Jack Kennedy said "The
ignorance of one voter in a democracy impairs the security of all."
In 1748, Montesquieu said
"The tyranny of a principal in an oligarchy is not so dangerous to the
public welfare as the apathy of a citizen in a democracy."
In a June 1950 commencement
speech, Boston University President Daniel Marsh said, "If the
(television) craze continues....we are destined to have a nation of
morons."
Well before television
arrived, journalist Walter Lippmann called the public "the bewildered
herd." In policy matters, their function is to be "spectators,"
not "participants."
"The common interests
elude public opinion entirely," he said, and that's the way it should
be.
Public ignorance isn't
universal, but a significant majority's affected. Henry Ford once said:
"It is well that the
people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system, for if
they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning.”
It's also true for
out-of-control imperialism, war and peace overall, political corruption,
corporate power, illusory democracy, elections little more than theater, police
state lawlessness, an unprecedented wealth disparity, shocking poverty,
unemployment, hunger and homelessness levels, and numerous other issues in the
world's richest country.
Widespread public ignorance
keeps these and other abuses out of public consciousness and concern enough to
demand political Washington
address them responsibly.
Instead, officials serve
wealth and power alone. As a result, popular needs go begging, especially under
mandated austerity to pay bankers and wage imperial wars.
A nation of morons literally
lets America
get away with murder, erode human and civil rights, and leave millions
uninformed, on their own, out of luck.
Public Education in America
Diogenes called education
"the foundation of every state." Father of American education Horace
Mann called "(t)he common school....the greatest discovery ever made by
man." He meant public, not private, ones to educate all students
responsibly.
Today, US public
education's targeted for privatization. At issue is commodifying it as another
profit center. Bottom line priorities only will matter. As a result, in cities
across the country, schools are closed, teachers fired, and students left out
in the cold.
Moreover, those in inner
city public schools aren't taught. Why bother when high-pay skilled jobs move
abroad, and they're left to scramble for low pay, no benefit, unskilled
part-time or temp ones at home.
Half a century after the
Supreme Court's landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling, Jonathan Kozol
called segregation worse, not better, in his book titled, "The
Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America."
At the same time, Harvard
civil rights researchers commemorated Brown's 50th anniversary saying, "At
the beginning of the twenty-first century, American public schools are now 12
years into the process of continuous resegregation."
Desegregation from the 1950s
through late 1980s "has receded to levels not seen in three decades."
Martin Luther King's dream became a nightmare with respect to education, civil
liberties, and inability of growing numbers of underprivileged Americans to get
by because help keeps shrinking when they most need it.
In 1983, the National
Commission on Excellence in Education published a report titled, "A
Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform." It found
academic performance poor at nearly all levels. It warned that America 's
educational system was "being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity."
Today, it's a national
disaster by design. So-called education reform's a fraud. It masks
privatization schemes, a society of growing haves and have nots, and no desire
to educate masses for low pay, low skill jobs if they can find one.
Critics warn of dire
consequences to no avail. Several books discussed it. They include Jared Diamond's
"Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed," Cullen Murphy's
"Are We Rome: The Fall of an Empire and the Fate of America," and
Adrian Goldsworthy's
"How Rome
Fell."
They explain the decline and
fall of powerful states, and apply what's highlighted to failing education in
America. Combined with out-of-control greed, imperialism, corruption,
duplicity, and lawlessness, it's a prescription for failure.
In his book titled,
"Just How Stupid Are We? Facing the Truth about the American Voter,"
Rick Shenkman discussed
profound public ignorance. He asked, "How much ignorance can a country
stand," and said one day we'll find out, perhaps to our dismay.
Numerous examples provide
evidence.
University of Michigan
studies categorize Americans as follows:
- few know much about politics and world affairs;
- around half know enough to answer elementary
questions; and
- all others know virtually nothing.
In the 1980s, less than a
third knew Roe v. Wade was a 1970s Supreme Court abortion ruling. Only
one-fourth understood senators serve six years. Only 20% knew America has 100
senators. Around 40% knew the nation has three branches of government, but few
can explain what separation of powers entails.
Less than half knew America
dropped the atom bomb on Japan. In response to a 2005 Gallup poll asking to
name America's greatest president, only 14% choose Lincoln and 5% Washington.
Only a third know Congress
alone can declare war, or that it can override a president's veto. Around half
think the chief executive can suspend the Constitution.
In their book titled, "What
Americans Know about Politics and Why It Matters," Michael Delli
Carpini and Scott Keeter found only 5% could answer basic economics questions,
11% domestic issues ones, 14% foreign affairs topics, and 10% on geography.
Only 25% answered most history questions right.
In 2003, the Strategic Task
Force on Education Abroad said, "America's ignorance of the outside
world" is so extreme, it threatens national security.
One survey showed nearly
one-fourth of Americans able to name all five Simpson family members, compared
to one in 1,000 correctly stating all five First Amendment freedoms.
They include free
expression, a free press, freedom of religion, the right to assemble peaceably,
and to petition government for redress of grievances, as well as the implied
rights of association and belief.
Free expression in all forms
is most important. Without it, all other rights are at risk.
In 2011, Newsweek magazine
gave 1,000 Americans the US
citizenship test. The results showed profound ignorance:
- 38% failed;
- 29% couldn't name the vice president;
- 73% knew little or nothing about the Cold War;
- 40% didn't know why America fought Germany,
Japan and Italy in WW II;
- 63% didn't know the correct number of Supreme
Court justices, let alone their names;
- 65% knew nothing about the Constitutional
Convention;
- 70% didn't know the Constitution is the supreme
law of the land;
- 23% didn't know Martin Luther King fought for
civil rights;
- 40% couldn't explain the Bill of Rights; and
- 6% didn't know July 4 was Independence Day.
In total, 100 questions were
asked. Simple ones included:
- where's the White House located?
- what's the US capitol?
- where does Congress meet?
- how many states are there in America?
- who's the military commander-in-chief?
- name America's two major political parties; and
- -- similar questions most everyone should answer easily. Most can't.
Results showed appalling
civic ignorance levels. Other tests on reading, math and computer skills are
just as dismal. Americans are profoundly ignorant.
In May 2011, the Chicago
Sun Times headlined, "Report: Over a third of students entering
college need remedial help," saying:
"Nationally, in 2010,
only 24 percent of ACT-tested high school graduates were deemed college ready
in all four subjects tested - English, math, reading and science." In
addition, most lack computer skills.
Columbia University's
Community College Research Center found students finish high school unprepared.
At the same time, around 80% needing remedial help graduated with GPAs above
3.0.
University of Illinois
Professor Debra Bragg called it "a problem for all types of (public) high
schools." They don't teach. They shove students through untaught and
unprepared. It's why over a third drop out and never finish. In fact, in
America's 50 largest cities, rates exceed 40%, and in some major ones approach
50%.
Problems begin in first
grade. Columbia University senior research associate Dolores Perin said:
"Students aren't
learning strong reading and writing skills and math, and the problems get worse
and worse. As kids get older, it just gets harder and harder to do well in
school," no matter what grades they're given to shove them out in
preparation for the next crop behind them.
In contrast, Western
Europeans and Asians score much higher on skills mattering most, as well as
knowledge of international issues. Whatever deficiencies affect their schools,
they way outperform America's.
Corporate controlled
education reform assures worse ahead. For business, only profits matter.
Marketplace solutions don't work, especially when they sacrifice vital needs
for bottom line priorities and prevent children from fulfilling the American
dream.
For growing numbers today,
it's a nightmare getting worse.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached
at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com
and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM
US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived
for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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