Jan Resseger lives in Ohio. Before retiring, Jan staffed advocacy and programming to support public education justice in the national setting of the United Church of Christ—working to improve the public schools that serve 50 million of our children; reduce standardized testing; ensure attention to vast opportunity gaps; advocate for schools that welcome all children; and speak for the public role of public education. Jan chaired the National Council of Churches Committee on Public Education for a dozen of those years.
Jan recently wrote this post for the National Center on Education Policy at the University of Colorado.
She writes:
I suppose many of us think about the classes we wish we had signed up for in college. Right now, as somebody who believes public schools are among our nation’s most important and most threatened public institutions, I wish that in addition to enrolling in The Philosophy of Education, I had also taken a class in political philosophy—or at least Political Science 101. How have groups like the Heritage Foundation, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Betsy DeVos’s American Federation of Children and their proxies like Moms for Liberty managed to discredit public schooling and at the same time spawn an explosion of vouchers, which, according to the editors of last year’s excellent analysis, The School Voucher Illusion: Exposing the Pretense of Equity, are failing to serve our society’s poorest children even as they are destroying the institution of public schooling?
Here are that book’s conclusions: “As currently structured, voucher policies in the United States are unlikely to help the students they claim to support. Instead, these policies have often served as a facade for the far less popular reality of funding relatively advantaged (and largely White) families, many of whom already attended—or would attend—private schools without subsidies. Although vouchers are presented as helping parents choose schools, often the arrangements permit the private schools to do the choosing… Advocacy that began with a focus on equity must not become a justification for increasing inequity. Today’s voucher policies have, by design, created growing financial commitments of taxpayer money to serve a constituency of the relatively advantaged that is redefining their subsidies as rights—often in jurisdictions where neighborhood public schools do not have the resources they need.” (The School Voucher Illusion: Exposing the Pretense of Equity, p. 290)
As I watch the wave of school privatization washing across conservative states and read about universal school choice as one of the priorities of presidential candidate Donald Trump as well as a goal of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, I find myself wishing I had a better grasp of how our society has gone off the rails. I wonder what I would have learned about the difference between democracy and extreme individualism in that political theory class I missed, and I find myself trying to catch up by reading—for example—on the difference between a society defined by individualist consumerism and a society defined by citizenship.
Back in 1984, the late political theorist Benjamin Barber published Strong Democracy, a book defining the principles our federal and state constitutions and laws are presumed to protect: “Strong democracy … rests on the idea of a self-governing community of citizens who are united less by homogeneous interests than by civic education and who are made capable of common purpose and mutual action by virtue of their civic attitudes and participatory institutions rather than their altruism or their good nature. Strong democracy is consonant with—indeed depends upon—the politics of conflict, the sociology of pluralism, and the separation of private and public realms of action… The theory of strong democracy… envisions… politics as… the way that human beings with variable but malleable natures and with competing but overlapping interests can contrive to live together communally not only to their mutual advantage but also to the advantage of their mutuality… It seeks to create a public language that will help reformulate private interests in terms susceptible to public accommodation… and it aims at understanding individuals not as abstract persons but as citizens, so that commonality and equality rather than separateness are the defining traits of human society.” (Strong Democracy, pp 117-119)
In that same book, Barber describes the consumer as a representative of extreme individualism—the opposite of the public citizen: “The modern consumer is the… last in a long train of models that depict man as a greedy, self-interested, acquisitive survivor who is capable nonetheless of the most self-denying deferrals of gratification for the sake of ultimate material satisfaction. The consumer is a creature of great reason devoted to small ends… He uses the gift of choice to multiply his options in and to transform the material conditions of the world, but never to transform himself or to create a world of mutuality with his fellow humans.” (Strong Democracy, p. 22)
Two decades later, Barber published Consumed, in which he explores in far more detail the danger of a society defined by consumerism rather than strong democracy. As his case study he contrasts parent-consumers who prioritize personal choice to shape their children’s education and parent-citizens: “Through vouchers we are able as individuals, through private choosing, to shape institutions and policies that are useful to our own interests but corrupting to the public goods that give private choosing its meaning. I want a school system where my kid gets the very best; you want a school system where your kid is not slowed down by those less gifted or less adequately prepared; she wants a school system where children whose ‘disadvantaged backgrounds’ (often kids of color) won’t stand in the way of her daughter’s learning; he (a person of color) wants a school system where he has the maximum choice to move his kid out of ‘failing schools’ and into successful ones. What do we get? The incomplete satisfaction of those private wants through a fragmented system in which individuals secede from the public realm, undermining the public system to which we can subscribe in common. Of course no one really wants a country defined by deep educational injustice and the surrender of a public and civic pedagogy whose absence will ultimately impact even our own private choices… Yet aggregating our private choices as educational consumers in fact yields an inegalitarian and highly segmented society in which the least advantaged are further disadvantaged as the wealthy retreat ever further from the public sector. As citizens, we would never consciously select such an outcome, but in practice what is good for ‘me,’ the educational consumer, turns out to be a disaster for ‘us’ as citizens and civic educators—and thus for me the denizen of an American commons (or what’s left of it).” (Consumed, p. 132)
Barber concludes: “It is the peculiar toxicity of privatization ideology that it rationalizes corrosive private choosing as a surrogate for the public good. It enthuses about consumers as the new citizens who can do more with their dollars… than they ever did with their votes. It associates the privileged market sector with liberty as private choice while it condemns democratic government as coercive.” (Consumed, p. 143) “The consumer’s republic is quite simply an oxymoron… Public liberty demands public institutions that permit citizens to address the public consequences of private market choices… Asking what “I want’ and asking what ‘we as a community to which I belong need’ are two different questions, though neither is altruistic and both involve ‘my’ interests: the first is ideally answered by the market; the second must be answered by democratic politics.” “Citizens cannot be understood as mere consumers because individual desire is not the same thing as common ground and public goods are always something more than an aggregation of private wants…. (W)hat is public cannot be determined by consulting or aggregating private desires.” (Consumed, p. 126)
So that is today’s lesson from the political philosophy class I was never able to fit into my schedule in college: “Freedom is not just about standing alone and saying no. As a usable ideal, it turns out to be a public rather than a private notion… (N)owadays, the idea that only private persons are free, and that only personal choices of the kind consumers make count as autonomous, turns out to be an assault not on tyranny but on democracy. It challenges not the illegitimate power by which tyrants once ruled us but the legitimate power by which we try to rule ourselves in common. Where once this notion of liberty challenged corrupt power, today it undermines legitimate power… It forgets the very meaning of the social contract, a covenant in which individuals agree to give up unsecured private liberty in exchange for the blessings of public liberty and common security.” (Consumed, pp.119-123)

Ressenger correctly points to the necessity of altruism in democracy. This is a problem those who desire representative government have confronted for a long time. The need for “virtue” regarding citizenship took Maximillian Robespierre in a dark direction during the French Revolution, producing the “Great Terror” phase of the Jacobin rule. He was not the last revolutionary who needed this idea to accompany the change he desired.
Opponents of democracy turn to radicals like Robespierre to justify the Randian belief that human beings are better off fighting with one another. These beliefs rest on the conviction that there are some people who are better than others at deciding what is best for all of us. Obviously, this appeals to those whose bent is toward oligarchy, and the ability of those individuals to buy media time to spread their gospel of inequality lies behind many of the social ills we now experience.
Thom Hartman sent an email this morning that describes why Americans rejected national health insurance. He goes into detail about Fredrick Ludwig Hoffman, who championed “scientific racism” during the progressive era. It is a really important piece, I think.
Speaking of Ludwig, Happy Beethoven’s Birthday to all.
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Thank you, Roy!
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Roy, I couldn’t finish listening to Trump’s speech this morning–Trump is still trying to sell what dignity and trust is left over from others as he approaches the oath-taking time (ha ha!) . . . 20 billion from Japan’s financial market. Also, from what I could tell up to when I threw my shoe at the television . . .
. . . Trump is also in the “business” of erasing Biden’s successful work on the USA economy, saying that he/Trump is recovering what Trump had in his last round in the White House. (The lie is a cancer doing what cancers do–taking over and killing the host.)
Trump’s vacuous personality has its transactional sharpie out again as he erases any history of Biden (and Harris) that worked (and there’s lots of it to inherit), that doesn’t sound and look to him like a golden shower of loyalty and (fake) respect for him.
By “fake,” I mean he continues to confuse loyalty born of fear (of intimidation, bribes, and threats to people who just want to keep their jobs and avoid the fire hose of Trump’s Maga goons) with authentic respect. CBK
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An on-the-mark essay.
I am glad to see someone nail the look and effects of untamed, transactional-only, predatory capitalism and put it up against the frame of a broader view of human development and its better angels. In that last paragraph, she, the writer, puts a mirror up to the oligarchs like Musk and the technofascists who, like A. Rand, think their horizon of human being is the only horizon of human being.
In our time, theirs is an invitation to corruption like no other in history. CBK
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Privatization does not generally benefit the people. It generally benefits special interests that donate to political parties to promote policies that favor a particular ideology or profiteers seeking to transfer public dollars into the pockets of those politically connected. Privatization benefits billionaires and corporations by reducing their tax responsibility and providing additional profit to private companies. Using their political influence, hedge funds, private equity and big corporations attack, discredit, starve or buy their way into the public good or service they want to disrupt. Medicare, VA services, the USPS, and public schools are all targets of privatization which will snowball under the Trump administration. Privatization generally results a worse, less efficient service and is more costly to the public than the original public service.
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People are not voting for the privatization of public services. These deals are made between the wealthy and politicians behind closed doors. Privatization is a top down scheme that is done to the people, not something for the people. Privatization is deliberately extractive from the common good.
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retired: Also, they’ve been setting the stage for privatization of all (oligarchy) for a very long time . . . in their ragging on “the government” and “government schools” (for education) and teachers, and bad programming, (no child, etc.) for decades. They were setting the stage for getting rid of democracy, regulations, and public-anything.
The People are conditioned now to think that “the government” is a deep state that wants to over-control everything (Orwellian code for mere regulations and free public services, etc., to serve and protect the poor and middle class (and color, and gender, the aged, etc.,); while the actual switch to privatization is a freedom from (appropriate) controls for the greedy wealthy and powerful (like regulations of poison in the air and water, child safety, health, etc.) and where the freedoms, again, are only for the wealthy and powerful.
In this case, privatization means that if you have an issue with a business (like the health care industry, for instance, or oil spills,), there is no rule of law or Congress person who stands between what the corporation or business owner wants and what YOU want and need, even to get a hearing.
There is “common good” that can be defended in a privatized culture, only if you can brown nose or bribe someone in the corporation. That’s why privatization and NO rule of law are an invitation to corruption.
It’s not that government is perfect–by no means. It’s that the alternative is much worse–people in government get a salary for doing their jobs under given protocols, which are identified with intelligence and excellence, and not with smiling at the CEO.
Freedom and the rule of law are blood brothers, so to speak. CBK
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privatization is also the result of poverty or scarcity. Either produces a society where life is perceived as struggle. Education is an example. Let me explain.
Prior to the American civil War, much of the trans Appalachian west was frontier, which led to political domination by a few geographic regions dominated by planta agriculture. Much of the population was typical frontier, subsistence agriculture and hunting. Thus most of the trans-Appalachian west did not develop a positive view of education as did the more densely settled mid-west and the longer settled East. After the war wrecked the economy, few people saw the need for education. The few who did set up private schools, often connected to the Presbyterian, Methodist, or Episcopal Churches.
It was not until the Twentieth Century that public schools began to be a pervasive presence. As late as the 1910s mission schools were being established in Appalachian villages that had no schools at all.
If you were dead set on your child going to school, you were generally required to send your kid off quite a distance away.
The point is that scarcity paves the way for privatization.
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