@ukdadventure@abritishparent@EducationNotTax@Sum1st@CamillaTominey I tell you what else is a fiction - the Consultation on the VAT on school fees proposal. I had no acknowledgent from my response email and nor did hundreds of other responders. They are not listening. They could not give a hoot about any of these children - state or private.
There is so much truth in this. Children need lifting by telling them they "can do anything they put their minds to". This Government would rather lower standards for all and level the playing field by trying to close down the high achievers.
Katharine Birbalsingh Exposes Labourโs Education Lie
Katharine Birbalsingh's success has exposed an uncomfortable truth for this government. Her school does what ministers endlessly promise but rarely deliver: it takes deprived children, imposes order, teaches knowledge, and produces results. That should make her a model. Instead, it makes her a problem. Because there's a habit in this government: it mistakes control for competence. It cannot build a culture, so it reaches for a rulebook. It cannot raise standards, so it polices symbols. And when confronted with schools that prove success is possible through discipline and authority, it moves to restrain them.
This is about power. Labour sells its schools bill as care โ safeguarding, support, "no one falling through the cracks". Some of that sounds reasonable. But buried inside is a deliberate grab: autonomy pulled from academies and free schools, authority hauled back to local councils and Whitehall. That is the point. Labour has never trusted institutions it cannot control. When a school succeeds on its own terms, it exposes the system. So the instinct is not to copy it, but to tame it.
This is why Katharine Birbalsingh matters. Michaela is a state comprehensive in inner-city London, serving largely deprived pupils, and it is one of the highest-performing schools in the country. It is not an eccentric outlier. It is a direct rebuke to the modern education class. Its pupils sing together, sit properly, speak clearly, thank their teachers, and are expected to know the answers. And it unsettles a political culture that has spent years insisting deprivation equals fragility and that authority itself is suspect.
Enter Bridget Phillipson, whose approach follows a familiar Labour instinct: centralise, standardise, and moralise. Uniforms become a ministerial obsession, not because ties and badges matter in themselves, but because Labour understands regulation, not ethos. Where Birbalsingh sees uniform as belonging and pride โ the small discipline that signals larger standards โ Phillipson sees a consumer issue to be managed from Whitehall. She cannot grasp that order is not imposed by guidance notes but by adults willing to insist.
The same blindness runs through Labour's curriculum agenda. Diluting the EBacc, widening "choice", and talking up "flexibility" sounds progressive. In practice it lowers the academic floor for the poor while the middle class quietly protects its own. Knowledge is replaced with options, rigour with convenience, and deprived children are left once again with the soft timetable and the low horizon. That is how inequality is reproduced โ not by high standards, but by pretending standards are oppressive.
Behind all this sits a deeper failure: a refusal to understand what education is for. Birbalsingh treats children as unfinished adults who must be formed. Labour increasingly treats them as permanent patients โ categorised, excused, therapised, and shielded from consequence. Bad behaviour becomes "trauma". Absence becomes "anxiety". Discipline becomes "harm". The child learns one lesson: responsibility is optional. That lesson does not liberate. It corrodes.
This is why grievance culture is so destructive. Tell a child the world is stacked against him and effort becomes pointless. Tell him every correction is prejudice and learning stops. Tell him success is suspect and he stops striving. Ministers then wring their hands over mental health, having dismantled every source of resilience. The cure is not more management or more professionals. It is standards, truth, and adults willing to lead.
Birbalsingh's schools are feared because they expose the lie. Excuses are optional. Deprived children don't need pity; they need seriousness โ knowledge, order, correction, belief. Labour wants the credit for mobility without the discipline it requires. Until it learns the difference, it will keep mistaking control for compassion โ and children will pay the price.
@CrazyVibes_1 How beautiful these snowmen are and how beautiful is your post. You are so lucky to have each other. Your son is so talented and those children so cruel. I know he will triumph because he has a true gift. Merry Christmas!
Does anybody else feel cheated that theyโre going to have to pay higher taxes and the income thresholds will be frozen for longer, all so Labour can scrap the two-child benefit cap and give more handouts to those who donโt want to work?
Itโs disgusting and unfair to workers.
@GnarlyRedDwarf@JamesMelville Dangers of compound interest? Dangerous only if you are a borrower. It's your best friend if you are an investor. Investment and saving definitely should be taught in school. It has a huge impact on lives.
Sadiq Khan wouldnโt answer questions on rape gangs, he said he didnโt understand what I meant. The Met are now looking into 9,000 cases. - Sadiq Khan is not worthy of the position of Mayor, he should resign!
@KEdge23 Implications she knew about mass rape gangs in the north west and hid it.
If a fair and independent national rape Gang enquiry takes place she will be out on her ear and could face a criminal investigation along with Burnham and others in the Labour government.