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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism
- Subject: CHOMSKY: Excerpts from "The 3rd World At Home" (I)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.015518.14863@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 01:55:18 GMT
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-
- "The Harris polling organization has been measuring alienation
- from institutions for 25 years. Its latest survey, for 1991,
- found the numbers at an all-time high of 66%"
-
-
- [From Z magazine, Nov. 1992; see bottom]
-
- =======================
- The Third World at Home
- =======================
- By Noam Chomsky
-
- [...]
-
- Studies of public opinion bring out other strands. A June 1992
- Gallup poll found that 75% of the population do not expect life
- to improve for the next generation of Americans--not too
- surprising, given that real wages have been dropping for 20
- years, with an accelerated decline under Reaganite
- "conservatism," which also managed to extend the cloud
- over the college-educated. Public attitudes are illuminated
- further by the current popularity of ex-presidents: Carter is
- well in the lead (74%) followed by the virtually unknown Ford
- (68%), with Reagan at 58%, barely above Nixon (54%). Dislike of
- Reagan is particularly high among working people and "Reagan
- Democrats," who gave him "the highest unfavorable rating
- [63%] of a wide range of public officials," one study found.
- Reagan's popularity was always largely a media concoction; the
- "great communicator" was quickly dismissed when the farce
- would no longer play.
-
- The Harris polling organization has been measuring alienation
- from institutions for 25 years. Its latest survey, for 1991,
- found the numbers at an all-time high of 66%. 83% of the
- population feel that "the rich are getting richer and the poor
- are getting poorer," saying that "the economic system is
- inherently unfair," Harris president Humphrey Taylor comments.
- The concerns of the overwhelming majority, however, cannot be
- addressed within the political system; even the words can barely
- be spoken or heard.
-
- The journalist who reports these facts sees only people who are
- angry at "their well-paid politicians" and want "more power to
- the people," not "more power to the government." We are not
- allowed to think that government might be of and by the people,
- or that they might seek to change an economic system that 83%
- regard as "inherently unfair."
-
- Another poll revealed that "faith in God is the most important
- part of Americans' lives." Forty percent "said they valued their
- relationship with God above all else"; 29% chose "good health"
- and 21% a "happy marriage." Satisfying work was chosen by 5%,
- respect of people in the community by 2%. That this world might
- ####
- offer basic features of a human existence is hardly to be
- contemplated. These are the kinds of results one might find in a
- shattered peasant society. Chiliastic visions are reported to be
- particularly prevalent among blacks; again, not surprising, when
- we learn from the _New England Journal of Medicine_ that "black
- men in Harlem were less likely to reach the age of 65 than men in
- Bangladesh."
-
- Also driven from the mind is any sense of solidarity and
- community. Educational reform is designed for those whose
- parents can pay, or at least are motivated to "get
- ahead." The idea that there might be some general concern for
- children--not to speak of others--must be suppressed. We
- must make "the true costs of bearing a child out of wedlock
- clear" by letting "them be felt when they are
- incurred--namely at the child's birth"; the teenage
- high-school dropout must realize that her child will get no help
- from us (Michael Kaus). In the rising "culture of
- cruelty," Ruth Conniff writes, "the middle-class
- taxpayer, the politician, and the wealthy upper class are all
- victims" of the undeserving poor, who must be disciplined and
- punished for their depravity, down to future generations.
-
- [...]
-
-
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