Widely regarded as the groundbreaking leader of the Chicago School of
monetary economics, Milton Friedman led a long and storied career, receiving
the 1976 Nobel Prize for Economic Science, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in
1988 and the National Medal of Science the same year.
But he is beloved because his academic brilliance was employed in the practical service of people. Friedman’s observance of the facts led him to a passionate belief that people truly free to choose their course in life without the heavy hand of undue government interference is the surest way forward to create hope and opportunity – a rising tide of prosperity – for all.
This is especially true in the timeless work of education freedom to
which he and his wife Rose devoted themselves.
As he once famously said:
Governments never learn.
Those words ring clear to the citizens of this country who know that Washington
is fundamentally broken. Those words
ring clear to the people of South Carolina where we know that while the sunbeams
of economic opportunity don’t shine as brightly in every county of the Palmetto
State.
Only people learn. South
Carolina has the opportunity to enrich the lives of so many children and
families by innovating policy to focus on students, empower parents and
strengthen our education system.
Too many of our low income and minority children are falling behind in
school and at incredibly high risk to drop out of school and be caught in a
cycle of poverty. A good education is
the first step on the path to solving these problems. But too many of these children are trapped in struggling
schools that don’t fit their needs. For
these children and their frustrated parents, there are no other educational
options.
Time and again, we have seen that more money and Washington mandates
are not the answer. Rather, South
Carolina must embrace the kind of education innovations that are passing in
states all over the country, including ideas like Opportunity Scholarships that
just passed in North Carolina last week.
This year, through heroic efforts in the South Carolina Senate, we took
a small but important first step towards opening up this kind of opportunity
for our children with disabilities. But
the work is never done. 2014 will be our
golden opportunity to cement and build on that important gain.
And if we do, we stand on the shoulders of giants like Milton Friedman whose
policy innovation, founded on a compassion for people, have left a powerful
example for us to follow.