Right-wing students were encouraged to spy on the classes of progressive professors (Henry Giroux) — Athena
My argument is the Military-Industrial Complex, through educations, and the 1958 National Defense Education Act have had huge social, economic, and political ramifications — Athena
No argument there. The USAF even funded one of my minor research projects that had no military applications. The Cold War has had a profound effect on society. — jgill
↪Athena
You make a good point about the humanities being pushed aside after Sputnik. I'm surprised this thread is languishing. :chin: — jgill
What of the external stimuli that allowed such a system to be created by its constituents? Surely it wasn't merely the gilded education system of the post-war boom that pushed American society from the good old days to the living hell it is now? And your argument holds the implication that there ever was a 'good ol' days'. Most famously, Emmet Till was lynched in 1955, McCarthyism ended the year before that, and people lived in constant fear of nuclear annihilation.Your lauded system of education pre-1958 can't have been that good because it produced a generation of people willing to design, implement, vote for, and otherwise allow the very system you now decry.
The problem with your argument is the same as the problem with any "haven't things gone to pot, weren't they better in the old days" argument. Something about them good ol' days caused things to become the living hell they are now. Your lauded system of education pre-1958 can't have been that good because it produced a generation of people willing to design, implement, vote for, and otherwise allow the very system you now decry. — Isaac
for sure that past education promoted independent thinking and literacy and a culture essential to our liberty. — Athena
What of the external stimuli that allowed such a system to be created by its constituents? Surely it wasn't merely the gilded education system of the post-war boom that pushed American society from the good old days to the living hell it is now? And your argument holds the implication that there ever was a 'good ol' days'. Most famously, Emmet Till was lynched in 1955, McCarthyism ended the year before that, and people lived in constant fear of nuclear annihilation.
I suppose the idea I'm trying to forward is that living in what our parents & grandparents most definitely saw as a hellscape caused them to want to try to create a utopian society, or at least one safe from Soviet and racial threats (those being the most obvious in my mind). And that society, which was designed to survive the Cold War, brought on its own set of issues. — deb1161
With the focus on technology came specialization and the Behaviorist Method of education which is also used for training dogs. — Athena
Obviously it didn't because the generation it produced contained and supported the institutions responsible for the very industrialisation of education you're complaining about. How can you claim they were successfully inculcated with a "culture essential to our liberty", and in the very same argument accuse them of designing a system to train illiterate robots? Is designing a military-industrial education system something which you find to be essential to our liberty? — Isaac
My generation is horrified by what has happened to our personal power — Athena
Sure, simple conditioning works better for training dogs than having long discussions with them. I've had long discussions with my very smart dog, and I can report that it didn't improve her behavior one wit (she was, of course, a very good dog).
It happens to be the case, like it or not, that human beings, dogs, monkeys, rats, and crows share many neurological characteristics. That's why we also learn in ways not much differently than other animals. Psychology's first big (and successful) project was to understand how we learn. So it is that the methods of the rat lab became the 'image of psychology'.
In saying that, please note, I am not equating a human mind with a dog's mind. The scope of human mental activities is far vaster than a dog's, and our brains are far more complex, and utilize additional methods of learning, knowledge acquisition, imagination, and so on and so forth.
Hey, Athena: I think we share a lot of discomfort, dissatisfaction, and disagreement with the world as it has been made. My disagreement here is that there are just more villains than the Military Industrial Complex. — Bitter Crank
Your generation (my generation to an extent, I'm well north of 50) raised the very people currently taking that power away. Why aren't you prepared to take any responsibility for that?
All you've done is listed a whole load of stuff wrong with current society, much of which I completely agree with, but you hark back to a time when things were 'better' in some way. My argument is something in that generation caused this state of affairs.
The people responsible for creating and maintaining the state of affairs you're lamenting were raised by the generation you're treating with reverence. They can't possibly have been that great, they raised a generation of monsters. — Isaac
The USAF even funded one of my minor research projects that had no military applications. — jgill
↪jgill
Could you please provide more information? What was that research about? — Athena
Could you please provide more information? What was that research about? — Athena
Infinite compositions of linear fractional transformations. Pretty much pure mathematics. :cool: — jgill
It looks like that is being discussed in other threads, but how does it apply here? I am very open to explanations. — Athena
I have taken responsibility for raising consciousness ever since I realize what happened — Athena
What have I said that you do not believe is true? — Athena
we are what we defended our democracy against. — Athena
that past education promoted independent thinking and literacy and a culture essential to our liberty. — Athena
Only when democracy is defended in the classroom is it defended — Athena
Since 1958 all those not going on to higher education have been cheated out of the education they need to self-actualization. — Athena
How important do you think those numbers were in the Civil War compared to how important they are to modern warfare. — Athena
I think the problem is a failure to understand the Military-Industrial Complex. — Athena
The US was basically a nation of innocent children living for a love of God. While the Prussians who took control of Germany were living for the love of military might. — Athena
So I am trying a new approach, the following comes out of Chris Hedges's book Empire of Illusion. — Athena
I don't doubt your intentions, but raising conciousness (whatever that is) is not the same as taking responsibility.
What have I said that you do not believe is true? — Athena
That's simple...
we are what we defended our democracy against. — Athena
No one else made us do this, so we obviously did not defend our democracy against anything.
that past education promoted independent thinking and literacy and a culture essential to our liberty. — Athena
This is self evidently false because if the past education promoted those things then those emerging from it would not have created the society we have today, would they?
Only when democracy is defended in the classroom is it defended — Athena
Again, self evidently false because democracy was defended in the classroom and it lead to a generation of teachers and leaders who no longer defend it in the classroom.
Since 1958 all those not going on to higher education have been cheated out of the education they need to self-actualization. — Athena
Again, self-evidently false. Pre-1958 education cannot possibly have lead to self-actualization because it produced the very people who came up with and implemented mechanical industry-serving post-1958 education.
21 hours ago
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Options — Isaac
That seems a strange thing to say. We would be speaking German if at the beginning of WWI we had not rushed to bring our nation up to the level of German military technology and this includes bureaucratic technology that has radically changed politics! In 1916, our education had nothing to do with technology and vocational training. It was all about literature and culture. So here we are in lulla land totally unprepared for modern warfare, and Germany was swallowing up one country after another. This technology is as much about bureaucratic technology as it is about weapons. — Athena
Charles Sarolea wrote a book warning the world Germany was mobilizing for war and his book was ignored until WWI began. — Athena
Germany, in world war 1, didn't "swallow up one country after another". They didn't even get to Paris. America entered that war not to protect it's democracy, but to protect it's economic interests. [/quote/]
Laugh, I could have sworn the glass was half empty but it you insist it is half full, then I guess that is true.
"We have seen how the Kaiser's marvelous soldiers carried their banner to the very outskirts of Paris an August and September, 1914. It is the Great God efficiency, to which the Germans were required by their commanders to pay homage of worship-and it behooves us either to effect a thing that will operate as well or to copy theirs. The fact of the world at war has silenct the erring lips that declared against the necessity for preparation against disaster, like that of Belgium and Servia." J.A. B. Sinclair 1917 NEA Conference.
There is no way the US would have entered the first world war if schools and the media had not convinced the population that the US had to defend democracy. The US was isolationist and did not want to get involved. The US was protected by an ocean in the west and an ocean on the east and did not feel threatened by a land invasion. The technology for airfare was not well developed. It did not have enough trained typists, engineers, mechanics for war and didn't have that many people enlisted in military service.
There was a lot of defending of colonies but that was far from being prepared to fight off an invasion with an army equal to Germany's army. Theodore Roosevelt entered a war with calvary. LOL That is comical compared the German military technology. Prussians changed the nature of war and I can not think of a nation that was keeping pace with the Prussians.
— Echarmion
All of Europe was mobilizing for war in the early 20th century. That's a major reason there WW1 started.
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