[Dialogue] Mark Morford- Doom Gloom Ray of hope
David L. Thomas
DavThom at worldnet.att.net
Wed Oct 6 20:50:09 EDT 2004
It sounds like the basic contradiction is that people are uneducated and as
a result don't care about a broader world. Unless they get educated, maybe
it is better that they don't vote. Otherwise, we might have worse leaders.
Dave Thomas
----- Original Message -----
From: <KroegerD at aol.com>
To: <Dialogue at wedgeblade.net>
Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 3:15 PM
Subject: [Dialogue] Mark Morford- Doom Gloom Ray of hope
> Why Don't Americans Care?
> Do you know who Halliburton is? Dick Cheney? How about Karl Rove? Alas,
most Americans don't
>
> By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist
> Wednesday, October 6, 2004
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
------
>
>
>
> Let's be honest. Percentage-wise, few people in America really give much
of a crap about what's going on in the hallowed halls of politics and power.
> This is what we in the media and maybe you in the media-consuming audience
tend to forget far too easily: This country is simply jam-packed with
millions of people who have no time for, or interest in, politics, or media,
or environmental policy, or education, or global issues, or which
presidential candidate lied his ass off about which aspect of his military
career and which Orange Alert is totally bogus and how many soldiers are
dying for what imbecilic war.
>
> It seems hard to believe. But the general rule of thumb is that major
cities are slightly more attuned due to aggressive media saturation and how
issues tend to make themselves known more urgently, more immediately,
whereas Middle America is a scattershot conglomeration of the politically
apathetic and the actively disenfranchised, full of people far too busy with
their lives and kids and jobs and zoning out on "Fear Factor" and "Monday
Night Football" to care about following the elitist, ever dire dramas
playing out on the nation's gilded stages.
>
> Most Americans, in other words, have no idea what the hell a Halliburton
is. Or a Karl Rove. Or a Donny "Shriveled Soul" Rumsfeld. Or a Lockheed
Martin. Or a Carlysle Group. Or have any idea that Saddam had nothing
whatsoever to do with 9/11. Or that WMDs were never found. Or that President
Bush has taken more vacation time than any president in U.S. history. Or
that Jesus thinks Dubya is "sort of a dink." Or where Iraq is on a map.
>
> Fact is, in the past decade, TV-news ratings -- cable and network,
combined -- has shrunk to a fraction of its former numbers. Newspaper
subscriptions have been either flat or dropping for just about as long.
Newsmagazines, radio, historical nonfiction: flat or dropping fast. Even the
Internet, that vast teeming customizable firestorm of news and info
streaming in from all over the planet, even the awesome Net draws far more
people to its porn and gossip and shopping departments than any e-news joint
could ever wet dream.
>
> Is this unfair? Does it sound elitist and biased? It's not. There have
been studies. And reports. And alarming indicators of all kinds telling us
time and again that, for example, fully 50 percent of eligible Americans
don't even bother to vote (a 15 percent drop since 1964), and many have no
idea who's on the Supreme Court or what Congress does, and many can't even
point to France on a globe.
>
> Voter turnout, comparatively, in Italy, Spain, the U.K., or Germany?
Anywhere from 75 to 92 percent, every time. The sad fact is, the United
States ranks 139th out of 172 countries in voter turnout. Wave that flag
proudly, baby.
>
> You've seen the headlines. Alarming numbers of American high school
students can't even identify the current vice president, much less name a
half dozen presidents from history. Far too many citizens can't name the
capital of their own home state or recognize their own senators, much less
discern how Bush's environmental policy is poisoning their water or how
Ashcroft wants to scan their email and tap their phones and suck the pith
from their souls. Forty-nine percent of Americans aged 18-25 can't find New
York on a map, and eleven percent can't even locate the United States. Now
that's patriotism.
>
> A recent report by the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and
Development states that upward of 60 percent of Americans ages 16-25 are
'functionally illiterate', meaning they can't, for example, fill out a
detailed form or read a numerical table (like a time schedule). A recent
Florida study shows at least 70 percent of recent high school graduates need
remedial courses -- that is, basic reading and math -- when they enter
community college. These are kids who, you can be assured, think Colin
Powell is that nasty British dude on "American Idol."
>
> And everyone you know seems to have a parent or a sister-in-law living
somewhere conservative and podunk for whom politics and news media is like
some sort of impossibly dense morass, alien and strange and vaguely
threatening, like a nasty, painful growth on their big toe, best ignored in
hopes that it will just dry up and go away.
>
>
> Maybe this, then, is the most pressing question of our time: How to get
the vast majority of Americans to care? To pay attention? To read? To effect
change and demand accountability from bumbling spoon-fed leaders who count
on voter apathy and force-fed ignorance to cram through their environmental
rollbacks and homophobic laws and draconian Patriot Acts? Is it even
possible? Are we too far gone?
>
> How to make America more like, say, Europe, where knowledge of current
events and political intrigue is not only hugely important to the vast
majority of citizens but is also deeply woven into the very fabric of daily
life, an integral part of the educational system and the café conversation
and the workplace water-cooler chats, and to ignore it is considered, well,
irresponsible and even a mite traitorous?
>
> True, part of why they care so much is because America is the foremost
bully on the block and it pays to know what makes the bully tick. And whine.
And kill. In short, as the theory goes, most Americans don't give a damn
because we're on top and we own everything and have more nukes than anyone
and we're never the ones getting invaded. It's our unofficial motto --
America: We Don't Have to Care.
>
>
> And this very column is frequently slapped with the accusation that it
merely "preaches to the choir," and if I really want to affect minds I
should consider tempering or sanitizing my opinions for a more "moderate"
mainstream readership, as if the nation was chock-full of opinionated,
well-read, temperate thinkers ready to be gently informed of new ideas, when
in fact this group is but a fraction, a sliver, far overshadowed and
overpowered by the real majority in America: The detached. The
disinterested. The intellectually lazy.
>
> So, what's the solution? It is as simple as dramatically changing the way
we educate our children, our population? Is it desanitizing our vacuous
history textbooks and making media studies and political science and current
events as mandatory to the educational diet as macho sports and bad lunches
and playground kickball?
>
> Or maybe it's a new national draft? Will that galvanize the rest of the
populace sufficiently? How about Iraq devolving even faster into Vietnam
2.0? Is it 10,000 dead U.S. soldiers and nary an imprisoned terrorist or
fresh barrel of oil to show for it? How about five bucks a gallon? Ten? Is
it legalizing pot and banning guns? What will it take?
>
> Maybe another massive national catastrophe? Maybe a 9/11 cubed, and cubed
again, something unthinkably horrific and unleashed upon the innocents and
the children and the puppies, something that so jars and infuriates and
undermines our desperate empire that even the cold-blooded neoconservative
Right can't possibly leverage our sorrow and pain for its own political
gain? Very possible. After all, nothing like a little hard-earned apocalypse
to make you consider voting independent.
>
> Or maybe it's something entirely different, maybe some sort of potent,
unimaginable spiritual enlightenment that looks like revelation and smells
like Vishnu and sounds like harmonic convergence and tastes like Buddha and
has nothing whatsoever to do with fundamentalism or Christianity or Bush's
angry homophobic flag-wavin' God. The mystics say we're very close. They
claim the next decade will offer, to those who care to participate, one
helluva transformational vibrational wallop. Possible?
>
> Whatever it looks like, we can rest assured we're still not out of the
dark, dank woods just yet. Our national apathy is well protected, our
intellectual ignorance secure and our fears well fed and carefully,
perpetually reinforced by the Powers That Be and the fact that the overall
50 percent voter turnout never moves by more than a point or two, usually
downward.
>
> And the Establishment, it only smiles knowingly, and nods, and says there
there now. It'll be all right. Just go back to sleep.
>
>
>
> --
> Dick Kroeger
>
>
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