What is happening in Philadelphia and Chicago, as examples,
scares me. The news reports made me
realize charter schools are a great danger to the foundation of our nation. The
local governments are in the process of closing 54 public school in Chicago and
44 in Philadelphia. Of course, there are many other school districts following
the same route. All I am asking people to do is step back and ask what and why this
is happening, and is it good for our children?
There is a history to all of this. Let’s back up to 1981
-1989 and look at Ronald Reagan and his Reaganomic policy. If all the money is
at the top, it is good because rich people create jobs. The government should
be small because it does not make money; it costs money. As so eloquently
pointed out by George Lakoff in his thoughtful book, Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think (Amazon, 2012),
this is seen as the “natural or moral order”. The government as the paternal
family model: the father the obedient wife and well disciplined children; this
is the backbone of conservatism. In contrast, liberals have an entirely different
approach; they include such foreign thoughts—as empathy and fairness, at least to
conservatives they are alien thoughts.
Then George W. Bush happened. Conservative funded think
tanks, funded by Ayn Rand types, worked for years developing a plan, almost like
a conspiracy involving an entire political party. Richard Mellon Scaife, Charles
and David Koch, and many others funded a wide net of radical right leaning think
tanks. Bush put their plan into action; he spent taxpayers’ dollars like a
drunken sailor throwing money at every thing. The unfunded Iraqi War was part
of the plan. The scheme was to create a severe debt crisis. A crisis so bad that
even Democrats would agree to cut all social welfare programs, stand ideally by
as CEO’s break unions, change bankruptcy laws like those used by Romney to make
millions, deregulate business, which lead to the housing crisis, and to
privatize everything, even the military and now the focus of their attack is
the public school system. They wanted to know how they get more tax dollars
into their pockets. If you are not familiar with the history of this brand of thinking
read Naomi Klein’s book, Shock Doctrine.
They close public schools. If there are not schools, there
are no jobs. If there are no jobs there are no unions. What is the perfect solution
for jobless teachers? Open private schools, call them charter schools. Corporations,
with deep pockets, donate huge sums of money to political campaigns. All of a
sudden like magic, taxpayers’ dollars are given to charter schools, which are
private schools. Forget about voucher programs, which we all recognized are
bad. Where will Charter Schools find teachers? Didn’t I just say that public
schools are being closed right and left putting teachers on the streets?
Everyone knows that out of work teachers love to teach, that is what colleges
trained them to do, and that is what they want to do “even at starvation wages”.
Look at the composition of the student body of the closed
schools—one of the news reports put it at 88% black. When a public school opens
it doors, everyone can attend. In the words of Rand Paul, if a person owns a
lunch counter he should have the right to decide who his customers are. Charter
schools, like lunch counters, are private business. However, in this case, charter schools thrive on minority students from family that can least afford the increase in cost.
All the money at the top, a created financial crisis, a shift
of the tax burden away from businesses and to the middle class and the poor,
closure of public schools with high paid teachers, because they cost too much
money, and shift the students to charter schools with the same teachers at much
lower pay. The only thing wrong with this scenario is that charter schools cost
more than public schools cost and the increased costs are going into the
pockets of corporations and not to the pockets of teacher. Reagan is dead but he fired those teachers just as he fired the air traffic
controls and put millions of people in danger, this time children—for what in
his mind was the most important reason of all; corporate greed.
I am a member of a Google discussion circle, Education Revolution. It doesn’t surprise
me that the topics of discussion are how to improve teaching methods, innovative
ways of introducing new technologies into the class room and evaluation of teaching
methods but not one reference to making big money in the class room. Is it shocking
that charter schools are not the number one topic on that site. Dedicated
teachers like +Kim Fleming and +Pauline Bresse have other important things to
do but those of us who are retired and are interested in politics should play
our part as well.
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