She really is ClueLess
http://nation.foxnews.com/2013/09/27/stacey-dash-vs-eric-holder-school-vouchers
SEAN HANNITY: Now school vouchers have become a hot button issues among school choice advocates lately. Now they were originally designed to give low income students a better chance to succeed. Now, passed in 2012, the Louisiana Scholarship Program allows some of the state's poorest kids to transfer from public to private schools using taxpayer dollars, but last month the state was sued by Eric Holder and the Obama justice department to stop schools that are under desegregation orders from handing out these vouchers, claiming the scholarships, whose recipients are almost all minorities, that it could re-segregate the schools. Joining me now with reaction is actress Stacey Dash who was once stuck in a failing, horrible, dangerous public school herself - passionate about the issue. How are you? Stacey, good to see you.
STACEY DASH, ACTRESS: Very good to see you. Thank you for having me.
HANNITY: You know, I felt horrible when during the last campaign and you Tweeted out your support for Romney rather - you really took a huge backlash for that. Has there been any other fallout after that?
DASH: Not really, I mean, if anything it's caused discussion which is always good. And thank God I don't scare easily, you know.
HANNITY: Good for you.
DASH: I'm going to stand for what I believe in.
HANNITY: Yes.
DASH: Which is why I'm standing with Governor Jindal and Jeb Bush because case - this is just asinine. I can't believe that the Attorney General would do something like this.
HANNITY: Let me ask you this -
DASH: Deny a child's education -
HANNITY: Uh huh -
HANNITY: Explain your situation.
(TALKING OVER ONE ANOTHER)
HANNITY: OK, go ahead, I'm sorry.
DASH: I'm saying deny a child education because of the color of their skin. That's absurd. You know, the natural evolution of a well-educated populous is integration. And this is not political, it's not theoretical, it's not even partisan. It's personal. You know, I was one of those children. I went to a failing school, and by the grace of God, my mother was able to put me into private school, and had she not, I would probably be in a gang or dead right now, because that was the road I was going down. So what they're doing is immoral.
HANNITY: So you moved to Los Angeles - your school was - you didn't even - you didn't get an education. But beyond that, it was dangerous. Tell us, what did you experience there?
DASH: Well, it was dangerous. It was a time when the forced bussing was happening, and you know, I was living in an all-white area and the kids were being bussed in for a better education, and it was hostile. It was very hostile. And you know I `m from the south Bronx - I'm a bit scrappy - and you know in order for me to survive I had to fight. And --
HANNITY: What -- why do you think there's this resistance when things are so bad and then here's an idea that we know works. There was an all- girls public school in Harlem that was doing great. The kids loved it, parents loved it, they wore uniforms, then the New York Civil Liberties Union I believe - I think it was them - they sued to stop it. These things work. Why is there resistance to these better options?
DASH: I think that this just proves that this administration is so out of touch with the very people they say they want to help. And it's a disgrace. I can't even answer that question for you. I can't do the math. It doesn't add up.
HANNITY: Yes. It's kind of sad. And those kids are going to be - they're going to be - if they don't get an education, they're left behind.
DASH: Yes, they are left behind. And that's what I talk about in my book that I'm writing, "Not Black Enough". Because that is a criticism I've received my whole life, and I don't know what it means. And it's about - it's an autobiography and it's how my life applies to policies and politics of today. Because it's just you know - education is the most important thing for a child.
HANNITY: Well, I'm a big fan. I admire your speaking out and hope you'll come back again when the book comes out. Thank you.
DASH: I would love to. Thank you.
http://nation.foxnews.com/2013/09/27/stacey-dash-vs-eric-holder-school-vouchers
SEAN HANNITY: Now school vouchers have become a hot button issues among school choice advocates lately. Now they were originally designed to give low income students a better chance to succeed. Now, passed in 2012, the Louisiana Scholarship Program allows some of the state's poorest kids to transfer from public to private schools using taxpayer dollars, but last month the state was sued by Eric Holder and the Obama justice department to stop schools that are under desegregation orders from handing out these vouchers, claiming the scholarships, whose recipients are almost all minorities, that it could re-segregate the schools. Joining me now with reaction is actress Stacey Dash who was once stuck in a failing, horrible, dangerous public school herself - passionate about the issue. How are you? Stacey, good to see you.
STACEY DASH, ACTRESS: Very good to see you. Thank you for having me.
HANNITY: You know, I felt horrible when during the last campaign and you Tweeted out your support for Romney rather - you really took a huge backlash for that. Has there been any other fallout after that?
DASH: Not really, I mean, if anything it's caused discussion which is always good. And thank God I don't scare easily, you know.
HANNITY: Good for you.
DASH: I'm going to stand for what I believe in.
HANNITY: Yes.
DASH: Which is why I'm standing with Governor Jindal and Jeb Bush because case - this is just asinine. I can't believe that the Attorney General would do something like this.
HANNITY: Let me ask you this -
DASH: Deny a child's education -
HANNITY: Uh huh -
HANNITY: Explain your situation.
(TALKING OVER ONE ANOTHER)
HANNITY: OK, go ahead, I'm sorry.
DASH: I'm saying deny a child education because of the color of their skin. That's absurd. You know, the natural evolution of a well-educated populous is integration. And this is not political, it's not theoretical, it's not even partisan. It's personal. You know, I was one of those children. I went to a failing school, and by the grace of God, my mother was able to put me into private school, and had she not, I would probably be in a gang or dead right now, because that was the road I was going down. So what they're doing is immoral.
HANNITY: So you moved to Los Angeles - your school was - you didn't even - you didn't get an education. But beyond that, it was dangerous. Tell us, what did you experience there?
DASH: Well, it was dangerous. It was a time when the forced bussing was happening, and you know, I was living in an all-white area and the kids were being bussed in for a better education, and it was hostile. It was very hostile. And you know I `m from the south Bronx - I'm a bit scrappy - and you know in order for me to survive I had to fight. And --
HANNITY: What -- why do you think there's this resistance when things are so bad and then here's an idea that we know works. There was an all- girls public school in Harlem that was doing great. The kids loved it, parents loved it, they wore uniforms, then the New York Civil Liberties Union I believe - I think it was them - they sued to stop it. These things work. Why is there resistance to these better options?
DASH: I think that this just proves that this administration is so out of touch with the very people they say they want to help. And it's a disgrace. I can't even answer that question for you. I can't do the math. It doesn't add up.
HANNITY: Yes. It's kind of sad. And those kids are going to be - they're going to be - if they don't get an education, they're left behind.
DASH: Yes, they are left behind. And that's what I talk about in my book that I'm writing, "Not Black Enough". Because that is a criticism I've received my whole life, and I don't know what it means. And it's about - it's an autobiography and it's how my life applies to policies and politics of today. Because it's just you know - education is the most important thing for a child.
HANNITY: Well, I'm a big fan. I admire your speaking out and hope you'll come back again when the book comes out. Thank you.
DASH: I would love to. Thank you.