Meet
America's Promise Alliance
April 07, 2008
By Seth Sandronsky
Before
U.S. forces attacked
Iraq
in March 2003, former Secretary of State Colin Powell argued at the U.N. for the
armed removal of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, whose weapons of mass destruction
threatened the American people.
Iraq's WMDs have yet to found. But Powell found
a new mission as founding chair of
America's Promise Alliance. USA Today calls it
"a group of foundations, advocacy and non-profit organizations, and corporate
and religious groups focusing on children's education, safety and health." Alma,
Powell's wife, is the current chair of APA, which released an April 1 report on
which students do (not) earn high school diplomas in the
U.S.
The report is titled Cities in
Crisis: A Special Analytic Report on High School Graduation. It found a 17
percent gap in the graduation rates between students at
U.S. urban and suburban high schools.
Christopher B. Swanson of the Editorial Projects in
Education Research
Center wrote the report with data from the federal
Education Dept. The Education
Research Center
gets support from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
The foundation's largesse is due in
no small part to the support Gates gets from the federal government: the
copyright monopolies it grants to Microsoft software. This is no case of the
market magic. To the contrary, this is a government policy of intervention for a
multi-billionaire and his U.S.-based global corporation.
Returning to the APA report, it
details the geography of the nation's high school graduation rates for
2003-2004. U.S. cities such
as Columbus, Cleveland,
New York, Philadelphia,
Indianapolis and Chicago
have some of the biggest gaps in graduation rates between urban and suburban
high schools.
It is worth noting that these
U.S.
cities have lost vast numbers of unionized factory jobs. This fall-off in
high-wage employment has had many negative effects. One is the weakening of the
local property tax base that partly funds public schools. The decline of
private-sector union employment drags down wages of non-union workers.
The trend of manufacturing job losses
flows from so-called "free-market" trade policies. They put American workers who
lack a college degree, the majority of the U.S.
work force, into direct job market competition with their much lower-paid
counterparts overseas, according to economist Dean Baker, co-director of the
Center for Economic and Policy Research in
Washington, D.C.
Such a bipartisan trade policy, in
turn, has spawned harsh prison sentencing laws. In this way, that part of the
U.S.
work force which private industry no longer needs for wealth-creation gets
locked down. They are out of sight and mind for the most part, brought out for
the political theatre of new "tough on crime" laws as elections draw near.
Meanwhile, Bill Gates gets a
different flavor of government policy: copyright monopolies for his Microsoft
software. That intervention weakens market competition. This effect increases
profits for Microsoft, some of which fund
U.S. education reform.
The APA report ends by noting "deep
undercurrents of inequity that plague American public education." Yes, this
bitter fact is as plain as day. Who can argue against that? The relevant
question is this. What are the economic forces driving the inequity in
U.S.
high school graduation rates? In the APA report, these causes are hidden, a bit
like the WMDs which Colin Powell said Saddam Hussein had before the
U.S. government launched the March 2003 "Shock and Awe"
invasion of Iraq.