Isn't the goal to get a quality education for your child? If public schools cannot provide a quality education shouldn't we allow for alternatives?
Not if using the alternatives is further choking off the public schools.
But we aren't addressing the problem. If we fix the public schools that are failing, (and the vast majority of them are not), then all the schools will be good choices.
If the public education system was ultimately replaced by private and religious schools that provided better education wouldn't that be good?
No, because it eliminates choice, and it eliminates social oversight. It will also eliminate quality and efficiency in the long run.
Contrary to popular nonsense, the free market system fails when the market's are not free. And "free" means that we have the ability to refuse to buy the product or service being offered. But as our society has become more and more interdependent, our ability to refuse many products and services is gone. Fuel, electricity, health care, retirement funds, insurance, education, and such, we cannot reasonably do without. These are no longer free markets, they are 'captive' markets. And captive markets work very differently than free markets. In a captive market the sellers no longer have to fear us refusing to buy their products or services. All they fear is being undercut by their competitors. But their competitors fear the same thing, and they all know it. So it's in none of their interest to start a price war. In fact, it's in ALL of their interest to inch the prices up, and up, and up, until they threaten to "break" the consumer. And so that's what they do.
Welcome to our world. Where the cost of oil, gasoline, utilities, insurance, health care, medicines, education and everything else we have to buy has crept up and up and up until it threatens to "break" us. Because these are all, now, captive markets, and not free markets.
Non-public K-12 education would be a captive market. If we "deregulate" education, and turn it over to the market system, it will become more expensive, by far, and stagnate in terms of quality. Just as has happened with all these other examples of captive market products and services.
In the end it would be far cheaper and less painful to simply fix the bad schools that we have.
So... you are pro-choice but not when it comes to schools eh?
I am anti-"deregulation" if it causes any more of these 'captive markets'. The average American already can't afford to buy gasoline, pay utilities, purchase health insurance, pay for health care, buy medications, retire, and pay their taxes. All because the cost of these things are up as high as they can possibly go without completely "breaking" the system.
Our free market isn't free at all. And it's killing us. If we dump the primary education system onto the market, the same thing will happen to it that has happened to all these other captive markets. And we'll just get hosed all over, again.