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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 08:01 AM Jun 2015

What is driving Scott Walker's war on Wisconsin universities

By Saul Newton

Scott Walker’s war on Wisconsin’s public colleges will result in lower quality and higher debt for students and families, which is precisely what his right wing political patrons at the Bradley Foundation have been planning for decades.

Wisconsin students have experienced first hand Scott Walker’s assault on public higher education over the last four years. Double-digit tuition increases and historic, unprecedented budget cuts have resulted in declining enrollment, rising costs, and exploding student loan debt for millions of Wisconsin families. The groundwork for Walker’s crusade against public higher education in Wisconsin was first being laid as Walker began his political career over two decades ago by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, a well funded far right wing organization that today has been behind every facet of Walker’s political rise, as well as the ideological and financial source of his failed agenda.

Under Scott Walker, Wisconsin’s colleges have been the targets of an ideologically motivated attack to undermine and dismantle higher education in this state. In his first term, Walker slashed funding for Wisconsin universities and technical colleges by nearly $400 million while in-state tuition rose by double digits. As tuition increased Walker froze funding for financial aid programs and cut tuition assistance by nearly $40 million, forcing college students to carry the weight of his extreme budget cuts. Earlier this year, Scott Walker defied the national trend and intensified his war on the on the University of Wisconsin System by proposing a massive budget cut of $300 million, the largest funding cut in University of Wisconsin history. He also included a proposal in the budget to eliminate portions of the Wisconsin Idea, the University of Wisconsin’s mission statement that codifies that the purpose of the University of Wisconsin System is to improve people’s lives outside the classroom. When confronted, Walker claimed the changes were the result of a “drafting error” and quickly withdrew the proposal. Records later revealed that Walker’s office had directed the changes over the concerns of University of Wisconsin System administrators. In addition, Walker’s budget proposal includes unprecedented assaults on academic freedom and university governance that are already driving away professors and faculty from across Wisconsin. Walker’s crusade against higher education is not “reform,” but is actually strategic and coordinated assault on universities across this state.

Scott Walker’s war on Wisconsin colleges and universities has been a hallmark of his tenure as Wisconsin's Governor. However, the coordinated political attack on higher education in Wisconsin we see today did not start with Scott Walker. Walker is instituting an ideological agenda laid out by his political benefactors, the Bradley Foundation, as far back as twenty years ago.

In 1994, the Bradley-funded Wisconsin Public Research Institute’s Wisconsin Interest magazine published an article titled “The Legacy of the Wisconsin Idea: Hastening the Demise of an Exhausted Progressivism.” The author, Michael S. Joyce, was then President of the Bradley Foundation, a well funded right wing organization that has funneled large sums of money to fund a sprawling network of extreme organizations for decades. In the article, Joyce claimed that the University of Wisconsin was emblematic of a philosophy that “required nothing less than the transfer of moral and spiritual authority away from civil society into the hands of the modern, centralized state.” Joyce viewed the dismantling of public education as a way to “invigorate traditional, local institutions” by working to “re-establish the dignity of traditional folk wisdom.” According to Joyce, “our common project must be to hasten the demise of progressivism” by demolishing public institutions, specifically public education.

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http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/purple-wisconsin/306818841.html

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DetlefK

(16,423 posts)
1. “re-establish the dignity of traditional folk wisdom.” - That's it. That's their true reason.
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 08:20 AM
Jun 2015

Those arrogant PROFESSORS and TEACHERS and those STUDENTS with their PROGRESSIVE ideas are getting in the way of good old-fashioned solutions.

That's the reason why conservatives hate science and everybody associated to it:
Conservatives think that science is a tool to climb the social ladder, a means to increase one's status and to demean others. They think that intellectuals are in the "intellectual business" because they want to look down on common people.
(I read an article about it a while ago. Can't remember if it was a real study.)

It also fits with the conservative mindset to look for an "intelligent designer" behind everything:
The universe and nature cannot happen by themselves with random events, there MUST be someone steering this.
Science cannot possibly be impartial, nobody is impartial and nobody can be trusted, there MUST be a plot by scientists to falsify results to their desires.
Homosexuals are asking for equal rights? That cannot truly be what they want. They MUST have sinister motives.

TexasProgresive

(12,158 posts)
2. It's not just Wisconsin - it is one of the tactics in the class war.
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 08:35 AM
Jun 2015

I think there is a concerted effort to steal higher education away from the "unwashed masses". It was inexpensive college education, state funded and the G.I. Bill that moved the greatest generation into a thriving middle class.

blm

(113,094 posts)
3. Knowing the extreme nature of GOP voting base he wants to win - the PRIMARY voters.
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 08:38 AM
Jun 2015

Scott will attack everything the dumbed down GOP voting base has been convinced to hate - education, women, minorities, working families, poor, and environmental science.

 

Buzz Clik

(38,437 posts)
4. This is good news for universities across the country looking for talented faculty members
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 10:43 AM
Jun 2015

Younger, more mobile faculty (the future of every university) have their eyes on the door, and they will be very responsive to flirtations from other institutions.

If Wisconsin doesn't get their shit together very very soon, they will have nearly irreversible momentum.

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
5. To a large extent, I think we've already passed the failsafe point.
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 01:29 PM
Jun 2015

Even if in the next election there is a Dem governor and a Dem controlled Assembly/Senate, how are they going to make the changes needed? How long will it take? I mean there is the university issues, public education, the courts, worker's comp, other litigation and insurances issues, etc. And you can't do those at once or people will freak. This state is destined to be in the shitter for quite a while. I've been here 22 years. If my wife gets a job in Minnesota (much easier for me to find a job after she does), we're out and never looking back.

n2doc

(47,953 posts)
8. Minnesota seemed to recover nicely
Thu Jun 11, 2015, 04:48 PM
Jun 2015

So there is hope. Although Snotty Walker has done more damage in his time.

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