Empire of Reason Commentary No. 21

Empire of Reason

Commentary No. 21

To:  The People of the United States, May 19, 2025

Memo from the Future Generation

By Abrielle Xerena Albertson-Kelly, Class of 2026,

Norwalk High School, Norwalk, Connecticut

President Trump

The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue,

Washington, D.C.

Dear Mr. President,

           I write this letter today to ask you:  What is the United States built on?  Now that probably sounds like a loaded question, one with countless answers; but really it all comes down to intelligence.  Intelligence, ideas, and creative thinking.  All the way from the very first hunter-gatherers to today’s surgeons, astrophysicists, and other learned people.  To reach their full potential required some form of education or learning, and for some more than others.  So allow me to propose another question to you:  Why are you choosing to limit society’s intelligence?

          The most recent budget cuts to the Department of Education are already preparing the upcoming school years (2026-2027) for failure.  Since layoffs for U.S. employees have skyrocketed two-hundred and forty-five percent, more so with half of the employees of the Department of Education being cut and removed, we are essentially damning the next generation of young scholars.  Because of the budget cuts, the National Center of Education Statistics (origins of which go back to  1867) is also losing at least ninety-five percent of its staff, which means we are cutting off central resources and information to educators and researchers that require it, as well as “complicating the distribution of funding.”  As of right now, low-income schools and those in more rural areas will be receiving next to nothing, with regards to funds and grants.  Without these grants, or help from the federal government, these schools are going to have an exceedingly hard time staying afloat.  But, there may be a solution to all of this.

          It is no secret that the United States is over $36,808,000,000,000 in debt, and this fact cannot be overlooked.  So it is not wrong to believe that many federal programs can be trimmed or cut, to better our country and save our money—this much I understand.  But instead of cutting the very education that prepares young leaders for the world, how about government office space?  That may sound odd but according to various news sources, only “twelve percent of space is being used in the Federal Government headquarters.”  The Government Accountability Office or GAO has estimated that a whopping one hundred to two hundred billion dollars could be saved if we disposed of these underutilized government properties.  Of course, some of them have essential purposes, but do we really require them all, especially when federal occupancy is at such a low rate?  Hundreds of millions of dollars go into maintaining these office spaces which are not even used.  In prior years, the House Oversight Committee spent 3.3 billion dollars on just furniture alone.  Why not cut this?  We could have saved land, resources, and most of all, money.  And isn’t that what you want?  Another process that could be cut for the better is producing coins.  Did you now that producing a single nickel costs eleven-and-a-half cents?  Producing pennies and nickels has cost the United States over one-hundred and seventy-nine million dollars,  If we were to terminate or at least lessen the production of coins, we would be saving millions of our dollars, instead of losing the very system that provides our younger generations with the necessary knowledge to survive and thrive in this world.

          Mr. President, you are not a student, so it is more than likely that you cannot relate to those of the younger generation.  You are likely not searching for colleges you might want to apply to.  You likely are not worried about how much money you can spend monthly.  But we are, especially now.  Thirty percent of U.S. college students rely on federal loans, but because of these budget cuts many will have to drop out of school, leaving fewer options for the future.  With the Department of Education gone, discrimination will no longer be prohibited, and those with disabilities under the IDEA program or Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, such as my sister, will no longer be protected or have the proper support they need to live in our society (which is fifteen percent of students, or 7.5 million).  Because of your actions, millions upon millions of students will be losing their education protection; but most importantly, their chance to obtain knowledge.

          I will conclude this letter as I began it, with a question:  Who does the government serve?  Answer?  The people.  And the people do not want to see their education flushed down the drain with no hope for the future.  The people do not want to see their children left stagnant and lost, with no resources to receive the proper knowledge for the next chapter of their lives.  As a bright student in high school myself, I can confidently and firmly say that I, too, do not want to see my education, the very foundation of my future, crumble beneath my feet.

Sincerely,

Abrielle Xerena Albertson-Kelly

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Mark Albertson

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