Back to $chool: College Is the Past, Prison Is the Future
Tuesday, 02 October 2012 09:51
By Andy Kroll, TomDispatch | News Analysis
It was the greatest education system the world had ever seen.
They built it into the eucalyptus-dotted Berkeley hills and under the
bright lights of Los Angeles, down in the valley in Fresno and in the
shadows of the San Bernardino Mountains. Hundreds of college campuses,
large and small, two-year and four-year, stretching from California's
emerald forests in the north to the heat-scorched Inland Empire in the
south. Each had its own DNA, but common to all was this: they promised a
“public” education, accessible and affordable, to those with means and
those without, a door with a welcome mat into the ivory tower, an
invitation to a better life.
Then California bled that system dry. Over three
decades, voters
starved their state -- and so their colleges and universities -- of
cash. Politicians siphoned away what money remained and spent it more on
imprisoning people, not educating them. College administrators grappled
with shriveling state support by jacking up tuitions, tacking on new
fees, and so asking more each year from increasingly pinched students
and families. Today, many of those students stagger under a heap of
debt as they linger on waiting lists to get into the over-subscribed
classes they need to graduate.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
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