>> Arguing over the morality (or even constitutionality) of such a measure was not the point of me bringing it up.
> So what? I was asking how you would feel.
To me how I feel about it is tied directly to the morality of it.
>> The point was that there are compelling arguments to make that both greatly liberalizing school choice and greatly eliminating school choice would improve things for those who are economically disadvantaged.
> Eliminating choice is generally about centralizing control.
I disagree with this. Eliminating choice generally causes a centralizing of control, but that does not mean it's generally the motivation for it.
> So what? I was asking how you would feel.
To me how I feel about it is tied directly to the morality of it.
>> The point was that there are compelling arguments to make that both greatly liberalizing school choice and greatly eliminating school choice would improve things for those who are economically disadvantaged.
> Eliminating choice is generally about centralizing control.
I disagree with this. Eliminating choice generally causes a centralizing of control, but that does not mean it's generally the motivation for it.