
Originally Posted by
PennyQuilts
Personally, I find the whole big city far left progressive experiment fascinating. I am a huge states' rights person and being able to watch a new approach from a distance is intriguing. If the housing collapsed from rich guy flight, it could take down the NYC economy but on the other hand, it could open up housing for younger families that are being priced out, right now. Assuming they could find jobs, it would go a long way to bring in a thriving middle class back in instead of the very rich and the subsidized poor. The high housing costs in NYC, IMO, are the biggest driver of the inequality gap.
That being said, whatever happens in terms of tax base their bigger problem, seems to me, is the horrible public schools and the protecting of lousy union teachers who aren't doing right by their kids. I've been poor but in OKC, I could find a modest house close to decent public schools. In contrast, there are whole sections of NYC where poor kids are stuck in horrible schools with no way out because their parents can't afford to live in neighborhoods with decent schools. That is tragic. The progressives claim the charter schools aren't doing very well and certainly not enough to justify undermining union teachers. But then we get to the point that everyone with enough money puts their kids in private schools. NYC is covered with them. When I was there last month, we passed a little private school down the street from one of my kids. I thought it was a kindergarten and pointed it out to my girl. I asked her if my grandbaby would go there in a few years and she said it was a K - 8th grade school with a $28,000.00 annual tuition. I nearly fell over. How do young families afford that???????
Just seems to me that the poor kids are being written off and that sure won't help the next generation - nor will it contribute in any positive way to the social justice sought by de Blasio - at least to the kids. It might keep the union teachers in the middle class but at what cost?
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