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Education: fault line or bridge? – excerpts from a speech by Bill Clinton

My grandfather just barely got out of grade school. My stepfather, who raised me, dropped out right before he got his high school diploma. I was the first person in my direct line to graduate from college.

 

And if it hadn’t been for my education and the gifts that others gave me along the way to help me with it, I never would have become president. I now know that there is something fundamentally different about the role of education now than at any otHer time in our history. Throughout our history, education has given individuals more opportunity. When we made a commitment to mass education after World War II, including making college education available to veterans who served through the G.I. Bill, it helped to build an enormous middle class and to lift this country up — all of us.

Now, we’re in a third stage where education can either be the fault line dividing our country or the bridge by which we all walk into the 21st century. Because now it is not enough, as it was 50 years ago, or even 30 years ago, to have a large number of people with a college education creating economic opportunities for everybody else in a mass-production, industrial society.

 

Economic Division

 

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