The
Camel's Head in the Tent
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
In politics
the greatest evil often comes from sources people least suspect.
Conservatives and Republicans, for example. They are now responsible,
through the most sly and underhanded means, of putting the federal
government in charge of certifying the rigor of the nation's public
high schools – an unprecedented power grab.
These are the
people who say they want to reduce government control over the country,
they trust the people to manage their own affairs, leave matters
to the states, and the rest of the malarkey we've been hearing for
about sixty years.
But you can
say that poison is apple juice and it will still yield death. And
the latest offerings from this conservative Republican administration
could certainly mean that for American education.
The evil originates
with the Republican Senate, in a 774-page education
bill that slathers another $3.75 billion on the public education
sector.
The spending
is not the news. Everyone knows that the government taxes us for
innumerable purposes in the guise of improving the quality of our
lives but only ends up feeding bureaucracies and special interests,
and contributing to the problem instead of the solution.
Nor is it news
that this is a step up in federal spending on education (once solely
a concern of the states and localities). The presidency has racked
up a frightening spending record in every area of life.
The statist
project is inconceivable without control over education, so it is
no real surprise that Republicans have fallen in love with the Department
of Education that they once promised to abolish. An administration
that thinks wiretaps and torture are an essential part of a sound
national defense would never let the people control their own educational
institutions.
Even so, even
for an administration and party intoxicated by the exercise of imperial
power, this is a new low. The measure gives $750 to $1,300 of your
money to "low-income" freshmen and sophomores who have completed
"a rigorous secondary school program of study" and even more to
those who major in math and science.
That is to
say, the feds will pay people to attend public schools they consider
"rigorous."
They say that
they will begin with half a million kids. For starters!
Ah ha, so who
precisely is to say what constitutes a "rigorous" program? Something
such as the wonderful institutions that have educated our nation's
illustrious bureaucratic class that manages our lives so well? Yes,
perhaps that rigorous: it will be the permanently employed
staff of the Department of Education.
What matters
is not their definition, actually, but their control. For the first
time in the country's history, we are going to do it in the Napoleonic
style: we will have the central government dictating to the nation's
high schools, deciding which are worthy and which are not.
Oh yes, the
mandarins at the Department of Education will "consult" with the
governors and the teachers lobbies and various education panels
– that means not you! – about what this means. In fact, what this
creates is a kind of Flexner Commission for high schools, precisely
like that monstrous turn of the previous century effort to cartelize
medical schools, which set us on the path to high prices and socialized
costs in medical care.
And yet, Ms.
Sally Stroup of the Education Department assures us that this is
not, repeat not, "an expansion of the federal role." How interesting
that she would so opine, since it so clearly is an expansion. It's
true that the schools themselves can decide not to seek the fed's
imprimatur, but that would mean losing money to others.
Terry Hartle
of the American Council on Education is exactly right: this is a
proposal to turn the Department of Education into a national school
board. The bureaucrats are already assembling their armies to come
to your local high school to administer strict oversight.
It is also
intriguing that the legislation seems to leave private schools and
home schools completely out of the picture. The legislation says
that the receiving students must be part of "program of study established
by a state or local educational agency and recognized by the secretary."
Not that private
schools and home schools should aspire to be on the take. They shouldn't.
But a program like this, on the margin, makes it even more difficult
for them to attract students. Not only are the public school students
getting free tuition but now the government is even willing to pay
them to go to school!
And what is
the idea that the federal government should be subsidizing math
and science specializations, as if it and not individuals in the
marketplace know best what skills are needed in society? Has anyone
done any math and science testing on the Senate itself?
There
are two priorities in education right now: one negative and one
positive. On the negative side, we must stop federal intrusion,
end the subsidies and school socialism, and arrest the tendency
toward dictatorial control.
On the positive
side, we should roll back control to the lowest possible levels,
privatize public property, repeal regulations, scrap compulsory
attendance laws, and free the market.
Unless I'm
overlooking something, no other agenda has a prospect for success,
not vouchers, not another school reform, and certainly not appointing
the federal government as Headmaster in Chief of the nation's high
schools.
This
bill isn't legislation yet. The Republican House has to sign on,
but it will. For this means more power and money and control, and
that's always and everywhere what the government wants, and will
get unless the public resists.
January
26, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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