Politics Versus Education
By _Thomas Sowell_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/thomas_sowell/)  - April 29,  2014

http://www.realclearpolitics.com

 
 
Of all the cynical frauds of the Obama administration, few are so 
despicable  as sacrificing the education of poor and minority children to the 
interests of  the teachers' unions. 
Attorney General Eric Holder's attempt to suppress the spread of charter  
schools in Louisiana was just one of the signs of that cynicism. His 
nationwide  threats of legal action against schools that discipline more black 
students than  he thinks they should are at least as damaging.




 
Charter schools are hated by teachers' unions and by much of the 
educational  establishment in general. They seem to be especially hated when 
they 
succeed in  educating minority children whom the educational establishment says 
cannot be  educated. 
Apparently it can be done when you don't have to hire unionized teachers 
with  iron-clad tenure, and when you don't have to follow the dogmas in vogue 
in the  educational establishment. 
Last year, there was an attempt to shut down the American Indian Model  
Schools in Oakland, California -- schools that had been ranked among the top  
schools in the nation, schools with the top test scores in their district and 
 the fourth highest scores in the entire state of California. 
The reason given was that the former -- repeat, FORMER -- head of these  
schools was accused of financial irregularities. Since there are courts of law 
 to determine the guilt or innocence of individuals, why should school 
children  be punished by having their schools shut down, immediately and 
permanently,  before any court even held a trial? 
Fortunately, a court order prevented this planned vindictive closing of 
this  highly successful charter school with minority students. But the attempt 
shows  the animus and the cynical disregard of the education of children who 
have few  other places to get a comparable education. 
Attorney General Holder's threats of legal action against schools where  
minority students are disciplined more often than he wants are a much more  
sweeping and damaging blow to the education of poor and minority students 
across  the country. 
Among the biggest obstacles to educating children in many ghetto schools 
are  disruptive students whose antics, threats and violence can make education 
 virtually impossible. If only 10 percent of the students are this way, 
that  sacrifices the education of the other 90 percent. 
The idea that Eric Holder, or anybody else, can sit in Washington and  
determine how many disciplinary actions against individual students are  
warranted or unwarranted in schools across the length and breadth of this  
country 
would be laughable if it were not so tragic. 
Relying on racial statistics tells you nothing, unless you believe that 
black  male students cannot possibly be more disruptive than Asian female 
students, or  that students in crime-ridden neighborhoods cannot possibly 
require 
disciplinary  actions more often than children in the most staid, 
middle-class  neighborhoods. 
Attorney General Holder is not fool enough to believe either of those 
things.  Why then is he pursuing this numbers game? 
The most obvious answer is politics. Anything that promotes a sense of  
grievance from charges of racial discrimination offers hope of energizing the  
black vote to turn out to vote for Democrats, which is especially needed 
when  support from other voters is weakening in the wake of Obama 
administration  scandals and fiascoes. 
Eric Holder's other big racial crusade, against requiring identification 
for  voting, is the same political game. And it is carried out with the same 
cynical  promotion of fears, with orchestrated hysteria from other Democrats 
-- as if  having to show identification to vote is like a revival of the Ku 
Klux Klan. 
Blacks, whites and everybody else can be asked for identification these 
days,  whether cashing a check or using a credit card at a local store or going 
to an  airport -- or even getting into some political meetings called to 
protest voter  ID laws. 
But to sacrifice the education of children, especially children for whom  
education may be their only ticket out of poverty, is truly a new low. As  
someone once said to Senator Joe McCarthy, "Have you no sense of decency,  
sir?" 


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