Joanne Barkan has been writing brilliant articles about the billionaire assault on public education for several years. Her first was “Got Dough? How Billionaires Rule Our Schools.”
Her latest is this article, which appeared on Valerie Strauss’s “The Answer Sheet.” She calls it “Death by a Thousand Cuts.” It will ring true for everyone who is fighting the massive money and power of the privatizers.
Barkan supplies a brief history of neoliberalism, as well as the federal efforts to introduce competition and privatization into the schools.
She begins:
When champions of market-based reform in the United States look at public education, they see two separate activities — government funding education and government running schools. The first is okay with them; the second is not. Reformers want to replace their bête noire — what they call the “monopoly of government-run schools” — with freedom of choice in a competitive market dominated by privately run schools that get government subsidies.
Public funding, private management — these four words sum up American-style privatization whether applied to airports, prisons, or elementary and secondary schools. In the last 20 years, the “ed-reform” movement has assembled a mixed bag of players and policies, complicated by alliances of convenience and half-hidden agendas. Donald Trump’s election and his choice of zealot privatizer Betsy DeVos as U.S. secretary of education bolstered reformers but has also made more Americans wary.
What follows is a survey of the controversial movement — where it came from, how it grew, and what it has delivered so far to a nation deeply divided by race and class.
Print it out and take the time to read it. An informed citizenry can stop this behemoth. All that money and power and the privatizers have achieved exactly nothing other than destruction.

The comments show that the charter school enthusiasts are determined to undermine the reputations of Strauss and Barkan in addition to teachers and public schools. The enthusiasts are also convinced that market-based solutions are always superior even if unfair.
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I think there is another reason for privatizing education. Many of these so-called conservatives don’t think their ideas can compete in the marketplace of ideas, which is why they try to intimidate & constrain teachers with excessive evaluations, over-testing, and the Common Core Canned curriculum. Narrow the curriculum – constrain what teachers are allowed to say & do – narrow the range of ideas. It’s all about power so that rich, white men can control the economy & choose winners & losers.
Conservatives love to make free speech the center of their fight against the left.
Don’t buy conservative rhetoric about this; they don’t want free speech for everybody. For example,
Leaked emails show what’s really going on in the campus free speech fight.
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You are correct, and the problem is bigger than you want to think. The hostile takeover of education is part of a far larger privatization scheme. Here’s a great and depressing article that I will also post below. https://www.rawstory.com/2018/05/meet-economist-behind-one-percents-stealth-takeover-america/
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The book to read is Nancy MacLean’s Democracy in Chains. About the economist to the Koch brothers.
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It’s the Defense Industry Model (DIM).
Massive public funding of a private corporate industry with purely token oversight, kept by and large secret under the guise of National Security, and next-to-zero real accountability relegated to officials in the pay of the very industry they are supposed to watch over.
The Nation @ Risk rhetoric should have clued us into their end game.
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AND almost all of the money set aside for “fixing” ending up in top brass and middle management pockets.
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I read the article, and I found it very interesting. I do not necessarily agree with the conclusions. The author made no mention of Indiana, where school choice/vouchers are available to almost every family in the state. Less than 3% of eligible families have chosen to participate, and the rate of increase in participation, has been declining in recent years. It appears to have “topped out”, at around 3%. Publicly-operated schools, with government funding, seem to be flourishing, increases in per-pupil expenditures have been enacted in recent years.
If you extrapolate Indiana’s experience nationally, then public schools have nothing to fear from school choice.
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I would post it on Oped…but I hit the paywall, even when I use a private setting
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Good article, but it left out some of the pioneers of the movement to divert public funds to private schools — such as the Catholic bishops, though not average Catholic voters, as Catholic schools (once about 90% of private school enrollment) began to decline in enrollment from 5.5 million in 1965 to 2 million today following the SCOTUS’ rulings on school prayer in the early 1960s. Who do you think were behind the private school aid drives in New York in 1967 (see my 1968 book The Conspiracy That Failed), Michigan in 1970 and 1978, Maryland in 1972 and 1974, Washington DC in 1981, Massachusetts in 1982 ans 1986? (Not to mention Australia after WW II and a number of European countries even earlier.) And the bishops were joined by evangelicals eager to brainwash kids with “creationism,” etc.
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The hostile takeover (privatization) of public education is part of a far larger ideological push to privatize EVERYTHING for the sole benefit of elitist rent seekers. Here is an article that gives some good history on this and shows a lot of what the day zero motivating ethos is among the rent seeking (oligarch and plutocrat) class. It is quite depressing to see how much they have infiltrated and usurped the government of what was once a basically good though often imperfect country. https://www.rawstory.com/2018/05/meet-economist-behind-one-percents-stealth-takeover-america/
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