*Arrogance and Insolence in the Age of Empire ***




Editorial



*By Ben Tanosborn *

*Arrogance and Insolence in the Age of Empire*



Just like some rather assertive domestic servants of old, or today's proud
Mac users, "I don't do Windows."  Metaphorically speaking, that is!  What I
really mean to say is that for all the references I may rely on to support a
given thesis, it's my preference to stay away from that genre.

But if my extended treatment of a book I've just read appears front and
center in this column, as it's likely to be the case today, it may turn out
that this piece is de facto a book review; or, at the very least, more than
my quasi-plagiarization of its title: "*Pedagogy and Praxis in the Age of
Empire: Towards a New Humanism*" co-authored by two scholars, Peter McLaren
(UCLA) and Nathalia Jaramillo (Purdue), and published in 2006 by Sense
Publishers (The Netherlands) - *www.sensepublishers.com
*<http://www.sensepublishers.com/>

These last two weeks have proved to be intensively instructive not just for
those of us living in the United States but for people around the globe.  We
had the 2007 DVD version (Deceit-Venality-Depravity) of "The Thief of
Baghdad," starring Bush-Filio, Greenspan, Petraeus and Crocker in
self-portrayed roles, together with a cast of thousands - which included
from self-serving buffoonish congressional legislators to a totally inept
and unprofessional mainstream press corps - shown in Truecolor and
Muffledsound on screens not just in our nation's capital but throughout the
world.

What transpired during this period may not seem revelatory to some, but to
many it was.  For once, Bush's bipolarity became real and stood in front of
us.  In the past Bush has always treated the world with unmasked disdain and
arrogance to the chagrin of some thoughtful Americans but, unfortunately,
also the sonorous applause and consent of too many of his countrymen.  In
the last few days, however, Americans were finally - and insolently - told
in bold, underlined and in-your-face language that Uncle Sam is the real
thief in Iraq, driving a late model Empire - a gas-guzzler solely ran and
lubricated with oil.  Even our own economic Nostradamus, Alan Greenspan,
just told us that the trek to Iraq was about oil. And as for our military's
stay in that nation... how about until Iraq's oil reserves run out or Iraqis
find common cause and muster the strength to kick us out?

Our president's bipolarity has now been unequivocally diagnosed: arrogance
towards the world, and insolence towards his own countrymen.  No
second-guessing any more.

And just as the curtain was being lifted on those realities no one wanted to
see, racism was added for good measure via two other timely events: the
trial of "the Jena 6" in Central Louisiana; and the private mercenary
armies' deeds, this time what is seen by the Iraqi government as the wanton
killing of eight Iraqi civilians by the for-profit elite SS Corps: the great
Blackwater warriors, la crème de la crème of America's military (Thug-
Rambo-tic terms) turned entrepreneurial... an engendering of capitalism's
marketplace.  These are two events exhibiting different types of racism,
both answering to one type of relationship: that between master and slave,
call it by whatever name.  That master-slave relationship brings us back to
the book mentioned at the outset of this column.

Enter McLaren and Jaramillo, and their latest contribution to what must be
referred to as a march towards an enlightened humanism within the realm of
pedagogy.  An attempt, as they put it, to make the pedagogical more
politically informed and the political more pedagogical critical.  Not an
easy task under any circumstance, and a most difficult one for authors
ideologically pegged to the always denigrated Left... truth be damned!

As relevant as I did find the book to my own understanding of peoples' and
nations' struggle to achieve a reasonable level of equity, and thus help
open the door to the all important state that gives each and everyone the
respect, self-worth and inherent nobility - a.k.a. human dignity - it was
the introduction to the book that gave palpability to today's reality in the
United States in social, economic and political terms.  Mostly a graded
narrative of events that took place just prior to, during and at the
aftermath of Katrina, it was plain telling of American society today; not
just defining a corrupt and inept administration but, if only by inference
or default, the rest of us as well... as observers to a drama that said
everything that needed to be said.

McLaren has been carrying the torch for well over a decade to bring
additional light - in his academic arena - to a concerted effort in the
fight against a unipolar, and univocal, world that exists today with the
United States as its "monotheo."  Global capitalism and the mirages of
democracy brought about by Neoliberalism certainly should at least be
questioned, and excerpts from essays in this book reinforce that.  Perhaps
this book is more than just a symbolic warning, since what has transpired
during the past decade, perhaps longer, is a reversal in true social
justice, often accompanied by blatant denial to the children of the lesser
gods of everything that makes up human dignity.

It is the warning, the calling to arms that pierces one's mind, and heart,
when reading the book; and one hope that it doesn't end up being the last
lament, the announcement by the bean chaointe (keening woman) that humanity
is no longer, that the world has self-destructed.

And, in an accelerated fashion, Bipolar Bush, in his arrogance and
insolence, appears to be taking us to that self-immolation.

*(c) 2007 Ben Tanosborn*

*Ben Tanosborn** **an editor of MWC News, after completing graduate studies
at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), set out for a career in
international business that would take him to five continents, expose him to
several cultures and make him realize the importance for any and all
Americans to become goodwill ambassadors for the United States*.
Other articles by this author
*http://mwcnews.net/Ben-Tanosborn* <http://mwcnews.net/Ben-Tanosborn>


http://mwcnews.net/content/view/16964/42/

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to