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In reply to the discussion: College Professor Who Called Charlie Kirk a 'Nazi' Handed Legal Win [View all]eppur_se_muova
(40,167 posts)***
To explain my perspective here, I need to go back in time. Lets go back to post-World War II, 1950s when the GI bill, and the affordability and sometimes free access to universities created an upsurge of college students across the country. This surge continued through the 60s, when universities were the very heart of intense public discourse, passionate learning, and vocal citizen involvement in the issues of the times. It was during this time, too, when colleges had a thriving professoriate, and when students were given access to a variety of subject areas, and the possibility of broad learning. The liberal arts stood at the center of a college education, and students were exposed to philosophy, anthropology, literature, history, sociology, world religions, foreign languages and cultures. Of course, something else happened, beginning in the late '50s into the '60s the uprisings and growing numbers of citizens taking part in popular dissent against the Vietnam War, against racism, against destruction of the environment in a growing corporatized culture, against misogyny, against homophobia. Where did much of that revolt incubate? Where did large numbers of well-educated, intellectual, and vocal people congregate? On college campuses. Who didnt like the outcome of the '60s? The corporations, the war-mongers, those in our society who would keep us divided based on our race, our gender, our sexual orientation.
I suspect that, given the opportunity, those groups would have liked nothing more than to shut down the universities. Destroy them outright. But a country claiming to have democratic values cant just shut down its universities. That would reveal something about that country which would not support the image they are determined to portray that of a country of freedom, justice, opportunity for all. So, how do you kill the universities of the country without showing your hand? As a child growing up during the Cold War, I was taught that the communist countries in the first half of the 20th century put their scholars, intellectuals and artists into prison camps, called re-education camps. What Ive come to realize as an adult is that American corporatism despises those same individuals as much as we were told communism did. But instead of doing anything so obvious as throwing them into prison, here those same people are thrown into dire poverty. The outcome is the same. Desperate poverty controls and ultimately breaks people as effectively as prison
..and some research says that it works even more powerfully.
So: here is the recipe for killing universities, and you tell me if what Im describing isnt exactly what is at the root of all the problems of our countrys system of higher education. (Because what Im saying has more recently been applied to K-12 public education as well.)
Step I: Defund public higher education.
Anna Victoria, writing in Pluck Magazine, discusses this issue in a review of Christopher Newfields book, Unmaking the Public University: In 1971, Lewis Powell (before assuming his post as a Supreme Court Justice) authored a memo, now known as the Powell Memorandum, and sent it to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The title of the memo was Attack on the American Free Enterprise System, and in it he called on corporate America to take an increased role in shaping politics, law, and education in the United States. How would they do that? One, by increased lobbying and pressure on legislators to change their priorities. Funding for public universities comes from, as the term suggests, the state and federal government. Yet starting in the early 1980s, shifting state priorities forced public universities to increasingly rely on other sources of revenue. For example, in the University of Washington school system, state funding for schools decreased as a percentage of total public education budgets from 82% in 1989 to 51% in 2011. Thats a loss of more than a third of its public funding. But why this shift in priorities? U.C. Santa Barbara English professor Christopher Newfield, in his new book Unmaking the Public University posits that conservative elites have worked to defund higher education explicitly because of its function in creating a more empowered, democratic, and multiracial middle class. His theory is one that blames explicit cultural concern, not financial woes, for the current decreases in funding. He cites the fact that California public universities were forced to reject 300,000 applicants because of lack of funding. Newfield explains that much of the motive behind conservative advocacy for defunding of public education is racial, pro-corporate and anti-protest in nature.
Again, from Anna Victoria:
(The) ultimate objective, as outlined in the (Lewis Powell) memo, was to purge respectable institutions such as the media, arts, sciences, as well as college campus themselves of left-wing thoughts. At the time, college campuses were seen as 'springboards for dissent,' as Newfield terms it, and were therefore viewed as publicly funded sources of opposition to the interests of the establishment. While it is impossible to know the extent to which this memo influenced the conservative political strategy over the coming decades, it is extraordinary to see how far the principles outlined in his memo have been adopted.
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more: https://www.alternet.org/2012/10/how-higher-education-us-was-destroyed-5-basic-steps
The memo itself: https://reclaimdemocracy.org/?s=powell+memo
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