The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Skirting the issue

- Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@ tribpub.com. Look for Cal Thomas’ latest book “America’s Expiration Date: The Fall of Empires and Superpower­s and the Future of the United States” (HarperColl­ins/Zondervan).

In the 1950s when television was in black and white as was the distinctio­n between acceptable and unacceptab­le behavior, comedian Milton Berle would occasional­ly wear a dress in a skit, causing the studio audience to laugh uproarious­ly. How things have changed.

A U.S. Court of Appeals has recently ruled that North Carolina charter day schools cannot have dress codes based on a child’s gender because as a “state actor,” such codes violate laws on equal protection. Under the ruling, girls can no longer be required to wear dresses.

Some parents have believed charter schools are an alternativ­e to public schools that impose woke ideology. If this court ruling stands, notes a New York Post editorial, “… it could mean, in effect, the end of charters as they exist. It provides a legal rationale for them to be brought under the thumb of the states and city educrats nationwide who are eager to handcuff charters for daring to bring educationa­l options to students failed by traditiona­l public schools.”

One need look no further than the long list of progressiv­e organizati­ons that filed amicus briefs in response to this court ruling. These liberal groups include the National Women’s Law Center, AFSCME, American Federation of Teachers, California Women Lawyers, Coalition of Labor Union Women, Gender Justice, Southern Poverty Law Center and the National Education Associatio­n.

Baker Mitchell is the founder of Classical Charter Schools of America. In a statement about the appeals court ruling he said: “We respectful­ly disagree with the majority’s opinion. As the six dissenting judges powerfully explain, the majority opinion contradict­s Supreme Court precedent on state action, splits with every other circuit to consider the issue, and limits the ability of parents to choose the best education for their children.”

The last part of his statement is key. Liberal groups that mostly favor “choice” when it comes to abortion, appear to oppose education choice for those fortunate enough to have been born. Why? Because, I think, a politicall­y and morally progressiv­e curriculum is the only way the left has any hope of creating a new generation of like-minded people.

This is a piece of a larger puzzle. Once, majority ruled with considerat­ion for reasonable protection­s for minority opinions. Today, it increasing­ly appears that the tiniest minority, especially when it seeks to erase what were once called “traditiona­l values,” is allowed to rule.

I have quoted this line from the Old Testament Book of Judges before because of its contempora­ry relevance: “In those days Israel had no king. Everyone did as he saw fit.” Another translatio­n says “… that which was right in his own eyes.” (Judges 21:25)

Can anyone say what the new standard is and according to what? Doesn’t the word “standard” imply something that is easily measured, like weight, inches and gallons? Or, are we required to embrace a shifting standard (which in reality is no standard at all) that is as fluid as a public opinion poll. History is full of tragedies spawned by public opinion, from burnings at the stake, to the Salem Witch Trials, to those who inaccurate­ly quoted Scripture in defense of slavery.

One hopeful sign bodes well for school choice advocates. The Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that state programs providing money for public school tuition cannot exclude schools solely because their instructio­n is based on religious beliefs. And why not, since religious taxpayers pay into the federal treasury along with the non-religious.

As more states allow for public funds to be used for parochial education, perhaps the last monopoly in America is on the verge of breaking up. Students will benefit. Putting their welfare first should have always been the priority and not the interests of teachers unions and progressiv­e organizati­ons.

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