WHOSE EDUCATION IS IT ANYWAY?
Rich Billionaires Get Tax Breaks. Poor Kids Get the Bill. Welcome to the Barnyard.
Published May 1, 2026 — Happy May Day. The kids are not alright.
Here's a sentence the Founders apparently forgot to add after "all men are created equal": "...unless you're a public school kid in 2026, in which case, good luck, champ." Because somewhere between the Declaration of Independence and the Citizens United decision, American democracy took a hard right turn into a barnyard — and George Orwell, bless his prophetic soul, already wrote the ending. Some animals are more equal than others. The pigs are running the farm. And the schoolhouse is on fire.
Welcome to the Barnyard: A Brief History of How We Got Here
Let's set the scene. It's May 1, 2026. Nationwide "Mayday Strong-No Kings" protests are filling the streets. Educators, parents, and students are marching because the Trump Administration just dropped a budget proposal so brazenly tilted toward billionaire interests that it reads less like a federal document and more like a Venmo request from the ultra-wealthy to the American taxpayer.
The numbers tell the story with brutal clarity:
- $12 billion slashed from discretionary education funding — a 15.3% cut in one swing
- 50+ federal education programs consolidated or outright eliminated
- $500 million redirected to charter school expansion
- Programs like Promise Neighborhoods, Arts in Education, English Language Acquisition, and Comprehensive Literacy State Development Grants — zeroed out
Meanwhile, the billionaire class is enjoying tax structures so favorable they'd make a medieval feudal lord blush with envy.
To borrow from the Declaration: We hold these truths to be self-evident — that cutting school lunch funding while expanding charter school grants for wealthy donors is not "educational freedom." It's a shakedown in a graduation cap.
The Billionaire Playbook: Four Moves, One Endgame
The oligarchic takeover of American education didn't happen overnight. It followed a very deliberate four-act play — and we are currently deep in Act Four.
Act I: Fund the Politicians
Jeffrey Yass, Pennsylvania's billionaire extraordinaire, didn't just support school voucher programs — he funded the lawmakers who wrote them, then profited from the tax credits those same laws created. It's the educational equivalent of owning the casino, dealing the cards, and being the house. The circular logic is so perfect it's almost artistic.
Act II: Rebrand Privatization as "Choice"
Nothing sells a product like calling it freedom. The voucher movement rebranded the systematic defunding of public schools as "parent choice" — a phrase so wholesome it practically comes with an apple and a Norman Rockwell painting. What it actually means: public tax dollars flowing into private institutions with far less accountability than the public schools they're replacing.
Act III: Standardize Everything (And Sell the Standards)
Enter Laurene Powell Jobs and the Science of Reading juggernaut. Now, improving literacy is genuinely noble — no argument there. But critics have raised serious flags about a "one-size-fits-all" mandate now embedded in 40 states, built around proprietary materials from private companies, effectively turning teacher training into a subscription service. When the curriculum is a product and the teacher is a facilitator for someone else's software, ask yourself: who's actually in the classroom?
Act IV: Replace Teachers with Screens
The final boss move. The EdTech pipeline — pushed aggressively by billionaire-backed foundations — increasingly frames teachers not as professionals but as inefficiencies to be optimized away. AI-driven platforms. Online instruction manuals. Automated assessments. The dream? A scalable, low-labor, high-margin education product. The reality? NAEP scores have been declining since 2013 — right around the time the "disruption" crowd showed up with their laptops and their TED Talks.
The Scorecard Nobody Asked For (But Everybody Needs)
Here's where the two visions of American education stand in 2026:
| The Battlefield | Public Education Advocates | The Billionaire Vision |
|---|---|---|
| 💵 Funding | Public dollars belong in public schools | "Funds should follow the student" (into my charter network) |
| 📚 Curriculum | Teacher professional autonomy | Standardized, proprietary, and "science-backed" |
| 🗳️ Accountability | Democratically elected school boards | Market competition (may the best-funded school win) |
| 💻 Technology | A tool to support human teaching | A replacement for the "inefficient" human teacher |
| 🏫 The Goal | Educated, civically engaged citizens | Scalable product. Measurable ROI. Exit strategy. |
The contrast isn't subtle. One side believes public education is a democratic institution. The other sees it as a market opportunity — and right now, the market is winning.
Tone-Deaf in the Barnyard: The Linda McMahon Chapter
Linda McMahon, current head of the Department of Education under the Trump Administration, has been on what critics are calling a "History Rocks!" tour — cheerfully misrepresenting standardized test data to paint public schools as irredeemably broken. The rhetorical strategy is as old as privatization itself: declare the public option a failure, then defund it until it actually fails, then point at the failure as proof you were right.
It's the educational equivalent of cutting the fire department's budget, watching the town burn, and saying, "See? Government can't fight fires."
The cruelest irony? The very programs being eliminated — literacy grants, arts education, English language acquisition support — are the ones that actually move the needle for the kids the system claims to be saving.
Parents Are Waking Up — And They Are Not Happy
Here's what the billionaire class may have miscalculated: parents notice things.
They notice when the special education aide disappears. When the school librarian position gets cut. When their kid's school lunch program gets trimmed while a new charter campus opens three miles away with gleaming facilities and a venture-capital backer.
The "No Kings" May Day protests happening today across America aren't just about labor rights in the abstract — they are parents, teachers, and community members saying, in very plain language: our children are not your collateral damage.
The FY2026 budget isn't a policy document. It's a values document. And the values it expresses are unambiguous: the children of the wealthy are investments. The children of everyone else are line items to be reduced.
The Orwell Paragraph We Can't Escape
George Orwell wrote Animal Farm in 1945 as a warning about what happens when revolutionary ideals get hijacked by those with the most to gain. The pigs started with "All animals are equal" — a beautiful, democratic principle. They ended with "but some animals are more equal than others" — the inevitable conclusion of unchecked power.
The Declaration of Independence gave us the American version of that first sentence. Citizens United — and the billionaire-funded political machine it unleashed — is busy writing the second.
The question for 2026 isn't whether public education is imperfect. Of course it is. Every human institution is. The question is: who gets to fix it, and in whose interest?
A billionaire with a tax credit and a charter school network has a very different answer than a third-grade teacher in Albuquerque with 28 kids, no aide, and a classroom supply budget of $200.
The Bottom Line
The FY2026 education budget is not a reform. It is a transfer — of public resources to private interests, of democratic accountability to market logic, of a child's future to a billionaire's portfolio.
"We hold these truths to be self-evident" — that a democracy which cannot educate its children equally is not a democracy for long. It's a barnyard. And right now, the pigs are very, very comfortable.
The kids are marching today. The parents are paying attention. And history, as it always does, is taking notes.
Dragging American education through the barnyard, one budget cut at a time — this has been your May Day reality check. Now go call your school board member.

