The Right-Wing Machine Behind ‘School Choice’
Think public-school teachers are bad and vouchers are good? You may be prey to a well-funded stealth campaign.
By Rachel Tabachnick
September 13, 2012
In June 1995, the economist Milton Friedman wrote an article for the Washington Post promoting
the use of public education funds for private schools as a way to
transfer the nation’s public school systems to the private sector.
"Vouchers," he wrote, "are not an end in themselves; they are a means to
make a transition from a government to a market system." The article
was republished by "free market" think tanks, including the Cato
Institute and the Hoover Institution, with the title "Public Schools:
Make Them Private."
While Friedman has promoted vouchers for decades, most famously in his masterwork Free to Choose,
the story of how public funds are actually being transferred to
private, often religious, schools is a study in the ability of a few
wealthy families, along with a network of right-wing think tanks, to
create one of the most successful "astroturf" campaigns money could buy.
Rather than openly championing dismantling the public school system,
they promote bringing market incentives and competition into education
as a way to fix failing schools, particularly in low-income Black and
Latino communities.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
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