I've lately thought that on Tue, 30 Mar 1999, Ross A. Finlayson wrote:
>Jocelyn Brown wrote:
>> BTW, are you actually in favor of the notion of compulsory education?
>>
>
>Absolutely. Compulsory education through to the threshold of adulthood is
>mandatory.
By all means, let's make sure those kids get to practice some valuable prison skills! :-/
>> >pleased all the time. That said, free public education is the backbone of
>> >America.
>>
>> Unless I hallucinated my last property tax bill, public education is far
>> from
>> free.
>If you ever go to class at a public school, you'll notice it's free, and
Didn't she just say she paid for it? How can it be free and costly at once?
>Part of our taxes goes to blatant pork overspending on military hammers and
>coffemakers, this has gotten somewhat better over the past ten years maybe, but
>gross inefficiency is much more prevalent in other sectors of the government
>than education, which returns marvelous returns of value for costs.
I think if you compare public and private schools, you'll see just how bad the return on investment is.
>Paying for education is part of the social contract.
What contract? I didn't sign no stinkin' contract.
-- Wolfkin. wolfkin@freedomspace.net | Libertarian webhost? www.freedomspace.net On a visible but distant shore, a new image of man; The shape of his own future, now in his own hands.-- Johnny Clegg.