Andrea Gabor is a professional journalist who has the skill to tell the story that readers of this blog know very well and bring it to a larger audience. The public needs to understand the squalid theft of our public goods that is being carried out in broad daylight by so-called philanthropists.
This article by Gabor was published by Harper’s, where it will reach a large public audience that does not read this blog.
Gabor begins:
Last May, the families of students at Cypress Academy, an independent charter school in New Orleans, received an email announcing that the school would close when classes ended the following week and that all its students would be transferred to another nearby charter for the upcoming year. Parents would have the option of entering their children in the city’s charter-enrollment lottery, but the lottery’s first round had already taken place, and the most desirable spots for the fall were filled.
Founded in 2015, a decade after New Orleans became the nation’s first city to begin replacing all its public schools with charters, Cypress was something of a rarity. Like about nine in ten of the city’s charter schools, it filled spaces by lottery rather than by selective admission. But while most of the nonselective schools in New Orleans had majority populations of low-income African-American students, Cypress mirrored the city’s demographics, drawing the children of professionals—African-American and white alike—as well as poorer students. Cypress reserved 20 percent of its seats for children with reading difficulties, and it offered a progressive education model, including “learning by doing,” rather than the strict conduct codes that dominated the city’s nonselective schools. In just three years, the school had outperformed many established charters—a particular feat given that one in four Cypress students had a disability, double the New Orleans average. Families flocked to Cypress, especially ones with children who had disabilities.
Faced with a sizable deficit, Cypress had to cut costs. The district did not offer help. Although it was academically successful, Cypress closed.
Big Philanthropy first embraced school privatization in the mid-Eighties, when Milwaukee’s Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation underwrote John Chubb and Terry Moe’s Politics, Markets, and America’s Schools, which became the bible of the privatization movement. Founded in 1942 by brothers in factory automation, the Bradley Foundation had long supported right-wing causes, including dismantling unions, and its wide-ranging support of market-based education reform went hand in hand with this goal. Among other efforts, the foundation helped to finance Milwaukee’s 1990 school voucher law, the nation’s first—and to defend it against legal challenges. As far back as the 1950s, the University of Chicago economist Milton Friedman had advocated for a system of government-funded school vouchers that would allow parents to use tax dollars to pay for private schools; however, vouchers had an ignominious history in the South, where they were used as a way to circumvent court-ordered desegregation.
When vouchers made no headway, the education privatizers took up charter schools as the best way to eliminate public schools and bust the teachers’ unions. The charter cause was led by the Walton Family Foundation, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation.
In the past, big foundations funded the ideas presented to them by grantees. In the new era of philanthrocapitalism, the big foundations gave money to grantees who agreed to carry out their plans.
New Orleans gave the philanthrocapitalists a virtually clean slate on which to play with their ideas.
Gabor writes:
The system operated on a bottom-line approach known as the portfolio model, which seeks to manage schools like stocks in a Wall Street portfolio; the model rewards high performers (as measured primarily by test scores) with further investment and punishes poor performers by cutting off funding or by shuttering them. The promise of this model was that idealistic technocrats would run schools like businesses, emphasizing competition, financial incentives, and accountability. Freed from bureaucracy and union rules, schools would blossom and adapt to meet the needs of children. Families could vote with their feet; if they didn’t like a school, they could choose another anywhere in the city. Schools that did not meet the grade would be closed, but new and better schools would open in their places. To realize these benefits, the New Orleans reformers stripped the locally elected school board of much of its authority and ceded control to nonelected charter-management organizations and non-profit groups. For the next decade, democratic oversight of the vast majority of New Orleans schools effectively ceased to exist. Instead, education policy was largely dictated by the charter establishment and a handful of its wealthy donors.
Gabor goes on to describe how the chartering process was “designed to deny input by community groups.” National corporate charter chains were encouraged to open new charters.
Gabor details how philanthropists are invading district after district, pouring millions into front groups intended to usurp democratic control and replace it with corporate control.
This is the future imagined by major philanthropists. One in which public schools have been replaced by corporate chains, where unions have been abolished, where the voice of the community is minimized or ignored.

HORRORS!
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Deserving of repeating (my emphases): “In the new era of philanthrocapitalism, the big foundations gave money to grantees who agreed to carry out their plans.”
There goes democracy as the political root of education, as well as the idea that no questions are “off-base” including questioning the power source in the corporation. And:
“This is the future imagined by major philanthropists. One in which public schools have been replaced by corporate chains, where unions have been abolished, where the voice of the community is minimized or ignored” AND
… where the corporation controls the curricula–particularly the erasure of POLITICAL curricula that would assume, teach-to, and enhance democracy and democratic movements, e.g., teachers’ unions.
Concretely, if you have money in fossil fuels, and Exxon funds your children’s charter school, you will feel it in your pocketbook if your school’s teachers teach sections on climate change–but only IF Exxon lets them teach such sections at all.
That’s a synopsis of why privatization of education diminishes and is set to destroy democracy. CBK
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And, also worth pondering, foreign ownership of schools. Internationalist, Bill Gates could co-write with the Koch’s MIT the class lesson about Jeffrey Epstein’s intriguing, proclivity for young women which can be viewed as inconsistent with everybody’s taste in decor.
And, they could write for students about venture philanthropy’s slow answer to a planet burning itself to extinction and an economy strangled by wealth concentration.
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I don’t think Gates et al are self-reflectively nihilistic. They just seem not to realize how their thought and actions aim at that state of intellectual affairs. That lack of recognition (of long-run consequences) is a mark of how truly bizarre their thinking has become–ironically, in the thought of those who can most afford to be truly intelligent about such things, e.g., the erasure a democratic ethos. They are in dire need of a true “come-up-ance”: “UP” to thinking in the long term where one’s political consciousness meets one’s highest moral-ethical-spiritual horizons. CBK
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Intriguing Lifestyle
His lifestyle is intriguing
I mean, his home decor
Don’t misconstrue my meaning
I really loved his floor
His plane was really nice
With comforts of his home
It really does entice
Decor complete with foam
It wouldn’t work for me
Melinda won’t allow. It
Decor is made for three
So i can not endow it
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Melinda won’t allow. Three endlessly frightening words.
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Enjoyed the poetry, Poet. The threat of disease is likely more of a deterrent than a billionaire’s cockeyed version of morality.
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I have always thought that this was the end game for mass privatization. Privatization has been a corrupt downward spiral from its inception. Big money has been rigging the deck from the start by imposing laws like NCLB, false narratives like test based accountability, VAM, the CCSS and standardization, “college and career ready” and market based education. None of these has a shred of positive based evidence behind them while all the negative evidence behind them has been ignored or supressed. Our policy is dictated by a corporate cabal forwarded by cheerleading foundations backed by dark money, neoliberal politicians and corporate owned media.
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I prove what you say here beyond a reasonable doubt in SLAYING GOLIATH
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The closure of the diverse Cypress Academy confirms that positive evidence is not a value. If evidence meant anything to them, they would have celebrated, supported and replicated this model.
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The oligarchs will not be satisfied until they own US education and have remade it into training for prole children to know their place in the Great Chain of Being that places them at the head of a New Feudal Order. https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2019/05/11/he-sees-you-when-youre-sleeping-2/
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tangential-
Corporate-loved, Buttieg, is attending a fundraiser co-hosted by Rahm’s law department chief who tried to block video release of the police killing of Laquan McDonald. What a surprise. (Huffpo)
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I strongly urge people to read Ms. Gabor’s article in full. She’s doubtless one of the best journalists in our history. One can count on her for extremely well-researched work that, importantly, presents the background information necessary for understanding the issues. Her work, like Diane Ravitch’s, is in the grand tradition of muckraking American journalism. It is clearly driven by moral concerns over the negative effects of the actions of those in power on the most vulnerable in our society, but she does, primarily, history and analysis, not polemic. And she has a knack for gripping, telling detail, so her pieces are very readable.
Work like this is an antidote for cluelessness. I think I’m going to start calling her “Doc” Gabor.
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And buy Ravitch’s Goliath, coming in January. It not only summarizes her devastating critique of Deform but shows how to fight it. It’s a celebration of the Resistance but also, most importantly, a manual for it, “how-to” book for beating back Deform. Lots of heroes in that book, but none more so than the one great hero of the Resistance that the book doesn’t sing the praises of, its de facto leader, our Boadicea, our Jeanne d’Arc, Diane Ravitch herself.
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I agree. I notice a sidebar in the article. It says the Waltons are funding public schools (not just charter schools). I look forward to more reports on this.
My brief search of the Walton Foundation grants database shows at least one large district, Atlanta Public Schools, has been receiving Walton grants since 1999. The most recent grants have a one-line description of the purpose, all of these of potential relevance to dumping more charter schools in the district.
Atlanta Public Schools 2018
To support a 3-year evaluation of the organization’s Turnaround Strategy $300,000;
Support to create data dashboards for the public, parents, students and educators with timely and clear student and school performance data $110,000
Atlanta Public Schools 2017
To support research related to student-based budgeting $350,000
To support research related to transportation $88,200
There are no descriptions for the following grants to Atlanta Public Schools
2016 $540,000
2004 $100,000
2002 $100,000
2001 $100,000
1999 $35,000
It is really hard to figure out which grants are for “traditional” public schools and “public charter school” which are not really public.
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Very important to get those data on the proles sites up and running!!! https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2019/05/11/he-sees-you-when-youre-sleeping-2/
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Another chapter in the subversion of a Constitution Republic to turn it into a corporate kleptocracy.
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And, to pave the way, evangelicals and prosperity Catholics voted for Russia’s man Trump and erased the separation of church and state.
The oligarch and Russian supporter, Ukrainian Dimitry Firtash, mentioned often in the Capitol hearings, funded establishment of the Ukrainian Catholic University, which was blessed by the prosperity Catholic’s Pope John Paul II.
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“This is the future imagined by major philanthropists. One in which public schools have been replaced by corporate chains, where unions have been abolished, where the voice of the community is minimized or ignored.”
Call it corporate socialism–corporate control of the means, methods and ends of “education” where education is reduced to training this generation to serve corporate interests. Among these interests are workers who comply with authority and have few hopes and expectations for what life may offer or reward beyond getting a job anf the latest gadget.
Republicans are paying for national and state ads designed to label all democrats “socialists” and to aggrandize the virtues of free markets. Today’s campaign in Ohio focused on the virtues of competition, innovation, low prices and wide availablity of new drugs. Yep, and not a word about the criminal pushing of opioids. The photo attached to the half-page advertorial was Rod Portman.
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“Call it corporate socialism….”
Actually, a better word is fascism – the hostile take-over of government by corporate interests. Trump is by no means the only fascist in this country.
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The Ukrainian Catholic University was financed by Dimitry Firtash, an oligarch linked to pro-Russian politicians (Wikipedia). The prosperity Catholic’s Pope John Paul II blessed it. Firtash also made a sizable donation to the construction of the Holy Trinity Cathedral.
Firtash’s name has come up often in the Capitol’s hearings about Ukraine and the Trump administration.
Catholic Steve Bannon, according to NYT reporting, is looking for a place in Vatican City from which he can secure the election of right wing politicians in Europe.
Off topic, the Koch-linked Manhattan Institute praises Catholic schools. Fordham wrote articles about saving Catholic schools. Bill Gates’ foundation gave $12,000,000 to a Catholic school chain. This year, the Gates-funded Bellwether advised ed reformers to reach out to churches to achieve their goals in the South.
As the former U.S. president said, when times are economically tough, people turn to religion and guns. Is it a leap to entertain the idea that Russia which wants America crippled would have associates in gun organizations and be linked to …?
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