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March 2018
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George Rebane

Colleges and universities will “soon begin to divide into two entities—the STEM fields and related practical subjects (i.e., business and economics), and the social sciences and humanities, which would start to shrivel under the weight of the degradations the left has inflicted over the last 40 years.”  So writes Steven Hayward in ‘The Higher Ed Crack Up Begins’ to which a reader and correspondent draws our attention.  The degradations to public education have been covered extensively in these pages over the years, and the anticipated ‘crack up’ described by Hayward is long overdue.

Our public institutions of higher learning already naturally divide their curricula into what I will call productive courses and today’s leftwing ideological “fever swamps”, consisting mostly of the ‘xx studies departments’ – you know the ones I’m talking about.  Carrying out this kind of divisions over the land will not be easy, and there are plenty of opportunities to unintentionally cut off some desirable meat with the proverbial fat.  Hayward points to some things that must be carefully considered in doing this surgery.

If we want to view this restructuring from a more encompassing perspective, we inevitably encounter and must answer the question, ‘What is the function of education within a defined society?’  The answer quickly begins forming around the society’s attempt to achieve two prime objectives – survival and enhancing the quality of life.  To survive, a society must successfully pass on to future generations the culture that defines it and makes it unique – among such cultural attributes are its language, history, values, mores, traditions, religions, …; essentially their commonly held ontology.

To provide the economic basis for enhancing a society members’ quality of life, it must also pass on needed skill sets, functioning infrastructure, and the means by which wealth can be created and accrued.  We are, of course, clear on the mutual support that achieving these two objectives provide each other.

The members of societies long ago realized that some of the educational efforts required to achieve these things necessitate collective action – pooling their private resources to work together in an organized manner.  This immediately called for the formation of collective institutions to carry out needed functions – among these are the military, emergency responders (e.g. law enforcement, fire, medical), and, of course, education.  But why education?


Societies also realized that the major component of survival was the ability to recognize, identify, and value what all joins to make the many into the us, and not the them – in America we canonized this meme into ‘E pluribus unum’.  Such perpetual melding of successive generations requires that new members be subjected to a common mold, one that evolves its contours slowly and after much deliberation by the ‘pluribus’ who have seen the value in and therefore embraced the ‘unum’.  To achieve such melding and molding, societies long ago decided to collectivize education – initially within the societies’ religious institution(s), and in modern times as a part of government services.

Societies developed infrastructure (farms, roads, aqueducts, mills, temples, granaries, fortifications, …) to enhance their survivability and quality of life.  These were permanent structures that now required the protection and retention of a defined territory, again for us and not them.  The natural rise of kingdoms and city-states facilitated that, and the later adoption of the Westphalian convention (1648) in Europe formalized such defined territories into modern nation-states that were sovereign within their fixed and mutually recognized borders.  The theory here was that adhering to Westphalia would lend more stability to societies, prevent/reduce warfare, and clearly identify boundary-violating aggressors who would subsequently be sanctioned by other nation-states for their aggression so as to maintain the mutually beneficent world order.

If some people within a nation-state wanted to radically change their society, it would now have to be done from the inside – enter the Westphalian revolutions and civil wars.  In modern times these soon came to be recognized as being too obvious and costly, quickly alerting the opposition to organize a defense.  A more surreptitious means was required by which a small but zealous contingent within a society (country) could grow, rise to power, while in the process fundamentally transforming that society so as to either change its normative culture, or do away with the containing nation-state altogether.  Gaining control of a nation’s educational collective was the obvious answer.

For centuries it was known that ‘as the twig is bent, so grows the tree’.  But until education was collectivized, there were too many twigs that had to be individually bent.  By the 20th century that problem had become easier as each nation-state collectivized its education under more and more comprehensive central authority.  Realizing that nations could be made to fall from the inside gave impetus to several virulent ideologies seeking to dominate beyond established Westphalian borders.  The solution was most prominently given voice (ca 1920) by the Russian Bolshevik V. Lenin who inspired nascent communist movements in other lands with the assertion (in one of its several forms), ‘Give me just one generation of youth, and I'll transform the whole world.’

After the ravages of WW2, in which its totalitarian combatants were summarily defeated or fought to a standstill, Lenin’s dictum became the guiding light for socialism which was by no means defeated in that global war.  Instead, socialism and its communist big brother became the target forms of governance in post-war anti-colonial struggles.  America’s post-war hiatus on the road to socialism ended with the civil rights and anti-war riots that formed the attention-grabbing backdrop to the quiet launch of President Johnson’s Great Society – arguably the most long-lived and successful ideology-based initiative, sustained by politicians of all stripes, that to this day is growing unabated.  As of 2018, America’s socialists have educated almost three generations of youth in our public schools that reach from kindergarten through university grad schools.

As part and parcel of the new world of education, the product(s) it delivers in the US have in large part become useless, nay destructive, to serve the two objectives of survival and QoL enhancement.  And the large part consists of almost entirely of the non-STEM fields which have exploded into a potpourri of political pabulum.  Graduates from those parts of campuses emerge with no skills for which any individual is willing to voluntarily pay out of their own pockets.  These people with ‘unproductive skills’, assuming they wish to work, are hired only by governments and private corporations under threat of government gun to implement and comply with reams of regulations, the only visible purpose of which is to create employment opportunities for the politically compliant.  In America, the handiwork of its ongoing fundamental transformation is best studied in the fate and fortunes of states like California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, … .

The belated effort by higher education to segregate and/or oust the unproductive departments is laudable.  It is finally responding to the reality of the job markets, recognizing which skill sets can contribute to making our lives better, and which are those that have come to act as a drag on who we are, how we wish to live, and where we wish to go.  But the final chapter (given there is one) is yet to be written about what new programs and stratagems are needed to keep the unproductive from achieving their carefully inculcated goals.

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25 responses to “Those Who Can, Can’t, or Won’t”

  1. Scenes Avatar
    Scenes

    Just a quick aside. My guess is that the division has already been happening. One that springs to mind is Anthropology departments between Physical Anthropology and Crazy People (ie. ‘Cultural’).
    I admit that it kills me to see the ongoing death of Classics as a discipline, but there is a death by neglect of what used to be a goodly part of a college education. To be fair, Latin (or heaven forbid, ancient Greek) is a heckuva lot harder thing to learn than Latina Studies.
    Oh, yeah…1st.

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  2. George Rebane Avatar

    Scenes 134pm – yes the intra-university divisions are happening quietly. But Hayward’s argument is that it is now kicking into high gear as such divisions are beginning to be seen as ‘legitimate’ restructuring of higher education.
    Purposely, I didn’t add my thoughts on what role such post-division higher education will serve in transmitting our western culture to the next generation. Since that task has already been abandoned and/or malformed in K-12, is there anything left of America’s normative culture to transmit? In short, the question again raises itself – why are we still a single country, what sinews remains which hold us together? I would like to hear from readers on this.

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  3. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    GR@2:47
    “is there anything left of America’s normative culture to transmit? ”
    Off the cuff, I’d say no. I rather liked the idea put forth in that youtube video I put up a sandbox or two ago. The basic idea was that the foundation myths of the West have moved from Romulus&Remus, 1066, Betsy Ross, The Pilgrims, etc. to some combination of WWII/Hitler/Holocaust and slavery in the US. Heroism (even if puffed up a bit) has been replaced by failure and death. This is a big deal.
    OTOH, look at the restoration of Russian nationalism and the Orthodox Church in just a few years. Perhaps tradition can outlast a couple of generations of willful destruction.
    Obviously, in the case of population replacement, all bets are off. East Prussia is dead and I wouldn’t bet money on Germany proper at this point.

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  4. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    Higher education, as well as all enterprises subsidised by the govt has seen its costs rocket upwards in amounts far exceeding inflation. With so much money to spend, all sorts of ridiculous add-ons and foolish ‘majors’ were and are added as seen necessary to the cause of left wing agitprop and ‘social justice’. Last year an Oregon college announced the addition of a major course of studies to be added entitled “Social Justice!”. The pathetic spokes-babe admitted the college actually had no idea how to define social justice. Brings to mind the admonition about using words you don’t know the meaning of.
    I will await the outcome of this so-called culling of useless courses with my lungs in full operational mode. (no bated breath)

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  5. Russ Avatar
    Russ

    The Education Apocalypse: How It Happened and How to Survive It
    Glenn Reynolds
    For decades, the U.S. invested ever-growing fortunes into its antiquated K-12 education system in exchange for steadily worse outcomes. At the same time, Americans spent more than they could afford on higher education, driven by the kind of cheap credit that fueled the housing crisis. The graduates of these systems were left unprepared for a global economy, unable to find jobs, and on the hook for student loans they could never repay. Economist Herb Stein famously said that something that can’t go on forever, won’t. In the case of American education, it couldn’t—and it didn’t.
    In The Education Apocalypse, Glenn Harlan Reynolds explains how American education as we knew it collapsed – and how we can all benefit from unprecedented power and freedom in the aftermath. From the advent of online education to the rebirth of forgotten alternatives like apprenticeships, Reynolds shows students, parents, and educators how—beyond merely surviving the fallout—they can rethink and rebuild American education from the ground up.

    Recommended

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  6. Scenes Avatar
    Scenes

    re: Student loans.
    My expectation is that one of the side effects we’ll see with increasing social volatility will be a forgiveness of student debt. Some Green Libertarian or the other will buy a huge bloc of votes by promising this, and it wouldn’t surprise me to see them win an electoral cycle or two.
    It’ll be just another salvo in the cold civil war, and since the two sides are reasonably evenly matched (as usual) there’s no reason for it to be over soon. It’s peculiar to have one team dominated by people who have rejected their own traditional culture, but then sometimes there’s no explaining religious belief systems.

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  7. Teine Rebane Estey Avatar

    I don’t think the twigs of this generation could have been bent more in tandem if they tried.
    On 60 minutes last night, extreme impatience in our youth was declared a virtue. The lead segment praised the quick results ‘The Florida high schoolers’ achieved in the states’ detachment from the NRA and changing gun laws. The news reporter asked the young leaders how they were able to achieve results that far exceeded what the Sandy Hook parents have yet to accomplish. The answer was that these kids had an amazing ability to quickly organize, quickly connect, and quickly make decisions. The segment showed children holding nothing more than their smart phones (no bulletin boards, no check lists, no structure, no planning) and claimed the swift, non-partisan results were pulled-off because the kids have this amazing new standard of expecting immediate results. Without critical thinking skills, this generation can be spoon fed information and can be relied upon to react instantly.
    In my daily interaction with this age group I see no interest in the data that backs up the information they believe in. Apparently unlimited access to data, doesn’t increase their demand for precision of INFORMATION used to solve problems. So sure are they that they’ve been educated and properly informed, they self confidently click their way out of a free future.
    If is really exists, I give an A+ to any entity that actually set out to achieve this spectacular result so soon. My faith in the organizational skills of the REgressive socialist education system isn’t even that great.

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  8. Scenes Avatar
    Scenes

    re: TRE@8:29AM
    I’d say that the ability of a mass of people to self-organize is nothing new. You might not like the results, though.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-iiPI6ps8o

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  9. George Rebane Avatar

    There is no evidence that the kids self-organized, and overwhelming evidence that they were professionally organized. But that is neither what they are being told, nor what they now fervently believe.

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  10. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    I’m referring to the logic of a mob, not the cause for it’s formation. Of course, any group with people like Linda Sarsour at it’s head are up to no good.
    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” – some English guy.

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  11. George Boardman Avatar

    I saw a news story the other night about young Russians who aren’t enthusiastic about six more years of Putin. Aside from being young, they were articulate and organized a big demonstration.
    Must be astroturfing.

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  12. George Rebane Avatar

    GeorgeB 1146am – What evidence do you have of their ‘astroturfing’? (or was that just a bit retributive snark?)

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  13. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    re: George Boredman@11:46AM
    I can’t say that I’m surprised that the vote for Putin isn’t 100%. OTOH, from any insights I have into Russian domestic politics he is a solid favorite of the majority.
    Of course it’s a form of astroturfing. Twenty year olds typically aren’t capable of any large scale planning and are dumb as posts to boot. It’s excusable and is the nature of the beast, privilege of youth and all that.
    The flat amazing thing is that you can demonstrate against the current head of state and not end up in a labor camp. The fact that they’ve accomplished that feat in just a few decades is one of the miracles of the modern world.
    In any case, and I apologize GeorgeR for getting away from your topic, I succumb to trolls too readily….
    It’s worth thinking about how post secondary education really should be constructed. There’s a ton of thinking that’s been done on that, but most of it seems to involve merely churning more money into a broken system.
    If I had my way (and there’s nothing original here), I’d think seriously about producing a set of professional certifications that had more oomph than merely getting a bachelor’s degree. The state bar in California always made a lot of sense to me as you can become a lawyer by passing a non-trivial test with no law school. I don’t see a reason why that couldn’t be applied to a number of disciplines and would allow people to choose their own path to learning. It does beg the question of what a cert in ‘Latina Studies’ would consist of.

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  14. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    GeorgeR: “What evidence do you have of their ‘astroturfing’?”
    He was just being snarky, and outside of the sandbox du jour by golly, but it’s a fair guess.
    There’s a number of secondary parties, all capable of printing flyers and working the internet, maybe that Navalny (sp?) guy is involved.
    The funny thing to me about the various Childrens’ Crusades is the notion of using kids as a proxy due to their purity. I think that the underlying notion is that a cause is good and just if a child is behind it.

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  15. George Rebane Avatar

    scenes 1218pm – Yes, the ‘kids crusade’ is off topic for this commentary (even the snarky comments) 😉

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  16. Scenes Avatar
    Scenes

    re: Russ@9:20PM
    I just read “The Education Apocalypse” as mentioned.
    It’s not a bad longish essay on the educational system although, as usual, any rigorous set of solutions is rather light on the ground.
    The main take-away I get from something like that is thinking (well, more thinking) on how best to avoid the financial collapse you’ll see at the state level. ‘Collapse’ is too strong a word, it’ll be more slow motion than that.
    The student loan debt will probably be kept afloat for some time due to the fedgov ability to print money, but the never-ending need for cash for schools combined with the pension/salary liability is (obviously) an ugly thing. Teachers and other education professionals possess an incredibly strong ability to marshal the troops, Wisconsin presenting an object lesson, and I simply can’t see any state government standing up to them in a significant way…at least until the whole kaboodle augers in.
    The short version is that I don’t see any real solutions taking hold, either financial or in terms of the actual schooling, but I’d sure like to stay out of the way.

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  17. Scenes Avatar
    Scenes

    Good heavens.
    “Oxford University is set to feminise its curriculum by requesting that 40 per cent of recommended authors on philosophy reading lists are women.”
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2018/03/14/oxford-university-set-feminise-curriculum-requesting-inclusion/

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  18. Bill Tozer Avatar

    University of WI to drop 13 majors (English, History, Spanish, Poli-Sci, Philosophy, etc) and replace them with STEM majors. Got to get those student loans paid back quicker or just paid back, I reckon. Those that can……
    https://www.collegemedianetwork.com/university-of-wisconsin-proposes-plan-to-drop-13-majors/ .

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  19. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    Article of the day.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5247129/CUNY-professor-claims-meritocracy-tool-whiteness.html
    From the first sentence of her scholarly work:
    “Most Black and Latinx students in U.S. cities attend schools hyper-segregated by race and socioeconomic class”
    ‘Latinx’? That’s a new one to me. I guess that ‘Latino’ is too male.

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  20. George Rebane Avatar

    Scenes 400pm – Good pick-up. This builds on the continuing assault on educating an intelligent electorate that has been fostered by the Left since the Great Society. We covered some of the ancillary developments on this line of dispensing dumbth here –
    http://rebaneruminations.typepad.com/rebanes_ruminations/2018/01/scattershots-4jan18.html

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  21. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Here is a link it took me three seconds to find for GeorgeB.
    http://keywiki.org/Barbara_Lee

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  22. Bill Tozer Avatar

    Latinx is soooo 2016, 2017. Try typing it the first time with autocorrect turned on. Wasn’t easy I tell ya. I like using the x, makes me feel hip with the jive.

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  23. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    I suggest you all do what I just did and leave a message of support for the NRA fundraiser. Check their FB page for contact info.

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