Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 2/12/25: Project 2025 Cheers Ed Department Destruction, Elon Betrays MAGA Working Class
Episode Date: February 12, 2025Ryan and Emily discuss Project 2025 author cheers destruction of Dep of Education, Elon Betrays MAGA working class. To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show... AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.com Merch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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let's get to the show. We're excited to be joined now by Lindsay Burke. She is the director at the
Center for Education Policy at the Heritage Foundation and also wrote the chapter in Heritage's Mandate
for Leadership, also known now as Project 2025, on education policy. This is a very timely
conversation given recent developments of the last 24 hours about how Doge is starting to turn
its attention to the Department of Education. So, Lindsay, first of all, thank you so much for being
here. Yeah, thanks for having me, Emily. Yeah, no, we appreciate it. I think you and I come from a very different place than Ryan does
on this. And the question about just like what's going to happen to the Department of Education
is obviously a sensitive one for parents around the country who are worried about a shutdown
affecting them. So Lindsay, I think maybe a good place to start is actually if you could walk us through, you know, your
take on why people, why parents with kids and, you know, schools that are almost entirely,
unless they're at Hillsdale, funded by the federal government in some part, should not be afraid,
from your perspective, of DOGE kind of tackling the Department of Education?
Yeah, well, first, we should make a distinction between K-12 and higher ed. So in the K-12 space,
federal funding is less than 10% of all school funding across the country. And it's worth noting,
and so this is different than higher ed, right, where you get student loans, it's wholly federally
funded, 93% of all loans are originated
in service by the federal government. So two separate things. But in K-12 education, it's
very important to remember the Department of Education does not run a single school,
it does not pay a single teacher salary, it does not educate a single child in America.
And so I would assuage parents' concerns. and I would make the case to most parents, you has meant their money is taken, sent to Washington,
filtered through this ineffective bureaucracy, and then 65 cents on every dollar is sent back
to local classrooms. And somehow that's supposed to improve educational outcomes or lead to
academic excellence. And it clearly hasn't. So that's where I would start just to assuage any
concerns parents might have. And the other quick where I would start, just to assuage any concerns parents might have.
And the other quick thing I would say is just because the Department of Education is eliminated
and we'll see what ultimately happens, doesn't mean that programs and spending go away.
Most of the proposals that are out there, including ours, would move many of the programs
that are actually effective or appropriate to other federal agencies.
So you look at something like the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, funding under
IDEA, that would move over to HHS.
Data collection, things like the National Assessment for Educational Progress, send
it over to the Commerce Department.
Let the Census Bureau handle that.
Student loans, move them to Treasury.
So this idea that eliminating the physical structure of the Department of Education will somehow have negative benefits on education, I think it's quite the opposite.
So the 2025 proposal seemed pretty heavy on block grants.
Like we'll take, you know, right now, like to take the disabilities provision that you talked about.
So you would move the,
you would move that over to HHS.
But the key thing there to me seems to be that you would also just block grant it.
And for people who don't know block grant just means,
all right,
we used to fund,
you know,
under these requirements,
the States had to,
you know,
submit this kind of paperwork and,
and meet these requirements to get this money.
Now we're just going to add up the amount of money, send it all out, and that means they'lls or something, it's already, as you know,
a war that parents have to go through with their schools to get these IEPs. Because you get an IEP,
it's going to cost a little bit extra money. So the school districts are generally doing
everything they can to say, well, your kid actually doesn't qualify for this. And just
to make it so difficult for parents that they just eventually give up and only the most dedicated ones get through. So if you no
longer, and that, so it's a war, despite the fact that you have the federal government kind of
looking over their shoulder and saying, you know, you need to do this if you're going to get this
money. If you, if the federal government just walks away and just hands the money to the schools, given the school's impulse already, why wouldn't the school just reject everybody's IEP, keep the money, cut property taxes, and then use the money to just fund their general operations?
And there are a couple other block grants.
You can remind me.
You know this better.
Yeah, Title I.
There are a few others. Why wouldn't they just do the same thing and just now the federal government is just,
that money isn't supporting these projects, it's just supporting the school and then the school
cuts taxes. Yeah. The city cuts taxes. So a couple of things. So your example with IDA is a really
important one because I think those are the parents, absolutely right, who have had the most
contentious, unfortunately, relationship getting the services that they are entitled to under federal law.
And it's something like 15 million parents have gotten through the thicket or 15 million kids, right? with the tools to actually fight that war effectively and not be reliant on a process where too often they end up in litigation, trying to get the services they are entitled to under
federal law. And so what do those tools look like? Once we block grant that funding to the state,
so it doesn't go directly to schools, right? So a state can receive the block grant.
At that point, a state can decide that parents can have access to their dollars. So states could make those IDEA
dollars portable. And if a family wanted, they could take their kid's share of IDEA dollars.
And honestly, at the per pupil level, it's not that much. And the overall scheme of what we
spend per pupil, we're talking about maybe $2,000 a year. But if a parent doesn't feel that their
school is providing services appropriately to them, they could tap
into that money and they could pay for private services and providers, schools, service providers,
whatever it might be, that they feel better meets the needs of their children. The other thing I
would add is... Would that pay for private school or are you talking about $2,000 a year or something?
Right. So services. So probably additional services, right? It's not going to pay for tuition at a private school. However, if you're in a state that has a school
choice program already, and we're now to the point where over half of them do, and most of them are
education savings accounts, and most of them started off for kids with special needs. In fact,
if you're in one of those states, you could easily envision a family getting an ESA,
enrolling in private school, and then under this proposal, also being able to tap in to their funding under IDEA and topping off that amount to get additional services.
So you could certainly envision that situation.
And we're to the point, by the way, quick non sequitur, if Texas gets school choice this year, which finally it looks like they're going to do, we're going to be at the point where over half of all kids across the country have access to private school choice.
So this is happening. But on IDA specifically at the federal level, I would add that the law that
is supposed to protect these children, that doesn't go away, right? And that law, the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act predated by the Education for All Handicapped
Children Act in 75, that predated the creation of the Federal Department of Education, as did so
many of these laws, right? So this idea that access or protections for kids with special needs or low
income children go away, all of those protections came well before Carter acquiesced to the
teachers union in order to get their support to be elected
president and created a federal department of ed. So none of that goes away. But just from a news
perspective, what can you tell us? What do you know about what the Trump officials were doing
at, at ed yesterday in the sixth floor that Jen Bender, we had a Jen Bender retweet from
HuffPost up there. Um, other people are saying that, you know, 89 contracts were cut
totaling something like $900 million. What do you know about what's been cut so far and what insight
do you have into what further cuts are coming? Yeah. So I don't have insight into what the
administration is doing or thinking yet. I think we're all just waiting to see what a potential executive order might include. And look, I mean, there is...
They're not working with you? I mean, you wrote the blueprint, right?
Look, we put out for years. In fact, for almost... I've been at Heritage 17 years now. So,
for almost two decades, we've been writing about the need to wind down the department. And our writing on that predated the chapter that you all referenced there.
And so, you know, we have a map for exactly what you would do with every single program.
We have a three-part test, which programs you would keep.
Are they ineffective?
Are they duplicative?
Or are they inappropriate at the federal level?
If they check any of those boxes, they're gone. The handful of programs that
remain, we map out more appropriate receiving agencies to manage those programs. And so
all of that's out there. I'm very excited to see an administration finally willing to try to correct
Carter's mistake and wind down this bureaucracy. I mean, look at the recent NAEP outcomes,
right? They were awful. Kids have lost, just if you look at fourth grade reading, kids have lost almost a year's
worth of learning, almost a grade level worth of learning just over the past decade. And I mean,
the recent outcomes were really just heartbreaking for so many families. And this has been a trend
that has continued since 1965, right? And we talk about
the department, but really it was the war on poverty, right? It was Lyndon Johnson. It was 1965
when we first see the federal government get involved in pre-K and K-12 ed and higher education.
There have been no improvements as a result of that involvement. You look at the gap between
low-income children and more affluent
kids, it's four grade levels worth of learning. Four. It's exactly the same today as it was in
1965. We have just not moved the needle and improved academic outcomes to speak of. And so,
yeah, we're all very excited to see the administration make some of these important
cuts. And as far as what contracts and programs we will see, we know that there is a lot of, you know, DEI adjacent stuff that has infused
the department over the past few years. So hopefully that's first on the chopping block.
Before we move to higher ed, I wanted to just get your take on this. Here are the collapsing scores, I think, that you were just referring to, which also show an
increase from, and you have other ones that show an increase before. I feel like correlation is
not causation. I look at the timing of some of these collapses and i see the rise of kind of cell phones and social media and
screens um but uh let me go a little bit further so like when you look at these long-term trends
so this is from your um your project 2025 document here um you know pretty flat you know flat and
rising for a 13 year old reading um rising for rising for a nine-year-old reading,
going back to 1971,
rising for math for 13-year-olds and nine-year-olds,
though falling a bit around the pandemic and screens.
I think a combination of those two things.
So what do you think accounts for the, the increase? Like,
if you look, if you look at those numbers, like, well, like I said, correlation is not causation,
but, you know, department of education came around and scores went up for decades,
screens came in and scores went down. So, and then the pandemic, you know, an absolute catastrophe
for, for, for schooling. So how is, you know, is unwindingness going to like
reverse that? Yeah. So what we didn't include and we should have are the 12th grade results.
If you look at the 12th grade results, they are flat, flat in reading, flat in math. And so even
though we see some increase in reading and math for 13-year-olds and nine-year-olds,
that doesn't persist throughout high school. And so we're just not seeing those gains throughout
the years. The longer a kid spends in school, the less the gains are there over time. And so
should have included that too. Look, in terms of the department, again, I would certainly not peg
the department to any of those increases. And if you look at the charts where you see those
slight increases that again, don't persist over time, they do correlate more with one could argue
some of the accountability measures that, and I'm no fan of No Child Left Behind, but that were
included in NCLB. And I mentioned that because there was a concerted effort at that point to care about reading outcomes.
The way that the federal government wrote NCLB, the sanctions that were put into place did not work well at all for states.
But we did see a focus at that time on reading by third grade.
You look at Florida at that time period, right? You
had Jeb Bush there who would continue to beat the drum about, you know, if a kid from kindergarten
to third grade is learning to read from third grade on, they're reading to learn, right? And
if they don't get that right, they're going to have a very hard time throughout the rest of their
academic experience. And so there was a real focus. And so I think that that focus on reading
may account for some of those early gains, but again, they didn't persist. And I am also heartened to see that we have a renewed focus
on phonics-based instruction now. That's something that is long overdue. We had this shift toward
whole language, which we know really failed, honestly, generations of children in learning
to read. And so that's been great to see a renewed focus on phonics-based
instruction. So hopefully that will accrue to the benefit of reading in the next few years.
But yeah, I mean, the pandemic declines, and I say pandemic declines, these were teacher union
induced school closures that kept kids locked out of schools, right? Far after, far after we knew it
was safe for schools to reopen. And so those significant declines lay
squarely at the feet of the teachers' union's heads. And, you know, that's going to stick with
these kids for decades to come, unfortunately. Well, I wanted to ask one question, Lindsay,
sort of from a conservative perspective. It's kind of different for me to imagine if this was a Ron
DeSantis administration versus a Trump administration with Elon Musk coming in.
People like you really have spent years carefully crafting detailed plans, like granular level plans as to how to put the Department of Education on an off ramp, essentially, with all kinds of ideas as to how gaps that would happen if the centralized federal department is
shut down will be filled. And I'm curious if it worries you at all the way that Doge has
approached other departments, you know, without debating what should have happened to USAID,
even just the way that it was, it was sort of like an ad hoc, oh, we're finding something here, gone, like the mile afuera approach to
government. Right. So does any of that concern you that you have this carefully crafted,
ideologically sound plan from a conservative perspective, and you kind of have the wrecking
ball coming for different departments now? No, it doesn't. Honestly, we need a wrecking ball at Ed. And we're in the, I would say, enviable position that families across the country
understand through experience and just intuitively that the Department of Ed has failed them over the
years. We don't have to make the case. Like, I go and give talks all the time. And the biggest
applause line is always closed down the Department of Ed. I mean, it is. So we're in a good position there. I think there's a fairly
high level of understanding among the public at large about how little the investment is at the
federal level in K-12 Ed relative to the red tape and regulations that the agency hands down. So,
you know, I think with USAID, there was just less, I think, understanding about what the agency does among the general population. And so I think we're
on pretty solid ground there. So what would funding levels look like in your ideal world?
You know, as we look at the world now, it's so hard for teachers to live near their schools, for instance, or to just live a dignified life, which makes it then harder to attract kind of the best people into the field.
So what does it look like in your world where you've gotten rid of the Department of Education?
Yeah.
Look, I agree, right? I mean, for teachers, so over the decades, the unions made a decision that they wanted more teachers rather than, and I say teachers, they wanted more education employees, right? So I should add, the teacher to non-teacher ratio right now is one to one. If you look at your typical school district, for every teacher in a classroom, there's an administrative counterpart. So the unions made a decision over the years to prioritize increasing staff because,
of course, that accrued to the benefit of their bottom line, right? More dues paying members,
rather than taking ever-increasing state, local, and federal spending and putting that into higher
teacher salaries. So that was a conscious decision that was made on the part of special interest
groups. We should pay teachers more, those who deserve to be paid more, right?
We should reward teachers based on merit, right?
Not just on the amount of time that they've spent in the classroom, but that will require
some changes, right?
It's going to require us to no longer have this staff surge that we have had over really
since the 1960s to put a damper on that. I mean,
we've had 100% increase in the number of students in schools since the 1970s, but a 700% increase
in the number of administrators, just to put a finer point on it. So we need to stop that staffing
surge. But we also need to be willing to say, modestly increase class size a little bit, right? We know
that at some point there's a diminishing return on reducing class size and it is low nationally.
It's 15 to one, right? So you could modestly increase class size and then you could pretty
significantly increase teacher pay for those teachers who increase student learning, right?
If you get more than a year or a year's worth of learning over time,
you deserve to be rewarded for that.
How do we get to that 15 to 1 number?
I don't know.
So that's National Center for Education.
I mean, I'm not doubting that that's the stat,
but like what happened such that most,
I bet most people watching this are going to be like,
huh, there's 28 kids in my kid's class.
And I should say that's high school, high school numbers. So if you look at your elementary numbers,
they are slightly higher, but for your typical high school, 15 to one.
So to your question, which I don't think I answered, about what is the appropriate
spending level? And are you thinking per pupil? Are you thinking at the federal level what we
should be spending? Well, either. I mean, what matters most really is what gets down to the
schools. Exactly. Yeah, 100% agree. So at the federal level, if you look at the plan that we've
worked on for two decades now, what we have recommended is that you eliminate all of the
competitive grant funding that the feds manage. It is completely
ineffective. It has not moved the needle at all in terms of student learning outcomes.
That's a lot of programs. It's not a lot of spending, to be honest. It's maybe not a lot,
maybe $3 billion of the department's budget. So that would go away immediately. And there are
certainly other areas where you could cut as well. But those large formula grant programs, which is where most of the funding is, those are
the programs that would just go to other receiving agencies.
So again, you actually probably wouldn't see that large of a reduction in existing
federal spending, but you would see some and you should see some.
As far as what the ideal per pupil spending level is, just to give the listeners
an idea, we spend about $18,000 per pupil per year now nationally. So that's combined local,
state, and federal revenue. And of course, the federal piece is a small share of that.
It's about 45% federal, I'm sorry, 45% state, 45% local, 10% federal funding. I would say we don't know
the ideal number because we don't have a market-based system, right? We have a system
that runs and functions much more like a monopoly than a market. But we can look at the school
choice programs that are expanding in the state and get some sense of what it does cost to educate
a child. If you look at education savings account options in
the states, states like Arizona, they're getting about $7,000 per kid. That's a base per pupil
allocation. If you have a kid with special needs, you get a little more money. It's weighted based
on disability. And that is working great for families. Families are choosing to enter that
program to take that amount of funding and then go find services that work for them rather than staying in the district system where they're spending twice that much and they're not getting a quality education.
So it's hard to say exactly what it should be, but the evidence strongly suggests we don't need to spend $18,000 per child per year.
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is this a vicious cycle like are this are the public schools that are seeing all of these kids leave and go to
these private schools funded by the school choice are they quickly collapsing and we haven't seen
any clothes yet like honestly uh and we should right i mean schools that are trapping kids
cycles and like you know generations of kids in these ineffective institutions, they shouldn't be
around, right? No kid should be trapped in a school that is failing them. We're not seeing
schools closed yet, but we do see the kids who are least well served by these schools having an
escape hatch out of them. And that tends to be the case with even if you look at states with
universal choice programs or really large choice options, you know, you look at Florida,
you look at Arizona, it is still an escape valve for these kids. So we haven't seen schools shutting
down. You know, I think two things are going to put more pressure on public schools than any school
choice option. One is just the demographic collapse that's coming, right? I mean, that will put a lot of pressure on public schools in the
future to either consolidate or downsize. They're just not going to have kids in seats because of
the fertility crisis, not because of school choice. And then the other thing is, if the
argument of those on the left against choice was, well, it's going to harm public schools, right?
We should be laser focused on funding children and not institutions. But if that were the case,
why allow public school choice at all? Why allow families to even buy a house in another
neighborhood, right? Like anytime you exercise public school choice, that money leaves an
assigned school and goes to another school. Same with charters, right? So this idea that
private school choice is either going to
lead to the end of public education as we know it, or that it already has, isn't founded. And I
always come back to the Friedman argument, right? That we, yes, we will publicly finance K-12
education, but the public financing does not require government delivery of services. So fund
the kid, separate that out,
allow the family to choose what works for them.
We're running out of time to talk about higher ed.
I was going to say.
I'm sure a lot of our viewers are deeply concerned about.
So what kind of wrecking ball are you guys bringing to the university system?
Hopefully the biggest one of all.
I mean, it needs higher ed. Wow. I
mean, it's more than a PR problem at this point, right? I mean, higher ed has entrenched systemic
issues that will only be solved when we cut off the open spigot of federal aid that has been
dumped on these universities from federal helicopters. To quote Richard Vedder, he's an
economist at the University of Ohio for decades now. If you look at the outcome of federal spending on higher ed, and again, it all goes
back to Lyndon Johnson, right? It all goes back to 1965. Prior to that, we did not have widely
available student loans and grants originated by the feds, right? We had the GI Bill, but that was
targeted. It was an earned benefit, right? But once we got the feds involved
in 65, then we just see this inflation in tuition prices over the decades. And it had gotten so bad
by the 80s. And I think everybody knows this at this point, but in 1987, Bill Bennett, who was
Ronald Reagan's ed secretary, he wrote a famous op-ed in, I think it was the New York Times or
the Wall Street Journal,
but it was called Our Greedy Colleges. And he said, continued spending at the federal level will lead colleges to increase prices. Sure enough, and that was called the Bennett hypothesis.
It became true, right? I mean, we know that that's the case. And even if you look at the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, they did a study a few years ago where they found that for every
additional dollar in subsidized student loans, universities increased tuition 60 cents. So they're capturing much of that
federal largesse that's going there. But it has really enabled universities to not mind shop the
way that they should, right? I mean, it has allowed this proliferation of DEI commissariat to just,
I think, really drain resources from higher ed and not create
a better learning environment for students. It's enabled this facilities arms race where you get
the climbing walls and the lazy rivers, right? I mean, it has really just been detrimental to
higher ed, the prices increasing for students. And then, you know,
we've had this policy over the decades of just trying to subsidize increases in costs, which haven't worked at all. And so hopefully the wrecking ball includes eliminating the plus loan
program, right? So this is all of the federal lending for grad students and for parents of
undergrads, right? So you've got the main direct loan program that goes to
undergrad students and grad students. But then once you exhaust that, you can plus up, right?
You can get additional funding from the federal taxpayer, subsidized by the federal taxpayer
for grad school, or parents can borrow even more for their undergrads. And so if you ever hear
these horror stories of people entering retirement with student loan debt, that largely falls at the feet of the Parent PLUS program where they borrowed for their kids' undergrad experience, the parents did.
And so we need to cut off that open spigot of federal aid and restore to the private lending market responsibility for offering student loans and grants.
And is the goal then that fewer kids go to college?
No, I mean, the goal is people for whom college is the right decision
have access to that and can go
and that those students who take out a loan
repay that loan.
And this is the problem, right?
We have said-
How do they get access if they don't?
Like, let's say, so just lay it out.
Like, you want to go, you can't afford it.
Schools are now ungodly expensive
how do you go yeah well so back to what i said a second ago our proposal doesn't eliminate the
direct loan program which is the basic loan program what's that uh 55 000 aggregate right
now i believe it's on that order about which is which is good for about like one year in college
well i don't know that's the case, right?
I mean, you look at some of your state schools, that's not the case.
And everybody forgets, by the way, Ryan, that you can also work while you're in school, right?
I did work-study.
I made $4.25 an hour.
Minimum wage went up.
I got a 10 cent raise while I was there.
That was beer money, though.
Like, it's not paying for college money.
This is not the 1960s anymore.
But look, you can also do that.
But so the direct loan program stays in place.
So we're talking about loans for grad students.
We're talking about that additional parent plus loan.
But if you eliminate some of the federal largesse, you're going to see that there is still a private lending market, right? So it's not just the federal,
granted, it's 7% of the market, but you can still get a loan through the private sector as well.
And look, we need to have a lending program in place that actually does take into account your
ability to repay in the future. Because what we have now is just open
access to federal taxpayer dollars. I call them federal taxpayer dollars because they're subsidized
and because we're forgiving them on the back end in large part. And so, you know, we have not
encouraged students to really take a hard look at the school they're attending, the education
they're getting, what the ROI will be on the back end. I mean, 44% of master's degrees have a
negative ROI, right? And so we have enabled this prof legacy on the part of higher ed institutions,
but also have created a situation in which students aren't well served at all. And yeah,
we might have too many people going to college right now. There are people who would probably
be better served not going that route, doing apprenticeship programs, doing career and technical ed options. But the federal government
has put the thumb on the scale in favor of traditional higher ed and has said, this is
your only path to climbing the ladder of upward economic mobility in America. And that is an
unfortunate falsehood that has not served students well at all. So if you keep those loan programs in place,
or the one that we were just discussing, how quickly, reasonably would tuition prices be
expected to go down and there would be a market correction? Because it seems to me there might
be a gap period where college is still ungodly expensive indefinitely. Yeah, there will probably
be a gap, but there are other things we can do concurrent with the loan program to help prices decrease.
One of those which has gotten some attention over the past few days is indirect costs, which is the sort of like arcane little policy idea.
But basically capping the overhead costs that universities can charge federal taxpayers for research grants. NIH, this was floating around a few days ago,
where NIH said, we're now going to cap at 15% your amount of indirect costs. I mean,
there are universities out there right now that are charging the taxpayers 60 cents on the dollar
for their research grant overhead. I mean, it's unbelievable. And so again, this is a part of
the federal largesse that has been handed down for decades now that has enabled universities to continually increase prices, knowing that there's more federal money coming on the back end.
They need some spending restraint imposed upon them.
And this is the only way we're ultimately going to see prices brought down is through reforms to loan programs, reforms to some of these other grant options that are out there. I mean, isn't research, though, one of the most overhead
intensive things you could possibly have? And aren't they required to say, like, here are the
actual specific overhead costs that are connected to this research? They're very broad. What a
university does, they'll say, here's the indirect rate that we charge.
They might say, we'll accept a grant from, I don't know, fill in the blank, Google.
And, you know, we'll accept a 5% overhead rate from Google, but we're going to charge the federal taxpayer 60 cents for research grants. So we know that what they're charging the federal taxpayer
is higher than what they necessarily need. And so one of the most interesting proposals,
and this is my colleague Jay Green at Heritage has put this proposal out, but basically putting
some market discipline in the indirect rate where you say to a university at the federal level,
you cannot charge the federal government an indirect rate that exceeds what you're willing
to accept from a private funder. And so it just sort of resets. And yeah,
look, of course, universities have some fixed costs. Of course, research has some fixed costs,
but they will argue all of their costs are fixed, right? And that's certainly not the case. They'll
use this to fund infrastructure where they have names on buildings, right, of donors who have
privately provided significant funding, right? You have all of the Title IV programs,
all of the student loan and grant options that are out there, other direct grants from the
federal government. You've got private foundations, philanthropy, universities are swimming in money.
This idea that putting a little discipline on their overhead rate that they're charging the
taxpayers is somehow going to have this detrimental effect on research, totally unfounded.
I just worry that, so why not invest in technical schools, trade schools,
in addition to colleges and universities? I worry that in the 70s and 80s and 90s, we
decided to, as a policy, destroy our manufacturing base and the thing
that is keeping us afloat is is our college and university system in the united states like that
it's the thing that makes us globally competitive and makes people want to live here for like the
you know the most talented people in the world want to come here like we're to gut that too. And then it's just going to be, you know,
a wasteland. Like, what do we, like, what do we have at that point?
Yeah, I hear you on that, but I think we are a little naive and believing that the quality
of higher ed is equally distributed among institutions. It is not. We have a lot,
a lot of underperforming colleges and universities
in this country. There are great, like the schools that we're probably thinking of,
the great schools, right? You've got some great state schools that are out there,
the flagship universities. You have some great smaller private great book schools and other
faith-based schools that are doing really well. But you've got a lot of middling schools across
the country, right? There are 4,000 or so colleges across the country. You know, a non-trivial number of those schools are having
students leave, right? And by the way, they're spending six years on average to get a four-year
degree. They're leaving with debt. Some of them leave and don't even get the paper credential
that they were promised. And that's the worst situation that they can be in. And we know it's ineffective because employers report that constantly, that students who leave college
are not prepared to enter the workforce. And so is there a better way to serve the needs of those
students? Can we do more to give them flexibility with those existing federal funds to pursue career
and technical ed? Right. So at the end of the day, our position is simply, you want to give
students flexibility if we're going to fund this at the federal level with the type of post-secondary
education they pursue, right? Maybe they do go into a trade where they are leaving with no debt
and making a good living right out of the gate. But right now we're saying to everybody, you've
got to go to a four-year brick and mortar. And by the way, probably a majority of them are not going to serve you very well in the long run.
Lindsay, we could keep going on this, but we really appreciate your time and your willingness to talk through some of these difficult questions that will definitely be on people's minds in the days and weeks ahead.
Thank you.
We appreciate it.
Likewise. Thanks for having me.
The summer of 1993 was one of the best of my life. I'm journalist Jeff Perlman,
and this is Rick Jervis. We were interns at the Nashville Tennessean, but the most
unforgettable part, our roommate, Reggie Payne from Oakland, sports editor and aspiring rapper. And his stage name? Sexy Sweat.
In 2020, I had a simple idea. Let's find Reggie.
We searched everywhere, but Reggie was gone.
In February 2020, Reggie was having a diabetic episode.
His mom called 911. Police cuffed him face down.
He slipped into a coma and died.
I'm like thanking you.
But then I see my son's not moving.
No headlines, no outrage, just silence.
So we started digging and uncovered city officials bent on protecting their own.
Listen to Finding Sexy Sweat coming June 19th on the iHeartRadio app,
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She was a decorated veteran, a Marine who saved her comrades, a hero.
She was stoic, modest, tough, someone who inspired people.
Everyone thought they knew her her until they didn't. I remember sitting on her couch
and asking her, is this real? Is this real? Is this real? Is this real? I just couldn't wrap
my head around what kind of person would do that to another person that was getting treatment,
that was, you know, dying. This is a story all about trust
and about a woman named Sarah Kavanaugh.
I've always been told I'm a really good listener, right?
And I maximized that while I was lying.
Listen to Deep Cover, The Truth About Sarah
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
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And on my podcast, Fighting Words, we talk to people who use their voices to resist, disrupt, and make our community stronger.
This year, we are showing up and showing out.
You need people being like, no, you're not going to tell us what to do.
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You'll hear from trailblazers like Bob the Drag Queen.
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And Gabrielle Yoon.
Hi, George!
And storytellers with wisdom to spare.
Listen on iHeartRadio app,
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We're joined now by Saurabh Amari.
He's actually my colleague at UnHerd and wrote a very, very interesting piece this week that crystal flagged for us.
We wanted to talk about the headline is Elon Musk is a danger to Trumpism.
And we should mention before we dive in that Saurabh and I also have a new newsletter that you can sign up for over at unheard.com. It's called Area 47.
It's kind of an inside scoop from Trump world with a very unheard-y lens. We're having fun
over there. So go ahead and sign up. And Saurabh, thank you for being here.
Thanks for having me, guys. It's so good to join you on yet another platform. Great to have you. Can you walk
through the argument that you lay out in this article, especially through the lens of somebody
who is on the right and is looking at what's just happened over the course of the first three weeks
of the Trump presidency? And there's a lot, you know, probably to be critical of that people are
dancing around or glossing over that that you actually lay out here openly. Yeah, so I start with the case of the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, or CFPB, not a friendly acronym. And I tell the story of
Rohit Chopra, who was President Biden's now ousted or outgoing director of the CFPB.
He did some numerous reforms that I think were pro-Main Street, helping ordinary Americans who have very little bargaining power against banks and now big tech companies that increasingly act like financial institutions.
One of the things that he proposed just in his final days in office was a rule against debanking.
This is basically that your financial institution can drop you as a customer based on your views or what you use your account to fundraise for or what you've said online.
And this was remarkable because it was kind of politically conciliatory. It's not just good policy, but in a way you have here someone from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party taking on a practice that mostly has been used against right wing activists like PayPal, debanked an evangelical fundraising site that was raising money for January 6th defendants.
Canadian truckers who protested the COVID mandates were debanked at the behest of the
Canadian government.
In Britain, Nigel Farage faced debanking for a while from his financial institution, which
is called Coutts.
Anyway, it was something that the right was exercised about.
And he just very, with a very swift rule that says, you know, customers cannot be dropped
based on their exercise of free speech, would have put a stop to
it. Now, that's not the only thing the CFPB did. It did lots of good things. But, you know, Musk
had said that the CFPB must die. And sure enough, he did it. Not just Musk, by the way. Mark
Zuckerberg also went on Joe Rogan's show complaining about why he's getting oversight from the CFPB. Well,
it's because they track their Facebook users' financial transactions and stuff. They surveil
people. And so they're acting more and more like a financial institution. As Chopra himself told
me, it's not that we are encroaching into big tech. It's that big tech is encroaching into
the financial system. Yeah. And Marc Andreessen, too, went on Rogan to complain about CFPB, talk about how it was debanking people.
And the debanking, I think, point is a be satisfied by what Chopra did at CFPB with his debanking rule because it said organizations. It's called Know Your Customer.
And it's one of the things that Silicon Valley, some elements of Silicon Valley have been so
hostile to this idea that you have as a financial institution, some responsibility
to know who your customer is and whether or not they are just – whether you're dealing with El Chapo.
They hate that. They think that that's an encroachment on their freedom to do Bitcoin
commerce or whatever. And so when Andreessen talks about them having so many founders who
were debanked, he's doing this kind of two-step where he's trying to make Rogan's
audience think that these Silicon Valley tech founders were debanked because they supported
Trump or because they said something critical of like George Floyd or Black Lives Matter or
something. When in fact, if you look at each case, it's like, oh, they were moving crypto for a cartel. And so the bank was like, we're freezing this.
And so for Chopra to come in and deal with the actual problem that people had
is interesting because it shows that he's responsive to the genuine public concern,
but the public concern is not the actual oligarch concern.
They're just kind of using that.
So I guess answer the charge that you've gotten online of – and I get this too on the left or on the right – of naivete.
That what did you expect?
It's a bunch of oligarchs who got Trump into office.
Did you actually believe they were going to do this?
Yeah. So I get very irritated by that because I wrote a number of pieces in the lead up to the election as saying as someone on the populist wing of the right or the pro worker conservative.
We have different names for people like me, conservative social Democrat. I'm very concerned about Elon's influence. I wrote a
piece for the new statesman before the election where the headline was Trump will have to choose
populism or Elon Musk. So it's not, I always saw that. And I know the administration is torn
between these competing impulses. But I, what I will say is like the degree to which Elon has been empowered, Elon and that
kind of coterie of the so-called techno-libertarian right is a little bit disturbing, especially what
I see as self-dealing, right? So Elon wants to create an app out of X that is not just a social
media company, but a kind of everything app like they have in China with WeChat.
So it's just it's your payment system.
It can do all sorts of things.
And CFPB would have brought scrutiny to bear on what he was doing on the financial side of it.
And he says, kill it and it is done.
That's that's very disturbing.
Another one, which I mentioned in the piece, is what's happening in the National Labor Relations Board.
So President Trump came in and he dismissed the general counsel of the NLRB.
That's quite expected because President Biden did the same thing to Trump won's general counsel. But then he also dismissed, without cause or notice, as required by both statutory law and Supreme Court precedent,
one of the members, Gwen Wilcox, who can only be dismissed for malfeasance or neglect causes like
that, and there's no indication that she's done anything like that, and also with notice,
and she didn't receive notice. Now, what that does is basically the NLRB needs, under Supreme Court precedent, needs a quorum in order to
actually uphold labor law to enforce the Wagner Act or the National Labor Relations Act.
Now, this happens against the backdrop in which Elon Musk and one other of the oligarchs who
stood on the stage at the swearing-in, namely Jeff Bezos of Amazon, have launched a lawsuit to
declare the National Labor Relations Act unconstitutional altogether.
Now, that's a drastic legal argument, and it's questionable whether even with a conservative
Supreme Court, they're going to be able to kill the National Labor Relations Act, which
is the fundamental labor law in this country.
But, you know, is there a better alternative?
Yes, basically to cripple the agency, which is what happens when you remove its quorum.
You know, local NLRB offices can still investigate and so on.
But when it comes to an actual labor dispute where the board as a whole has to uphold collective bargaining, it can't do that.
And what I've heard is that they intend to keep things that way, essentially crippling the agency.
So, Rob, one thing that I've heard from people in Trump world or this argument from people who are sympathetic to Musk and Doge is that this is basically a generational opportunity to deal with
the problem of waste, fraud and abuse in the government, which I think probably all of us
agree is significant. You know, there's kind of it's sort of an inevitability, of course, and whether they're able to make a big dent in it without touching things like Medicare and Social Security.
I mean, you basically can't.
You could eliminate the Pentagon and still probably not put, not government, making it more efficient and helping get in the American system to an actual
oligarch. So how do you think about the balance between this worthy goal, noble goal of cutting
down on largesse and actually, you know, making the spending of taxpayer money more efficient?
And on the other hand, having it sort of done by someone who at least has the potential to be a corporate raider for his own cause.
Yeah. So I that's a great question.
We have to separate mentally separate different things here.
The first is that if you want social reform that empowers working working people and consumers, that's not necessarily tantamount to supporting everything
that's associated with big government. You know, like just a bloated administrative apparatus can
actually be as, conservatives know this well, but it can be pretty oppressive to ordinary people,
and it can be gamed by incumbents to their own advantage. So it's telling, for example,
that in Mexico, President AMLO, as he's
popularly known, very left wing president, he actually slashed the size of government and he
cut off all sorts of like magazines and NGOs and stuff that survived at the only because the
Mexican taxpayer was subsidizing them. And the Mexican kind of progressives think about the
Mexican equivalent of the Brooklyn left were really, really angry with AMLO the whole time he was in power.
They hated him in part because he had cut them off from the public dole.
And yet at the same time, he did things that empowers ordinary people relative to employers and relative to capital.
So like raising the minimum wage, making it easier to organize workplaces and so on.
So it's not just like if you're in favor, if you consider yourself pro-worker or pro-labor or pro-consumer,
you should just want bigness in government for its own sake in every direction.
But two things have to happen for this kind of reform.
One is it can't be so self-dealing. The guy who has an obvious, imminent material
interest in deleting, quote unquote, some agency should not be the one wielding that kind of
scalpel. It's not even a scalpel, unfortunately. It's like an axe. It's a different thing.
And the second thing I'd say is there are two different kinds of administrative agency. One is one that like, you know,
it's just, you know, directly overseeing society.
And I think those can be quite oppressive.
However, agencies that came out of the New Deal,
there's more, many more of them, you know,
all the various like trade commissions, you know, et cetera.
And the New Deal era, I mean, New Deal order.
LRB, yeah.
And then I think of the CFPB the same way,
is more they're playing umpire.
They're playing umpire between different social forces.
So the state is mediating between labor, capital, consumers,
you know, state-backed electricity, co-ops, et cetera, et cetera.
Those are not big government.
What they're doing is just restraining the power of a few market giants and allowing,
you know, encouraging the other side of the market to exert what used to be called
countervailing power by the new dealers.
That's the difference, you know, like and I think of Social Security, by the way, in
the same vein, it's Social Security is not a big government program.
It's not coming from the taxpayer.
And FDR deliberately set it up that way. Going back to the 19th century and even the early 18th century,
workers had set up these basically mutual organizations of mutual aid, where if one of
them fell ill, the rest of them had contributed and they could take care of that person's family or if he died, the widow. What the Social Security program did was take and just codify that and formalize it into a
system. But because it's not funded by the taxpayer, it's impossible to quote unquote
reform or very difficult. We'll see if Elon tries to go there. So I agree that like big government
for its own sake in every direction. Sure. Challenge that it's,
it can be,
it can be oppressive,
but when the state plays umpire and tries to level the economic playing
field between different social forces,
I think that shouldn't be touched.
But I'm just kind of curious,
by the way,
just in general,
what makes people like you conservative social Democrat,
not just a social Democrat?
Like what's the.
Well, that becomes a social Democrat? Like, what's the break?
Well, that becomes a more philosophical question.
So I think social democracy and we should say social and Christian democracy, they're kind of like twin traditions.
In the US, the closest equivalent we have is the New Deal tradition is conservative,
right?
In other words, I'm not saying, I'm not like a right wing guy who then occasionally says stuff to get like a pat on the head from like the New York Times or whatever.
It's because as a as a person who wants to see a social order that is not completely disruptive to workers lives that conduces to family formation, things like that.
Well, capitalism is a profoundly revolutionary force.
It's very good at doing things efficiently and so on.
We all know its benefits, but it can also be pretty disruptive.
So as a conservative, I want to restrain that, to try to bring it under.
If we're going to have disruption, let's have it subject to political contestation rather than just having
you know the few the very very powerful uh direct the nature of so it's like a it's like a twist on
the buckley line where you know you're you're standing athwart the tide of capitalism and
yelling yelling stop yeah i guess so um yeah so one one last very quick point is that also that
like the new dealers the social democrats old, they were trying to prevent revolution.
Right.
The idea was to stabilize the system in order to not have authoritarian leftism or authoritarian rightism come up.
It was a conservative impulse.
And I think the people who call themselves democratic socialists would
be offended to hear that. But the fundamental impulse here is not that we don't want totally
classless society. Very few people do, only like really hardcore tankies. It's about restraining,
keeping it under some political control, keeping it, you know, making the market safe for society is a good way to put it.
So such a, I think, important piece.
So thank you for coming here to discuss some of this as it happens.
Changes by the hour, seemingly.
And we appreciate your time.
Thank you both.
And it's good to join my colleague on a different show.
All right, Emily, very nice to have your colleague on.
Interesting show today.
We didn't get a chance to talk about the new inflation numbers that just came out showing a rise in inflation, 3%.
It's a real blow to Trump, also a blow to your 401k.
The stock market is diving on this news.
It's probably going to push Trump to calm down a little bit on the trade war.
And it's going to be interesting to see.
I think he's just going to go into the Bureau of Labor Statistics and into the bowels of the Commerce Department
and tell them to stop giving him ugly numbers.
I think that's going to be Musk's task, give me better numbers.
But in the meantime, I think it'll put a little bit of the brakes on the
trade war. And that is one of those things where it's tough because there actually are some tweaks
that probably need to be made over at BLS. So maybe there's a good end, there's a good outcome,
but you just can't trust the process. So something to keep an eye on for sure. Trump notoriously
cares very much about the markets on his watch,
but also notoriously is a hardened ideologue on the question of tariffs. So an interesting clash
here for sure. Thank you so much, everybody, for tuning in to today's edition of CounterPoints.
We'll be back here next Wednesday with more. We know this is a longer show,
so we appreciate everyone sticking with us.
Yeah. And we'll do a little Friday thing for you just to keep you updated and we'll see you then.
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