Peter Greene, who taught for 39 years in Pennsylvania, wrote recently in The Progressive about Corey DeAngelis, who travels the nation to trash public schools and to advocate for vouchers. If you hate public schools and unions, he’s your guy. If you adore Betsy DeVos and her plans to destroy local communities and to get more children into discriminatory religious schools, he’s your guy.
Greene writes:
Corey DeAngelis is an influential, if not the most influential, voice in the rightwing campaign to demonize public schools and privatize public education. The guy’s résuméhits all the bases in the libertarian gameplan. After earning a doctorate at the University of Arkansas’s education reform program (funded bythe pro-school choice Walton family), DeAngelis helped found the Education Freedom Institute, became a senior fellow at the Reason Foundation, worked as an adjunct scholar at the CATO Institute, took up an appointment as a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and was hired on as a senior fellow at Betsy DeVos’s American Federation for Children.
He still holds all of those jobs, but his more common title is “school choice evangelist.” As the recent school voucher wave has surged in state after state, DeAngelis has been there to spread the word. While on tour in support of his new book, he distills the current pro-voucher argument.
In a recent talk at the Heritage Foundation, DeAngelis touched on most of the main arguments for vouchers (many of them false) and revealed a few truths about the pro-voucher strategy.
1. The Evil Unions and COVID
The villainy of the teachers union is a thread that runs through much of DeAngelis’s argument, especially related to the COVID-19 pandemic narrative. DeAngelis blames the unions (and American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten) for “fear mongering” and accuses them of extorting ransom payments by holding schools hostage. The unions, he charged, used the pandemic to empower themselves and the “government schools” that he calls “a jobs program for adults.”
There’s no recognition that teachers had a legitimate fear during the pandemic or that hundreds of educators died of COVID-19. Nor did he mention the many private and non-union charter schools that also closed their doors. Every problematic decision that he cited from pandemic times is blamed on the union, with no mention that Betsy DeVos’s Department of Education provided little or no guidance to districts facing difficult decisions in an evolving situation.
DeAngelis’s narrative argues that parents viewing Zoom school were appalled and awakened by what they saw. That oft-repeated tale stands in contrast to polls that show the vast majority of parents were satisfied with how their schools handled COVID-19. A 2022 Gallup poll found that, while the general public’s opinion of public schools is “souring,” parents’ favorable opinion of their own school matched pre-pandemic levels. The common sense conclusion to draw from this data is that people who don’t have first-hand experience with public schools are developing a low opinion of them based on some other source of information.
DeAngelis’s argument has other flaws. He claimed that the unions extracted a huge ransom from schools. But he also argued that pandemic relief funds given to schools never reached teachers and were, instead, soaked up by administrative bloat, which would seem to be a big tactical blunder on the unions’ part.
2. The Evil Unions and the Democratic Party
DeAngelis made the unusual claim that Democrats aren’t having kids, but Republicans are. But that, he said, won’t save conservatives because schools are fully “infiltrated by radical leftist union teachers.” The left uses schools as a way to control other people’s children. The Democratic Party, he added, is a fully owned subsidiary of the teachers’ union.
DeAngelis also repeated a false narrative of the National School Board Association’s supposed campaign to muzzle parents. In fall 2021, local school boards found their usually sleepy meetings had turned into wild, threatening, and even violent chaos. The NSBA turned to the Biden Administration for help, calling some of the actions “the equivalent of a form of domestic terrorism or hate crimes.” This was quickly and inaccurately cast as the Democratic administration calling parents domestic terrorists.
The resulting controversy caused the NSBA to lose some members, which DeAngelis seemed happy about. “Play stupid games, win stupid prizes,” he said.
This narrative that smears public school-friendly groups fits a general pattern of conservative attacks on groups seen as Democratic Party supporters.
Open the link to read more about the DeVos-funded public school hater who is spreading his propaganda across the nation.

Far-right homophobic school board members have been elected in more-conservative parts of California in the blitz mounted by Corey DeAngelis and his big-money backers. But there’s a backlash. Recalls have recently succeeded in four districts. As with eliminating reproductive rights, it turns out bigotry and cruelty aren’t what voters want.
In one district, Temecula in conservative inland Southern California, Eric Trump came and held a rally to support one far-right homophobic board member facing a recall — but the recall passed anyway.
Far-right homophobic board members have also been recalled in Orange Unified (Southern California) and Sunol Glen (rural outer Bay Area). And in Woodland, near Sacramento, a far-right homophobic board member facing a recall resigned when it was clear the recall was going to succeed.
So DeAngelis’ hatefest crusade isn’t succeeding everywhere, it’s heartening to know.
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That’s great to hear.
DeAngelis has been successful in using DeVos money to persuade GOP legislatures to adopt vouchers.
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I think Corey DeAngelis is an assassin, a sniper, for Project 2025. His assigned targets: public schools, public teachers, and teachers’ unions.
In shooting wars, both sides have snipers and assassins.
Since words are the weapons in the war on public schools, DeAngelis is shooting lies.
The snipers and assassins on the other side use truth based on reputable facts.
Which side hits the bullseye the most?
In wars, words or bullets, both sides are always competing to come up with the best tactics, the best weapons.
Who has the edge there — Lies or Truth?
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JESUS FAILED — Christian nationalists see Jesus as a failure.
Jesus preached His Way of living throughout the New Testament, as in The Sermon of the Mount [Matt 5:3-12] where He declared that “Blessed are the meek [meaning, the gentle; the considerate; the humble]” — but Christian nationalists view such teachings of Jesus as not having worked to make the world into the world they want; so, Christian nationalists have a “better” way: Instead of the humility that Jesus taught and lived, the Christian nationalists have decided on pride, as in The Proud Boys.
Jesus told Peter to put away his sword and that “those who take the sword shall die by the sword” (Matt 26:52). But Christian nationalists view Christ’s teaching of putting away the weapons as having failed, so they have turned to arming themselves with more and more guns.
What today’s Christian nationalists fail to understand is that if God had wanted Jesus to conquer evil with force, He would have sent Jesus to Earth, descending from the heavens on a golden throne amid clouds with flashing bolts of lightning and surrounded and backed up by a heaven-filling army of terrifying and unkillable angels.
Instead, God sent Jesus to Earth to be born in a stinking stable to poor, totally obscure parents of total unimportance in a world dominated by the mighty Roman Empire.
Christ’s Gospel of meekness, repentance, forgiveness, love, and service to others has failed: God got it wrong.
Today’s Christian nationalists think that it is now up to THEM to make the world right — no more meekness, no more putting away the sword.
Instead, Christian nationalists arm themselves with pride and guns and political power to intimidate and to force others to live the “right” way.
Christian nationalists have sidelined the teaching of Christ and have turned instead to follow a person of pride, boasting, deceit, and trickery to show God and Jesus how saving the world should have been done.
Blinded by their own self-righteousness, Christian nationalists have been unable to read the warning from Jesus in MATTHEW 7: 21-23 which reads: “And Jesus said: ‘Many of you will say to Me on Judgment Day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name and in Your name drive out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell them plainly: ‘I never knew you. Depart from Me, you evildoers’!”
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Amen
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