Re: links to sites dedicated to inclusion in education

From: Nate Schmolze (vygotsky@home.com)
Date: Tue Jul 17 2001 - 13:01:30 PDT


http://seriweb.com/

http://www.familyvillage.wisc.edu/education/inclusion.html

http://circleofinclusion.org/

At 01:18 PM 7/17/01, you wrote:

>Dear xmca-members,
>
>I'd be very pleased if you could recommend site(s) dedicated to inclusion in education (inclusively education?).
>
>
>Ricardo Ottoni Vaz Japiassu
><http://sites.uol.com.br/rjapias/>http://sites.uol.com.br/rjapias/
>www.coroadetebas.cjb.net

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George Bernard Shaw:
It is the deed that teaches, not the name we give it. Murder and capital punishment are not opposites that cancel one another, but similars that breed their kind

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Nate Schmolze
http://members.home.net/schmolze1/
schmolze1@home.com

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Albert Camus (1957):
An execution is not simply death. It is just as different from the privation of life as a concentration camp is from prison. It adds to death a rule, a public premeditation known to the future victim, an organization which is itself a source of moral sufferings more terrible than death. Capital punishment is the most premeditated of murders, to which no criminal's deed, however calculated can be compared. For there to be an equivalency, the death penalty would have
to punish a criminal who had warned his victim of the date at which he would inflict a horrible death on him and who, from that moment onward, had confined him at his mercy for months. Such a monster is not encountered in private life.
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