Malcolm Kirkpatrick
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2006
- Messages
- 4,046
1. Where have I changed the context or removed the context? I include context and address it.And then proceed to respond in ways that take the context of the quoted section away are replace it with another one. That you include the last post doesn't negate this, but it does make it easier to spot1.Only if you define 'support' broadly enough. In that case all money spent, including by the state on public education, supports all sorts of services2.3. Any user fee supports the entire institution that delivered the good or service. If I "only" pay for the groceries I eat, I support all kinds services I do not use. There is no contradiction, problem, or paradox here, as tyr implies with "Your tax money on gas goes to roads other than the ones you drive on."What insults would those be? I've labeled and accused you of doing more than a few things, but I don't recall actually insulting you3.Let's discuss how the differences in markets for various goods and services make a difference to the arguments for or against user fees and customer control in general and parent control in the education industry in particular. Can we have this discussion without insults?So the reasoning you applied originally does not apply to the police4. Now why not? And as we've discussed before, the 'default option' is what is in place now, your proposal would simply transfer funding from them to some alt schooling, and describing not being able to afford these out priced 'options' as failing is insulting. I'm not sure if I've mentioned that last one in text before though5.100% agreement. Tutors are analogous to private security services. I suggest that the State could (legally, if not yet, within the limits of political possibility) empower parents with the taxpayers' K-12 education subsidy and turn them loose in a competitive market for education services. Unless this policy includes the repeal of the entire welfare entitlement system, this implies some regulation, including a default option ("the public school system") for children of parents who fail to provide for their children's education.
A cartel is an explicit agreement between competing producers and manufacturers6.GM is not a cartel. American Motors is not a cartel, Ford is not a cartel, Chrysler is not a cartel. Together, in the era before free trade, they formed a cartel. Harvard is not a cartel. Yale is not a cartel. Princeton is not a cartel. Together, with the accreditation agencies, they (and other exclusive colleges and universities) form a cartel. The NEA is not a cartel. The AFT is not a cartel. The AFSCME is not a cartel. The NEA/FT/AFSCME cartel is a cartel.
Do you not understand the distinction7? Lying would certainly be disingenuous, but one need not lie to be disingenuous.
Oh for crying out loud. JAQing off is a debate technique in which someone claims to be 'just asking questions' in order to avoid having to avoid any holes in their argument or address attacks against it by making it appear that they aren't making any claims. It's a cowardly and commonly used tactic by conspiracy nuts who lack the intellectual fortitude to form a cohesive argument and defend it8. Someone claiming to be 'just presenting options', while at the same time obviously endorsing those options by hand waving criticisms and highlighting benefits (the candy in my example), would be being disingenuous9.Not always and not with every enterprise. Again, I go back to the police example. Do you want private security to investigate rapes and murders? Would a private police force employed by Penn State be the best way to investigate Sanduski10?Competitive markets deliver higher quality at lower cost, per unit, than tax-subsidized State-monopoly enterprises.
What about for the many enterprises where the most directly cost effective measure is to simply not provide the good. I assume that's why you want child labor and minimum wage laws repealed11. The example I always come back to for that is the 'cost saving' privatization of water systems which lead to poor communities simply having no water. Education and mail are other good examples12.You still don't seem to understand how much leeway school boards and parents actually have within the current system. You keep saying demonstrably false things like 'US State-monopoly' as if that proves your point13.Policies which give to individual parents the power to determine which institution, if any, shall receive the taxpayers' age 6-18 education subsidy give control to the people who know individual children best and who are most reliably concerned for their welfare. Numerous possible paths lead from the current US State-monopoly structure to a more competitive market in education services.
I can actually see parts of your proposed system, and you are proposing one, working though carefully worded regulation, but the end result still ends up looking basically what we have now. And it still isn't funded by user fees14.
2. Yes. Subsidies support all kinds of things. The issue is how user fees and other forms of support differ in their impact on customers and venders.
3. "Disingenuous", "you don't understand" (see above), and any other reference to a deficiency of the arguer as opposed to the argument. For example:...
4. Huh? Tyr asked if user fees could support police functions. The answer is, "yes, sometimes". Where they could but currently does not resort to user fees, a city department could alter its policy to fund some security services through user fees instead of taxation. For example, organizers of a parade could pay for the police force that covers the event. Or a city could allow organizers to provide their own security (the police union might object). The city could put a contract out to bid to provide security to a gated community (the police union might object). These scenarios have parallel examples in the education industry....in your method ...you could keep out the darkies. You know, the real goals.
5. The difference is the fraction of the population that operates under the user fee and private provider regime and fraction that operates under the direct subsidy to government institutions regime.
6. (a) Cartels are anti-competitive. (b) An individual firm is not a cartel. An individual firm is a party to an agreement. It's the coordination that makes the cartel.
7. No. "Disingenuous" is the gone-to-college way to call someone "liar".
8. And any similarity to the term used for masturbation is entirely coincidental. What's the word...? "Disingenuous", maybe?
9. "Method" is singular. "Options" is plural. Several different policy options support enhanced parent control, and these different options would have different effects in the short run and longer term: repeal of assignment by district, charter schools, tuition vouchers, tuition tax credits, education tax credits, virtual schools in the government system, Parent Performance Contracting, credit by exam for all courses required for graduation, a complete withdrawal of the State from the education industry, etc. Tyr made an assertion about "your system" (singular) or "method" (singular), or
"proposal". I asked "which proposal?" Earlier, tyr wrote:
andNone of that addressed the criticisms you leveled at public regulated/supported schools which also applies to your method. Those criticisms apply at least as much to your method, only changing the parties who are choosing/meal ticketing.
So, let's consider which of these might include user fees. Tuition vouchers in competitive markets function as user fees to a degree. Depending on how the legislature structures the voucher (can a school charge more? Can parents keep the difference if tuition is less? Can part of the voucher apply to Math instruction at one school and part apply to language instruction at another?, etc.) the voucher creates incentives for buyers to economize and for producers to improve quality and lower costs. byw, even half of the US average subsidy of $12,000 per pupil-year is more than enough to empower parents in a competitive market for education services.And people in your system still don't get to choose everything their children learn, only those with enough resources to choose different schools. Those with the money would in effect be able to dominate the market and do their own social experiments on other people's children.
10. We could have a productive discussion if we weighed the features of industries that make a difference to the applicability of user fees. When do they work, and when do they not, and why? Certainly I would want private investigators as a fall back if police do not do their job. If police cover up a crime and a victim hires a PI, I can see a court awarding a judgment against the city for the expense to the victim of the investigation. A tax-funded user fee for security services.
11. Dunno what you mean.
12. Water, mail, and schooling. Water, maybe. I can see a complicated discussion there. Mail and school? I expect that society would be better off if the State (government, generally) left the business to non-State actors.
13. In many US States the NEA/AFT/AFSCME cartel's schools occupy an exclusive position in receipt of the taxpayers' age 6-18 education subsidy. They qualify as a monopoly.
14. I'm "proposing" several. I support most expansions of parent control. Some policies more directly rely on user fees (sometimes tax subsidized, sometimes not) than do others.
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