Jeb Bush spoke to the Republican National Convention on his favorite subject: how to save American education by privatizing it.
Bush said that choosing a school should be like buying milk.
This came from a newspaper report:
- “Everywhere in our lives, we get the chance to choose,” he said in aprepared version of his remarks sent to reporters. “Go down any supermarket aisle – you’ll find an incredible selection of milk. You can get whole milk, 2% milk, low-fat milk or skim milk. Organic milk, and milk with extra Vitamin D. There’s flavored milk- chocolate, strawberry or vanilla – and it doesn’t even taste like milk. They even make milk for people who can’t drink milk.”
- “Shouldn’t parents have that kind of choice in schools?” Bush said.
He agrees with Condoleeza Rice that education is “the civil rights issue of our time.”
But how can this be?
Is shopping for milk a civil right? How are these comparable?
This is not a good analogy.
Isn’t public education a public responsibility? Isn’t it a public good? How can it be compared to something as trivial as shopping for milk?
You can see where he is going with this analogy. An end to public education, a welcome mat for the privatizers, the for-profit schools, the for-profit online corporations.
Anyone is welcome to produce their own brand of milk, funded by taxpayers.
They can buy the high-priced milk, if they can afford it. They can buy the plain milk, or if they are poor, they can buy the rancid milk. It’s their choice.
Needless to say, Bush said nothing about the research showing that charter schools and voucher schools get similar results to public schools; and that the online for-profit schools get decidedly worse results.
But this is not about the kids. It is about letting the free market have its way with the kids.

especially since he stands to make lots of money from k-12, his online charter school company.
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K12 Inc. is Mike Milken’s company, though it’s publicly traded on the NYSE so maybe Jeb owns stock.
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Jeb Bush’s milk analogy reveals a major problem in our society. Go to the supermarket and look at all those milk choices.. Skim, 1%, 2%, low fat, skim, soy, etc..
Now look at all the choices for flavored milk. Does chocolate milk come in 1%, 2% skim,skim, soy, etc?? Limited choices for chocolate and other flavored milks.. the real analogy.
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Indeed!
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You nailed it rratto ! Touche!
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Ironic for him to compare education to milk. Wasn’t the price of milk something that tripped up G.H.W. Bush in one of his debates with
Clinton? (He didn’t know the price of it, I think.)
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Got milk?
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A school is like milk because if you purposefully leave it out in the hot sun, you may then decline to refill it and argue it must be disposed of You can then push an inferior but more profitable product on unsuspecting consumers.
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I guess the children with special needs will be sitting at the bottom of the steps looking at inaccessible buildings and further deminisment of THEIR rights! Public school education needs to be strengthened NOT destroyed!
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It’s a whole new breed of “reform” today. This is the Education Reform Industry (ERI) –and the notion of that is just as “eerie” as it sounds.
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Jeb’s connections to online ed for profit are well known in FL. See the link below for further details. When folks listened to him speak at the RNC and asked, ‘GotJeb?’ … We Floridians answered, ‘Yup… we have had Jeb for years. Believe me, that milk spoiled long ago.’ #EXPIRED
From the article: “Ron Packard, K12 Inc.’s CEO made $5 million this year. He is a member of Jeb Bush’s Digital Learning Council. There are some other familiar names on Bush’s DLC that readers of this blog will recognize such as Patricia Levesque, then Virginia school boss Gerard Robinson and Florida state Sen. Aniteres Flores. Also on the list are Florida Virtual School’s Julie Young.
The associations are not illegal or unethical. But they are associations that occur repeatedly and represent a pattern. Even casual observers of Florida’s education policy battles knows about the close relationship between Levesque and Bush, but probably didn’t know that the organizations they front receive financial support from corporations like K12 Inc. who benefit from their efforts.” http://bobsidlethoughtsandmusings.wordpress.com/2011/12/15/jeb-bush-k12-inc-the-digital-learning-council-and-florida-virtual-school/
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FUnny, i could post my thoughts about his comment on facebook fast enough…i had a feeling you’d comment on this….and it felt good!
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oops, i mean couldn’t….not could in my previous post
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One other comment…I noticed he didn’t say anything about raw milk. he’s all about the choice as long as the govt still gets to regulate it. That’s the problem with this choice farce. What good is choice when the choices are only the choices that a certain group of those in power allow you to choose. That’s not choice.
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School is like milk…. It can nourish or it can disgust you if it isn’t properly cared for and handled. If processed carefully you get cream, sour cream, whipped cream and milk. If neglected you get a stinking mess that no one can ingest or stand. We know what the reformers want, despite their words.
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If public education were properly funded then parents wouldn’t have to worry about which school their kids are placed in ! Jeb Bush and friends are not looking to help kids get a great education , quite the opposite they want to privatize it and make education untouchable for many, many children! If we respected teachers instead of trying to replace them withwith ill prepared individuals from TFA , if we stop making testing a priority and increase the learning potential that would be great!
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Re Jeb Bush’s analogy—choosing schools is like choosing milk as you wander down the aisle. Among the kinds of milk he listed were milk for people who can’t drink milk. Well, I suppose there are indeed some schools that are for people who “can’t be educated” (in his mind).
What a startling picture-metaphor. Creepy? The schools are, for Jeb, just another brand on the market with fancy packaging, millions spent in promotion, and success dependent on making a profit. Worse still is the very mindset that would create such a metaphor. It could have been worse—I suppose. He could have chosen toothpaste…or….
I’m off to the market to get ready for a picnic tomorrow and will try to keep this metaphor in mind as I select my hot dog rolls, et al.
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I chuckled as I went by the dairy aisle yesterday. It will never mean the same to me again. Choosing peanut butter was the tough decision I had to make yesterday.
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Everything’s a market….supermarket too. Just think, Wal-Mart schools aren’t that far away.
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BTW follow the money and the connection between Jeb Bush, Pearson, k12 inc, charter schools owned by neil bush , and TFA, etc…..
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If the discussion was about medical reform, banking reform, reforming the auto industry, there would be panels of insdustry participants – assembly line workers, middle management, upper management, those who have spent time in the industry and understand the nuances required for success. Those who would be the consumers of the product would also be consulted and allowed to provide input and suggestions. Somehow all that goes out the window when education reform is the topic. Anyone who has ever sat in a desk feels they are an expert, those who have really been a part of the process and spent time, money and energy in the classroom are ignored. But the group most ignored is the consumers of the product – – the students. Even elementary students can articulate their wants and needs and should be a part of the process. Education is not a one size fits all process and what is appropriate in one region of the nation, may not be a good fit in another. As teachers, we are constantly told to differentiate, to use ongoing assessment to guide and redirect our instruction, to tailor lessons to fit the needs of our students, sometimes even chaning them from one class section to another, based on the needs in that class. Then how, oh please someone, please tell me how, one size fits all grandiose education reform gestures are in the best interest of the consumer – the student?
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Milk’s for cows. Therefore, Jeb Bush’s attempt at analogy misses the mark. Is he saying people will drink federally subsidized milk even when they never visit the dairy isle?
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Text to Text connection: This choosing-schools-is like-choosing-milk comparison is making me think of the current debate around voter suppression laws. “We get to choose our milk, therefore we should choose schools like we choose milk” and “We must carry proper id to buy alcohol, drive a car, apply for permits, therefore, we should show id to vote”
Are these not both logical fallacies? Don’t these arguments conflate consumer choices (which milk to buy, whether to drink alcohol, whether to drive/own a car, etc.) with (1) the constitutional right to vote, and (2) the fundamental right to a free public education?
I for one don’t want to be seen as a mere consumer when it comes to voting or educating my children.
And while I’m on the subject of logical fallacies, a comment above points out that Mike MILKin’s company owns K12 Inc. He therefore must be good friends with Jeb Bush.
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Can the general public really be swayed with such a ridulous and condescending analogy?
Jen Bush should be ashamed and embarrassed.
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Should be “Jeb”.
My sincere apology to anyone named “Jen Bush”. 🙂
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I would not want to over-estimate the intelligence of swing voters, who ultimately determine election outcomes, especially in swing states for the presidential election, due to electoral college votes –which is why politicians target them.
These people should not be confused with Independents, who usually try to study candidates and the policies they promote before deciding who to support.
Swing voters are a whole different animal. I’ve known a number of swing voters and they made their decisions based on things that caused my jaw to drop. One told me she voted for Dole because she liked how “his wife looked”. Another voted for George Dubya because his daddy “had those points of light”. Others mentioned voting for candidates due to claims made in political commentaries and commercials on TV, without bothering to look up whether it was true or not.
Politicians know this and count on it –that’s why there are so many lies in TV ads, especially the ones with all the fine print disclaiming any direct association with the candidate. It’s why they also have commercials now with the candidates stating they approved the ad. Right, like swing voters typically notice the difference.
Then there are lies told blatantly by the candidates themselves, such as at political conventions:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/08/31/1126231/-Awesome-Jon-Stewart-compilation-of-Paul-Ryan-s-LIES
Makes you wonder why truth in advertising doesn’t apply whenever ANYONE anywhere is selling a political candidate.
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I think I hear my urban farming neighbor’s goats saying naaaaaaaaaaa….
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Ironic that our local school district has eliminated the choice of regular or chocolate milk for our kids. It’s all white now….
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Hmm. Just like choosing milk? Where the rich are able to afford the healthy organic milk in the non-plastic containers for their sweet little ones and the poor can’t afford to buy any milk at all? The only analogy I see is that every child should have the right to quality nutrition and healthy food…and health care regardless of economic background.. just like every child has the right to a high quality free education.. again, regardless of socioeconomic background.
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