Diane Ravitch Went to Cuba, Failed to Get Perspective About School Choice

Diane Ravitch is a former school choicer turned union booster and flak. (You can read some past posts about her here.) Earlier this month she vacationed in Cuba and offered her thoughts about the trip on her blog. She found the trapped-in-amber quality of the island charming though she was mildly annoyed at inconveniences like the lack of cell and Internet service. But she was optimistic about the prospects for change:
And yet it seemed to me that Cuba is on the verge of a major transition. It won't happen overnight but it will happen, it is happening already. A new generation is coming of age. They want opportunity. They want a better life. Little pockets of entrepreneurialism are opening up. Officially, the government owns everything, but there are many inconsistencies. Private restaurants called paladares offer excellent food (and pay heavy taxes). Because of a shortage of hotel space in some cities, many private homes rent rooms to guests. The old world is passing, dissolving, and a new world is beginning, shoots of grass breaking through the concrete.

Let's try that again, with just a couple of words tweaked:
And yet it seemed to me that Cuba American education is on the verge of a major transition. It won't happen overnight but it will happen, it is happening already. A new generation is coming of age. They want opportunity. They want a better life. Little pockets of entrepreneurialism are opening up. Officially, the government owns everything, but there are many inconsistencies. Private restaurants called paladares schools offer excellent food education (and pay heavy taxes). Because of a shortage of hotel space decent public schools in some cities, many private homes rent rooms to guests schools offer refuge to parents and students, but only those who can pay. The old world is passing, dissolving, and a new world is beginning, shoots of grass breaking through the concrete.
Ravitch says she would like to see the "antique" embargo on commerce with the United States lifted. Amen to that. But the American education system is nearly as locked down as the Cuban economy right now—why not apply some of the same insights to the ways that commerce could bring the opportunity and chances for a better life here at home?
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Yeah, but no union members are going to lose their job if Cuban communism ends.
"She found the trapped-in-amber quality of the island charming"
She should have tried the trapped-in-political-prison.
Leftist love poverty tourism. The suffering of the natives is so authentic.
Change nothing!
Poverty is romantic!
That's why socialism is so wonderful!
Everyone lives in romantic poverty!
Tony Bourdaine has an entire TV career and successful TV show based on that idea.
Now he's gone full-urban-hipster with his new show The Layover. I preferred the romanticization of poverty on No Reservations.
I don't mind that show too much. I sort of consider it for hipsters what Nature is for wildlife. Short of a world tour for those of us who can't get out to observe them in their natural habitat.
I loved how, in the Istanbul episode of No Reservations, he says he drank on the airplane so as to get his fill before landing in a Muslim country. Clearly his PAs did not do their research. The Turks know how to drink. Even during Ramadan.
It is only the gulf muslims who don't drink. The Iraqis and the Persians both drink too.
Uh, alcohol is illegal in Iran. And in some parts of Iraq, if some armed religious nutter sees you selling or drinking alcohol, they'll let you know, in their fun little way, that they don't appreciate that.
I think he did do his research and decided that if he was to face off with Rak?, a humiliating defeat was certain. Far better to not show up at all.
I dunno. It kinda started that way until Zimmer came along. Then when there was someone else to eat all the nasty shit, the show really changed. It went from "Look at these weird shit that poor non-white people eat" to "Look at the cool stuff you can eat in places that aren't as free as the United States."
Also, Kitchen Confidential is like one of the best books ever and stuff.
I liked that book.
They sure do.
I've been to Cuba and while it is indeed a lovely place endowed with great people it's a piece of shit of a place where functional governance is concerned.
I walked into a pharmacy with little medicine. I saw city buses from Montreal from the 70s and 80s with the street stops (Papineau, Pie IX etc). still lit up. Little access to anything.
Worse, the people weren't allowed on their own beaches and were constantly looking over their shoulders lest they be spied by Castro cronies.
Yes. So "romantic" to watch people live in obvious destitution.
I'd love to see the embargo lifted for I think the Castros would be gone within 48 hours of the lifting.
Question, what will be the greater rush once the embargo is lifted and US citizens can come and go to Cuba as they please.
1. The rush of S. Florida Cubans going back to Cuba in attempt to regain property taken by the Commies
2. Classic car buffs looking to scarf up all the 50s vehicles on Cuba
3. Federal employees, contractors and anyone with an active security clearance looking for a cheap tropical vacation.
1. The rush of S. Florida Cubans going back to Cuba in attempt to regain property taken by the Commies
The Cuban government will gladly let them in and then throw them in prison. Just because we say they can go, doesn't mean the cubans will have them.
And if ending the embargo would really end Castro, why do they want it so badly?
I think they still really believe it'll work any day now.
Maybe so. My guess is that they know they have all of the guns and can steal any money the country makes trading with the US.
Hasn't death already ended Castro? How much longer are they going to Weekend at Bernie's that evil fucker's corpse around?
Him and Chavez. Chavez is the bigger problem than Castro. When Castro goes they can just put his idiot brother in. But when Chavez goes, they won't be able to steal from Venezuela anymore. That is probably when the whole place falls in.
Joe Kennedy tells me that I should thank Hugo and the wonderful people of Venezuela for providing heating oil to poor people.
The ads for that program this year more unspeakably horrible than in previous years, using a little boy with cancer. Fuck that fucking Joe Kennedy.
The poorest person in New England is probably above the mean in Venezuela. But it is just great to take natural resources from there and give them away in the US.
Up next, Joe Kennedy proposes Ethiopia give food aid to South Boston.
I think that for the older generation, the end of the embargo equates to surrender, since it marks the end of the U.S. government fighting for the return of their expropriated property.
With that being said, the Cuban government's grip on power is probably strengthened by the embargo; a population in poverty is less well equipped to resist oppression than one that is wealthy.
Certainly, the Castro regime uses the embargo as an excuse to justify the failures of its economic policies. I'm not sure how helpful this propaganda is to it though; it's quite likely that Cubans realize on some level it's a bullshit excuse.
Further clouding any prediction is the fact that increased trade will also benefit the Cuban government because they control the primary means of production, so are in a position to benefit most from exports.
But, in the end, Cuba has unembargoed trade with the rest of the world, and the government hasn't collapsed, so I conclude that the lifting of the embargo won't cause the govt to immediately collapse. However, the government having access to export markets throughout the world, the lifting of the embargo will have minimal benefit to it. The increased flow of money from the mainland to relatives on the island will increase the wealth of the serfs and might put them in a better position to resist the state in the future.
" The rush of S. Florida Cubans going back to Cuba in attempt to regain property taken by the Commies"
Exactly how are they going to do that? The commies are still in control there and only break with the Party line quietly when they have utilitarian reasons for doing so. Their argument is still the gulag or a bullet to the back of the head.
(4) Real Estate speculators scarfing up mega-cheap beachfront property.
Oh wow. Person sees defects of Communism. Neglects to extrapolate that to a full embrace of libertarianism. Film at 11.
I simply don't get the point of this post.
You're right, MP, there's no reason to comment on the hypocrisy of the left.
It's not hypocritical to hold the belief that free markets are beneficial but only in particular circumstances. One need not be expected to have to extrapolate their benefit across all fields of the marketplace in order to avoid the "hypocrite" label.
Particularly...PARTICULARLY...when "school choice" is rooted in mandatory enrollment and mandatory taxation.
"School choice" isn't rooted in anything other than the belief that people should be able to make decisions for themselves in regards to education. However, given the fact that most people would not accept that because of the widespread indoctrination that it would create a permanent uneducated underclass, not putting people at the mercy of crappy schools granted a monopoly by virtue of geography is the next best thing.
"School choice" isn't rooted in anything other than the belief that people should be able to make decisions for themselves in regards to education.
That's completely false. In almost all contexts, "School choice" refers to a system of private choices using public funds.
So what? It's a definite improvement over what we have now.
Because the status quo is required spending on schools, required attendance AND required specific schools, regardless of quality. Even taking that out of context doesn't make it false.
"She found the trapped-in-amber quality of the island charming though she was mildly annoyed at inconveniences like the lack of cell and Internet service."
Being trapped in amber is only charming if you are not the one trapped in amber.
There are some truly disturbing posters in the comments of that article.
I find the best way to deal with leftists praising Cuba is to tell them about the AIDS prison/hospitals that Castro ran into the 1990s.
Done that, also shown photographs of the actual public "free" hospitals with no glass in the windows or functional plumbing provided by a pastor friend of mine and I get reactions ranging from dumb, blank stares to outright frothing at the mouth raging rants.
Denial is universal to the verbal responses.
I find the best way to deal with leftists praising Cuba is to tell them about the AIDS prison/hospitals that Castro ran into the 1990s.
That's a pretty good one, though I prefer explaining the metric by which Cuba arrives at it's shockingly low infant mortality rate.
How does that go?
Also, here are some horror-story pictures of Cuban hospitals, fwiw.
Babies delivered before term are not counted as live births.
You sure that's not Walter Reed?
But the American education system is nearly as locked down as the Cuban economy right now
Just a bit much, perhaps? While all of the taxes collected at gun point are tied considerably, it seems that the actual system operates relatively freely, only the socialist side that doesn't. There is a wide range of prices and choices for those who spend their own money.
There is a wide range of prices and choices for those who spend their own money.
Kinda like in Cuba?
Needs more "Robot Teachers".
Socialists talk about a Cuban renaissance the same way many US soccer fans talk about the sport becoming the Next Big American Obsession. It's always "just about to happen," and when it doesn't, they still retain the smug self-satisfaction of supposedly being in on something that the masses just don't understand or appreciate.
Because... THE CHILDREN.