After a lifetime of
observation and thought, it increasingly seems to me that failures on the left
are often not a result of leftists being too radical, but of them not being
radical enough. That is to say, leftist who are supposed to oppose the arbitrary
uses of power that are infused in society, all too often abandon one set of
power structures for another. Now, this is historically obvious in the disastrous
cases of many large-scale socialist projects like the Soviet Union. I think
that most people on the left who are appropriately reflective understand that
power (whether institutional or personal) tends to be self-replicating and that
it gets out of hand easily and with often terrible consequences. We didn’t
necessarily need Michel Foucault to point this out, there has been a solid
tradition of leftists who have grappled with the issues of power, doubted parts
of the Marxist or socialist traditions because of their (all too often) failure
to make liberation a central part of their creed. But these liberatory threads
of leftist thought were mostly marginalized by the mainstream socialist
tradition that (for reasons that I could never fathom) hitched themselves to
the wagon of Leninist (or even Stalinist) Marxism.
Unfortunately, we on
the left are still paying for this colossal historical/intellectual error, and
we still haven’t properly begun to reformulate (at least in the public mind)
the real case for a liberatory socialism. So it goes.
Even more unfortunate
is, I believe, that you don’t really have to look too far to see why leftism
continues to be self-crippling. Leftist, as much as anyone else on the
political spectrum continually fall victim to romanticizing the past. All too
often, leftist, like those on the right, reason by nostalgia. The depth of this
romanticism struck me recently while watching an exchange between Fran Leibowitz
and Bill Maher. Both of these public figures (who are ostensibly considered to
be left – at least in American terms) are so quick to hop on the band wagon of “good
ol’ days” thinking that it is little wonder we are ideologically stuck. Leibowitz
and Maher have fallen into the all too prevalent belief that one of the primary
problems with today’s society is that we are too easy on kids. You hear this
kind of talk all the time from people on every part of the political spectrum. “We
are too soft with kids nowadays.” “In my day kids learned from the life of hard
knocks, and it if was good enough for me it is good enough for them.” Leibowitz
actually said that “we don’t punish kids enough” any more!
It is interesting to
me that people who otherwise criticize the arbitrary exercise of power over
people, are suddenly “all in” when it comes to parenting. I have heard many leftists
who claim that punishment and negative reinforcement is counterproductive with
adults, and then turn around and believe that it is the very best way to handle
children. As though we can be harsh with children, treat them as though we are
wardens governing over little prisoners, and then expect them to be soft,
forgiving, equity-seeking, non-aggressive adults! The very idea seems patently absurd
to me, and its falsity shockingly obvious.
There are a number of
things to unpack about these kinds of beliefs. The first is to question whether
they even true? Are children actually being treated more “indulgently” than in
the past, say, sixty years? The second thing to ask ourselves is, if we do
treat children significantly differently, is that demonstrably something that
leads to undesirable behaviors now or later on?
Now, at one level, it
is obvious that kids are treated differently than in the past. If you go back
past the 1960s (at least in North America), schools and home-life was very different
for the majority of kids. Children and young people often couldn’t express
themselves in many ways. If they spoke up in classrooms or to their parents
about what they thought, they could be treated shockingly harshly. But I have help
to raise four kids and I don’t think much has changed since the 1960s. I don’t
think kids are significantly more “indulged” than they were when I was growing
up, and in many cases I am shocked to see the parents of my kids’ friends
considerably stricter than the parents of my friends were.
There is a widespread perception that things
have changed radically in the past 30 or 40 years and I just don’t believe that
is true. But again, as people age, they seem to inflate the changes that have
taken place in their lifetimes and bemoan the perceived changes as progress run
amok. Thus you will hear older people say, “In my day we didn’t talk back to
our parents” as though having the capacity and/or right to say what you think
is a bad thing. Furthermore, such a claim is mostly bollocks. In my day kids
spoke back to their parents all the time. They might have got smacked for it,
but they did it. And for those who think that hitting kids is totally fine, my
simple question is “How did that work out for us?” You know, besides the World
Wars the constantly lynchings, and the abundance of systemic violence
everywhere? When I was young teachers could still hit kids in school in parts
of North America. And let’s just observe that as it has become unacceptable to
hit children the crime rates have consistently dropped.
So, while I will admit
that some changes have taken place over the past 75 years concerning how we
treat children, these changes haven’t gone nearly far enough, and rather than
being a problem, such changes are actually one of the things that is driving us
toward a more tolerant and equitable society. How is that any leftists let themselves
fall into an idealization of our past treatment of children?? Particularly when
it is the leftists who have always said that it is in our treatment of the most
vulnerable, those without much of a voice, that we will be judged? Surely it is
partially nostalgia, and partially the fact that many leftists simply aren’t
(and never have been) actually committed to the principles of liberation. They
only want a tidy revolution, they only want changes where it enhances their
status and power.
As I said, I have helped
to raise four kids, and if I have learned anything as a socialist it is that
schools continue to be prison-houses for kids, plying them with competitive,
power-driven ideologies. If kids speak up and say “fuck this,” I will do
nothing but cheer them on. And if a young person wants me to call them by
another pronoun, I will happily oblige. And if a child is grieved by some kind
of loss (anything from a perceived academic failure to a loss in little
league), I will be glad to commiserate with them. And if a child thinks that
they should be able to wear what they want, I would not only allow it, I would
encourage it, even I think (in my fuddy-duddy years) that it is a little wacky!
And if kids want to be heard I will give them a bullhorn to be heard louder. And
I will do these things for kids because I would do them for anyone! That’s not
indulgence, that’s liberation.
Some nostalgic folks
say that kids aren’t learning to deal with failure nowadays. I can’t think of a
bigger load of nonsense. If you even vaguely observe a child today you know
that they continue to deal with failure everyday; they struggle to be accepted
by their peers, despite not being “thin enough” or “cool” enough. They continue
to be pushed into activities by their parents that they don’t really want to
do, and they struggle and often “underperform.” They struggle to get good
grades in school because “success” is more than ever determined by your long-term
career prospects. We are not indulging kids too much. If anything, we aren’t
indulging them enough, we aren’t being honest enough about our own shortcomings
and failures, and (certainly in the case of girls) we aren’t encouraging them enough
to speak their minds and be who they really want to be.
The socialist project
will move forward when we actually embrace tolerance, inclusion, and liberatory
attitudes. And what better place to start than with kids? Let’s not bemoan the
idea that kids have too much space to be themselves, let’s encourage it.
4 comments:
There never was a "good old days," Kirby. And it's never been easy to be a child.
Perth County Conspiracy - Listen to the Kids - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_F44jfWXoE
"The Perth County Conspiracy - Does Not Exist" 1970 [Full Album]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pt8aOig9AmM
good to see your still truckin'
enjoy a socialist tune from a socialist album
during a time of socialist experiments
and a shout out
to those socialist Scandinavian countries and their prosperity
Not sure I entirely agree with your analysis. It all sounded so wonderful until I spent a reflective half-hour recalling some of the outrageously nasty children I grew up among both in the neighbourhood and school. Thieves, liars, and some who set out to make a vulnerable teacher's life a veritable hell. Then there the bullies who set out to dominate other kids' lives, a daily hell for many children. Without some rein on these nasty little humans, I cannot imagine what they would grow up into. So there's theory, and then there's reality to my way of thinking.
One could take the approach of theorizing that the nasties were the way they were due to bad parenting, and thus your ideas would triumph. But I know that this was often not the case. Free rein let these little buggers act out their fantasies, and being caught stealing from me, one kid was marched around to his parents by my father. They were outraged at us! The kid got away scot free. Only one case. I could recite many more.
If the theory is that child-rearing is different between leftists, centre and right, my belief is you are bringing a political philosophy to bear on a situation that is independent of politics, as environmental action on climate change should be but isn't. Surely we don't need to politicize child-rearing?
I'm 72, went to British parochial school for two years, four years in a private school then we came to Canada, and settled in a rural area. I'd have to say that the rurality seemed to decrease the incidence of bad kids compared to my previous experience in the UK, but there were still some.
No, I'd have to say your analysis does not cover the situation at all well. However, I cannot speak about current schooling and how children are treated. They seem to do a good job on themselves with social media, bullying away as usual. The perfect human who could exist in your utopia I believe does not exist and must realize that whatever they think is fine certainly is not necessarily so with everyone else. Clothes, schmoes - that's one thing. What do you do with a young thief? Have a heart-to-heart chat? A chat just shows you're weak to them, I'm afraid, and I saw it tried with complwtely mixed results. Some people are incorrigible.
My opinion, anyway.
BM
If they spoke up in classrooms or to their parents about what they thought, they could be treated shockingly harshly. But I have help to raise four kids and I don’t think much has changed since the 1960s
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