tultican , to random
@tultican@awscommunity.social avatar

Ohio: The Corrupt GOP Politicians Defunding Public Schools and Their Students - Children of the affluent, already enrolled in private and religious schools, are the beneficiaries. https://dianeravitch.net/2024/06/24/ohio-the-corrupt-gop-politicians-defunding-public-schools-and-their-students/ via @dianeravitch

prachisrivas , to AcademicChatter group
@prachisrivas@masto.ai avatar

Full recording of NORRAG-TISS-Western University panel on 'Private Sector Approaches to Education'.

I speak about the equity issues in the Global South, and a tendency to view education as a technical enterprise. I argue education is a complex and political process and systems are value-laden, requiring a critical examination of supposed resource scarcity and the roles of public and private actors.

https://www.norrag.org/private-sector-actors-and-approaches-in-education/

@academicchatter

salixsericea , to random
@salixsericea@mastodon.social avatar

Rent vs. Food -- an economist explains why paying 30% or more of your income for rent is nothing to worry about.

Bonus: apples and oranges discussion.

Yes, you read that first part right. An economist who not only has no problem with paying so much in rent but who straight up says it's fine.

Why?

Because, he says, food was about 29% of expenditure and it now down to about 10%.

So, a higher percentage going to rent is cool.

He even had a graph to show the numbers.

...🧵

kentpitman ,
@kentpitman@climatejustice.social avatar

@salixsericea

I have trouble with this because the foundations of such arguments are based on trends that presume some kind of physics, when economies are structurally, if not also actually, more like whims. A panic over something can send prices spinning in one or another direction. There is no structural requirement that yesterday relates to tomorrow.

And by these things, I include even things like Steven Pinker going on about the world getting better by studying what amount to almanacs. Truly, the betterness he describes is built on surplus, and surplus is a product of structural integrity, which is not always a visible thing. Pinker has done interesting work in other areas, but his predictions and assurances on the goodness of the world rely on really no structure at all. They have zero predictive value in my book. The moment the world has no surplus (and that is what climate change is setting us up for), all "betterness" that Pinker speaks of will evaporate like so much cotton candy.

To turn the conversation back by way of climate metaphor, it can look like the ice in, say, Antarctica has not changed as seen from a satellite, only to find that it's been melting from below due to heating oceans or some sort of volcanic effect or other effects we just haven't discovered, and things can just fall in.

The economy is the same. For a hopefully-entertaining brief parable on the matter, see my 2009 essay "Hollow Support" (http://netsettlement.blogspot.com/2009/03/hollow-support.html). In it, I offer a metaphor for thinking about the economy and its fragility, which I was pondering after what was then a recent crash.

A lot of what we are doing with the economy these days has been aptly, I think, described as a "sugar high". It locally seems good, but it's not improving structure, so doom must follow.

And so back to this actual piece: High rent is something hard to sustain in hard times, so becomes a weight that weighs one down. And while I'm a big advocate of things like community kitchens, they are rarely publicly funded, and the importance of that is critical to understand.

Public funding is eschewed by many as some kind of socialism, but another way to think of it is a public commitment to making sure a process is there no matter the economy. In tough times, donations to private matters dry up, and that cascades down to hard times for our most vulnerable. To make something like this, or social security, or medicare, be publicly funded to a proper degree is to say we have no higher priority in society than the survival of our citizens. We are either committed to them or we are not, but privatization basically says we are not, that they will somehow manage to survive tough times by means we aren't willing to think through.

So there is no real backstop there. There is just the illusion of continuity from good times. And it is terrible policy, public or private, to tell people to reason about the future based on the artifacts of the past. Those artifacts can inform intuitions, but what must really inform thought is an understanding of what is changing, including the hearts of the public.

Any suggestion I can offer is unsatisfying. Some would say this is why people should be preppers, but prepperism is really only useful for temporary problems. The climate problem is so structural that no basement full of food will get anyone through it. At best it will help people survive a brief glitch or give people a chance to endure climate pain for longer before it is too much to endure.

The solution is to care about climate, and also social justice, and make structural changes there. But there seems little public appetite for that, in part because the people likely to be most affected are mindlessly backing the people who would do the worst to them.

prachisrivas , to random
@prachisrivas@masto.ai avatar

What role (if any) for non-state private actors regarding on , and what of evidence? Join us for the NORRAG - TISS - Western University hybrid event, 'Private Sector Actors and Approaches in Education'.

I will address private schooling and low-fee private schooling, with co-panellists, on private investments, corporate social responsibility, diverse partnerships, and philanthropic engagement.

Tuesday, 7 May at 12pm EDT

https://www.norrag.org/private-sector-actors-and-approaches-in-education/

@AcademicChatter

tultican , to random
@tultican@awscommunity.social avatar

Tennessee: Voucher Bill Dead!! - Republicans have a supermajority in both houses of the Legislature. But some Republicans listened to their constituents, not the out-of-state money. https://dianeravitch.net/2024/04/22/tennessee-voucher-bill-dead/ via @dianeravitch

lukemartell , to AcademicChatter group
@lukemartell@social.coop avatar

I wrote a blog on the marketisation of universities. It's prompted by radical cuts at universities in the UK currently and reflecting back on blog posts I wrote between 2010-13 on the privatisation and marketisation of universities. https://lukesnotes.mataroa.blog/blog/on-the-marketisation-of-universities/
@academicchatter

faab64 , to random

The President of Argentina, Javier Milei, announced that his government is considering the possibility of selling the country's prisons to private companies in order to build new penal facilities away from urban areas

dcjohnson , to random
@dcjohnson@mastodon.cloud avatar

In the UK the Tories are being paid by private healthcare interests to kill off (privatize) the NHS. Defunding is a privatization strategy.

It's what is happening. Just say it.

tultican , to random
@tultican@awscommunity.social avatar

Post is based on new NPE report measuring each states depth of support for public education and it calls out the Christian nationalist opposition to public schools. https://tultican.com/2024/03/07/public-education-attack-measured/

18+ dcjohnson , to random
@dcjohnson@mastodon.cloud avatar

Privatization is supposedly "more efficient" because governments are supposedly inefficient.

Reality: Privatization saves money by paying people less, delivering poor service and skimping on safety and maintenance. (So the poor services, delivered by impoverished people, also get more and more dangerous.)

Paying people less lowers the standard of living for the population in aggregate.

A functioning democracy would never allow public services to be privatized.

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