Winter in America: Democracy Gone Rogue

by: Henry A. Giroux, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Winter in America: Democracy Gone Rogue
(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: hugovk, ishmagination)

The absolute ... spells doom to everyone when it is introduced into the political realm.

- Hannah Arendt [1] 

Democracy in the United States is experiencing both a crisis of meaning and a legitimation crisis. As the promise of an aspiring democracy is sacrificed more and more to corporate and military interests, democratic spheres have largely been commercialized and democratic practices have been reduced to market relations, stripped of their worth and subject to the narrow logics of commodification and profit making. Empowerment has little to do with providing people with the knowledge, skills, and power to shape the forces and institutions that bear down on their lives and is now largely defined as under the rubric of being a savvy consumer. When not equated with the free market capitalism, democracy is reduced to the empty rituals of elections largely shaped by corporate money and indifferent to relations of power that make a mockery out of equality, democratic participation and collective deliberation.

The undoing of democracy as a substantive ideal is most visible in the illegal legalities perpetuated by the Bush-Cheney regime and reproduced under the presidency of Barack Obama that extend from the use of military commissions, the policy of indefinite detention, suppressing evidence of torture, maintaining secret and illegal prisons in Afghanistan to the refusal to prosecute former high-level government officials who sanctioned acts of torture and other violations of human rights. As part of the crisis of legitimation, democracy's undoing can be seen in the anti-democratic nature of governance that has increasingly shaped domestic and foreign policy in the United States, policies that have been well documented by a number of writers extending from Noam Chomsky to Chris Hedges. What is often missed is how such anti-democratic forces work at home in ways that are less visible and when they are visible seem to become easily normalized, removed from any criticism as they settle into that ideological fog called common sense.

If the first rule of politics is to make power invisible, the second rule is to devalue critical thought by relieving people of the necessity to think critically and hold power accountable. And always in the name of common sense. Under the rubric of common sense, democracy is now used to invoke rationalizations for invading other countries, bailing out the rich and sanctioning the emergence of a national security state that increasingly criminalizes the social relations and behaviors that characterize those most excluded from what might be called the consumer- and celebrity-laden dreamworlds of a market-driven society. As democracy is removed from relations of equality, justice and freedom, it undergoes a legitimation crisis as it is transformed from a mode of politics that subverts authoritarian tendencies to one that reproduces them. Used to gift wrap the interests and values of an authoritarian culture, the rhetoric of democracy is now invoked to legitimate its opposite, a discourse of security and a culture of fear enlisted by pundits and other anti-public intellectuals as all-embracing registers for mobilizing a rampant nationalism, hatred of immigrants and a bunker politics organized around an "us" versus "them" mentality. When tied to the discourse of democracy, such practices seem beyond criticism, part of a center-right mentality that views such policies as natural and God-given - beyond ethical and political reproach.

As the country undermines its own democratic values, violence and anti-democratic practices become institutionalized throughout American culture, their aftershocks barely noticed, testifying to how normalized they have become. For instance, one major report indicated recently that more "than 60 percent of children were exposed to violence within the past year ... [with] nearly half of adolescents surveyed ... assaulted at least once in the previous year [and] one-quarter had witnessed an act of violence."[2] In one week, the media reported on a 12-year-old student who was arrested for doodling on her desk at school. Her teacher thought it was a criminal act and called the New York City police who promptly handcuffed her and took her to the local police station.[3] In Montgomery, Maryland, a 13-year-old student at Roberto Clement Middle Schools was taken out of class by security officers after she refused to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.[4]  The mainstream media provide glimpses of such assaults, but rarely are they analyzed within a broader political and social context that highlights the political and economic conditions that make them possible. For instance, such assaults say nothing about the increasing militarization of public schools, the right-wing attempts to defund them so they can be privatized, the rampant inequality that approximates a form of class warfare, or the racism often at the heart of such practices.[5] 

Such actions are now normalized within the discourse of a bunker politics fueled by both the increasing militarization of all levels of society and legitimated further through a harsh and cruel notion of economic Darwinism. There are no shades of gray in this militarized discourse, no room for uncertainty, thoughtfulness or dialogue, since this view of engagement is modeled on notions of war, battle, winning at all costs and eliminating the enemy. Complex understanding is banished under the call for thoughtless, one-size-fits-all zero-tolerance policies in schools, intelligence is now quantified using formulas that may be useful for measuring the heights of trees but little else, and teachers are deskilled through the widespread adoption of both a governing-through-crime pedagogy and an equally debilitating pedagogy of high-stakes testing. Resentment builds as social services either collapse or are stretched to the limit at a time when over 17 million people are unemployed and over "91.6 million people - more than 30 percent of the entire population - fell below 200 percent of the federal poverty line."[6]  Emerging out of this void and shaping a more militaristic anti-politics are the anti-public intellectuals and their corporate sponsors, eager to fill the air with populist anger by supporting right-wing groups, Sarah Palin types, Glenn Beck clones and self-styled patriots that bear an eerie resemblance to the beliefs and violent politics of the late Timothy McVeigh, who bombed a federal building in Oklahoma in 1995.[7]

This emerging conglomerate and diverse group of anti-public intellectuals, political pundits, populist agitators expresses a deep-seated hatred for government (often labeled as either socialist or fascist), progressive politics, and the notion that everyone should have access to a quality education, decent health care, employment and other public services. Under such circumstances, it is not surprising that Sarah Palin in addressing the recent National Tea Party Convention stated "I will live, I will die for the people of America, whatever I can do to help." Surely, these words leave little ambiguity for members of the John Birch Society, right-wing militia groups, Oath Keepers white supremacists, and other armed anti-government groups that appear to be growing in numbers and influence under the Obama presidency. But while these lines received much attention from the dominant media, the more telling comment took place when Palin offered the Tea Party audience lines she lifted from one of the more fascistic films released by Hollywood in the last decade, "Fight Club." Inhabiting the character of a self-styled, pathologically violent maverick, Tyler Durden (played by Brad Pitt), whose misogyny is matched by his willingness to engage in acts of militia-inspired terrorism, Palin unabashedly mimics one of Tyler's now famous wisecracks in attacking Obama's clever rhetoric with the line, "How's that hopey, changey stuff working out for ya?"[8]  Going rogue in this context suggests more than a compensatory quip for any kind of sustained analysis; instead it offers a seductive populist reference to lawless violence.

This somewhat confused but reckless appropriation of the discourse of glamorized violence suggests the not-so-subtle ways in which violence has become the framing mechanism for engaging in almost any mode of politics. Under such circumstances, politics shares an ignoble connection to a kind of soft terrorism, a kind of symbolic violence blatantly tied to the pathologies of corporate corruption, state-sanctioned brutality and authoritarian modes of engagement.

As violence and politics merge, the militarization, disciplining and oppressive regulation of American society continue, often legitimated by a popular culture in which the spectacles of celebrity idiocy and violence become the only stimuli left to shock people out of their boredom or offer them an outlet for their anger. But they continue in ways that seem incidental rather than connected, diffused of its real meaning and abstracted from the politics that informs it - hence, it slips into a kind of invisibility, wrapped in the logic of common sense. Under its common-sense rubric, homelessness and poverty are now criminalized, schools are dominated by zero-tolerance policies that turn public schools into a low-intensity war zone, school lockdowns are the new fire drills, the welfare state morphs into the warfare state, and university research is increasingly funded by the military and designed for military and surveillance purposes. In one of the more frightening examples of the militarization of American society, David Price has brilliantly documented how government intelligence agencies are now placing "unidentified students with undisclosed links to intelligence agencies into university classrooms ... and has gone further ... than any previous intelligence initiative since World War Two. Yet, the program spreads with little public notice, media coverage or coordinated multicampus resistance."[9] Is it any wonder that when intellectuals in the social sciences and medical fields assist in the illegal torture of "enemy combatants" or embed themselves in military-sponsored counter-insurgency campaigns, such practices rarely get the critical attention they deserve. All too often, the blathering disciples of common sense tell us that politics is rooted in natural laws, unhampered by critical thought. Such appeals to common sense suggest that thinking is at odds with politics, and its hidden order of politics is hateful of those public spaces where speaking and acting human beings actually engage in critical dialogue, exercise discriminating judgments, and address important social problems. Common sense is in effect an anti-politics because it removes questions of agency, governance and critical thought from politics itself. As part of the logic of common sense, scapegoating rhetoric replaces the civic imagination, and a brutalizing, calculating culture of fear, demonization and criminalization replaces judgment, emptying politics of all substantive meaning. In this discourse, there are no social problems, only individual failings. Poverty, inadequate health care, soaring public debt, the bailout of corrupt financial institutions, the prison binge, the destruction of public and higher education cannot be addressed by the logic of common sense, because such issues point to broad, complex considerations that demand a certain amount of understanding, literacy and a sense of political and moral responsibility - all enemies of the anti-public intellectuals who wrap themselves in the populist appeal to a know-nothing common sense. Common sense makes human beings superfluous, depoliticizes politics and transforms human beings into the living dead, unable to recognize "that politics requires judgment, artful diplomacy, and judicious discrimination."[10] Common sense occupies the antithesis of Hannah Arendt's insistence that debate constitutes the very essence of political life."[11] This is the central message of Fox News, Glenn Beck and other right fundamentalists who live in circles of certainty and reject any real attempt at debate, persuasion and deliberation as the essence of politics. Their populist appeal to common sense to justify their various views of the world rejects enlarged ways of thinking, thoughtfulness and the exercise of critical judgment. Such a discourse creates a zombie politics in which deliberation is blocked and the ethos of democracy is stripped of any meaning.

A zombie politics enmeshed in the production of organized violence, surveillance, market-driven corruption and control, buttressed by an appeal to common sense, blocks the path to open inquiry. War not only becomes normalized under such circumstances, it becomes a defining force in shaping all aspects of society, including its use of science and technology. Put differently, as warlike values become more prevalent in American society, science and technology are increasingly being harnessed in the interest of militarized and commercialized values and applications. For example, the defense industries are developing drone aircraft that can be used to deliver high-tech violence not only abroad but also at home. Unmanned drones fitted with surveillance cameras will soon be used to monitor demonstrations. As the technology becomes more advanced, the drones will be mounted with taser guns, rubber bullets and other non-lethal weaponry in order to contain allegedly unruly individuals and crowds.[12] High-tech weapons have already been used on American protests and as the state relies more and more on military values, money and influence to shape its most basic institutions, the use of organized violence against civilians will become more commonplace. For instance, at the 2009 G20 summit of world leaders, democracy took a hit as the Pittsburgh police used sonic canons against protesters.[13] These high-tech weapons were used previously by the US military against Somali pirates and Iraqi insurgents and create sounds loud enough to damage eardrums and potentially produce fatal aneurysms. In public schools, surveillance has become so widespread that one school in Rosemont, Pennsylvania, issued over 1,800 laptops to high school students and then used the Webcams fitted on the computers to spy on students. The mainstream media hardly blinked and the public yawned.

Common sense may be good or bad in terms of its value, but in all cases it is unreflective sense and as such shortcuts the types of critical inquiry fundamental to an engaged public and an aspiring society. Surely, common sense is of little help in explaining the existence of brain research that is now being used to understand and influence how people respond to diverse sales and political pitches. Nor does it explain why there is not a huge public outcry over the emergence of a field such as neuromarketing, designed by politicians and corporations, who are "using MRIs, EEGs, and other brain-scan and medical technology to craft irresistible media messages designed to shift buying habits, political beliefs and voting patterns."[14]  Nor does it explain the politics or the lack of public resistance to food industries using the new media to market junk food to children. Zombie politics loves to depoliticize any vestige of individual agency and will. How else to explain a story by New York Times writer Nicholas D. Kristof, who incredulously legitimates the notion that political judgments are primarily the result of how our brains are hard-wired. This is the ultimate expression of anti-politics, in which matters of agency are now removed from any sense of responsibility, relegated to the brave new world of genetic determinism.

Under such circumstances, memory is lost, history is erased, knowledge becomes militarized and education becomes more of a tool of domination rather than empowerment. One result is not merely a collective ignorance over the meaning, nature and possibilities of politics, but a disdain for democracy itself that provides the condition for a lethal combination of political apathy and cynicism on the one hand and a populist anger and an ethical hardening of the culture on the other. Symbolic and real violence are now the defining features of American society. Instead of appealing to the principles of social justice, moral responsibility and civic courage, the anti-public intellectuals and the market-driven institutions that support them laud common sense. What they don't mention is that underlying such appeals is a hatred not merely for government, but for democracy itself. The rage will continue and the flirtations with violence will mount. Going rogue is now a metaphor for the death of democratic values and support for modes of symbolic and potentially real violence in which all vestiges of thought, self-reflection and dialogue are destroyed. Hopefully, the voices of reason and justice will recognize how serious this threat to democracy really is and when they do, they will surely understand what Gil Scott-Heron meant when he talked about winter in America.

Notes:

[1]  Hannah Arendt, "On Revolution" (New York: Viking, 1963), p. 79.

[2] Editorial, "Violence in the Lives of Children and Youth," The Child Indicator, 10: 1 (Winter 2010), p. 1.

[3]  Jenna Johnson, "Pledge of Allegiance dispute results in Md. teacher having to apologize," The Washington Post, (February 24, 2010), p. B01.

[4]  Liliana Segura, "Arrested for Doodling on a Desk? "Zero Tolerance" at Schools Is Going Way Too Far," AlterNet, (February 27, 2010).

[5]  I have taken this issue up in great detail in Henry A. Giroux, "Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability?" (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).

[6]  Bob Herbert, "They Still Don't Get It," New York Times (January 23, 2010), p. A21.

[7]  Frank Rich, "The Axis of the Obsessed and the Deranged," The New York Times, (February, 28, 2010), p. WK10.

[8]  Cited in Kathleen Hennessy, "Sarah Palin to Tea Party Convention: 'This is about the people.'" Los Angeles Times (February 7, 2010).

[9]  David Price, "How the CIA is Welcoming Itself Back Onto American University Campuses," CounterPunch 17:2 (January 16-21, 2010), p. 1.

[10]  Richard J. Bernstein, "The Abuse of Evil: The Corruption of Politics and Religion Since 9/11," (Polity Press, 2005) pp. 1-124.

[11] Hannah Arendt, Between Past and Future (New York, Penguin Books, 1977), p. 72.

[12]  Paul Joseph Watson, "Surveillance Drones to Zap Protesters Into Submission," Prison Planet (February 12, 2010). For an excellent source on how the robotic revolution is being used to transform the nature of war, see P.W. Singer, Wired for War: The Robotic Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century (New York: Penguin Press, 2009).

[13] News Blog, "G20 Protesters Blasted by Sonic Cannon," The Guardian (September 25, 2009).

[14] (See, for example, Rinaldo Brutoco and Madeleine Austin, "'Spellcasters': The Hunt for the 'Buy Button' in Your Brain", TruthOut, (January 10, 2010).

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Henry A. Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department. He has taught at Boston University, Miami University of Ohio, and Penn State University. His most recent books include: Youth in a Suspect Society (Palgrave, 2009); Politics After Hope: Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy (Paradigm, 2010); Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror (Paradigm, 2010); and he is working on two new books titled Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism and Education and the Crisis of Public Values, both of which will be published in 2011 by Peter Lang Publishers. Giroux is also a member of Truthout's Board of Directors. His website is www.henryagiroux.com.

 

 


Comments

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OR US citizens, minutemen

OR US citizens, minutemen and patriots could REFRAME the rogue as what It IS: Full Frontal Fascist TREASON against We the People and Our CONSTITUTION! AND Time To SPRING!!



The points in this article

The points in this article are bang on, but must it be written in such grandiose language? It's really hard work to read it, and you practically need a PhD in english to do so. It would be wonderful if the points Mr. Giroux makes could be spread among the general public, but 99% of the general public could get little or nothing out of this article. We all have a challenge here - how to make this important message accessible to all?



Anyone who contemplates the

Anyone who contemplates the ominous warnings as well as the hope that reason will prevail should have a look at Benjamin Creme's May 26, 2009 Nagoya lecture in which he describes our "wilderness" experience and the reasons why it has descended on humanity, especially on America. We are, he says, at the crisis between two ages, between two ways of thinking and acting. One way, the competitive and individualistic way of the past, no longer produces benefits for humanity. The newer way, the way of cooperation and interdependence, is the only way through which humanity will survive. The choice of which way to act will ultimately determine whether we will survive on this planet. It is that serious. If interested in this thought provoking discussion, please see:
http://www.share-international.org/av/v_lectures_2009.htm
Scroll down to the May 26 Nagoya lecture.



A very interesting and

A very interesting and cogent article, Mr. Giroux. But who, one might wonder, brought us to this abysmal point?
Could it be a decades long conspiracy by right wing Randites and corporate hegemonists? Could it be that Chomsky, Zinn and Nader were right after all?
Could that the media concatenation we all watched happening, resulted in a wholly-owned propaganda machine even Goebbels could not have imagined?
Identifying the problem, as you have done, is a good first step, but it is only a first step.
What do you propose we (and you) do about it?
After all, the so-called intelligentsia in this country couldn't wait to replace the corporate Republican hack, GWB, with their very own corporate Democratic hack.
So, now that they are waking up from their hopey-changey fever dream, what do you propose we do before the peasants get their torches and pitchforks and head for the castle gate?



I believe our people fear

I believe our people fear the government, and the government fears our military. They have given it free rein for so long now. Everyone feels that if they just ignore everything, it will go away. They ignore the homeless, the jobless, the suffering, and the hungry, afraid to take a stand. They forget that government was not meant to serve corporate or military whims. It was meant to protect the welfare, rights, and freedoms of ALL it's citizens. They are oblivious to the needs of others, of the call to help by creating jobs instead of country clubs, hospitals instead of castles, and safe streets instead of highly secured private perimeters. The world revolves around them, their family, and their CEO paychecks...until Karma comes knocking...and it's THEIR turn. By then the cancer has metastasized and it is too late for the body.



What democracy? There hasn't

What democracy? There hasn't been any for nine years -
eight under Bush and one under Obama, who failed to
recognize the destruction of democracy by the Supreme Court and Bush, thus accepting it. Pete Edler, Stockholm



Dear Sirs, It is

Dear Sirs,
It is interesting to note that the Boston Massacre predates the Boston Tea Party.
That was a tragedy in which a mob so provoked the redcoats that they fired and killed Crispus Attucks.
Paul Revere was all for hangings.
John Adams defended the redcoats.
If the redcoats had been at the tea party, it would have been the same thing over again.
Incidentally, Crispus Attucks was a runaway slave. He was also our first martyr.
I have yet to hear any tea partier mention his name.
Why?
Clifford Spencer



This article is not written

This article is not written in grandiose language. It is merely written in a style that does not talk down or condescend to its readers. This in itself is remarkable. The appalling situation the article describes is allowed to continue to get worse because the US media belongs to very powerful corporations whose interests are best served by the continued rise of American Fascism. By the time the general public realise what has been perpetrated on them, it may well be too late for them to do anything about it.
Who controls the military? Who controls the police? Ultimately, that's what it will come down to.



purely and simply it is

purely and simply it is this: overt takeover by
corporate power of all functions of society.
In the 1930s the people pushed back, in the streets,
today, the people are on the couch munching
mind numbing chips and watching mind numbing
media on tv, on the cell phone, and radiated through the walls from who knows where.



Talk about becoming a numbed

Talk about becoming a numbed zombie -- this piece will do the trick. I have many many complaints about every year in this country since LBJ escalated the number of troops in Vietnam, but this Cassandra's warning just doesn't ring entirely true. Maybe it's Giroux's long Canadian winter.
Tonight I am going to a community planning meeting in which local citizens wrested control away from the developers and then I am going to another public gathering where a friend of mine, representing the League of Women Voters, will speak against a ballot proposal for "strong mayor" in the very sold-out City of San Diego, aka "Enron by the Sea."



To continue on the idea that

To continue on the idea that this article is not written in grandiose language, it must be taken in consideration that Henry Giroux, must defeat all the efforts the mainstream media is deploying to hide and downplay the importance of what is happening, and we must admit it not easy to do, and that Henry Giroux succeded with mastery and without grandiose language.

It's just that it's a risky undertaking and it's a difficult one to bring to a logic conclusion without losing itself in the details.

I think Henry Giroux succeeds completely and that the language used is the right one to bring us from point A to point B, while keeping focus and without losing interest .

Thank you, Henry Giroux, for this interesting article.



Henry, one can only wonder

Henry, one can only wonder whether the only appropriate action remaining for those of us opposing the kind of demonic society you elucidate so brilliantly and clearly is VIOLENCE? I mean, if, as you've observed: "Unmanned drones fitted with surveillance cameras will soon be used to monitor demonstrations," then civil disobedience will soon become, or has already become, an anachronistic joke. We are controlled by those who understand only this language of violence, manipulation and punishment and they ARE winning, not the progressives. Obama is the latest puppet-master in a history of emotionally and psychically constipated automatons occupying the Oval Office. What choices are remaining for us who cannot WAIT for change? As much as your intellect changes the terrain of human subjectivity, for a few, will it in fact be enough? Is intellectual discourse the way we must travel? We may have to fight back, I am afraid. The French Revolution could not have happened without those rivers of blood. Those idiot robots in Washington need to be removed from office. Literally.



I agree with all commenters

I agree with all commenters that this piece makes many interesting and important points. I also agree with the point made by buzzersdad - that the language is so complex that it renders Mr. Giroux's ideas inaccessible to most readers.

I myself have a tendency to Faulknerize (go on for pages in clause after clause). When you're good with words, it's a strong temptation.

The author could take a look at his writing in light of the Gunner Fog Index or any other readability index. I suspect he will discover his writing style is needlessly complex. These ideas would be even more powerful, stated much more simply and plainly in shorter sentences.

Here are a couple of links on how to analyze a piece of writing using the Fog Index. The first is the more straightforward:

http://www.thelearningweb.net/fogindex.html

http://www.klariti.com/business-writing/Fog-Index-Readability-Formulas.shtml



What the heck does "an

What the heck does "an ethical hardening of culture" actually mean? In my opinion this essay's writer tends to the grandiloquent bent. The author makes many legitimate points: guns, murder, and war do seem to be on the upswing in the USA. Yea, prisons, gun-toting "security" dudes and dudesses, x-ray machines, all the paranoid Philip K. Dick shit is kicking in over there, but come on, "zombie politics". Way stratosphere abstraction level. Write some dirty nuts and bolts!



The message here is the same

The message here is the same as usual, except in the corporate media. But, this particular version isn't going to reach most people, because Giroux simply isn't talking to most people. A writer doesn't simply write. S/he writes to an audience. Well Truthout has other versions of this message, for other types of reader, I guess.

The problem, as usual, is that everybody preaches to the choir. That's why the elite can afford to ignore organizations such as Truthout.



Too bad only us elitists

Too bad only us elitists will ever see this writing. Too bad that the people who need to know will continue to know nothing and be led down this road. -- Nice article, well thought=out and presented.



Perhaps it's your role to

Perhaps it's your role to translate Giroux's thinking into something more palatable to the masses. I don't think he'd mind an adaptation...



A trenchant commentary on

A trenchant commentary on our times.



I think students protesting

I think students protesting tuition hikes will expand to all the other areas we should be rightly demonstrating against. I have no idea how long it will take for a full blown revolution, but the fuse has been ignited.



Translation: paragraph #1

Translation: paragraph #1 Democracy is being screwed with. paragraph #2 Since Bush, our rights and democracy has been screwed with badly. paragraph #3 Who are the Brain Police? The invisible power elite manipulates us. paragraph #4 Americans are allowing democracy to be destroyed while living in a police state. (Excellant paragraph) paragraph #5 Right wingnuts advocating violence and supporting the military facist state. paragraph 6 Hope and change co-opted by lawlessness and violenc? paragraph 7 (needs no translation) paragraph 8 More about the police state and how the individual has been charged with their own responsibility for everthing. paragraph 9 Technology will always be used to control the masses and we are screwed. paragraph #10 discourse on science and mind control. last paragraph Democracy is headed for the junk heap.

My sincere apologies to Mr. Geroux,who has written an amazing piece, but for the general public, I thought I might break it down to soundbites we could use on bumperstickers.



America has become an

America has become an dangerous empire, intent on controlling the world for its own benefit through military violence. Once a nation or a people morph into empire, this entity takes on a distinct persona and proceeds to its inevitable self destruction as have all empires throughout recorded history. There is no way to stop for reflection; to "go back" to simpler times; to change the direction or increasingly self destructive bent of the entity. Once the elites of this quite insane neocon venture decided to carry out the 9/11 "attacks" to gin up support for their warmongering defense contractor allies, and to create a new enemy to replace "communism," the die was cast and there was no turning back. As we spiral downwards towards the inevitable, one must consider what options can be exercised in order to avoid the fate of the average citizens of the many historical empires that disintegrated in violence and chaos. Not many Germans opted to emigrate, despite their instinctive sense of impending doom. They should have listened more closely to those instincts.



It is especially telling

It is especially telling that many who have commented feel that the Mr. Giroux (yes, that's the correct spelling) needs to simplify his language if he is to reach the average American with his message. Every teacher of English is painfully aware that the language comprehension skill of most students has been eroding at an alarming rate these past hundred years, and the "teach-to-the-test" approach now universally mandated in our public schools only augments this decline. Yes, we need to hear a simplified version perhaps, but complex ideas require complex descriptions that often defy simplification; sound bites just won't do.



I will tell you what "an

I will tell you what "an ethical hardening of the culture means" by use of a personal example, an experience I had this week during a rare visit by my brother, a protestant minister.

Upon hearing that I had endured a prescription mistake which cost me my job and forced me to discontinue my studies as the healing process is long, in spite of the fact that I had never asked him for any assistance and am also not on public assistance, his response to me was "my taxes pay for you." He went on to talk about me as having a lack of personal responsibility and values.

The conversation was full of misinformation from Fox news, which I tried to peacefully correct- giving sources, using logic, appealing to his self interest (lack of food(stamps) might lead to more violence against personal property, lack of community based health care to diseases spread throughout the population, affecting everyone, ect.). He was concerned that social programs were funded by the middle class, I spoke about how corporations and the super wealthy had not been paying their fare share and giving something back. He felt that whatever one gives back should be totally at their discretion. In short, it was a clash of ideologies, but with one side believing the other to be not only morally inferior, but better of disposed of. "The underclass", his word, was unchristian, unamerican, agitating for social services simply out of a lack of personal responsibility.

Now, my brother would be capable of reading and understanding this piece. He would, however, while feeling a slight momentary inner questioning of position, immediately negate it all with his common sense backed up by the power of the corporatist meme.

I do not see Henry's writing as grandiose. Not everything we read, see or hear must be simplified. The process of education requires reading above one's head at times. There are many ways to be effective. Henry's audience is reading him. And if members of his audience would like to diseminate these ideas in a form more easily read by many, they are free to do so.



One of the challenges often

One of the challenges often overlooked is that most Americans do not live most of their lives in a 'democracy.' We grow up in Authoritarian families and attend Authoritarian schools. Our workplace is not a Democracy, our religious institutions are not Democracies, sports teams are not Democracies, etc.

Every step of the way, there's an Authoritarian Leader telling us what we may or may not do, no questions asked.

Is it really any wonder, then, that most of 'us' have trouble sustaining a political Democracy when the concept is actually diametrically opposed to the real Authoritarian way of life we live every day?



He might also be describing

He might also be describing Israeli 'democracy.'



Giroux is steeped (in a

Giroux is steeped (in a general way) in the thinking of the so-called Frankfurt school, which included a wide range of thinkers including Lukacs, Horkheimer, Marcuse, Adorno, Arendt and a number of others, and has continued into post-modernity through the writings of Jürgen Habermas and others. The "critical pedagogy" to which Giroux frequently makes reference is related to the thinking of this school.

In a very loose way, Frankfurt School thinking can be considered a fusion of Marxism, Freudian psychology, and certain tendencies in sociology, philosophy, and (more recently) in linguistics. While the roots of this school go back as far as the 1920s, a great stimulus to its worldwide reputation was the frustrations experienced by leftists in the 1930s in the face of fascism's rise to power and the manifold betrayals of Stalin and the Communist Parties who followed his lead.

The background of this tendency has always been academic. The "school" in Frankfurt School is an actual school: the Institut für Sozialforschung, founded by Carl Grünberg in 1923 as an adjunct of the University of Frankfurt, carried on at Columbia Universtiy for many years, and returned more recently to its original home in Frankfurt.

Typically, thinkers of this school are ex-Marxists or would-be Marxists who have abandoned any belief in actual revolution led by the working classes, and offer a variety of introspective processes of discovery in its stead.

This is assumed to have socially beneficial consequences apart from any definite program of social action. Such thinkers continue in the Marxist fashion to see class conflict everywhere, but are interested mostly in the its consequences for the delicate inner organs of the mind rather than in its gross outward economic consequences.

In other words, Giroux is has not one but many axes to grind, and readers are quite right to suspect that his language is less than perfectly straightforward. This is partly because his essentially pedantic writing style, while occasionally effective, is rather crude and seldom arises to actual eloquence. It isn't hip to refer to "zombie politics" just because the phrase refers to movies. It's merely half-baked, shallow, and unscientific.

Giroux will have none of what he contemptuously calls the "ideological fog called common sense." For him, enlightenment can only be expressed in a special language divorced from the concerns and aspirations of ordinary people. The pop sociology about "zombies" (to select a single detail) is his idea of hitting folks where they live, but in the long run this kind of thing is both patronizing and useless. It's aimed at the reader who doesn't understand but who is willing to be impressed

I don't hate Giroux, but much of the time I find him neither convincing nor necessary. When one does understand him (it isn't nearly as difficult as he seems to think), one finds that he has surprisingly little to say.

What we need instead of this tediously branded academic by-product, is the kind of critical thinking that informs (and sometimes alters) common sense rather than seeking to obliterate it.



Giroux is steeped (in a

Giroux is steeped (in a general way) in the thinking of the so-called Frankfurt school, which included a wide range of thinkers including Lukacs, Horkheimer, Marcuse, Adorno, Arendt and a number of others, and has continued into post-modernity through the writings of Jürgen Habermas and others. The "critical pedagogy" to which Giroux frequently makes reference is related to the thinking of this school.

In a very loose way, Frankfurt School thinking can be considered a fusion of Marxism, Freudian psychology, and certain tendencies in sociology, philosophy, and (more recently) in linguistics. While the roots of this school go back as far as the 1920s, a great stimulus to its worldwide reputation was the frustrations experienced by leftists in the 1930s in the face of fascism's rise to power and the manifold betrayals of Stalin and the Communist Parties who followed his lead.

The background of this tendency has always been academic. The "school" in Frankfurt School is an actual school: the Institut für Sozialforschung, founded by Carl Grünberg in 1923 as an adjunct of the University of Frankfurt, carried on at Columbia Universtiy for many years, and returned more recently to its original home in Frankfurt.

Typically, thinkers of this school are ex-Marxists or would-be Marxists who have abandoned any belief in actual revolution led by the working classes, and offer a variety of introspective processes of discovery in its stead.

This is assumed to have socially beneficial consequences apart from any definite program of social action. Such thinkers continue in the Marxist fashion to see class conflict everywhere, but are interested mostly in the its consequences for the delicate inner organs of the mind rather than in its gross outward economic consequences.

In other words, Giroux has not one but many axes to grind, and readers are quite right to suspect that his language is less than perfectly straightforward. This is partly because his essentially pedantic writing style, while occasionally effective, is rather crude and seldom arises to actual eloquence. It isn't hip to refer to "zombie politics" just because the phrase refers to movies. It's merely half-baked, shallow, and unscientific.

Giroux will have none of what he contemptuously calls the "ideological fog called common sense." For him, enlightenment can only be expressed in a special language divorced from the concerns and aspirations of ordinary people. The pop sociology about "zombies" (to select a single detail) is his idea of hitting folks where they live, but in the long run this kind of thing is both patronizing and useless. It's aimed at the reader who doesn't understand but who is willing to be impressed

I don't hate Giroux, but much of the time I find him neither convincing nor necessary. When one does understand him (it isn't nearly as difficult as he seems to think), one finds that he has surprisingly little to say.

What we need instead of this tediously branded academic by-product, is the kind of critical thinking that informs (and sometimes alters) common sense rather than seeking to obliterate it.



I believe the powers that be

I believe the powers that be fear us more than we fear them. We the unruly mob who are finally waking up to the fact this nation is not a democracy but an oligarchy in the guise of one. This awakening must be quelled in any manner available to protect those who own and control everything, including the politicians. Why else do they spy upon us, have warrantless searches, tap into our phones and emails, set up check points in our neighborhoods, use media to brainwash us and use these hi-tech weapons to break up public dissidence? To stop irate Arabs? No! They are afraid of us and they want us to be more afraid of them.



To Kalosar- Discovery is the

To Kalosar-

Discovery is the first step. It is the foundation upon which we grow into our future actions.



How sad that several

How sad that several commenting on "Winter in America" think that this essay needs to be dumbed down to be understood by the average reader! Is the United States Constitution and its Bill of Rights too complex and difficult for the average reader to understand? If so, it makes Giroux's essay even more compelling.

This esssay needs to be shared with every e-zine and progressive blog on the web so that millions will have an opportunity to read it. Giroux should submit the essay for publication in mainstream magazines and to nationally know news papers as an op-editor.

We need to work together.



To buzzersdad: English is

To buzzersdad: English is not my mother tongue, but I can understand this article easily and I find it excellent. I don't understand how could its language be deemed "grandiose".



"Discovery is the first step

"Discovery is the first step ...."

That sort of pseudo-mystical horseshit is the exact reason why Giroux's brand of post-radicalism winds up in the long run paralyzing the critical faculty that it is supposed to stimulate.

It's the theory equivalent of "If it sounds good, it is good--a tolerable maxim when applied to jazz by a great musician, but a sign of complete confusion when applied to the discourse of political criticism.

Which merely reinforces the point that by the time Giroux comes along at the end of a long theoretical tradition, you have something a lot closer to a petty-bourgeois professional preaching tenure than a true radical leader.

As I said before, the point is to revitalize common sense, not to leave it behind.



Sure, there is a whiff of

Sure, there is a whiff of the esoteric around learning as it is something one can't exactly measure/touch/see...but finding out that something exists IS the first step in learning about it.

Would you say that learning about things is not a worthwhile or necessary part of life?

I am not blindly worshipping but reading and thinking when I read Giroux. When I read what you are writing I do not see a real criticism, but more a pet peeve. No facts, no real conclusion, just an unproved assertion.



kalosar, you are bang on. I

kalosar, you are bang on. I am university educated, free thinking and well informed, but Giroux's article struck me as dense and painful, offering no solutions, only the litany of abuses endured.
my mind kept drifting to orwell, not the orwell of cliche but the orwell of vision and virtuousity, who knew the enemy of whom we speak, and crafted everyword to maximize clarity and tell a great story.
We, (and we know who we are) have lost the narritive of our story, and Giroux et al though well meaning are thrashing about in their own prison tapping the walls to each other.
Yes we need to tell the story but lets give up the handwringing and the furrowed brows people. Even the protestant ministers have given up on the hamstrung platitudes we ienshrine in these lofty articles.
Look at the faces of rove and cheney, we have their contempt and we have earned it, not because of what we stand for, but because we fail to stand for it at all.
what gauls us about the Palin doll squalking about that hopey changing thing is its genius and its contempt, and we have no answer.
first step? a new script : Kalosar , you play the brad Pitt guy and Giroux you play that dopey white guy alter ego.
step right up people its goin to be a good one.
or not.



The time and place to react

The time and place to react to right-wing movements is when they are taking place. The problem is that the right-wing are often your employer. They represent the upper-class and are quick to exclude or fire workers. It is not fashionable to be to the left. Add in the constant propaganda of the media and the extreme FOX news and democracy is in trouble. The "tea party" does not realize they are joined with the equivalent of the British. They chant "liberty" as if not paying taxes gives them freedom. They are ignorant fools and tools. With our military arsenal it is not a surprise that some in the world are alarmed not only at the economic crash resulting from the US refusal to regulate, but the massive military force that can be used both overseas and within the US while chanting democracy at the point of a gun.



My comments here have been

My comments here have been written through the direction of all of your comments beginning with the opportunity provided by Henry A Giroux. Thank you.

It is time to institutionalize democratic practices and that must take place in the public school system. It isn't a glamorous or exciting topic and unfortunately is not one that many people care to learn enough about to be helpful. And, who do you trust? But,..... WAKE UP PEOPLE. It is Spring in America!

Yes, it must be an accessible message. Yes, we need to propose a solution. No, we can't let fear keep us from taking a stand.

The reality: We have never been a democracy...but perhaps democracy should be what the next revolution produces. A peaceful revolution is still possible, very possible.

The nuts-and-bolts of the situation is that the time for the "awakening" is now. We must quit preaching to the choir. We must work together.

Did you know that in the No Child Left Behind act that it gives access to student names and addresses to military recruiters? Did you know that our congress has failed to re-write that law for two years and now has opened it to public comment for one month (20 days left)?

We can and should stop and reflect. We must demand that congress and America do the same. We must discuss education.

We can no longer FAIL TO TAKE A STAND. http://www.PetitionOnline.com/eddemand/petition.html



What matters is if those of

What matters is if those of us who agree that democracy is an ideal worth striving for are willing to perform the individual and group actions that will create/promote/defend that ideal. The third crisis that Giroux does not mention is the crisis of will that lurks as a dark undercurrent in modernity. The clock is ticking, and once the brave new world, the mechanized new Jerusalem, is irreversibly, irrevocably, totally in place, democracy will permanently lapse out of human history.



IN 1956 C. Wright Mills

IN 1956 C. Wright Mills described the American power structure in a way that is still true, only more so: The top level, where the decisions of war and peace are made, is made up of the combination of military, industrial/corporate, and certain political leaders; the middle level, where most "democracy" is practiced, made up of most of Congress, journalists, and all who take part in public "debate"; and a bottom level consisting of most of the "public", especially those disinterested/disconnected from political debate. The things that are debated publicly are of secondary importance to the the tide of history.

This description perfectly fits the debate over military strategy in Iraq/Afghanistan/Iran, as opposed to a public debate about what we're doing there at all, or the fact that we have no intention of really leaving. Or the lack of frankness with regard to our demonstrably compromised elections. The list goes on and on, excluding everything that really matters.

Until and unless we can publicly debate the matters of life and death, we're fooling ourselves.



I enjoyed this article.

I enjoyed this article. Perhaps because it is preaching to my choir. It is always pleasant to have one's opinions reflected in the thoughtful language of another.

I find interesting that much of the discussion centers on its use of language rather than its content. This focus on messenger versus message seems of a piece with much of our current political debate.

Regarding Mr. Giroux's argument I would make two points:

“As the country undermines its own democratic values, violence and anti-democratic practices become institutionalized throughout American culture…”

I agree that anti-democratic practices follow from the undermining of democratic values, but would substitute security for violence here and in the ensuing argument. Increasing violence there definitely is – I cannot pinpoint its source but feel this is not it. But there is no doubt that we are well along the way to substituting life, security, and the pursuit of happiness for the original unalienable Rights. Violence is merely an instrument or excuse for these actions to increase our "security".

“…that ideological fog called common sense.”

"Common sense may be good or bad ... but in all cases it is unreflective sense and ... shortcuts ... critical inquiry..."

I take issue with the author’s use of the term common sense. It seems he generally is referring the bastardized version that is often referenced - “know-nothing common sense.” A better term might be opinion held as fact.

“common sense: sound and prudent judgment based on a simple perception of the situation or facts”

While it may not require in-depth analysis, to be sound and prudent, it cannot be entirely without reflection or critical thought. I felt there was some intermixing of these two definitions that muddied the argument.

As a final note, I find the term “zombie politics” apt, descriptive, and delightful!



I also find Mr. Giroux's

I also find Mr. Giroux's writing tedious in many respects. He makes some good intellectual points, but I don't think he's really someone experiencing any "Winter in America" himself. How many jobs do liberals provide for other Americans? How many jobs for Americans do liberals shut the doors in their faces? Unemployment, no medical care, open borders, NAFTA, this is winter in America. Has Mr. Giroux really been hurting from this stuff, or does he make money off of it? I think the later. When it comes to 'zero tolerance', how much tolerance does the left have for anyone who strays from their little pack? How many of those 'zero tolerance' teachers are your packs of dogs defending when they viciously attack anyone who thinks those teachers and principal might really deserve to be out on their butts? It's not your kids in those schools is it, as you fight "zero tolerance". How are your health plans, btw? While you work under unions in schools and universities -- those unions now sabotaging anyone else in America from getting single payer? You think our right and our children's right to be on FING medicaid is a goddamn blessing from where YOU sit? HYPOCRITES.



I'm back to respond to the

I'm back to respond to the comment about HYPOCRITES and this whole conversation in general.

My children were in those zero tolerance schools and they did experience what I believe was the darkest hours in public education...although if people don't act now before our public education system is totally dismantled, maybe I didn't see the worst of it. I do know of what I speak.

What I find hypocritical is for ALL of you, and I do mean ALL, to continue to talk about talk but no one responds to a person like me that has solutions and is doing as much as one person can to take action. Anyone jumping on board to save a sinking ship? NO, you are just arguing about how to arrange the deck furniture. Come on people.

Education was supposedly the "civil rights issue of the 21st century." Do we understand that civil means citizen? Education is a citizens issue. This country has never offered fair and equal access to quality education. NEVER. Don't you think it is time to start?

It has to start somewhere and somehow.

www.amissingingredient.com



Well, guys, your

Well, guys, your entertaining, if off point, analysis of the writer's style and the reader's limitations get us exactly nowhere. Which is, of course, exactly where the power elite want us and where democrats default to whenever an idea is introduced.

Democracy is dead. Shall we hold a funeral or just hold our noses as we walk past?

The teabaggers are lost souls wandering in the desert deluded in to thinking they are bright beacons leading the way to ? where, exactly? Not too clear on that point, but they have their guns.

There are no revolutionaries in America. We are a nation of sheep.



22:27 Maybe those were your

22:27 Maybe those were your children's darkest hours because it was so upsetting for the little spoiled brats not to be number one in line as their parents thought they should always be, as their little elites. Ever think that other people raised their children to behave in classrooms and have to put up with the bullshit from your children who were never told they could do anything wrong? We pay for what you don't do in your job as a parent, dearly. As for zero tolerance -- take a look at yourself and your post. At least I'm HONEST enough to admit I support zero tolerance of your bullshit, though you are HYPOCRITICAL about your fing liberalism in your own damn interests ONLY.



02:36 Speak for yourself.

02:36 Speak for yourself. Are you or any liberals opening the doors for anyone? Have you dropped your health insurance policy yet, Mr. Revolutionary?



Anonymous on 3/8 at 3:00 -

Anonymous on 3/8 at 3:00 - you don't even make sense. If you can't put words together into a sentence that means SOMETHING, confine your posts to Yahoo.



It wasn't MY CHILDRENS

It wasn't MY CHILDRENS darkest hours; it was the darkest hours for other kids that didn't have parents that read to them or had books, could speak English, or understood the importance of education. SO do we say that's the little brats problems? I don't think so.

I spent 11 years volunteering in classrooms and therefore gained my perspective through the experience of others. Too many are removed from the public education system to even recognize what is meant by "the darkest hours."
It was the institution of No Child Left Behind and the testing mandates that excluded time for learning.....

And, Sir or Madame, you know nothing of my children. My own happen to be well mannered, (unlike yourself), are working their way through college, and have been taught to look and think beyond themselves. One of them does have a learning disability for which we did not burden the system but took responsibility for the extra effort at home.........as you can tell, I don't believe personal attacks were called for in the discussion but...we do still have freedom of speech in this country lasted I looked...so have at it.

I don't believe my blog was hypocritical. I still believe a strong republic based on democratic ideals is worth fighting for and fighting for the public education system is the way I intend to do it.

I do not intend to be deterred by minor distractions. Democratic ideals are worth the effort. In my eyes, it IS spring in America.

NOW, I could use help. Please sign my petition and pass the link on to others...that is democracy in action...only 14 days left to sign it.

http://www.PetitionOnline.com/eddemand/petition.html



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