The hoax is at last coming to light. Vouchers were sold as a way to “save poor black and brown kids from failing schools,” but that was always a sleight of hand. Vouchers are about privatization.
ALEC has on its current agenda a presentation titled: “entitled: “Problems in Suburbia: Why Middle-Class Students Need School Choice, Digital Learning and Better Options.”
Jonas Perrson of PR Watch writes:
School vouchers were never about helping poor, at-risk or minority students. But selling them as social mobility tickets was a useful fiction that for some twenty-five years helped rightwing ideologues and corporate backers gain bipartisan support for an ideological scheme designed to privatize public schools.
But the times they are a-changin’. Wisconsin is well on its way toward limitless voucher schools, and last month, Nevada signed into law a universal “education savings account” allowing parents to send their kids to private or religious schools, or even to home-school them—all on the taxpayers’ dime. On the federal level, a proposed amendment to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act that would have created a multi-billion-dollar-a-year voucher program was only narrowly defeated in the U.S. Senate.
ALEC is not the only organization presenting the real agenda for education:
At the American Federation for Children’s National Policy Summit held in New Orleans, lobbyist Scott Jensen—who, before being banned from Wisconsin politics for violating the public trust served as chief of staff to governor Tommy Thompson, and was a prime mover behind the first voucher program in the nation—admitted that vouchers were really all about “pursuing Milton Friedman’s free-market vision” even though the ideological agenda was nowadays sugarcoated with “a much more compelling message … of social justice.”
So what exactly was the brave new world Milton Friedman envisioned when he first floated the idea of school vouchers? While lecturing rightwing state lawmakers at a 2006 ALEC meeting, Friedman jumped at the opportunity to explain what his vision was all about. It had nothing whatsoever to do with helping “indigent” children; no, he explained to thunderous applause, vouchers were all about “abolishing the public school system.”

Just a minor correction, Diane. Universal voucher systems are not “right wing”. Have you heard ANY opposition to any of this in “liberal” ed reform circles?
They don’t oppose this stuff. They just don’t (publicly) promote it.
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Those running the Democratic party are not liberal and they don’t typically claim to be. When he was Obama’s White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emmanuel (current Democratic mayor of Chicago) called liberals “f*#king retards.”
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ALEC is a bigger threat to the American way of life than all our other enemies put together.
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You’re right. They are determined to recreate the world to suit their narrow minded agenda, and they have the money and access to pull it off. They are dangerous.
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Don’t most empires collapse from within before being defeated by external enemies?
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“How do we get from where we are to where we want to be—to a system in which parents control the education of their children? Of course, the ideal way would be to abolish the public school system and eliminate all the taxes that pay for it. Then parents would have enough money to pay for private schools, but you’re not gonna to do that. So you have to ask, what are politically feasible ways of solving the problem. And the answer is, in my opinion, choice, that you have to change the way government money is directed. Instead of its being used to finance schools and buildings, you should decide how much money you are willing to spend on each child and give that money, provide that money in the form of a voucher to the parents of the children so that the parents can choose a school that they regard as best for their child.”
from Friedman’s remarks at the 7/21/2006 ALEC meeting. See the entire video at:
http://library.fora.tv/2006/07/21/Milton_Friedman
Lori Roman’s introduction of Dr. Friedman (about 8 minutes in) is more than troubling – it is nauseating actually. She notes that “for the past 51 years, Dr. Friedman has been lauded and recognized as the father of the modern school reform movement.”
It has never been about education. It has only been about “how much money you are willing to spend on each child.”
How sad.
How tragic.
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“But it’s not about privatization!”
I honestly do not know how they repeat that with a straight face.
Of course it’a about privatization. It’s all they talk about.
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All of the agenda being pushed by the progressive left targets the poor. How could we possibly deny the poor anything is how they guilt us into buying their snake oil. Bottom line they could care less about the poor. They care only about the rich and making the rich richer. Corporate fascism is a live an well in American education and our government. At the end of the day the poor are used and then cast to the curb once they get what they want. We need to stop all this BS. Get back to basics. No computers, no sex ed…nothing but education. Reading. Writing/ Arithmatic and taught the old way. Shut down the US Dept. of Education, get the US out of the UN and repeal ESEA.
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Is it Thanksgiving, Karen?
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They are not “progressives.” Bill Clinton changed the course of the Democratic party and labeled it “centrist,” then proceeded to adopt neoliberal policies that originated in the GOP. The evidence indicates they are right of center, RepubliCrats.
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Actually, vouchers have been more of a right-wing thing. The allegedly “progressive left” has generally supported charters.
BTW, sex education *is* education – one of the most important aspects thereof. Comprehensive sex education has been proven to reduce teenage pregnancies.
And furthermore, by “repeal ESEA”, I guess you’re saying you oppose equitable funding for poor and minority schools? Because that’s what the bill was originally about.
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“Shut down the US Dept. of Education, get the US out of the UN and repeal ESEA.”
Let us look at shutting down the US Department of education.
(2015 budget authorization) Three major elements of spending are as follows:
Total, Elementary and Secondary (tile 1 plus) 37.11 Billion
Federal Pell Grants 28.90 Billion
Federal Direct Student Loan Program 23.66 Billion
Grand total (includes other costs) 87.37 Billion
Therefore if we shut down the Department of education we lose:
1. Title I funds, more schools become poor
2. Pell grants, more young people cannot go to college,
3. No direct student loans, many more young people can not go to college.
I believe this will be devastating to the US population.
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I think that was pretty obvious from the beginning, wasn’t it. $5 or $6k does not get you into any sort of quality independent school.
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Homeschool vouchers? aka beer money.
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It can amount to big bucks for God only knows what. Once when I was apartment hunting, there was a lot of noise and commotion going on in a nearby apartment and the landlady told me it was a family of 7 homeschooled children. She said the parents both worked and the older kids took care of the younger ones. She said the parents came home late each night and that she never saw any evidence of actual homeschooling going on.
At $6K or more a head per year, more parents with large families like this might be motivated to claim they homeschool just so they can make a tax free fortune for doing absolutely nothing, while their older children carry the heavy load of child care.
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I too have seen this. Those who homeschool can and some do educate their children, but, there are also many home schooled children who do not get any education at all or a subpar education. Homeschooling requires dedication and time. It also requires teaching abilities. I have family members whose home schooling efforts failed to give their children an adequate education. They chose to return them to school in the tenth grade. They were several years behind the publicly schooled children in their area. They were also unable to pass the GED (the old one). One could not read well enough to pass the written portion of the driver’s test. I have seen this as an elementary school teacher as well. We have had fifth and sixth grade aged home schooled children come to school with academic success on level with kindergarteners. Like wise, I have had college classes with homeschoolers who were well prepared. The problem I for see with this approach is a lack of oversight. How many children will then have no education or a poorly conceived education?
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Huh? What kind of comment is that?
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That was to TC . . . And to Reteach, seven children will make noise!
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With public funds, a state teaching license should be a minimum, and a time clock and camera to verify hours.
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You don’t need to tell a teacher that “seven children will make noise.” I know what learning sounds like, too, and I don’t mean learning in silence. 7 children being “supervised” by their older siblings in a small apartment sounded like total chaos in a gymnasium packed with flying furniture.
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ALEC…
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Legislative_Exchange_Council right wing, conservative, formed 1973. Writes model legislation. About privatizing education to be about free markets.
Take a look at the goals of the New Apostolic Reformation. Tentacles everywhere. Right wing. Evangelical. Open your eyes and look around.
Look at opportunitylives.com commercials …as if they are speaking truth.
Look at what is happening to AP history. Teaching westward expansion with a free market stance. No concern for Native Americans.
And, I watched a documentary on the making of the bomb. It included a 1946 country song “Atomic Power, Atomic Power, given to us by God” and the lyrics make the skin crawl. Ridiculous. The propaganda that was shoved into people’s minds…is frightening. No wonder when you combine these forces that we have a group of maniacs running for President, supported by duped sheep.
Don’t blame this stuff on liberals.
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What middle class is ALEC targeting? The same one they have been dismantling for 40 years? Still no truth in advertising. It is about dismantling social services so the rich only pay for what they use so that no one else can compete with them on an already uneven playing field. Either make it on your own merit or not at all is the motto.
They don’t want to help the middle class, they want ppl to buy into reasons to dismantle every social service.
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Dr. Ravitch, has anyone proposed a boycott of products of those participating in Alec? What if all your readers and commenters started with boycotting all Koch brothers products?
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Beth, good idea. I’ll look for a list of Koch products.
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Many if not most of Koch’s products are industrial rather than consumer-end products, so it’s not easy to avoid them, particularly the textiles products (e.g. nylon fibers and plastics). The paper products (e.g. paper towels, toilet paper) from Georgia Pacific are probably the easiest for consumers to identify.
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I believe that they have already moved or are in the process of becoming a 503(c)4, so that they don’t have to disclose their donors. After they lost a lot of sponsors after the Trevon Martin case, they needed to figure out a way to protect their donors from this kind of backlash. For more read this article from The NY Times: http://takingnote.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/04/if-you-liked-stand-your-ground-youll-love-the-jeffersonian-project/
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Google “Koch Industries/ Georgia Pacific products to avoid” for a Facebook page which provides a list of alternatives. There’s also “Sign the pledge: don’t buy these Koch products” (Daily Kos). Or “boycott Koch Industries products”, which leads to other organizations. There’s even an app for iphones “buycott” to use while shopping!
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I just repeat this mantra: “buy Bounty, Scott, and Kleenex. No more Vanity Fair napkins. Never buy Dixie.”
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Thank you . . . I’m sold!
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Great! Let’s get the word out there!
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