Bush’s
Education Plan
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
Republicans
are cheering Bush’s education bill, but they should ask themselves
this critical question: why is Teddy Kennedy smiling?
What
American education needs is not another federal reform bill. We
need a revolution to end what has been called the "twelve-year
sentence," also known as public school. In this system, everyone
is taxed whether or not he has kids, and parents are enticed to
take advantage of the free service by surrendering their children
to the government to teach and raise.
At
government school, kids are subjected to relentless political propaganda,
develop the habit of deferring to government authority, and are
alienated from the adult world. What is taught and how are the subjects
of endless political controversy and social division, and the kids
get stuck in the middle. Some schools are worse than others, but
all of them are worse than they would be if they were private.
That
said, is Bush’s bill a good one? We can’t rule out the possibility
that a federal bill could take a step in the right direction. It
could curb union control of the teacher’s profession. It could stop
mandating what is taught and how, giving more authority to local
school districts. It could end menacing court supervision of the
racial makeup of schools. It could curb the power of the unconstitutional
Department of Education, or, better yet, abolish it.
Alas,
Bush’s bill does none of that, which explains why Teddy likes it.
As the New York Times sums it up: "President Bush proposed
a significant increase today in the federal role in public education."
What else do you need to know?
Think
of this: for the first time in the history of the United States,
the federal government will impose a national test to determine
what kids learn. The test is called the National Assessment of Education
Progress. For now, it is a means to measure overall scores within
schools, not individual students. In effect, Bush is taking what
he did as governor in Texas and applying it to the country.
This
is one of the hazards of having a governor as president. He once
demanded federalism (freedom from central control) in order to be
able to govern, but as president, he forgets about federalism once
the central power is in his hands. We are told this is necessary
to provide accountability and flexibility. Nonsense. When have the
feds ever provided either? This bill means conformism and regimentation.
Listen
to the language: we are told that this bill will seek out "failing
schools." What does that mean? That the bricks are disintegrating?
If students aren’t performing well, why not admit that we are dealing
with failing students and failing teachers? Already, a lack of personal
responsibility is built into this approach.
Schools
in Texas dealt with this by reformulating their teaching methods.
Now, teachers teach the test. They drill and they drill until 90
percent of the kids can pass it. The weakest among the students
dictate the pace and method. It is a dreary and unimaginative approach,
which guts the collective experience of hundreds of years of teaching.
But if your goal is to boost overall scores, no question: this is
the way to do it.
What
happens to superior students? They are shuffled off to supposedly
advanced classes to mark time learning about the environment and
such until the next school year rolls around, and they can move
on to the next level. In short, this plan limits the performance
of good students in the name of ballooning the scores of the worst
students.
Bush’s
approach is supposed to be conservative and Republican because it
introduces the idea of vouchers. If the "schools fail"
again and again, the students are permitted to take the equivalent
of the federal subsidy and use it at private schools.
Stop
right here and think about this: the federal government will be
giving direct aid to private schools via individual students. This
is the policy nightmare that conservatives before about 1985 had
warned about for generations. And yet here it is, coming to fruition
under a Republican president. To Republican cheers!
There
are legions of policy experts on the Right who will tell you that
Bush’s idea is the educational equivalent of the Second Coming.
But they are wrong, dead wrong. Federal aid to private schools is
a disaster. The budget will grow and grow, and evil bureaucrats
in the federal government will have their fingers in the affairs
of private schools, overriding state laws and the independence that
parents demand of these schools. It short, it spells catastrophe,
if not with this president, certainly with the next Democrat who
comes to power.
The
Bush people refuse to say how much this big-spending, big-government
proposal will cost, always a bad sign. But it will certainly be
in the billions.
The
only saving grace is the education savings plan that would permit
parents to spend up to $5,000 per year for tuition and not pay taxes
on the money. No word yet on whether that would apply to homeschoolers
and whether the school chosen by the parents would have to be federally
certified in some way.
And
one wonders what kinds of strings will later be attached to the
use of this money. What kinds of information will the IRS demand
to permit you to use this provision? Homeschoolers in particular
will be very wary of using these accounts if protections for their
independence are not guaranteed.
Any
lover of freedom must favor any measure that permits parents to
keep more of their own money. But such deductions also raise the
danger that the tax system is being used for social planning. Why
not just increase personal deductions and be done with it? That
way parents can spend the money on whatever they want.
Can
someone who is close to this guy remind him of the main lesson of
political history: in the long run, government power is never constructive,
but destructive of all that is decent and good.
January
26, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits a daily
news site, LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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