103. The Spectre Of Uncontrolled Breeding: The Underground History of
American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
The
Spectre Of Uncontrolled Breeding
School as we know it was the creation of four
great coal powers whose ingenious
employment of the coal-powered steam engine shrank distance and crippled
local integrity and the
credibility of local elites. But the United States produced almost as much coal as the other three
school-bound nations put together, as you can see from figures for coal production in 1905: 1)
United
States — 351 million tons; 2) United Kingdom — 236 million tons; 3) Germany — 121 million tons;
4) France — 35 million tons.
Prior to the advent
of coal-based economics, mass society was a phenomenon of the Orient, spoken of with contempt in the
West. Even as late as 1941, 1 remember a barrage of adult discourse from press, screen, radio, and from
conversations of elders that Japan
and China had no regard for human life, by which I presume they meant individual human life. "Banzai!" was
supposed to be the cry of fanatical Japanese infantrymen eager to die for the Emperor, but Western
fighting men, in the words of H.G. Wells' wife, were "thinking bayonets." For that reason Germany was
much more feared than Japan in
WWII.
With the advent of
coal and steam engines, modern civilization and modern schooling came about. One of the great original
arguments for mass schooling was that it would tame and train children uprooted from families broken by
mining and factory work. In
sophisticated spots like Unitarian Boston and Quaker/ Anglican
Philadelphia, school was sold to
the upper classes as a tool to keep children from rooting themselves in the
culture of their own industrially
debased parents.
The full impact of
coal-massified societies on human consciousness is caught inadvertently in Cal Tech nuclear
scientist Harrison Brown's The Challenge of Man 's Future (1954), a book pronounced "great" by fellow
Nobel Prize-winning geneticist Hermann
Muller. Brown examines carefully the probability that the human carrying capacity of the
planet is between 50 and 200 billion people, before summarizing the reasons this fact is best kept
secret:
If humanity had its
way, it would not rest content until the earth is covered completely and to a considerable depth with a
writhing mass of human beings, much as a dead cow is covered with a pulsating mass of maggots.
Brown's metaphors
reveal something of the attitude that raised schooling in the first place on the industrial base of coal,
steam, and steel. Among other things, the new institution would be an instrument to prevent mass humanity
from "having its way."
This essay, characteristic of many such
syntheses issuing from foundation and corporate- sponsored university figures of reputation through the
century, as well as from public
intellectuals like H.G. Wells, was written on the island of Jamaica
which to Brown "appears to be
a tropical paradise," but his scientific eye sees it is actually "the
world in miniature" where
"the struggle for survival goes on" amidst "ugliness,
starvation, and misery." In
this deceptive Utopia, the "comfortable and secure" 20 percent who
live in a "machine
civilization" made possible by coal and oil, are actually "in a very
precarious position,"
threatened by the rapid multiplication of "the starving." Such
paranoia runs like a backbone
through Western history, from Malthus to Carl Sagan.
Only the United
States can stop the threat of overbreeding, says Nobel laureate Brown. "The destiny of humanity depends
on our decisions and upon our actions." And what price should we pay for safety? Nothing less than
"world authority with jurisdiction over population." The penalty for previous overproduction of
the unfit had become by 1954
simply this, that "...thoughts and actions must be ever more
strongly limited." Brown
continued, "[We must create a society] where social organization is
all-pervasive, complex and
inflexible, and where the state completely dominates the individual."
What is "inflexible"
social organization but a class system? Remember your own school. Did a class system exist there? I can see you
through my typewriter keys. You're nodding.
Global Associations Of Technique
No comments:
Post a Comment