Matt Damon Wants To Limit School Choice For Your Kids But Sends HIS KIDS To Posh Private Schools

Filthy rich actor Matt Damon continues his quest to limit school choice for regular Americans with kids trapped in public schools. Strangely, however, Damon also continues to choose not to send any of his four children to the schools he loves so much.

Damon was in Boston last week for a screening of the documentary “Backpack Full of Cash,” reports The Boston Globe.

He narrated the film.

The left-wing thespian who starred in “The Legend of Bagger Vance” discussed the documentary after the screening with a standing-room-only audience of teachers and education activists on the campus of Wheelock College (a private school where a year of tuition, fees and room and board costs $51,325).

Public schools have been “at the forefront of our family and dinner table conversations my entire life,” Damon — who sends his own kids to private schools — told the crowd, according to the Globe.

“Teachers have been increasingly beat up and devalued for the last two decades, and ultimately we’re all going to pay for that as a society,” Damon also said.

“To see these kids not have that kind of access — how many of these kids in these schools, how many artists have we lost? How many learners have just given up because they feel like this is not for them?”

The 90-minute “Backpack Full of Cash” documentary criticizes charter schools and insists that voucher programs, online programs and other new ideas must be shunned, and that America’s public school system should instead be infused with vast amounts of taxpayer cash.

The event at which Damon spoke was especially focused on increased government funding for music and art classes at public schools.

Damon, 46, currently resides in the fancypants Los Angeles neighborhood of Pacific Palisades.

Like millions of Americans — except in the completely opposite way — Damon has claimed with a straight face that he doesn’t “have a choice” when it comes to sending his own kids to private schools.

“Sending our kids in my family to private school was a big, big, big deal. And it was a giant family discussion,” Damon told The Guardian in 2013.

“But it was a circular conversation, really, because ultimately we don’t have a choice. I mean, I pay for a private education and I’m trying to get the one that most matches the public education that I had, but that kind of progressive education no longer exists in the public system. It’s unfair.”

The actor and his wife, Luciana, have four daughters (one of whom is Damon’s stepdaughter).

Damon was a sheltered student during his academic life. He attended two public schools: Cambridge Alternative School and then the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School, which is famous as the alma mater of Boston Marathon bombers Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev.

Damon also attended Harvard University, but failed to graduate.

In 2011, Damon made waves when he gave a rah-rah speech at a Save Our Schools march in Washington, D.C. The thrust was that teachers are wonderful and standardized tests are really bad.

The website Celebrity Net Worth estimates that Damon has amassed a $160 million fortune making movies.

http://dailycaller.com/2017/09/18/m...s-but-sends-his-kids-to-posh-private-schools/
 
Actually, what he wants is better puublic schools. He wants better schools fr the average american kids.
And he explained that if public schools were better he would have put his kids into one.

The US education system is made so that if you can pay for private school, your kids will receive good education but if you can't pay your kids will go to public school and won't receive tht good education. Damon isn't crazy enough to put his kids in pubklic schools where they won't receive good education. But he wishes he could put his kids into public school knowing that they would receive good education.
 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
Matt Damon Wants School Choice for He, but Not for Thee

According to the Daily Caller, the documentary is a perfect film for anti-school choice confirmation bias, as it bashes charter schools, denounces voucher programs, and basically makes any new ideas just look bad. Meanwhile, the film insists that even more taxpayer dollars need to be thrown at public schools.

Here’s the kicker.

Damon’s preaching for public education from a golden pulpit that allows him to send his own children to a private school. His excuse for not sending his kids into the public education system he loves so much?

According to a 2013 Guardian interview, the public education system’s shortcomings in progressive education doesn’t give him a choice:


Choosing a school has already presented a major moral dilemma. “Sending our kids in my family to private school was a big, big, big deal. And it was a giant family discussion. But it was a circular conversation, really, because ultimately we don’t have a choice. I mean, I pay for a private education and I’m trying to get the one that most matches the public education that I had, but that kind of progressive education no longer exists in the public system. It’s unfair.”

Damon wants a progressive education like the one he had, but since public schools aren’t teaching the radicalism he hoped, he made the choice to send them to a private school where his children will get the education he prefers.

Full article in link.

Article

:facepalm:

He wants choices for the wealthy and he wants schools to teach progressively aka Communism.


 

Supafly

Retired Mod
Bronze Member
Beattie, again, you prove to see things in a very narrowminded manner.

If you had experience with the mentioned "new ways of learning", and would understand WHY they are so much favored by companies or governments who like to massively cut down on their education budget, you would not write such rubbosh.

Public schools have to be much better financed, and if you think THAT is wrong, you want your country to get more stupid in future.
 
Public schools have to be much better financed, and if you think THAT is wrong, you want your country to get more stupid in future.
Yes, he does : stupid people are more inclined to buy the fear-mongering spread by the GOP, more inclined to think that faith should guide leader's choices, that before passing any bill, politicians should look at what the bible says about the issue.
Stupid people think unemployment would drop massively if illegals were deported and less legal immigrants come to the country (even thought they think immigrants are just leechers who live on welfare)
Stupid people got Trump elected.
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
This seems very much like a contrived controversy to me. As long as Damon is paying his taxes I don't see the issue here. Voucher programs are unfairly skewed against those on the lower end of the socio-economic scale.

Damon is paying for his kids to receive a proper education because he can afford to and he knows he can't depend on the public school system as it is to adequately educate them. He's quite willing to pay extra tax dollars to improve public education and he's asking the rest of us to join him. Why anyone would have a problem with his behavior in any regard on this issue is baffling. On the contrary, he deserves applause for crusading about the sorry state of public education. As a rich movie star, he could easily simply choose to say nothing about it as most other stars have chosen. Where's the outcry against them? Talk about hypocrisy. :facepalm:

Geezus....when are we going to realize that quality educational opportunities are the only way out of poverty for so many of our under-privileged kids? Yet the very same people who wish to deny them additional funding for proper schooling will be the same ones to demonize them for being welfare bums, drug dealers etc when they become adults who lack any marketable skills and are forced to seek less traditional methods in order to survive. It doesn't take a genius to see the endless cycle of poverty simply recreating itself through our own willful negligence. Wake the fuck up, people! :mad:
 
This seems very much like a contrived controversy to me. As long as Damon is paying his taxes I don't see the issue here. Voucher programs are unfairly skewed against those on the lower end of the socio-economic scale.

Damon is paying for his kids to receive a proper education because he can afford to and he knows he can't depend on the public school system as it is to adequately educate them. He's quite willing to pay extra tax dollars to improve public education and he's asking the rest of us to join him. Why anyone would have a problem with his behavior in any regard on this issue is baffling. On the contrary, he deserves applause for crusading about the sorry state of public education. As a rich movie star, he could easily simply choose to say nothing about it as most other stars have chosen. Where's the outcry against them? Talk about hypocrisy. :facepalm:

Geezus....when are we going to realize that quality educational opportunities are the only way out of poverty for so many of our under-privileged kids? Yet the very same people who wish to deny them additional funding for proper schooling will be the same ones to demonize them for being welfare bums, drug dealers etc when they become adults who lack any marketable skills and are forced to seek less traditional methods in order to survive. It doesn't take a genius to see the endless cycle of poverty simply recreating itself through our own willful negligence. Wake the fuck up, people! :mad:

yes, not enough tax dollars thrown at public education is the problem. Doesn't the U.S. spend more than any other country on education? Yet we lag behind our global competitors.
do teachers' unions have anything to do with the sad state of affairs in the U.S. public education system today? Their pay and employment status should be performance based.

and if I had a child (which I don't) I would hope to use the voucher system to get them a good education just as Matt Damon is doing. So yes, he's a hypocrite in that regard.
 
Damon, 46, currently resides in the fancypants Los Angeles neighborhood of Pacific Palisades.

So do a couple of members of my extended family.
Pacific Palisades only offers one public high school choice - a charter school. Being as Damon has issues with charter schools its hardly surprising he'd send his kids elsewhere.
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
yes, not enough tax dollars thrown at public education is the problem. Doesn't the U.S. spend more than any other country on education? Yet we lag behind our global competitors.
do teachers' unions have anything to do with the sad state of affairs in the U.S. public education system today? Their pay and employment status should be performance based.

and if I had a child (which I don't) I would hope to use the voucher system to get them a good education just as Matt Damon is doing. So yes, he's a hypocrite in that regard.

I know you're banned so this is sort of like talking to a corpse here but I will try to imagine the repartee as it might have been (pardon the poetic license but....what else can I do? :dunno:).

So, your plan would simply choose to ignore those on the lower end of the income spectrum then? If you run off with your vouchers where is the money going to come for those less financially able? Oh wait....they can get vouchers too?? So....those who don't contribute to the tax pool earmarked for public education can receive the same amount in school vouchers that people like you do? Wow, that's mighty decent of....oh, what's that?....they don't get the vouchers unless they pay in to the pool? In that case, see my first sentence.

American education is BROKEN and yes, it will take more money to fix it....like a decent career path for teachers, salaries commensurate with those in other professions in order to draw the best and brightest into our faculties, more and modern school facilities and learning materials, a better methodology to divide students according to their own abilities and tendencies rather than lumping them all together, strict guidelines and enforcement of home schooling programs (what a joke!), serious monetary penalties for parents who don't keep their kids in school through 12th grade and, (drumroll please)....yes.....free college tuition for all.

You can't just turn your back on the problem and go your own way. You say Damon is a hypocrite? At least he is advocating for the public sector. There is a huge difference between using your own funds to send you kids to a private school and raking your taxes back out of the public pool in order to use them for your own selfish ends without any regard for others. What? You don't give a fuck?

That's what I thought.
 
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