C-Mag wrote:Speaker to Animals wrote:Okeefenokee wrote:Elections are a majority state and local affair, with only small oversight at federal level. No department of elections required.
Since you're saying education is about the same, we can get rid of the DOE and not lose anything.
Get rid of government schools, period.
The Founding Fathers were for Limited Public Funding for Education and 'Extreme Decentralization' of Education. Bullet points on their thoughts.
- Public Funding of Education for 3 years
- Private Funding thereafter
- Scholarships for the one best, pauper student for further education
- Staunch Proponents of Control at the local level
- Counties can vote to opt out of having Public Schools
- The right to vote should not be granted to people who cannot demonstrate basic literacy skills
Good enough for me.
https://www.libertarianism.org/publicat ... ion-part-1
The key to understanding the history, IMNSHO, is examining how state-approved education became compulsory.
Here's a quick and dirty freebie:
Education: Free and Compulsory
[T]he system relies on compulsion instead of voluntary consent.
Certain consequences follow. The curriculum is politicized to reflect the ideological priorities of the regime in power. Standards are continually dumbed-down to accommodate the least common denominator. The brightest children are not permitted to achieve their potential, the special needs of individual children are neglected, and the mid-level learners become little more than cogs in a machine. The teachers themselves are hamstrung by a political apparatus that watches their every move.
A tax-supported, compulsory educational system is the complete model of the totalitarian state
By enforcing certification for minimum standards, the State effectively, though subtly, dominates teh private schools and makes them, in effect, extensions of the public school system. Only removal of compulsory schooling and enforced standards will free the private schools and permit them to function in independence.
p. 16.
. . .
The individualist tradition on this matter was well presented in the early nineteenth century by Thomas Jefferson. Although an ardent advocate of public schools to aid the poor, Jefferson squarely rejected compulsion:
It is better to tolerate the rare instance of a parent refusing to let his child be educated, than to shock the common feelings and ideas by the forcible transportation and education of the infant against the will of the father.
p. 42.
. . .
Some Americans pride themselves that their educational system can never be tyrannical, because it is not federally, but state, controlled. This makes very little difference, however. Not only does this still mean the government, whether state or Federal, but also the educationists, through national associations and journals, are almost completely coordinated. In actuality, therefore, the school systems are nationally and centrally controlled, and formal Federal control would only be the crowning step in the drive for national conformity and control.
Another important source of tyranny and absolutism in the school system is the fact that the teachers are under Civil Service. As a result, once a formal examination is passed—and this has little relation to actual teaching competence—and a little time elapses, the teacher is on the public payroll, and foisted on the children for the rest of his working life. The government bureaucracy has fostered Civil Service as an extraordinarily powerful tool of entrenchment and permanent domination. Tyranny by majority vote may be unpleasant enough, but at least if the rulers are subject to democratic checks, they have to please the majority of the voters. But government officials who cannot be voted out at the next election are not subject to any democratic check whatever. They are permanent tyrants. “Taking something out of politics” by putting it under Civil Service certainly does “increase the morale” of the bureaucracy. It elevates them into near-perpetual absolute rulers in their sphere of activity. The fact that teachers are under Civil Service is one of the most damning indictments against the American compulsory system of today.
pp. 48-49.