March 20, 2008 -
Issue 269 |
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Ignorance for the Blissfully Educated Represent Our Resistance By Dr. Lenore J. Daniels, PhD BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board |
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Among all the political sex scandal
revelations, there’s this revelation: Answering quiz show questions about
world history is at an all-time low. White House Press Secretary Dana
Perino revealed that when a reporter once asked her a question referencing
the Cuban Missile Crisis, she had to admit she didn’t know. She didn’t
know how to answer the question because she didn’t know about the Cuban
Missile Crisis. “It had to with Well, with Blackberries a person doesn’t have to remember what happened yesterday or what will happen today or think about tomorrow. Anyway, the corporate media does all the thinking. These are the people who believe in invention. They think everything they do is new! So these rulers have invented pre-emptive war, complete with a campaign of “shock and awe.” They have invented ID cards for Brown immigrants and Black voters. They have invented schools and curriculums for the elite. They have invented imperialism unlike any other seen before in - in, dare I type the word - history. It is all so damn new it’s blinding! They have invented an Empire led by a “maverick” King who shoots from the hip, and even missed shots are “collateral damage,” serving to open new avenues for ingenious “negotiators” and “entrepreneurs” trained to make a profit from dry brush. By not being cognizant of the world, these rulers believe they have invented a way of being new in the world! Ignorance is a sweeping variant of the new! King George’s library will feature his autobiography, and it will be in the form of a “pop-up book” - his words, mind you! The normalization of ignorance in the
King George and his cadre of white, Black, and Brown mouthpieces, administrators, and judges are not alone. Common Core, a nonpartisan research and advocacy organization commissioned a phone survey in which American teenagers were asked “basic questions about history and literature” (“History Survey Stumps U.S. Teens” New York Times, February 26, 2008). The group, according to the report, hopes to argue that the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law has “impoverished American’s public school curriculum by holding schools accountable for student scores on annual tests in reading and math but in no other subjects.” When a school receives a failing grade, it is closed and a charter school appears in its place overnight. Think - privatization of education! Any surprise that the schools receiving a failing grade are Black and Latino/a schools? For chronically failing schools like these, the No Child Left Behind law, now up for renewal in Congress, prescribes drastic measures: firing teachers and principals, shutting schools and turning them over to a private firm, a charter operator or the state itself, or a major overhaul in governance. ‘What are we supposed to do?’ Ms. Paramo
[high school teacher] asked. ‘Shut down every school?’ (“Failing Schools
Strain to Meet The study, Still At Risk: What Students Don’t Know Even Now conducted by Frederick M. Hess, suggests an even more sinister scenario regarding the role of “educational” institutions in this new era. Let’s come back to failing schools and the privatization of educational institutions. The Still At Risk study reports
that 17 year-olds thought It is easy to make light of such ignorance. In reality, however, a deep lack of knowledge is neither humorous nor trivial. What we know helps to determine how successful we are likely to be in life, and how many career paths we can choose from. It also affects our contribution as democratic citizens (Still At Risk). Common cultural exposure is limited.
According to the report, “two-thirds of all 17 year-olds have attended
a play or read a work of literature outside of school and about half have
visited an art museum or participated in a choir or orchestra” (Still
At Risk). Having taught at the college/university level for twenty
years, I know the extent to which students lack knowledge of cultures
and history outside the It is not clear if the study considered U.S. history as history of conquest and repression, genocide and enslavement, and the literatures of Native, Black, Latino/a, Chicano/a, and Asian Americans a response to that history. But the study is nonetheless revealing about the extent of ignorance and how this ignorance resonates, for example, in the current, never-ending presidential campaign. Obama’s insistence that there is “one
The team of Hillary and Bill Clinton,
familiar with these narratives and their images, are operating from within
the realm of Darth Vader’s “darkside.” Who will answer the phone in the
White House at 3 in the morning? Will it be someone with dark skin and
the middle name of Hussein? And reminiscent of the minstrel shows where,
as David R. Roediger writes, “rubbing on blacking was an accumulating
capitalist behavior” (The
Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class,
Revised and Expanded Edition (Haymarket)),
in other words profitable for whites. Bill Clinton played at being
Black for 8 years to the detriment of Black Americans. You think
the Dixiecrats are back in business? Have they ever left? But this too
requires a knowledge of And this Obama, according to Geraldine
Ferraro, wouldn’t be a front runner in the ’08 presidential campaign if
he had been born a white woman. He’s a front runner, her words imply,
because he is Black. He isn’t qualified because he is Black - wink, wink!
Forget all that The general public, “trained” to hear certain words as cues that conjure up knowledge of an individual or situation, are beginning to see what the corporate media wants them to see. Corporate media knows history, knows how to distract the public’s attention away from the issues of unemployment, single-payer health care, foreclosures, housing, poverty, war, and education. Corporate media relishes disseminating disinformation to a general public entrenched only in the knowledge of justifying narratives. That white Americans benefited from affirmative action, called Jim Crow, for over 150 years will not be televised for discussion any time soon. Don’t dare attempt to enlighten the masses. But this is history - again! A little McCarthyism and a little 1984! With substantive and meaningful knowledge
of Obama is Nafta, Cafta and like is friends
he is “afta” the repression of Black and Brown, consciously or unconsciously.
Obama is a capitalist as are the Clintons and Ferraro, but I wonder if
he is learning something about that “other Now back to that study. How does this new world order of ignorance relate specifically to Black and Brown children? Black and Brown children have been designated for canon fodder for the rulers’ continual wars and for the cheap labor they supply the prison industrial complex. Who wins with this scenario? Halliburton, KBR, and their politicians who make sure more canon fodder and cheap labor continues to flow their way with legislation (the Violent Crime Control an Law Enforcement Act 1994 and the crack-powder Cocaine disparity/Clinton, the Gang Abatement and Prevention Act 2007/Feinstein, and No Child Left Behind/Bush) targeting Black children directly and indirectly targeting the demise of the Black Left. Both Obama and Clinton support renewing the atrocious No Child Left Behind (NCLB) agenda. In a “democracy” that isn’t democratic, placing more value on math and science benefits the interests of the ruling class. A select few ascend to the top of this educational pyramid to serve as engineers and science for the corporate capitalists - and an even smaller select few are Black or Brown. The strategy is to prohibit thought that isn’t approved, programmed and controlled in order to achieve an outcome beneficial to the imperialist rulers. The “new” is the same “old” imperialist
hegemony, concerned with repression rather than liberation. Black and
Brown children have borne the brunt of this repression, and, as a group,
have suffered from betrayal and abandonment. They are the causalities
of the war on drugs, terrorism, racial and class differentiation, and
“education” in the Reform, the Still At Risk study concludes, is not enough. Stuffing a literature book here and a line or two about slavery and genocide there, offering “scattered kernels of awareness” is no more than “romanticized images flickering in the national conscience. What we need is confidence that all our children will be familiar with the highs and lows of the compelling narrative that is our common heritage.” But the people who believe they have invented the wheel, a new world - are tearing and slicing their way to “somewhere” else and the hell with those dispensable beings. So when the prisons are all filled with Black, Brown, poor, and “radical” people, when the asylums can’t hold one more body, housing isn’t available to one more lower-working class family in any city, New York, Chicago, New Orleans, San Francisco, when we have encamped outdoors, hungry and tired, will we see the hippie-yuppies order the filing of detention camps, the ones being readied as I write this? Then when those camps are filled, will the hippies-yuppies, contractors, developers, negotiators, will we see them call for the extermination of us - expendable people? History tells us this has happened before, but then who will remember? We will only hear silence. For us, there’s only our liberation narrative. History tells us there’s always been resistance. And the time for resistance against imperialism is now, before we are solidly drawn characters in the narrative of the old. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels,
PhD, has been a writer, for over thirty years of commentary, resistance
criticism and cultural theory, and short stories with a Marxist sensibility
to the impact of cultural narrative violence and its antithesis, resistance
narratives. With entrenched dedication to justice and equality, she has
served as a coordinator of student and community resistance projects that
encourage the Black Feminist idea of an equalitarian community and facilitator
of student-teacher communities behind the walls of academia for the last
twenty years. Dr. Daniels holds a PhD in Modern American Literatures,
with a specialty in Cultural Theory (race, gender, class narratives) from
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