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Obama Confidant's Spine-Chilling Proposal
Cass Sunstein has long been one of Barack Obama's closest confidants. Often mentioned as a likely Obama nominee to the Supreme Court, Sunstein is currently Obama's head of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs where, among other things, he is responsible for "overseeing policies relating to privacy, information quality, and statistical programs." In 2008, while at Harvard Law School, Sunstein co-wrote a truly pernicious paper proposing that the U.S. Government employ teams of covert agents and pseudo-"independent" advocates to "cognitively infiltrate" online groups and websites -- as well as other activist groups -- which advocate views that Sunstein deems "false conspiracy theories" about the Government. This would be designed to increase citizens' faith in government officials and undermine the credibility of conspiracists. The paper's abstract can be read, and the full paper downloaded, here.
Sunstein advocates that the Government's stealth infiltration should be accomplished by sending covert agents into "chat rooms, online social networks, or even real-space groups." He also proposes that the Government make secret payments to so-called "independent" credible voices to bolster the Government's messaging (on the ground that those who don't believe government sources will be more inclined to listen to those who appear independent while secretly acting on behalf of the Government). This program would target those advocating false "conspiracy theories," which they define to mean: "an attempt to explain an event or practice by reference to the machinations of powerful people, who have also managed to conceal their role." Sunstein's 2008 paper was flagged by this blogger, and then amplified in an excellent report by Raw Story's Daniel Tencer.
There's no evidence that the Obama administration has actually implemented a program exactly of the type advocated by Sunstein, though in light of this paper and the fact that Sunstein's position would include exactly such policies, that question certainly ought to be asked. Regardless, Sunstein's closeness to the President, as well as the highly influential position he occupies, merits an examination of the mentality behind what he wrote. This isn't an instance where some government official wrote a bizarre paper in college 30 years ago about matters unrelated to his official powers; this was written 18 months ago, at a time when the ascendancy of Sunstein's close friend to the Presidency looked likely, in exactly the area he now oversees. Additionally, the government-controlled messaging that Sunstein desires has been a prominent feature of U.S. Government actions over the last decade, including in some recently revealed practices of the current administration, and the mindset in which it is grounded explains a great deal about our political class. All of that makes Sunstein's paper worth examining in greater detail.
* * * * *
Initially, note how similar Sunstein's proposal is to multiple, controversial stealth efforts by the Bush administration to secretly influence and shape our political debates. The Bush Pentagon employed teams of former Generals to pose as "independent analysts" in the media while secretly coordinating their talking points and messaging about wars and detention policies with the Pentagon. Bush officials secretly paid supposedly "independent" voices, such as Armstrong Williams and Maggie Gallagher, to advocate pro-Bush policies while failing to disclose their contracts. In Iraq, the Bush Pentagon hired a company, Lincoln Park, which paid newspapers to plant pro-U.S. articles while pretending it came from Iraqi citizens. In response to all of this, Democrats typically accused the Bush administration of engaging in government-sponsored propaganda -- and when it was done domestically, suggested this was illegal propaganda. Indeed, there is a very strong case to make that what Sunstein is advocating is itself illegal under long-standing statutes prohibiting government "propaganda" within the U.S., aimed at American citizens:
As explained in a March 21, 2005 report by the Congressional Research Service, "publicity or propaganda" is defined by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) to mean either (1) self-aggrandizement by public officials, (2) purely partisan activity, or (3) "covert propaganda." By covert propaganda, GAO means information which originates from the government but is unattributed and made to appear as though it came from a third party.
Covert government propaganda is exactly what Sunstein craves. His mentality is indistinguishable from the Bush mindset that led to these abuses, and he hardly tries to claim otherwise. Indeed, he favorably cites both the covert Lincoln Park program as well as Paul Bremer's closing of Iraqi newspapers which published stories the U.S. Government disliked, and justifies them as arguably necessary to combat "false conspiracy theories" in Iraq -- the same goal Sunstein has for the U.S.
Sunstein's response to these criticisms is easy to find in what he writes, and is as telling as the proposal itself. He acknowledges that some "conspiracy theories" previously dismissed as insane and fringe have turned out to be entirely true (his examples: the CIA really did secretly administer LSD in "mind control" experiments; the DOD really did plot the commission of terrorist acts inside the U.S. with the intent to blame Castro; the Nixon White House really did bug the DNC headquarters). Given that history, how could it possibly be justified for the U.S. Government to institute covert programs designed to undermine anti-government "conspiracy theories," discredit government critics, and increase faith and trust in government pronouncements? Because, says Sunstein, such powers are warranted only when wielded by truly well-intentioned government officials who want to spread The Truth and Do Good -- i.e., when used by people like Cass Sunstein and Barack Obama:
Throughout, we assume a well-motivated government that aims to eliminate conspiracy theories, or draw their poison, if and only if social welfare is improved by doing so.
But it's precisely because the Government is so often not "well-motivated" that such powers are so dangerous. Advocating them on the ground that "we will use them well" is every authoritarian's claim. More than anything else, this is the toxic mentality that consumes our political culture: when our side does X, X is Good, because we're Good and are working for Good outcomes. That was what led hordes of Bush followers to endorse the same large-government surveillance programs they long claimed to oppose, and what leads so many Obama supporters now to justify actions that they spent the last eight years opposing.
* * * * *
Consider the recent revelation that the Obama administration has been making very large, undisclosed payments to MIT Professor Jonathan Gruber to provide consultation on the President's health care plan. With this lucrative arrangement in place, Gruber spent the entire year offering public justifications for Obama's health care plan, typically without disclosing these payments, and far worse, was repeatedly held out by the White House -- falsely -- as an "independent" or "objective" authority. Obama allies in the media constantly cited Gruber's analysis to support their defenses of the President's plan, and the White House, in turn, then cited those media reports as proof that their plan would succeed. This created an infinite "feedback loop" in favor of Obama's health care plan which -- unbeknownst to the public -- was all being generated by someone who was receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars in secret from the administration (read this to see exactly how it worked).
In other words, this arrangement was quite similar to the Armstrong Williams and Maggie Gallagher scandals which Democrats, in virtual lockstep, condemned. Paul Krugman, for instance, in 2005 angrily lambasted right-wing pundits and policy analysts who received secret, undisclosed payments, and said they lack "intellectual integrity"; he specifically cited the Armstrong Williams case. Yet the very same Paul Krugman last week attacked Marcy Wheeler for helping to uncover the Gruber payments by accusing her of being "just like the right-wingers with their endless supply of fake scandals." What is one key difference? Unlike Williams and Gallagher, Jonathan Gruber is a Good, Well-Intentioned Person with Good Views -- he favors health care -- and so massive, undisclosed payments from the same administration he's defending are dismissed as a "fake scandal."
Sunstein himself -- as part of his 2008 paper -- explicitly advocates that the Government should pay what he calls "credible independent experts" to advocate on the Government's behalf, a policy he says would be more effective because people don't trust the Government itself and would only listen to people they believe are "independent." In so arguing, Sunstein cites the Armstrong Williams scandal not as something that is wrong in itself, but as a potential risk of this tactic (i.e., that it might leak out), and thus suggests that "government can supply these independent experts with information and perhaps prod them into action from behind the scenes," but warns that "too close a connection will be self-defeating if it is exposed." In other words, Sunstein wants the Government to replicate the Armstrong Williams arrangement as a means of more credibly disseminating propaganda -- i.e., pretending that someone is an "independent" expert when they're actually being "prodded" and even paid "behind the scenes" by the Government -- but he wants to be more careful about how the arrangement is described (don't make the control explicit) so that embarrassment can be avoided if it ends up being exposed.
In this 2008 paper, then, Sunstein advocated, in essence, exactly what the Obama administration has been doing all year with Gruber: covertly paying people who can be falsely held up as "independent" analysts in order to more credibly promote the Government line. Most Democrats agreed this was a deceitful and dangerous act when Bush did it, but with Obama and some of his supporters, undisclosed arrangements of this sort seem to be different. Why? Because, as Sunstein puts it: we have "a well-motivated government" doing this so that "social welfare is improved." Thus, just like state secrets, indefinite detention, military commissions and covert, unauthorized wars, what was once deemed so pernicious during the Bush years -- coordinated government/media propaganda -- is instantaneously transformed into something Good.
* * * * *
What is most odious and revealing about Sunstein's worldview is his condescending, self-loving belief that "false conspiracy theories" are largely the province of fringe, ignorant Internet masses and the Muslim world. That, he claims, is where these conspiracy theories thrive most vibrantly, and he focuses on various 9/11 theories -- both domestically and in Muslim countries -- as his prime example.
It's certainly true that one can easily find irrational conspiracy theories in those venues, but some of the most destructive "false conspiracy theories" have emanated from the very entity Sunstein wants to endow with covert propaganda power: namely, the U.S. Government itself, along with its elite media defenders. Moreover, "crazy conspiracy theorist" has long been the favorite epithet of those same parties to discredit people trying to expose elite wrongdoing and corruption.
Who is it who relentlessly spread "false conspiracy theories" of Saddam-engineered anthrax attacks and Iraq-created mushroom clouds and a Ba'athist/Al-Qaeda alliance -- the most destructive conspiracy theories of the last generation? And who is it who demonized as "conspiracy-mongers" people who warned that the U.S. Government was illegally spying on its citizens, systematically torturing people, attempting to establish permanent bases in the Middle East, or engineering massive bailout plans to transfer extreme wealth to the industries which own the Government? The most chronic and dangerous purveyors of "conspiracy theory" games are the very people Sunstein thinks should be empowered to control our political debates through deceit and government resources: namely, the Government itself and the Enlightened Elite like him.
It is this history of government deceit and wrongdoing that renders Sunstein's desire to use covert propaganda to "undermine" anti-government speech so repugnant. The reason conspiracy theories resonate so much is precisely that people have learned -- rationally -- to distrust government actions and statements. Sunstein's proposed covert propaganda scheme is a perfect illustration of why that is. In other words, people don't trust the Government and "conspiracy theories" are so pervasive is precisely because government is typically filled with people like Cass Sunstein, who think that systematic deceit and government-sponsored manipulation are justified by their own Goodness and Superior Wisdom.
UPDATE: I don't want to make this primarily about the Gruber scandal -- I cited that only as an example of the type of mischief that this mindset produces -- but just to respond quickly to the typical Gruber defenses already appearing in comments: (1) Gruber's work was only for HHS and had nothing to do with the White House (false); (2) he should have disclosed his payments, but the White House did nothing wrong (false: it repeatedly described him as "independent" and "objective" and constantly cited allied media stories based in Gruber's work); (3) Gruber advocated views he would have advocated anyway in the absence of payment (probably true, but wasn't that also true for life-long conservative Armstrong Williams, life-long social conservative Maggie Gallagher, and the pro-war Pentagon Generals, all of whom mounted the same defense?); and (4) Williams/Gallagher were explicitly paid to advocate particular views while Gruber wasn't (true: that's exactly the arrangement Sunstein advocates to avoid "embarrassment" in the event of disclosure, and it's absurd to suggest that someone being paid many hundreds of thousands of dollars is unaware of what their paymasters want said; that's why disclosure is so imperative).
The point is that there are severe dangers to the Government covertly using its resources to "infiltrate" discussions and to shape political debates using undisclosed and manipulative means. It's called "covert propaganda" and it should be opposed regardless of who is in control of it or what its policy aims are.
UPDATE II: Ironically, this is the same administration that recently announced a new regulation dictating that "bloggers who review products must disclose any connection with advertisers, including, in most cases, the receipt of free products and whether or not they were paid in any way by advertisers, as occurs frequently." Without such disclosure, the administration reasoned, the public may not be aware of important hidden incentives (h/t pasquin). Yet the same administration pays an MIT analyst hundreds of thousands of dollars to advocate their most controversial proposed program while they hold him out as "objective," and selects as their Chief Regulator someone who wants government agents to covertly mold political discussions "anonymously or even with false identities."
UPDATE III: Just to get a sense for what an extremist Cass Sunstein is (which itself is ironic, given that his paper calls for "cognitive infiltration of extremist groups," as the Abstract puts it), marvel at this paragraph:
So Sunstein isn't calling right now for proposals (1) and (2) -- having Government "ban conspiracy theorizing" or "impose some kind of tax on those who" do it -- but he says "each will have a place under imaginable conditions." I'd love to know the "conditions" under which the government-enforced banning of conspiracy theories or the imposition of taxes on those who advocate them will "have a place." Anyone who believes this should, for that reason alone, be barred from any meaningful government position.
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239 Comments so far
Show AllI would remind as well of Gandhi's praxis: "Truth Force" or Satyagraha (Sanskrit: सत्याग्रह satyāgraha). It relates so much to what Greenwald advocates regarding an ethical culture. Gandhi warned, as Greenwald does here, not to engage in the same deceits and practices as others are doing - or that one's cause(s) would indeed backfire.
It seems President Obama and his administration - and the DLC controlled corporatist Democratic Party is and will experience some and more of that should they continue.
Which is quite ironic considering that during his campaign - surrounded by earnest Progressives who worked so hard with him - Obama advocated NOT doing what the other politicians (Clinton, in particular, and McCain later) were doing.
It seems that the resulting DLC-OBAMA Inc. that came after the "win" in November 2008, quickly adopted the same ole political praxis as usual, which Obama the candidate had temporarily moved beyond. (And quickly packed off the Progressives who had surrounded his during the campaign.)
...
(Watching that contested Kennedy seat in Mass. and remembering:
"If Democrats become carbon copies of the opposition, we will lose – and deserve to." – Edward Moore "Ted" Kennedy
Hmm...it's election time - time to put on the "Progressive" mask for the "win" - and later back to DLC-Neoliberal business as usual? Think again.
Americans and real Progressives won't fall for that next time or the next.)
Jeez! Does that mean I could get out from under my mortgage and load of debt by just becoming a government shill...?
Naaah.
The playbook for this sort of thing dates way back to the '20's and 30's
---------------------------------------------------
“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”
“The most brilliant propagandist technique will yield no success unless one fundamental principle is borne in mind constantly - it must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over,”
“Think of the press as a great keyboard on which the government can play.”
Joseph Goebbels, Reich Minister of Propaganda for Nazi Germany
1897-1945
----------------------------------
"Naturally the common people don't want war: Neither in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same for any country."
Herman Goering to Gustave Gilbert at Nuremberg, 18 April, 1946
-----------------------------------
Goebbels wrote the playbook and the new gang is running the plays with all the modern enhancements in surveillance, psychological warfare, advertising, etc.
If the Gestapo had had the technical expertise we have now, and the Wehrmacht had had the weaponry we have now, we would all be speaking German.
The world made a valiant effort to see that nothing like WW-II would ever happen again, but the superpowers made sure that would not work because they gave themselves veto power over anything constructive that was put into the mill.
The US was party to treaties, signed on to the Nuremberg Principles, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners, etc. Those things, being ratified, became the law of the land, our land.
In the past decade or two, we have seen those thigs discarded by us, with no penalty visited upon the government that breaks its own laws. Now, the lawlessness that was called the US Government has probably become legal precedent. The argument against protests wil be that "For the past decade, through both Republican and Democrat governments, these things have been done and allowed to continue." That sets a legal precedent for dictatorship vs Constitutional Republic.
As I've said before, my Dad's definition of an "Honest Politician" was, "One who stays bought." We have the most honest politicians that money can buy. Ask any lobbyist.
Right on, minitrue. Allow me to repeat your most striking statements. We should never forget these things.
"The US was party to treaties, signed on to the Nuremberg Principles, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners, etc. Those things, being ratified, became the law of the land, our land.
"In the past decade or two, we have seen those thigs discarded by us, with no penalty visited upon the government that breaks its own laws. Now, the lawlessness that was called the US Government has probably become legal precedent. The argument against protests wil be that "For the past decade, through both Republican and Democrat governments, these things have been done and allowed to continue." That sets a legal precedent for dictatorship vs Constitutional Republic."
but it IS "friendly," and fiendly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zchtjTwx9ok
from Consolidated's Friendly Fa$cism - 1991
based on excerpts from the book:
Friendly Fascism: The New Face of Power in America
by Bertram Gross
South End Press, 1980
excerpts from the book can be found at
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Fascism/Friendly_Fascism_BGross.html
A great book. Note the last word in the URL should be "html" not htm, it gets cut off in CD's messager program.
Gary
Glad to see some folks are starting to get it and are seeing through that Orwellian babble that there is no such thing as a valid conspiracy theory, even one that addresses the facts better than the offical conspiracy theory.
Plato said it was ok for the philosopher kings (rulers) to lie to the people for their own good. So this concept is about 2300 years old, maybe longer. Rulers agreeing on a particular lie is of course a conspiracy.
Orwell said speaking the truth in a time of universal deception is a revolutionary act.
The Brits said Washington, a British subject, was the equivalent of a terrorist or enemy combatant for his part in the revolution. So you can figure out what is coming down the pipeline.
Hitler used to boast everything he did was legal under German law. Maybe he picked the judges too. Obama is simply continuing to set the table at SCOTUS, as did Bush, for further erosion of our liberties.
Goebel used to say that if you repeat a lie often enough it becomes the truth. I was told as a kid there was a Santa Clause, a victim of an adult conspiracy that I had no choice but to believe until I caught my old man wolfing down Santas sandwich while assembling a bike Made in Taiwan.
One day we are backing Osama in Afghanistan, the next he is the enemy. One day Saddam is our friend and help him against Iran and the Kurds (we also armed Iran), the next day he is our enemy. One day the state department is saying Castro is not a Communist and we can work with him, and once he takes over Cuba they then say he is a Communist and is the enemy.
I mean, we can vote, so some say we are a Democracy, but then, they can vote in Iran. Only difference is that over there the Supreme Leader approves the candidates, while large corporate interests select who can run here with their campaign financing.
But I guess if we keep saying we are a Democracy and that war is peace, then it must be true. Lie = Truth.
Lets face it, if it's not 1984, it's pretty darn close. Better off being ignorant though. Ignorance is strength (or at least bliss) after all.
Orwell - or Huxley. And maybe BOTH AND MORE.
Educator Neil Postman reminds in Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business (1985) - a work more timely today than when he wrote it [!!!!]
"Postman said that reality was reflected more by Aldous Huxley's Brave New World where the public was oppressed by pleasure than Orwell's 1984 where they were oppressed by pain....
Postman distinguishes the Orwellian vision of the future, in which totalitarian governments seize individual rights, from the vision offered by Aldous Huxley in Brave New World, where people medicate themselves into bliss and voluntarily sacrifice their rights. Postman sees television's entertainment [internet, videogaming, myspacing, twitter] value as a "soma" for the contemporary world, and he sees contemporary mankind surrendering its rights in exchange for entertainment. (Note that there is no contradiction between an intentional "Orwellian" conspiracy using "Huxleyan" means, which is an argument advanced in the later book The Unreality Industry: the deliberate manufacturing of falsehood and what it is doing to our lives by Ian Mitroff and Warren Bennis [New York: Carol Pub. Group, 1989]. Postman evidently did not disagree, since he provided a blurb for this book.)"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amusing_Ourselves_to_Death
Not that our forms of technology can't be put to other uses (as we are communicating here, now, right?), but Postman's warnings should be heeded.
Got pscyho-pharm anti-anxiety, anti-depressant, anti-panic, anti-? at a corporate-BIG pharma corner near you, anyone? (Zoloft-soma, celexa-soma, klonopin-soma, ambient-soma-I-can't-sleep-for-some-reason), where's my pornification? etc. etc. etc.
Remember, in "Brave New World" the generations were "test tube babies" whose station in life was pre-programmed. Those embryos destined to be Gammas were treated with alcohol to stunt their mental growth, for instance. All the children were raised in creches and subjected to sleep programming and conditioning. "I'm so glad I'm a Beta..."
When they finally entered the world, they were already well conditioned. It was cheaper to rule a nation of complacent hedonists than to rule with an iron rod over a possibly restive population.
Remember what happened when the "Savage" was introduced into the population.
This is eerily true....
NEOLIBERAL Global Trap: 20/80 Society, anyone?
Die Globalisierungsfalle - Der Angriff auf Demokratie und Wohlstand is a 1996 book by Hans-Peter Martin and Harald Schumann which describes possible implications of current trends in globalization. It was published in English as The Global Trap: Civilisation and the Assault on Democracy and Prosperity in 1997 .
In particular, the book is known for defining a possible "20/80 society". In this possible society of the 21st century, 20 percent of the working age population will be enough to keep the world economy going. The other 80 percent live on some form of welfare and are entertained with a concept called " titty tainment", which aims at keeping the 80 percent of frustrated citizens happy with a mixture of deadeningly predictable, lowest common denominator entertainment for the soul, and nourishment for the body.
from http://www.economicexpert.com/a/20:80:Society.htm
That "20/80 society" has been the stuff of SF for quite awhile now. See, e.g., Harry Harrison's trilogy whose first book is 'Wheelworld".
It seems to me that we're already well along the road to such a dystopia, and our only hope is to grab the steering wheel and change course for a Tahiti-style paradise in which everyone works who can, but nobody works much except by choice. Such a paradise would require that anti-social greed be treated as the psychopathology it is rather than as something to be praised or emulated. It would need a considerably different pattern of early-childhood socialisation, but I truly don't think we have a hope, otherwise.
With millions of jobs probably gone forever (yeah, teach assembly-line workers with maybe a GED to write computer code -- meanwhile India grinds out highly educated software ENGINEERS by the hundreds of thousands a month -- while outsourcing means those supposed "hight-tech" jobs are already a chimera), the welfare state is well on its way to fulfillment. Six million already live on just food stamps in the United States, Another 5 million get welfare checks. Two million are homeless. Those numbers are increasing daily with unemployment and foreclosures.
Gary
Yes. It's frustrating to work in a field that has warned and warned and warned "THIS IS HAPPENING" for the past 50 plus years and to continue to go unheeded.
That's where the Freire passage (1997) applies so to these times HERE NOW.
He lived the results of the "Shock Doctrine" of Neoliberalism in Brazil - and lived to tell of it throughout his whole life.
Chickens are home to roost: programmed massive unemployment: 20/80 society was no "accident."
Yes, it's the rule of no-job-no-right-to-life that must go away.
Which means that the private-profit feudalism (aka Capitalism) that enforces that rule must go away.
We're circling the drain now, and things can only get worse as long as the many, to stay alive, must support the psychopathic few in luxury.
We're frighteningly close to the breaking point. Soon it's going to be resist or die. I just hope enough decent people make the right choice.
Hmmm....Kind of looks like THIS, doesn't it:
http://s818.photobucket.com/albums/zz105/dvdleo/?action=view¤t=oxfam3.jpg
Those bottom tiers are getting heavier and heavier, and more cramped...
Yes, indeed it does, and thanks - I'd not seen that one before. That ought to be fixed up to be more visible and printable. It's a nice update to the IWW's Pyramid of Capitalism from the early 1900s, which you've doubtless seen:
http://www.whale.to/b/pyramid_of_capitalist_system.html
Thank you! I needed to see that again, and only discovered it recently through Boots Riley, SSSC.
It's his background page. He turned me onto to this remarkable documentary - if you haven't seen it:
The American Ruling Class (which reflects BOTH of those pictures)
http://www.hulu.com/watch/112523/the-american-ruling-class
The original OXFAM/Freire poster is from the late '60s-70s - and believe it or not it's now the cover of text used in an education class I had once (required of all beginning teachers). They still use the image on the updated versions of this text. The course urges teachers to question the image and ask IS THIS THE SYSTEM AMERICAN EDUCATION STRATEGICALLY REPRODUCES - OR SEEKS TO TRANSFORM?
It was a great course, the ONLY one that actually related to my teaching most meaningfully, although it was hard to see it at the time (before I had taught).
From my experience, I'd say BOTH are going on.
Thank those teachers and administrator who are seeking to transform such a system - although most these days, from what I have witnessed, are rigidly seeking to reproduce it.
Wanna good laugh:
Read the post-transcript of Bill Clinton's NAFTA signing speech surrounded by the smiling Bush.
"...And I'd like to tell you why: first of all, because NAFTA means jobs American jobs, and good-paying American jobs. If I didn't believe that, I wouldn't support this agreement....
I believe that NAFTA will create 200,000 American jobs in the first 2 years of its effect. I believe if you look at the trends--and President Bush and I were talking about it this morning-starting about the time he was elected President, over one-third of our economic growth and, in some years, over one-half of our net new jobs came directly from exports. And on average, those export-related jobs paid much higher than jobs that had no connection to exports....
I believe that NAFTA will create 1 million jobs in the first 5 years of its impact. And I believe that that is many more jobs than will be lost--as, inevitably, some will be, as always happens when you open up the mix to a new range of competition....
Many Americans are still worried that this agreement will move jobs south of the border, because they've seen jobs move south of the border and because they know that there are still great differences in the wage rates. There have been 19 serious economic studies of NAFTA by liberals and conservatives alike; 18 of them have concluded that there will be no job loss. [!!!!!!! That's that bi-partisan Neoliberalism again]...
It is right at the center of the effort that we're making in America to define what the future is going to be about.
And so there are differences. But if you strip away the differences, it is clear that most of the people that oppose this pact are rooted in the fears and insecurities that are legitimately gripping the great American middle class. It is no use to deny that these fears and insecurities exist. It is no use denying that many of our people have lost in the battle for change. But it is a great mistake to think that NAFTA will make it worse. Every single, solitary thing you hear people talk about that they're worried about can happen whether this trade agreement passes or not, and most of them will be made worse if it fails. And I can tell you, it will be better if it passes....
It's a good deal, and we ought to take it."
Yeah. "Good DEAL" for whom and what? And now CAFTA.
In light of Freire and so many others warning about Neoliberalism - NAFTA and other pseudo-"free" trade race to the bottom agreements, I find Clinton's dismissal of the nay-sayers in his speech quite interesting in retrospect.
As always, we should have listened to those who cautioned against NAFTA.
Again, the massive unemployment was systematic, programmed and planned. Wake up, America.
(For a take on how the same crap is happening in our higher ed (with complicity), see the brilliant Marc Bousquet: http://howtheuniversityworks.com/wordpress/ )
Oh, but OBAMA promised - during the campaign - to take a look at that old NAFTA and "renegotiate it" in light of its lived consequences, right?
Oh, but NOT anymore.
Paulo Freire from Pedagogy of Freedom: Ethics, Democracy, and Civic Courage (1997)
( See accompanying graphic of "Neoliberal World: a Corporatist 'Bi-Partisan' Creation":
http://s818.photobucket.com/albums/zz105/dvdleo/?action=view¤t=oxfam3.jpg )
...Globalization theory, which speaks of ethics, hides the fact that its ethics are those of the marketplace and not the universal ethics of the human person. It is for these matters that we ought to struggle courageously if we have, in truth, made a choice for a humanized world. A world of real people. Globalization cleverly hides, or seeks to cloud over, an intensified new edition of that fearful evil that is historical capitalism, even if the new edition is somewhat modified in relation to past versions. Its fundamental ideology seeks to mask that what is really up for discussion is the increasing wealth of the few and the rapid increase of poverty and misery for the vast majority of humanity. The capitalistic system reaches, in its globalizing neoliberal crusade, the maximum efficacy of its intrinsically evil nature.
It is my hope that the world will get over its fascination with the end of communism and with the fall of the Berlin wall. And thus remake itself so as to refuse the dictatorship of the marketplace, founded as it is on the perverse ethic of profit.
I don't believe that women and men of the world, independent of their political positions yet conscious of their dignity as men and women, will not want to reflect on the sense of foreboding that is now universal in this perverse era of neoliberal philosophy. A foreboding that one day will lead to a new rebellion where the critical word, the humanist philosophy, and commitment to solidarity, the prophetic denunciation of the negation of men and women, and the proclamation of a world worthy of human habitation will be the instruments of change and transformation.
A century and a half ago, Marx and Engels cried out in favor of the unity of the working classes of the world against their exploitation. Now, in our time, it is essential and urgent that people unite against the threat that looms over us. The threat, namely, to our own identity as human persons caught up in the ferocity of the ethics of the marketplace....
I have affirmed and reaffirmed the extent to which I rejoice in knowing that I am a "conditioned" being, capable of going beyond my own conditioning. The place upon which a new rebellion should be built is not the ethics of the marketplace with its crass insensitivity to the voice of genuine humanity but the ethics of universal human aspiration. The ethics of human solidarity.
I prefer to be criticized as an idealist and an inveterate dreamer because I continue to believe in the human person, continue to struggle for legislation that would protect people from the unjust and aggressive inroads of those who have no regard for an ethical code that is common to us all. The freedom of commerce cannot be ethically higher than the freedom to be human. The freedom of commerce without limits is no more than the license to put profit above everything else. It becomes a privilege of the few, who in certain favorable conditions increase their own power at the expense of the greater part of humanity, even to the point of survival itself. A textile factory that is forced to close because it cannot compete with the price of labor in Asia, for example, not only brings down the factory owner (who may or may not be a transgressor of that universal ethical code of which I have spoken) but signals the expulsion of hundreds of workers from the process of production. And what about their families? I refuse, with all the conviction I can muster, to accept that our presence in history can be reduced to a deterministic adaptation to our socio-historical condition. As I have said before, worldwide unemployment is not a fatalistic inevitability. It is the result of the economic globalization and the scientific and technological advances, which requires the sacrifice of thousands of people, is one more example of how we can be transgressors of a universal human ethic in the name of the market, of pure profit.
One of the transgressions of a universal human ethic that ought to be considered criminal is programmed mass unemployment, which leads so many to despair and to a kind of living death. Thus, the preoccupation with techno-professional education for the retraining of those who have become redundant would have to be greatly increased to begin to redress the balance.
I would like to make it clear that I know full well how difficult it is to put in practice a policy of development that would put men and women before profit. However, I believe that if we are going to overcome the crises that at present assail us, we must return to ethics. I do not see any other alternative. If it is impossible to have development without profit, then profit of its own accord cannot be the sole object of development in such a way that it justifies and sanctifies the immoral gain of the investor. It may be the utopia of a minority (which will also wither like the grass) to create a society robotized by highly intelligent machines that can substitute men and women in a whole range of activities, creating millions of Peters and Marys without anything to do. But such a utopia is worthless.
- Paulo Freire (1921-1997)
Who is Paulo Freire? A brief introduction from http://www.infed.org/thinkers/et-freir.htm and "Rage and Hope," a site founded at the University of Texas at Austin, to start: http://www.perfectfit.org/CT/freire1.html
Recent UK story: To inspire more confidence in the secret services of our governments, they should “fight back by infiltrating internet sites.” http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/secret-services-must-be-made-more-transparent-2064948.html