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Original post by tstrimp
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Original post by HostileExpanse
Likely it would, but there's still been little justification for *why* the open public school system should be drained of the funding; especially when the private education market can be supported by private consumers who believe the value offered is vastly superior.
You have yet to prove that it would have a significant impact on public school funding.
Sure there is a question of whether the impact would be significant. (But that there would be a non-zero impact on funding is pretty self-evident.)
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Original post by tstrimp
If all those European countries can provide excellent public education AND subsidize private education, why shouldn't we consider the same?
Sure .... but, that's the conundrum. The politicos pushing these proposals (in the US) are not generally seeking
similar programs.
AFAIK, many of the EU countries apply pretty strict rules on private schools that accept funding, almost to the point that the private schools follow the same guidelines as the public ones .... yet, in the US, the same "free market" types pushing for the use of public funds are the exact same ones who would cry foul at trying to attach regulations to the process.
I've already stated earlier that I have no problem with school choice initiatives, if they avoid exacerbating the large problems (specifically, stuff like cream-skimming). I haven't seen a lot of push in the US for the school choice implementations that avoid those issues, though. A good deal of the talk is for the cash-value vouchers which is the worst of the worst, IMO.