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Robin Lakoff

Robin Lakoff

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The Republican Ignorance Agenda

Posted: 03/30/11 09:30 PM ET

Conservative Republicans have been very busy lately making inroads into teaching and learning at all levels -- a curious program, especially at a time when more serious voices have been urging America to strengthen its investment in science and technology in order to remain globally competitive in the twenty-first century. One wonders what their oppositionism is really about.

Let me summarize a bit of this interesting record:

Congressional Republicans have fought to reduce pre-kindergarten (Head Start) funding.

Conservatives in various arenas have been whittling away at the prestige, authority and autonomy of elementary and high school teachers. The denial of the right to collective bargaining, the destruction of security of employment, demands to take classroom decisions out of teachers' hands and create a national curriculum, forcing teachers to teach to tests whose subject matter bears no relation to what future generations of Americans will need to know, allowing school buildings to deteriorate in the interests of "no new taxes," carrying banners at rallies identifying teachers as "glorified babysitters" - all these work to encourage contempt for those who teach in those who need to learn, and to make mediocrity the norm. (Does anyone believe that "the best and the brightest" will want to become teachers under these working conditions?)

At the university level, we have seen many disquieting moves over the last several years. After 9/11, Lynne Cheney's ACTA (the American Council of Trustees and Alumni) tarred as "treasonous" any academic who had dared to suggest that the U.S. bore any responsibility for the acts of terrorism. Several conservative organizations have placed "student" spies in the classrooms of professors suspected of liberal sympathies to report on them and cause them embarrassment and, ideally, loss of employment. Tenure has come under attack at this level as well as at the primary and secondary levels. There have been demands for national uniformity of curricula in many or all fields, as well as exit exams to be taken by undergraduates, a means of depriving professors of autonomy and dignity in the classroom. And most recently, e-mail accounts of academics have been broken into on what must be considered frivolous -- or, better, dubious -- grounds. In one well-known case, climate scholars' e-mails were hacked and the results published to cast doubt on climate change; more recently, the distinguished University of Wisconsin professor (and Republican) William Cronon, who had dared to question the Republican agenda, had his e-mails made public under the Freedom of Information Act, by the conservative Mackinac Center.

In 1929, Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson closed the State Department bureau of cryptanalysis saying that "gentlemen don't read each other's mail." Well, maybe faux populists aren't gentlemen.

Scholarship at all levels has been devalued and impugned by the deep thinkers of the Right. Conservatives have cast doubt on science -- from evolution to climate change -- on no rational basis at all other than that it isn't in the Bible or they just plain don't like it. Their inability to grasp the ideas of postmodernism has proven no deterrent to their making fun of its questioning of the absolute certainty of all scientific claims (does anyone detect an irony here?). Generally, the conservatives' aim seems to be to reassure their constituencies that you don't have to know anything to be an expert. All you have to do is yell louder than anyone else.

The above is certainly depressing. But is it just a list of the desperate flailings of a party confused about how to respond to the situation in Libya and fragmented by the Tea Partiers in their midst? Are the proponents of all of the above just a bunch of fogeys (old and young) terrified of losing ground in 2012 once voters realize they were snookered in 2010? Is each of the items independent of the others, each a response to some vague, inchoate fear? Or does that list represent something planned, deliberate, and coherent?

Perhaps cconservatives realize that their attractiveness is dependent on ignorance at many levels and of many kinds: ignorance of the Constitution; ignorance of the benefits that unionization has brought to so many people; ignorance of the importance of science and technology in the modern world; ignorance of their own ignorance.

If education is respected and strong, if teachers are autonomous, authoritative, and respected, ignorance cannot survive. If ignorance cannot survive, groups that thrive on it will not do well.

Do the math.

 
Conservative Republicans have been very busy lately making inroads into teaching and learning at all levels -- a curious program, especially at a time when more serious voices have been urging America...
Conservative Republicans have been very busy lately making inroads into teaching and learning at all levels -- a curious program, especially at a time when more serious voices have been urging America...
 
 
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02:29 PM on 04/03/2011
Fantastic piece. There isn't a benign piece of information, data, or fact out there that the right can't turn into something to be afraid of.

Bankers crash the economy so they go after teachers and unions. It's like going after Iraq because of 19 Saudis all over again.
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
09:31 PM on 04/01/2011
The lead scientist of the BEST study, Richard Muller told the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee on Thursday that “"The world temperature data has sufficient integrity to be used to determine temperature trends."

On March 6, Anthony Watts said , in anticipation of the results of the BEST study, “And, I'm prepared to accept whatever result they produce, even if it proves my premise wrong.”.

Well, TV weatherman Watts had a Bill O'Reilly quality melt-down-hissy-fit denouncing his BEST hope for proving his skeptical position. Very flip floppy. Very insincere. Very Republican. Very uncool.

The thing about TV weathermen is, well, they really kind of look at the small picture, don’t they….
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dragonmaster
04:45 AM on 04/01/2011
the science of global warming is si little understood- so peddling an agenda of ignorance is easy for now for the republican party.

in the years to come however has more extreme weather events become common- even the most ignorant are going to begin to ask questions, like 'what is going on/'

trouble is by then the planet will be gone, but so will the deniers and most of the republican party.
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Richard2
09:19 AM on 04/01/2011
Congressional testimony: "Christy’s punch lines:

"Climate assessments like the IPCC have to date been written through a process in which IPCC-selected authors are given significant authority over the text, including judging their own work against work of their critics. This has led to biased information in the assessments and thus raises questions about a catastrophic view of climate change because the full range of evidence is not represented.

Because this issue has policy implications that may potentially raise the price of energy significantly (and thus essentially the price of everything else), the U.S. Congress should not rely exclusively on the U.N. assessments because the process by which they were written includes biased, false, and/or misleading information about one of the most murky of sciences – climate."

- from judithcurry.com
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dragonmaster
02:08 PM on 04/01/2011
The Ipcc predicted an ice free arctic in summer y 2050

could happen by 2020- go figure.
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Richard2
06:44 PM on 03/31/2011
But the argument "trust the experts" is becoming less persuasive as the information revolution progresses. Hierarchies are being flattened in every walk of life, and this includes intellectual hierarchies. As Mark Penn says, elites are more impressionable than the masses — so more likely to be persuaded by a scientific consensus. The public want to be persuaded, not told that they should believe the Clever People. - Fraser Nelson, in the Spectator.
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Trepasky
Sanity is neither free nor easy
07:21 PM on 03/31/2011
THe interesting thing about science is that it has no need to persuade. Science is factual and reliable information not an opinion. Even theories are based upon some sound and reasonable information.

If the public needs to be persuaded then they will not discover nor learn.

THe "elitists" are the ignorant because they choose not to learn. Those called elitists by the ignorant are just folks who take the time to learn.

"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
Albert Einstein
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
10:33 PM on 03/31/2011
He sounds so much like a young Pol Pot here, I don't know...
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
10:33 PM on 03/31/2011
You assume, erroneously, that intellect, and education is heirachical. This is true, in some cases, but never MORE true than in the precious capitalist system you adore so much. In effect, you're not far off Pol Pot in your stance...which is at once deeply socia//ist, highly paranoid, and imbued with rab//id anti-intellectualism.

One shouldn't trust anyone except for those closest to the flesh. However, this doesn't mean one shouldn't consider experts are being somewhat more useful than f00ls in the determination of key decisions. Unless you want to trade your cow for these magic beans. In that case, have at it.
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CTDFalconer
Think twice, post once.
06:44 PM on 03/31/2011
Nothing public, including schools at all levels, fall in line with the extreme right-wing ideal of the supremacy of the private sector and sanctity of individual property rights. Therefore, the effect a degraded education system on regular people and hence the economy itself is of secondary importance. It's no mistake that the GI Bill, which opened college doors to thousands of returning WW2 soldiers, was a prelude to the most broadly prosperous periods in US history. It's well known that a decent education is the single largest boost toward upward mobility. It's basically a prerequisite to entry into the middle class. It cannot be stressed enough the importance for us to have robust and modern education system. In today's world, more than ever, our workforce will need knowledge of the science and technology that now drive the economy. By trashing the scholastic sector, we're hobbling the US's potential for a strong future. It's as important as that.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
04:50 PM on 03/31/2011
This goes beyond an attack on education. It is an attack on humanity, civil rights, and indeed, essential human rights. It is the attempt to create an underclass of burnt-adrenal fleshmachines, beholden to nothing more than their own ill health, endless drugs, and toil. It is the final machination in a system of rationality that dissects the human being, reducing it to elements, a living, breathing, walking soylent green that is supple, and pliable.

The caveat is Frankenstein, Mary Shelly saw it two centuries ago...the attempt to create the monstrous creates the monstrous in us, and it destroys both parties. Her chimeric creature made of dead parts is the inverse of the modern capitalist prole...a dissected and refracted being made into a thing.

Abandon hope all ye who enter here.
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marignymitch
E pluribus unum percent
02:09 PM on 03/31/2011
Too late. The Republican war on education has succeeded. (See landslide victories in 2010, Junior's re-election, etc.) I see sociopaths.
01:56 PM on 03/31/2011
It is not desparate flailings. It's a deliberate attempt to "dumb down" the voting populace. A good way to get people to vote against their best interests, and it appears to be working.
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SunnyDaySam
To Err is Human, to Forgive is Canine
12:04 PM on 03/31/2011
The Daily Beast has an interesting gallery of Ignorant politicians. Michelle Bachmann is on the cover of course.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/galleries/2762/1/
11:03 AM on 03/31/2011
This is especially evident when you see their trend toward home-schooling as they push for educational defunding, history revision in textbooks and to include creationism as scientific theory.

What is even more worrisome is that they are also establishing/expanding creationist colleges (calling it "higher education" would be inept) which cheapens the value of college degrees across the board.

These are troubling times for thinkers...
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
10:46 AM on 03/31/2011
The new Republican pledge of allegiance is out. Here it is.

"I pledge allegiance, to the false flag, of the United Stupidity of Americarbon, and to the Republican Corporations for which it stands, one notion, under Gold, indefensible, with libertarianism, and ignorance, for all."
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jaxstl
I may disagree with you but I will defend your rig
09:55 AM on 03/31/2011
All I can say is Brilliant!
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Nansue
09:43 AM on 03/31/2011
There is a difference between being stuipd and being ignorant. Ignorance is a lack of knowledge and we are all ignorant of something; in fact, we are all ignorant of many things because of the inability to have knowledge of everything. To be stupid is to lack intelligence and the ability to reason.

We don't have a problem with ignorance -- it's usually curable. We have a problem with wanton ignorance and glorified stupidity.
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Trepasky
Sanity is neither free nor easy
07:22 PM on 03/31/2011
AGreed!

"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
Albert Einstein
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zanzig
09:39 AM on 03/31/2011
Oh, what a beautiful thing to read. This entire HuffPost Politics page has been the best since the 2008 elections. Finally, finally, you are waking up to the absolute evil that the Republican party is wreaking in your country.
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SunnyDaySam
To Err is Human, to Forgive is Canine
09:37 AM on 03/31/2011
This dumbing down of the GOP is something I just don't understand. I'm old enough to remember when it wasn't so and I think it started with Reagan. The willful ignorance of the GOP candidates, especially the TP endorsed ones is beyond belief.
10:59 AM on 03/31/2011
i agree at one time we had conservatives that where interested in a honest dialogue with the liberals. conservatives that made sense and even got the facts right. what a shame that bachman and palin and the rest are the paragons of conservative thought. the new conservatives are not interested in dialogue are debate and seem to be very proud of their ignorance almost if they feel facts are some sort of liberal propaganda. the new conservatives do not need or value education for anything that deviates form what passes as conservative thought is purely liberal propaganda. we are in trouble we are becoming a nation that values its ignorance glories in being ignorant and treasures, promotes and elects ignorant people. America keep voting in republicans and watch the country decay.
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pennypii
I can see them. They can't see me.
01:51 PM on 03/31/2011
You are right. It did start with Reagan. After about 16 weeks of his reliably untrue stories, the press was thoroughly castigated, BY THE PUBLIC, for attempting to correct him and get him to tell only the truth. They backed off the truth wagon and Ronald Reagan took the bit in his mouth. It would have helped the country if the press had been willing to hold him to account, especially telling all of the made up stories. But our history shows they let him say whatever he wanted.