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- Path: sparky!uunet!meaddata!johnt
- From: johnt@meaddata.com (John Townsend)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
- Subject: Re: Chelsea's school ...
- Date: 12 Jan 1993 20:43:58 GMT
- Organization: Mead Data Central, Dayton OH
- Lines: 49
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1ivaieINN5ck@meaddata.meaddata.com>
- References: <nate.1049@psygate.psych.indiana.edu> <C0pHsC.9Ev@unix.portal.com> <1isp3cINN5em@meaddata.meaddata.com> <nate.1056@psygate.psych.indiana.edu> <1iurihINNs2t@meaddata.meaddata.com> <nate.1058@psygate.psych.indiana.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: skibum.meaddata.com
-
- In article <nate.1058@psygate.psych.indiana.edu>, nate@psygate.psych.indiana.edu (Nathan Engle) writes:
- |> johnt@meaddata.com (John Townsend) writes:
- |> >Hmm. Last I checked, we had the best damn military in the world, and it was
- |> >precisely because the competition between the many private defense contractors
- |> >has resulted in a significant technological edge over our adversaries. You're
- |> >not such a racist that you think Americans are just naturally smarter and
- |> >better fighters than anyone else, are you?
- |>
- |> No, but I think you've changed the subject on me. We were previously
- |> discussing (and IMHO agreeing) that it would be very unwise to use more
- |> than one "defense provider" to serve the needs of our country. I have no
- |> qualms about the prospect of competition between providers of materials
- |> for use in education, however I have a big problem with the idea of
- |> taking money that is currently earmarked for public education and giving
- |> it indirectly to a bunch of private schools.
-
- Here, you agree (I think) that private competition has had the effect of
- providing a high-quality defense system.
-
- |> >IMO, the ideal solution to the education problems would be to completely
- |> >privatize the entire system. Schools could be privately operated, and paid by
- |> >local and state governments out of tax monies on a per-student basis. Some
- |> >regulation, such as standardized testing, would be necessary, as it is with any
- |> >public utility. This really isn't much different in principle from the voucher
- |> >system that President Bush proposed.
- |>
- |> I agree. That's why I would oppose that solution as well.
-
- Here, you disagree (I think) that private competition would have the effect of
- providing a high-quality education system.
-
- What is the distinction? I think if you could just get past the notion that
- "private" means "religious," as far as education goes, you'd see that it makes
- a lot of sense. The government contracts private organizations with tax money
- for all kinds of things, from roads and bridges to utilities to public trans-
- portation to lawyers, why not education? Why should government be in the
- teaching business any more than any other service? What's more, not everyone
- has the same idea of what's best to teach, and when to teach it, for their
- children, and rightly so. There is no way that a single school system can
- please everyone. How can you justify discriminating against a certain set of
- parents by forcing them to pay double for the education of their children in
- a manner consistent with their own philosophy, be it religious or otherwise,
- which is their right?
-
- --
- // John Townsend "I thought I was Legal Conversion Engineering
- // Mead Data Central wrong once, but johnt@skibum.meaddata.com
- // 8891 Gander Creek Dr. I was mistaken." ...!uunet!meaddata!johnt
- // Miamisburg, OH 45342 8-} (513) 865-7250
-