Home   |   Latest Stories   |  Analysis   |   Special Reports   |   Multimedia   |   Downloads   |   Live Coverage   |   Webcasts   |   Twitter               March 21, 2010   |   Manila
Politics
Economy
Human Rights
OFWs & Migration
Agrarian Reform
Labor & Employment
Urban Poor
Environment
Education
Indigenous Peoples
Women & Children
Health
Media
Culture
Poetry
Salungguhit
Democratic Space
Webcasts
Slideshow
Video
Audio / Podcast
Photo of the Week
Street Shooter
PHOTO OF THE WEEK


Lifesavers

SALUNGGUHIT


Party-list or Malacanang’s List?

STREET SHOOTER


Key Pounder

Connect with

through

CULTURE
Artists Launch ‘Experimental Organik Musik’
POETRY
Ang Mabubuting Anak ng Bayan
LABOR
The Other Morong Detainees: In Jail Since 2007 Strike, Workers May Soon Be Freed
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Indigenous Peoples from Abra, Mt. Province Join Katribu


The Powell Memo and the Teaching Machines of Right-Wing Extremists

Published on October 3, 2009
Now Playing:
Watch recorded webcast of Morong 43 hearing at CHR
Forum on Morong 43 organized by Concerned Artists of the Philippines
Filipino women take a day off to march against oppression and injustice
Bookmark and Share
Print This Print This
RELATED CONTENT

Voters Education on Automated Absentee Voting: Mission Impossible, Says Migrante

Bush: ‘I Was Aware’ of Harsh Tactics

Migrante: Trainings Alone Will Not Prevent Failure of Overseas Absentee Voting

By Henry A. Giroux
Truthout/Perspective
International
Posted by (Bulatlat.com)

Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, echoing the feelings of many progressives, recently wrote in The New York Times about how dismayed he was over the success right-wing ideologues have had not only in undercutting Obama’s health care bill, but also in mobilizing enormous public support against almost any reform aimed at rolling back the economic, political, and social conditions that have created the economic recession and the legacy of enormous suffering and hardship for millions of Americans over the last 30 years.[1] Krugman is somewhat astonished that after almost three decades the political scene is still under the sway of what he calls the “zombie doctrine of Reaganism,” – the notion that any action by government is bad, except when it benefits corporations and the rich. Clearly, for Krugman, zombie Reaganism appears once again to be shaping policies under the Obama regime. And yet, not only did Reaganism with its hatred of the social state, celebration of unbridled self-interest, its endless quest to privatize everything, and support for deregulation of the economic system eventually bring the country to near economic collapse, it also produced enormous suffering for those who never benefited from the excesses of the second Gilded Age, especially workers, the poor, disadvantaged minorities and eventually large segments of the middle class. And yet, zombie market politics is back rejecting the public option in Obama’s health plan, fighting efforts to strengthen bank regulations, resisting caps on CEO bonuses, preventing climate-control legislation, and refusing to limit military spending. Unlike other pundits, Krugman does not merely puzzle over how zombie politics can keep turning up on the political scene – a return not unlike the endless corpses who keep coming back to life in George Romero’s 1968 classic film, “Night of the Living Dead” (think of Bill Kristol who seems to be wrong about everything but just keeps coming back). For Krugman, a wacky and discredited right-wing politics is far from dead and, in fact, one of the great challenges of the current moment is to try to understand the conditions that allow it to once again shape American politics and culture, given the enormous problems it has produced at all levels of American society, including the current recession.

Part of the answer to the enduring quality of such a destructive politics can be found in the lethal combination of money, power and education that the right wing has had a stranglehold on since the early 1970’s and how it has used its influence to develop an institutional infrastructure and ideological apparatus to produce its own intellectuals, disseminate ideas, and eventually control most of the commanding heights and institutions in which knowledge is produced, circulated and legitimated. This is not simply a story about the rise of mean-spirited buffoons such as Glenn Beck, Bill O’Reilly and Michael Savage. Nor is it simply a story about the loss of language, a growing anti-intellectualism in the larger culture, or the spread of what some have called a new illiteracy endlessly being produced in popular culture. As important as these tendencies are, there is something more at stake here which points to a combination of power, money and education in the service of creating an almost lethal restriction of what can be heard, said, learned and debated in the public sphere.

And one starting point for understanding this problem is what has been called the Powell Memo, released on August 23, 1971, and written by Lewis F. Powell, who would later be appointed as a member of the Supreme Court of the United States. Powell sent the memo to the US Chamber of Commerce with the title “Attack on the American Free Enterprise System.”

The memo is important because it reveals the power that conservatives attributed to the political nature of education and the significance this view had in shaping the long-term strategy they put into place in the 1960’s and 1970’s to win an ideological war against liberal intellectuals, who argued for holding government and corporate power accountable as a precondition for extending and expanding the promise of an inclusive democracy. The current concerted assault on government and any other institutions not dominated by free-market principles represents the high point of a fifty-year strategy that was first put into place by conservative ideologues such as Frank Chodorov, founder of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute; publisher and author William F. Buckley; former Nixon Treasury Secretary William Simon, and Michael Joyce, the former head of both the Olin Foundation and the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. The Powell Memo is important because it is the most succinct statement, if not the founding document, for establishing a theoretical framework and political blueprint for the current assault on any vestige of democratic public life that does not subordinate itself to the logic of the alleged free market.

Initially, Powell identified the American college campus “as the single most dynamic source” for producing and housing intellectuals “who are unsympathetic to the [free] enterprise system.”[2] He was particularly concerned about the lack of conservatives on social sciences faculties and urged his supporters to use an appeal to academic freedom as an opportunity to argue for “political balance” on university campuses.

Pages: 1 2 3

Printer-Friendly Version Printer-Friendly Version
ARTICLE TOOLS                              

TAGS
,
CATEGORIES
REPRINT
Feel free to reprint, repost or republish this material. (Read Bulatlat's syndication policy.)

Leave a Comment

Important: While we welcome comments, we treat these no differently from letters to the editors. Comments must contain the real name, valid email and other details of the sender. We will not publish comments from anonymous senders or those with incorrect or spurious contact details. We will not publish those that contain abusive language or those that are off-topic.

NEWS IN PICTURES
KABATAAN PARTYLIST
AYI S. MUALLAM
JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
MAKABAYAN-SMR
INPEACE MINDANAO
MARYA SALAMAT
ANNE MARXZE D. UMIL
AYI S. MUALLAM
KALINAW MINDANAO
JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
KONTRA DAYA 2010
FRED DABU
T.W. TRINIDAD
JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
UPLB YOUTH LEAD
MULTIMEDIA


Video: Filipino Women Take a Day Off to March


Freedom March for Morong 43


Morong 43: A Day of Defiance


“US Accountable for Gregan’s Death”


March 8 Speeches by Women Leaders

Powered by Ustream
Follow breaking events or get instant notification through Facebook, Twitter , Plurk and FriendFeed
MUST-READS
In Fiery Protest, PUP Students Denounce 2,000% Tuition Hike Mar 19, 2010
The Courage and Commitment of Judy Taguiwalo Mar 16, 2010
As Election Nears, Military Intensifies Harassment of Partylist Groups, Leftist Bets Mar 15, 2010
TOP STORIES
New Attacks Target Bayan Muna Officials, Members
SC Decision Allowing ‘Arroyo Court’ a Danger to the Public, Say Critics
Peasant Leaders to Aquino Sisters: Insulting Farmers Won’t Help Noynoy’s Campaign
OPINION & ANALYSIS
Benjie Oliveros | Party-List Elections, a Failing Democracy Project?
The Shame of Padre Faura
Streetwise| In memoriam: Josie Lichauco (1935-2010)
HUMAN RIGHTS
Live Coverage: CHR Hears Case of Morong 430
Seven Farmers in Davao del Sur ‘Falsely Accused’
MIGRANTS
15 Years After Death of Flor Contemplacion, OFWs Remain Vulnerable as Ever
One-Day Strike in Saudi Company Fruitful for 200 OFWs: Migrante
PRESS RELEASES & STATEMENTS
In Supplemental Complaint Before CHR, Morong 43 Reveal Military Attempts to Gain their Cooperation
Free the 43 Health Workers Alliance: DOJ, AFP Defying the CHR is Defying the Constitution
 
Home   |   Subscribe (RSS or Email)   |   About Us  |  Donate   |  Contact Us   |   Archive
Copyright © 2009 Alipato Media Center Inc.   |   Read Bulatlat's Syndication Policy   |   Web design and hosting by Web Host Philippines
Creative Commons License