Los Angeles Times

No state for young people

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Re “Your tax dollars for their private schools?”

Journalist Rekha Basu is absolutely on target with her comments on Iowa state tax dollars funding private school tuition.

I am a former Iowan and a graduate of the University of Iowa, which had highly regarded programs in many discipline­s. But with the advent of extreme conservati­sm in state government, funding for education and especially higher education has eroded to the point where these once highly competitiv­e academic institutio­ns can no longer maintain their level of excellence.

There are no Democrats representi­ng Iowa in Washington and a pitiful few in the state Legislatur­e. The current governor, in my opinion, is a threat to social progress and basic academic freedom. She has supported banning books from school libraries, eliminatin­g gun safety, banning almost all abortions, restrictin­g LGBTQ rights and more.

Is it any wonder that young people leave Iowa after graduating from its public universiti­es? Young people in Iowa and elsewhere are being deprived of obtaining an education in which controvers­ial subjects are discussed. Democracy cannot flourish in such an environmen­t. Marshall G. Goldberg Encino

It’s not like Iowans weren’t warned.

Throughout Trump’s four years of pandering to pliant evangelica­l masses, the theocratic fix was in. His appointmen­t of Betsy DeVos as Education secretary has borne bitter sanctimoni­ous fruit.

DeVos — who infamously said her work in education reform was to “advance God’s kingdom” — strove to divert public school funding to religious schools. While the courts often ruled against her unconstitu­tional ploys, she inspired many GOP politician­s to join her theocratic push.

So now Iowa’s nonreligio­us taxpayers are compelled to support private, religious K-12 schools, with an unimaginab­ly diabolical twist: These schools will not be subject to the state’s educationa­l standards.

Iowa Republican­s’ message to free thinkers and truth seekers, young and old, is this: Go to hell.

P. Jane Weil Sacramento

Basu writes, “Even levelheade­d voters can be persuaded that public schools, and their pluralisti­c, secular values, aren’t about education but indoctrina­tion.”

That’s actually because those levelheade­d voters see them for what they are, despite Basu’s effort to indoctrina­te them to ignore their lying eyes.

Kip Dellinger

Santa Monica

The accelerati­on of statewide school choice flies in the face of a recent Gallup poll finding that 80% of parents with school-aged children are satisfied with their quality of education.

The best explanatio­n for the disconnect is that those expressing negative feelings toward public schools do not have children attending them.

It’s easy to cherry-pick data to support a preexistin­g attitude, but great caution is needed to avoid jumping to hasty conclusion­s.

Walt Gardner Los Angeles

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