|
|
|
A direct line runs from the “segregation academies” of
the post-Brown South
and today’s corporate-invented school vouchers “movement.”
Both talk the same language: a “freedom of choice” double-speak
that would preserve and expand racial and economic privilege. In
place of Brown, today’s voucher advocates would subsidize
the “choices” that somehow become available in an American social
marketplace that has historically devalued Blacks. They would
achieve this unregulated educational supermarket by liquidating
the principle and promise of universal, quality public education.
Just as segregationists shut down the public schools of Prince
Edward County, Virginia, in 1959 in favor of private white and
Black academies, today’s voucher advocates openly agitate for
defunding urban public schools. The very same rightwing forces
that sought to neuter Brown at every stage in its 50-year
history now push privatization as a remedy for the misery they
have wrought in America’s cities. They aim to profit – literally – from
their own crimes.
That Dirty Old Voucherman
Click here or on image for complete/printable
image
Rewards for racism
“The crusade for vouchers actually has its roots in an effort
to continue segregation,” said Cynthia
Tucker, editorial page editor of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
in a July 7, 2002 column. “By the time of Jimmy Carter's presidency,
the parents of segregation academy students were campaigning for
tax breaks for private school tuition. They formed the early core
of what later became the voucher movement.”
The haste with which southern whites established
private schools after 1954 made it impossible to cloak the exodus
in euphemisms – this
was white flight from physical proximity to Blacks, pure and simple,
and the name “segregation academies,” stuck. Whites in the North
would react in much the same way when their turn came, opting out
of the cities entirely to invest their taxes in quality schools
for their own children in the suburbs. Those who remained in places
like Boston chose private education over integration. “You saw
an immediate drain of white participation from public education,
going into parochial and private schools,” said Rev.
Graylan Hagler, president of Ministers for Racial, Social,
and Economic Justice. “And ever since, they have attempted to
redirect public dollars out of public education and into private
schools.”
Racists always find a “freedom” to mask their hatreds. Segregationists
in Virginia devised a “freedom of choice” policy in the mid-Fifties
to allow white students to transfer out of schools slated for integration.
When Prince Edward County whites finally exhausted their legal
bag of tricks in 1959, they shut the public schools down and set
up a foundation to support the education of whites.
The county schools were among the five cases that had been combined
under Brown. The late Wilbur
Brookover, a Michigan State University sociologist who testified
as an expert in Brown, chronicled the county’s response
to the decision:
”The White school foundation…moved rapidly to raise money
to establish the Prince Edward Academy, which used a variety
of facilities beginning in fall 1959. Permanent Academy facilities
for both elementary and secondary students were built soon
after. Essentially all of the White children in Prince Edward
County were enrolled in the Academy in the next few years.
Some of the poor Whites in the county were provided scholarships
to pay their children's tuition….
“Although Whites established a private
foundation to provide similar opportunities for Black children,
many Black county
residents and the NAACP refused this on the grounds that it
continued essentially the same situation that the Brown decision
was supposed to end. Those opposing this effort vocalized their
concern by actively working to discourage Black children from
signing up for the private schools. In January 1960, the Southside
Schools, the name given to the private schools, received an
application from one Black student. After that, private school
advocates decided to postpone their efforts to educate Black
students.”
This was the fatal political flaw in the
early segregation academies: their failure to gain Black participation.
The Black citizens
of Prince Edward County deserve a permanent place of honor for
refusing to collaborate in a scheme to undermine their just-won
rights to a non-Jim Crow, public education – even when the alternative
was to have no public schools at all for five years.
President Lyndon Johnson’s Internal Revenue
Service made life difficult for the segregation academies,
as detailed in this IRS memorandum:
“The IRS response began
in 1965 with the suspension of the issuance of rulings
to private schools in order for the Service to consider the effect
of racial discrimination on their exempt status. After extensive
study, the IRS announced in 1967 that racially discriminatory
private schools, which were receiving state aid, were not entitled
to exemption under IRC 501(c)(3) based on public policy beginning
with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.”
In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court cracked down on backdoor subsidies
to segregated private schools in Mississippi. The court ruled,
in Norwood v. Harrison, that “free textbooks, like tuition
grants directed to students in private schools, are a form of
tangible financial assistance benefiting the schools themselves,
and the State's constitutional obligation requires it to avoid
not only operating the old dual system of racially segregated
schools but also providing tangible aid to schools that practice
racial or other invidious discrimination.”
In their review of
the racist roots of voucher politics, People for the American
Way note that President Nixon toyed with the idea of federal
aid to parochial schools – “parochiad” – in 1971. Four years
later, the far-right Heritage Foundation made its first foray
into vouchers, sponsoring a forum on the subject. But it was
not until the Reaganites came to power in Washington that the
Heritage Foundation proposed attaching vouchers to federal education
legislation, in 1981. The problem was, vouchers were still firmly
(and correctly) associated with die-hard segregationists. Memories
of white “massive resistance” to integration remained fresh,
especially among Blacks, who had never demanded vouchers – not
even once in all of the tens of thousands of demonstrations over
the previous three decades.
Former Reagan Education Secretary William
Bennett understood what was missing from the voucher political
chemistry: minorities.
If visible elements of the Black and Latino community could be
ensnared in what was then a lily-white scheme, then the Right’s
dream of a universal vouchers system to subsidize general privatization
of education, might become a practical political project. More
urgently, Bennett and other rightwing strategists saw that vouchers
had the potential to drive a wedge between Blacks and teachers
unions, cracking the Democratic Party coalition. In 1988, Bennett
urged the Catholic Church to “seek out the poor, the disadvantaged…and
take them in, educate them, and then ask society for fair recompense
for your efforts” – vouchers. The game was on.
The Heritage Foundation was soon joined in voucher agitation
by the young, hyper-aggressive Bradley
Foundation, of Milwaukee. Bradley and its allies steamrolled
through the Wisconsin legislature a voucher program for Milwaukee’s
schools, and spent millions of dollars to buy a Black constituency
to support it. In 2000, the Bradley, Heritage and Walton Family
Foundations unveiled their African American front group: the
Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO),
whose job is to put a Black face on a rich, white man’s creation.
Treachery
New Jersey is a battleground for voucher operatives,
the most urban/suburban state in the nation, and a pet interest
of John Walton, one of five heirs to the $100 billion Walton (Wal-Mart)
family fortune. Walton and local white businessman Peter Denton
took a special liking to 30-year-old, then first-term Black Newark
City Councilman Cory Booker. With the help of the Bradley-funded
Manhattan Institute and a national network of corporate rightwing
donors and activists, Booker ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 2002,
hugely outspending the incumbent. Booker is a founding director
of the BAEO and of Newark-based
E-3 – Excellent Education for Everyone – the Right’s voucher
outpost in New Jersey, founded by Denton, a white Republican.
Booker is a nominal Democratic, of the Democratic Leadership Council
(DLC) variety. Indeed, he is the very model of the Black Democratic
Trojan Horse that the rich Right now cultivates on a national
scale. Publicists from the Manhattan Institute and other rightwing
thought-manipulation tanks have dubbed this small but growing
rump of Black Democrats the New Black Leaders. Naturally, the
corporate media sing the same song.
Rightwing money has accomplished William
Bennett’s 1988 mission.
They have created out of whole cloth the appearance – if not
the reality – of an authentic Black voucher movement where none
existed less than a decade ago. However, this spawn of the Bradley,
Heritage and Walton Family Foundations (and now funded directly by
the Bush Education Department) functions like no other “Black” political
current in American history.
Witness the treachery of Dana Rone, Booker’s closest local Black
political ally and Vice President of the Newark Public School
Advisory Board, who doubles as a “consultant” to the school “choice” outfit,
E-3. In March of this year, Rone traveled to the state capital
at Trenton to urge that Newark education monies be diverted to
private schools.
“As this is a budget committee meeting, I will share a particularly
telling statistic. Between Newark and Camden, we share an almost
$1 billion budget. For that we produced approximately 2,000
high school graduates last year…. In plain terms, that’s a
staggering cost of $1 million per legitimately proficient high-school
graduate. Such numbers indicate the abuse of two things: the
money the state sends into our urban districts, and the children
who are subjected to the system.”
“We are, essentially, paid for our failure, and our customers – the
children who live in our districts and who are zoned into our
schools – are forced to take what we give them, regardless
of whether or not it works for them, or for the community as
a whole.”
While authentic Black leadership everywhere
struggles to overcome the near-universal underfunding of urban
schools – an historic
injustice that the New Jersey Supreme Court has ordered the state
to correct through the expenditure of billions of dollars – Rone
and her cohorts encourage the suburban legislative majority’s
deeply ingrained desire to withhold funding. Rone earns her living
mouthing free market shibboleths:
“Make money follow children to schools they
choose instead of tying school funding to guaranteed populations
segregated by zip codes…. And, most importantly, leverage successful
private and parochial schools in our communities that have a
proven track record of educating minority children at, incidentally,
a substantially lower cost than our traditional public system.
Tying dollars to children will make us compete for students. Market
forces will lead to more efficient, and effective, use of the
aid the state sends us and, ultimately, the improvement of every
public school in our district.”
Of course, no voucher program in the nation
has proven “successful” by
standards that are applied to the public schools.
But what counts is that Rone’s remarks are music to billionaire
patron John Walton’s ears, believing as he does that the most
fundamental human right, is the right to shop.
Rone mimics her local guru, white businessman
and E-3 founder Peter Denton, who takes every opportunity to
undermine the court’s Abbott urban
funding decision: “New Jersey's record of huge increases
in urban education spending over the last generation, coupled
with this lack of results, makes arguments for increased funding
more and more difficult to sustain.”
This then, is the Right’s answer to Brown:
that urban public education is not worth funding. African Americans
should
join with the privatizers, put their hopes in the “market,” and
abandon demands for equality in the public sphere.
“For me ladies and gentleman, it’s education by any means necessary,” Rone
bizarrely proclaimed to the legislators. “And in my heart, I
know that Malcolm would agree with me.”
From the lips of a corporate mercenary, the words are obscene.
|
|
|
|
|
|