Gen. Powell, so clear in his vision on so many matters, gets swallowed up every now and again when the matter touches on race and discrimination. Thus he mourns that there are 2 million convicts and that "most of them are men and the majority of those men are minorities." That is a conceptual tongue-twister, the business of majorities being minorities. And Gen. Powell was less than satisfying in his failure to plumb the question: Why should this be so? Why are there more blacks and Hispanics in jail?
On the other hand he was telling the Republican Convention and the American people at large that a successful approach to the problem has been made in Texas, under Gov. George Bush. Bush "expanded the charter school movement. Seventeen thousand Texas kids are now in charter schools. Seventy-eight percent of those kids are minorities. Their parents had a choice, and they decided what was best for their kids. The results in Texas have been dramatic. The number of students passing all parts of the standardized tests since 1994 has increased by 51 percent. Even more exciting, the number of minority students passing the tests has increased by 89 percent."
Along that narrow road, avoiding the abyss of affirmative action on the one side, neglect on the other, Gov. Bush came out with a formula that Gen. Powell has embraced. "Governor Bush has guaranteed acceptance at public universities for the top 10 percent of every high school graduating class in the state." If the cynicism Gen. Powell so much deplores is to be avoided, the world needs to know that some schools in Texas don't become de facto conduits for noncompetitive minorities.
Powell was vigorous and forthright in endorsing the idea of vouchers for parents who find their children failing in local public schools. And the GOP platform calls out for assisting "states in closing the achievement gap and empower(ing) needy families to escape persistently failing schools by allowing federal dollars to follow their children to the school of their choice."
This theme, education -- hit head-on by General Powell and by Laura Bush -- is surely the key to public support at a time in American history when, to use Gen. Powell's language, "cynicism is created" by so many politicians loudly condemning the failure of our schools while enabling the teachers' unions to clog up the natural energies of intellectual curiosity to widen young horizons.