"To understand the world, is to understand what in it is capable of being transformed."
Bertold Brecht
I wonder what can be transformed today.
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Serves 'em right
A Texas mega-church is linked to 21 cases of measles. Eleven of 16 people with measles were not vaccinated. Anti-science practice has consequences.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Omnipotent Secret Medelsome America
On the 60th anniversary of the 1953 military coup in Iran that overthrew
the democratically elected government of radical nationalist Mohammad Mossadegh, the US has
declassified documents detailing how the CIA’s secret operation brought
the country’s Shah back to power. Mossadegh had the temerity to nationalize Iranian oil.
This episode is relevant to today's clamor over individuals spilling of government secret documents.
This episode is relevant to today's clamor over individuals spilling of government secret documents.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
It's All About Money
"Bill Clinton earned $17 million last year giving speeches, including one to a Lagos (Nigeria) company for $700,000. Hillary gets $200,000 a speech."
This is a contrast in moral values with previous presidents.
"Until Harry Truman wrote his memoirs, the ex-president struggled on an Army pension of $112.50 a month." He said, "I could never lend myself to any transaction, however, respectable that would commercialize on the prestige and dignity of the office of the presidency."
NYT August 18, 2013.
I long for the old school values.
This is a contrast in moral values with previous presidents.
"Until Harry Truman wrote his memoirs, the ex-president struggled on an Army pension of $112.50 a month." He said, "I could never lend myself to any transaction, however, respectable that would commercialize on the prestige and dignity of the office of the presidency."
NYT August 18, 2013.
I long for the old school values.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
American Universities Future
I want to share this important essay:
The Future
of American Universities by Larry Busch, MSU Dept of Sociology,
21 August 2013
It is my conviction that universities as we have known them for centuries
are undergoing a radical transformation. Gradually, but surely, the very notion
that faculty are intellectuals who follow their consciences in educating
students and in the search for new knowledge is being undermined. To my mind,
although the reviewers are certainly right on some details, they have
completely capitulated to this transformation of the university. Let me explain:1. New Public Management has become the norm at public universities. (If you are not familiar with the term, I suggest that you read up on it.) Instead of allowing disciplinary units to determine what counts as scholarship, we are being forced to accept 'objective' measures such as number of publications, number of citations, journal impact factors, number of grant dollars received, and other criteria. Ironically, these measures are so badly constructed that a student proposing to use them to study research quality would be the laughing stock of any statistics deparment. Moreover, NPM is based on the assumptions of Public Choice Theory which assumes that we are all social isolates and that anyone working in a setting in which markets and competitions are not central is likely goofing off. Imposing these measures shifts the kinds of research that gets done and quietly supresses most critical research. It is aided by the growing acceptance of grant activity as a measure of quality, forgetting that many topics neither require nor need grant money. Those topics are being gradually moved off the agenda. (Please remember that I say this as a faculty member who, with my colleagues, has obtained ~$30 million in extramural grants over my career.)
2. There is more and more pressure to standardize undergraduate and graduate education. (Much to my amazement, the College of Arts and Letters is standardizing its introductory courses so that all faculty will use the same textbook. This will allow comparison of 'effectiveness' across faculty members!) Both grads and undergrads are to be moved as rapidly as possible through the assembly line of education so as to improve efficiency. Remember that our department has long had an international focus. Many of our best students have taken quite a bit of time to complete their degrees because they spent a year or more in the field gathering data. Of course, it should be obvious that pressure to move students quickly through the system is also tantamount to encouraging a decline in quality (although those pushing for it would not admit that).
3. On the grounds of greater efficiency and cost cutting, the proportion of faculty in tenure track positions is declining.Those who are not in tenure track positions are faced with living vulnerable lives at the whim of the university. They are also miserably paid for what they do. Some politicians have already called for doing away with tenure; others will follow. In Britain, they have already done that.
4. A consequence of growing marketization and competition is growing bureaucracy. Despite endless propaganda about the efficiency of markets and competitions, each time one establishes a market or competition, one must also establish a bureaucracy to monitor, develop measures, check on those who will undoubtedly attempt to game the system, etc. Hence, the volume of forms, memos, requirements, measures, and consequently the number of administrators is rising. The US education department has collected numbers that are astonishing.(Think of this as a new version of the Wizard of Oz, in which we are all told not to pay any attention to that fellow behind the curtain.)
5. Students are becoming 'individualized' by virtue of huge loans that MUST be repaid regardless of circumstances, requiring them to work during the semester -- when they should be studying and learning -- to minimize the size of those loans. They are also being forced by the loans into believing that college is all about maximizing future earnings, one's human capital. The idea that college education is also about citizenship and knowing onesself is receding.
What to do about all this is not entirely clear. But there are certainly some things that can be done. Each of us can get up to date on how higher education is changing. (To put that in sociological terms, we can each learn how certain powerful groups are changing social structures to meet their desires, while screwing the rest of us.) We can also begin to consider how to develop new forms of social solidarity with colleagues in other disciplines (we are sociologists! Remember?) and, when appropriate resist. And, we can help students to understand how these changes affect them and what they might do about it.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Class Warfare
Whenever anyone calls attention to extremely unequal income distribution, the radical right screams "class warfare" as if the label should stop all further discussion. But in fact, there is class warfare by some of the rich on the poor and middle class. The attack on unions and the call for much less government spending and austerity is a cover for getting rid of anything that helps the less fortunate. These rich simply want the poor to disappear--certainly not vote. The rich can provide for their own good life. It reminds me of the aphorism, "One for all and one for all" said the elephant as he danced among the chickens!
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Austerity Superstition
“Small and medium-sized enterprises in many countries, which are the engines of employment, are starved of credit. The prospects in the countries on the periphery of a reduction in today’s record-level unemployment are bleak. These countries face a lost decade of economic progress that will trap tens of millions of people in misery.”
“the E.C.B. will discover that just pumping in liquidity will not suffice to prevent economic conditions from getting worse.”
says William R. Rhodes, former senior vice chairman of Citigroup
Rhodes is correct. This bleak picture does not need to be. The European Central Bank (and the Federal Reserve) could make loans to the treasuries of sovereign nations that they could use to employ the unemployed to construct much needed infrastructure. This would increase consumer demand for products of the economy. It is only myth and superstition that prevent governments from seeing the obvious. Austerity is absurd.
Labels:
Fiscal stimulus,
monetary policy,
Political Economy
Monday, August 5, 2013
Quest for Land & Fortune
The Quest for Land & Fortune, a work of narrative nonfiction, by
Alfred Allan Schmid, traces the great themes of the American experience through
five generations of actual interconnected families whose patriarchs and their
intrepid wives could never be satisfied with the status quo. Whether led by
their ideals or propelled by the yearning for more land or greater fortunes,
these immigrants and plantation owners, Unionists and Rebels, agrarians and
industrialists shaped their emerging nation even as they were shaped by
seemingly greater forces.
Available on line at
http://www.schulerbooks.com/product/quest-land-and-fortune
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