12. The
Art Of Driving: The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor
Gatto from archive.org
The
Art Of Driving
Now come back to the present while I
demonstrate that the identical trust placed in
ordinary people 200 years ago still survives where it suits managers of
our economy to allow it. Consider the
art of driving, which I learned at the age of eleven. Without everybody behind the wheel, our sort of
economy would be
impossible, so everybody is
there, IQ notwithstanding. With less than thirty hours of combined
training and experience, a hundred million people are
allowed access to vehicular weapons more
lethal than pistols or rifles. Turned loose without a teacher, so to
speak. Why does our government make such
presumptions of competence, placing nearly unqualified trust in drivers, while it maintains such a tight grip
on near-monopoly state schooling?
An analogy will illustrate just how
radical this trust really is. What if I proposed that we hand three sticks of dynamite and a detonator
to anyone who asked for them. All an
applicant would need is money to pay for the explosives. You'd have to
be an idiot to agree with my plan — at
least based on the assumptions you picked up in school about human nature and human competence.
And yet gasoline, a spectacularly
mischievous explosive, dangerously unstable and with the intriguing characteristic as an assault
weapon that it can flow under locked doors and
saturate bulletproof clothing, is available to anyone with a container.
Five gallons of gasoline have the
destructive power of a stick of dynamite. The average tank holds fifteen gallons, yet no background check is necessary
for dispenser or dispensee. As long as
gasoline is freely available, gun control is beside the point. Push on.
Why do we allow access to a portable
substance capable of incinerating houses, torching crowded theaters, or even turning skyscrapers into infernos? We
haven't even considered the battering ram
aspect of cars — why are novice operators allowed to command a ton of
metal capable of hurtling through school
crossings at up to two miles a minute? Why do we give the power of life and death this way to everyone?
It should strike you at once that our
unstated official assumptions about human nature are dead wrong. Nearly all people are competent
and responsible; universal motoring proves
that. The efficiency of motor vehicles as terrorist instruments would
have written a tragic record long ago if
people were inclined to terrorism. But almost all auto mishaps are accidents, and while there are seemingly a
lot of those, the actual fraction of mishaps,
when held up against the stupendous number of possibilities for mishap,
is quite small. I know it's difficult to
accept this because the spectre of global terrorism is a favorite cover story of governments, but the truth is
substantially different from the tale the public is sold. According to the U.S. State Department,
1995 was a near-record year for terrorist
murders; it saw 300 worldwide (200 at the hand of the Tamil Tigers in
Sri Lanka) compared to 400,000
smoking-related deaths in the United States alone. When we consider our assumptions about human nature
that keep children in a condition of
confinement and limited options, we need to reflect on driving and
things like almost nonexistent global
terrorism.
Notice how quickly people learn to drive well.
Early failure is efficiently corrected,
usually self-corrected, because the terrific motivation of staying alive
and in one piece steers driving
improvement. If the grand theories of Comenius and Herbart about learning by incremental revelation, or those lifelong
nanny rules of Owen, Maclure, Pestalozzi,
and Beatrice Webb, or those calls for precision in human ranking of
Thorndike and Hall, or those nuanced
interventions of Yale, Stanford, and Columbia Teachers College were actually as essential as their proponents
claimed, this libertarian miracle of motoring
would be unfathomable.
Now
consider the intellectual component of driving. It isn't all just
hand-eye-foot coordination. First-time
drivers make dozens, no, hundreds, of continuous hypotheses, plans, computations, and fine-tuned judgments
every day they drive. They do this
skillfully, without being graded, because if they don't, organic
provision exists in the motoring
universe to punish them. There isn't any court of appeal from your own stupidity on the road.
I could go on: think of licensing,
maintenance, storage, adapting machine and driver to seasons and daily conditions. Carefully
analyzed, driving is as impressive a miracle as
walking, talking, or reading, but this only shows the inherent weakness
of analysis since we know almost
everyone learns to drive well in a few hours. The way we used to be as Americans, learning everything, breaking down
social class barriers, is the way we might
be again without forced schooling. Driving proves that to me.
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