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Necking In The Guardhouse: The Underground History of Amercian Education by
John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Necking
In The Guardhouse
About
an hour out of Philadelphia there was once (and may still be) a large U.S.
Air Force base from which officers being
sent overseas to Germany, Crete, and elsewhere,
were transshipped like California cabbages. During the early 1980s I
drove a relative there, a freshly minted
lieutenant, late on the night
before she flew to Europe for her first assignment and the first real job of her
life. She was young, tense, bursting with Air
Force protocols. Who could blame her for taking the rulebook as the
final authority?
By
happenstance I took a civilian highway outside the eastern perimeter of the base
when her billet was on the western side.
Irritated, I checked a map and discovered to my disgust that the only public connection to the right
road on the far side of the base (where the
motel sat) was miles away. It was late, I was tired. To make matters
worse, I knew this prim young lady would
need to be sharp in the morning so guilt prodded me. There was just one way to avoid the long detour and
that was to take the military road through the
center of the base leading directly to where we wanted to be. Well then,
we would take it! But the lieutenant was
aghast. It was not possible. I wasn't authorized, had no tag, had no permit, had no rank. No! No! Not permitted!
Listen to me, the young woman demanded,
security is maniacal on SAC bases; we will have to take the long way
around. What she said was perfectly
reasonable, but quite wrong.
One
of the genuine advantages of living as long as I have is that you eventually
come to see the gaps between man-made
systems and human reality. Even in a perfect system, functions must be assigned to people, and
people find a way to sabotage their system
functions even if they don't want to. Systems violate some profound inner
equilibrium, call it the soul if you
like. Systems are inhuman, people are not. On the principle nothing ventured, nothing gained, I drove toward the
guard post sitting astride the transverse road,
all the while listening to my passenger, increasingly nervous, shrilly
informing me there was "No
way" I would be "allowed" to pass. "And don't play
games," she further told me
ominously, "MPs have instructions to shoot people acting
suspiciously." We pulled up to the
guard booth. No one was in sight so I proceeded down the transverse like a justified sinner smiling, but the lieutenant
beside me was so agitated, I stopped and
I backed up quite a long way to the lighted hut again and blew the horn.
This time a guard emerged, his tie
askew, lipstick all over his face. Before he could fully collect himself I shouted out the window, "Okay if I drive
through to the motel? The lieutenant here is
leaving for Germany tomorrow. I'd like to get her to bed."
"Sure, go ahead," he waved and
went back to whatever paramilitary pursuit he was engaged in, repopulating the world or whatever.
The temptation to gloat over my
officious kinswoman was strong but I fought it down in light of her
tender age.
Just outside the far gate across the base
was the ghastly two-story cinder-block motel, a
type favored by military personnel in transit, where a reservation
waited in the young woman's name. As we
pulled into the front parking lot a terrible sight greeted my young relative, a sight that reminded me of nothing
so much as Monongahela on a bad Saturday
night around New Year's Eve. At least two dozen men, some half in
uniform, some bare- chested and bloody,
were fistfighting all over the first floor walkway and on the little balcony that paralleled the second floor.
Dozens more watched, hooting and howling,
beer cans in hand. Grunts and the sounds of fists smacking heads and
bodies filled the air. They were all
enlisted men, apparently indifferent to official disapproval, for all the world as if they had been Chechens or Hmong
instead of obedient American soldiers.
At
first I couldn't believe my eyes. The combat clearly had been raging for
awhile, but no Air Force or local police
had moved to stop it. Suddenly to my dismay, from the new officer's uniform beside me with a girl
inside came something like these words: "I'll stop this, let me out of the car. When they see an
officer's uniform they '11 take off running."
"Don't do it," I begged. "They
should take off running, but what if they don't? What if that pack of fighting drunks goes for you
because they like to fight and think it's none of your business? Why don't we just find another
place for you to sleep? You've got a plane
to Germany in the morning. Let's keep our eye on the ball." Driving
to another motel, I said cautiously,
"You know, what they write in rule books and how things really work
are never the same. We all learn that as
we get older." She was too angry to hear, I think.
It's fairly clear to me by now that we engage
in our endless foreign adventures, launching
military forces against tiny islands like Grenada, or tiny nations like
Panama, bombing the vast deserts of
Iraq, a country of 22 million people, or engage in our reckless social adventures, too, patenting human genes,
forcing kids to be dumb, because our leadership
classes are worn out from the long strain of organizing everything over
the centuries. Our leadership has
degenerated dramatically, just as British leadership did after Ladysmith, Kimberley, and Mafeking. Recently I read of
an American newsman who walked
unchallenged into a nuclear weapons storage facility near Moscow watched
over by a single guard without a weapon.
It tends to make me skeptical about any orderly scientific future. Is it possible that those who sit
atop the social bell curve represent the worst of evolution's products, not its best? Have the
fools among us who just don't get it risen up
and taken command? Think of the
valent symbols of our time: Coca-Cola, the Marlboro Man, disposable diapers, disposable children, Dolly the cloned
sheep, Verdun, Auschwitz, Hiroshima, the
national highway system, My Lai, fiat money, the space program,
Chernobyl, Waco, the Highway of Death,
welfare, Bhopal, hordes of homeless, psychopathic kids filling the corridors of the schools put out of sight and
mind until their morale is deteriorated; think
of Princess Di and the Ponzi scheme we call Social Security, the missile
attack on the Sudan, the naval blockade
of Haiti. The naval blockade of Haiti? Is any of this real? People who walk the dogs and kiss the
grandchildren are all so tired of grandiose
schemes and restless Utopians I doubt if too many would really care if
the planet exploded tomorrow.
Think of the never-ending stream of
manufactured crises like the invasion of Panama or the cremation of Iraq, principal products of
a spent leadership trying to buy itself time
while the grail search for a destiny worth having goes on in
laboratories and conference rooms
instead of in homes and villages where it belongs. Did the people who arrange
this sorry soap opera ever take note how
green the world really is, how worthwhile the minds and hearts of average men and women, how
particular the hue of each blade of grass? It's
the terrible idleness of the social engineering classes that drives them
mad, I think. They have nothing
worthwhile to do, so they do us.
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