By An Old Friend
Wed, Dec 23, 2020 7:47 p.m.Jonathan Turley: NYC Mayor Warren Wilhelm [aka "Bill De Blasio"] Admits He's All for Eating the Rich
AOF: Turley, a law prof at George Washington U., is no conservative. Still, he seems to be truly awakening to the character of the national Democrats (best understood via commentator Michael Walsh's description: "a criminal gang masquerading as a political party").
During the Democratic primary, I wrote about New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and his "eat the rich" pitch for votes. He pledged to "tax the hell out of the rich." It did not work. Not only did de Blasio never get to one percent nationally. Worse yet, he polled at zero in his own New York city with a 58 percent unfavorable rating. Yet, De Blasio later continued his anti-capitalism agenda including using the pandemic to renew calls to curtail capitalism and demonstrating a shocking lack of knowledge of basic economics. Now de Blasio has declared the purpose of the New York public schools as redistribution of wealth and doubled down on that call after being criticized on Fox News.
Last week, de Blasio declared that he viewed the public schools as a tool for wealth redistribution and not just education: "I'd like to say very bluntly our mission is to redistribute wealth. A lot of people bristle at that phrase. That is, in fact, the phrase we need to use."
His remarks drew criticism, including on Fox News. That coverage led to the recent response from de Blasio:
I'm going to say it one more time in case Fox News is watching again: 'NYC mayor sees the redistribution of wealth as an important factor toward ending structural racism in education.' Exactly right. I don't get to say it very often, but Fox News got it exactly right. Amen. We are going to fight structural racism through redistribution, so Fox News, congratulations, fair and balanced coverage right there. If we think we're going to deal with structural racism and segregation without redistribution of wealth, we're kidding ourselves," the mayor added. "Nothing changes unless you put the resources behind it."
As with my criticism of his understanding of economics (in demanding that the federal government just print more money to wipe out the New York city debt), I believe de Blasio is fundamentally wrong about the purpose of public education. In Chicago, my parents were great supporters of the public school system and sought to stop the white flight from public schools. While we could afford private schools, I went to public schools for virtually all of my pre-college education. They believed that public schools constitute important forums for shaping citizens in a diverse and common education. I believe strongly in public schools and we sent all of our kids public schools for the same reason.
Public education is not about wealth distribution. It should be a place for all families — wealthy and impoverished — to experience a common education, including important civics courses. This is the place where we shape future citizens. It is about affording all children a common and shared educational experience, not laboratories for de Blasio's experiments on social or economic reconstruction.
It is certainly true that all forms of social welfare programs involve distribution of resources. However, public education is not about redistributing wealth. It is about guaranteeing common education and opportunities for all citizens. The level of support is tied to its educational, not a redistributive, function.
As an educator of over thirty years, I find de Blasio's statement deeply troubling. Our schools and our children are not vehicles for de Blasio or others to recreate society. It is a highjacking of our schools for their own agendas. Public schools are struggling with low performing test scores, particularly among minority students. We need a greater focus on education, not economics, in our schools.
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money."
ReplyDeleteHe can start with the Big Tech criminals who financed the recent fraudulent election.
ReplyDeleteAsking de Blasio to do anything for White,non-liberals is like asking President Xi to give up eating Chinese food.
ReplyDelete-GRA
jerry pdx
ReplyDeleteI might not necessarily be against it if the "redistribution" came my way but most of these sharing the wealth schemes bypass the white middle class and want to send the wealth to negro's,hispanics & alien invaders.
"he seems to be truly awakening to the character of the national Democrats"
ReplyDeleteA number beyond Jonathan too.
And it is not that guys like the mayor of NYC don't understand capitalism. They understand quite well. They just HATE capi8talism.