(tyr_13): "I brought it up, along with asking you to support why, firstly because I honestly didn't think you'd support private police and the like, and secondly to discuss the why of how those fields are different. I did not envision you dodging by ignoring why free market forces might work well for some things, but not for others, by denying that free market forces don't work with some things."
Ummm:...(rebuttal deleted)
Seems to me, I clearly acknowledged a role for the State in some cases.
Just not for police, military, schools, etc
1.
Across the US, State and local governments have adopted policiess which give to the NEA/AFT/AFSCME cartel an exclusive position in receipt of the taxpayers' age 6-18 education subsidy. The cartel's school system qualifies as a monopoly.
No it doesn't. That's simply incorrect and a huge network of Catholic schools proves it
2. And you're attacking unions here, not public schools, so it's a red herring as well as being incorrect
3.
(Malcolm): "4, 5, 6. The question was: (tyr): "...do you apply that reasoning (funding schools through user fees) to road construction and maintenance? Why or why not?", and the answer is a qualified "yes". These services do not benefit from performance by public employees and they do benefit from funding through user fees (vehicle weight taxes and gas taxes)."
(tyr_13): "Well that's both wrong and dodging the context."
Generally, the US Department of Transportation, and State and local governments hire private contractors to construct roads. Often, road maintenance also is put out to bid. User fees (in the form of fuel taxes and vehicle weight taxes) support these projects. What's "wrong" or evasive?
You aren't even trying to address the objects I laid out before. Why do you not want private companies
in control of those choices and not simply bidding on already selected choices?
4None of those are paid for only
5 in user fees, and one of the reasons I used multiple examples is that some of them can supplement with types of user fees that don't work as well with schools. People benefit from roads, even ones that they don't use directly, and people also benefit from a high level of education for most of the population even if they don't interact directly with them
6.
tyr_13 said:
Malcolm said:
tyr-13 said:
How are the college teacher unions fundamentally different from high school unions? You want to hand wave holes in your reasoning as disagreements, but that isn't a matter of opinion.
Dunno 'bout "fundamentally". The University of Hawaii Faculty Assembly is an NEA subsidiary. The biggest difference between K-12 and post-secondary schooling is that the State (government, generally) does not compel attendance at post-secondary schools. The federal government subsidizes college attendance through vouchers and grants that students may apply toward tuition at independent or Church-operated universities (user fees, basically). Most US States restrict students' use of the taxpayers' post-secondary education subsidy to schools operated by government employees.
And look, it still has the problems you dislike of K-12, and it has limitations that I've been pointing out which would be more problematic at the K-12 level than they are at college level!
To vague to address.
You mean you have trouble following your arguments too?
7
(Malcolm): "8. I do not know which policy tyr intends by 'your proposed system'."
(tyr_13): "The one you listed."
Please link and quote this list. It's a simple question: what list? Which method? Which system?
You again claim ignorance of your
own position
8...
In most US States, school district policies and State statutes or case law restrict most parents' options for the use of the taxpayers' age 6-18 education subsidy to schools operated by dues-paying members of the NEA/AFT/AFSCME cartel. Abundant evidence supports the following generalizations:
1. As institutions displace individual parents in educationsl decision-making, overall system performance falls, and
2. Political control of school harms most the children of the least politically adept parents.
It seems you're trying to make yourself hard to understand.
9
In general, at any given level of tax support, any expansion of parent control, in any dimension, will enhance overall system performance. Some policy options exclude others, and different policy options offer different advantages and disadvantages. We could discuss the relative merits of virtual schools within the government system, tuition vouchers, and education tax credits, if participants to this discussion refrained from imputing malign intent to other participants to this discussion.
Probably not. You've tried in other threads, but it just turns into you repeatedly linking to economic theory, cherry picking a couple of studies, and hand waving objections
10.
Going off against child labor laws and unions doesn't help. Most people give up because of how inaccessible the discourse becomes. That leaves only a couple of people even bothering to try to read through your posts until even we give up trying to have a discussion with such deliberate obfuscation, blatant dodging, and disingenuous context removal.
11
I'm not keen on your recommendations. I have one for you though,
Amartya Sen.
12.
Even public education functions as a market, despite your claims of monopoly, and again, it's a misapplication to claim that your claims from above, would be making it a market where there isn't one.
13Trying to understand what you're saying is exhausting.
1. Try "Just not for police, military, baked goods, etc." One of these is not like the others.
We discussed when user fees might support services that State (government, generally) agencies currently provide. I recommend the Brookings study
Vouchers and the Provision of Public Services. In earlier school-related and healthcare-related discussions I posed the following questions:
i) From State control or subsidy of which industries does society as a whole benefit? You may imagine either a dichotomous classification: A=[x:x is an unlikely candidate for State control (or subsidy)} and B={x:x is a likely candidate for State control (or subsidization)} or a continuun
(Highly unlikely) -1______.______+1 (highly likely)
ii) What features of an industry determine its classification or position on the continuum?
In various forms, we keep returning to this issue. When do user fees make sense for police (security) services? Never? Obviously not, as private contractors in fact make a living supplying security services. We agree that a State presence in the extortion business (e.g., fines for pollution and speeding, incarceration for auto theft) can make a positive contribution to social welfare. That is not in dispute. When do user fees make sense in the provision of other goods and sevices, in general? Discuss this in abstract or by example and we might extract some principles that relate to the education industry.
2. The NEA/AFT/AFSCME is the sole supplier of pre-college education services to taxpayers' agents in many US States. States have legislated this monopoly position. That other institutions supply education services to other buyers does not disqualify the cartel's school system as a monopoly supplier
to the State. Milton Friedman called the US "public" school system a monopoly.
3. I was not attacking unions. Unions arose when I alluded to their interest in opposing contracting-out various functions that police might perform. Similarly, the NEA/AFT/AFSCME cartel opposes vouchers. This is standard interest-group politics.
4. "Control" was not the issue. We discussed funding various providers of goods and services through user fees. We will return to this below.
5. "Only" is a new qualification. Why so all-or-nothing?
6. We agree (mostly) that people benefit from the education of their fellow citizens. We do not agree that the education industry is an obvious candidate for State operation. People benefit from provision of adequate nutririon to their fellow citizens. Is this an argument for State-operated grocery stores? Collectivization of agriculture in Ukraine and China produced mass starvation.
7. "It", "it", "they", "be more problematic". The abstract pronouns and passive voice make this paragraph unclear. I answered the question: "how are college faculty unions different from K-12 teacher unions?" How 'bout a response without insults?
8. A description of the current system, a discussion of considerations which shape system performance, and a discussion of policy options do not qualify as a "method", a "proposal" or a "system", seems to me. I do not support
tyr said:
Vouchers with governmental regulations hands off. You can't play ignorant of what you yourself are saying.
I have observed elsewhere that the State cannot support education or schooling financially without a definition of "education" or "schooling".
9. What's unclear? I can describe the education industry from my point of view and discuss policy options. I cannot
understand this view or these options
for other people. As Mayor Ed Koch said to some reporter: "I can explain it to you. I cannot understand it for you". Furthermore, if my position is so unclear, how does tyr infer my "method", or "system" or "proposal"?
10. "Probably not" what? Have a civil discussion? Or "probably not" enhanced parent control enhances system performance?
11. Minimum wage laws and child labor laws relate directly to our discussion (on-the-job training is education). I did not "go off" on unions. I mentioned the obvious point that the police union might object to a city policy of contracting out some security services. Is that so implausible? Obfuscation? Seems to me I've been clear and direct, to the point that tyr claimed "gross simplification". "Dodging"? Again, I answered the questions (user fees, K12 unions versus faculty unions, etc.). "Disingenuous content removal"
a) "Disingenuous" is the gone-to-college way to call someone "liar". Let's keep it civil, m'kay?
b) "Context removal"? I include far more context than anyone else, to the point that tyr complained of my "wall o' text", remember?
12. Not keen, huh? Telescopes? We doan' need no stinkin' telescopes. Point to an article by Sen and I might read it. Where has he endorsed a State-monopoly education industry?
13. Maybe, depending on how one uses these words. The public school system is not a competitive market. There is one supplier (the cartel) and one buyer (the school district). If we quit arguing over the meaning of words and address the issue of how to generate better performance for any given level of subsidy, then we can have a sensible discussion. Maybe.