How can they thrive when they can't afford to buy food?kr@cker wrote:
if their minds are so great, they would thrive in such an environment
Point taken, the problem there is that education should not be a product to be sold. All people should have equal access to in order to contribute the world.kr@cker wrote:
where it fails is that, just like other aspects of communism, there is no incentive for the public school do provide a superior product,what parent wouldn't want their child to go to a superior school?
Now granted, there are public schools in place that people can advance through, but my point was helping the people get there. Not whether all schools should be public or private.
I'm sure every parent wants there kids to go to a superior school. But what's the percentage of parents that can afford it? According to this http://www.capenet.org/facts.html only 11.3%. So you want only 11.3% of your learning population to get the best education and lead the country on? Do we need more burgers or doctors? Besides, if you privatize all school, you widen the gap between a good education and a bad one. This will ultimately lessen the number of those who get well paying jobs. That doesn't sound like a good idea when the population continues to grow.
how is investing in new minds, especially those which we will depend on in the future, any less efficient use of tax dollars? I can see about 100 billion that could be taken from a single department here and used 'more effeciently'kr@cker wrote:
this will also directly result in more efficient use of taxpayer money
Last edited by Havazn (2006-06-21 17:52:43)