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Thursday, November 11, 2010

The Original Inhabitants of Crazy Town | Intercepts

The Original Inhabitants of Crazy Town | Intercepts

The Original Inhabitants of Crazy Town

It’s with some amusement that I read the overheated debate about abolishing the U.S. Department of Education. For one thing, there is a vast difference between those who want to eliminate the federal role in education, and those who want to return ED to its former home in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. But since neither of those things is going to happen, I guess it doesn’t matter if they are lumped together.

On the other hand, there are those who think getting rid of ED would “destroy public education as we know it,” and that those abolitionists are “strange bedfellows in Crazy Town.” This attitude only demonstrates the hopelessness of the task. If talk of eliminating or downgrading a Cabinet department is beyond the pale, maybe the Postmaster General should should be returned to his spot.

Since the argument is academic, I thought I would engage in some academics. I dug up Public Law 96-88, theDepartment of Education Organization Act of 1979. This is the federal statute that created the U.S. Department