I accept this, but these are also the same problem. The elites are the elites because of the monopolization of school by the state.
Breaking that is the first step. Then, yes, just like Notre Dame University or even most of the private religious colleges, the next step is to make them accountable to the consumers who are saying "we didn't pay for this shit". Then building a parallel system within that which defunds private woke schools. Then, paralleling the entire field of education so that teachers who teach can go to private schools and teachers who groom continue to flood public schools, pushing the division further. Those pupils from genuine private, non-woke, schools can then be educated against Leftist radicalization and lead further resistance.
Fixing education isn't something to be done in one lifetime. It's a god damned nightmare, so there's gonna be a lot of time for these changes to take effect. Even getting a few "experiments" in can work wonders for comparison. Someone just stops funding public schools in a township or a county and takes tax money to create a private school stipend. Little shit like that can create success stories that can serve as a base for further actions.
Private schooling isn't a solution, it's just that defunding public schooling is the equivalent of putting a chest-seal on a sucking chest wound... that wants to rape your kids.
The state is the state because the elites shaped the state to their interests. The issue with privatization is that you are going to eventually have "woke" mega-corporations buy up the private schools, and they will become even more difficult to manage than public schools in many cases, once they reach near monopolization. Finding a non-pozzed schools will then become as difficult as finding non-pozzed movies, TV, shows, etc.
The issue with privatization is that you are going to eventually have "woke" mega-corporations buy up the private schools, and they will become even more difficult to manage than public schools in many cases, once they reach near monopolization
I don't agree. This, I think, is comparable to UK hotels selling out to the government and NGO's to house migrants for wild amounts of money. You could do serious damage to that by cutting taxes and programs, even without directly targeting that one in particular. But that's just the supply side. The demand side is building enough cultural momentum to push people to reject the bribes in the first place, same thing you do with mask mandates.
The right typically doesn't win on culture war issues because it typically never fights them, but in situations like that, you need to push the value of the privately owned small business refusing to sell out to the big Leftist corporation. "Don't be a fucking sell-out" needs to be a rightist mantra.
We need to focus on building a heroic narrative around a single man who stands up to corporations and business to protect his family, friends, and community.
There is no reason to think private schooling would defy current trends toward consolidation and monopolization that are happening in the wider economy, doubly so when there is a school privatization lobbying effort going on.
current trends toward consolidation and monopolization that are happening in the wider economy
Hard disagree on that one. If anything, the past 70 years has shown corporations intentionally segmenting themselves into allied syndicates. Almost nothing is a pure monopoly anymore. A good example is General Motors. To say they are a car company anymore is a bit of a stretch. They are more akin to a financial company that orders the manufacturing of cars. What used to be "General Motors factories" are now "Factories that take manufacturing orders from General Motors". Factories now work with GM as if they were vendors, rather than an integral part of the industrial process. More like franchises than factories.
More and more, there is business-to-business economics at every level. No one company seems to make one product (start to finish) for consumers in a vertical monopoly. Everyone works by a contract with everyone else.
You're far more likely to see that reflected in education as colleges prove to be worthless. Your private schooling is going to result in something akin to certification and examination prep for industries and specific vendors. Even the largest companies on earth don't want to consolidate into education because it's too much of an investment for too low of a return. They just want to set the standards and let the schools do the work.
With education, as an industry, the only monopolies are the state.
I accept this, but these are also the same problem. The elites are the elites because of the monopolization of school by the state.
Breaking that is the first step. Then, yes, just like Notre Dame University or even most of the private religious colleges, the next step is to make them accountable to the consumers who are saying "we didn't pay for this shit". Then building a parallel system within that which defunds private woke schools. Then, paralleling the entire field of education so that teachers who teach can go to private schools and teachers who groom continue to flood public schools, pushing the division further. Those pupils from genuine private, non-woke, schools can then be educated against Leftist radicalization and lead further resistance.
Fixing education isn't something to be done in one lifetime. It's a god damned nightmare, so there's gonna be a lot of time for these changes to take effect. Even getting a few "experiments" in can work wonders for comparison. Someone just stops funding public schools in a township or a county and takes tax money to create a private school stipend. Little shit like that can create success stories that can serve as a base for further actions.
Private schooling isn't a solution, it's just that defunding public schooling is the equivalent of putting a chest-seal on a sucking chest wound... that wants to rape your kids.
The state is the state because the elites shaped the state to their interests. The issue with privatization is that you are going to eventually have "woke" mega-corporations buy up the private schools, and they will become even more difficult to manage than public schools in many cases, once they reach near monopolization. Finding a non-pozzed schools will then become as difficult as finding non-pozzed movies, TV, shows, etc.
I don't agree. This, I think, is comparable to UK hotels selling out to the government and NGO's to house migrants for wild amounts of money. You could do serious damage to that by cutting taxes and programs, even without directly targeting that one in particular. But that's just the supply side. The demand side is building enough cultural momentum to push people to reject the bribes in the first place, same thing you do with mask mandates.
The right typically doesn't win on culture war issues because it typically never fights them, but in situations like that, you need to push the value of the privately owned small business refusing to sell out to the big Leftist corporation. "Don't be a fucking sell-out" needs to be a rightist mantra.
We need to focus on building a heroic narrative around a single man who stands up to corporations and business to protect his family, friends, and community.
There is no reason to think private schooling would defy current trends toward consolidation and monopolization that are happening in the wider economy, doubly so when there is a school privatization lobbying effort going on.
Hard disagree on that one. If anything, the past 70 years has shown corporations intentionally segmenting themselves into allied syndicates. Almost nothing is a pure monopoly anymore. A good example is General Motors. To say they are a car company anymore is a bit of a stretch. They are more akin to a financial company that orders the manufacturing of cars. What used to be "General Motors factories" are now "Factories that take manufacturing orders from General Motors". Factories now work with GM as if they were vendors, rather than an integral part of the industrial process. More like franchises than factories.
More and more, there is business-to-business economics at every level. No one company seems to make one product (start to finish) for consumers in a vertical monopoly. Everyone works by a contract with everyone else.
You're far more likely to see that reflected in education as colleges prove to be worthless. Your private schooling is going to result in something akin to certification and examination prep for industries and specific vendors. Even the largest companies on earth don't want to consolidate into education because it's too much of an investment for too low of a return. They just want to set the standards and let the schools do the work.
With education, as an industry, the only monopolies are the state.