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No ‘Choice’ (projectile vomit communist tirade alert)
In These Times ^ | March 31, 2004 | Glen Ford and Peter Gamble

Posted on 04/06/2004 8:04:51 PM PDT by El Conservador

No ‘Choice’ Wal-Mart prepares to bury the left under a mountain of money

By Glen Ford and Peter Gamble | 3.31.04

Jim, John, Alice, Sam and Helen may carry the world’s most dangerous genetic markers. They are the Waltons, heirs to the global destructive force called Wal-Mart.

With more than $100 billion in personal assets among them, the five Waltons occupy positions six through 10 in the Forbes billionaires rankings, twice as rich as Microsoft’s Bill Gates, the guy at the top. Collectively, they are antisocial malevolence with a last name. These spawn of Bentonville, Arkansas harbor an abiding hatred for the public sphere: business regulatory controls, nondiscrimination laws, wage and workplace safety standards, the social safety net—all of it—as expressed through the operations of their retail empire, which is both the largest employer in the United States and biggest importer of goods made in China. As the Democratic Socialists of America put it: “Wal-Mart is more than just a participant in the low-wage economy: It is the most important single beneficiary of that economy. It uses its economic and political power to extend the scope of the low-wage economy and threatens to extend its business model into other sectors of the economy, undermining the wages of still more workers.”

Such a vast project of political economy is far too complex for four middle-aged children of wealth and the 84-year-old matriarch, Helen. The family’s immediate personal ambitions are more modest: to destroy public education in the United States. To that end the Waltons, through their Walton Family Foundation and in close collaboration with Milwaukee’s Bradley Foundation, literally invented the national school “choice” network and its wedge issue-weapon, vouchers.

It is the existence of the school vouchers “movement” that allows the Bush administration to savage and massively disrupt the nation’s public schools while positing “alternative” forms of education, both vouchers and charter schools that often operate very much like public-funded private schools. “Choice” has become national policy under Bush’s Department of Education, which has doled out more than $75 million to organizations birthed by the Waltons, Bradley and their allies. (See “Funding a Movement” by People for the American Way, www.pfaw.org.)

Public education’s defenders, already outgunned by the combined resources of the right-wing political funding network plus the full weight of the Republican executive branch, now await the deluge: an infusion of $20 billion into the Walton’s private philanthropy, most of it earmarked for education “reform”—the euphemism for school privatization. At the usual rate of foundation disbursement, this would translate as $1 billion a year—a tidal wave of money, enough to reinvent the voucher “movement” many times over.

The Money Storm

The Waltons’ planned transfer of $20 billion in Wal-Mart stock to the family foundation, most likely precipitated by tax exigencies, was heralded by the corporate media as a boon to prospects for education “reform.” Family voucher impresario John styles himself a savior of inner-city dropouts. “They’re choosing the streets over a school that apparently doesn’t work for them,” Walton told a receptive USA Today reporter. “If choice destroys the public system, then why are we so sanguine about the choices those kids make?”

This minority-aimed wedge has a sharp edge. The obscenely rich Waltons aren’t slumming, but rather are pursuing a super-cynical, fiendishly clever, grand strategy on the way to final victory: destruction of the public sphere. Although the Waltons and their friends would love to franchise (and, ultimately, monopolize) the education “market”—K-12 is worth $350 billion yearly to taxpayers—it is a mistake to view school privatization in vulgar market terms. That’s not how the denizens of right-funded think tanks think.

The public schools by far are the most pervasive public institutions, social spaces, in American society. Therefore, they must be made fully subservient to private capital. To the world-coveters of the Waltons’ class (all several hundred of them, plus their legions of hirelings), public education is more an obstacle than a potential convertible asset.

In the here and now, two forces stand in the way of total corporate hegemony over U.S. political life: Black American voters and organized labor, particularly the teachers unions, whose members are highly active and dependably progressive even in the more reactionary regions of the country. Blacks and labor are the two pillars of the national Democratic Party, without which not even a shell would remain.

Vouchers are the right’s chosen tools to pit African Americans (and more recently, Hispanics) against the teachers unions and labor in general (an ambitious plan, since blacks make up a disproportionate chunk of organized labor). The Waltons and their paid strategists believe they have identified the soft spot in the black body politic: the confluence of African-American reverence for education and the cruel denial of educational justice in the cities. Through relatively small outlays of money—small, that is, for the super-rich—and a great deal of corporate media collaboration, the right has made great strides in just a few years in using the voucher “issue” (it was never an issue for blacks, before) to create the impression that there exists a substantial “alternative,” “conservative” political current in black America. This myth is given credibility through purchase of black spokespersons for the right-funded (and now federally-funded) voucher “movement.” An “alternative” black political leadership is being assembled around school “choice,” totally beholden to the most reactionary elements of corporate America. Should these black compradors gain significant traction, progressive resistance to corporate (and racist) rule in the United States will collapse.

How much traction can a billion dollars a year buy? Nobody in black America has ever seen the kind of money that the Walton Foundation will have at its disposal once the $20 billion stock transfer is completed. The prospect is terrifying.

Progressives are hard pressed, as it is. The two principal advocacy organizations opposed to vouchers are People for the American Way (PFAW) and the NAACP, with annual budgets of about $15 million and $30 million, respectively. The teachers unions—the National Education Association (NEA, 2.7 million members) and the American Federation of Teachers (AFT, 1 million members) spend about $350 million a year combined, for all purposes. Only a tiny fraction of these organizations’ resources can be spared for the anti-voucher fight, while right-wing foundations and the Bush Education Department lavish tens of millions on voucher propaganda, recruitment, cooptation and institution-building.

If the Waltons continue their policy of allocating about 80 percent of their grants to education, and if only half that amount is targeted to “reform”—privatization in one guise or the other—their yearly “choice” war chest would be larger than the combined budgets of the NEA, the AFT, the NAACP and PFAW. That’s overkill.

War Against All

If evil could be branded, its emblem would be the Wal-Mart logo. The retailer has become so large, and behaves so aggressively, it sometimes appears as a force of nature, like weather. Three huge grocery chains with a 70 percent combined national, big-city market share ambushed the United Food and Commercial Workers union this winter, all the while crying that Wal-Mart’s low-wage, few-benefits “model” made them do it. After more than three months on strike and lockout, UFCW President Doug Dority accepted a two-tier, higher premium health coverage settlement. If the Wal-Mart model is a private-sector inevitability, then larger circles of solidarity are the only defense. The UFCW Web site carried Dority’s statement:

We must have national health-care reform. No one company, no one union, no industry or group of workers alone can fix the healthcare system. … Now is the time for action. 2004 is the year to put health care reform on the political agenda and demand that every candidate for office commits to comprehensive, affordable health insurance for every working family.

Labor can’t beat the Wal-Mart model piecemeal, or even if it were united. A larger mobilization is needed.

Wal-Mart shifts the burden of its exploitation to the public, causing federal taxpayers to pay more than $2,000 per employee in social safety net costs to subsidize John, Jim, Sam, Alice and Helen’s profits. In Georgia, Wal-Mart employees’ kids wind up in disproportionate numbers on the state program for uninsured children. Wal-Mart is Georgia’s No. 1 employer, and the state can’t fight that kind of power—not alone.

In Los Angeles, Wal-Mart attempts to usurp the public’s power to decide how communities are developed, asserting a virtual right to barge in where it’s not wanted. Coalition for a Better Inglewood representative the Rev. Altagracia Perez invokes a more comprehensive constituency and a deeper principle:

Despite its track record throughout this country of replacing good jobs with poverty-wage jobs, driving out small businesses and destroying communities, Wal-Mart is asking voters to sign away all their rights to regulate development in their community. If the Wal-Mart initiative goes forward unchallenged, it will send a signal that communities have no role, no voice, no power in the decisions that affect their lives. We cannot let this happen. The circles of resistance become larger, because the Wal-Mart model attempts to diminish and weaken us all. Wal-Mart wants more than blood—it covets every inch of social space, the places where human civilization lives.

Soon the diabolical Walton family will pump a billion more dollars a year into its offensive against public education, seeking to saturate African-American politics with paid flunkies, drive a wedge between blacks and labor, and cripple the people’s ability to resist.

We must build a bigger circle.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: americanheros; capitalism; catholiclist; communism; greatamericans; myheros; socialism; trueamericans; walmart
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Soldier on, comrades!!! (/sarcasm)
1 posted on 04/06/2004 8:04:51 PM PDT by El Conservador
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To: El Conservador
Wow! Guess I'll have to buy more at Walmart...
2 posted on 04/06/2004 8:07:54 PM PDT by EternalHope (Boycott everything French forever. Including their vassal nations.)
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To: All
Rank Location Receipts Donors/Avg Freepers/Avg Monthlies
27 Kansas 245.00
7
35.00


90.00
5

Thanks for donating to Free Republic!

Move your locale up the leaderboard!

3 posted on 04/06/2004 8:09:25 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (If Woody had gone straight to the police, this would never have happened!)
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To: El Conservador
If evil could be branded, its emblem would be the Wal-Mart logo.

Hadn't they better get the UN and France's permission to go to war against Wally world?

Communist tirade if ever I heard one! How dare these Waltons be rich and help education! What on earth was Bush thinking inventing these people?

4 posted on 04/06/2004 8:10:33 PM PDT by ladyinred (Anger the left! Become a MONTHLY DONOR to FreeRepublic.com)
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To: El Conservador
I've just surprised myself.....I'm beginning to like the Waltons.
5 posted on 04/06/2004 8:11:24 PM PDT by syriacus (2001: The Daschle-Schumer Gang obstructed Bush's attempts to organize his administration -->9/11)
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To: El Conservador; All
"an infusion of $20 billion into the Walton’s private philanthropy, most of it earmarked for education “reform”—the euphemism for school privatization."

Bring it on!!!!!!

6 posted on 04/06/2004 8:17:02 PM PDT by davisfh
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To: El Conservador
"destroying communities"

Ah, forgive me guys but I don't think a retail store can "destroy" a community.

7 posted on 04/06/2004 8:24:07 PM PDT by ASTM366
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To: El Conservador
Wow! If Walmart is that good I guess I better shop there more often. I didn't know Walmart was helping to fund school choice and bust the tax-hiking teachers unions. Thats good. Its just another reason to shop at Walmart.
8 posted on 04/06/2004 8:34:18 PM PDT by MarkM (Who really is JFK (Jane Fonda Kerry)?)
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To: El Conservador
How good is Wal*Mart? So good that I rarely have to shop anywhere else.

It is a real convenience to get groceries, clothing, a DVD and home furnishings all at the same place. Wish mine had gasoline :)

Bless you Sam. Ya done good.

9 posted on 04/06/2004 8:38:15 PM PDT by upchuck (Pay attention!! This tagline changes on an irregular schedule and without prior warning.)
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To: ASTM366
"In Los Angeles, Wal-Mart attempts to usurp the public’s power to decide how communities are developed, asserting a virtual right to barge in where it’s not wanted."


Damnit! If anyone is going to dictate terms to the people it should be the commisars comprised of the self-styled vanguard of the proletariat!

*Sarcasm off*
10 posted on 04/06/2004 8:39:40 PM PDT by Army Air Corps (To increase the power of the State over the individual is a crime against Humanity.)
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To: syriacus
I am too. Scary thought.
11 posted on 04/06/2004 8:44:14 PM PDT by CARepubGal
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To: El Conservador
I'd love to see the reaction of Fannie Lewis (black radical Cleveland councilwoman and huge vouchers advocate) to this premise...LOL.

-Eric

12 posted on 04/06/2004 8:47:30 PM PDT by E Rocc (Democrats are to the economy what Round-up is to grass.)
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To: ASTM366
Ah, forgive me guys but I don't think a retail store can "destroy" a community.


Well, there are nut-burgers on the left who believe that they can. I had to read a book for a graduate history class that was written by an anti-corporate nut (Naomi Klein). she claims that thses chains destroy public space; public space described in a non-existant past utopia. accroding to the lefties, these businesses cause the town square to disappear. It is a fairly long-winded theory that would occupy too much room in a post.
13 posted on 04/06/2004 8:55:28 PM PDT by Army Air Corps (To increase the power of the State over the individual is a crime against Humanity.)
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To: El Conservador; GatorGirl; maryz; *Catholic_list; afraidfortherepublic; Antoninus; Aquinasfan; ...
Another great reason to shop WalMart! (Besides lower prices and no unions!)
14 posted on 04/06/2004 9:01:45 PM PDT by narses (If you want OFF or ON my Catholic Ping list, please email me. +)
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To: El Conservador
"In the here and now, two forces stand in the way of total corporate hegemony over U.S. political life: Black American voters and organized labor, particularly the teachers unions, whose members are highly active and dependably progressive even in the more reactionary regions of the country. Blacks and labor are the two pillars of the national Democratic Party, without which not even a shell would remain."

Shop WalMart!!!!!!!

15 posted on 04/06/2004 9:04:30 PM PDT by narses (If you want OFF or ON my Catholic Ping list, please email me. +)
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To: El Conservador
"In the here and now, two forces stand in the way of total corporate hegemony over U.S. political life: Black American voters and organized labor, particularly the teachers unions, whose members are highly active and dependably progressive even in the more reactionary regions of the country. Blacks and labor are the two pillars of the national Democratic Party, without which not even a shell would remain."

Shop WalMart!!!!!!!

16 posted on 04/06/2004 9:04:36 PM PDT by narses (If you want OFF or ON my Catholic Ping list, please email me. +)
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To: EternalHope
LOL I think they uphold the 2nd amendment as well...
17 posted on 04/06/2004 9:05:52 PM PDT by Libertina (FRee Republic - What have you done for her lately? CONTRIBUTE 5 or 10!)
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To: El Conservador
"K-12 is worth $350 billion yearly to taxpayers"

Is worth? Don't you mean *costs*?

"The teachers unions—the National Education Association (NEA, 2.7 million members) and the American Federation of Teachers (AFT, 1 million members) spend about $350 million a year combined, for all purposes"

So can anyone taught by public schools still do the math? 3.7 million teams cost $350 billion a year, means around $95,000 per year, each. And four hundred school districts in California want to opt out of Algebra I requirements, because they were confused about whether high school seniors had to have signed up for a class with "3 + 2x = 7" in it, or had to actually be able to pick "x = 2" out of four choices when presented that sort of thing. After 13 years of math class, five days a week. (And Pershing Road, educrat central here in Chicago - where the kids can't even read - is paved with pink marble).

Commies are terrified of a "tidal wave of money", in the form of $1 billion of philanthropy? But taxpayers can't possibly be outraged at $350 billion a year, decade after decade, with less and less to show for it. But oh, to commies it isn't less and less. It is less of that oppressive math that might make people prefer things that are cheaper or more efficient, and more indoctrinating commie drivel.

They are scared. They should be scared. Not of the Waltons. If the American people knew what they are really about and what they have already done, they would have to count themselves lucky if they were only looking for a job at Walmart, rather than hanging from the lamp-posts, by morning.

18 posted on 04/06/2004 9:16:28 PM PDT by JasonC
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To: El Conservador
Who needs vowchers? The publick skools are doing sutch a grate job.
19 posted on 04/06/2004 9:17:33 PM PDT by litany_of_lies
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To: El Conservador
Each of us votes with his wallet on where to shop. Wal-Mart has the power to move wherever it wants to precisely because Wal-Mart is where Americans like to shop. The dumpy little local stores where liberals purportedly refer to shop are being steamrollered by Wal-Mart precisely because of the retail choices the majority is making. The zoning nannies are getting blown away by Wal-Mart because the huge majority pf shoppers - the "community", remember - has decided they would rather shop at the big store that has everything.
20 posted on 04/06/2004 9:31:03 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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