tuition affordable and better prepare graduates to compete for higher-paying jobs. There’s no reason Ohio can’t do even better. Either we reform our higher education system with purpose, or we watch it decline by default.

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Alex Triantafilou 🇺🇸🐘🇺🇸
In @VivekGRamaswamy, Ohio will get a thoughtful, measured, and common-sense reformer who has the intellectual skill and dynamic ideas to bring excellence across government. Our university system needs help. Vivek will fix it. Amy Acton is the past. Vivek is the future. 🇺🇸
Vivek Ramaswamy@VivekGRamaswamy

Ohio’s state-funded universities face an enrollment cliff, tuition is going up, and the value of a college degree is going down. We can’t ignore the problem & I’ve offered an actual solution to fix it, while my opponent @amyactonoh offers what she always does: absolutely nothing. My piece in the Columbus Dispatch this week: The race for governor of Ohio can be a positive opportunity to give voters a choice between competing policy visions for our state – and to have a healthy debate about the right way to improve Ohio. But we risk missing that opportunity in 2026: While I aim to offer clear policies to improve the lives of Ohioans, my opponent offers little more than cheap criticisms of my ideas while offering no solutions of her own. The recent debate about Ohio’s publicly funded universities continues that growing pattern. Ohio’s higher education system faces a severe enrollment cliff that threatens the future of our state-funded universities, and rising tuition costs are becoming unsustainable for Ohio families. The next governor of Ohio needs a real plan to address this growing problem, and ignoring it isn’t a solution. The facts are stark. America is aging fast, and Ohio is aging faster. The number of high school graduates in Ohio has peaked, hitting our highwater mark in 2024 with roughly 149,000 graduates. But by 2041, that number falls to about 124,000 – a 17% decline in as many years. Meanwhile, fewer Ohio students are choosing four-year universities – and understandably so. Graduate salaries aren’t keeping pace with climbing tuition and student debt. Just 47.6% of Ohio graduates in the class of 2021 enrolled in higher education within two years of graduation, down from 59% in 2015, while the total cost of attending Ohio's public universities has increased by nearly 50% over the past 15 years. Families across the state are feeling the strain. Despite these headwinds, Ohio still operates one of the most fragmented public university systems in the country, enrolling roughly 313,000 students across 14 public universities, 24 regional branch campuses and 22 community colleges. Florida, with about twice our population, only operates 12 public universities. That means Ohio is spreading its limited state dollars across too many bloated bureaucracies, and alarms are already blaring. Just last week, Lourdes University became the fifth private college to close since 2020. Meanwhile, public universities that receive hundreds of millions in taxpayer funding are feeling the impact of fewer students. In recent years, Cleveland State has cut staff and eliminated NCAA sports programs. The student count at the University of Akron inched up this past year but is at half of its 2010 enrollment level. Kent State launched a "Transformation 2028" restructuring plan last year in search of administrative efficiencies. Central State University remains on “fiscal watch.” While universities struggle to get by, other states have benefited from commonsense reforms. Consider Georgia, which adopted a sensible plan that reduced the number of state universities from 35 in 2011 to 26 by 2018. Notably, their process didn’t start with an agenda of consolidation for its own sake, or with targets set on certain universities. Instead, it began with a set of principles. Their leadership decided they wanted to expand access, reduce duplication, improve attainment and strengthen regional economic development. The results were better retention and more on-time graduation, without increasing tuition. That is what real reform looks like. Ohio should go further. As governor, I intend to lead a pragmatic reform that guides certain state-funded universities that suffer from under-enrollment to instead become “centers of excellence” – national leaders in a specific field – with the goal of offering a higher-quality education to students at a lower cost. Specialization creates distinction, and distinction attracts students. This will push our state-funded universities to work together, instead of in separate siloes. My first budget will propose to empower the Chancellor of Higher Education to conduct a statewide review, guided by clear statutory criteria, not backroom favoritism. It will identify where missions overlap, where enrollment collapse has made independence untenable, and where administrative functions can be unified without harming students. The chancellor will then return to the General Assembly with a concrete plan on a fixed timeline. Critics will say this threatens campus identity. This is an understandable concern, but it does not justify inaction. Georgia’s experience shows that campuses and local identities need not vanish, even if excess overhead costs do. A campus can keep its traditions and its local role without carrying the full cost of an outdated administrative hierarchy. The purpose of a university isn’t to sustain a legacy bureaucracy; it’s to educate students. When the structure stops serving that mission, the structure should change in a positive way. My plan will ensure that the dollars saved from administrative duplication go back to benefit students. Options abound for how to achieve this goal: Ohio could reinvest these dollars through the State Share of Instruction formula and tie that formula more directly to affordability, or improve the quality of instruction, academic experience and tuition relief in other ways. Skyrocketing tuition, cratering enrollment and declining quality of education are real problems that demand thoughtful solutions. While my opponent sneered on social media at my ideas, she offers absolutely no alternative solutions to help Ohioans. By contrast, I’m willing to start the challenging conversations we need to lead Ohio to new heights, in higher education and beyond. My plan will create a more competitive, increasingly affordable and rightsized higher education system for taxpayers and students. As other states have demonstrated, thoughtful reform can attract and retain more students, keep tuition affordable and better prepare graduates to compete for higher-paying jobs. There’s no reason Ohio can’t do even better. Either we reform our higher education system with purpose, or we watch it decline by default.

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Kim Georgeton for Lt. Governor of Ohio
🚨 Ohio is quietly surrendering its water to AI. Not tomorrow. Right now. Central Ohio alone has 65+ new data centers planned. Each one can guzzle up to 5 million gallons per day just to cool the servers. Google’s New Albany facility? Already sucking down 348,000 gallons daily. One facility. We get 40 inches of rain a year. Ohio should be water-rich. Instead, we’re pumping groundwater faster than it can recharge. Wells are dropping. Aquifers are thinning. By 2050, industrial water demand is projected to explode 120%. That’s your drinking water, farmers’ irrigation, and every river, stream, and wetland in a losing battle against server farms. This isn’t sustainable. This isn’t progress. This is theft from our children’s future. That’s why Ohioans are fighting back: a citizen-led effort to amend the Ohio Constitution to ban large-scale data centers that threaten our water. Ballot language is being reviewed now. Petitions will hit every county soon. Most of these companies hide their real water usage behind NDAs. They don’t want you to know they’re drinking your future. AI doesn’t run on electricity alone. It runs on your water. Arizona already learned this lesson the hard way. Ohio doesn’t have to. We will not sacrifice our water, our land, and our grandchildren’s inheritance so tech billionaires can train bigger models. Sign the petitions when they drop. Spread the word. This is Water Wars and Ohio is waking up. #water #waterwars #ohio #bigtech #datacenters @CaseyPutschOhio
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Dr Sherri Tenpenny
Dr Sherri Tenpenny@BusyDrT·
They called it “disinformation.” But the real question is… who decides what you’re allowed to say? This is bigger than a label. It’s about the future of free speech and the limits of the First Amendment in a digital world. Read more. Understand what’s at stake. And if you feel called—take action: drtenpenny.substack.com/p/a-modern-dav…
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Allison Russo
Allison Russo@Russo4Ohio·
While Ohio’s current Secretary of State plays fast and loose with 8 million Ohioans’ personally identifiable information, I’m working to protect your privacy. This week I introduced the Ohio Privacy Act, which mirrors the federal Privacy Act and provides clarity in how state agencies and employers must maintain, use, and disseminate your personal information. 1/2
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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
@Juliedonuts Ugg I was on the same page you are for years. Im sadly not anymore! Too much has happened. He is not on our dide👍
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Kim Dotcom
Kim Dotcom@KimDotcom·
Trump's going nuts. It's his last Presidency. It's the end of his life. He got away with his crimes. He's openly threatening war crimes against Iran. He doesn't care if you die in a nuclear winter. History will record it's him who ended humanity. His legacy. You should be afraid.
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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
@TeeTimesPub You know what who cares he has people that love him that should be doing something about this rather than sitting back and letting him be their cash cow
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Tee Times
Tee Times@TeeTimesPub·
It's time for everybody to stop pretending Tiger doesn't have a serious problem because they want to protect their cash cow or preserve some fantasy that he will be the player he once was. Keeping this taboo only has bad outcomes. Enough is enough.
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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
@TheBrianShapiro And now this has happened twice imagine all the time he hasn't gotten caught
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Pushing The Limits With Brian Shapiro
This is now the 2nd time Tiger could have killed somebody. Clearly either drunk or on drugs. Maybe both. Put this dumb mother fucker in jail. I have ALWAYS thought he was an utter pos. This brings it to another level.
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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
@AVindman Newsflash it's happening everywhere
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Alex Vindman 🇺🇸
Alex Vindman 🇺🇸@AVindman·
I came to Florida because it was an affordable place to live. Not anymore. Basic necessities are skyrocketing and retirement is increasingly out of reach for folks here — gas, groceries, rent, insurance.
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scotty ☄️✨
scotty ☄️✨@major_comet·
KSU is the only school in ohio with an accredited MLIS program. it’s the highest ranked public institution in northern ohio, and it’s one of the top 50 U.S. schools for undergrad engineering. it’s one of only five R1 research schools in ohio. this Will make students leave ohio.
scotty ☄️✨ tweet mediascotty ☄️✨ tweet mediascotty ☄️✨ tweet mediascotty ☄️✨ tweet media
Roberto Shenanigans@Rob_Shenanigans

Vivek Ramaswamy doubles-down on his plan to close universities in Ohio. He specifically references University of Akron, Kent State University, and Central State University. I wonder how the Akron & Kent State communities feel about this? The 2 schools employ 13,000+ Ohioans.

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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
@5le You know what sad is most parents don't care because their kids are addicted and it's too hard to go do something with your kid then it is to just let him sit in the corner with the screen
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Eli Schwartz
Eli Schwartz@5le·
Research has shown that excessive screen time in children can actually lead to thinning of the brain's cortex, the part responsible for critical thinking and reasoning. Check out this interactive guide for parents to break the addiction to screens: amzn.to/407g3RE
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Arienne Childrey
Arienne Childrey@Ari4Ohio·
I’m Arienne Childrey, working-class candidate for OH-84. I’m not a wealthy politician. I’m a trans woman & former city council member in rural Ohio, juggling bills just like you. We need leaders who actually live the struggles of the 84th. (1/3)
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Sandi Beach 🏖️☀️
Sandi Beach 🏖️☀️@Sandibeach0114·
@harryfisherEMTP @samthelion79 Hey Harry I’ve been following you for awhile. I am COVID vax injured and have kept a journal for the last few years, pictures included. I am at the worst I have ever been and I don’t know where to turn for help.
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Harry Fisher
Harry Fisher@harryfisherEMTP·
When I first started telling people that I was witnessing many die from the Covid shots, I understood why a lot of folks were reluctant to believe me, even mad at me. The narrative was pushed so heavily by the media and government. I could rationalize, to a degree, the push back. But Now, with all we know, all that’s come to light, it makes zero sense why anyone would disagree with what I’ve seen. I’m a paramedic witnessing immense death and horrific injury post mRNA “vaccine.” Through all this My stance has NOT CHANGED! The mainstream narrative, however, has changed soooo many times. It went from completely safe and effective to ‘it has killed children, causes strokes and heart problems and doesn’t even work to stop the spread.’ Yet some people still champion these products. Especially those in government that took Pharma money. So, if you or a loved one still believe the Covid shots are completely safe, I urge you to reconsider your mindset. Because if you can’t see the danger right in front of you, at this point, then a medic like me might be calling your much to early time of death. Forced to witness your bitter end at the hands of pharmaceutical companies that lied about products that you seriously should’ve been avoiding. Please, If you know someone still on the fence, share this with them. Inform them of the dangers. And if they don’t want to listen to you, here’s a message from a medic that’s truly concerned for them too. Sincerely, Harry Fisher Paramedic God bless you
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Linda
Linda@LndamyDark·
God wants us to help people, but he also states there are 5 types of people we should never help. There's some people out there that really need to see this right now. God bless 🙏🙏🙏
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curious
curious@unitedistheway·
@LndamyDark @War10ck1377 God gives everyone free will he will not cross that. If you ask God for help, he will help you. But if you continue to make bad decisions over and over, I never ask for that help that you're free will.
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Linda
Linda@LndamyDark·
@War10ck1377 They would have to accept God first.
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