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To: PsyOp
Thanks for the bump. I was just reading Adams and noted that he spoke in his very concise and abbreviated inaugural address on a public education.

Here I see Jefferson very strong on education and Washington in his first Administration made public education a priority...so, why is it that so many Freepers argue we shouldnt have a public education system, with it so prominent in several key Founding Fathers speeches, Administrations, and clearly in their intents?

9 posted on 04/21/2002 4:22:37 PM PDT by rbmillerjr
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To: rbmillerjr
so, why is it that so many Freepers argue we shouldnt have a public education system.

Our founders were all very much in favor of public education and its most vigorous proponent was Benjamin Franklin, who also pushed forward the idea of public libraries - having formed the first of them himself and at his own expense. The reason they were for it was becasue of the european and English class systems which kept most people from gaining any formal education, and which the founders felt was a major reason why tyranny and monarchy was able to flourish.

Universal education at the public expense was seen as an insurance policy for liberty. The more educated the people, the longer the fledgling republic they fought so hard to establish would last. Also, in their day, all control over what was taught rested in the community which the school served. If teachers were found to be ineffective, incompetent, or teaching things which the community at large felt ran contrary to the interests of the community, they could be removed without much fuss.

Fast forward 200 years. The principle is still sound, but it has become understood, especially by people with agendas, that the school is the best place to foster their ideas and propagandize the next generation - rather than just teach them how to read, write, add and think for themselves. Add to that the advent of teachers unions, tenure, and a dozen other factors that limit direct parental involvement in their children's education, and you have a situation in which the public schools that were seen by our founders as the vanguard of our liberties are now working, in many cases, towards their destruction.

The movement away from todays public schools can be seen as an attempt to return to what those schools used to be. Returning control of what children are taught back to the parents. A movement that has been driven by the unwillingness of school boards and administrations - protected by unions, tenure and federal intrusion - to listen to the people they are supposed to serve. IMHO.

12 posted on 04/21/2002 6:38:43 PM PDT by PsyOp
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To: rbmillerjr
Is that "JOHN ADAMS" by McCullough? I loved that book(and John Adams).I remember reading some reviews of the book and one said that if Washington was the father of the nation,then Adams was the 'midwife.' I sure hope that after all of this time,the nation will honor him with a memorial.It's hard to believe that there's no monument to him.
18 posted on 04/21/2002 9:09:15 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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