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  1. #1
    Quote Originally Posted by spoonitnow View Post
    I agree with your general sentiment that the kid is going to have an uphill battle, to say the least..
    Massively hyperbolic understatement. I prefer the term "hopelessly fucked for life". I think that's far far more accurate.

    However, if what you're arguing (that there is 0 chance) was strictly true, then there would be a 0 percent success rate for those kids. There's not.
    It's close enough to 0. I believe any evidence of a non-zero success rate is anecdotal. I'm also having a hard time envisioning how government would be driving any of these success stories.

    Additionally, I'm not talking about more school funding.
    Neither am I. I said "better funding", not "more".

    I'm talking about changing how the distribution of funding is determined by using free market principles. It's a freeroll.
    The free market says that a meritocracy should exist where people who are successful in keeping their community property values high through enhanced school programs, low crime rates, investment in business, increased amenities, and decreased pollution are entitled to the benefits of that success.

    It's not a freeroll to those people if the government takes their money and then gives it to other communities where people don't care about crime, where they don't invest in business, where they don't take care of their land, and where they openly shirk any sense of personal responsibility.

    There's a term for that and it's not "freeroll". It's actually called taxation without representation.
    Last edited by BananaStand; 01-09-2018 at 12:19 PM.
  2. #2
    spoonitnow's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    The free market says that a meritocracy should exist where people who are successful in keeping their community property values high through enhanced school programs, low crime rates, investment in business, increased amenities, and decreased pollution are entitled to the benefits of that success.

    It's not a freeroll to those people if the government takes their money and then gives it to other communities where people don't care about crime, where they don't invest in business, where they don't take care of their land, and where they openly shirk any sense of personal responsibility.

    There's a term for that and it's not "freeroll". It's actually called taxation without representation.
    I'm not sure if you understand how the voucher system works and how it doesn't work.

    Under the current system, a low-income parent is forced to send his or her child to school X. They have no choice. The representative funding for that child is given to that school directly from the government regardless of how that school performs. There is no incentive for the school to perform well.

    Under a voucher system, a low-income parent gets to decide to send the child to school X, Y or Z. They do have a choice. The representative funding for that child goes to the school that is chosen. This provides incentives for the schools to perform well to be competitive. Otherwise, they're out of jobs.

    This also creates an upward pressure in public education in general, which currently doesn't exist.
  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by spoonitnow View Post
    I'm not sure if you understand how the voucher system works and how it doesn't work.

    Under the current system, a low-income parent is forced to send his or her child to school X. They have no choice. The representative funding for that child is given to that school directly from the government regardless of how that school performs. There is no incentive for the school to perform well.

    Under a voucher system, a low-income parent gets to decide to send the child to school X, Y or Z. They do have a choice. The representative funding for that child goes to the school that is chosen. This provides incentives for the schools to perform well to be competitive. Otherwise, they're out of jobs.

    This also creates an upward pressure in public education in general, which currently doesn't exist.
    It's a nice dream, but there are so many "what if's" and "yeah buts" that I just don't see it being viable except in maybe a few locales.
  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    It's a nice dream, but there are so many "what if's" and "yeah buts" that I just don't see it being viable except in maybe a few locales.
    For example, how would vouchers help this situation?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarem..._New_Hampshire

    You're probably not familiar with the geography of Claremont, but it's WAAAAAAY the fuck out there, accessible by only secondary roads, surrounded by sprawling rural-ness.

    Their school blows. If you gave a parent in Claremont a voucher, what would he do with it?? Is he gonna commute to Newport to drop off and pick up his kid from school? How do we know that this school in Newport even has room for Claremont kids? Sure, you're saying "the voucher pays for the additional capacity". To a point that's true. But kids still have volume. They take up space. Eventually a school building will need to expand if enough kids come from out of town. School overhead increases....now your voucher money doesn't go as far. Who pays the difference??

    Are you gonna go back to the town of Claremont and ask them for the money? How could they pay it if they can't even afford to take care of their own school?? Does Newport pick up the bill? How is that fair? They were doing fine until all this Claremont trash came into town.

    And what if Newport high sucks too?? (it does). Are claremont families gonna commute even farther cause there is a better school in Keene?? Do they really care when ultimately a high school diploma is totally generic anyway? When was the last time someone asked what high school you went to as a measure of your academic credibility? Isn't it more likely that most of the Claremont families would just spend their vouchers on the school that's most convenient?

    So that puts us right back where we started. How does a voucher solve this problem?
  5. #5
    Could you imagine if the government told you which grocer to shop at and when you got there government employees gave you the food items it decided for you and garnished everybody's paychecks to pay for them? Anybody think that's crazy? Well that's similar to how k-12 education works right now.
  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    Could you imagine if the government told you which grocer to shop at and when you got there government employees gave you the food items it decided for you and garnished everybody's paychecks to pay for them? Anybody think that's crazy?
    It's less crazy when you consider that an apt analogy to education would also specify that the government is responsible for funding the operations of the farms and factories that produce the food.
  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    It's less crazy when you consider that an apt analogy to education would also specify that the government is responsible for funding the operations of the farms and factories that produce the food.
    I don't understand the point. Are you saying that governments are responsible for education but not responsible for feeding? If so, that's by law. Are you saying that should be the case by philosophy? If so, why the distinction? Why is the private sector good at feeding itself but not good at educating itself?
  8. #8
    spoonitnow's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    Could you imagine if the government told you which grocer to shop at and when you got there government employees gave you the food items it decided for you and garnished everybody's paychecks to pay for them? Anybody think that's crazy? Well that's similar to how k-12 education works right now.
    Yep.
  9. #9
    spoonitnow's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    For example, how would vouchers help this situation?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarem..._New_Hampshire

    You're probably not familiar with the geography of Claremont, but it's WAAAAAAY the fuck out there, accessible by only secondary roads, surrounded by sprawling rural-ness.

    Their school blows. If you gave a parent in Claremont a voucher, what would he do with it?? Is he gonna commute to Newport to drop off and pick up his kid from school? How do we know that this school in Newport even has room for Claremont kids? Sure, you're saying "the voucher pays for the additional capacity". To a point that's true. But kids still have volume. They take up space. Eventually a school building will need to expand if enough kids come from out of town. School overhead increases....now your voucher money doesn't go as far. Who pays the difference??

    Are you gonna go back to the town of Claremont and ask them for the money? How could they pay it if they can't even afford to take care of their own school?? Does Newport pick up the bill? How is that fair? They were doing fine until all this Claremont trash came into town.

    And what if Newport high sucks too?? (it does). Are claremont families gonna commute even farther cause there is a better school in Keene?? Do they really care when ultimately a high school diploma is totally generic anyway? When was the last time someone asked what high school you went to as a measure of your academic credibility? Isn't it more likely that most of the Claremont families would just spend their vouchers on the school that's most convenient?

    So that puts us right back where we started. How does a voucher solve this problem?
    Congrats on digging to try to find a cherry-picked case that has nothing to do with inner city schools in predominantly black neighborhoods. However, to your question, there would be a profit-driven motive for another school to be built in that situation.
  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by spoonitnow View Post
    Congrats on digging to try to find a cherry-picked case that has nothing to do with inner city schools in predominantly black neighborhoods. However, to your question, there would be a profit-driven motive for another school to be built in that situation.
    Wait, spoon is arguing and being sarcastic with himself now?
  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by spoonitnow View Post
    Congrats on digging to try to find a cherry-picked case
    Well it's a problem that affects the entire state of NH. One fiftieth of the country. That's a huge fucking cherry.

    that has nothing to do with inner city schools in predominantly black neighborhoods.
    So you would selectively implement this voucher program only in certain neighborhoods?

    However, to your question, there would be a profit-driven motive for another school to be built in that situation.
    By whom? With what money?
    Last edited by BananaStand; 01-09-2018 at 02:59 PM.
  12. #12
    spoonitnow's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Well it's a problem that affects the entire state of NH. One fiftieth of the country. That's a huge fucking cherry.


    So you would selectively implement this voucher program only in certain neighborhoods?



    By whom? With what money?
    1. NH is hardly 1/50 of the country by any measure.

    2. I would implement it in all neighborhoods. In your example you asked about, assuming it would change nothing is not sufficient reason to not switch to the voucher system.

    3. By someone who could profitably run a better school than what's available with their own money or with the money of investors. That's how free markets work.

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