202. Quill-Driving Babus: The Underground History of
American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Quill-Driving
Babus
A servant to the imperial virusl Here is a whole new take on
what I was hired to do with my
adult life. It helps to explain why I encountered such violent reactions
from administrators as I
innocently deviated further and further from
my function in an effort to be useful to kids. While straining
to find ways to be helpful, I constantly ran afoul of this hidden directive forced schooling was created to serve,
about which I had previously not
the tiniest clue except that gleaned through intuition.
Professional associations of proles
expand or contract according to the schedule of the political state for absorbing fringe groups and outsiders
for retraining in new habits and
attitudes. If a great social project is underway, bureaucracy grows.
When no compelling
agenda is afoot it shrinks. As populations learn to discipline
themselves, the need for expensive
professional assistance to do it for them diminishes.
For instance, if the managerial promise
of computer workstations is realized — hooking children into automatized learning systems which have been
centrally engineered — then great
numbers of schoolteachers and school administrators who were hired for a computerless moment now passed will
melt away like ice in spring to be reabsorbed into the leveled and featureless common proletariat. My guess is
that this process is already well
underway. Low-level school administrators are a class facing imminent
extinction if I read entrails
correctly.
Indeed, the
bureaucratic giantism we have endured since the end of WWII has clearly
lost momentum. Whether or not we
should consider that a cause for celebration is dubious. A retreating bureaucracy is a sign the
dominant minority considers the proletariat tamed, its own danger past; the bureaucratic buffer
becomes superfluous. It marks a time when
people can be trusted to control themselves. Woe to us all if that is
so.
There is a catch,
however, to the wonderful elasticity of bureaucracy. It is found in the degree of violent backlash occasioned
by bureaucratic shrinkage, or downsizing as it has come to be known. This dangerous reaction Toynbee refers to
as "the bitterness of the
intelligentsia."
Indeed, grounds for bitterness are
formed in the very scheme for training civil servants. They surrender any prospect of
developing full humanity in order to remain employed. Private judgment, for example, is an inevitable early
casualty, personal courage is totally
out of order. Bureaucrats often regard themselves privately as less than
whole men and women, not totally
insensitive to the devil's bargain aspect in what they do. For Toynbee:
This liaison-class suffers from the
congenital unhappiness of the hybrid who is an outcast from both the families that have
combined to beget him. An intelligentsia is hated and despised by its own people. He continues: And while the intelligentsia thus has no love lost on
it at home, it also has no honor paid
to it in the [workplace] whose manners and tricks it has so laboriously
and ingeniously mastered. In the
earlier days of the historic association between India and England, the Hindu intelligentsia, which the British
Raj had fostered for its own administrative convenience, was a common subject of English ridicule.
Servants of state and corporation, like
schoolteachers, lawyers, and social workers, are inherently untrustworthy because of the stress and insult
they constantly endure living and
working suspended between two worlds. They must be carefully watched
during training and subjected to
spiritually deficient education to measure their dependability for the work ahead. If they swallow it,
they get hired.
This hothouse
situation creates fault lines deep in the breed which begin to crack open when employment is cut back. Because
what these men and women do can, in fact, be done by almost anyone, they live in constant peril of being
excessed even when a shrinkage
isn't underway. Toynbee again:
A Peter the Great
wants so many Russian chinovniks or an East India Company so many clerks, or a Mehmed Ali so many
Egyptian shipwrights.... Potters in human clay set about to produce them, but the process of
manufacturing an intelligentsia is more difficult to stop than to start; for the contempt in which the liaison
class is held by those who profit
by its services is offset by its prestige in the eyes of those eligible
for enrollment in it. (emphasis
added)
The applicability of this principle to
your own boy or girl in school, embedded painfully in one of the many bogus gifted and talented classes of
recent years, or graduating from a
watered-down college program set up to accommodate more than half of all
young men and women, is this:
Candidates increase out of all
proportion to the opportunities for employing them and the original nucleus of the employed
intelligentsia becomes swamped by an intellectual proletariat which is idle and destitute as well as
outcast.
Now you have a proper
frame in which to fit the armies of graduate students enduring a long extended childhood in prospect of
a sinecure not likely to be there for most. In Toynbee's eye-opening language, this "handful of
chinovniks is reenforced by a legion of
nihilists, the handful of quill-driving babus by a legion of failed
B.A.s." Be careful not to
smirk; that quill-driving babu you see every morning in the mirror is
likely to be you.
Nor have you heard
the worst: an intelligentsia's unhappiness builds geometrically — an underemployed chinovnik or babu becomes
angrier and more cynical with the passage of years. Sometimes this rage discharges itself quickly, as
when postal employees shoot up the
joint; sometimes it takes centuries. For an example of the latter, Toynbee
offers us:
1. The Russian
intelligentsia, dating from the close of the seventeenth century, which "discharged its accumulated
spite in the shattering Bolshevik Revolution of 1917"
2. The Bengali intelligentsia, dating
from the latter part of the eighteenth century, which began in 1946 to display "a vein of revolutionary
violence which is not yet seen in
other parts of British India where local intelligentsia did not come into existence till fifty or a hundred years
later." [Shortly after those lines were written, the intelligentsias brought British India
down.]
I hope this helps you understand why,
from a policymaker's standpoint, the decision to muzzle intellectual development through schooling has been
in a bull market since the end of
WWII despite the anomaly of the G.I. Bill. The larger the pool of educated
but underemployed men and women,
the louder the time-bomb ticks. It ought to be clear by now that the promises
of schooling cannot be kept for a majority of Americans in an economy structured this way; only by
plundering the planet can they be kept even temporarily for the critical majority that is necessary to
keep the lid on things.
In the society just ahead, one
profession has astonishingly good prospects. I'm referring to the various specialties associated
with policing the angry, the disaffected, and the embittered. Because school promises are mathematically
impossible to keep, they were,
from the beginning, a Ponzi scheme like Social Security. The creative
minority who unleashed this
well-schooled whirlwind a hundred years ago seems to have finally exhausted its imaginative power as it
transmuted slowly into a dominant minority without much creative energy. Dr. Toynbee points to such a
transition as an unmistakable sign of
society in decline. Another ominous sign for Toynbee: the increasing use
of police and armies to protect
private interests.
In 1939, on the eve of war, the defense
budget of the United States was $11 billion (translated into a constant dollar, year-2000 equivalent).
We were at peace. Today, at peace
again, without a visible enemy on the horizon, the defense budget is
twenty-four times higher. The
appearance of a permanent military force in peacetime, which claims a huge share of society's total
expenditure, can't be explained by saying we live in a dangerous time. When wasn't that true?
It is our own leadership which lives dangerously, dwelling in a Darwinian world in which its own people are
suspect, their danger so far
contained by ensnaring the managed population through schooling into a
conspiracy against itself.
We meet
every day in school a reflection of the national leadership class displaying
every indication it has abandoned
its fundamental American obligation to raise ordinary people up, becoming instead an overseas
transmitter of the original mother ideas of England.
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