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Institutionalizing Ignorance
Mises Daily ^ | July 03, 2013 | Walter Block and Jordan Reel

Posted on 07/03/2013 6:37:27 AM PDT by Sopater

According to the official White House website, the end goal of schooling is to “help restore middle-class security.” Such a stance is a surprisingly honest one in a political environment built on deceit. The Obama administration makes no attempt to hide the fact that mandatory public schooling is a state tool for manipulating class structure. This is both a historical and economic fact.

Modern American schooling stems from two sources. First the Prussian school system which was used by the Nazis to limit and control legal access to information while psychologically training students in order to promote fascist ideology. The second is the free state-run schools which were an important part of the caste-structure that has existed in India for thousands of years. Here, the menial and “untouchable” classes, approximately 95 percent of the population, were subject to the rule of the Hindu Brahmin priest (Gatto 39). Each class had its own forms of education, all of them placing an emphasis on “truth,” which referred to the superiority of the Brahmin priest and the proper subservient role of the student in society.

The core principle of education for the two lowest classes in India, was ignorance. By filling up the free time of children with repetitive tasks of little educational value, students were transformed into thoughtless followers of the Brahmin. One would believe such a process would drive away any man of God who sought to help children, but such was not the case with Anglican missionary Andrew Bell who was able to see the “good” in what he referred to as the Madras system of education. In 1790 he wrote, “In every instance under my observation in this kingdom, and in every report with which my brethren have honored me of the effects produced by the Madras System in their parishes, the improvement in the subordination, orderly conduct, and general behavior of the children, has been particularly noticed, and must be regarded as infinitely the most valuable feature of its character” (Bell 10).

Bell enthusiastically took over the Hindu schools and adapted them to raise impoverished children into loyal subjects of the Anglican Church. In 1797 he opened up the Aldgate Charity School in England. In his own words, “Its ultimate object, the ultimate object or end of all education, is to make ... good subjects ...” (Bell 7). He was heavily influenced by the zeitgeist that it was God’s will that the impoverished remain in their present state of existence.

Joseph Lancaster, a Quaker in London, took what was once a systematic approach to subjugating peasants and turned it into a method of affordably teaching thousands of students, from his own home no less, so as to empower them to rise to a greater glory. Lancaster’s school did not last long before it attracted the attention of Bell, who saw his philosophy of pedagogy being defiled by the Quaker. Quickly, King George III began funding Lancaster’s school, and with it began regulating curriculum by requiring that students learn the Bible (Gatto 41-42). In 1807 Bell contested the perversion of his system and, with the support of the Anglican Church, replaced Lancaster’s school with his own. However, with Lancaster’s school being more popular than the Aldgate Charity School, it was his name and not Bell’s that came to define the Anglican version of the Indian Madras system.

Amid fears of non-Anglican values destroying the newly formed republic of the United States, English-Americans adopted Lancaster and Prussian schooling (Liggio and Peden). Today the English traditions that go back over a century in America continue to promote inequality. The main purpose of school in an industrialized economy is to signal productivity to employers. Government funding of education whether by public, charter, or private voucher schools incentivizes students seeking a competitive edge to spend more time in school. For the middle and lower classes the results are greater economic inefficiency. Middle class students who may have otherwise obtained only a high school degree, now must deplete more savings or go into debt to get a college degree that signals the same amount of productivity. For the poor the results are even worse. They must spend more time in school to signal that they are capable of higher productivity. The high opportunity cost of going through school keeps low-income students from being able to afford to display their productivity, limiting them to lower paying jobs.

Government schools serve to both mentally and economically restrict students and history makes it clear that is what they were designed for.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: arth; commoncore; education; publicschool
In this sense, government schools have been a great success and are doing exactly what they were intended to do.
1 posted on 07/03/2013 6:37:27 AM PDT by Sopater
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To: Sopater
According to the official White House website, the end goal of schooling is to “help restore middle-class security.”

Thanks for posting this. When I read this premise, I had to go to the White House website to verify it. Sure enough it is there. My jaw dropped on seeing it for myself.

I taught high school for 30 years. My philosophy of education was mainly this: it is the job of schools and teachers to provide our youth with an "on-ramp" to the flow of The Great Conversation, the elegant flow of civilization itself. I always hoped that even the Lois Lerners (lowest learners) in my classes would come out ready to survive, even thrive, and that there would be a significant percentage of students who would become hungry and thirsty for more and more knowledge, and that a percentage of them would go out and add to the Great Conversation.
Nowhere in my thinking was there EVER anything about social and economic class demographics. That is communist thinking.

How ridiculously far we have fallen off course.

2 posted on 07/03/2013 7:32:54 AM PDT by Migraine (Diversity is great -- until it happens to YOU...)
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To: Migraine
That is communist thinking.

How ridiculously far we have fallen off course.


And how sad it is that we seem to have embraced that fall as something to cling to.
3 posted on 07/03/2013 7:42:00 AM PDT by Sopater (Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? - Matthew 20:15a)
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To: Migraine
...even the Lois Lerners (lowest learners) in my classes...

Funny that you should say that, because when the IRS news first broke, I was listening on my radio, and I thought that they actually said "lowest learner".
4 posted on 07/03/2013 7:43:32 AM PDT by Sopater (Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? - Matthew 20:15a)
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To: Sopater

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0lR1KQq2-U


5 posted on 07/03/2013 8:06:18 AM PDT by Dick Bachert (Hitler would have LOVED obozo!)
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To: Sopater

Government schools serve to both mentally and economically restrict students and history makes it clear that is what they were designed for.

gov/socialism can never work


6 posted on 07/13/2013 8:06:51 PM PDT by Democrat_media (IRS rigged election for Obama and democrats by shutting down tea party)
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