THE SHOEBOX CONSTITUTION? By Charlotte
Iserbyt, September 12, 2015 NewsWithViews.com
There has
been much coverage regarding the recent Washington State Supreme Court declaring Charter Schools
unconstitutional.
The crux of the ruling is centered
upon upholding a taxpayer’ right to vote and maintain local accountability. The
Court disallowed Charters as they deemed them unconstitutional taxation without
representation. Isn’t that why we fought the Revolutionary War? Charter schools
have appointed boards while using taxpayer money, but the tax payer has no say
in how the money is to be spent. The Court said: “But the new schools came with
a trade-off: the loss of local control and local accountability”
It appears that certain conservative
think tanks, editors, and organizations, do not agree with the Washington State
ruling. For instance, The American
Enterprise Institute (AIE) has this to say about the ruling:
“This interpretation matters to our
very ideals about civil society. Any decision by state officials that erodes
the public nature of charter schools because they fail to fit inside a shoebox definition of a “local, free school” usurps our right to access a
diverse set of learning options.” Should
“diversity” and “opinions” trump a state’s Constitution Laws?
The AIE then makes many other
elaborate arguments, at the above site, as to why the Court decision is wrong.
But, they never point out that voters lose their
right to vote. It seems to appear that they would prefer to support the “ambitions” of those who promote
“Choice” and “Charters”… you know… Bill Gates, the Walton Foundation, Tom
Vander Ark, Arne Duncan and Barrack Obama, Jeb Bush, the Koch Brothers,
Heritage Foundation, the privatizers, etc. rather than protect the “rights” of American citizen’s to
vote.
Others in the conservative movement
cited the fact that Washington State voted and passed a Charter initiative in
2012. An article regarding this issue posted in the Daily
Caller cited that the Charter initiative,
I-1240 was passed by a narrow 1% vote and legalized Charter Schools in
Washington State. The Court responded to this Charter initiative accordingly:
“In sum, the Charter School Act
violates article IX, section 2 [of the Washington State Constitution] because
charter schools are not common schools despite the Act’s attempt to so
designate them. The Act’s designated funding mechanisms fail, and these
provisions are not severable for the remainder of the Charter School Act…”
The American Enterprise Institute appears to have a remedy for the
Supreme Court ruling:
“Washingtonians’ demand for parental
choice is tenacious. If history holds true, families and taxpayers will take
this decision back to where it belongs: to the people.”
Isn’t that interesting. In other words the AEI suggests that the issue
go back to the people so that they can vote to eliminate their right to vote. Would such reasoning
be the result of the elimination of Formal Logic in schools some time ago; and,
could such reasoning qualify one to become.
© 2015 Charlotte
T. Iserbyt - All Rights Reserved
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