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   <updated>2008-11-26T21:04:51Z</updated>
   
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<entry>
   <title>America the Illiterate</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/jormungand/2008/11/america-the-illiterate.php" />
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   <published>2008-11-26T21:03:49Z</published>
   <updated>2008-11-26T21:04:51Z</updated>
   
   <summary>[Note: I am simply re-posting an article a friend forwarded to me. I know this is frowned upon on the Cafe, and I apologize, but I find this article to be of absolutely critical importance to understanding the current problems...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Jormungand</name>
      
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      <![CDATA[<i>[Note: I am simply re-posting an article a friend forwarded to me. I
know this is frowned upon on the Cafe, and I apologize, but I find this
article to be of absolutely critical importance to understanding the
current problems of the United States.]<br /><br /></i><div class="post-header">
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																	<font face="Times New Roman">
																	<a href="http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21239.htm"><b>
																	<font size="6">America the 
																	Illiterate</font></b></a><br />
																	<br />
																	<b>By Chris 
																	Hedges<br />
																	<br />
																	November 16, 
																	2008</b></font><font face="Times New Roman"><b>&nbsp; 
																	--- W</b>e live 
																	in two 
																	Americas. 
																	One America, 
																	now the 
																	minority, 
																	functions in 
																	a 
																	print-based, 
																	literate 
																	world. It 
																	can cope 
																	with 
																	complexity 
																	and has the 
																	intellectual 
																	tools to 
																	separate 
																	illusion 
																	from truth. 
																	The other 
																	America, 
																	which 
																	constitutes 
																	the 
																	majority, 
																	exists in a 
																	non-reality-based 
																	belief 
																	system. This 
																	America, 
																	dependent on 
																	skillfully 
																	manipulated 
																	images for 
																	information, 
																	has severed 
																	itself from 
																	the 
																	literate, 
																	print-based 
																	culture. It 
																	cannot 
																	differentiate 
																	between lies 
																	and truth. 
																	It is 
																	informed by 
																	simplistic, 
																	childish 
																	narratives 
																	and clichés. 
																	It is thrown 
																	into 
																	confusion by 
																	ambiguity, 
																	nuance and 
																	self-reflection. 
																	This divide, 
																	more than 
																	race, class 
																	or gender, 
																	more than 
																	rural or 
																	urban, 
																	believer or 
																	nonbeliever, 
																	red state or 
																	blue state, 
																	has split 
																	the country 
																	into 
																	radically 
																	distinct, 
																	unbridgeable 
																	and 
																	antagonistic 
																	entities.
																	<br />
																	<br />
																	There are 
																	over 42 
																	million 
																	American 
																	adults, 20 
																	percent of 
																	whom hold 
																	high school 
																	diplomas, 
																	who cannot 
																	read, as 
																	well as the 
																	50 million 
																	who read at 
																	a fourth- or 
																	fifth-grade 
																	level. 
																	Nearly a 
																	third of the 
																	nation's 
																	population 
																	is 
																	illiterate 
																	or barely 
																	literate. 
																	And their 
																	numbers are 
																	growing by 
																	an estimated 
																	2 million a 
																	year. But 
																	even those 
																	who are 
																	supposedly 
																	literate 
																	retreat in 
																	huge numbers 
																	into this 
																	image-based 
																	existence. A 
																	third of 
																	high school 
																	graduates, 
																	along with 
																	42 percent 
																	of college 
																	graduates, 
																	never read a 
																	book after 
																	they finish 
																	school. 
																	Eighty 
																	percent of 
																	the families 
																	in the 
																	United 
																	States last 
																	year did not 
																	buy a book.
																	<br />
																	<br />
																	The 
																	illiterate 
																	rarely vote, 
																	and when 
																	they do vote 
																	they do so 
																	without the 
																	ability to 
																	make 
																	decisions 
																	based on 
																	textual 
																	information. 
																	American 
																	political 
																	campaigns, 
																	which have 
																	learned to 
																	speak in the 
																	comforting 
																	epistemology 
																	of images, 
																	eschew real 
																	ideas and 
																	policy for 
																	cheap 
																	slogans and 
																	reassuring 
																	personal 
																	narratives. 
																	Political 
																	propaganda 
																	now 
																	masquerades 
																	as ideology. 
																	Political 
																	campaigns 
																	have become 
																	an 
																	experience. 
																	They do not 
																	require 
																	cognitive or 
																	self-critical 
																	skills. They 
																	are designed 
																	to ignite 
																	pseudo-religious 
																	feelings of 
																	euphoria, 
																	empowerment 
																	and 
																	collective 
																	salvation. 
																	Campaigns 
																	that succeed 
																	are 
																	carefully 
																	constructed 
																	psychological 
																	instruments 
																	that 
																	manipulate 
																	fickle 
																	public 
																	moods, 
																	emotions and 
																	impulses, 
																	many of 
																	which are 
																	subliminal. 
																	They create 
																	a public 
																	ecstasy that 
																	annuls 
																	individuality 
																	and fosters 
																	a state of 
																	mindlessness. 
																	They thrust 
																	us into an 
																	eternal 
																	present. 
																	They cater 
																	to a nation 
																	that now 
																	lives in a 
																	state of 
																	permanent 
																	amnesia. It 
																	is style and 
																	story, not 
																	content or 
																	history or 
																	reality, 
																	which inform 
																	our politics 
																	and our 
																	lives. We 
																	prefer happy 
																	illusions. 
																	And it works 
																	because so 
																	much of the 
																	American 
																	electorate, 
																	including 
																	those who 
																	should know 
																	better, 
																	blindly cast 
																	ballots for 
																	slogans, 
																	smiles, the 
																	cheerful 
																	family 
																	tableaux, 
																	narratives 
																	and the 
																	perceived 
																	sincerity 
																	and the 
																	attractiveness 
																	of 
																	candidates. 
																	We confuse 
																	how we feel 
																	with 
																	knowledge.
																	<br />
																	<br />
																	The 
																	illiterate 
																	and 
																	semi-literate, 
																	once the 
																	campaigns 
																	are over, 
																	remain 
																	powerless. 
																	They still 
																	cannot 
																	protect 
																	their 
																	children 
																	from 
																	dysfunctional 
																	public 
																	schools. 
																	They still 
																	cannot 
																	understand 
																	predatory 
																	loan deals, 
																	the 
																	intricacies 
																	of mortgage 
																	papers, 
																	credit card 
																	agreements 
																	and equity 
																	lines of 
																	credit that 
																	drive them 
																	into 
																	foreclosures 
																	and 
																	bankruptcies. 
																	They still 
																	struggle 
																	with the 
																	most basic 
																	chores of 
																	daily life 
																	from reading 
																	instructions 
																	on medicine 
																	bottles to 
																	filling out 
																	bank forms, 
																	car loan 
																	documents 
																	and 
																	unemployment 
																	benefit and 
																	insurance 
																	papers. They 
																	watch 
																	helplessly 
																	and without 
																	comprehension 
																	as hundreds 
																	of thousands 
																	of jobs are 
																	shed. They 
																	are hostages 
																	to brands. 
																	Brands come 
																	with images 
																	and slogans. 
																	Images and 
																	slogans are 
																	all they 
																	understand. 
																	Many eat at 
																	fast food 
																	restaurants 
																	not only 
																	because it 
																	is cheap but 
																	because they 
																	can order 
																	from 
																	pictures 
																	rather than 
																	menus. And 
																	those who 
																	serve them, 
																	also 
																	semi-literate 
																	or 
																	illiterate, 
																	punch in 
																	orders on 
																	cash 
																	registers 
																	whose keys 
																	are marked 
																	with symbols 
																	and 
																	pictures. 
																	This is our 
																	brave new 
																	world.<br />
																	<br />
																	Political 
																	leaders in 
																	our 
																	post-literate 
																	society no 
																	longer need 
																	to be 
																	competent, 
																	sincere or 
																	honest. They 
																	only need to 
																	appear to 
																	have these 
																	qualities. 
																	Most of all 
																	they need a 
																	story, a 
																	narrative. 
																	The reality 
																	of the 
																	narrative is 
																	irrelevant. 
																	It can be 
																	completely 
																	at odds with 
																	the facts. 
																	The 
																	consistency 
																	and 
																	emotional 
																	appeal of 
																	the story 
																	are 
																	paramount. 
																	The most 
																	essential 
																	skill in 
																	political 
																	theater and 
																	the consumer 
																	culture is 
																	artifice. 
																	Those who 
																	are best at 
																	artifice 
																	succeed. 
																	Those who 
																	have not 
																	mastered the 
																	art of 
																	artifice 
																	fail. In an 
																	age of 
																	images and 
																	entertainment, 
																	in an age of 
																	instant 
																	emotional 
																	gratification, 
																	we do not 
																	seek or want 
																	honesty. We 
																	ask to be 
																	indulged and 
																	entertained 
																	by clichés, 
																	stereotypes 
																	and mythic 
																	narratives 
																	that tell us 
																	we can be 
																	whomever we 
																	want to be, 
																	that we live 
																	in the 
																	greatest 
																	country on 
																	Earth, that 
																	we are 
																	endowed with 
																	superior 
																	moral and 
																	physical 
																	qualities 
																	and that our 
																	glorious 
																	future is 
																	preordained, 
																	either 
																	because of 
																	our 
																	attributes 
																	as Americans 
																	or because 
																	we are 
																	blessed by 
																	God or both.
																	<br />
																	<br />
																	The ability 
																	to magnify 
																	these simple 
																	and childish 
																	lies, to 
																	repeat them 
																	and have 
																	surrogates 
																	repeat them 
																	in endless 
																	loops of 
																	news cycles, 
																	gives these 
																	lies the 
																	aura of an 
																	uncontested 
																	truth. We 
																	are 
																	repeatedly 
																	fed words or 
																	phrases like 
																	yes we can, 
																	maverick, 
																	change, 
																	pro-life, 
																	hope or war 
																	on terror. 
																	It feels 
																	good not to 
																	think. All 
																	we have to 
																	do is 
																	visualize 
																	what we 
																	want, 
																	believe in 
																	ourselves 
																	and summon 
																	those hidden 
																	inner 
																	resources, 
																	whether 
																	divine or 
																	national, 
																	that make 
																	the world 
																	conform to 
																	our desires. 
																	Reality is 
																	never an 
																	impediment 
																	to our 
																	advancement.<br />
																	<br />
																	The 
																	Princeton 
																	Review 
																	analyzed the 
																	transcripts 
																	of the 
																	Gore-Bush 
																	debates, the 
																	Clinton-Bush-Perot 
																	debates of 
																	1992, the 
																	Kennedy-Nixon 
																	debates of 
																	1960 and the 
																	Lincoln-Douglas 
																	debates of 
																	1858. It 
																	reviewed 
																	these 
																	transcripts 
																	using a 
																	standard 
																	vocabulary 
																	test that 
																	indicates 
																	the minimum 
																	educational 
																	standard 
																	needed for a 
																	reader to 
																	grasp the 
																	text. During 
																	the 2000 
																	debates, 
																	George W. 
																	Bush spoke 
																	at a 
																	sixth-grade 
																	level (6.7) 
																	and Al Gore 
																	at a 
																	seventh-grade 
																	level (7.6). 
																	In the 1992 
																	debates, 
																	Bill Clinton 
																	spoke at a 
																	seventh-grade 
																	level (7.6), 
																	while George 
																	H.W. Bush 
																	spoke at a 
																	sixth-grade 
																	level (6.8), 
																	as did H. 
																	Ross Perot 
																	(6.3). In 
																	the debates 
																	between John 
																	F. Kennedy 
																	and Richard 
																	Nixon, the 
																	candidates 
																	spoke in 
																	language 
																	used by 
																	10th-graders. 
																	In the 
																	debates of 
																	Abraham 
																	Lincoln and 
																	Stephen A. 
																	Douglas the 
																	scores were 
																	respectively 
																	11.2 and 
																	12.0. In 
																	short, 
																	today's 
																	political 
																	rhetoric is 
																	designed to 
																	be 
																	comprehensible 
																	to a 
																	10-year-old 
																	child or an 
																	adult with a 
																	sixth-grade 
																	reading 
																	level. It is 
																	fitted to 
																	this level 
																	of 
																	comprehension 
																	because most 
																	Americans 
																	speak, think 
																	and are 
																	entertained 
																	at this 
																	level. This 
																	is why 
																	serious film 
																	and theater 
																	and other 
																	serious 
																	artistic 
																	expression, 
																	as well as 
																	newspapers 
																	and books, 
																	are being 
																	pushed to 
																	the margins 
																	of American 
																	society. 
																	Voltaire was 
																	the most 
																	famous man 
																	of the 18th 
																	century. 
																	Today the 
																	most famous 
																	"person" is 
																	Mickey 
																	Mouse.<br />
																	<br />
																	In our 
																	post-literate 
																	world, 
																	because 
																	ideas are 
																	inaccessible, 
																	there is a 
																	need for 
																	constant 
																	stimulus. 
																	News, 
																	political 
																	debate, 
																	theater, art 
																	and books 
																	are judged 
																	not on the 
																	power of 
																	their ideas 
																	but on their 
																	ability to 
																	entertain. 
																	Cultural 
																	products 
																	that force 
																	us to 
																	examine 
																	ourselves 
																	and our 
																	society are 
																	condemned as 
																	elitist and 
																	impenetrable. 
																	Hannah 
																	Arendt 
																	warned that 
																	the 
																	marketization 
																	of culture 
																	leads to its 
																	degradation, 
																	that this 
																	marketization 
																	creates a 
																	new 
																	celebrity 
																	class of 
																	intellectuals 
																	who, 
																	although 
																	well read 
																	and informed 
																	themselves, 
																	see their 
																	role in 
																	society as 
																	persuading 
																	the masses 
																	that 
																	"Hamlet" can 
																	be as 
																	entertaining 
																	as "The Lion 
																	King" and 
																	perhaps as 
																	educational. 
																	"Culture," 
																	she wrote, 
																	"is being 
																	destroyed in 
																	order to 
																	yield 
																	entertainment."<br />
																	<br />
																	"There are 
																	many great 
																	authors of 
																	the past who 
																	have 
																	survived 
																	centuries of 
																	oblivion and 
																	neglect," 
																	Arendt 
																	wrote, "but 
																	it is still 
																	an open 
																	question 
																	whether they 
																	will be able 
																	to survive 
																	an 
																	entertaining 
																	version of 
																	what they 
																	have to 
																	say."<br />
																	<br />
																	The change 
																	from a 
																	print-based 
																	to an 
																	image-based 
																	society has 
																	transformed 
																	our nation. 
																	Huge 
																	segments of 
																	our 
																	population, 
																	especially 
																	those who 
																	live in the 
																	embrace of 
																	the 
																	Christian 
																	right and 
																	the consumer 
																	culture, are 
																	completely 
																	unmoored 
																	from 
																	reality. 
																	They lack 
																	the capacity 
																	to search 
																	for truth 
																	and cope 
																	rationally 
																	with our 
																	mounting 
																	social and 
																	economic 
																	ills. They 
																	seek 
																	clarity, 
																	entertainment 
																	and order. 
																	They are 
																	willing to 
																	use force to 
																	impose this 
																	clarity on 
																	others, 
																	especially 
																	those who do 
																	not speak as 
																	they speak 
																	and think as 
																	they think. 
																	All the 
																	traditional 
																	tools of 
																	democracies, 
																	including 
																	dispassionate 
																	scientific 
																	and 
																	historical 
																	truth, 
																	facts, news 
																	and rational 
																	debate, are 
																	useless 
																	instruments 
																	in a world 
																	that lacks 
																	the capacity 
																	to use them.<br />
																	<br />
																	As we 
																	descend into 
																	a 
																	devastating 
																	economic 
																	crisis, one 
																	that Barack 
																	Obama cannot 
																	halt, there 
																	will be tens 
																	of millions 
																	of Americans 
																	who will be 
																	ruthlessly 
																	thrust 
																	aside. As 
																	their houses 
																	are 
																	foreclosed, 
																	as their 
																	jobs are 
																	lost, as 
																	they are 
																	forced to 
																	declare 
																	bankruptcy 
																	and watch 
																	their 
																	communities 
																	collapse, 
																	they will 
																	retreat even 
																	further into 
																	irrational 
																	fantasy. 
																	They will be 
																	led toward 
																	glittering 
																	and 
																	self-destructive 
																	illusions by 
																	our modern 
																	Pied 
																	Pipers--our 
																	corporate 
																	advertisers, 
																	our 
																	charlatan 
																	preachers, 
																	our 
																	television 
																	news 
																	celebrities, 
																	our 
																	self-help 
																	gurus, our 
																	entertainment 
																	industry and 
																	our 
																	political 
																	demagogues--who 
																	will offer 
																	increasingly 
																	absurd forms 
																	of escapism.<br />
																	<br />
																	The core 
																	values of 
																	our open 
																	society, the 
																	ability to 
																	think for 
																	oneself, to 
																	draw 
																	independent 
																	conclusions, 
																	to express 
																	dissent when 
																	judgment and 
																	common sense 
																	indicate 
																	something is 
																	wrong, to be 
																	self-critical, 
																	to challenge 
																	authority, 
																	to 
																	understand 
																	historical 
																	facts, to 
																	separate 
																	truth from 
																	lies, to 
																	advocate for 
																	change and 
																	to 
																	acknowledge 
																	that there 
																	are other 
																	views, 
																	different 
																	ways of 
																	being, that 
																	are morally 
																	and socially 
																	acceptable, 
																	are dying. 
																	Obama used 
																	hundreds of 
																	millions of 
																	dollars in 
																	campaign 
																	funds to 
																	appeal to 
																	and 
																	manipulate 
																	this 
																	illiteracy 
																	and 
																	irrationalism 
																	to his 
																	advantage, 
																	but these 
																	forces will 
																	prove to be 
																	his most 
																	deadly 
																	nemesis once 
																	they collide 
																	with the 
																	awful 
																	reality that 
																	awaits us.
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				</div><br />]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>

</feed>

 
