One of the biggest con games going on at the moment is the sustained
attack on the U.S. public school system. It’s being perpetrated by
predatory entrepreneurs (disguised as “concerned citizens” and
“education reformers”) hoping to persuade the parents of school-age
children that the only way their kids are going to get a decent
education is by paying for something that they can already get for
free. You might say it’s the same marketing campaign that launched
bottled water.
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| Photo by Common Dreams |
The profit impulse fueling this drive is understandable. All it
takes is a cursory look at the economic landscape to see why these
speculators are drooling at the prospect of privatizing education.
Millions of students pulling up stakes, bailing out of the public school
system, and enrolling in private or charter schools? Are you kidding?
Just think of the money that would generate.
Mind you, these “education reformers” are the same people who want to
privatize the world—the same people who want more toll roads, who want
hikers to pay trail fees, who want city parks and public beaches to
charge admission. Indeed, they’re the same tribe who convinced a thirsty
nation to voluntarily pay for drinking water that it could otherwise
get for free.
Before comparing private and public schools, let’s revisit that
bottled water craze, the stunning marketing phenomenon that made
beverage companies wealthy and added a billion plastic bottles to our
landfills and oceans. For the record, since passage of the Safe
Drinking Water Act (1974), municipal water, unlike bottled, has been
stringently regulated by the EPA, which is why bottled water contains
more impurities and bacteria. In truth, city water is safer, cheaper and
better for the environment.
Of course, there are people who refuse to believe one word the
government (municipal or otherwise) tells them. They don’t believe the
census, they don’t believe the figures in the federal budget, and they
regard EPA statistics as state-sponsored propaganda. Fine. You’ll
never get these people to change their minds, so save your breath. Let
them, Grover Norquist, and Orly Taitz do whatever it is they do.
And then you have your beverage connoisseurs who (even though blind
taste-tests tend to dispute this) insist that they can not only
instantly tell the difference between bottled and tap water, but can
tell the difference between varying brands of bottled water. I’m not
saying that some of these epicureans (taste-test evidence aside) can’t
do this. All I’m saying is that they’re fanatical about it.
Offer a glass of tap water to a beverage connoisseur who—before the
bottled water craze swept the nation—had happily guzzled city water his
entire life, and he’ll recoil in horror, as if you’d invited him to
drink from your toilet. I’ve joked with these people that if I ever
introduced a brand of bottled water, I would name it “Placebo.”
Back to education. The thing about private schools is that they’re
very much like bottled water. They are far less regulated than public
schools. In fact, they’re largely unregulated. Take California, for
example. In order to teach in a California public school (elementary,
intermediate or high school), you must have both a college degree and a
teaching credential. The private schools require neither.
Not only can you teach in a private without a credential or degree,
but private teachers earn significantly less than their public
counterparts. Less education, less certification, less salary. The
obvious question: Which institution—private or public—is going to
attract the better instructor? Would we ever choose a medical doctor
with those startling deficiencies? Yet, free enterprise hounds continue
to extol the virtues of privatization, pretending it’s the cure for
what ails us.
Another component to this anti-public education campaign is the
Republican Party’s on-going attempt to subvert organized labor by
attributing the flaws in our public school system to the teachers’
union. In 2008, labor is reported to have donated $400 million to the
Democratic Party, which has been a rallying cry for Republicans ever
since. Their stated goal is to neutralize the Democrats by crippling
organized labor.
Of course, the irony here is that labor is furious at the Democrats
for having more or less abandoned them. Labor places $400 million in
the Democrats’ war chest, and what do they get in return? A pat on the
head and a condescending lecture on the virtues of patience from Rahm
Emanuel. Talk about your placebo.
David Macaray, a Los Angeles playwright, Labor Columnist and author (“It’s Never Been Easy: Essays on Modern Labor”), was a former union rep. He can be reached at dmacaray@earthlink.net
Source: Huffington Post