By Joel Turtel - NewsWithViews.com

One of the most common arguments that school authorities use to justify public schools is that all children have a “right” to an education. Public-school apologists claim that all children have a right to an education, and that only the existence of a massive, compulsory, government-controlled public-school system can “guarantee” that right.

As I will explain below, the claim that all children have a right to an education ends up hurting the very children it was intended to help. I will therefore ask a seemingly shocking question — do all children have a right to an education? If they do, public-school apologists are correct in assuming that we need government to guarantee that right.

What is an economic right such as the alleged right to an education? A right means that a person has a claim on the rest of society (other Americans) to give him some product or service he wants, regardless of whether he can pay for it or not. For example, if we claimed that everyone has a right to a car, that would mean if someone couldn’t afford a car, government would give that person the money to buy it (the payment might be called a car voucher).

Similarly, if we say that all children have a right to an education, regardless of their parent’s ability to pay tuition, then only government can guarantee this alleged right. Government has to guarantee this right because no private, for-profit school will admit a student if the parents don’t pay tuition (unless the student gets a scholarship). If a private school doesn’t get paid for its services, it soon goes out of business.

Local or state governments can guarantee this alleged right in two basic ways. They can own and operate all the public schools and force all children to attend these schools, or they can give subsidies (vouchers) to parents to pay for tuition in the private school of their choice. Since most school authorities strongly oppose vouchers, that means they support only a government-controlled system of compulsory public schools and school taxes to guarantee children this alleged right to an education.

But government produces nothing by itself. Government gets its money by taxing us. To guarantee this alleged right to a product or service, government tax collectors must therefore take money from one person to give it to another. They must take from Peter to pay Paul, as the saying goes. So, in effect, a person who demands food, housing, or medical care as an alleged right, is really demanding that government tax agents steal money from his neighbor to give him an unearned benefit he didn’t work for.

Education, like housing or medical care, does not grow free in nature. Just as someone must pay doctors, nurses, and hospitals for all the services they provide, someone must also pay for teachers’ salaries, textbooks, janitorial services, and school upkeep. Other than air, nothing that we need is free.

The average public school now gets over $7,500 a year per student, paid from compulsory taxes. To guarantee education as a “right,” local, state, and federal governments must tax all Americans to pay for public schools. All of us are taxed, whether or not we have school-age children or think these schools are worth paying for. So when some parents claim that their children have a right to an education, they are really demanding that their local or state government steal money from their neighbors to pay for their children’s education.

Here’s an analogy that might help clarify this issue. Imagine that your unemployed neighbor comes to you and asks you to lend him money to pay for his children’s education. You reply that, though you sympathize with his problem, your answer is no. He responds by saying that he is poor, points out that you have a big house and a job, and insists that his children have a “right” to an education. You say, “Sorry, my answer is still no because I need my money for my own children’s education.” Suppose that your neighbor then gets real mad, pulls out a gun, puts it to your head, and says, “I asked you nicely. I told you my children need an education. You have a job, and I’m unemployed, so you have a moral duty to give me your money.” Then he clicks back the hammer on the gun.

Does your neighbor have the right to put a gun to your head and steal your money because his children “need” an education? He has no such right. Nor does he, or any number of your neighbors, have the right to rob you by getting government to be their enforcer – by pressuring local governments to take your money through school taxes. Any school system that uses compulsory taxes is a system based on the notion that theft is moral if it’s for a good cause. No goal, not even educating children, justifies legalized theft.

It is only natural that all parents want the best education for their children, but do good intentions justify stealing from your neighbor? A mugger on the street who puts a knife to your throat and demands your money also has good intentions – he wants to make his life better with your money. One of the Ten Commandments says, “Thou shalt not steal.” It does not say, “Thou shalt not steal, except if you need tuition money to educate your child.” Since no one has a right to steal from his neighbor, no one, including children, has a “right” to an education.

Surely we can’t punish innocent children for their parent’s failures? Just because parents are poor or unemployed, why should innocent children suffer and be denied an education? The answer to that question is one that many people find hard to accept, yet it is true – there are no guarantees in life, not for adults or for children. Good intentions to alleviate a problem do not justify hurting other people by stealing from them. Two wrongs do not make a right.

Moreover, if we agree that children have a right to an education because their parents are poor, then shouldn’t they also have a right to food, a bicycle, a nice house in the suburbs, and designer clothes? If poor kids (and all children) have an alleged right to an education, don’t they also have an alleged right to everything else that other kids have whose parents are well-off? Why not then say that anyone, poor, middle-class, or rich who has less money than his neighbor, has the “right” to steal from his neighbor?

Where do we stop if some people can legally steal from others because they claim their kids need this or that?

The answer is, we don’t stop, and we haven’t stopped. That is why our country has turned into a devouring welfare state that is drowning in debt. When I use the word “welfare,” I don’t mean only for the poor. Rich, poor, and middle-class alike in America now claim the right to everything from corporate tax breaks and subsidies, to price supports for farmers, to Medicare, to rent subsidies for unwed mothers. When we let government steal money from taxpayers to give unearned benefits or subsidies to special-interest groups, we open up a Pandora’s box. We become a nation of thieves stealing from each other. Is this what we want America to become?

The current economic crash was caused by marxist-Democrat Senators and Congressmen who believed that all people have a “right” to a home, even people with low-income or bad credit who couldn’t afford the mortgage payments. So the marxists in Congress pushed banks to give loans to everyone, no matter what their income or credit rating was.They then created a system that guaranteed these risky loans through the quasi-government agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Because government agencies guaranteed these risky loans, naturally the banks went on a lending binge of sub-prime mortgages. The crash had to come, sooner or later. So this alleged “right” to a home eventually snowballed into the toxic sub-prime mortgage crisis that triggered the economic crash that we’re ALL suffering from.

Now the Obama marxists in Congress are looking to pass the 2000-page “health-care” bill that will destroy our health care system and health-care liberty, because Obama and the Democrat-marxists in Congress believe that all people have a “right” to health care. That’s the underlying driving premise behind this health-care bill. To “guarantee” health care as a “right,” they will now destroy our health-care liberty and the health-care system for the rest of us.

It is true that a free market does not, and cannot guarantee that all children have enough to eat or live in a comfortable house. Likewise, a free-market education system in which all parents have to pay for their children’s education obviously can’t guarantee a quality education for every child.

However, government-controlled public schools also can’t guarantee that every child gets a quality education. These failed schools can barely teach our children to read. Also, neither system can make guarantees because there are no guarantees in life, and because each child’s abilities, personality, and family background are so different that such guarantees are impossible. The real question, then, is not which system is perfect, but which system is more likely to give the vast majority of children a quality education that most parents could afford?

Public schools fail and betray millions of children, year after year. The only “right” the public-school system gives to school children is the right to suffer through a mind-numbing, third-rate education for twelve years.

In contrast, the free-market, while not perfect, gives us all the wondrous goods and services we buy every day, such as cars, fresh food, computers, refrigerators, and televisions. The superbly efficient and competitive free market gives us all these marvelous products at prices that most people can afford. Even the poorest American families today have a car, refrigerator, and sometimes two televisions in their homes. If we want to discover which system would give the vast majority of children a quality education at reasonable prices, I think we have the answer – the free market, hands down.

We therefore don’t need a failed public-school system to enforce an alleged right to an education, when there is no such right in the first place. Each parent should be responsible for paying for their own children’s education, just as they pay for their children’s food or clothing.

Finally, public-school apologists use this alleged right to an education to justify keeping the public-school dinosaur alive, in spite of these schools’ never-ending failure. Many public-school apologists who claim that children have a right to an education do so out of good intentions. They want to give all children a chance to get a decent education. But good intentions mean worse than nothing if they lead to dismal consequences. This alleged right to an education lets government bureaucrats have tyrannical control over our children’s minds and future.

The “right” to an education requires a massive government-controlled public-school system to enforce that right. But it is this same public-school system that cripples the education and lives of millions of children. So, ironically, the alleged right to an education is the worst thing we can offer our children.

Most low-income families don’t need government education handouts anymore in the form of allegedly “free” public schools. Parents today can buy quality, low-cost food in a competitive, free-market food industry full of grocery stores and supermarkets. In the same way, parents today can give their kids a quality education using low-cost Internet private schools and homeschooling.

Only when we reject the notion that all children have a “right” to an education will we get government out of the education business, permanently. Only a fiercely-competitive free-market education system can give kids the quality, low-cost education they deserve.

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3 Responses to “Do Children Have A “Right” To An Education?”

  1. Anon says:

    are you serious? that way of thinking is completely selfish and heartless.

    I would rather pay taxes, then see poor families living on the streets, unable to read and provide for themselves.

    You come off as a spoiled selfish whiny little child, that got told it couldn’t have it’s third bowl of icecream.

    • Turtel says:

      YOU would rather pay these taxes? What if I or other people think the public schools are not worth the taxes they pay. and we DON”T want to pay for these schools? If YOU think the public schools are worth it, no one is stopping you from contributing with YOUR money. But what right do you, and others who think like you, presume the right to force others who don’t like the public schools or think they are worth it, to pay taxes to support them? What about people who have no children, or older retired people with no children? Why should they pay taxes for other people’s children. You say this is ‘selfish’ and ‘heartless’. You don’t seem to care about being ‘selfish’ and heartless by forcing people to pay taxes for something they don’t want. Where is your ‘humanity’ for the people you are willing to rob to pay for your pet causes? Do you have the right to be a legalized mugger with other people’s money? Where do you assume such a right?
      What if I said that I think all towns in this country need golf courses, and all people should be forced to get golf lessons, because walking on a golf course is good exercise, which increases the ‘general’ good health of millions of people. I think that YOU should pay thousands of dollars to support these golf courses? Are you willing?
      It’s so easy to be ‘noble,’ with OTHER people’s money.

  2. alice charles says:

    Your free market argument is false, period. There is no “free market.” All markets are controlled by their governments, through the use of increasing or decreasing the money supply and enacting legislation to curb “abuses.” Thus, there is no perfect system. Find a better argument. Second of all, who told you that parents have the luxury as you might and your readers might, to stay home and home-school children and still pay the bills? Your arguments are just plain ridiculous, sounding more of hatred than sound reason. It is a pity. You should move to India where the caste system is still in place. I guess you would prefer such a system. There are families in your community starving, do you care about that? Or do you close your eyes to those truths? Even in your upscale communities you have hunger and government handouts. Second of all, an uneducated population is dangerous. An uneducated populace means that this country – as it is – will lose ground to those countries that make education available for all. We have lost the academic race with the Chinese for this very reason. If the country were to follow your thinking, we would soon be a third-world country. Maybe you would prefer that? Those who do not have should what – die? Be slaves? Without an educated populace, the nation is doomed. In a democracy, there is a social contract. Why shouldn’t the government ensure that all those who want a public education get one? If anything, maybe there are those who work in public education who do not want the public to believe that public education works and who intentionally do all they can to stymie innovation in order to support the rants of sites like this to destroy public education. You seem angry and afraid because democracy has a way of leveling the playing field. Mankind is growing and we are no longer in the medieval times where there were only two classes: slaves and owners. You should commend your government’s effort to educate all. I could see your point if government banned private education, or limited how much a private institution can charge. But the government does not do that. Why shouldn’t it educate? Are you secretly afraid that if it really worked people would prefer it over the private schools and they would soon go out of business? You cannot stop what has been put in motion and neither you nor the rest of the haters of democracy will be able to turn the clock back to the days of slavery. When there has been great injustice, there needs to be great compassion. Only in a democracy can you post such unresearched nonsense. I don’t hear the rich community complaining about the public schools in their neighborhoods, as a matter of fact they send their kids to these schools (as those communities remain lily white) and I have yet to hear them complain. Go to your rich communities and ask them if they want the public schools gone? What do you think will be the response? I’ll tell you: a resounding no. Go do some real research and come back with sound and reasoned arguments, not those full of hatred.