Jeb Bush hasn’t made much headway in the polls but he is hanging in there, the favorite of the GOP establishment and the best-funded.
He recently announced his plan for reforming American education, and it is a paean to school choice. He just doesn’t like public education, period.
Peter Greene has performed a public service for us by reviewing Jeb’s proposals. He does so in part 1 and part 2.
i will give you some pithy excerpts and encourage you to read the whole thing by yourself.
This is from part 1:
“For all the conservative love for choice and freedom, it never seems to include the choice and freedom to do things that conservatives believe are Very Wrong, or to say, “We will pick our own choices to choose from, thanks.” That’s in part because the very idea of school choice is fundamentally flawed.
“First, nobody wants choice. Rich kids don’t have an advantage because they have choice– they have an advantage because they have access to an excellent education. People want a good school. That’s it. If someone gets a restaurant meal that is undercooked and cold, they don’t say, “Bring me a dozen mediocre meals to chose from.” They want what they want, done right.
“Second, choice is not “budget neutral.” When facing a tight budget, no school district says, “No need to shut down any buildings. It wouldn’t save us any money.” You can’t operate several sets of schools (with several sets of administrators) for the cost of one. Anybody who tries to set up a choice system without a plan to fully fund it is smoking something.
“Third, choice as currently conceived, disenfranchises a huge part of the electorate and cuts social responsibility out of the picture. If you don’t have a child, you don’t have a say in how tax dollars are spent. Choicer “it’s the family’s choice” rhetoric only goes so far– nobody is seriously suggesting that vouchers be literal vouchers that students can use to go to school, buy a car, or take a vacation in Europe. Choice never seems to include “I choose no school at all.” Choicers haven’t suggested doing away with compulsory education, but they can’t admit that it’s because the students have a level of responsibility to the country that’s paying for their education, because that would mean admitting that families are not the only stakeholders in education, which would conflict with the “the money belongs to the family” theory.
“But even if we get past those, we arrive again at the conservative conundrum– if you allow freedom and choice, you have to accept that people may choose things you don’t like, including NOT having a bunch of choices. Conservatives– and Bush is no exception here– keep calling for a system of imposed choice, which is a big screaming oxymoron.”
This is from part 2:
Bush wants more money for more charter schools, although he reminds us that money is not the answer.
Greene goes through the various proposals and here is the bottom line:
“Bush is being direct and clear– he would like to get rid of traditional public education. He thinks schools still work like they did two generations ago (there is no excuse for this belief). And he likes blended learning and competency based education, which means he is destined to meet the same people who hammered him over Common Core, only they’ll be carrying different signs.
“Also, remember– it’s important to give parents and students a choice, as long as they choose the choices that Bush chooses for them. Under Bush, you can have lots of choices– except for a traditional public school.”

Diane, did Peter Greene secretly play a part for the gov’t in George Orwell’s “1984”? He says you can only have the choices that we the union determine you can have, not the choices that families want because we (the union) don’t want real choice. He says it is our social collective that is the stakeholder in your education (read: we must pay our union lackeys these fees, not independent charter operators), not the individual.
Is this guy for real? Do you teachers out there buy any of this baloney? Please tell me that you are just venting and don’t really think a single word of his argument makes sense.
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Virginia,
Are you also upset that the government planned the roads and highways and you don’t have a choice to drive wherever you want? Are you upset that the government controls the police and firefighters? Do you want to get rid of government-controlled beaches and parks? Why not open up all of our national parks to private exploitation and home-building?
You are going off the deep end. Try to catch yourself before you write such silly things.
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Excuse me Virginia, but the unions do not control the schools. Unions do not interview the teachers, hire the teachers, observe and evaluate the teachers and in some cases, fire the teachers. Unions do not set up the curriculums or create budgets. All of the latter is the domain of elected school boards, superintendents, school administrators, curriculum people and principals. I’m not buying your salami.
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People like Virginia usually concede roads, police and firefighters, but careful with those last couple. I bet Virginia would indeed argue in favor of privatizing beaches and parks, including National Parks.
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Dianne, you think he has chosen a choice waterfront building site in the Chincoteague national park?
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Va.sgp rehashes the tired PR tactic of union bogeyman, to mount a fake front onto what is really, a yearning by American communities, to preserve themselves.
Take away all of the plutocratic money from education deform, and there’s no mooring for it.
The fact that communities, learned a lesson from Walmart’s hollowing out of their towns, and want to keep local resources, local, is the argument that trumps any blather from va.sgp.
Proven corruption of government, as the result of charter-provided campaign money, fleecing of taxpayers and abysmal academic performance by charters, voids any rationale for privatization. So, va.sgp, pulls out the bogeyman, who is, in reality, a collective that sends their kids to the public schools that they pay local taxes to support.
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At a protest on Ohio’s capitol square, I saw a fireman holding a placard that said, “The next time you have a fire, call the Koch’s “.
The number of court cases involving money-bilking scams by Tea Partiers, seems way disproportionate to their representation in the population.
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There’s a reason that a few folks have the labels “owner” and “boss” and “manager” and “CEO” and the vast majority sport others like “employee” and “subordinate”—
The labels mean something. Inverting reality to put the label “boss” on the “person that is bossed” is ludicrous.
But what the hey! When your hero can take “her” students from the 13th to the 90th percentile and nose out even the formidable Arne Duncan as the greatest civil rights hero of all time—
VAMania is at work.
Go figure…
😎
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People are very uniformed and buy into propaganda sponsored by the corporate entities that are pulling the strings in our country, trying to make students the new cash cow.
I wonder if people who hate teachers hate the idea of unions. I wish I could post a picture of my then 14 year old grandfather working underground in a coal mine during the depression to help support his brothers and sisters. We are going backwards in this country because people don’t want to do the work of keeping themselves informed.
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Jeb Bush, hanging in there.
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In Jeb’s world “choice” equals corporate education. Of course, he is huge fan of competency based education. He and his cronies are heavily invested in cyber education. Getting the American taxpayer to underwrite your profit is the “holy grail” of opportunistic investing. Jeb is hanging in there, but only as low hanging fruit.
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Watch ” Building the Machine” . We are failing to see the bigger picture.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DzjxBClx01jc&ved=0ahUKEwiH-eKJ4czKAhVhuoMKHbKWAk0Q3ywIHDAA&usg=AFQjCNFsUhVQEgmRIJpiXR_jfxOF3RVypA
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You have to love a public education plan that refers to public schools only incidentally, in order to assert that they’re all failing 🙂
Bonus points for blatantly selling ed tech product to…. those same public schools!
The function of public schools is apparently to purchase product. Let the buyer beware, indeed.
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I hate everything about Jeb’s plan except for one thing………HE THINKS IS IS ACCEPTABLE FOR A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE TO TALK ABOUT EDUCATION. Sanders does not count………his talking about education was probably offensive to Hillary and Obama both.
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Yes, Jeb talks about education and how to privatize it as quickly as possible.
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I can guarantee you Sanders counts and hits a nerve with young people. His rise from an obscure, fringe senator to serious contender in early primaries is refreshing. I talk to young people and, most importantly, listen. Many, not all, young people are very aware of what is going on affecting their future. The worst mistake Hillary can make is talk down and dismiss the next generation of voters. Trump already knows that which is why his savvy rejection of Fox News appeals to younger conservatives.
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The hope of young people is reflected in UnKochMyCampus.org. The group recently had a win at Suffolk University.
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Thanks Diane, and MathVale. I saw the report about what Sanders said about charter schools……and, of course…..the almost zero followup……because the media finds it an inconvenient issue upon which to report. Perhaps Jeb’s offering….which can be covered by 10 of 15 meaningless words about charter schools being a different approach…..will generate followup….not sure if that would be a good thing or a bad thing.
I wish there was some way for public education to become a major issue….
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Agreed. I actually enjoy Trump’s and Sander’s candidacies. I’d be a Republican if the party didn’t all resemble Putin oligarchs or hapless militia ranchers. The GOP has gone so far off the deep end that Kasich is considered moderate and Cruz is the runner up. Hillary is sold to Wall Street and at least Sanders keeps issues important to education alive, particularly the concept of public good. “Democratic socialism” causes people to envision sickles and hammers until they need Social Security, clean water and air, available education, and safe neighborhoods.
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Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads and commented:
As if we needed yet another reason not to vote for Jeb.
He has already proposed eliminating SNAP (food stamps), housing assistance for the poor, and temporary assistance for needy families. Sure, he says that he wants to give grants to the states, to run their own programs, and we know how well that will work in certain states. (Yes, this is snark.)
Now, he proposes doing all he can to eliminate public schools.
What is it with these people? They want to take the most vulnerable among us, the poor, the children, the ill, and leave them at the tender mercies of businesses, and states, many of which which will not be willing to do anything to help people.
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Florida privatized its Medicaid. Now some poor parents cannot get children the care they need because the nearest participating doctor is hundreds of miles away.
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Jeb! lacks morality! Proven at the debate last night. He was asked about the alleged corruption at a wounded soldier “charity”. Jeb brushed off that topic and trotted out the tired attack on the Office of Veterans Affair (underfunded in budgets, for years). Jeb’s answer was no surprise. Last year, his brother’s pocket was lined with $100,000 and Laura’s purse was lined with $50,000, for speaking to wounded soldier “charities”.
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