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sailingaway
02-20-2013, 11:22 PM
http://www.csmonitor.com/var/ezflow_site/storage/images/media/content/2013/02-20rpaul/15067581-1-eng-US/02-20rpaul_full_380.jpg


Fresh off a presidential primary run and retirement from Congress, Ron Paul is hitting the books.

Actually, he’s writing them. The former Texas GOP congressman is turning his libertarian focus to education with a new book that advocates for a free-market approach to schooling and education.

“New School Manifesto” will be published by Grand Central Publishing Sept. 17, just in time for back-to-school season.

According to the publisher, the book will be “a focused guide to Dr. Paul’s position, which centers on a strong support for home schooling and free-market principles applied to education. He makes the case for individual freedoms as they pertain to educating our children, and nimbly dissects the most pressing issues that need to be addressed from the libertarian point of view.”

In “New School Manifesto,” Paul compares the education system to the postal service, arguing both would benefit from private sector competition, according to Politico. The libertarian author also examines a variety of education policy proposals, says the news site, and advocates that parents should have more leverage in choosing what schooling system is best for their children.

Some interesting context: Throughout his career, Paul has tried to get the government out of education. During the 2012 presidential campaign, then-GOP nominee contender Paul advocated closing the Department of Education as well as abolishing “No Child Left Behind.” Instead Paul was in favor of giving tax credits and vouchers to parents. That small government, free-market approach is sure to shape his latest book. He has also long opposed federal student loans and has called federal education efforts a “propaganda machine,” according to the Houston Chronicle.

more at link: http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2013/0220/Ron-Paul-will-pen-book-advocating-a-free-market-approach-to-education

green73
02-20-2013, 11:30 PM
I'm pretty sure there is a thread on this.

sailingaway
02-20-2013, 11:37 PM
There was on the book, but I don't see one on the CSM article, which has a lot more than the articles taken from the Politico article. They actually called and asked questions, apparently.

BuddyRey
02-21-2013, 03:05 AM
Wow...this is the first I've heard of this!

I guess we should resist the urge to pre-order it until just before its release. Maybe Ron can get another NYT bestseller!

http://blog.chron.com/txpotomac/2013/02/ron-paul-takes-on-education-establishment-with-new-school-manifesto/

tangent4ronpaul
02-21-2013, 04:20 PM
The former congressman's book, titled 'New School Manifesto,' is scheduled for a September release.

http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2013/0220/Ron-Paul-will-pen-book-advocating-a-free-market-approach-to-education

Fresh off a presidential primary run and retirement from Congress, Ron Paul is hitting the books.

Actually, he’s writing them. The former Texas GOP congressman is turning his libertarian focus to education with a new book that advocates for a free-market approach to schooling and education.

“New School Manifesto” will be published by Grand Central Publishing Sept. 17, just in time for back-to-school season.

David Foster Wallace: 10 quotes on his birthday

According to the publisher, the book will be “a focused guide to Dr. Paul’s position, which centers on a strong support for home schooling and free-market principles applied to education. He makes the case for individual freedoms as they pertain to educating our children, and nimbly dissects the most pressing issues that need to be addressed from the libertarian point of view.”

In “New School Manifesto,” Paul compares the education system to the postal service, arguing both would benefit from private sector competition, according to Politico. The libertarian author also examines a variety of education policy proposals, says the news site, and advocates that parents should have more leverage in choosing what schooling system is best for their children.

Some interesting context: Throughout his career, Paul has tried to get the government out of education. During the 2012 presidential campaign, then-GOP nominee contender Paul advocated closing the Department of Education as well as abolishing “No Child Left Behind.” Instead Paul was in favor of giving tax credits and vouchers to parents. That small government, free-market approach is sure to shape his latest book. He has also long opposed federal student loans and has called federal education efforts a “propaganda machine,” according to the Houston Chronicle.

“Ron Paul’s beliefs are always controversial, and even if you disagree with his principles, his arguments will make you think,” his publisher says of the forthcoming book. ”Ron Paul’s ideas and his urgent appeal to all citizens and officials will tell us what we need to do fix America’s education system for future generations.”

-t

wgadget
02-22-2013, 07:03 PM
The former congressman's book, titled 'New School Manifesto,' is scheduled for a September release.

http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2013/0220/Ron-Paul-will-pen-book-advocating-a-free-market-approach-to-education

Fresh off a presidential primary run and retirement from Congress, Ron Paul is hitting the books.

Actually, he’s writing them. The former Texas GOP congressman is turning his libertarian focus to education with a new book that advocates for a free-market approach to schooling and education.

“New School Manifesto” will be published by Grand Central Publishing Sept. 17, just in time for back-to-school season.

David Foster Wallace: 10 quotes on his birthday

According to the publisher, the book will be “a focused guide to Dr. Paul’s position, which centers on a strong support for home schooling and free-market principles applied to education. He makes the case for individual freedoms as they pertain to educating our children, and nimbly dissects the most pressing issues that need to be addressed from the libertarian point of view.”

In “New School Manifesto,” Paul compares the education system to the postal service, arguing both would benefit from private sector competition, according to Politico. The libertarian author also examines a variety of education policy proposals, says the news site, and advocates that parents should have more leverage in choosing what schooling system is best for their children.

Some interesting context: Throughout his career, Paul has tried to get the government out of education. During the 2012 presidential campaign, then-GOP nominee contender Paul advocated closing the Department of Education as well as abolishing “No Child Left Behind.” Instead Paul was in favor of giving tax credits and vouchers to parents. That small government, free-market approach is sure to shape his latest book. He has also long opposed federal student loans and has called federal education efforts a “propaganda machine,” according to the Houston Chronicle.

“Ron Paul’s beliefs are always controversial, and even if you disagree with his principles, his arguments will make you think,” his publisher says of the forthcoming book. ”Ron Paul’s ideas and his urgent appeal to all citizens and officials will tell us what we need to do fix America’s education system for future generations.”

-t

So will he be coming to Atlanta for a book signing????

Will he, huh, huh, HUH???

sailingaway
02-22-2013, 07:17 PM
I sure hope he'll do a LOT of appearances!

Patrick Henry
02-22-2013, 07:52 PM
Can't wait to read it!

awake
02-22-2013, 08:23 PM
How dare he advocate anything other than government schools. What would the knaves do with out their indoctrination centers?

Government teachers should be called such. "Teacher" is a misnomer.

jj-
02-23-2013, 02:17 PM
Sounds like a nice topic for Tom Woods to write and sell it under Ron Paul's name.

sailingaway
02-23-2013, 03:36 PM
Sounds like a nice topic for Tom Woods to write and sell it under Ron Paul's name.

Revolution was written by Tom Woods, and a bunch of the succinct charm was almost certainly his, but it was from Ron's speech notes, and Ron wrote the speeches and a lot of the precise phrases, himself. The ideas were Ron's. I expect something similar in this case, which I don't mind at all, because I love Ron's ideas, and also Woods' writing style.