April 30, 2003
Independent Institute Speech - Part 2
Peter
Brimelow and John Merrifield spoke at the Independent
Policy Forum Thursday, February 20, 2003. We’re
economically posting the
Brimelow portion of the
forum. For John Merrifield’s remarks, click
here.
David Theroux
Thank you
very much, John. My next speaker is someone who has been
a friend of mine for many years. Peter Brimelow is
currently a columnist for CBS Marketwatch. He’s a former
senior editor at Forbes. His new book is this one
right here, called The Worm in the Apple, which I
highly recommend to anyone here and beyond.
Peter was
born in England. He was educated at Sussex. He received
his MBA in the Bay Area here from Stanford University.
He’s also been a media fellow with the Hoover
Institution. He was a recipient of a Fulbright Award and
also a Stanford scholarship.
He’s
received numerous awards, including the Royal
Bank/Toronto Press Club Award. He’s also had quite an
extensive career in the media. He was a staff writer for
the Financial Post in Toronto, business editor at
McLean’s, economic counsel for Senator Orrin
Hatch, associate editor at Fortune. He’s a senior
editor at National Review, contributing editor at
Barron’s, and so forth.
He’s the
author of many other books, and his articles have
appeared in many top newspapers and magazines. I’m very
pleased to introduce Peter Brimelow. [Applause]
Peter Brimelow
Columnist,
CBS Marketwatch
Thank you,
David. Thank you, John. When do you want me to stop?
David Theroux
Half an hour
from now.
Peter Brimelow
Half an
hour! [Laughter] These people want to go to bed. OK.
David Theroux
Central
time. Oh, you’re on Eastern time.
Peter Brimelow
You know, at
the time of Nation of Risk, as John mentioned, in
1983, I was at Fortune magazine. And they came to
me. Fortune’s kind of a top-down operation, and
they came to me and said, "We have to do something about
the public school crisis, and you have write the story."
And so I said this was a very poor idea because I hadn’t
gone to an American school, obviously. And at that time,
we didn’t have children, so I had no first-hand
experience. And finally, it was summer and the schools
were shut. They replied, "This will make you objective."
[Laughter]
And guess
what? They were right. I approached the school system as
a financial journalist would approach any industry—the
baked bean industry, it doesn’t make any difference.
It’s a question of input versus output, which is, what’s
the best output to what the input is?
Now this is
completely and totally antithetical to the way the
education industry looks at itself, and for that matter,
the way most education writers that write about it.
Their attitude is: education is good, more education is
better. Education spending is good, more education
spending is better. They have no sense of margin
utility. Is that the term, John? Thank you. [Laughter]
So in the 20
years since Nation at Risk came out—you can argue
about results, which are basically flat. The test
scores, as far as we can tell, there’s been no dramatic
improvement since the Nation at Risk. But one
thing you can’t argue about is that the system is now
fantastically more expensive than it was 20 years ago.
Costs have gone up, in real terms, per pupil sort of
spending, has risen, adjusted for inflation, by
something like 40 percent. There are various ways of
measuring productivity, it’s an interesting concept. The
productivity is down 35 to 40 percent in this system in
just 20 years.
Now, this is
unique in the American economy. There’s no other area
where you see this continuous productivity decline.
There are never any productivity increases in education,
in spite of typewriters, television, computers, and
videos, which your children spend more time watching in
public schools than you may think. There’s never any
kind of productivity increases.
John’s
making the point that the experiments—and they are
experiments that are being conducted in vouchers—at the
moment don’t have clear results on the qualitative side
as far as the quality of the testing, the output goes.
Except maybe for African-Americans. There’s some
evidence it’s helped them.
But there’s
a secondary issue here, which is one of the principle
points I’m making in my book, These experiments are
cheaper. The kids are being turned out at lower cost,
and that’s an end in itself to me, as a financial
journalist, if you can get the cost down.
The Public School
System as a Socialist Industry
But the
problem—as soon as you look at the education system in
this context—what you realize immediately, of course, is
that we’re looking at a socialist industry. I used to
compare it to the Soviet farm system, which as you know,
turned Russia from being a grain exporter to being a
grain importer, and they experienced 70 years of bad
weather at harvest time. [Laughter] Then the Soviet farm
system went away, so we’re left with American school
system, which is still very much here. And there are
certain symptoms which you can always find.
One, there
is the politicized allocation of resources—decisions
about what’s going to be spent on are made through a
political process, not through any kind of a market
process. And that’s a big problem in terms of
efficiency. For example, generally speaking, for
political reasons we now mainstream handicapped
children. That’s fantastically expensive. It’s
responsible, all by itself, for about a third of the
cost increase. And it’s not clear that’s the best use of
resources, or that that environment is best for the
children.
The second
symptom of socialism is proliferating bureaucratic
overhead. I’ve got a lot of numbers about this in The
Worm in the Apple. Fifty years ago, there were three
teachers in the school system for every adult who wasn’t
a teacher. In other words, administrators, guidance
counselors, whatever they are, who weren’t in the
classroom, there were three teachers. Now the ratio is
almost one-to-one. There’s almost one non-teaching adult
in the system for every teacher. There are about half a
dozen states in the country where I find there are more
adults out of the schools in the education system.
They’re in the central headquarters and so on. They
never see a kid from one day’s end to another because
they’re entirely in the headquarters.
Another
symptom of socialism, the third symptom, is the chronic
mismatching of supply and demand. And in Russia, this
used to take the form of the left boot factory producing
more than the right boot factory did. [Laughter] In the
teaching system it’s gluts in various things, followed
by shortages. We’ve had a teacher shortage, and there’s
some evidence now we’re going to have a teacher glut in
California. It’s an endless cycle of chronic mismatching
of supply and demand.
A fourth
symptom of socialism, which you are all familiar with,
is the constant quest for top-down panaceas. There are
no solutions coming up from the bottom, so solutions
have to be imposed from the top. In the Soviet system it
took the form of plowing the virgin lands or using more
fertilizer, preferably financed with Western bank loans,
all this sort of thing. All these panaceas usually
involve more input.
In the
American school system, the government school system, it
takes the form of various fads that go through the
system, such as whole language, or open classrooms—or
closed classrooms, or just ajar classrooms, or any kind
of classroom. [Laughter] There’s an endless series of
fads like this. And this is inevitable in the system,
because that’s the only way you can get any change.
I have to
say I think the President’s plan of No Child Left Behind
is in itself a type of a fad. It’s equivalent to sort of
going out and shooting a few peasants to make them work
harder. And it will produce results in the short run,
but in the long run, I don’t think it is going to
produce results.
And a final
symptom of socialism is qualitative and quantitative
collapse, and that’s what we see in the system,
particularly on the quantitative side, on the cost side.
This is my contribution to the school debate, we should
be worrying more about costs. Forget about the output.
Let’s assume the output is constant, let’s just get the
cost down. And if you are a California taxpayer, you’re
going to be thinking this a lot in the next little
while, because basically over half of local spending is
the schools. And about 70 percent of that spending is
teacher salaries. That’s what’s driving the budget
crisis across the country.
The Teachers Unions
Now, having
taught about the apple, the education system, I’m going
to turn to the worm, the teachers’ union—the teacher
unions. You know, about 100 years ago, a number of
muckraking journalists, on whom I model myself, made the
discovery that there were these national corporations
starting to come into existence, and they were
essentially acting like monopolies. And they were
monopolies. Standard Oil and so on. And this was a bad
thing. And they called them trusts. In those days they
used to call monopolies trusts. Now what we have here is
a teacher trust. The way the union works is it attempts
to monopolize and restrict the supply of labor in order
to get the prices up. The teacher trust.
Now, it was
said back in the 19th century that the tariff is the
mother of trusts. Very important point. What it means is
if you could get imports, cheap imports coming in, they
would undermine a domestic monopoly. So the tariff is a
public policy that makes it possible for the trust to
come into existence. Similarly, I think the government
school system is itself the mother of the teacher trust.
It’s a political system, and it responds to political
action. And that’s what the teacher union is good at.
The National
Education Association has been around since the Civil
War, 150 years or something. But it was literally a
National Education Association most of its
existence. It only became a union in the 1960s. It was
actually illegal for public employees generally to
unionize until the 1960s. And that the reason it was
illegal is that even labor advocates like FDR and George
Meany at the AFL/CIO thought that it would simply create
a situation of impossible power, that you would have a
monopoly on top of a monopoly. You’d have a monopoly
supply of labor to a monopoly service.
In the case
of education, there’s actually a third level of the
monopoly, which is the compulsory attendance laws. The
consumers are forced to consume. So for that reason,
they felt that public employee unions, and particularly
teachers, were a bad idea. And they were right. It turns
out that 30 years later, this has been a disaster. It’s
created a monster.
But you know
this often happens in the economy. When you have a very
dynamic and fluid but also structured system like the
U.S. economy, it happens from time to time that there’s
kind of an institutional glitch and some group gets
itself in a position where it can extort rents. How
would you define rents, John? Basically, it’s money.
They can extort money from the rest of the system.
John Merrifield
Excess
profit.
Peter Brimelow
Is there
such a thing as an excess profit? Let’s not get into
that. [Laughter] Anyway, I mean, I’m old enough to
remember when this was the case with stockbrokers. Are
there any stockbrokers in the room? There was a time
when you couldn’t negotiate sales commission rates as a
buyer of stock. So these big institutions, like the
insurance companies, were buying these huge blocks of
stock and paying retail commissions on them, so it made
a lot of institutional salesmen very rich for a while,
until they were forced to start negotiating commissions.
I would say
another example—before deregulation, airline
deregulation. Another example, I would say, is the
plaintiff lawyers right now. The interaction of
contingency fees, on the one hand, and the tort crisis
on the other, the liability crisis on the other, has
made a lot of trial lawyers very rich. But the
interesting thing about all these glitches—eventually
people figure out what’s happened, they do something
about it, and they go away. And that’s what’s going to
happen with the teachers union, the teacher trust.
There was
actually nothing inevitable about this development, that
teachers would go to a sort of industrial union model of
organizing. At the very moment that they did it, it
turned out that the union movement was entering an
historic decline. Fewer and fewer Americans are involved
in unions in the private sector. It really is the public
sector that’s keeping the union movement going.
That’s a big
problem for the unions right now, by the way. They’re
having trouble keeping their membership growing. And one
of the reasons for it is that the Generation Xers simply
can’t relate to the idea of solidarity forever and all
this stuff. Some of the things that the union is
supposed to be protecting them against they just don’t
believe would ever happen. There was a time, for
example, way back in the ’40s and earlier , when
teachers used to have get permission to marry, and
things like that. Now no Generation Xer can even believe
this could exist. They think that’s out of the Stone
Age. So the union can’t very well pretend they’re going
to protect them against that. That’s the least of the
things that—well, best I don’t get into that. [Laughter]
The final
point I’d like to make about the teacher union, the
teacher trust, is it’s absolutely critically dependent
on legal privileges. It doesn’t come into existence in a
vacuum. Those legal privileges—I mean, the most
important was to be allowed to unionize at all in the
public sector. But basically you could divide them into
collective bargaining laws, on the one hand, and agency
fee laws. Collective bargaining means that if you’re in
a collective bargaining state, if you get enough
teachers together, you can compel the school board to
negotiate with you as the exclusive representative of
all teachers. That’s what collective bargaining is.
You’ve got it in California.
There’s also
agency fee. That means that once the teacher union has
got itself recognized as the monopoly bargainer, it can
then turn around and demand fees from even teachers who
don’t want to join the union. It can’t compel them to
join, but it can compel them to pay the fees, except for
some of the political contributions. That’s called
agency fee. You’ve got that in California, too. In fact,
it’s mandatory in California. It’s not even negotiable
here, that the CTA has got itself into a position of
extraordinary power. But was done recently. When I came
here in 1970, it wasn’t the case. Jerry Brown was
responsible for passing collective bargaining in the
public school sector.
And the
result of all this is that the inmates are running the
asylum. [Laughter] I have somewhere a quote from the
Hoover Institution’s Terry Moe about rules. Oh, here’s
the one I used this morning. The California legislative
analyst discussing the California situation. He said,
"Districts that enter into collective bargaining share
power with the unions over a wide range of decisions
that affect district education policies and the
distribution of district resources." In other words,
they just get control of every aspect of life.
Let me draw
back a minute and raise another question about the
education system. Apart from the cost numbers, which I
think are really fascinating, there’s another
interesting number about the way in which the government
school system works, which tells us a lot about what’s
going on, and that’s the dropout rate, or rather the
inverse of the dropout rate, the graduation rate.
Way back in
1900, about 6 percent of all 17 year-olds graduated from
high school. It was very unusual to graduate from high
school in those days. Most people dropped out, went to
work. After that it starts to go up, looking from left
to right, an exponential curve. By the Second World War,
about half of kids in that group, 17 year-olds, were
graduating from high school. But still, the fact is that
Hitler was defeated by a nation of high school dropouts.
The graduation rate continued to soar until 1968 or ’69.
It reached 77 percent, and at that point it stalled. And
it’s never gotten higher than that. Twenty-five years
later, it’s actually significantly lower now. It’s
declined to below 70 percent—68 or 67 percent.
Now this is
a fascinating datum, I think, and it can only be
explained in two ways. One is that there’s something
absolutely chronically wrong with the system because it
can’t do what it’s trying to do, namely, graduate all
the kids from high school. Or the second possibility is
that, in fact, the kids can’t be graduated from high
school. There’s a limit to the number of people you can
actually expect to graduate from high school.
I have data
in The Worm in the Apple which suggests that in
the early 1990s, of white kids with IQs below 75, nearly
half of them are graduating from high school. Now these
kids are on the verge of being technically retarded, but
they graduated from high school. What does this say
about the high school degree? That’s a really
fascinating question to me.
I mean, what
it means is that there’s never been a golden age in
American education where everybody graduated from high
school. The attempt to keep people in these big
comprehensive high schools until they’re 18, and get
them out at 18, has never, never worked. It’s
responsible for a lot of curious things. Occasionally
you’ll see people say that the quality of high schools
was much better back in the 1900s and so on. That’s
probably true, because the kids who were getting out of
high school were an academic elite. There weren’t
attempts to keep all these other kids in the system, and
generally having them stink up the halls and have fights
and all this sort of thing.
But there’s
another side of this as well, by the way. A teacher once
said to me that compared to when he and I went through
school—150 years ago—the big difference today, he said,
with his kids, was that kids are constantly falling
asleep in class. And the reason they’re falling asleep
in class is they’re working in the malls. The labor
force participation of 16 to 19 year-olds for Americans
is staggering. It’s like 60 percent. It’s three or four
times what it is in France or Germany.
Now it seems
to me that’s something that should be encouraged. They
should be sent out there to work if they want to work,
and maybe drop in and out of education later. Maybe we
should focus on getting the kids out of school earlier
and allow them to come back and to top up their
schooling later as they see fit. Now that’s exactly the
kind of thinking that the teacher union will not allow,
because they want more victims in the system. They would
like you all to be in high school right now. [Laughter]
And there’s
another aspect of this, which is the great expansion in
home-schooling. There’s somewhere between half a million
and a million-and-a-half kids being home-schooled at the
moment. It’s very hard to get exact numbers, but it’s
clearly vastly larger than it was 30 years ago.
Now that’s
come about because laws have been changed, which goes to
the critical importance of the legal framework in
education system. Parents had to be given the right to
educate those kids at home, and yet conform with the
compulsory education laws that exist in every state.
Now, I have
small children, and it’s impossible for me to imagine
educating these two children at home without murdering
them. [Laughter] Or, in the case of teenagers, being
murdered by them. [Laughter] But the answer is in
home-schooling they’re often not actually taught for
very long. Home-schools make it work because they teach
the kids for a couple of hours a day. In other words,
the moral of the story is, the substantive content of
education can be delivered much more efficiently, both
in terms of the hours of the day, and probably the years
in the school kid’s curriculum than it is right now.
Now, I’ll
quickly say something about what’s to be done. I see two
aspects to this problem. That’s your book, isn’t it? I’m
sorry. One of them is, we’ve got to clean the apple. The
answer is, clean the apple with market forces. There are
lots of proposals. John’s discussed a few. They’re both
an end and also a means, because they undermine the
power of the teacher’s union, the worm. If it can’t keep
you from marching in lock-step, and it doesn’t like
organizing lots of small units, its power is going to be
weakened.
But the
second aspect of what’s to be done is the worm itself
has to be extracted and exterminated. That means the
teacher trust has got to be busted. You’ve got to go to
the legal framework that governs that, in which the
teacher trust is rooted. In the end, in the last chapter
of Worm, I have about 25 proposals where this can
be done, ranging from very grand ideas to small ones.
For example, I don’t see why you couldn’t apply
antitrust theory to the teacher union, break it up into
separate states so it can’t mobilize across state lines.
Curiously enough, one of the things that the NEA
actually did when it became a union was to unify its
dues to compel teachers everywhere who joined any branch
of the NEA to join the national union. And it was very,
very unpopular. In fact, the Missouri teacher’s union
actually seceded from the NEA over it.
But there’s
a lot of other things that can be done, too. In the end,
it goes down to the collective bargaining laws. The
collective bargaining laws have got to be removed,
weakened, so that teachers don’t have to accept the
leadership of the union. At least so there’s competition
among representatives. In Texas, there’s actually a
profit-making organization that bargains on behalf of
teachers.
It happens
that in there are still two states in the union—North
Carolina and Virginia—where school boards are prohibited
from bargaining collectively. They’re not allowed to
bargain with teacher unions. Of course, you still have a
socialist system, and the union still exists, and it
confers, and it lobbies, and so on and so forth, and
people in Virginia think it’s very strong, but it’s
nowhere near as strong as it is here. And that’s
something which ought to be thought about.
Someone was
saying to me earlier, is there any hope for the system?
It seems to me there’s a lot of hope. I mean this is not
a stable system. It’s something that’s happened by
accident. It can be swept away. And if you have any
doubts about it—well, let me just tell you a story. In
the town in Connecticut where I live, recently they had
a lot of trouble getting the peasants to vote for a tax
increase, and so it kept getting voted down. And at one
point, the teachers actually picketed the commuting
drivers, and they had big notices, holding it up, saying
it’s about the children. Now of course, it’s not about
the children, it’s about the teachers. Specifically,
many teachers that don’t realize they belong to a union,
by the way, polls show. And the grander reason, I would
adduce, for being hopeful, is the Soviet Union
collapsed. Thanks very much. [Laughter] [Applause]
David Theroux
Thank you,
Peter. We have time for questions. And Carl will bring
the microphone by. How about the lady right here?
Audience Member #1
I wish the
panel had been a little bit more balanced. I found it
very much on the Right, and I just want to mention that
there are words you said nothing about —
David Theroux
By the way,
one question—was Bismarck right wing or left wing?
Audience Member #1
I’m just
commenting about contemporary politics. There are
languages other than the market for assessing policy
questions, for assessing what is to be done. I’m not
saying the Oakland schools are in great shape, but I
work there all the time as a researcher, and so does my
colleague here, and I don’t think the two of you have
spent very much time on the ground where the battles are
being fought.
David Theroux
Do you have
a question?
Audience Member #1
Yes, here’s
my question. What about democracy and the history of the
ideal, at least, of the common school which—in which
children from varied backgrounds, not just immigrants,
but social class has not been mentioned here, would come
together and learn democratic discourses in citizenship?
What about the ideal of a sense of the public and of
children as a collective responsibility and resource?
What about questions of inequality? We have wider income
gaps now than ever before in U.S. history.
So my
question is the following: Since the Reagan era, public
provisioning for families for caregiving and for public
services have deteriorated radically, funding for parks
and rec as well as schools, for example, and market
dynamics have expanded. There are some areas of the
world—and issues of care and education are some of
them—where markets don’t work as well as they may, for
example, in manufacturing. And my question is, what
about these wide inequalities? And if you were to have a
total market mechanism, as you are proposing, what would
happen to the 25 percent of children in Oakland who live
below the poverty line? Thirty-five percent in LA
County? The rich always get richer. They’re doing fine.
John Merrifield
They’d go to
functional schools.
Audience Member #1
I don’t
think that would be the case. I’d like you to address
inequality and justice and democracy issues.
John Merrifield
Well, I mean
I don’t really know what her question is, but there’s
nothing worse for poor children than the system that we
have now. [Applause]
Audience Member #2
Here, here.
Peter Brimelow
I think the
question is a fine illustration of what I said about the
way in which educators think. I mean essentially they
don’t view education as a business or an industry, they
view it as a religion. Somebody noted here that the fact
is that public schools are a relatively recent invention
in the U.S. They’re not more than just over 100 years
old. For most of the first 100 years of the Republic,
there weren’t public schools, there were private
schools. And they seemed to be pretty good about being
democratic. So I’m inclined to think that these things
can be delivered.
But we’re
not talking here about a pure market system. We’re
talking about a system in which there’s a very
substantial government subsidy to pupils, to students,
amounting, as John says, to somewhere up to $8,000 a
year. That subsidy exists, the question is what is the
most efficient way to deliver it.
David Theroux
By the way,
one book you might want to consult is a book by Joel
Spring called Education in a Corporate State, which is
basically about how the state system is designed to turn
out cogs in the corporate-state wheel for military
adventurist purposes, which is not exactly in a right
wing position. Other questions?
John Merrifield
Just one
other thing about the battle she’s fighting. The whole
idea of this is to not have those battles. Most school
things can be decided individually between parent and
school proprietor. We don’t all—we can’t, and we don’t
all have to agree on what should be taught and how it
should be taught.
Peter Brimelow
Well, yes, I
just did address an issue on that. I said there’s a
substantial subsidy to every student who is in the
public schools. The problem is most of that subsidy
right now goes to salaries. Maybe it should be spent
some other way.
John Merrifield
You have
administrators.
David Theroux
There’s
also, I think, a certain question about whether
collectivism and equality can go hand-in-hand, or
whether it’s basically a system of an elite ruling the
masses and forcing them to participate whether they have
any choice or not.
Audience Member #3
I may be
unique here. I have attended private and public school.
I have home-schooled. I have children who went to
private school and children who went to public school,
so I did it all. And I must say that I’m very impressed
with both of you two gentlemen and all that you had to
say.
I also serve
on the school board in my district. And I deal with
collective bargaining in a very real state, and it’s
horrible. I did not realize how difficult it was to deal
with the teachers union until I arrived with a majority
of teachers union supporters on my board.
My question
is you said that Texas was able to get rid of collective
bargaining, and that they have gotten rid of compulsory
fees or that they have a profit-making institution that
fights on behalf of the teachers. Did I understand that
correctly? And how can we in California get rid of
collective bargaining? Right now, it’s almost impossible
with a Democratic-controlled legislature and governor
who’s passing almost every bill they can. We dealt with
about 500 education bills, last year, at least that they
passed for us to deal with in education. So it’s an
overwhelming task for us. But I want to hear how we, in
this room, and including board members, what can we
do—because there’s another person that’s on the school
board with me that came. How can we get rid of
collective bargaining?
John Merrifield
Now, before
Peter answers that, let me just point out the contrast
between these two. She’s talking about battles, and she
just named them. How can we survive in a system where we
pass 500 new pieces of legislation? Of course those are
battles, and that’s exactly what’s destroying our school
system. The whole idea is to avoid that. I’m sorry.
Peter, go ahead.
Peter Brimelow
Texas is a
state where there are no collective bargaining laws, and
there are no agency fee laws—and you can’t strike as a
teacher. So the union is very weak in terms of its legal
power. And there’s a very large Texas independent
educators association, which is not a union. What I
think you were thinking of was North Carolina and
Virginia where laws have been passed that actually
prohibit collective bargaining. North Carolina prohibits
the school boards from engaging in collective bargaining
with a union. As to what can be done here, it’s really
just a mirror image of what happened in the 1980s when
they put collective bargaining through. I mean, most
people don’t even know what collective bargaining is. It
has to be identified as the enemy. It has to be made
into a political issue. That means that whoever does it,
for example, the Republican Party, is going to have to
show some backbone, which is a problem. [Laughter]
But on the
other hand, I grew up as a kid in England, where all the
major industries were nationalized. And they’re now
denationalized. And none of us expected that to happen.
It was just done because there was a strong political
leader, and because the economy was cratering. And the
education system was cratering, so we just need some
political leadership. And I recommend that you provide
it. [Laughter]
Audience Member #4
This
teacher, I have to thank her for bringing up a term,
democratization. I have a real issue with that term in
education because I’ve done all private school, public
school, home-school, and my goal as a parent is to nurse
my children’s mind and intellects, and I’m really more
concerned about civilizing my children instead of
socializing them, which goes along with democratization,
because socializing is to put them under the control of
a government.
But when I
go out and I talk about school choice, having written
the school choice initiative with Milton Friedman, I
find that there are so many people that don’t even have
a concept of what education is. There is no definition.
And isn’t that one of the first problems we have to
attack? What is education, and by whose standard are we
going to go along? Isn’t it in the end going to have to
be the parents who decide what the standard is for their
children?
John Merrifield
Right, but
that’s why we don’t want to politically decide that
question. We want to leave that up to individuals and
families.
John Merrifield
We can’t
politically decide, it’s not going to happen.
David Theroux
People, by
and large, who are interested in the concept of
democracy in education or any field, want basically to
have a system that’s responsive, that’s accountable,
that they have a say in, that is functional, and is one
that will reinforce the bonds of cooperation and
community and so on and so forth. Does this system do
that? That’s the question. How about the gentleman right
here?
Audience Member #5
Please don’t
throw hard objects, but I am a union steward, and I have
the distinction of going to one of the worst school
districts in probably the country, the Richmond Unified
School District, and one of the best in Benecia,
California. So I’ve seen both sides of the coin. And I
have a three-part question. I think you both gave a
pretty cogent explanation of the problem, but your
solutions were pretty far off.
First, as
far as the union, one possibility you didn’t consider,
what do you think of union empowerment? Because I think
it’s kind of a tired old fallacy that you’ve trotted
out, that the unions are these all powerful
organizations who are controlling the weather and
everything else. They’re actually not very powerful,
especially on the local level.
My wife is a
teacher and she has no control over what goes on in the
classroom. Things are fiated to her by the school
district, not by the union. The problem with our school
system is the peer culture in the school, and it’s not
the teachers. Your teachers have gone to school for an
average of five years. How would you deal with the peer
culture? That’s one question. And would you advocate
empowering teachers to kick out the one or two students
in every classroom, even in the good districts, that
take up all the teacher’s time?
The second
part of my question is, could you please, especially Mr.
Brimelow, explain to me —how does spreading yet more
taxpayer money to the private sector, instead of just
the public sector, how does that increase the sort of
capitalist laissez-faire system that you seem to be
promoting?
And my third
part is—well, I guess, I said it—the union. How would
the further empowerment of the union and the union being
given a chance hurt these reforms? You might not
actually have the enemy you think have.
Peter Brimelow
I’m not sure
what you mean exactly by union empowerment. As I said
earlier, I do think that is a big problem for the
system—that it’s trying to keep too many kids in school
too long who should perhaps be out somewhere else. And
that goes to the compulsory attendance laws, and the
length of time they require kids stay in school. I think
that we should definitely be looking at that.
I don’t know
that this is what the union wants, though. It seems to
me they want people to stay in school because they want
more clients. I’ve never seen a union representative
advocate that school attendance be actually reduced.
Now your
other question, I mean it’s just a question of economics
here. What we have here is subsidy that’s delivered by
the state to students. At the moment, it is delivered in
the form of government-owned buildings, and curriculum,
and so on. This is the direct equivalent of instead of
giving food stamps to the poor, having free
government-owned supermarkets. And it would not be
efficient. It’s more efficient to give out food stamps
and let the supermarkets compete for them. That’s the
essential argument for vouchers. There is the subsidy
given by the state, and the question is, what is the
most efficient way to deliver it?
John Merrifield
Interesting
contrast. You pointed out they’re not so powerful.
They’re powerful enough to keep the politicians making
the choices and the policies, but it’s true, the
politicians keep making bad choices and policies, which
you described. That’s the problem.
Click here for Part
2...