Writing in The New Yorker, Jessica Winter deftly connects the spread of vouchers with deep-seated racism, phony culture war issues, and the war on public schools. Winter is an editor at The New Yorker.
She writes:
In October, 2018, on the night of a high-school homecoming dance in Southlake, Texas, a group of white students gathered at a friend’s house for an after-party. At some point, about eight of them piled together on a bed and, with a phone, filmed themselves chanting the N-word. The blurry, seesawing video went viral, and, days later, a special meeting was called by the board of the Carroll Independent School District—“Home of the Dragons”—one of the wealthiest and highest-rated districts in the state. At the meeting, parents of Black children shared painful stories of racist taunts and harassment that their kids had endured in school. Carroll eventually convened a diversity council made up of students, parents, and district staffers to address an evident pattern of racism in Southlake, although it took nearly two years for the group to present its plan of action. It recommended, among other things, hiring more teachers of color, requiring cultural-sensitivity training for all students and teachers, and imposing clearer consequences for racist conduct.
As the NBC reporters Mike Hixenbaugh and Antonia Hylton recounted in the acclaimed podcast “Southlake,” and as Hixenbaugh writes in his new book, “They Came for the Schools: One Town’s Fight Over Race and Identity, and the New War for America’s Classrooms,” Southlake’s long-awaited diversity plan happened to emerge in July, 2020, shortly after the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer sparked Black Lives Matter protests against racism and police brutality across the United States. It was also the same month that a journalist named Christopher Rufo published an article in City Journal headlined “Cult Programming in Seattle,” which launched his campaign to make “critical race theory”—an academic discipline that examines how racism is embedded in our legal frameworks and institutions—into a right-wing panic button. A political-action committee called Southlake Families pac sprang up to oppose the Carroll diversity plan; the claim was that it would instill guilt and shame in white children and convince them that they are irredeemably racist. The following year, candidates endorsed by Southlake Families pac swept the local elections for school board, city council, and mayor, with about seventy per cent of the vote—“an even bigger share than the 63 percent of Southlake residents who’d backed Trump in 2020,” Hixenbaugh notes in his book. Some nine hundred other school districts nationwide saw similar anti-C.R.T. campaigns. Southlake, where the anti-woke insurgency had won lavish praise from National Review and Laura Ingraham, was the blueprint.
“Rufo tapped into a particular moment in which white Americans realized that they were white, that whiteness carried heavy historical baggage,” the education journalist Laura Pappano writes in her recent book “School Moms: Parent Activism, Partisan Politics, and the Battle for Public Education,” which also digs into the Southlake controversy. Whiteness could feel like a neutral default mode in many communities because of decades of organized resistance to high-density housing and other zoning measures—the bureaucratic backhoes of suburbanization and white flight. Today, the Carroll school district, though still majority white, has significant numbers of Latino and Asian families, but less than two per cent of the district’s students are Black.
In this last regard, Southlake is not an outlier, owing largely to persistent residential segregation across the U.S. Even in highly diverse metro areas, the average Black student is enrolled in a school that is about seventy-five per cent Black, and white students attend schools with significantly lower levels of poverty. These statistics are dispiriting not least because of ample data showing the educational gains that desegregation makes possible for Black kids. A 2015 analysis of standardized-test scores, for instance, identified a strong connection between school segregation and academic-achievement gaps, owing to concentrated poverty in predominantly Black and Hispanic schools. A well-known longitudinal study found that Black students who attended desegregated schools from kindergarten to high school were more likely to graduate and earn higher wages, and less likely to be incarcerated or experience poverty. Their schools also received twenty per cent more funding and had smaller classroom sizes. As the education reporter Justin Murphy writes in “Your Children Are Very Greatly in Danger: School Segregation in Rochester, New York,” this bevy of findings “lends support to the popular adage among desegregation supporters that ‘green follows white.’ ”
These numbers, of course, don’t necessarily reflect the emotional and psychological toll of being one of a relatively few Black kids in a predominantly white school. Other recent books, including Cara Fitzpatrick’s “The Death of Public School: How Conservatives Won the War Over Education in America” and Laura Meckler’s “Dream Town: Shaker Heights and the Quest for Racial Equity,” have also considered how those costs have been weighed against the moral imperative of desegregation. This is the axial force of a lineage that runs from the monstrous chaos that followed court-ordered integration in the nineteen-fifties and sixties and the busing debacles of the seventies to the racist slurs thrown around at Southlake. As my colleague Louis Menand wrote last year in his review of Rachel Louise Martin’s “A Most Tolerant Little Town: The Explosive Beginning of School Desegregation,” “It was insane to send nine Black teen-agers into Central High School in Little Rock with eighteen hundred white students and no Black teachers. . . . Desegregation was a war. We sent children off to fight it.” To Rufo and his comrades, there was no such war left to be fought; there were only the bitter-enders who hallucinate microaggressions in the wallpaper and whose books need to be banned from school libraries. A mordant irony of Rufo’s imaginary version of critical race theory is that Derrick Bell, the civil-rights attorney and legal scholar who was most closely associated with C.R.T., eventually came to be skeptical about school-integration efforts—not because racism was effectively over or because legally enforced desegregation represented government overreach, as the anti-C.R.T. warriors would hold today, but because it could not be eradicated. In a famous Yale Law Journal article, “Serving Two Masters,” from 1976, Bell cited a coalition of Black community groups in Boston who resisted busing: “We think it neither necessary, nor proper to endure the dislocations of desegregation without reasonable assurances that our children will instructionally profit…”
In the years before Brown v. Board of Education was decided, the N.A.A.C.P.—through the brave and innovative work of young lawyers such as Derrick Bell—had brought enough lawsuits against various segregated school districts that some states were moving to privatize their educational systems. As Fitzpatrick notes in “The Death of Public School,” an influential Georgia newspaper owner and former speaker of the state’s House declared, in 1950, “that it would be better to abolish the public schools than to desegregate them.” South Carolina, in 1952, voted 2–1 in a referendum to revoke the right to public education from its state constitution. Around the same time, the Chicago School economist Milton Friedman began making a case for school vouchers, or public money that parents could spend as they pleased in the educational marketplace. White leaders in the South seized on the idea as a means of funding so-called segregation academies. In 1959, a county in Virginia simply closed down its public schools entirely rather than integrate; two years later, it began distributing vouchers—but only to white students, as Black families had refused to set up their own segregated schools.
Despite these disgraceful origins, vouchers remain the handmaiden of conservative calls for “school choice” or “education freedom.” In the run-up to the 2022 midterms, Rufo expanded his triumphant crusade against C.R.T. into a frontal assault on public education itself, which he believed could be replaced with a largely unregulated voucher system. “To get universal school choice, you really need to operate from a premise of universal public-school distrust,” Rufo explained. He had been doing his best to sow that distrust during the previous two years.
Twenty states currently have voucher programs; five states launched universal voucher programs in 2023 alone. But reams of evidence show that vouchers negatively impact educational outcomes, and the money a voucher represents—around eight thousand dollars in Florida, sixty-five hundred in Georgia—is often not nearly enough to cover private-school tuition. In practice, then, vouchers typically act as subsidies for wealthy families who already send their children to private schools; or they pay for sketchy for-profit “microschools,” which have no oversight and where teachers often have few qualifications; or they flow toward homeschooling families. Wherever they end up, they drain the coffers of the public schools. Arizona’s voucher system, which is less than two years old, is projected to cost close to a billion dollars next year. The governor, Katie Hobbs, a Democrat and former social worker, has said that the program “will likely bankrupt the state.”
Back in Texas, Governor Greg Abbott has become the Captain Ahab of school choice—he fanatically pursued a voucher program through multiple special sessions of the state legislature, failed every time to sink the harpoon, and then tried to use the rope to strangle the rest of the education budget, seemingly out of spite. Abbott’s problem is not only that Democrats don’t support vouchers but that they’ve also been rejected by Republican representatives in rural areas, where private options are scarce and where public schools are major local employers and serve as community hubs. (Southlake’s state representative, a Republican with a background in private equity, supports Abbott’s voucher scheme—a bizarre stance to take on behalf of a district that derives much of its prestige, property values, and chauvinism from the élite reputation of its public schools.) White conservatives in Texas and elsewhere were roused to anger and action by Rufo-style hysteria. But many of them may have realized by now that these invented controversies were just the battering ram for a full-scale sacking and looting of public education.

The attack on public education is closely connected to racism. Housing patterns that have led to increased separation of social and racial groups have led to increased separation of students by race and class. Public schools in this country are more than half minority majority. Lots of affluent people do not want to put money into education for “those children,” and privatization schemes allow them to invent a way to divide students along racial and social lines. Privatization leads to enhanced segregation. It is a double bonus to biased groups when the scheme also allows them to plunder the budgets of public schools and provide streams of revenue for well-to-do investors. “We don’t fund systems, we fund students,” says Betsy DeVos. Under privatization students are funded so they can be separated and shuttled to “where they belong,” in separate and unequal schools. Diversity, equity and inclusion is somehow threatening to these bigots. Segregation, discrimination and exclusion are far more dangerous to society as marginalized people often end up in the criminal justice system.
The research is clear. Students of color do better in academics in integrated schools. The schools are better resourced in integrated settings. In majority minority schools funding is reduced and resources are sparse. White students learn tolerance and acceptance. Integration is better for young people and society at large. One of the central missions of public education is to teach people how to relate to each other. In our polarized society this is even more important today.
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retired teacher,
I AGREE totally. You are so “right on.”
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My experience as a student who grew up observing black students bused to suburban schools and as a public educator for 38 years, is that families vote with their feet. When busing took place in Chattanooga, TN there were a few ways to get out of attending city schools. One was to move and go to county schools, another was to attend white flight academies or parochial schools, and the other, for those with the means, to attend traditional elite private schools that had existed since the early twentieth century. I attended Chattanooga High School five years after my sister, two years after busing had begun. Almost all of the highly acclaimed staff had left or retired by the time I got there. When I entered the high school it was probably around 60 percent white and when I graduated it was fifty percent. Five years later it was predominantly black and the school closed around 1990.
I began my teaching career in Charlotte, NC in 1982. At the time, it was considered among the few districts that made busing work. The schools were predominantly 60% white and 40% black. Being a proponent of busing, I was thoroughly impressed. Over the next two decades, the metro area experienced explosive growth and many who moved to Charlotte challenged the focus on diversity. In 2001, a lawsuit brought by a parent over the magnet lottery was allowed to become a case over unitary status as allowed by a judge who had written a brief against the 1970 Supreme Court case that mandated busing. Prior to the ruling for Unitary status, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools had under 20 Title one schools. There are now over 100.
The problem as I see it is that those who favor segregation and those who think their privilege should keep their community schools exclusive are numerous enough to blunt any movement toward equality. Busing did not work because communities chose not to participate. Schools with populations of the underprivileged struggle because those with money and power don’t believe their wealth should go toward serving impoverished schools. I was principal of a school with a wealthy PTA that chose not to share with the district PTA. My three children, for the most part, all attended schools with a dynamic diversity. They not only benefited from the social empathy they learned, but it also brought about an intellectual understanding of the wealth brought about through vibrant community. What we are not seeing from our polity is a meaningful advocacy for the benefits of diversity in our schools. The return to segregated schools has played a significant role in the fraying fabric we are witnessing in our communities. We have to get past this manifest greed of privatization to have any chance of providing opportunity for all of our children and building a better society.
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I attended integrated schools and taught in a naturally integrated school system for over thirty years. Integration is overall a very positive state of being for all. It was wonderful to see different types of students getting along, and nobody was harmed in the process. By senior year yearbooks had pictures of integrated classes, teams and cultural events. To me these types of schools are only possible when we do not mess with the demographics, but that is exactly what privatization does. It sorts young people into haves and have nots, often according to racial and socioeconomic groups. This is not a positive vision of America, IMO.
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And this self-sorting limits our potential as a democracy.
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As far as looting goes, who benefits by shifting attention AWAY from the greatest looter of funds and minds, (test-score-complex) ? Subjective attitudes of superiority existed long before vouchers. Voucher ‘splainin doesn’t end the biases any more than pretending biases are a one party event. Foundational racism, attitudes of superiority, or cultural biases, have yet to be “Schooled” away. Repeating mission statements doesn’t change the results anymore than doing more of what doesn’t bring meaningful change does.
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Yes, I was lucky enough to go to integrated secondary schools in Flint, Michigan and Portsmouth, Ohio. In Flint, we not only had African American kids, but quite a few Mexican American kids as well. Plus, we had lots of kids who were second-generation Poles, Hungarians, etc. It was really great! There was racism, though, as some kids wouldn’t associate with others, some made racial slurs, and in Portsmouth, on the Ohio River, in the mid-1950’s, movie houses had separate and unequal facilities–blacks sat in the balcony.
At our house in Flint, we were lucky enough to have friends who were dark Mexican, other nationalities, etc. That, of course, was due to my parents–both of whom grew up in Northern Ky. and Southern Ohio. My mom said, “It takes all kinds of people to make a world.” And she got that from her mom–who integrated her Nazarene Church by bringing a black friend. I included that story in my poem about my great grandfather, Tom Moulton, who as a Kentuckian fought for the North. Here’s a brief excerpt:
Later in life, his daughter, Lula Belle,
found a medal, engraved with the words,
“Grand Army of the Republic,” and asked him about it,
and the war, and why he fought in it.
“I had to,” he said quietly. “It was to keep the
Union together, and to free the slaves.”
He gave her the medal, and he died soon after.
Lula Belle carried his story to her own children,
and they to theirs, to this day.
Once, when Lula Belle was old, her own husband gone,
tired of going to The Church of the Nazarene alone,
she invited her neighbor, who was black.
As they entered the church, she smiled sweetly
at the all-white congregation,
and her dark friend doffed his hat.
from “Grand Army of the Republic,” by Jack Burgess
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Love the poem, Jack!
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Can you post it all, below, or a link to the whole thing? Thanks!
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Diane, that The New Yorker article was so powerfully written.
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It’s great to finally see this issue covered in “mainstream” media so powerfully. If only it hadn’t taken so long.
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Grand Army of the Republic
by Jack Burgess
David Moulton was seventeen when he
left the hills of Fleming County, Kentucky
to go down to the war.
It was the war they fought about pride
and exploitation, and what can happen
if people are too different and too poor.
When he rode down through the hills, he passed
the dark men, women, and children
working in the big tobacco fields
and corn fields, in the blazing sun.
They watched him go by, and he lifted
his slouch hat, to cool his head,
but also in an embarrassed salute.
In the war he saw thousands of shootings and explosions.
He loaded and fired and loaded and fired into the whirlwind,
and sometimes hoped he didn’t hit anyone with the lead, though the
rebels terrified him when they charged, and he hated that they just
kept coming, trying to kill him, trying to drive him and the others off
of their land, trying to keep their right to enslave people.
But he knew his bullets hit some. He could see them
jerk and fall. Thousands fell on both sides.
Sometimes at night he saw their eyes,
dreamed of the bayonets.
It made him sweat in his sleep.
When he woke, his own pale eyes were hard and cold.
When you look at his tintype from the day he mustered out
you can see it, and how his nostrils flare
like he could still smell two-hundred-thousand men,
with all the choking smoke and dust and sweat,
trying to shoot or skewer each other.
In the winter of ’64 he froze his toes,
so they put him on the train and sent him home.
When he got there it was early morning.
His toes were now dead, so he told his sister how to
take the ax and cut them off, like he had seen the surgeons do
to shattered arms and legs after the battles.
He stuffed newspaper in the ends of his boots
and began a new life, out of balance,
teetering stiffly on his heels.
He had lost his smile, lost his boyhood, didn’t sleep well,
couldn’t tell the stories people really wanted to hear.
Dead faces of the boys on his side and theirs
swirled just behind his eyes
as he sat on the porch of an evening, wondering what
ever happened to the dark people that used to help with the work,
and hide their eyes and their anger that he knew they had.
Later in life, his daughter, Lula Belle,
found a medal, engraved with the words,
“Grand Army of the Republic,” and asked him about it,
and the war, and why he fought in it.
“I had to,” he said quietly. “It was to keep the
Union together, and to free the slaves.”
He gave her the medal, and he died soon after.
Lula Belle carried his story to her own children,
and they to theirs, to this day.
Once, when Lula Belle was old, her own husband gone,
tired of going to The Church of the Nazarene alone,
she invited her neighbor, who was black.
As they entered the church, she smiled sweetly
at the all-white congregation,
and her dark friend doffed his hat.
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Wonderful poem, Jack! Thanks for sharing it! The business about the toes and the axe and the teetering–so intensely real.
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Diane and all: On Book TV CNN RE: “As the NBC reporters Mike Hixenbaugh and Antonia Hylton recounted in the acclaimed podcast “Southlake,” and as Hixenbaugh writes in his new book, “They Came for the Schools: One Town’s Fight Over Race and Identity, and the New War for America’s Classrooms,”
Mike Hixenbaugh, “They Came for the Schools”
After Words
Watch: 10 am/pm & 1 pm Watch a Preview NBC investigative reporter Mike Hixenbaugh looks at how issues around race and identity are playing out in school districts around the country. In his book, “They Came for the Schools: One Town’s Fight Over Race and Identity, and the New War for America’s Classrooms,” he examines the nationwide effort to oppose history lessons, library books and school programs dealing with racism, LGBTQ rights and other social issues through the lens of Southlake, Texas, where residents elected school board candidates running on an anti-critical race theory platform.
He is interviewed by Chalkbeat story editor and author Cara Fitzpatrick.
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