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You
Are Cordially Invited to a Guerilla War
by
James Ostrowski
by James Ostrowski
DIGG THIS
Recent
events in Buffalo have me thinking about government schools again.
Fourteen Catholic schools closed including the neighborhood school
my children happily attend. We were devastated. My son asked me,
"Are you going to send us to a government school?" I said,
"No way would we ever do that!"
Long
story short. The government school system is finally beginning to
realize its original mission: to knock off Catholic schools. The
nuns and brothers had fought the good fight for 150 years. Without
reinforcements, Catholic schools, with one-half of all private school
students, are in deep trouble.
Government’s
de facto monopoly over primary and secondary education is our single
biggest problem, a problem that is genetically linked to all our
other political problems.
As
I wrote in 2001:
The
government school monopoly strengthens the state and harms the
cause of liberty in many ways. On the state and local levels,
education accounts for an enormous percentage of expenditures.
It is absurd to suggest, as most Republican candidates do, that
they will cut the size of state government but not touch the school
system. Federal expenditures on education are still relatively
small, but wait five minutes: the foot is in the door.
Next
comes the complex web of educational special interest groups:
teachers and their unions, suppliers, publishers, administrators,
and even parents who get a free babysitting service. Three million
government schoolteachers form a powerful army for statism. Since
every subsidy is an argument for every other subsidy, the education
lobby rolls logs with the best of them. They support not only
the cause of ever-greater expenditures on education, but also
the entire statist program of endlessly creative wealth redistribution
and the ever-increasing bureaucratization and regulation of society.
Most
importantly, public schools allow government to determine the
political ideas that children are allowed to learn about. Libertarians
are always struck by the consistently statist perspective exhibited
by the vast majority of government school inmates and parolees.
These students just "know" that we needed the Constitution because
the nation was in chaos, FDR saved us from the Great Depression,
and TR saved us from the "robber barons."
Such
ideas and more and worse are inculcated in young minds when they
are soft and malleable. They gradually harden like concrete long
before any of our libertarian institutions can supply an antidote.
Is it not the case that most lovers of liberty formed their views
as teenagers or young adults? I personally do not know a single
person who became a libertarian after age thirty. You have to
get them while they're young or forget them. Presently, that task
is impossible.
The
present ban on religion in government schools aids the statist
viewpoint. As all totalitarian regimes know, religions posit a
scheme of values prior to and superior to the state. It is not
the case, however, that no religion is taught in government schools.
If religion is broadly defined to include even "one's ultimate
concern," it becomes obvious that the religion taught in government
schools is that interventionist government is the ultimate human
value. Government schools forbid the teaching of any religion
but state worship.
Government
schools introduce and reinforce the bureaucratic mentality, the
opposite of a free and spontaneous attitude toward life. To the
bureaucratic mind, life is about unthinking adherence to a set
of arbitrary rules of behavior established by superiors in a chain
of command. No heavy thinking is required; just follow orders.
By their very nature, such rules do not differentiate between
individuals, but treat all as a mass. Twelve years of habituation
to such a mode of living generally inoculates students from resistance
to the bureaucratic state they will be suffering under for the
remainder of their lives.
Though
many government school products survive the experience with their
minds intact, many hundreds of thousands emerge ill-equipped,
intellectually or morally, to function independently in today's
world. These misfits fill out the ranks of petty criminals, welfare
recipients, drug users, and beggars of one form or another. Naturally,
the existence of such folk leads to calls for more social service
programs, police, prisons, and more spending on education! In
this way, government creates its own demand, as the failure of
one government program provides the impetus for the next one.
It
is therefore no exaggeration to state that government control
over education is the ultimate foundation of statism today. No
substantial progress for liberty will occur unless this foundation
is cracked.
What
accounts for the apparent lack of success of the modern libertarian
movement, which has, after all, spent millions for decades now?
Perhaps that lack of success can be attributed to our failure to
smash the government school monopoly.
We
have tried, I guess. Proposing vouchers and tax credits; encouraging
home schooling; nothing has worked so far though home schooling
has been the best political strategy yet as I argued in 2001.
Nearly
ninety percent of students are in government schools. Ninety percent
of the population is subjected to a pro-government worldview for
their 13 most impressionable years. And we expect to convince those
folks that big government sucks! Government is about the only thing
they’ve ever known. Many students see their teachers more than they
see their parents.
I
pointed out in another article
why modern jurors are so submissive to judges and prosecutors: "ninety
percent of jurors went to government schools and heard all that
propaganda" for thirteen years! "Passive submission
to a governmental authority figure is imprinted on their brains."
At
the state and local level, the education lobby is the strongest
political force. You can measure the strength of a lobby by their
share of annual spending. Spending on schools is approaching half
a trillion dollars each year. That leaves many millions for lobbying
and buying politicians to keep the scam going.
Pickett’s
Charge showed the difficulty of direct frontal assaults on entrenched
positions. The same is true in politics. Politics is after all the
continuation of war by the same means (force) with better public
relations. "When one door closes another door opens; but we so often
look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door, that we do
not see the ones which open for us." (A. G. Bell) When conventional
warfare is not an option, try guerilla warfare:
Guerrilla
warfare (also spelled guerilla) is a method of unconventional
combat by which small groups of combatants attempt to use mobile
and surprise tactics (ambushes, raids, etc) to defeat a foe, often
a larger, less mobile, army. Typically the smaller guerrilla army
will either use its defensive status to draw its opponent into
terrain which is better suited to the former or take advantage
of its greater mobility by conducting surprise attacks at vulnerable
targets, often deep in enemy territory. (Wikipedia)
[For
numbskulls only: my reference to guerilla warfare is a metaphor.]
Libertarians’
efforts at educational reform have failed because they use conventional
political means of trying to persuade the government to change.
However, the government school citadel can be assaulted from a different
direction: by a direct appeal to parents. Government schools
cannot survive without parents choosing to send their children
to them. There is a constitutional right to choose a private school.
How
do we do this? By explaining to parents that private schools are
good for their children and government schools are bad for their
children. It’s that simple. If we can convince just a few percent
of families to switch over to private schools, momentum can be generated
and a snowball effect can result. With more students, private school
tuitions can decline because of economies of scale. With fewer government
school students, governments can be embarrassed into cutting their
budgets. Thankfully, some funding formulas are based on the number
of students. That will, we hope, lower taxes and put more discretionary
income into the hands of parents which will in turn encourage ever
further defections from the government schools. Lower taxes and
better education will also stimulate economic growth and provide
ever-greater discretionary income to keep the drive away from government
schools alive.
We
need to encourage educational entrepreneurs to start new ventures
in low-cost, but high-quality teaching. Web-based programs with
live video and audio feedback are a promising avenue to pursue.
How about a part-time school designed for part-time home school
students that would specialize in teaching subjects such as trigonometry
that are more difficult for parents to master? Such schools could
also provide sports and other extracurricular activities that parents
and students desire. A half-time school might charge tuition of
$2,500 per student, a figure within the means of many families.
Here’s
another free idea that can make a clever entrepreneur rich: a school
that accommodates various religions not by silencing them but by
offering instruction in them for those who desire it. In other words,
how about a school that offers religion classes for each sect at
some point during the week and where tolerance for religion is otherwise
encouraged?
Such
ventures will be encouraged if a movement away from government schools
can be jumpstarted.
I
propose a carrot and stick approach. First, we emphasize the benefits
of private schools. Then, we explain the many perils and pitfalls
of government schools.
Fast
Facts about Private Schools
- One in
four schools is a private school;
- One child
in nine attends a private school;
- Private
schools produce an annual savings to taxpayers estimated at
more than $48,000,000,000;
- Private
school students perform better than their public school counterparts
on standardized achievement tests;
- Ninety
percent of private high school graduates attend college, compared
to 66 percent of public high school graduates;
- Private
school students from low socio-economic backgrounds are more
than three times more likely than comparable public school students
to attain a bachelor’s degree by their mid-20s, meaning that
private schools contribute to breaking the cycle of poverty
for their students;
- Private
schools are racially, ethnically, and economically diverse.
Twenty-three percent of private school students are students
of color; twenty-eight percent are from families with annual
incomes under $50,000;
- Private
secondary school students are nearly 50 percent more likely
to take AP or IB courses in science and math than public school
students;
- The participation
of private school students in community service projects is
significantly higher than their public school counterparts.
This won’t
necessarily be pretty. Feelings will be hurt. That’s the whole
point. To wake people up to the damage they are doing to their
children by sending them to government schools! Ouch! I said it.
Let the hate mail flow like lava.
I
sometimes chide my friends who send their precious offspring to
government schools, "How can you send your children to a school
whose teachers can’t be fired unless they commit a serious felony?"
We
can likewise ask:
- How can
you send your children to schools with a propensity towards
violence?
- How can
you send your children to schools where drug use is rampant?
- Where
sex, drugs and rock and roll is the predominant cultural value?
- Where
test scores are low?
- Where
the dropout rate is high?
- Where
there’s a dumbing down of standards to accommodate the students
who don’t want to be there?
- Where
your children will sit next to students who are there because
their parents want a free babysitting service?
- Where
any positive mention of your religion is illegal?
- Where
teachers are frequently physically assaulted by students and
students are sexually abused by teachers?
I
am sure to be accused of foisting a guilt trip on parents. I
plead guilty to that charge. That’s exactly what I’m doing.
So
I say abandon hope all ye who seek to move our bought and paid for
state legislators to abolish the educational monopoly they created.
Instead,
join me in launching a guerilla war against the greatest obstacle
in the path of truly free, liberal and tolerant society: the government
school monopoly.
Schedule
an "intervention" with your friends and family who send
their children into the lion’s den. Exercise some tough love today.
They’ll thank you for it ten years from now.
This
will not be easy; but it will be a velvet revolution without
bloodshed. Libertarians must be committed to exhausting all avenues
of peaceful change.
Speaking
of which, you might start your harangue with the story of what happened
in Colorado on April 20, 1999….
April
21, 2007
James
Ostrowski is an attorney in Buffalo, New York and author of Political
Class Dismissed: Essays Against Politics,
Including "What’s Wrong With Buffalo." See his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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