The corporate "Playbook" on how to destroy public education
Richard Eskrow from Campaign for America's Future describes how the corporate "playbook" to destroy public education works. Rahm Emanuel is following it to the T:
1.
Pretend that “budgets” are the real crisis – but never mention that
corporations and the wealthy are paying less in taxes than ever before
in modern history.
2. Make scapegoats of innocent people to draw attention away from
yourselves. For Social Security they’ve attacked “greedy geezers,” but
it’s hard to come up with a catchy equivalent for kids. (“Insatiable
imps”? “Avaricious anklebiters”?) So they vilify teachers instead.
3. Sell a fantasy which says that the private sector can do more,
with less money, than government can. (Never, never mention that
private insurance provides far less healthcare than public insurance, at
much higher cost. And don’t bring up the mess privatization’s made of
prisons and other government services.)
4. Find a name that doesn’t use words like “money-making.” How about “charter schools”?
5. Describe yourselves as “reformers” – rather than, say,
“demolishers.” That’s why “entitlement reform” is used as a euphemism
for cutting Social Security and Medicare. (Michelle Rhee even called her
autobiography “Radical.” Apparently “Shameless” was taken.)
6. Employ the political and media elite’s fascination with (and poor
understanding of) numbers. Suggest that “standardized” and “data-driven”
programs will solve everything – without ever mentioning that the truly
ideological decisions are made when you decide what it is you’re
measuring.
7. Co-opt the elite media into supporting your artificial description
of the problem, as well as your entirely self-serving solution.
8. Use your money to co-opt politicians from both parties so you can
present your agenda as “bipartisan” – a word which means you can “buy” a
few “partisans” from both sides.
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