Monday, December 22, 2014

ecently, I found out that my work is mentioned in a book that has been banned, in effect, from the schools in Tucson, Arizona. The anti-ethnic studies law passed by the state prohibits teachings that "promote the overthrow of the United States government," "promote resentment toward a race or class of people," "are designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group," and/or "advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals." I invite you to read the book in question, titled Critical Race Theory: An Introduction, so that you can decide for yourselves whether it qualifies.


Not the Individualist theory of society.   

nti-Intellectualism Is Taking Over the U.S.

By Patricia Williams, Guardian UK
21 December 14

The rise in academic book bannings and firings is compounded by the US's growing disregard for scholarship itself

ecently, I found out that my work is mentioned in a book that has been banned, in effect, from the schools in Tucson, Arizona. The anti-ethnic studies law passed by the state prohibits teachings that "promote the overthrow of the United States government," "promote resentment toward a race or class of people," "are designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group," and/or "advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals." I invite you to read the book in question, titled Critical Race Theory: An Introduction, so that you can decide for yourselves whether it qualifies.
In fact, I invite you to take on as your summer reading the astonishingly lengthy list of books that have been removed from the Tucson public school system as part of this wholesale elimination of the Mexican-American studies curriculum. The authors and editors include Isabel Allende, Junot Díaz, Jonathan Kozol, Rudolfo Anaya, bell hooks, Sandra Cisneros, James Baldwin, Howard Zinn, Rodolfo Acuña, Ronald Takaki, Jerome Skolnick and Gloria Anzaldúa. Even Thoreau's Civil Disobedience and Shakespeare's The Tempest received the hatchet.
Trying to explain what was offensive enough to warrant killing the entire curriculum and firing its director, Tucson school board member Michael Hicks stated rather proudly that he was not actually familiar with the curriculum. "I chose not to go to any of their classes," he told Al Madrigal on The Daily Show. "Why even go?" In the same interview, he referred to Rosa Parks as "Rosa Clark."
The situation in Arizona is not an isolated phenomenon. There has been an unfortunate uptick in academic book bannings and firings, made worse by a nationwide disparagement of teachers, teachers' unions and scholarship itself. Brooke Harris, a teacher at Michigan's Pontiac Academy for Excellence, was summarily fired after asking permission to let her students conduct a fundraiser for Trayvon Martin's family. Working at a charter school, Harris was an at-will employee, and so the superintendent needed little justification for sacking her. According to Harris, "I was told… that I'm being paid to teach, not to be an activist." (It is perhaps not accidental that Harris worked in the schools of Pontiac, a city in which nearly every public institution has been taken over by cost-cutting executives working under "emergency manager" contracts. There the value of education is measured in purely econometric terms, reduced to a "product," calculated in "opportunity costs.")
The law has taken some startling turns as well. In 2010 the sixth circuit upheld the firing of high school teacher Shelley Evans-Marshall when parents complained about an assignment in which she had asked her students in an upper-level language arts class to look at the American Library Association's list of "100 most frequently challenged Books" and write an essay about censorship. The complaint against her centered on three specific texts: Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. (She was also alleged, years earlier, to have shown students a PG-13 version of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.)
The court found that the content of Evans-Marshall's teachings concerned matters "of political, social or other concern to the community" and that her interest in free expression outweighed certain other interests belonging to the school "as an employer." But, fatally, the court concluded that "government employees… are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment purposes." While the sixth circuit allowed that Evans-Marshall may have been treated "shabbily", it still maintained (quoting from another opinion) that "when a teacher teaches, 'the school system does not "regulate" [that] speech as much as it hires that speech. Expression is a teacher's stock in trade, the commodity she sells to her employer in exchange for a salary.'" Thus, the court concluded, it is the "educational institution that has a right to academic freedom, not the individual teacher."
There are a number of factors at play in the current rash of controversies. One is a rather stunning sense of privilege, the confident sense of superiority that allows someone to pass sweeping judgment on a body of work without having done any study at all. After the Chronicle of Higher Education published an item highlighting the dissertations of five young PhD candidates in African-American studies at Northwestern University, Chronicle blogger Naomi Schaefer Riley wrote that the mere titles of the dissertations were sufficient cause to eliminate all black studies classes. Riley hadn't read the dissertations; they're not even published yet. When questioned about this, she argued that as "a journalist… it is not my job to read entire dissertations before I write a 500-word piece about them," adding: "there are not enough hours in the day or money in the world to get me to read a dissertation on historical black midwifery." Riley tried to justify her view with a cliched, culture-wars-style plaint about the humanities and higher education: "Such is the state of academic research these days…. The publication topics become more and more irrelevant and partisan. No one reads them." This is not mere arrogance; it is the same cocooned "white ghetto" narrow-mindedness that allows someone like Michael Hicks to be in charge of a major American school system yet not know "Rosa Clark's" correct name.
Happily, there is pushback occurring against such anti-intellectualism. One of the most vibrant examples is a protest group called Librotraficante, or Book Trafficker. Organised by Tony Diaz, a Houston Community College professor, the group has been caravanning throughout the south-west holding readings, setting up book clubs, establishing "underground libraries," and dispensing donated copies of the books that have been removed from Arizona's public school curriculum. You can donate by visiting librotraficante.com.

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+41# Dust 2014-12-21 18:15
“Anti-intellect ualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'"

-Isaac Asimov
 
 
+8# davidr 2014-12-22 02:09
Indeed. We were settled in New England by a Calvinist religious sect, forebears of our evangelical Christians, whose conceptual frame rested on the idea that faith alone, pure & unexamined belief, was the sole source of truth — not experience, not logic, not reflection, neither moral nor psychological, not imagination, observation, research nor empirical findings. Theirs was a very strict antinomianism, persistent in our country from the exile of Roger Williams, to the Salem and HUAC witch trials, to Mr. Scopes, the censoring of books and a host of other intellectual offenses.

Our grossly fictitious Thanksgiving romance is that the Pilgrims fled religious persecution in oppressive England to find the freedom of their purer (Puritan, purer-than-thou ) faith in a whole new world placed by God under their most righteous dominion.

But another version of this tale, of course, is that a crackpot bunch of antinomian heretics, whose belief-system made them perfectly unfit for social cooperation or political integration, was invited at sword point to leave England. When even the tolerant and otherwise hospitable Dutch couldn't stomach them, they soon enough washed up on these shores. A certain amount of the rest of the story is written by Ms. Williams above.
 
 
+6# brux 2014-12-22 04:59
Asimov and all those early science fiction authors created a whole generation or two of people whose imaginations had been stimulated and could think for themselves ... how subversive. I loved it.
 
 
+19# RMDC 2014-12-21 21:05
The US has always been anti-intellectu al. It elects presidents like Reagan and Bush who had all the intelligence of a rodent. I would not say Clinton or Obama were much better. 

Anti-intellectu alism is part of the way the ruling elites of the US manage the masses. They tell the masses never to trust people who think or read. And they role model that in political leaders, movie stars, and other public figures. 

No backlash or book trafficking will help. Banning books only gives them notice. The best thing is to do nothing and no Amerian will read or pay any attention.
 
 
+2# futhark 2014-12-22 04:26
In terms of raw brainpower, I would rate Bill Clinton and Barack Obama pretty highly. Their problem has not been want of intellect, but want of the capacity to make and follow through on decisions based on moral or ethical considerations. Both largely owed their respective meteoric ascents in politics to monied interests and chose to pay back their oligarchical masters in the blood of others and in special financial favors. Both used their humble beginnings to ingratiate themselves with voters, then, once elected, cynically turned on those who had entrusted them with their precious votes.

If the Democratic Party leadership fears the consequences of poor voter turnout for their candidates, they have only to examine the quality and performance of those they have nominated and promoted.
 
 
+16# Kootenay Coyote 2014-12-21 23:18
The mind boggles: a land of suicidal idiots? First the brain goes, then the body dies…Alas, USA.
 
 
+10# Jayceecool 2014-12-21 23:29
Isn't it remarkable that our society, with such a long history of public education, has fallen so low? With such a large proportion of college graduates?
 
 
+8# angelfish 2014-12-22 01:10
It's not Anti-intellectu alism that's taking over this Country, it's Anti-Intelligen ce! WHERE have all the intelligent, reasonable, and thoughtful people gone? There seems to be NONE on the ReTHUGlican side of the aisle and fewer on the Democratic side. I have hope that the young people will save this Country from the sycophants and Psychotics that appear to have been elected in this Mid-Term Election. If not, we ARE doomed to go the way of the Dinosaur.
 
 
-1# brux 2014-12-22 05:01
One reason I continue posting here is to challenge the thinking of the left of center folks who are getting as rigid and doctrinaire as the far right. Everyone needs to learn more about the world and how ti works, but particularly how their own brains work, and how we need to challenge it to keep it young and flexible.
 
 
+1# tedrey 2014-12-22 05:31
Physician, first heal thyself.
 
 
+7# Annietime13 2014-12-22 01:22
In " THE REPUBLIC OF IMAGINATION " by Azar Nafisi , is written pg. 65. " The first thing a totalitarian mind-set does is strip it's citizens of their sense of identity, rewriting the past to suit it's goals, and rewriting history to serve its ends "

This is happening, and like fallen nations before us, we seem to sleep.
 
 
+4# lorenbliss 2014-12-22 01:30
And yet there are still those on the Left who fume at my denunciation of the U.S. as Moron Nation -- a sadistically happy-faced realm peopled by the most maliciously ignorant citizens on this planet, a dunce-cap republic of hatefulness and greed led by sneering plutocrats who -- in obedience to their monetary messiah Ayn Rand -- have embraced moral imbecility as their economic system and philosophy of governance.
 
 
-4# brux 2014-12-22 05:03
90% of all people in all nations are no smarter or peaceful than Americans. Maybe it's your singling out of Americans to insult, because that frame is not helpful. If there was a single nation that was not a moron nation it would be attracting everyone in the world to live there .... so ... ?
 
 
+3# ericlipps 2014-12-22 06:02
Could it be that lorenbliss and others single out Americans because America is the country they have the greatest hope of reforming, and the greatest personal interest in doing so? You know, actually living here and all.
 
 
+1# elkingo 2014-12-22 02:45
Wow! The Great American Moronocracy is growing by leaps and bounds! The degree of absurdity and stupidity seems to rise as the whole "cultural" phenomenon accelerates. How do we rid institutions of these mega-morons?
 
 
0# brux 2014-12-22 05:05
> How do we rid institutions of these mega-morons?

My latest article says, by having the wisdom to accept the difference between that which can be changed and the things that cannot, and focusing on what is possible, and how, without prejudice.
 

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