Open Thread - Wed. July 29,2016 - Neo-liberal Commoditization of Education

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Good Morning 99%'ers. Today's Open Thread topic in another in the series on neo-liberalism. For those who may be interested in previous essays on this subject, here are the links to those essays.

Week 1 - The Curse of Neo-liberalism
Week 2 - Neo-liberalism Part 2
Week 3 - The Neo-liberal Myth of Meritocracy
Week 4 - Characteristics of Neo-liberalism
Week 5 - Neo-liberalism - Obama and the Clintons
Week 6 - Neo-liberalism - The Legacy of Bill Clinton
Week 7 - Neo-liberalism - Lack of Empathy
Week 8 - Overview of the Impacts of Privatization
Week 9 - The Rule of the Market
Week 10 - Effects of the Neo-liberal Push for Deregulation
Week 11- Cutting Expenditures for the Social Safety Net

In one of my first essays in this series on neo-liberalism, I referenced an excellent article titled What is Neoliberalism? This article was written by Elizabeth Martinez and Arnoldo Garcia and published by Corp Watch. This article provided an excellent definition of neo-liberalism as well as a listing of the five characteristics of neo-liberalism. Among the five characteristics of neo-liberalism is the cutting of public expenditures for social services and reducing the safety net for the poor.

CUTTING PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR SOCIAL SERVICES like education and health care. REDUCING THE SAFETY-NET FOR THE POOR, and even maintenance of roads, bridges, water supply -- again in the name of reducing government's role. Of course, they don't oppose government subsidies and tax benefits for business.

Today's essay will attempt to focus upon the neo-liberal goal of reducing the government's role in public education. This is a subject that I have been avoiding tackling because I am not sure I can do justice to it. I am not nor have ever been an educator, nor is any member of my family. So I hope those who have far more expertise in the educational system than I do will feel free to weigh in and expand upon this essay.

In researching the history of public education in the United States, I found this little nugget that points out how our educational system has been transformed from a system in which teaching children learning skills that they can use for the sake of learning more about the world around them and becoming creative, ciritical thinkers into training children for jobs determined to be necessary for the workforce. Prior to the adoption of this concept, children were taught a wide range of skills that they could apply across a large number of occupations without being specifically trained for specific work force demands. This allowed children to move up through the education system with more flexibility in future career choices or further educational pursuits. It also allowed children to develop their creativity and problem solving skills.

The new concept of education was based upon the idea of students developing what is known as 21st Century Skills. This represented a shift from developing creativity and critical thinking skills to promoting conformity and rote learning. The arts, music, humanities and similar subjects were cut from many school budgets as funding dollars became more scarce.

Beginning in the 1980s, government, educators, and major employers issued a series of reports identifying key skills and implementation strategies to steer students and workers towards meeting the demands of the changing and increasingly digital workplace and society. 21st century skills are a series of higher-order skills, abilities, and learning dispositions that have been identified as being required for success in 21st century society and workplaces by educators, business leaders, academics, and governmental agencies.

In 2010, author Gillian Russom wrote the following in the International Socialist Review regarding Obama's continuing the neo-liberal assault upon public education.

Education should be at the center of a national debate on social priorities, led by a president who promised “change.” Instead, the economic crisis is being used by the White House to dramatically accelerate a neoliberal agenda for education, going far beyond what George W. Bush’s administration was able to do with its No Child Left Behind (NCLB) policy. With Arne Duncan, a political operative with no formal training in the field, as education secretary, the administration has aggressively promoted an education program with three principal elements: using test score data to evaluate teachers, shutting down and “reconstituting” schools deemed to be failing, and expanding privately-run, mostly non-union charter schools. Other elements include the standardization of curriculum and the lengthening of the school day. This agenda is supported by a nearly unified front of the powerful—Wall Street, Democrats and Republicans at all levels, and many non-profit organizations.

If we examine the highlighted portion of this excerpt, there are three main components to the Obama administration education plan. Let's examine each of these components and their effects in the real world.

1) An emphasis upon a standardized curriculum and testing, the results of which would be used to evaluate teachers and schools. The emphasis upon testing has become a very controversial topic with parents and teachers often on one side and legislators and private testing corporations on the other. A two year study of schools in big cities showed that the average student is subjected to an average of 112 standardized tests over the course of their school life through the twelfth grade. The time lost taking such tests ranged between 20 and 25 hours per year.

In Florida, standardized tests are used to assign a grade of A through F to schools within the public school system statewide. Those schools that score well are rewarded with additional state funding dollars. Since there is a high correlation between student performance on the tests and their family economic status, schools located in well to do areas get richer while poor schools are often deprived of additional resources necessary to catch up.

2) Closing of "failing" schools which were often located in poorer neighborhoods. According to a report, the most common reasons for closing "failing" public schools are these:

- Move to Smaller Charter Schools - Districts often choose to replace large public high schools that they have closed with small charter schools. The move is meant to benefit students because charter schools often achieve better results on measures of student achievement than large, traditional public schools.
- A Chance to Clear Out Underperforming Teachers - In New York City, the new replacement schools are only required to consider for employment 50 percent of the qualified teachers who lost their jobs in the old school’s closure. Thus, closing a school can be one way for a city to clear out teachers who are not producing adequate results in terms of student achievement.

3) Promotion of charter schools, most of which are privately run and staffed with non-union teachers. Charter schools have been promoted as a solution to all of the problems in education. But are they? Several studies have been done to try to compare the performance of charter schools versus public schools and overall the results are inconclusive.

Some charters do better; the majority do the same or worse. CREDO also moved beyond individual student performance to examine the overall performance of charter schools across multiple subject areas. They found that while some charter schools do better than the traditional public schools that fed them, the majority do the same or worse. Almost one-fifth of charters (17 percent) performed significantly better (at the 95 percent confidence level) than the traditional public school. However, an even larger group of charters (37 percent) performed significantly worse in terms of reading and math. The remainder (46 percent) did not do significantly better or worse.

And is it even about improving our education system at all or is it just another way for neo-liberalism to suck more money from the taxpayers?

Education markets are one facet of the neoliberal strategy to manage the structural crisis of capitalism by opening the public sector to capital accumulation. The roughly $2.5 trillion global market in education is a rich new arena for capital investment.5

In the United States, charter schools are a vehicle to commodify and marketize education. Charter schools are publicly funded but privately operated. They eliminate democratic governance, and, although they may be run by nonprofit community organizations or groups of teachers or parents, the market favors scaling up franchises of charter school management organizations or contracting out to for-profit education management organizations that get management fees to run schools and education programs.

Not one of these features of the Obama administration's Race to the Top education program takes in to consideration the needs of individual students. Instead, it sees education as a series of inputs and outputs which must be measured and tested. Commoditization of education devalues its role in humanizing our society which is brilliantly summarized in this essay titled The Destruction of Education. The author draws out a great analogy between the results of commoditization of our education system and the characteristics of corporate capitalism.

In short, when education is commoditised, it ceases to play the role of making students curious, or inquisitive or excited by the exposure to the grand world of ideas. It makes them look upon education as a capsule which they must imbibe so that they can command a better value on the job market. Commoditisation of education destroys creativity, originality, and any desire to go beyond the given, among the students. Since going beyond the given is the hallmark of creative thought, commoditisation of education destroys creative thought. And interestingly, such commoditiSation proceeds at a much faster pace, with far greater virulence in the so-called “newly-emerging” countries like India than even in the traditional bastions of capitalism, the metropolitan countries. This is partly because the former are characterised by a much more aggressive, socially climbing, and politically weighty urban middle class, and partly because, the slate being “cleaner” in the former, new “characters” can be written with much greater ease upon them.

The other implication of commoditisation of education is to make its products, the “educated”, into socially insensitive and completely self-absorbed entities, incapable of any sympathy for the toiling masses. This characteristic in fact comes particularly easily to the “educated” in a society like ours which has been marked by millennia of caste oppression and institutionalised inequality, and where looking upon the toiling masses as “inferior” is almost a habit acquired from birth.

Children and their teachers are simply cogs in a corporatized education system. A commoditized education system is not one that fosters lifelong love of learning nor a quest for great enlightenment.

Renowned educator, Diane Ravitch weighs in.

As we have seen again and again, the corporate education industry is eager to break into the U.S. public education and turn it into a free marketplace, where they can monetize the schools and be assured of government subsidization. On the whole, these privatized institutions do not produce higher test scores than regular public schools, except for those that cherrypick their students and exclude the neediest and lowest performing students. The promotion of privatization by philanthropies, by the U.S. Department of Education, by rightwing governors (and a few Democratic governors like Cuomo of New York and Malloy of Connecticut), by the hedge fund industry, and by a burgeoning education equity industry poses a danger to our democracy. In some communities, public schools verge on bankruptcy as charters drain their resources and their best students. Nationwide, charter schools have paved the way for vouchers by making “school choice” non-controversial

In 2012, the always quotable Henry Giroux wrote an op-ed in Truthout titled Can Democratic Education Survive in a Neoliberal Society? I have plucked just one powerful paragraph from Giroux's op-ed, but I highly recommend that everyone go to the link above and take the time to read it.

In this conservative right-wing reform culture, the role of public education, if we are to believe the Heritage Foundation and the likes of Bill Gates-type billionaires, is to produce students who laud conformity, believe job training is more important than education, and view public values as irrelevant. Students in this view are no longer educated for democratic citizenship. On the contrary, they are now being trained to fulfill the need for human capital. What is lost in this approach to schooling is what Noam Chomsky calls "creating creative and independent thought and inquiry, challenging perceived beliefs, exploring new horizons and forgetting external constraints." At the same time, public schools are under assault not because they are failing (though some are) but because they are one of the few public spheres left where people can learn the knowledge and skills necessary to allow them to think critically and hold power and authority accountable. Not only are the lines between the corporate world and public education blurring, but public schooling is being reduced to what Peter Seybold calls a "corporate service station," in which the democratic ideals at the heart of public education are now up for sale. At the heart of this crisis of education are larger questions about the formative culture necessary for a democracy to survive, the nature of civic education and teaching in dark times, the role of educators as civic intellectuals and what it means to understand the purpose and meaning of education as a site of individual and collective empowerment.

What I see from all of this is the same ideology that permeates all neo-liberal thinking. It is all about competition in the marketplace. Sadly, in the case of education, our children and their futures should not been treated as commodities.

The neo-liberal states, through the use of standards, assessments, and accountability, aims to restrict educators to particular kinds of thinking, thinking that conceptualizes education in terms of producing individuals who are economically productive. Education is no longer valued for its role in developing political, ethical, and aesthetic citizens. Instead, the goal has become promoting knowledge that contributes to economic productivity and producing students who are compliant and productive. Blackmore summarizes that "educational policy has shifted emphasis from input and process to outcomes, from the liberal to the vocational, from education's intrinsic to its instrumental value, and from qualitative to quantitative measures of success"

The idea that the marketplace staffed with de-skilled teachers teaching the test so that students become competitive little cogs increasing the output to score well is dehumanizing and fails to address the social growth that our schools have helped to provide for our children. It also fails to promote a vibrant, diverse, and individualized way of educating our children instead of just creating little bots tailored to fit into the labor market demands of the neo-liberal oligarchy. Our children are human beings and individuals, not commodities. And they deserve better.

As always, this is an Open Thread, so feel free to comment on whatever is on your mind today.

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the desired generation of automatons and led to the openess of the 1960s and early 1970s. This clearly was not in the interest of those who control the political economy and its Prole Watch Committee. When the time was right, meaning enough politicians had been bought, capital struck the public schools and its weapon was charter schools and the testing movement.

("In the dreariness of the Eisenhower 1950s, you'd hitchhike 1000 miles to see a friend"...Gary Snyder)

The universal, and interminable, testing of students is driven mainly by the profit motive: These tests are copyrighted and their use brings privatized public funds and puts money in the pockets of those who hold the copyrights. It also produces "failure" and allows neolibs and paleoconservatives to close public schools and replace them with for-profit charter schools.

Universal free public education is one of the USA's successes. Being universal, the total amount spent is rather large and presents a source for neoliberals to skim money from the system. A disaster like the hurricane that devastated New Orleans gave them a chance to ruin an entire school system for their profit and they did.

A couple of things I'd like to add to your excellent essay: Bill Gates and Microsoft grew large and rich mainly from buying up the competition and not from intellectual innovation. And now this Wealther, wants to rid America of public education so the 1% can continue their parasitism on the majority.

There is the chance for students to opt out of this testing regimen and New York and, especially, Washington state have had significant numbers do so. There is organized resistance to for-profit testing - with a high percentage of those tested engineered to fail - and if you have kids in school, or know families with public school students, we may need to tell them of this option.

Your observation that education is being commodified is very apt. The neoliberal agenda features many sectors that produce nothing, but support the system: planned obsolescence; advertising and marketing, public relations, etc. These are needed to keep the neoliberal economy afloat but in reality, "an economic system in which such costs are socially necessary has long since ceased to be a socially necessary economic system."

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

gulfgal98's picture

As always, duckpin, your comments add so much to the substance of discussion. I really appreciate your reading, commenting, and adding excellent points to this series.

This particular essay was probably the most difficult one for me to write because it is so painful to see what is being done to the future of our children for the same of enhancing the wealthiest among us.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Thanks for the kind words - I look forward to your essays and read them carefully.

I never thought I would see the day when public school teachers were singled out as overpaid villains that are a drain on American society. Teachers have been underpaid in relation to the education required when compared to other professions. It's not unusual for a school teacher to spend his/her money to buy classroom supplies because there is little money available from the local government.
Also teachers have been subject to forced unpaid work at family nights and various ball games and other school functions.

I think the attacks on the public school teachers and the public schools themselves indicate the loathsomeness of the neoliberals.
Pubic schools deserve both an evening out of resources and a raise in appropriations. This concerted attack is an attack on the children and their future as well as the teachers and schools.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Puke.

This entire election has made it crystal clear that progressives have no place in the democratic party.

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Haikukitty's picture

Although, I don't know why. When shit is rigged in your favor, you don't need to court the peons. But still, just for appearances sake, I'd have expected a VP pick who was more nominally progressive and less obviously corporate.

I guess even expecting such a small, meaningless concession to the base is ridiculous.

Never Hillary, for real.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

that many of Bernie's supporters, except for a sizable number of millennials. (I'm basically regurgitating what's been said at POTUS Channel, BTW.)

I take MSM reporting with a huge grain of salt, but on this type of 'process' stuff, they are often correct.

They've been saying that her VP pick would be between Kaine, Vilsack, and Warner--all DLCers.

Posted a WaPo Editorial and link recently at EB--even the Editorial Board admitted that the Dem Party Platform is one that FSC can easily run on, since it's only marginally more progressive than her own policies.

I don't have a crystal ball, but I expect that her rhetoric will veer sharply to the right as soon as the Convention is over.

They report that FSC's Campaign was angry that they didn't get an endorsement sooner. So, they plan to go after disaffected Repubs, and hope to garner just enough Millennials to win.

If she does win--and I'm not convinced that she will--it will be a loooooooooong 4 years!

Hey, excellent OT!

Mollie


“I believe in the redemptive powers of a dog’s love. It is in recognition of each dog’s potential to lift the human spirit, and, therefore, to change society for the better, that I fight to make sure every street dog has its day.”
--Stasha Wong, Secretary, Save Our Street Dogs (SOSD)

National Mill Dog Rescue (NMDR) - Dogs Available For Adoption

Misty May - NMDR

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

Lily O Lady's picture

care about us. The goal, I think, is a realignment of the party.

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

gulfgal98's picture

Out of a whole array of disgusting Vice Presidential possibilities, these two are among the most disgusting. It shows just how prepared the Clintons are to betray us even further and rub our noses into it.

This entire election has made it crystal clear that progressives have no place in the democratic party.

I never thought I would be saying this, but I hope to high heavens the Republicans will take her down.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

be counted on to deliver a pro-corporate vote when it's needed?

I agree with you: This is another example of the corporate Democrats giving the finger to those who put people before profits and sustainability before short term profits.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

They're both just god awful. I guess it doesn't matter. Even Bernie as VP wouldn't get me to vote for Clinton.

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a disaster for the planet and for traditional agriculture.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

martianexpatriate's picture

I wasn't expecting much from the VP pick. Honestly I'm glad it wasn't Warren. If it had been Elizabeth Warren it would have been a horrible waste of talent.

In the future, Warren could run as President and potentially win. I don't think having her as VP pick would have been a good idea, there are too many what if's.

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Haikukitty's picture

And found this - although I don't know how accurate it is:

Kaine, a Roman Catholic, is for religious reasons privately against abortion,[64] but opposes overturning Roe v. Wade. On his 2012 Senate campaign website he says, "I strongly support the right of women to make their own health and reproductive decisions and, for that reason, will oppose efforts to weaken or subvert the basic holding of Roe v. Wade."

Kaine asserts that he has encouraged policymakers to focus on bringing down the number of abortions by reducing teen pregnancy through abstinence-focused education, ensuring women's access to health care and contraception, and promoting adoption.[65] He supports some legal restrictions on abortion, such as requiring parental consent and banning late term abortions in cases where the woman's life is not at risk.[66]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Kaine

Doesn't matter, I'm not voting for her (or him) but nevertheless am always looking for the slightest bits of hope in our inevitable Queen's administration.

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gulfgal98's picture

her running mate and no way in hell would I ever vote for her.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Haikukitty's picture

with the coronation.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

gulfgal98's picture

or later this month. Some of us in Florida who have primaries in August are waiting to Demexit after them.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Just biding my time...

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Haikukitty's picture

the most. The loss of education is ultimately going to be at the root of this country's downfall.

The corporate powers think they only need worker robots, but in order for us to progress and thrive, we will always need critical thinkers and innovators, and we are creating a system where they are no longer nurtured or created.

Once again, the short-sightedness of the neoliberal worldview. It's a damn crime to deprive generations of children of the absolute joy of learning to learn for its own sake, and learning the skills to keep learning throughout their lives.

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gulfgal98's picture

This was a very difficult essay to write. One of my biggest concerns is that the way our education system is being forced to structure itself to meet workforce demands is how it leads our young people to view themselves and other human beings as commodities to be marketed. For me, I am not sure I can adequately express it is in words, but here goes. It means that there is a coarsening of how human beings view other human beings and a potential lessening of our humanity. Competition and the marketplace becomes supreme. I am of the firm belief that the arts and humanities strongly contribute to what makes and keeps us humane in the dog eat dog world that neo-liberalism has created and now controls. We seem to be rapidly losing that.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Haikukitty's picture

Even in a commodified world where we all have to be wage slaves to survive, arts and humanities education offers a balm for the soul, something to feed that "humanity" (a word I'm not sure is even appropriate!) in us despite the deadening effect of one's daily grind. Art/literature/music and the education to truly appreciate them/produce them/enjoy them can offer a mental escape from the drudgery. It really says something to me that they want to take away even that.

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Thanks for your essays gulfgal98, I hope everyone reads your links. Love the people's comments here too. Thanks a lot.
This did happen as all predicted last week. CalPERS posts worst year since 2009, with slim returns

California’s largest public pension fund made a return of less than 1% in its most recent fiscal year, the fund’s worst performance since 2009.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System said Monday that its rate of return for the year ended June 30 was just 0.61%. What’s more, Ted Eliopoulos, the pension fund’s chief investment officer, said the poor year has pushed CalPERS’ long-term returns below expected levels.

“We have some challenges to confront,” Eliopoulos said during a conference call. “We’re moving into a much more challenging, low-return environment.” [...]

Former CEO of CalPERS is sentenced to prison for his 'spectacular breach of trust'

May 31,2016

A federal judge Tuesday sentenced the former head of the California Public Employees' Retirement System to 4 1/2 years in prison after the former chief executive acknowledged accepting more than $200,000 in bribes and trying to steer investments to help an associate.

Senior U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer called the case against Federico Buenrostro Jr., head of the nation's largest public pension fund, “seriously troubling” and said it reflected a “spectacular breach of trust for the most venal of purposes, which is self-enrichment.”

Buenrostro pleaded guilty to fraud and bribery charges two years ago, saying he started taking bribes around 2005 to try to get CalPERS staff members to make investment decisions that helped Alfred Villalobos, an investment manager and former board member of the pension fund.[...]

Please follow the links that's what my ellipses mean, I only quote three paras not necessarily the best quotes. Because I'm almost dumbstruck, almost I can still make copy pasta, thanks Internets. Now for news from the other end(?) the students:
Santa Rosa City Council prepares to declare homelessness emergency

[...] “We need to stop slapping Band-Aids on it and figure out how to cure the damn disease,” Carnahan said.

Santa Rosa Junior College English professor Michael Hale said he sees the toll homelessness takes on his students every day.

“I see them sleeping in their cars, I see them struggling to be focused,” he said, repeating estimates that as many as 800 SRJC students may be homeless. [...]

One solution is already available to all since years, three decades in fact.
Free Software, Free Society

Free software is software that gives you the user the freedom to share, study and modify it. We call this free software because the user is free.

To use free software is to make a political and ethical choice asserting the right to learn, and share what we learn with others. Free software has become the foundation of a learning society where we share our knowledge in a way that others can build upon and enjoy.

Currently, many people use proprietary software that denies users these freedoms and benefits. If we make a copy and give it to a friend, if we try to figure out how the program works, if we put a copy on more than one of our own computers in our own home, we could be caught and fined or put in jail. That’s what’s in the fine print of the license agreement you accept when using proprietary software. [...]

Be careful this links to a large file that may not stream correctly on our non-free devices. /good example
Richard Stallman explains free software at TEDx Geneva.

If you can spare 13minutes great! Or jump to the 10minute mark and see tell me if Richard makes sense to you about Free software in education. To me it does but first I had to understand Free as in freedom, not price. It's a mind stretch for many USians (just the United States) I think that is so ironic. Granting government monopolies to first Apple, then Microsoft, now Google has produced a bunch of "intellectual" property that must now be "protected" by the US military via free trade deals. That is where it stands today, threatening war over Mickey Mouse patents and Silicon Valley's sunk costs in their proprietary cloud applications.)
Let the awakenings continue. Thanks.

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gulfgal98's picture

and I went to all of them except the video which I will view later.

The problems with CalPers pension system and with homelessness probably have the same root cause and that is the greed behind those who control the money. In a country as wealthy as the United States, there is no excuse for any human being to be forced into homelessness and there is no reason why we cannot take care of those who worked all their lives and paid into a pension plan. AS I posted before, the State of Florida pension system lost $62 billion in the great recession. That money was stolen by the big banks in their casino operations that risked many private investors' money and that of pension funds.

There is a still a lot of funky stuff going on by the big banksters and the ones who suffer are the innocent citizens at the bottom of the meritocracy chain.

Thank you so much for reading and commenting.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

lack of prudent reasonable investing by those who oversee the CalPers system.

For years, making 6% to 8% on prudent bond investments - treasuries, corporation, and munis - was not hard. When bond yields fell from 17% to 5% it was hard not to make more. Now, with microscopic returns on AAA bonds and Ginnie Maes, a pension fund or a university endowment has to ramp up the risk profile to approach 5% and with many exotic instruments, high fees are charged.

It's the low interest rate environment that makes prudent investing nearly impossible if you need a 7% rate of return. It's better to be safe and prudent and accept less than to risk your entire fund when you've taken on too much poorly understood risk. That may mean some peoples' pensions are lowered, and if there's a law that says they can never be lowered, you're placing the trustees of the system in an untenable position. Not all fund managers are venal although many are, and have been over paid.

It's a tough environment because of the secular stagnation monopoly capital tends toward. It's a low growth world and the neoliberal imperative is grow or die. (Too often it's grow and kill.) There are villains to be sure but some of the fund managers have made good faith efforts. (Chrahst, I never thought I'd be in the position of having to defend them.)

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Just piling on this article from 2012, here in Sonoma County pensions are a yuge part of budget. Thanks.

'Double-dippers' rake in public money

Police officers who retire from most Bay Area cities draw their pension from the state Public Employees' Retirement System, or CalPERS. If they go back to work for another agency that is a CalPERS member, they can only collect their pension for a few months -- then it's frozen until they actually retire.

But if they find a new job at a government agency with a separate pension plan, such as Alameda County, one of 22 independent county retirement systems in the state, they can double-dip. There, they can still get their monthly CalPERS check and their county pay, plus contributions toward a future county pension. San Jose's stand-alone pension system lets Lansdowne and others do the same thing.

"There is no law against working for a non-PERS-affiliated employer and still earning a (CalPERS) pension," said Brad Pacheco, a CalPERS spokesman. [...]

Lawmakers couldn't fix the problem because it was "too hard".

State lawmakers considered limits on double-dipping across retirement systems during their pension reform discussions but they proved to be too difficult to achieve because county retirement agencies have a great amount of independence, said Mark Hedlund, a spokesman for Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento. "It just got to be too unworkable."

Former North Bay Assemblyman Joe Nation said something needs to change to stop public officials from receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars a year through double-dipping.

"This is something that people are generally going to find outrageous," said Nation, who studies public pensions at Stanford University. [...]

Needs a Free software solution, something the public owns and maintains in the commons. Until then well here ya go:
How to Double Dip Your CalPERS Pension

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A few federal jobs, firefighting, law enforcement, have age limits and the employee has to retire or get another federal job to keep working. I think the age is 57 now and it used to be 55. It's to keep a young and vigorous workforce. If the firefighter, say, gets a job in the private sector and works his/her 40 quarters to get vested into Social Security, his/her SS pension is reduced by approx. 70% via the Pension Offset law.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

gulfgal98's picture

I know because it affected me and will affect even what I would receive should my husband pre-decease me. I worked for years on Social Security and got in the necessary 40 quarters. Then I went on the city retirement plan and when I retired, my normal SS payment was significantly reduced due to my having a city retirement. This reduction even affects a widow's benefit despite that fact that my husband has paid into SS his entire career. I am not crazy about it, but I understand it.

The state of Calif. can enact a similar measure that penalizes double dipping.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

I think your SS payment should have the cap lifted should you lose your spouse. Your income will be significantly reduced even though you did the prudent thing and worked a post-retirement job. I can understand it now but I can't support it should the above come to pass.

California can stop double dipping. My guess is that the state is still afraid of the prison guards union and won't do it. Since CA has too many prisons and too many prisoners (and too many guards therefore) it will be a societal plus.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

enhydra lutris's picture

private sector is cool, however. It is seen as bad in the public system in part because "it's our money", and in part because of all the LEOs who get to retire quite young who do it.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

hecate's picture

with the public-school system predate the invention of the notion of neoliberalism.

The current US public-school system was deliberately based, back in the 1800s, on the Prussian model—"free and compulsory," bristling with "tests," designed to produce obedient workers and soldiers, imbued with love of god and country. Defective, therefore, from the start.

Then, commencing in the late 1950s and early 1960s, the wingers set about methodically undermining the public-school system in reaction to Brown v. Board of Education and Engel v. Vitale; the former put children with melanin in the schools, the latter took Jesus out of them. For more than fifty years, the wingers have strived, without respite, to return to a world where their children, in their schools, do not have to sit next to children with melanin, and can freely fellate Jesus in the classroom, and all the live-long day. They've pretty much succeeded.

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Haikukitty's picture

I had some great teachers who focused more on discussions and critical thinking then on rote testing. (Also had some horrible teachers...) Sure, our education system was FAR from perfect, but it has gotten much worse.

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gulfgal98's picture

I agree with her. What is now happening is a going backwards after having made much progress. I can say this because I grew up in a segregated school system. Integration was a great thing, but one of the effects of the current neo-liberal commodification of our schools is a de facto return to segregating our schools.

In my youth, I attended only three schools: one elementary, one junior high, and on high school. All three schools dated back to the 1920's or earlier. Two of the three, my elementary and my junior high schools, have been closed.

So yes, the system was not perfect, but it is rapidly sliding backwards.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

gulfgal98's picture

I was away all morning and have not responded to the comments as a result. I will be reading and catching up on them the rest of today. Thank you to all who have commented thus far. I admit that I do not have the background on this subject so I deferred to quoting a lot of people who do.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

hecate's picture

aren't always expert. I value reading what you yourself think.

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gulfgal98's picture

Your comment means a lot to me.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Don't wish this upon anyone it is awful. But how symbolic, out of every orifice.
Norovirus strikes the Republican National Convention

CLEVELAND -- A terrifying word circulated Tuesday at the Republican National Convention: norovirus.

A dozen staffers in the California delegation who had arrived in Cleveland early have fallen ill with the extremely contagious virus, California GOP chairman Jim Brulte said.

The virus causes extreme vomiting and diarrhea and has been known to spread explosively through people in closed places, such as cruise ships, schools and nursing homes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. [...]

Thanks California.

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hecate's picture

only get worse. Skeletor is scheduled to speak tonight, and will no doubt drag into the hall some of the toxic algae that is plaguing Florida.

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At the 2016 Conservation Tillage and Technology Conference, Spiese shared the results of his recent study, which found a significant correlation between DRP loads and the number of acres planted with herbicide-tolerant genetically engineered (GE) crops (which are heavily sprayed with Roundup).

“For every acre of Roundup Ready soybeans and corn that you plant, it works out to be about one-third of a pound of P coming down the Maumee [watershed and into Lake Erie],” Spiese told Sustainable Pulse.16 Spiese also found that glyphosate is capable of releasing phosphorus from the soil and conducted studies to see what happens when soil samples were applied with phosphorus and then sprayed with glyphosate.

Some of the samples showed significant phosphorus release, with “hot spots” likely contributing a significant amount of DRP. Sustainable Pulse reported:17

“Based on the average two glyphosate applications growers make every year, Spiese estimates that overall, 20 to 25 percent of the DRP runoff is caused by glyphosate. But depending on the location within the watershed, that percentage could be much lower or much greater.”

I'd link to follow the lobby money but too weary at the moment nenni ekki.
Edit: added back the footnote links.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

I found this interesting, looking at California I don't know about the rest: Political Disclosure States State Links for Viewing Political Contributions

From the CA link downloaded a couple PDFs to see contributors like this one: California Advocates. I forgot I started with the evil of Monsanto already that's how propaganda works on me, the best words win! lol

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Monsanto is running amok internationally and its poisoning of the biosphere and the political process needs stopping. Traditional farmers, growing many crops for their local markets in the global south, are being displaced so plantation style for-export crops can be grown even though it leaves the people food insecure for the first time.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Lookout's picture

are not designed with children in mind. Sit down, be quiet, read the dark black words, sit in a row (like the factory worker, mill weaver, or corn plant), get in line, don't talk, .... We couldn't hardly have designed a system more unlike a child's biology and natural learning tendencies. If you haven't seen it, try to catch Moore's movie "Where to invade next". He goes to Norway to look at schools. Watch the students in that segment. They're building stuff, growing things, cooking.

After decades in the classroom I have much more to say, but it's summer in the south and the jungle grows. There have been several good studies out recently. I'll drop a couple here -

What GAO Found http://www.gao.gov/assets/680/676745.pdf
The percentage of K-12 public schools in the United States with students who are poor and are mostly Black or Hispanic is growing and these schools share a number of challenging characteristics.

From MI - which schools have financial problems? Those mostly of color and poverty
http://www.education.msu.edu/epc/library/papers/documents/WP51-Which-Dis...

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

gulfgal98's picture

between a child's ability in school is the income of his or her family. As per usual, politicians are placing the blame upon teachers for not solving the ills of society that the politicians themselves have created.

Thank you for your comment and the links you have provided.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

of the kids on reduced or free lunches. When parents, both or single parent, have to work, often at irregular schedules, how can they spend the needed time with the kids helping with homework or just reading to them?

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

EyeRound's picture

to reading your essay, GG, and you have not disappointed. This is a great essay that introduces readers to a wide-ranging and crucially important topic. You've opened the door to further comments, so I hope I can add mine here.

Charter schools are unquestionably the worst example of the "public-private partnership" (which HRC supports)--because they do so much to limit the development of children's intellect. As Hecate points out, such limitation has been part of our concept of education for a long time, now, going back to the 19th century. But only recently has business laid such a broad claim to ownership of education.

I would add a bit of a focus-shift to what you've written about: namely that the crackdown on primary and secondary education that now culminates in charter schools has been matched by a virulent crackdown on post-secondary education, which began to intensify in the 1970's. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover infamously opined that American colleges and universities were suffering from "too much democracy" as evidenced in the student activism of the 1960's. In the 1970's the Trilateral Commission issued a paper on higher education recommending that US colleges eliminate "value-oriented faculty" and replace them with "policy-oriented faculty." This dealt a blow to the teaching of critical thinking. At the same time faculty was being dealt with more and more as "employees" or "human resources" that serve at the pleasure of the college administration. At the same time many more women were earning post-graduate degrees and entering the market as prospective professors, thus doubling the workforce while the number of jobs available stayed the same. [Capitalism repeatedly uses women in its attempts to regulate the price of labor, alternately inducting them into the labor force and forcing them out of the labor force as needed to keep wages as low as possible.]

The combined effects of these and other incursions in the structure of our colleges served to further censor what faculty taught, researched and wrote about, producing curricula that increasingly served the goals of the monied interests who held college purses strings and who had no interest in promoting the educational values described in GG's essay.

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gulfgal98's picture

There is so much more to this than what I wrote, obviously. I do try to keep these posts from being too long so that people do not doze off while reading them. LOL Seriously, I purposely chose not to address post secondary in this essay because there are some other issues such as student loans as well as large private endowments that come into play. I may venture into that hornet's nest sometime in the future though. The bottom line is our educational system is less about real education and more about what the oligarch wish to serve their own purposes.

Thank you again for your great comment.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mimi's picture

over 600 educational facilities, most of them private educational institutions. Erdogan says they are related to Fethullah Gülen and therefore share responsibility for the coup. Academics are not allowed to leave the country, Academics, who live overseas are asked to return to Turkey asap. Foreign academics, who teach in Turkey, are investigated for potential relations to Fethullah Gülen. It has been announced that 1577 Deans of universities are demissioned. Open positions in educational institutions are given to Erdogan followers. 60,000 governmental and public sector employees have been arrested or suspended from their positions. (Sources is the "Deutschland Funk.) Paraphrasing and translations my own.

German CSU-politician for foreign policies Hans-Peter Uhl said forces in Turkey are not accepting to join into Erdogan's lead into an authoritarian state. He says that he fears another, second coup, of "another quality" that will be caused by Erdogan and seems to be unavoidable. He warns of a refugee crisis coming out of Turkey.

Turkey blocked access to Wikileaks. Wikileaks had published emails from the leading AK Party.

Apparently not many folks are worried about this development. May be everybody is sleeping on the wheel, or may be they are all blogging about Trump and Hillary and Bernie while driving. That usually leads to some unforeseen crashes on the highway...

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mimi's picture

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Lenzabi's picture

Keep scaring folks GG! The fact that the exposed Neo-liberal agenda essays you are writing can scare people is a compliment! Wink

People really need a fire under their butts so that they will act and make the moves to fight this horrifying despotic agenda by the Neo-liberals, their allies the Neo-cons, and the corporate oligarchy that has usurped control over the nation and the world.

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So long, and thanks for all the fish

gulfgal98's picture

The more I learn researching this stuff, the more it scares me too! Shok

Thank you, Lenzabi!

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

riverlover's picture

This is thy type of oddly religious and cultural educational setting promoted by the Clintons. I do not believe they are madrassas, I have heard wingnut mutterings, but so what? More funneling children in low-income areas into charter schools.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

mimi's picture

Public Enemy No. 1: A Visit with Fethullah Gülen, Erdogan's Chief Adversary
He said in the end of the interview:

So what happens next? Erdogan is demanding that the United States extradite Gülen, but he hasn't yet filed an official request and Gülen doesn't believe he will be extradited. Erdogan, he says, has no evidence to show the Americans. "The US justice system works. The Americans won't turn me over if there isn't a tangible reason."

His praise is more than idle. With permanent resident status, he says he likes America a lot and feels at home here. Indeed, he has even taken up an interest in American politics.

"Hillary Clinton is a good woman," he says. "She is a figure of hope for this country."

Makes sense that he says that, no ?

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enhydra lutris's picture

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

gulfgal98's picture

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

In case anyone is interested in reading more about neoliberalism as it relates to the relationship between the government, private industry, and the global economy, David Harvey has a short, albeit somewhat academic, treatise on the history of neoliberalism, titled A Brief History of Neoliberalism. There's a lot of overlap with the information that you've provided in the last twelve weeks--particularly since there is a strong dialogue between the work of scholars like Giroux and Harvey--and some of the information is dated since it was first published back in 2005, but the critique is solid and is a good supplement to more accessible texts like Frank's Listen Liberal.

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gulfgal98's picture

Thank you for recommending another resource. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy