Date: Sun, Dec 18, 2011 at 11:01 AM
Subject: Bill and Melinda Gates's Foundation Helps ALEC Undercut Public
Education
To: Rick Blaine <[email protected]>


**
>From what we've seen, ol' Bill, while most likely a computer & perhaps
business genius, suffers from altruist/collectivist/statist BS (Belief
System), apparently instilled by his socialist lawyer Dad, along with the
usual State-controlled schools & media.  However, if what you say here is
somewhat true, Rick, perhaps there's still hope for "Billy Boy", as you so
cleverly label him.

What you call "Public School" is 100% State Indoctrination, 100% funded by
theft, which you call "taxation".  Theft is taking property without the
owner's consent, regardless of what you call it.  Calling it taxation does
not give me, or my "government" the right to take your property, Rick.

We must have must have separation of education and State [
http://www.schoolandstate.org/home.htm], health care and State, child care
and State & economics and State, as we should have separation of church and
State ... and for the same reasons.

Let's replace our coercive State with the "Natural Republic", in which all
humans have 100% control of their lives and property.  To do that, there
must be a group of humans who thoroughly understand the solution.  Please
help as many of your thinking friends as possible purchase and listen
multiple times to at least the first four sessions of Jay Stuart Snelson's
V-50 lectures ... and preferably, the whole course .. available at
http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/JaySnelson.

*Government is the  great fiction, through which everybody endeavors to
live at the expense of  everybody else.*

*-- Frederic Bastiat,  French economist(1801-1850)*****
--bob & lou
www.wynman.com

----- Original Message -----
*From:* Rick Blaine <[email protected]>
*Sent:* Sunday, December 18, 2011 8:36 AM
*Subject:* Bill and Melinda Gates's Foundation Helps ALEC Undercut Public
Education

Charter schools are the vehicle of the sneaky-snake right-wing Top One
Percent whose objective is to get government out of education and
abolishing school systems by pushing vouchers and charter schools.

*"ALEC-sponsored "bills would privatize public education, crush teacher's
unions, and push American universities to the right. Among other things,
these bills make education a private commodity rather than a public good,
and reverse America's modern innovation of promoting learning and civic
virtue through public schools staffed with professional teachers for
children from all backgrounds."***

*"**ALEC's mission is "to defund and redesign public schools." Underwood
detailed how ALEC has been promoting "choice" and "vouchers" for more than
20 years.**"*

Leave it to Billy Boy to throw in with ALEC.
Bill and Melinda Gates's Foundation Helps ALEC Undercut Public
EducationSubmitted
by BuzzFlash on Tue, 12/13/2011 - 3:18pm.

   - Guest Commentary <http://blog.buzzflash.com/taxonomy/term/32>

*BILL BERKOWITZ FOR BUZZFLASH AT TRUTHOUT*

*Gates Foundation Enables ALEC's Project to Privatize Public Education*
* *

*In the war being fought over the very survival of public education, the
privatizers are forging the future. Is the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation aiding and abetting them?*

I don't know how you feel about Bill Gates, the chairman of Microsoft, and
one of the world's richest men. Many people appreciate what he's
accomplished. Many think that Gates' wife, Melinda, is doing wonderful work
aiding the poor in underdeveloped countries. Gates' dad, who has taken the
lead in advocating higher taxes for the wealthy, has always seemed really
likable.

In philanthropic circles, the work of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
(http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Pages/home.aspx), which gives some $3
billion annually, especially in fighting HIV/AIDS, malaria and mother-child
deaths in underdeveloped countries around the world, is highly regarded.

However, there are critics concerned about what Edward Skloot, director of
Duke University's Center for Strategic Philanthropy and Civil Society,
recently characterized as the foundation's "brass-knuckle philanthropy."
(It should also be noted that Skloot has indicated he thinks the
foundation's methodology was "pretty close to the ideal.")

At a recent Hudson Institute-sponsored panel titled "Living with the Gates
Foundation" (
http://www.hudson.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=hudson_upcoming_events&id=899),
Tim Ogden, editor of Philanthropy Action, said that Gates is "creating the
ball, building the team, hiring the referees," and "funding the instant
replay." According to The Chronicle of Philanthropy's Caroline Preston's
report, Laura Freschi, of New York University's Development Research
Institute, "said it's not out of the question that one day a reader might
devour an article about a Gates-supported health project, printed on the
pages of a newspaper that gets Gates money, reported by a journalist who
received media training paid for by Gates, citing research by scientists
financed by Gates."

Gates recently told Christiane Amanpour, the host of ABC's "This Week With
Christiane Amanpour," that while he favored raising taxes on the wealthy,
he didn't think that would solve the "deficit gap." He also said that he
didn't think President Obama was waging class warfare on the rich, joking
that as far as knows, there are no barricades in the streets being manned
by the wealthy.

Gates does have a legion of critics. In his new biography of the late Steve
Jobs, author Walter Isaacson reported that Jobs told him that Gates is
"basically unimaginative, has never invented anything ... he just
shamelessly ripped off other people's ideas."

Last year, I wrote a piece about the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's
relationship to the chemical company Monsanto and the agribusiness giant
Cargill (http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/11834). The gist of the story was
that the Foundation had bought 500,000 Monsanto shares worth around $23
million in the second quarter of 2010. Critics pointed out that amongst
other things, Monsanto has for years had a negative impact on small
farmers, especially in Africa.

And some critics are highly skeptical about some of the Gates Foundation's
choices, particularly as it relates to education in the United States.
According to the Gates Foundation website, their education mission in the
U.S. is pretty straightforward: "... to dramatically improve education so
that all young people have the opportunity to reach their full potential.
We seek to ensure that all students graduate from high school ready for
college and career and prepared to complete a postsecondary degree or
certificate with value in the workplace."

Would it surprise you to learn that the *Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation*recently gave
more than $300,000 to the *American Legislative Exchange Council*, a
shadowy right-wing organization that has inordinate power in state
legislatures across the country.   (POSTER'S NOTE:  The strategy is to
expand shadow influence FROM Washington DC TO state houses.)

In November, the foundation announced that it has awarded the American
Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) (http://www.alec.org/) a grant of
$376,635 earmarked for ALEC's work on an assortment of education projects,
over a 22-month period. The Gates Foundation's official description of the
grant reads: "to educate and engage its membership on more efficient state
budget approaches to drive greater student outcomes, as well as educate
them on beneficial ways to recruit, retain, evaluate and compensate
effective teaching based upon merit and achievement."

Robin Rogers is an associate professor of sociology at Queens College and
the Graduate Center at the City University of New York (CUNY), and the
author of "Why Philanthro-policymaking Matters" in The Politics of
Philanthrocapitalism, Society 2011, The Welfare Experiments: Politics and
Policy Evaluation (Stanford University Press, 2004). In a recent piece at
The Education Optimists titled "Billionaire Education Policy," Rogers
pointed out that the Gates Foundation's grant to ALEC was aimed at
"influenc[ing] state budget making - where the rubber hits the road on
education policy." Rogers noted that after the grant's announcement,
"Twitter was buzzing with the news" and the debate revolved around "whether
this constituted a Republican takeover of the state budget process, a Gates
Foundation takeover of ALEC or both. No one suggested it was a victory for
democracy."

Since its' founding nearly 40 years ago, the raison d'etre of the American
Legislative Exchange Council (http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/12551) has
been to influence state legislatures on behalf of corporations and
so-called family values advocates, *but mostly corporations*. As The Center
for Media and Democracy's "ALEC Exposed" (
http://www.alecexposed.org/wiki/ALEC_Exposed) project points out, the
organization is "not a lobby" and "not a front group": "It is much more
powerful than that."

*Primarily funded by corporations, corporate trade groups, and corporate
foundations," and populated mainly by Republican office holders, ALEC is a
non-profit organization made up primarily of a "who's who' of the extreme
right."*

As I reported in late March of this year, "while the Washington, D.C.-based
ALEC may not be responsible for all of the mayhem going on in such states
as Wisconsin, Ohio, New Jersey, Indiana, Florida, and Michigan (with more
states certain to follow), it has historically played an extraordinary role
in shaping pro-corporate legislation in a number of states."

According to ALEC Exposed, *ALEC-sponsored* "*bills would privatize public
education*, *crush teacher's unions*, and *push American universities to
the right*. Among other things, these bills make education a private
commodity rather than a public good, and reverse America's modern
innovation of promoting learning and civic virtue through public schools
staffed with professional teachers for children from all backgrounds."

As Julie Underwood, dean of the School of Education and a professor at the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, pointed out in a piece in The Nation (
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/07/14-12), *ALEC's mission is* "*to
defund and redesign public schools."* Underwood detailed how ALEC has
been *promoting
"choice" and "vouchers" for more than 20 years.*

However, Underwood wrote: "ALEC's most ambitious and strategic push toward
privatizing education came in 2007, through a publication called School
Choice and State Constitutions, which proposed a list of programs tailored
to each state." Several states, including Georgia, Louisiana, Oklahoma,
Florida, Utah and Indiana enacted ALEC-suggested legislation.

"ALEC's 2010 Report Card on American Education called on members and allies
to ‘Transform the system, don't tweak it,' likening the group's current
legislative strategy to a game of whack-a-mole: introduce so many pieces of
model legislation that there is "no way the person with the mallet
[teachers' unions] can get them all." Underwood wrote.

According to Underwood, "ALEC's agenda includes":

§ "Introducing market factors into teaching, through bills like the
National Teacher Certification Fairness Act."

§ "Privatizing education through vouchers, charters and tax incentives,
especially through the Parental Choice Scholarship Program Act and Special
Needs Scholarship Program Act, whose many spinoffs encourage the creation
of private schools for specific populations: children with autism, children
in military families, etc."

§ "Increasing student testing and reporting, through more "accountability,"
as seen in the Education Accountability Act, Longitudinal Student Growth
Act, One-to-One Reading Improvement Act and the Resolution Supporting the
Principles of No Child Left Behind."

§ "Chipping away at local school districts and school boards, through its
2009 Innovation Schools and School Districts Act and more. Proposals like
the Public School Financial Transparency Act and School Board Freedom to
Contract Act would allow school districts to outsource auxiliary services."

Admittedly, the $376,635 grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
is just a drop from the foundation's bucket, and it will not guarantee
ALEC's success in achieving its goals. It certainly will help. As Underwood
pointed out, "ALEC's real motivation for dismantling the public education
system is ideological-creating a system where schools do not provide for
everyone - and profit-driven."

What the foundation's grant might contribute to is another in a series of
ginned-up reports produced by ALEC's education team. Robin Rogers wrote
recently that there's a danger to extrapolate conclusions from education
experiments - as it was in welfare reform: "Our measurements are imprecise
at best and meaningless and misleading at worst. Most educators, advocates,
researchers, philanthropists, and policymakers are well aware of the
problem of measuring complex outcomes. That awareness disappears when we
talk about policy experiments. We act as if testing these programs will
lead to some empirical, objective truth about what works best."

Rogers added: "Policy experiments are supposed to tell us empirically how
good a program or approach is. They don't do this very well. Randomized
experiments are expensive, difficult, and rare. Most policy ‘experiments'
aren't really experiments. They are a trial run of a program with data
collection. Even then, the data is often collected haphazardly or to
highlight program success and minimize failures. Politics and research also
operate in different time frames - solid evaluations often take years. In
short, well-funded policy evaluations take too long to actually affect
policy, and ad hoc evaluations don't produce reliable findings."

In the final analysis, ALEC will take Gates money. It will likely come up
with another report touting the success of charter schools and voucher
programs, and more reasons to bust teachers unions. It will design sample
legislation for its members to introduce in state houses across the
country. The privatization of public education will move forward. This is
not a project that Bill or Melinda Gates should be proud of.

http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/13204

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