Anything of value will be beset by greedy assholes trying to take control and use it for their own selfish reasons. Democratic governments require their people to inform themselves and work together to prevent this from happening. #LiberalValues
I just doubt that private/home schools will do a better job on the civics & liberal arts education aspect than what we have now. I'm biased but the people who doubt the ability of democracy to work, who question how much others actually care about the public interest...I don't see them as likely to instill a concept of civic virtue. Won't they lean towards tribalism? Won't capitalism take over? We have to protect education from greedy assholes. Privatizing doesn't tend to do that.
yes, them too. I've been bitching about the Chicago Teachers Union here.
@wjmaggos @Atlas if actual capitalism takes over, competitive forces will punish & eliminate greedy assholes who don't serve the market. In the current government run de facto monopoly, there is practically zero chance for this. As with all government, bad performance gets rewarded & promoted, not boycotted.
I think markets do a ton of good under restraints supplemented with public goods, but then you also need to keep governments from going too far.
If a free market did happen and worked out awesome, what would then prevent somebody from corrupting it? No matter what, you've gotta have a public educated (and engaged) enough to think through problems and possible solutions and likely outcomes etc.
And no businesses really want critical thinking customers...
@wjmaggos @Atlas nothing corrupts like government. Businesses not wanting critical thinking customers is a blanket statement I don't agree with. Even if there is a public interest in people being educated, which is a collectivist concept & "the public" is an abstraction which doesn't tangibly exist, public education is a COMPLETE failure. It's also not its purpose, just look at where it came from.
most people are good but a few are shit and there's always lots of bad incentives. those problems apply to government and markets. government is as good as we force it to be. businesses owned by good people are great, as long as they don't succumb to bad incentives. with enough uncritical thinkers out there (and a lack of good government oversight), business owners who are willing to lie, cheat, steal get ahead.
that's my math.
I did not say that. They are very different processes. I think free exchange is great but it's also not a magic elixir for all that ails us. We need both and a well educated public makes both function better. But a soda company doesn't want us to understand nutrition. Facebook doesn't want us to understand the value of decentralized networks. You don't want them to have any kind of business relationship with the lowest bidder for most people's private education provider.
@Atlas @wjmaggos @SirFahrenheit This statistic is probably true because private schools cost money so families who go there are families with money and having money can make you more prepared
@leyonhjelm
@Atlas @SirFahrenheit @valleyforge
@Agni
everything depends on the pressures to do better & what better means to the customer/voter. in a society, we're affected by the education of those around us. in an education marketplace, parents may choose poorly.
markets do a great job providing things like groceries when there's lots of competition. government wouldn't because voters wouldn't/couldn't oversee that process in enough detail to make good policy.
not all goods are private.
parents may choose poorly
Parents are people. Government is people. The two are the same.
“If the natural tendencies of mankind are so bad that it is not safe to permit people to be free, how is it that the tendencies of these organizers are always good?
Do not the legislators and their appointed agents also belong to the human race? Or do they believe that they themselves are made of a finer clay than the rest of mankind?” ― @bastiat
@Atlas @Agni @leyonhjelm @valleyforge @wjmaggos parents may choose poorly
According to whose criteria? Again, nobody owns them other than themselves, so nobody has the right to make decisions for them. It's their responsibility. One is free to persuade them to make a better decision, but not coerce. It is an arrogant position to take that any person knows what is best for others, even if we assume benevolence.
@SirFahrenheit
@Atlas @Agni @leyonhjelm @valleyforge
I agree that this is a really difficult problem. I should have also mentioned that in things like groceries, choice is king and competitive markets allow for that better than government ever could. But if we want a thriving society, there's some basic skills we want the people around us to have. I want to believe every parent would choose to spend their resources (assuming they have them) on teaching these to their kids, but some wouldn't.
@Coyote @SirFahrenheit @wjmaggos @Agni @leyonhjelm @Atlas
Ask him about that I was just commenting on the slavery thing