SEPARATE, UNEQUAL, AND TOTALLY FINE WITH THAT
THE RETURN OF JIM CROW'S FAVORITE TRICK
How vouchers, charter schools, and a Supreme Court that's whistling past the graveyard are quietly re-segregating America's classrooms — and what you can do about it before November.
The Ghost of Plessy v. Ferguson Just Got a MAGA Makeover
Here's a fun history quiz: What year did the Supreme Court declare that "separate but equal" schools were unconstitutional?
1954 -Brown v. Board of Education. Chief Justice Earl Warren, writing for a unanimous court, said you literally cannot turn back the clock on segregation — you have to fix it right now, in the present, in the real world where children actually live.
Fast forward seventy-two years. Schools are as segregated today as they were in the 1970s — that's not a hot take, that's the finding of researchers Ann Owens and Sean Reardon at the Segregation Tracking Project, using 2023–24 school year data compiled at Brown's Promise. New York ranks #1 in the nation for racial segregation (index: 0.544 — nearly halfway to complete apartheid). Illinois is #2. Pennsylvania is #3. New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts — all blue, all progressive, all high-spending — are in the top ten for both racial and economic segregation.
Meanwhile, Chief Justice John Roberts has been on a one-man crusade to declare racism a solved problem. "The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race," he famously wrote, "is to stop discriminating on the basis of race." Brilliant. By that logic, the way to stop a house fire is to stop having a house fire.
The Roberts Court has spent two decades systematically dismantling the legal tools built to address segregation — and the current political moment is gleefully handing them a wrecking ball labeled "school choice."
The Voucher Scam: Privatization With a Bow On It
Let's talk about the Trump administration's private school voucher program — the crown jewel of Project 2025 and the single most effective mechanism for re-segregating American education since the Southern states invented "segregation academies" after Brown.
Here's how the con works:
Call it "choice." Who could be against choice? Choice is American! Choice is freedom! (The freedom, it turns out, is mostly for wealthy white families to take their tax dollars to private religious schools, leaving everyone else behind.)
Drain the public school budget. The NEA and AFT — representing 4.8 million educators — warned Democratic governors in an open letter published today, June 23, 2026, that the voucher program carries a potential $50 billion annual price tag nationally. That's $50 billion sucked out of the schools serving 90% of America's K–12 students.
Gut the safety net. When public school enrollment shrinks because vouchers pull kids out, per-pupil state revenue drops — but fixed costs (buildings, buses, special ed staff) stay the same. The budget hole grows. Then Congress cuts Title I (which funds high-poverty schools) and IDEA (which funds kids with disabilities). The most vulnerable students get left in a defunded building while their wealthier peers attend a private school that, in many states, is not required to accept students with disabilities, English learners, or anyone whose family the school finds theologically inconvenient.
Repeat until public education collapses. Then privatize the rubble.
AFT President Randi Weingarten and NEA President Becky Pringle called it precisely what it is: "a Trojan horse carrying near-universal K–12 private school vouchers into every state that participates — even states where voters have already rejected vouchers at the ballot box."
Read that again. Even where voters said no. Democracy is so 2015.
This Isn't Just Politics. It's Neuroscience.
Before we go further, let's dispense with the comfortable fiction that poor kids in segregated schools are just "behind" because they didn't try hard enough. The science is unambiguous and it is devastating.
Poverty doesn't just limit resources. It physically reshapes the developing brain.
- Chronic stress from poverty floods a child's system with cortisol, which shrinks gray matter in the hippocampus — the region that converts short-term instructions into long-term memories. Children living below 1.5× the federal poverty line show hippocampal gray matter volumes 3–4% below developmental norms.
- The prefrontal cortex — the brain's impulse-control and planning center — develops more slowly under chronic stress. A child who appears "defiant" or "checked out" in class is frequently exhibiting a neurological survival response, not a character flaw.
- The mental tax of unpredictable scarcity — food insecurity, housing instability, chaotic caregiving — consumes cognitive bandwidth equivalent to a 13–14 IQ point reduction. That's the cognitive cost of simply being poor in America.
- Add lead paint (disproportionately in low-income housing), particulate air pollution (disproportionately near low-income neighborhoods), and the result is a child whose brain has been systematically disadvantaged before they ever walk into a kindergarten classroom.
Only 48% of low-income five-year-olds meet baseline school-readiness guidelines, compared to 75% of their moderate-to-high-income peers. That gap exists before a single teacher has been hired or a single dollar of voucher money has been diverted.
The good news — and there genuinely is good news — is that the brain is plastic. High-quality early childhood education (Head Start), stable housing, school-based mental health services, and targeted funding have been proven to reverse these developmental lags. The brain can be rewired for success. But that requires investing in public schools, not defunding them.
The Segregation Map: Your State's Report Card
The Brown's Promise Segregation Tracking Project has done the uncomfortable work of ranking every state. Here's a snapshot of where the crisis is most acute — and the structural driver behind it:
| State | Racial Seg. Rank | Economic Seg. Rank | Primary Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🏆 New York | #1 | #11 | Extreme district fragmentation; 700+ tiny districts |
| Illinois | #2 | #4 | Chicago metro vs. suburban/rural divide |
| Pennsylvania | #3 | #19 | Between-district walls (90% of seg. is district-to-district) |
| New Jersey | #8 | #2 | 95% of racial seg. is between entire districts |
| D.C. | #19 | #1 | 100% within-district; one district, profound inequality |
| California | #25 | #10 | Urban/suburban vs. agricultural center divides |
| Nevada | #36 | #3 | 90% within-district; one large district, massive internal gaps |
Notice anything? The states spending the most per pupil — New York ($30,012/child), New Jersey ($26,280), Massachusetts ($22,978+) — are also among the most segregated. High spending does not buy integration. It buys adequately funded segregation: the schools have roughly equal resources, but the children remain entirely separated by race and class, sorted into districts drawn around the property values of their parents' zip codes.
This is the direct legacy of redlining and restrictive covenants — 20th-century housing policy showing up in 21st-century classrooms. School districts serving the highest concentrations of students of color receive an average of $2,700 less per student in state and local funding than those serving the fewest students of color. The property tax system doesn't just reflect historical racism. It perpetuates it, automatically, every fiscal year, with the full blessing of the law.
Christian Nationalism and the Classroom
Here's where the voucher scheme gets its ideological engine. The MAGA movement's education agenda isn't really about "choice" or "competition" or "accountability." It's about routing public tax dollars to private religious schools that are exempt from anti-discrimination laws, that can teach whatever version of American history they prefer, and that are not required to serve students with disabilities, LGBTQ+ students, or students of any faith other than their own.
This is Christian nationalism with a 529 account. It is the privatization of civic education. And the Roberts Supreme Court — which has already ruled that states must fund religious schools if they fund any private schools at all (Espinoza v. Montana, 2020; Carson v. Makin, 2022) — has essentially given it a constitutional green light.
The Chief Justice who declared that racial discrimination is over has simultaneously built the legal architecture for a system that tracks almost perfectly along racial and economic lines. You don't have to write "whites only" on the door if you can just draw the district boundary in the right place, or fund the private school that happens to be in the right neighborhood.
What Actually Works (And What's Just a Patch)
States have tried to fix the funding gap with weighted student funding formulas — giving high-poverty districts more money per pupil. California's Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), signed by Governor Jerry Brown in 2013, is the gold standard:
- 20% supplemental grant for every low-income student, English learner, or foster youth
- 65% concentration grant for every qualifying student above a 55% high-needs enrollment threshold
- Local Control and Accountability Plans (LCAPs) requiring public hearings and community input on how equity dollars are spent
The results are real: LCFF-driven funding surges produced measurable gains in reading and math, lower suspension rates, and higher graduation rates in California's lowest-income communities. California's Proposition 98 (1988) also provides a constitutional floor guaranteeing K–14 education receives roughly 39–41% of the state's General Fund — insulating schools from political whims.
But here's the honest truth: money is necessary but not sufficient. Weighted funding is harm reduction. It ensures that segregated schools aren't also starved of resources. It does not change who sits next to whom. It does not change the enrollment list. It does not undo the district boundary drawn around the wealthy suburb in 1962.
True integration requires changing enrollment policies, redrawing district boundaries, and building regional magnet systems — moves that state legislatures almost universally avoid, because the parents in the wealthy districts vote in higher numbers and donate to more campaigns.
What You Can Do — Right Now, Today, Before November
The Roberts Court isn't going to save us. The Trump administration is actively making it worse. That leaves you.
📞 Call Your Senators and Representatives — Today
Tell them:
- School vouchers are a $50 billion raid on public education that will gut Title I and IDEA funding for the most vulnerable students.
- Charter school proliferation without accountability accelerates segregation by allowing demographic self-sorting with public money.
- Federal civil rights enforcement in education must be restored and strengthened — not gutted.
Find your representatives at house.gov and senate.gov. Call. Don't email. Calls get counted.
🔍 Know Your State's Segregation Score
Go to Brown's Promise — States of Segregation and look up your state. Share it. Post it. Bring it to your school board meeting. The data exists. Use it.
🗳️ Vote — And Vote Specifically
In November, ask every candidate for state legislature, governor, school board, and Congress one simple question: "Do you support public school funding or private school vouchers?" The answer tells you everything. Candidates who support public schools support:
- Fully funded weighted student formulas that direct more resources to high-poverty schools
- Regional integration policies like magnet schools and open enrollment across district lines
- Rejection of federal voucher schemes that drain public budgets
- Restoration of federal civil rights enforcement in education
📣 Show Up to Your School Board
School boards set local policy on enrollment, magnet programs, and district boundaries. They are elected by whoever shows up. In most districts, that's a few hundred people. You can change the outcome of a school board election by making five phone calls.
The Bottom Line
Chief Justice Warren wrote in Brown that you cannot turn back the clock — you have to address segregation in the present, in the real world, right now.
Seventy-two years later, the clock has been turned back. The mechanism isn't a "whites only" sign. It's a voucher. It's a charter school application. It's a district boundary drawn around a zip code. It's a Supreme Court that calls racism solved while signing off on a system that sorts children by race and class as efficiently as anything Jim Crow ever designed — just with better branding.
The Brown promise was simple: every child deserves an equal education, regardless of the color of their skin or the zip code of their birth. That promise has been broken, systematically, with bipartisan indifference and MAGA enthusiasm.
The question isn't whether we know what's happening. We do. The question is whether enough people are angry enough — and organized enough — to do something about it before the next generation of children pays the price.
Call your representatives. Telephone: 202-224-3121. Check your state's segregation ranking. Vote like a child's future depends on it.
Because it does.
📚 Resources:
- Brown's Promise — State Segregation Rankings
- Segregation Tracking Project — Owens & Reardon
- NEA/AFT Open Letter to Democratic Governors on Vouchers
- Find Your Representative — house.gov
Sources & References
🏫 School Segregation — Data & Research
Brown's Promise — State Segregation Rankings The primary state-by-state segregation index used in the article, based on 2023–24 school year data. 🔗 https://www.brownspromise.org/statesofsegregation
Segregation Tracking Project — Owens & Reardon (Stanford/USC) The underlying academic research engine behind the Brown's Promise rankings, using the normalized exposure index. 🔗 https://edopportunity.org/segregation/
UCLA Civil Rights Project — "The Unfinished Battle for Integration in a Multiracial America" (April 2024) The landmark national report assessing school segregation 70 years after Brown v. Board of Education, documenting that schools are as segregated as they were in the 1970s. 🔗 https://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/National-Segregation-041624-CORRECTED-for-1.pdf
UCLA Civil Rights Project — Press Release: Assessing School Segregation 70 Years After Brown Summary press release accompanying the 2024 national segregation report. 🔗 https://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/press-releases/ucla-civil-rights-project-assesses-school-segregation-70-years-after-brown/
💸 Vouchers, Charter Schools & Privatization
NEA/AFT Open Letter to Democratic Governors — Reject Trump Voucher Scheme (June 23, 2026) The primary source for the $50 billion cost estimate, Title I/IDEA threat analysis, and the Project 2025 connection. 🔗 https://www.nea.org/about-nea/media-center/press-releases/aft-and-nea-call-democratic-governors-reject-trump-private-school-voucher-scheme
AFT/NEA Full Joint Open Letter to Democratic Governors (PDF) The complete text of the letter signed by AFT President Randi Weingarten and NEA President Becky Pringle. 🔗 https://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/media/documents/2026/Joint_AFT_NEA_Open_Letter_to_Democratic_Governors.pdf
National Education Association — Homepage & Advocacy Resources The nation's largest professional employee organization, representing 3+ million educators. 🔗 https://www.nea.org
🧠 Poverty, Neuroscience & Child Development
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — Poverty and Child Health in the United States Source for the 48% vs. 75% kindergarten readiness gap between low-income and moderate-to-high-income children. 🔗 https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/137/4/e20160339/52495/Poverty-and-Child-Health-in-the-United-States
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child — Toxic Stress (Harvard Center on the Developing Child) The foundational neuroscience research on how chronic stress and poverty alter hippocampal and prefrontal cortex development in children. 🔗 https://developingchild.harvard.edu/science/key-concepts/toxic-stress/
Mullainathan & Shafir — "Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much" (Behavioral Economics Research) The source for the 13–14 IQ point cognitive bandwidth tax imposed by scarcity and unpredictable poverty. 🔗 https://scholar.harvard.edu/sendhil/publications/scarcity-why-having-too-little-means-so-much
💰 School Funding, Property Taxes & Equity Formulas
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) — Public School Revenue Sources The primary federal data source for the national 45% local / 47% state / 8% federal funding breakdown and state-by-state per-pupil spending figures. 🔗 https://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/indicator/cma
The Education Trust — "Funding Gaps: An Analysis of School Funding Equity Across the U.S." Source for the finding that districts serving the highest concentrations of students of color receive an average of $2,700 less per student than those serving the fewest. 🔗 https://edtrust.org/resource/funding-gaps-2018/
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy — Property Taxes and School Funding Research on state-by-state reliance on local property taxes for school budgets, including New Hampshire's 62–63% local property tax dependency. 🔗 https://www.lincolninst.edu/research-data/data-toolkits/significant-features-property-tax
California Department of Education — Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF) Overview Official state explanation of California's 2013 equity-based funding reform, including the 20% supplemental and 65% concentration grant structure. 🔗 https://www.cde.ca.gov/fg/aa/lc/
California Legislative Analyst's Office — Proposition 98 Explained The definitive nonpartisan explanation of California's constitutional education funding floor, the Three Tests formula, and the Maintenance Factor. 🔗 https://lao.ca.gov/Education/EdBudget/Details/323
⚖️ Supreme Court Cases & Legal History
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483 (1954) — Full Opinion The landmark ruling declaring racially segregated public schools unconstitutional. Chief Justice Warren's full opinion is available via Cornell Law School's Legal Information Institute. 🔗 https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/347/483
Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, 591 U.S. 464 (2020) The Roberts Court ruling that states must fund religious private schools if they fund any private schools — the legal foundation for the voucher expansion. 🔗 https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/18-1195
Carson v. Makin, 596 U.S. 767 (2022) The follow-up Roberts Court ruling extending Espinoza, requiring Maine to fund religious school tuition — further cementing the constitutional pathway for voucher programs. 🔗 https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/20-1088
🗳️ Take Action — Contact Your Representatives
Find Your U.S. House Representative 🔗 https://www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative
Contact Your U.S. Senator 🔗 https://www.senate.gov/senators/senators-contact.htm
National Student Clearinghouse Research Center — College Completion Data Source for the 25% vs. 60% six-year college completion rate gap between high-poverty and low-poverty school graduates. 🔗 https://nscresearchcenter.org/completionsreport/
All links verified as of June 23, 2026. Academic PDFs may require free institutional or public library access.


