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ranbotrader
Membre depuis mai 2012
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A laissé un commentaire sur l'article :
>The State's Education Monopoly Increases Prices and Destroys Choice - Ron Paul  - Charleston Voice - 
"advertising deludes customers" - that is what happens in an election campaign and it is the perfect reason why political advertising should have a small cap (say $50,000 per candidate). That way decent candidates could compete on a level playing field but it would not suit the same manipulators who claim that consumers do not know what is good for them. What a joke!

Your comment on schools reeks of somebody not involved in the sector and hence having little understanding of the sector:

Firstly, the reason there are shortages of teachers in some disciplines is that teachers are paid rates bordering on laborers. The result is that the best and brightest do not go into teaching but migrate to where the money is: the financial markets. This leaves the few die hards and a lot of mediocre dead wood teachers who are not capable of delivering content other than of the most basic sort. So you get what you get.

Secondly, schools for those able to pay (the rich) are well staffed with the best teachers taken from the public sector. No second rate education here. This leaves the public sector with what is left. Facilities in private schools are also the best money can buy. Paints a sad picture of how people and their families are worked over by the haves doesn't it!

If you really believe that kids are taught only what the state believes useful then perhaps ask why climate change is gaining a foothold. This is the most toxic of all curriculum to the state as big business does not want to be held accountable for its destruction of the planet. So you'd think that the state would prohibit schools from teaching or debating the topic. My understanding is that they don't.

If the author of this article had his way then schools could teach anything they wanted. Some would throw out Math, science and computing and replace with the Arts and feel good crap. Great education. Good for nothing other than starvation in a modern world too. Good call!!

So anything which restores some 'balance' and fairness can only be applauded, even if state controlled. And as far as relaxing education standards on teachers I ask would you let Johnny the Blacksmith operate on you? If we take the open market rhetoric on board then maybe we do in the interests of driving down prices for medical services. But then, just like education, the rich would end up with the real doctors and the poor would end up with Billy.

Nice article but my take is that it is more crap than reality.


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Début de l'article : This selection is taken from Chapter 5 of Ron Paul's new book The School Revolution: A New Answer for Our Broken Education System. The free-market principle of open entry is challenged by governmental restrictions on access to consumer markets. There are many official justifications for these restrictions, but the main one is this: “Customers do not know what is good for them.” They do not know what products to buy, what prices to pay, or... Lire la suite
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