Russ Walsh, who works at Rider University in Pennsylvania, asks a simple question:

What if Chicken Little had 70 billion dollars? Would his comical error in believing the sky is falling have been dismissed so quickly? Would the acorn of truth have been discovered and Chicken Little disgraced? Instead of making Chicken Little the laughingstock of the barnyard, would we instead be drawing up plans for “sky proof” shelters and evaluating them with standardized quality control measures all financed by Chicken Little’s largesse? Perhaps Chicken Little would decide that the public barn on the farm was substandard and he would contract out to have charter barns built. Perhaps he would finance a project to bring Common Corn to the barnyard feed, so that chickens in Mississippi would be fed the same stuff as those in Wisconsin. Perhaps Chicken Little would be lionized in the media as the great fowl hope for the future of barnyards everywhere.

What if everything the “reformers” have been saying for the past decade and more is simply wrong? Would we believe them if their claims were not backed up by the billions of the U.S. Department of Education, the Gates Foundation, the Broad Foundation, the Walmart family, and a pride of politicians?

No, of course not. But why do we believe them? Could it be the power of the Big Lie technique, where you say that same thing so often that people start thinking it is true.

Or does it serve the purposes of those who see a way to jump into public education as an emerging market?

Russ concludes:

Buy the book. Read it. Get angry. And then get busy spreading the word that Chicken Little has gotten it wrong again.