shanek said:
The private college that I went to was 100% wheelchair-accessible for something like 20-30 years before the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Yeah, sure, cut off a source of potential income. That's a good business practice...
Okay, now you're just making stuff up.
That's just the effect of one's environment. By your definition, urban New York and suburban North Carolina are two separate societies, and therefore the Federal government shouldn't be forcing one way on both of them. You just shot down your own argument.
And, probably, neither from your car or fire insurance, either. You still pay it.
Keeping crime down doesn't benefit you?
Theoretically. Check your state's budget and see if it actually works that way.
Wow. What an astounding collection of completely meaningless statistics. What GovCo pays for education is not at all comparable with what private schools charge. you 7% statistic is meaningless without a lot of supporting items, such as % of overall teachers in the private sector and teacher/student ratios. The "average salary" claim is just completely wrong; teachers are much better paid in private schools. That's why there are no shortage of applicants for private schools while public schools are suffering teacher shortages.
Your private college is a single example, give something more substantive. Your opinions on business practice aside, different disabilities require different levels of accomodation and private schools have no incentive to accomodate all students, unlike public schools.
This: "The family probably has learned to provide much of the care themselves out of necessity. Most parents do not go to school and stay with their children all day, so someone else, someone qualified, would have to perform those duties instead." is making stuff up? How about a real response. I'll give you an example- a student requiring a feeding tube. Guess what, the parents take care of that themselves at home, but that isn't an everyday activity for most people, and who is supposed to do it for the child at school? It is an example of
nursing care. I have known only one girl whose mother attended school with her; she was partially paralyzed.
New York and the Carolinas wouldn't be considered different
societies but different cities within American society. But take the practice of bowing in Japanese society. Not every Japanese person has to bow, and a portion of the population could stop entirely, but the practice wouldn't disappear as a characteristic of their society. There's certainly no physical thing forcing them to bow, but the society seems to exert itself in what behaviors bring the approval and scorn of the averge other citizen.
I pay car insurance because I want to, but I have never benefitted from having it. If I was in a car wreck,
then I would benefit. I pay fire insurance because, again, I want to just in case, but I have never benefitted from an unused policy.
The police don't "keep crime down", they respond to crime. Perhaps that has an deterent effect, I don't know without statistics to prove it. I have weapons. There's no reason I couldn't defend myself in the event I ever had to.
If my statistics were wrong then you have to prove it. The reason people choose to work at private schools
despite lower pay is they like the religious nature of the school, they like the environment, they are given discounts on tuition for their own children, etc. Private schools suffer a shortage of teachers too. In my private school, they had a terrible time getting qualified teachers and often hired people without teaching licenses out of necessity. My private school charged $3000 per student per year, but it was heavily underwritten by the catholic churches in the area, the diocese, and their separate long-standing scholarship fund. The episcopal school in town charges almost $6000, is also underwritten by a scholarship fund and church contributions. Per student expenditures in my county in the public schools is only $4,641 per student. (Texas Education Agency)
There is a well on my parents' property. The water is unusable without reverse osmosis though because it is contaminated with salt from oil drilling. The people who drilled have to money to fix the damage, but they don't. In Texas, the 'rule of capture' applies to groundwater, meaning people can do whatever they want with the groundwater on their property, regardless of what that does to anyone else.