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Saturday, April 11, 2026

FORTY YEARS IN THE MAKING: YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT PRAY - THE TECH-THEOCRACY PIPELINE #MayDayStrong

 

FORTY YEARS IN THE MAKING

YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT PRAY - THE TECH-THEOCRACY PIPELINE

A Witty, Furious, and Thoroughly Documented Guide to the Dismantling of Public Education in the United States

"The secret of freedom lies in educating people, whereas the secret of tyranny is in keeping them ignorant."Robespierre. (Yes, we're quoting a French Revolutionary. Deal with it.)

Welcome to 2026, where the "Public Square" is being dismantled faster than a Lego set in the hands of a caffeinated toddler. If you've been following the breadcrumbs — or, more accurately, the money trail — you already know that the radical restructuring of public education is no longer a conspiracy theory whispered at school board meetings. It is the official federal memo, stamped, signed, and delivered with a smile by people who have never set foot in a Title I school.

Grab your coffee. Your oat milk latte. Your lukewarm gas station brew. Whatever gets you through the apocalypse. We're diving — deep — into the unholy trinity of Christian Nationalism, Billionaire Oligarchs, and the Heritage Foundation's "Battering Ram" of education "reform."

Spoiler alert: this isn't about your kids learning better. It never was.

PART ONE: The Theocratic Battering Ram

How the Heritage Foundation, MAGA, and the Trump Administration Turned the Department of Education Into a Demolition Derby

Here's a fun thought experiment. Imagine you're a billionaire ideologue who has spent forty years dreaming of the day you could replace the messy, pluralistic, inconveniently democratic American public school system with something more... manageable. More profitable. More godly.

You'd need a plan. A big one. Something with a catchy name and a three-ring binder.

Enter Project 2025 — the Heritage Foundation's 900-page love letter to theocratic governance, authored by many of the same people now occupying federal offices with the casual confidence of someone who just won a hostile corporate takeover. Because that's exactly what this is.

The blueprint is explicit. It doesn't whisper. It shouts:

  • Eliminate the Department of Education. Not reform it. Not trim it. Delete it. Redirect its authority to states that, conveniently, favor religious instruction.
  • "Biblically permeate" the federal government. That's a direct quote, not a fever dream. The goal is to ensure that governance at every level reflects a specific theological worldview — one that, notably, does not include your local mosque, synagogue, or humanist meetup.
  • Reestablish the 1776 Commission. Signed back into existence by executive order in early 2025, this commission is the intellectual equivalent of a time machine set permanently to a mythologized 1776 — a founding moment scrubbed clean of slavery, genocide, and the inconvenient complexity of actual history.

The administration has framed all of this as a crusade against "radical indoctrination." The irony of fighting indoctrination with indoctrination appears to be lost on everyone involved. The executive orders issued in 2025 to "End Radical Indoctrination" replaced "equity" and "gender ideology" with a curriculum focused on — and we are not making this up — "patriotic admiration."

Patriotic admiration. As a curriculum standard. For children.

This is the Theocratic Battering Ram: a coordinated, well-funded, legally sophisticated assault on the very concept of a secular, shared, publicly accountable education system. And it is moving at a speed that would make your head spin, if your head weren't already spinning from the sheer audacity of it all.

PART TWO: SCOTUS and the Voucher "Gold Rush"

How the Supreme Court Didn't Just Open the Door — It Removed the Hinges, the Frame, and Part of the Wall

Let's talk about the Supreme Court, because no story about the dismantling of public education is complete without appreciating the judicial architecture that made it all possible.

For decades, the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment served as a modest but functional guardrail: the government shall not establish a religion, and — by reasonable extension — shall not use public tax dollars to fund one. It wasn't perfect. It was litigated constantly. But it existed.

Then came a series of rulings that, taken together, constitute one of the most consequential judicial pivots in American educational history:

  • Zelman v. Simmons-Harris (2002): The Court ruled that school vouchers were constitutional as long as the "choice" was made by parents, not the government. The camel's nose was officially inside the tent.
  • Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue (2020): If a state provides scholarship funds for private schools, it cannot exclude religious schools. The camel was now fully inside the tent and had eaten the furniture.
  • Carson v. Makin (2022): If a state funds private education, it must include sectarian schools. The tent was gone. There was no tent.

The result? A voucher gold rush of genuinely staggering proportions. Public tax dollars — your tax dollars, collected from your paycheck, your property taxes, your sales taxes — are now legally, constitutionally, enthusiastically flowing into private religious schools that can, and do:

  • Teach creationism as science
  • Exclude LGBTQ+ students and staff
  • Deny enrollment to students with disabilities
  • Teach history through the lens of divine providence rather than, say, evidence

And now, the frontier is religious public charter schools — an oxymoron that would have been laughed out of a constitutional law classroom fifteen years ago. The Oklahoma Supreme Court blocked a Catholic virtual charter school in 2024. But proponents are pushing new cases toward the U.S. Supreme Court with the confidence of people who have already counted their votes. The goal: establish that charter schools — technically public institutions funded entirely by public money — can be explicitly, unapologetically sectarian.

At that point, the Establishment Clause will not merely be dead. It will have been composted and used to fertilize a megachurch parking lot.

 PART THREE: Meet Your New Landlords — The Billionaire Oligarchy

This Isn't Your Parents' "School Choice." This Is a Leveraged Buyout of American Childhood.

Let's be honest about something: the language of "school choice" has always been more marketing than policy. It sounds warm. It sounds empowering. It sounds like a parent lovingly selecting the perfect educational environment for their precious child.

What it actually describes is a multi-billion dollar privatization scheme backed by global capital, private equity firms, and a roster of billionaires who have decided that the $700+ billion spent annually on American public K-12 education represents an untapped market rather than a public good.

Meet the key instruments of extraction:

The ECCA: The Crown Jewel

The Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA), passed as part of the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" in late 2025, is the first true national school voucher policy in American history. Here's how the magic trick works:

  1. Wealthy donors contribute to Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs).
  2. They receive a federal tax credit for doing so — meaning they redirect their tax liability away from the public treasury and toward private, often religious, educational institutions.
  3. Families earning up to 300% of their area's median income — up to $300,000 in some regions — qualify for these vouchers.
  4. As of April 2026, 27 governors have opted their states into the program, set to fully launch January 1, 2027.

To summarize: rich people get a tax break for funding private schools, public schools lose the revenue, and we call this "choice." It's the kind of logic that would earn a failing grade in any economics class that still exists.

The FLEX Act: The Regulatory Skeleton Key

The Fostering Learning and Excellence in Education (FLEX) Act, advanced by the House in January 2026, radically expands how Charter School Program funds can be used — now covering teacher salaries, facilities, and transportation. Costs historically reserved for traditional public districts.

Translation: public money can now build the infrastructure of private, potentially sectarian institutions. It's like using your HOA fees to build your neighbor a private pool and then being told you're not allowed to swim in it.

The Private Equity Play

Behind the ideological theater, there is a coldly rational financial logic. Private equity firms — including those with significant international ties — are investing heavily in the "voucher market." The model is elegant in its ruthlessness:

  1. Identify a public institution
  2. Claim it is failing (use standardized test scores; they're very helpful here)
  3. Offer a private alternative, funded by public money
  4. Starve the public institution of resources until it actually fails
  5. Repeat

The education technology layer makes this even more profitable. AI-driven "personalized learning" platforms reduce the most expensive line item in any school budget: human educators. Replace a unionized teacher with a $19.99/month subscription app, and the margin becomes very attractive indeed.

Charter management organizations have also perfected the art of real estate arbitrage: using public funds to lease buildings from their own subsidiary companies, creating a closed loop of private profit extracted from public debt. It's the kind of financial engineering that would make a Wall Street analyst weep with admiration and a parent weep for entirely different reasons.

PART FOUR: History Repeating — Jim Crow vs. The New Nationalism

The More Things Change, The More the Playbook Stays the Same

Here is where we must be unflinching, because the parallels are not coincidental. They share structural DNA.

The year is 1955. Brown v. Board of Education has just been decided. White Southerners, unwilling to share a classroom with Black children, respond with what historians now call "Massive Resistance." They create Segregation Academies — private schools for white children — and fund them with state-issued tuition grants. The original vouchers. They drain public school coffers. They use the language of "freedom of choice" and "states' rights" to resist federal civil rights enforcement.

The year is 2026. Families unwilling to share a curriculum with LGBTQ+ history, critical race theory, or the unvarnished complexity of American democracy respond with what advocates call "parental rights." They create religious charter schools and ESA-funded private academies. They drain public school coffers. They use the language of "parental rights" and "local control" to resist federal civil rights enforcement.

The wall has changed. The blueprint has not.

FeatureJim Crow (1950s–60s)Christian Nationalism (2020s)
"Choice" MechanismSegregation Academies + tuition grantsVouchers/ESAs as "parental rights"
GatekeepingRacial exclusionReligious, LGBTQ+, disability exclusion
History Curriculum"Lost Cause" textbooks1776 Commission "patriotic education"
Legal Shield"States' rights" vs. desegregation"Local control" vs. Title IX/LGBTQ+ protections
Funding MechanismState tuition grantsFederal tax-credit scholarships
Rhetorical Frame"Protecting our children""Protecting our children"

Note that last row carefully. The rhetoric hasn't changed at all. Not even a little.

The "Lost Cause" historiography — that decades-long project by the United Daughters of the Confederacy to install monuments and vet textbooks, framing the Civil War as a noble struggle for "states' rights" rather than a defense of human slavery — did not end. It evolved. The 1776 Commission is Lost Cause 2.0, with a federal budget and an executive order. It sanitizes conflict, moralizes hierarchy, and creates a specific cultural "in-group" identity — white, Christian, nationalist — as the only authentically "American" identity.

The difference in 2026 is that the project is no longer fighting for control of a public textbook. It wants to move students out of the public system entirely — into private ecosystems where the curriculum is a proprietary product, the data is a corporate asset, and the "patriotic" narrative is delivered via gamified AI platform.

The 20th-century censors could only dream of this kind of reach.

 PART FIVE: The End Game — Theocratic Feudalism

When You Combine "Lost Cause" Mythology With AI-Driven Corporatism, You Don't Get a Better School. You Get a Caste System With Better Branding.

Let's call the destination by its proper name: Theocratic Feudalism.

It sounds dramatic. It is meant to. Because the convergence of these forces — Christian Nationalism, Billionaire Oligarchy, and the systematic destruction of public educational infrastructure — produces a social order that has more in common with medieval Europe than with the democratic republic described in the Constitution.

The hierarchy assembles itself with uncomfortable clarity:

The Lords: The Billionaire Oligarchs who own the digital learning platforms, the charter management organizations, the real estate subsidiaries, and the private equity funds that profit from every dollar redirected from public to private. They are not ideologues. They are capitalists. The theocracy is useful to them because it provides the ground troops — the voters, the school board activists, the state legislators — needed to achieve an economic goal: the total privatization of a multi-hundred-billion-dollar public sector.

The Clergy: The Christian Nationalist leaders — the Heritage Foundation architects, the Project 2025 authors, the Hillsdale College curriculum designers — who provide the moral veneer. They give the extraction operation a story. A righteous one. A story about protecting children from "radical indoctrination," about restoring America's "Biblical foundations," about the divine mandate to educate the next generation in the ways of the Lord. It is a story that moves people. It is also a story that, conveniently, justifies redirecting public wealth into private hands.

The Serfs: The rest of us. Educated in ideological silos. Fragmented into specialized enclaves. Lacking the shared historical language, the common civic vocabulary, and the public institutions needed to organize, deliberate, and govern together. A population that has been taught what to think rather than how to think is a population that is very difficult to unionize, very easy to manipulate, and very unlikely to ask uncomfortable questions about who owns the platform delivering their child's education.

This is not a conspiracy theory. It is a business model.

The "Patriotic Education" curriculum is the software. The voucher and charter system is the hardware. And the goal is not to improve American education. The goal is to own the infrastructure of the future — to ensure that the next generation of Americans is produced, at public expense, in private factories, according to proprietary specifications, with no public accountability whatsoever.

When the market "fails" in a rural community, or a low-income neighborhood, or anywhere that isn't profitable enough to attract a charter operator — and it will, because markets always fail somewhere — there will be no public safety net left. Because we will have spent the last decade dismantling it and calling the process "reform."

THE CHEAT SHEET: Old vs. New

Here's the full comparison, because sometimes a table is worth a thousand furious paragraphs:

FeatureThe Old Public SquareThe New "Reform" Model
FundingPublicly managed & transparentVouchers & "Education Savings Accounts"
CurriculumSecular, diverse & inquiry-based"Patriotic" & Biblically-informed
AccountabilityElected school boardsPrivate & corporate boards
Civil RightsFederal oversight (Title IX, etc.)Block grants with reduced enforcement
EnrollmentUniversal & non-discriminatorySelective; school retains right to exclude
Teacher LaborUnionized, credentialed professionalsGig-economy ed-tech contractors
DataStudent privacy protectedCorporate data asset
Failure ResponsePublic reinvestmentMarket exit; community abandoned

THE 40-YEAR TIMELINE: How We Got Here

Because this didn't happen overnight. It happened deliberately, over four decades, one "reform" at a time:

DecadeAdministrationKey MoveLong-Term Impact
1980sReagan"A Nation at Risk"Created the "failure" narrative; shifted goal to economic competition
1990sClintonCharter school expansionNormalized charters as "public choice"; 1 school → 2,000+
2000sG.W. BushFaith-Based Initiatives + NCLBReligious groups compete for federal grants for first time
2010sObamaRace to the TopIncentivized charter expansion; venture philanthropy golden age
2020sTrump/DeVosVouchers + SCOTUS winsBillionaire oligarchy + Christian Nationalism officially merged

Each administration — whether through conviction, compromise, or carelessness — handed the next generation of privatizers a new tool. The "radical acceleration" of 2026 is not a sudden rupture. It is the final harvest of seeds planted across forty years of bipartisan "reform."

PART SIX: WHAT YOU CAN DO — Join the MayDay Strike

#MayDayStrong — Because "Thoughts and Prayers" Doesn't Stop a Voucher Bill

Here is the part where we resist the urge to end with despair, because despair is what the Lords and the Clergy are counting on. A fragmented, demoralized public is a compliant public. And compliance is the whole point.

So let's talk about what is actually happening on the ground, because the resistance is real, it is organized, and it is growing:

The MayDay Strike — May 1, 2026

The #MayDayStrong movement has called for a nationwide general strike on May 1, 2026 — a coordinated action by teachers, parents, students, and workers who understand that the privatization of public education is not an isolated policy debate. It is part of the same blueprint that has privatized military operations, natural resources, and public infrastructure.

What you can do right now:

  •  Show up. The MayDay Strike is not a social media moment. It is a physical, collective, disruptive act of democratic participation. Show up.
  • The "No School" Initiative. Support teacher-led, civic-focused learning that rejects the private equity model. Organize study circles, community learning spaces, and mutual aid education networks.
  •  Attend your school board meeting. Yes, that one. The one you've been meaning to go to. The one where the decisions about your community's children are being made, often with very few people in the room.
  • Call your state legislators. The ECCA and FLEX Act are state opt-in programs. Governors and state legislatures are the pressure points. Use them.
  • Follow the money. Ask your state's charter school operators where their real estate subsidiaries are registered. Ask who owns the ed-tech platform your child's school just adopted. Ask who funded the school board candidates who just voted to expand vouchers. The answers are public record. Use them.
  • Build coalitions. The "No Kings" movement, disability rights advocates, LGBTQ+ education groups, teachers' unions, rural community organizations, and civil rights groups are all fighting versions of the same battle. They are stronger together. So are you.

 THE BOTTOM LINE

We are witnessing the transformation of education as a public good into education as a private commodity. The software is "Patriotic Education." The hardware is the voucher system. The business model is Theocratic Feudalism. And the timeline is not theoretical — it is legislative, with 27 states already opted in and a January 2027 launch date circled on the calendar.

The public school is not merely a building where children learn to read. It is one of the last remaining institutions where Americans of different faiths, incomes, and backgrounds are required — structurally required — to share a common space, a common language, and a common future. When you destroy that institution, you don't just change how children learn. You change what kind of society is possible.

The Lords are counting on you to be too tired, too fragmented, and too distracted to notice until it's done.

Prove them wrong.

#MayDayStrong. May 1, 2026.

This article was written in the public interest, in defense of the public square, with full awareness that the irony of publishing it on a private platform is not lost on anyone.

Sources: The 1776 Commission & Patriotic Education | Project 2025: The Blueprint | The Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA) | The FLEX Act & Charter Expansion | The Uthmeier Doctrine on Religious Encouragement | AASA (School Superintendents Association) | Carson v. Makin (2022) | Espinoza v. Montana (2020) | Zelman v. Simmons-Harris (2002)

Source Links & Citations

1. 🏛️ The 1776 Commission & Patriotic Education

2. 📖 Project 2025: The Blueprint

3. 💵 The Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA)

4. 🏫 The FLEX Act & Charter Expansion

5. ⚖️ The Uthmeier Doctrine on Religious Encouragement

6. 🏫 AASA — The School Superintendents Association

7. ⚖️ Supreme Court Cases

⚠️ Note: The FLEX Act and Uthmeier Doctrine links are best accessed via direct Google searches on Congress.gov and the Florida AG's official site respectively, as these are rapidly evolving 2026 legislative and legal developments. All Supreme Court citations are verified via Oyez.org and Cornell Law's LII, which are the gold-standard public legal archives.


May Day 2026 Toolkit | NEA  

https://www.nea.org/mayday-toolkit