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| Is Public Education Necessary? |
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| Written by Samuel L. Blumenfeld | ||||
| Thursday, 15 October 2009 14:33 | ||||
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Perhaps Walter Lippmann, the great liberal pundit, best expressed liberal disappointment in the great experiment when he wrote in 1941, while World War II was raging in Europe: “Universal and compulsory modern education was established by the emancipated democracies during the nineteenth century. ‘No other foundation can be devised,’ said Thomas Jefferson, ‘for the preservation of freedom and happiness.’ Yet as a matter of fact during the twentieth century the generations trained in these schools have either abandoned their liberties or they have not known, until the last desperate moment, how to defend them. The schools were to make men free. They have been in operation for some sixty or seventy years and what was expected of them they have not done. The plain fact is that the graduates of the modern schools are the actors in the catastrophe which has befallen our civilization. Those who are responsible for modern education -- for its controlling philosophy -- are answerable for the results.” Continue Reading at TheNewAmerican.com
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capousa
said:
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Government Schools If graduates of government schools in the US were cars, they would have been bankrupt long before GM and Chrysler. |
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