david i. backer Profile picture
Jul 27, 2022 16 tweets 6 min read Read on X
I've been trying to better understand how Roe v. Wade got overturned. Something I didn't know until now is that school finance--specifically, efforts to preserve tax exemption for segregated christian schools & perpetuate a white lifeworld--is at the heart of the story.🧵
It was @KnowYrEnemyPod's recent series on "How They Did it" that tipped me off, citing @rickperlstein's Reaganland. If you haven't listened to the podcasts and read the book, I recommend them both.

The context is the formation of the 'new right'. 1/x

…ow-your-enemy-1682b684.simplecast.com/episodes/how-t… Image
They cite an essay "The Real Origins of the Religious Right" tracing its origins to a lawsuit filed in 1969 about the tax exempt status of whites-only 'Christian' schools opened to push back against desegregation. 2/x politico.com/magazine/story…
The original case was called Green v. Kennedy. In 1969, the first year of desegregation in their school district, Black parents in the Holmes County watched as their white neighbors did a school strike to protest desegregation. 3/x
law.justia.com/cases/federal/…
Balmer notes that "the number of white students enrolled in public schools in Holmes County dropped from 771 to 28; the following year, that number fell to zero." These white parents took their kids out of the public school and started private schools that were white-only. 4/x
The segregation academies were founded as non-profit entities. Under the 501(c)(3) law governing non-profits, the institutions themselves didn't have to pay taxes. law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26… 5/x
But not only that, under Internal Revenue Code 170(c)(2), those donating to the foundations could deduct their donations from gross income tax.

Basically, if you give money to these segregation academies then you didn't have to pay taxes on the income you used to pay them. 6/x
But the Green case undid all this: the judge found in favor of the plaintiffs!

Not only that, but Richard Nixon--fearing the collapse of local control after several state courts found school finance unconstitutional & illegal--changed the IRS code too. 7/x Image
To be clear: think of tax exemption as govt expenditure.

When the government decides not to tax what you have, you can kind of see it as the government giving you that money.

So the racists found a way to get a tax expenditure for their segregation academies. 7a/x
This tax exemption was a key material condition of white segregation post-Brown v. Board--which, remember, was mostly a publicity stunt during the Cold War: communists kept saying how unequal and unfree the US was, so the ruling class had to shut them up. 7b/x
The political economist of education Martin Carnoy once wrote that schools have a legitimate public claim to maintaining society's continuity. So imagine what it was like for white supremacists to integrate schools? They lost the means of maintaining their whole lifeworld. 8/x Image
The Green case pissed off evangelical leaders, especially as the IRS sent queries to church-related schools like Jerry Falwell’s Lynchburg Christian School. Falwell was furious. “In some states,” he said, “It’s easier to open a massage parlor than a Christian school.” 9/x Image
Evangelicals hadn't been super political, but conservative activists wanted to get activated to form a voting bloc. The loss of their white Christian schools' tax exemption status did the trick. But they couldn't come out and fight for this explicitly--it was too racist. 10/x
That's where abortion comes in. Balmer writes in another longer essay that abortion was the issue evangelicals could fight against as a sort of proxy or trojan horse to win back the loss of their white world. 11/x amc.sas.upenn.edu/sites/default/… Image
I lay it all out here with more detail. And if you want readable socialist analysis of education with a focus on finance, sign up for the newsletter! buttondown.email/davidibacker/a…
Important clarification that I hadn’t seen: the “it’s all about segregated schools and only got taken up later” narrative is over-simplified. I think the issue was still in the mix and arguably played a key role, but we certainly can’t be reductive/ignore: washingtonpost.com/outlook/2022/0… Image

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More from @schooldaves

Apr 6, 2022
While people were focused on the superintendent search and city budget processes in Philly, a group of students were measuring the CO2 in their classroom as part of a project with their teacher.

Then a district official came to hear their presentation and told them off.🧵
For context, architect and organizer @lizzies21 got national coverage for her work with her elementary school age son Luke. They were using a CO2 detector hidden in his backpack to see if the air was turning over properly in the midst of the pandemic. 1/x nytimes.com/2021/10/10/hea…
I'd been working with Lizzie to formalize this work, communicate to it a broader audience, and scale it up.

It puts pressure on the school facilities crisis locally and nationally.

We've done a ton of work: 2/x
Read 12 tweets
Feb 23, 2022
As professional class people move to cities and have kids in the US, we have to choose schools--which means participating in an intensely unjust system.

I’m a socialist, professor of education policy, and a parent in this position. Here’s my story.🧵
I grew up in a medium-sized town in western Connecticut. When I left for college, I promised myself I'd live in a city. I hated being in cars all the time, and hated the silent, soul crushing, isolated, anxious depression of the middle class scramble for status. 1/n
My urban preference syncs up with trends in millennials' choices. Dowell Myers finds that 2015 was the peak year for millennials in cities. (This is changing now, with millenials moving out of cities. I wonder if this is because of schools). 2/n researchgate.net/profile/Dowell…
Read 25 tweets
Jan 5, 2022
Omicron is surging and there's a crisis over whether to close schools. A key part of this issue is school building safety, specifically ventilation systems. I've been studying how these are financed so here's a 🧵with an explanation for how our school buildings got this way.
There's a difference between regular operating costs (salaries, books) and big project costs.

Ventilation system maintenance and replacement are big capital extensive projects that take a lot of time and money to complete. These are called capital expenditures.
You might be surprised to learn that school districts and states in the US have to take out loans from Wall Street for these big capital projects. It leaves every district and state for themselves and subject to credit ratings, interest rates, and fees. nytimes.com/2021/08/27/opi…
Read 11 tweets
Jan 3, 2022
I've been looking up who's in charge of facilities stuff at the School District of Philadelphia given the buildings crisis. Who actually works on designing & financing things like school ventilation systems?

Poking around the Office of Capital Programs, I noticed Nicole Ward.🧵
Ward is the Design Manager for the district's capital management team. (She's the one behind 'ment' here.) She started in 2016. ImageImage
If you want to design school construction projects or big maintenance programs--that reduce building emissions, for instance--she's an important person to know. This proposal bid was addressed to her. phila.gov/media/20210205… Image
Read 10 tweets
Sep 10, 2021
There's a facilities crisis in the School District of Philadelphia. Buildings full of asbestos, garbage not being picked up, roofs caving in. So I got interested in the District's facilities leadership: who makes decisions about facilities? I found some weird things. (thread)
The SDP's facilities are overseen by the Office of Operations, led by Reggie McNeil.philasd.org/operations/. They also have a twitter feed: @PHLschoolOps
In the Office of Operations is the Office of Facilities Management & Services (OFMS), which has a Facilities Dept and a Maintenance Dept.

Under Facilities, we find Executive Director of Operations Ralph Carp and Director of Facilities Tim Holman. philasd.org/facilities/dep…
Read 15 tweets
Feb 15, 2021
Ever wonder why some schools have enough money for safe ventilation and others don’t?

A thread.
@BisforBerkshire and @Edu_Historian have a new book called A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door. It’s about how if we’re not careful public education could be totally privatized. It’s great.

But when it comes to the schoolhouse itself—it’s infrastructure—the wolves already control it.
Now for some basic accounting.

A capital expenditure is diff than an operating cost. OpC is a regular expense, like wages.

Capital project is a one-time or infrequent thing, like fixing your buildings.

Ventilation systems are usually the latter.
Read 10 tweets

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