Matt Yglesias recently suggested that LA Times editor Michael Kinsley intentionally hires dim-witted conservatives to write painfully dumb op-ed columns to help make the right look ridiculous. I was skeptical, but thanks to David Gelernter’s latest piece, I’m largely convinced that Yglesias was on to something.
Discussions of school choice and vouchers nearly always assume that public schools are permanent parts of the American educational scene. Increasingly I wonder why. Why should there be any public schools? […]
What gives public schools the right to exist? After all, they are no part of the nation’s constitutional framework. Neither the Constitution nor Bill of Rights requires public schools. And in one sense they are foreign to American tradition…. Today’s public schools have forfeited their right to exist. Let’s get rid of them.
Predictably, Gelernter offers the usual conservative tirade against public schools — they teach respect for diversity, they sometimes tell students about bad things America has done, etc. — but the substantive points are almost beside the point. Gelernter devoted an entire column, in one of the nation’s leading newspapers, to explaining why voucher opponents are right about conservatives’ policy goals.
For years, the school voucher movement has argued publicly that taking money away from public education to subsidize tuition at private schools is somehow good for public schools. Critics would point out inconvenient facts — such as the fact that the claim doesn’t make any sense — but proponents would insist they’re right.
Occasionally, voucher opponents would suggest that the ultimate goal of voucher programs is to ultimately do away with public schools altogether. Sensitive to political realities, conservatives would reject such talk as wild paranoia.
Once in a great while, a voucher advocate would let his or her guard down. For example, Jerry Falwell once slipped and said, “I hope I will live to see the day when, as in the early days of our country, we won’t have any public schools. The churches will have taken them over again and Christians will be running them. What a happy day that will be!” This, however, was a rare admission; most voucher advocates will at least pay lip service to the idea that public schools serve a valuable role and deserve public support.
We’re fortunate, therefore, to have Gelernter tear the mask off the charade with a poorly written rant that advocates the abolishment of public education. A special thanks to Michael Kinsley for allowing such inanity to appear on his op-ed page.