Originally Posted by
Nessus
I think I'd be interested in that, too, given that (in my mostly ignorant/biased view) libertarians ought to be against state-mandated (I don't necessarily mean state as in US state here, but government in general) education goals, means and so forth. To agree on such means and goals and so forth, you'd have to tax people to investigate these, implement them, pay the teachers, some portions thereof. Ostensibly the best schooling would be given by the schools that attract the most customers (parents)? Competing in a free market of education, without external subsidies or enforced by externals standards. Right?
I would also assume/guess that this level of education would not be available to the majority, but solely to the higher echelons of society capable of paying the high fees in exchange for the best service on the market, but that need not factor into the larger argument, and we can always postulate enough charities etc. to fund the lower "classes" educating their kids.