Dreams and Other Realities/Genesis

“Spokoj (be calm), Kennush, so you can have the best dreams,” Busia would often tell me as she tucked me in for naps while my parents were off working.

Dreams have always been important to me. They have served as regurgitations, amplifications, and sources of insight. My dreams have occasionally been predictive. But mostly, they have been imaginative grist and launching points for ruminations about personal experiences and reactions to events and the world at large, a sort of expressive impressionism.

“I dream of painting and then I paint my dream.” Vincent Van Gogh

© 1972, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

Shifting Sands, Change, and Prediction

One morning in August, I awoke, just as others around the world, to discover that Kuwait had vanished as a country. The immediate reaction of many was “how could we have predicted the invasion?” or “there goes the peace dividend.” Our collective hindsight tells us now that through careful analysis better understanding could have led us to conjecture the event if only we had tried—in other words, we could have avoided a lot of hand-wringing. Nevertheless, that unfortunate development combined with the “unpredictability” of dramatic events in Eastern Europe and China last year inspires reflection on change, prediction, and the role of education.

Change is an element central to prediction. Some people gainsay change, complaining that things are worsening or not what they used to be. One of the few certainties about the future, however, is continued, rapid change as shown by the German unification and the release of Nelson Mandela. Of course, this century has been fraught with changes that have brought tremendous difficulty to the whole human race and environment—wars, famine, disease, degradation. But it has also brought wonderful, life-enhancing advances in health care, increased wealth for many nations, and the resilience of democratic institutions and ideals. Change and difference give meaning to life, and the changes of this century have highlighted some of the best and worst of human endeavors.

Some people study and comment on the future to prepare for what might happen or to warn others to accept change more readily. Other people try to predict just to be able to say, “I told you so,” or to assert smugly, “If only you had listened to me, things wouldn’t have turned out that way.” Such attitudes obviously have negative implications for collaborating to solve foreseeable problems.

But there are two often overlooked reasons for prediction: to identify risks and opportunities—entrepreneurial foresight—and to avoid or lessen the effects of potential problems. Financial analysts use tools of prediction such as market data trends to ascertain the consequences of events on business prospects, reason one. Regarding the second reason, many authors over the years such as Huxley when he wrote Brave New World, and Orwell who wrote 1984 and Animal Farm have tried to ward off “evil” futures. Similarly in education, a number of people have expressed the view that “if public education is still around in the twenty-first century, they’ll be quite surprised.” Naturally, one could interpret this comment at face value; but by saying this the opinionators are probably intending to avert a possible demise or the deterioration of public schools.

To serve us better, authors and researchers who do their work well can offer meaningful insights on the future by employing more advanced methods of analyzing demographics, the effects of public policy, and developments in public health, science, and technology. They may thus be able to identify more precisely near-term dangers and opportunities, suggest new approaches, assist more wisely decision making, and help to prevent unwanted outcomes.

The world is shrinking as technology brings heretofore unheard of participation of ordinary citizens in world affairs. People must acquire new skills and knowledge to be able to cope with this constantly evolving situation.

Accordingly, the education system should be restructured to provide the ability to comprehend and project more effectively the consequences of change—for example, how society can deal with the shifting political sands of the Middle East or the growing ecological crisis throughout the world. In addition, instruction should create a mind-set for change and produce self-motivated problem solvers to make the human and natural environment livable in a highly competitive, multicultural world. In short, education must provide knowledgeable foresight—not necessarily to criticize change, but to evaluate and direct it for the benefit of the human race. Our success as a globally interdependent society depends on how we adapt to the changes that the future offers.

Educational Horizons 69(1) Fall 1990

© 1990, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

Novels and Short Stories About Work

An Annotated Bibliography

The main purpose of this bibliography is to offer a fairly comprehensive list of novels and short stories written in English or available in translation that teachers can use to help students at the secondary and college level think critically about the world of work. The works included in this bibliography articulate the lives of men and women who run the machines, plow the fields, sign the contracts, sew the clothes, and work the assembly lines. It is hoped that these stories will be enjoyable, informative, thought provoking, and maybe even a little unsettling. Some stories focus on the laudable side of work, while others criticize or satirize the more unpleasant or burdensome aspects–“I hate my job,” “I’m the only human being in this place,” and so on. Some works represent efforts to defy what they see as a conspiracy on the part of business and government to dehumanize or to 1 2 6 characterize businesspeople as Babbitts or unlettered Philistines (Holt, 1989). Others attempt to right a perceived prejudice against labor and labor leaders.

The bibliographic entries contain the original publication date as well as a citation for editions published that were available mainly through the use of the University of California library system. These editions do not represent the only publication source for many of these works.

The annotations are of two kind. First, up to three major work-related subjects are listed as they apply to the contents of each work. Second, this is followed by a short description, usually about the plot, that further explains each story’s connection to the world of work. The subjects listed represent some of the major work-related topics contained in these literary pieces and are not exclusive, for many of these works cover multiple aspects of the work experience. The following is a list of the subjects used in this bibliography:

Agriculture
Business
Career (career choices, paths, and obstacles)
Customer Relations (how service is rendered to customers and clients)
Discrimination (race, gender, and so on)
Entrepreneurship (starting work on one’s own)
Ethics (affect of work on ethical fabric of society)
International Business
Management
Marketing
Performance (evaluation of the quality of a person’s work)
Technology (how technology affects the workplace)
Unions
Value of Work (the reasons why one works, its human worth)
Women and Work
Working Conditions (mainly the physical environment)
Work Relations (how one gets along with coworkers and supervisors)
Work Skills (what is needed or lacking to be an effective worker)

No bibliographic list of this type, of course, can ever be considered complete, for the more one looks the more one discovers the rich diversity of literature. As for the selection of these works, the overriding criterion is whether work plays a significant part in the development of the plot or the characters, even though the work activities may also be tightly interwoven with other psychological, social, and cultural elements of life.

Another major criterion of this bibliography is to provide a large range of work experiences particularly in areas that interested vocational educators–industry, business, agriculture, and home and health care. Thus, work as experienced by the characters in these stories covers a wide range from that of homemakers to space-age technologists, from blue-collar workers to white-collars ones, from street messengers and peasants to corporate executives. For the most part, work in these stories is paid employment, but the bibliography also contains stories of homemakers and other workers who receive no direct compensation.

Again, for the sake of variety, some care has been taken to include works by women writers, writers of ethnic minorities, and writers from other continents (available in English) that pertain to work experiences. In regard to women writers, the existence of several anthologies devoted to their work has made the task of identification easier than ever before. As can be seen from the literature, the major roles women have performed in fiction are (1) farm work (an overwhelming number), (2) jobs that are extensions of their nurturing roles like nursing and teaching, (3) factory work especially in the early textile mills (these offered the first major industrial jobs for women), and (4) housework (though women are rarely protagonists if they are solely homemakers) (Hornbostel, 1986).

The prominence of agrarian literature which constitutes the majority of the world corpus of literary pieces in the world about work in the development of American culture cannot be overestimated. It has spawned such important concepts as an ideal society of independent property owners, and the cultivation of the soil as instilling honor, self-reliance, courage, moral integrity, sense of family, and hospitality (Inge, 1969). However, on account of limitations of space, only a relatively small selection of representative works is included.

Likewise, this bibliographic list contains few works by “working-class” writers the Chartist novelists of the 1840s, the socialist novelists of the 1880s through the 1920s, the “proletarian” writers of the 1930s, the working-class “angry young men” of the late 1950s and early 1960s, and current worker-writers. Again, time constraints and the sheer number of such works preclude a coherent listing at this time. For more information about these it is best to consult such studies as Klaus (1985) and N. Coles (1986).

Novels in this list are primarily about work and the major characters’ reactions to it. There are, however, a few examples where the main story does not directly concern work, but work does act prominently in a chapter or section of a work. The paint factory chapters of Ralph Ellison’s The Invisible Man and the introductory chapter, “The Custom House,” of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter are good examples. The reason for including such works is to point out that many pieces of literature, even those of the canon, hold important observations about work that could be included in designing the curriculum.

In addition, care has also been taken to include works that covet a range of reading levels. Several of these fictional works are labeled “easy reading.” These represent, in general, contributions from the realm of adolescent novels.

Classroom Use

There are few examples of curriculum material designed to teach the literature of work. Hence, teachers may have to develop their own plans using books and bibliographies and other materials at hand. One possibility is to structure a course to revolve around the theme of work and its many facets–personal, social, and economic. For example, when studying a major work such as Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, students could explore the whole work–how the parts (like recruiting the crew and the details of life aboard ship) fit into the major theme (obsession with revenge for a perceived evil) and the book as a whole. After all, Melville conceived of his work as a whole, not merely as the simple story of a man versus a whale.

In dealing with these and other works, instructors should require students to look at the world of work critically to examine and pose questions about the nature and politics of work, its necessity, its rewards, and its pitfalls. For instance, in George Orwell’s Animal Farm, students may at first be sympathetic to the cause of the animals against a farmer who exploits them so he can gain the maximum profit. However, students eventually learn further on in the work that applications of the socialist -like society the animals devise are difficult (O’Neill, 1985).

Attention should be given to open discussion about the merits and demerits of the author’s interpretation of the work reality, about that of the author’s contemporaries, and about what historical insight has contributed. One should be critical of a Babbitt but also be able to see what positive lessons can be drawn from the piece of fiction (e.g., the importance of integrity in business dealings) for work and life.

Moreover, writing about work and the lives of real people usually requires a realistic style. These stories and other types of work literature often contain language of their experience, which may at times be quite raw and explicit (Hoffman, 1990, p. 55). Discussion of these pieces of fiction should then focus on the living and working conditions of the characters and traits that enable them to endure adversity and relish personal triumphs.

One should be fairly attentive in selecting works that balance a number of factors about both the author and characters: gender, ethnic/cultural background, socioeconomic status, political/religious perspective, geographic location, and historical period. The following are some examples of combinations of works which teachers could consider:

For a high school unit focusing on literature and technology, an instructor could select from among these works:

Asimov, I, Robot
Brontë, Shirley, A Tale
Brown, “Virus”
Morris, Motor City
Norris, Octopus; a tale of California
Vonnegut, Player Piano

For a high school short story unit focusing on international working conditions, an instructor could select from among these works:

Baranskaia, A Week Like Any Other
Calvino, Marcovaldo: Or Seasons in the Snow
Chavez, “Last of the Menu Girls”
Conroy, The Weed King and Other Stories
Hayama, “Letter Found in a Cement Barrel”
Matshoba, “A Glimpse of Slavery”
Narayan, Malgudi Days
O’Rourke, “The Maggot Principle”
Yokomitsu, “The Machine”
Zimpel, “Foundry Foreman”

For a one-semester community college course focusing on literature and unions, an instructor could select from among these works:

Bimba, Molly MaGuires
Conroy, The Disinherited
Fast, Power
Kobayashi, Cannery Boat
Sinclair, The Jungle
Stead, “The Azhdanov Tailors”
Steinbeck, “The Raid”
Ward, Red Baker

For a one-semester community college course focusing on literature and migrant workers, an instructor could select from among these works:

Anaya, Heart of Aztlan
Barrio, The Plum Plum Pickers
Bell, Out of This Furnace
Olsen, Yonnondio: From the Thirties
Steinbeck, Grapes of Wrath

For a one-semester four-year college course in women’s literature focusing on work novels, an instructor could select from among these works:

Bullard, Comrade Yetta
Canfield, The Home-Maker
Cather, My Antonia
Glasgow, Barren Ground
Jewett, A Country Doctor
Kelley, Weeds
Peattie, The Precipice
Phelps, The Silent Partner
Savage, Factory Girl

Finally, the annotated bibliography is followed by a teaching resource section that includes books and articles that can provide assistance for the teaching of literature that is related to work. The first section covers studies of work literature and how this type and other types of nontraditional literature can be incorporated in the English classroom and curriculum. The second section contains selected titles on the subject of work. These latter works provide a background for the discussion of an author’s insights on the work setting.

Continue to full Bibliography here

© 1992, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

Paths Not Taken

Curriculum Integration and the Political and Moral Purposes of Schooling

The movements to reinforce the occupational content of high schools, from of the turn of the century to the present, have all tended to reinforce a particularly utilitarian conception of education. The school reform movements since the publication of A Nation at Risk (National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983) have similarly been driven by economic concerns, with employers clamoring for a better trained workforce while policymakers worry about reforming schools to improve the nation’s competitiveness. Occasionally, commission reports over the past decade have reminded us of the importance of political education. For example, A Nation at Risk repeated Thomas Jefferson’s dictum:

I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them but to inform their discretion. (p. 7)

However, such comments have largely been afterthoughts, and the political and moral aspects of education—the central purpose of the public when they were established in the nineteenth century—have been by most reformers and policymakers.

Current efforts to integrate academic and vocational education have generally followed the same path. The academic subjects included in integration have been those that are the most necessary to occupations: math, reading and writing for comprehension (“communication skills”), biology and chemistry for the health fields, and electronics and physics for technical occupations. The curricula associated most closely with political and moral education—literature, government or civics, history, and social studies or the social sciences—have almost never been included. This tends to justify one potential objection to these efforts: that they intend, like career education 20 years ago, to turn high schools into wholly vocational institutions with no commitment to the political development of students, no place for students to acquire the capacity to be socially critical (including the ability to evaluate the limits of existing occupations and of American capitalism generally), and no place for the exploration of values and sensibilities that goes hand in hand with the humanities.

Yet this need not be true. Occupations, understood in their broadest sense, provide ways to approach virtually any subject, as John Dewey argued when he advocated education through occupations. Occupations can provide contexts for understanding the importance of history or civics; they offer ways to make relevant to present life, and to adolescent dilemmas, those disciplines that students often find irrelevant and arcane. An occupational focus also provides a way of balancing the emphasis within history and civics on political issues—an understandable legacy of the nineteenth-century concern with preparing individuals for life in a democracy—with a greater appreciation of economic problems and roles. Following are some ways of incorporating literature, history, and social studies into programs that integrate academic and occupational education.1

THE LITERATURE OF WORK

In efforts to incorporate material from the English curriculum into vocational programs, the emphasis so far has been on “communication skills.” For example, the Applied Communication sequence produced by the Agency for Instructional Technology (1988) emphasizes reading for comprehension (as one might read a technical or instructional manual), writing in such “practical” forms as resumes and business letters, aural comprehension (following directions), and speaking abilities (speaking with supervisors, co-workers, or clients). The literary side of conventional English curricula has been largely neglected, though there have been a few attempts to identify literary works suitable for a “literature component” in applied communication courses.2 However, the potential for incorporating literature describing work, its special complexities and relationships, the tensions between life at work and life in other spheres, and changing attitudes toward work has been little explored.3

WHY STUDY LITERATURE ABOUT WORK?

Reading literature is an excellent w ay to develop critical thinking. It is also a powerful means for learning about character and values, showing, for instance, the difference between ambition and greed, loyalty and servitude, liberty and license. Literature has the power to capture the intensity of experience—as with romance, or pain, or work—and can thus conjure powerful scenes and feelings. And perhaps more than any other mode of expression, it pulls the reader in, confronts basic assumptions, and then leaves the reader to work out his or her own solutions. Accordingly, reading literature permits the student into the lives and work of other individuals and to observe representative and relevant experiences that are otherwise inaccessible.

Most people will spend much of their lives as workers. Over 30 % of the average person’s normal waking experience is related to work outside the home. Events at work encompass the full range of human emotion—courage, honor, loyalty, ambition, fear, love, pain, and greed. Through these emotions, people derive differing degrees of satisfaction from work. Some have to drag themselves daily to a dull, meaningless job, while others receive from work some of the most exhilarating experiences life offers. Because of unemployment, work is often unequally distributed, and perhaps meaningful work even more so. However, whether one likes work or not, an individual’s identity is often tied to the work one does.

The literature of work is also concerned with acting within the human community. Through this literature, one can examine work life and the emotions it stirs from another person’s point of view and learn to take responsibility for one’s own work: “Literature plays an important part in developing awareness of the commonness of the human drama. What an impact a work has when the reader finds in it a fellow sufferer, one who obviously knows ‘what it is like’!” (Burton, 1970, p. 10). Success at work is usually built through effort, and often the greatest success comes witheffectively working with others. Studying the literature of work can provide new insights into what is significant about human life, the ability to empathize with others through the development of an understanding of human needs and problems (Coles, 1989, p. 120).

Studying the literature of work offers other important advantages Because of the major role of work in daily life, it is important to understand its function in society, and the individual’s relationship to it. By reading about work one can also learn about historical events from a perspective that differs from the “great men / great events” focus usually found in social studies textbooks—whether the events be the rise of the factory system in New England, the struggles of the ”Okies” during the Great Depression, or the development of corporate business culture in post-World War II America. Through literature, for example, one can gain new insights into labor conditions, the rise of unions and other social and political movements, as well as the background of work-related legislative acts for which work literature itself has sometimes served as a catalyst (Holt, 1989). For the large and increasing portion of the labor force who are not only workers but also women and mothers, usually with special familial responsibilities, literature can serve as a way of exploring the relation between work and family life, the sense of meaning in work that women have come to find, together with the special conflicts they experience. Literature also affords the opportunity to gain a greater appreciation of the contributions, struggles, and feelings of individual working people who have built this world, from homemakers to space—age technologists, from blue-collar workers to middle managers, from street messengers and peasants to corporate executives. Few of us will end up being one of the great “movers and shakers” profiled in conventional histories, but we will nearly all be workers.

Work-related literature thus operates like a mirror that reflects historical material, and also like a microscope that examines it in detail. It not only presents an author ’s point of view at a moment in history (as exemplified in Upton Sinclair’s criticism of slaughterhouse conditions in The Jungle, and Sinclair Lewis’s insight into American business in Babbitt), but it also analyzes as a case study the events occurring around the moment, as well as the actions of individuals whom the author posits as. representative of the time. This literature, furthermore, ”… contributes to the social vision and moral development in the growth of sensibility and exercise of imaginative alternatives” (Nelms & Nelms, 1988, p. 214). Readers of Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath, for instance, discover a number of economic and social obstacles to the formation of workers’ unions as they read about the struggle of the load family to find a place to live and work in California during the Dust Bowl era. As Rosenblatt (1983) stated, what is

particularly important is [the] discovery that various groups within our society hold up diverse images of success, and that there are kinds of work   despised or ignored by [one’s] own group that others considered socially valuable … the craftsmen, the technologists, the artists, the scientists, the scholars offer personal goals and systems of value often strongly in contrast to those represented by the dominant image of the successful businessman. (p. 194)

The literature of work articulates the lives of men and women who run the machines, plow the fields, sign the contracts, sew the clothes, work the assembly lines, and sit in offices. It can be enjoyable and informative, thought-provoking, and perhaps even unsettling. Some novels and stories focus on the laudable side of work, while others criticize or satirize the more unpleasant or burdensome aspects—Upton Sinclair’s The jungle, joseph Heller’s Good as Gold, and a larger literature exploring the oppressiveness of the modern corporation—thereby capturing the full range of experience surrounding work. Certain pieces of work literature represent efforts to defy What they see as a conspiracy on the part of business and government to dehumanize individuals or to characterize businesspeople as Babbitts or unlettered philistines. Others attempt to right a perceived prejudice against labor and labor leaders. Some contemporary critics hold that “literature …  serves a purpose. It can integrate the reader into culture, inviting him to define himself against a background of cultural expectations and to modify that background” (Probst, 1988, p. 249). When seen in this light, the literature of work can aid in the transition from academic to work life by encouraging a more total human development, raising the stakes of the individual’s interest in the curriculum material presented.

Lastly, through reading the literature of work, it is possible to capture the romance and human drama of the work and business worlds—the good and bad, the excitement and boredom, and the nobility and rascality. In these creations, dry economic theories are given flesh and blood explorations and interpretations.

There are, to be sure, utilitarian reasons for reading work-related literature. Businesses often complain that their workers are not able to read and communicate at appropriate levels, and that they lack the requisite higher-order capacities. By studying literature, students can gain new insights into work habits, communication skills, interpersonal skills, and problem solving—skills that business leaders consider just as important as technical abilities. Literature can, furthermore, help develop a stronger corporate citizenship by promoting a sensitivity to the needs and desires of others in a work setting, and a sensitivity to the problems within a work setting. One business Instructor teaching a course called Wisdom for the Workplace, used literature, together with case studies from business, to “teach students that the wisdom of Great writers from the past is still pertinent to the solving of contemporary job-related problems.” This instructor described the process as follows:

I have also discovered why my business-career students generally falter When faced with complex problems in their business or technical core courses, especially those that deal with human issues. The juxtaposition between the humanities—which always ask questions about life, happiness, and freedom—and the courses that fill their career programs (always focusing on the absorption of accepted processes or pragmatic applications) is so strong. [My course] is a wild mix that asks students to question first, and then to justify their opinions convincingly, rather than to simply accept (Smith, 1990)4

The use of literature as an approach to problem solving may strike some—particularly some traditional English teachers—as overly utilitarian in this sense, but it is also a way of allowing students to view the world from radically different perspectives.

THE ADOLESCENT AND WORK LITERATURE

Critics have pointed out that the typical secondary school English literature curriculum lacks appeal to many students (Probst, 1988, p. 114). Must such curricula utilize a majority of works from the classic canon. Junior and senior high school literature programs are still often organized historically and not thematically. In contrast, high school years are a time of orienting oneself to the central goals and purposes of one’s life. An adolescent “is concerned about relations with peers the gradual assumption of responsibilities. He wants to understand work, love, hate, death, vengeance” (Probst, 1988, p. 4). Hence, a literature curriculum that does not include a substantial number of selections that relate directly to work may be less interesting and relevant to students.

In view of the increase over the past two decades in the number of high school students who also are working, it is rare to find students today who have not had at least a summer job, or done baby-sitting, or chores for pay. Their own experience, in turn, makes them keen observers of the work world around them: “Students are simultaneously observers, beneficiaries, victims of their parents’ work lives, continually assessing the merits and drawbacks of their work choices, their moods after a work day” (Hoffman, 1990, p. 56). Most are eager to recount their own experiences with bosses or customers. For adolescent students, jobs are boring, exciting, oppressive, heroic, difficult, and satisfying. They can already begin to realize that Work can transform lives by imbuing them with significance and meaning—or conversely, that work can be “a drag.”

Moreover, high school students are often already preoccupied with their own work futures, but are pressured by adults and peers to declare future professions based on woefully inadequate information—few have a sense of the day-to-day experiences that lie behind even the most familiar jobs (Hoffman, 1990, p. 55). And many lack realistic views about what the future will hold for them: “Most secondary students will not become professional literary scholars they will more likely drive cabs, wait on tables, sell real estate, [or] work in an office” (Probst, 1988, p. 3). Adolescents are developing independence from parents and other authority figures. They are struggling with the almost universal concerns of growing up and of accepting adult roles. Reading literature can provide an opportunity for adolescents to exercise independent response and critical judgment. Work literature often deals seriously with these recurring themes.

SUGGESTIONS FOR THE CLASSROOM

Students in both general and vocational tracks often are assigned less literature in school than are students in the academic track (Ravitch & Finn, 1987, p. 171). Perhaps it is time not only to reverse that trend, but also to enrich the spectrum of what students in all classes read with choices ranging from works that concentrate on personal life to those that relate the experience of the individual at work and in other social contexts In some states, students are ”expected to read provocative works” (California State Department of Education, 1987, p. 8). These could include works giving a more balanced view of relations between labor and labor leaders and businesspeople—perhaps striking a responsive chord in students by offering substance that relates to what they have experienced and will experience—to keep interest alive (Probst, 1988, p. 5).

As already mentioned, there are few examples of curriculum material designed to teach the literature of work. One purpose of such material would be to provide another perspective about work and its consequences—since the conventional approach in high school has been to stress the skills and knowledge necessary for work but not otherwise to explore what working means in an individual’s life. Through such material, students would explore and analyze attitudes toward work and learn to appreciate what is significant about this important part of human life. Another purpose would be to lead students back into literature; for the large number of students who view literature as a chore, or who think of reading in purely utilitarian terms, it might be possible to use literature about work to move from purely informational uses of reading to more literary concerns. In this way, students could become more competent in the interpretation of literature and in the understanding of other symbolic expressions and, thereby, develop their abilities to communicate about basic human experiences such as work. Finally, another purpose of such material would be to allow students to analyze a significant component of human life—work—and to understand that no single interpretation of it (as either insignificant or all-important, as viewed from a capitalist or a labor-union standpoint, and so on) is sufficient.

How does one approach the literature of work in the classroom? One of the first steps is to identify the literary works suitable for the classroom. Because there are few resources, teachers may have to develop their own plans using books, bibliographies, and other materials at hand. In the realm of fiction, Koziol (1992) has compiled an annotated bibliography of nearly two hundred works written in English or available in translation that teachers can use to help students at the secondary and college levels to think critically about the world of work. The bibliography also includes references for teaching resources about work that can provide a background for discussion of an author’s insights on the work setting. The fiction in this bibliography is primarily about work and the major characters’ reactions to it. There are, however, several selections in the list, some considered part of the “canon,” where the main story does not directly concern work, but in which work does figure prominently in one chapter or section. The paint factory chapters of Ralph Ellison’s The Invisible Man, and the introductory chapter, “The Custom House,” of Nathaniel Hawthorn’s The Scarlet Letter are two examples.

As for the actual incorporation of this material into the classroom, one possibility is simply to include examples of this literature among the types of literature to be studied, or among the themes to be examined, which already exist in the curriculum. The following provides some brief illustrations of how this could be done.

Example I

The short poem “Relief Locations Managers” by Herbert Scott (1976, p. 38) could be used, along with other more traditional pieces, in a class on free verse, or in one exploring human relationships.

Relief is everywhere
at once. He’s on his way
up. When he works the front,
the register jumps
under his fingers,
groceries flashing past
like landscape,
his arms almost
screaming with motion.
If he comes to help you
in your section, you know
you’re moving too slow.
You go home ashamed
of your thick clumsy hands.
Relief’s bucking for manager
in a new store. You hope
he’ll make it.

After the class reads the poem, the teacher could then stimulate discussion about type of poem, its structure, and its general meaning. Next, the teacher could assign activities based on the piece in which students discuss their reactions to the poem as a piece of literature about work.

1. In small groups, exchange anecdotes about times you or someone else has not followed directions or made mistakes on a job. How did you feel about your errors? How did your boss or co-workers react? How would you react if you were them?

2. With the members of your group, compose a set of directions or guidelines to help fellow workers avoid making the same mistakes.

Unlike the usual questions about literature, which focus on facts of plot and character, these questions are designed to move students toward a consideration of both personal experiences and their implications for others.

Example ll

Students would be assigned a reading of John Updike’s ”A & P,” a short Story about a checkout person who quits his job to make a point. Then they Can be asked the following questions, which again move beyond questions Of plot to those of interpretation and meaning within work contexts:

1. Skim the story to identify the four male A & P employee characters and scan to locate details about these characters and the reaction of each to the young female customers.

2. Why did Sammy quit his job at the A & P?

3. Discuss the meaning of one character’s statement to Sammy: ”You Don’t want to do this to your Mom and Dad.”

4. Speculate on Sammy’s final comment: ”… my stomach kind of fell As I felt how hard the world was going to be to me hereafter.” Have you experienced something similar?

Another possibility for incorporating this material into the classroom would be to structure a class directly around the theme of work and its many facets—personal, social, and economic. For example, when studying a great work like Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, students could explore the whole of the work instead of merely concentrating on the major theme—the obsession for revenge against a perceived evil. They could examine the historic and economic background of the whaling industry, the methods used in recruiting a crew, and the details of the search for whales, and then discuss how all this fits into the plot and major theme. Another focus could be on worker relations: what would it have been like to work on a whaling ship: the cramped living conditions; living, working, and eating with all different types of people; relations with co-workers and supervisors. Melville, after all, conceived of his work as a whole, not merely as story of a man revenging himself against a whale.

In dealing with Melville’s novel and with the works of other authors, instructors should require students to look critically at the World of work that is presented—to examine and pose questions about the nature and politics of work, its necessity, its rewards, and its pitfalls. The biographical interviews of working people in Studs Terkel’s Working, for instance, could be read to bring out these motifs: money versus meaning in the choice of work; the impulse to leave a lasting mark on the world; the unjust stereo- types with which most jobs are weighted. Students could then be asked to write about their own visions of their personal work futures. In George Orwell’s Animal Farm, the author at first presents a rather sympathetic view of an uprising of the animals against a farmer who exploits them so that he can gain the maximum profit. However, students learn further on in the work that applications of the socialist-like society the animals themselves devise are also difficult.

An entire curriculum could also center on the general theme of work. For example, a one-semester course focusing on literature and labor could include works of fiction such as: The Factory Girl by Sarah Savage, the earliest American novel with a working person as the main character; Charlotte Bronte’s Shirley, a story in which workers react to the introduction of machinery; Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, which exposes the abuses of workers in the meat—packing industry in Chicago and the struggle of organized labor therein; Anthony Bimba’s Molly Maguires, about a coal miner’s strike for better conditions; and John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath. There are also biographies available for classroom use that deal with the lives of labor leaders, such as ]ohn L. Lewis, Samuel Gompers, “Mother” Jones, and Caesar Chavez. These all provide excellent opportunities for creative writing, allowing students to explore the biographical form, or work histories of people they know, or their own work lives.

In the category of the most comprehensive approaches to integration, it is possible to develop courses that incorporate literature, vocational studies and other elements of the school curriculum in an all-encompassing fashion. One such course was created at Mastbaum Vocational—Technical School in Kensington, Maryland. There, a class in Shakespeare was transformed into an investigation of the aspects of Elizabethan life and culture that were relevant to the students’ vocational studies. Students came up with projects in carpentry, food science, home economics, cosmetology, and drafting adopted from what they had learned from the literature and history of the age.

In all of these alternatives, attention can be given to open discussion about the merits and demerits of each author’s interpretation of the work reality, about the author’s views of his contemporaries, and about the contribution of historical insight to understanding the views presented in the selections. Students should learn to be critical of a Babbitt, for example, but also be able to see what positive lessons for work and for life (for example, the importance of integrity in business dealings) can be drawn from that piece of literature. While reading Death of a Salesman, students can focus on the many ways that author Arthur Miller demonstrates Willy’s alienation from his family, his job, and society as a whole. They can examine why Willy cannot comprehend Biff ’s rebellion against rigidly prescribed modes of behavior and the hierarchy of the business world, and why, for Willy, there is no other way of living.

Authors writing about work and the lives of real people often use a realistic style. Work literature often contains language culled from the work experience, which may at times be quite raw and explicit (Hoffman, 1990, p. 55). Two prime examples of this frank expression and approach are Studs Terkel’s candid interviews of ordinary workers in Working, and the graphic descriptions of a coal miner’s life and family in D.H. Lawrence’s Sons and Lovers. Discussion of this type of literature could focus on the living and working conditions of the characters, and on the traits that enable them to endure adversity and to relish personal triumphs.

Finally, literature about work provides opportunities—as does literature in general—for examining a number of themes connected to multicultural perspectives in the curriculum: the particular conditions of women at work, the special experiences of African Americans and Hispanics, the conflicts between historical and “modern” patterns of work among Native Americans, and so on. (For a partial listing of some appropriate literature, see Koziol, 1992) Within this large area, there is room for stressing both the similarities and differences that exist between the general experience and the experiences of particular groups: for example, differences that include the experience of particular groups with discrimination in employment, relegation to menial work or to ”woman’s work,” and conflict between different cultures and their approaches to work; and similarities in the realm of what all workers must face (both the joys and pains of work), the ambitions of twentieth century Americans for progress through work, and the disappointments connected with ambitions that are limited by conditions beyond our control.

Of course, it is unnecessary, and probably inappropriate, to choose one Type of literature over another. The literature of work need not be used to The exclusion of all other kinds of literature. Instead, instructors can find a better balance, correcting the pervasive neglect of work-related themes in the high school that restricts the range of issues that students can explore through literature. Given the richness of the literature about work, a greater variety of reading material provides one way of allowing all students to explore the work-related issues they will confront, while at the same time preventing the potential excesses of applied and overly utilitarian approaches to reading and writing that can exist in academies, clusters, and magnet schools with an occupational focus.

Continue to full paper here

© 1995, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

English über alles

09-02-1996

I take my hat off to all those who have donated their time and energy in the valiant effort to preserve our mother tongue.  There is hardly a major American city today that is free from the assault on our native language.  The federal government spends millions of our hard-earned tax dollars to print books and documents and post signs in a myriad of foreign tongues, all intended to aid and abet foreign-born newcomers in an attempt to dodge their linguistic responsibilities.  You can walk into, if you dare, many neighborhoods in our cities and go for blocks on end without hearing a syllable of even broken English.  It is our duty as responsible of this society and parents to speak out to rectify this problem.  With these recent legislative proposals, we finally have a means of tearing down our Tower of Babel and instead erecting a Fortress English where no one will ever mispronounce the name of our fair land.

I have a few suggestions to improve the present linguistic morass.  For starters, why don’t we establish our own English Language Academy similar to one the French have to defend the integrity of their own Gallic language.  We could appoint wordsmiths like William Safire as our first line of defense against foreign invasion of our speech and writing.

One of the duty s of this academy would be the total elimination of alien words and phrases.  Terminology from abroad peppers our everyday vocabulary, our arts, our business, our science, law, and politics.  And while these foreign “tourists” may spice up a sentence, they crowd out native-born terms, leaving them in a heap of disuse.  For example, some people use “adios” when a simple native “goodbye” would easily suffice.  Phrases such as mano-a-mano, and gesundheit should drop off the chart of usage.  Why do we say “chic” when “stylish” will do just fine.  French and other foreign languages give us nothing but trouble.  We probably never would have had marriage infidelity if some perverted francophile had not introduced the ménage-à-trois.  America’s favorite sidedish French fries does not sound very native.  One should be ordering American fries, and that’s that.

There are a whole host of other words and phrases that foreign-loving elitists have foisted on us:  deus ex machina (only wimpy gods need stage props), kindergarten, ennui, and Hagen Daz (though I would like to keep their French silk flavor).  Just think all the pain and toil we’ll save for true American kids who have been forced all these years to memorize these foreign terms.  Oh yes, and what about those Latin words.  They spell nothing but trouble.  I’d like to have a buck for every Latin term dropped into the language by crafty lawyers or charlatan doctors just to keep us in the dark about their machinations.  No more sine qua non, no more compos mentis, and thank goodness no more argumentum ad hominemPro bone (though I do like Cher), outta here.  Actually, you couldn’t get me to take a worthless buck, what with all that foreign writing on the other side … e pluribus unum sure sounds socialist to me.

And even the English language has got its own identity crisis.  We should be careful about letting in phrases from fringe cultures.  Do they really think they speak English in Nigeria, or India, or Australia?  I hear good’ay mate and I say, what?  And all that ghetto talk.  It started with jazz, then soul, then all those exploitation films, now it’s rap, and who knows what else.

© 1996, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

Message to Sen. John McCain on the ACA

July 25, 2017

Although I am a very Blue democrat who often stridently disagrees with many of your positions, I have always retained a deep affection for you and your experience. I also commend your staff. For while we may disagree on direction, I know that you and your staff work very hard for the state of Arizona and the country. In early Fall 2007, I extended an invitation to you and your wife to share a dinner with us at our modest Bay Area home to obtain a more personal impression of your views on a number of national issues. Perhaps if you had followed up on my invitation, a different portrait may now be hanging at an address on Pennsylvania Avenue.

It is difficult for me to understand your position on the ACA. There have been several flip-flops over your political career. The latest major flip-flop is your decision to vote ‘yes’ to carry on debate over the ACA. You know continuing to oppose the ACA will severely affect the lives of millions of you fellow citizens. You claimed that you wanted a return to “regular” order, but this “yes” vote means just the opposite. Healthcare for millions is complicated and requires careful discussion and analysis. For a short example, there is no discussion on how to reign in soaring health delivery costs when healthcare executives are seeing record salaries. What exactly did your sacrifice in Vietnam mean that you would instill pain upon your fellow citizens? Arguments about the burden of the individual mandate are really superficial – the burden of some hundreds or even thousands of extra dollars a year versus the tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands medical procedures cost. A single IVIG treatment can cost $20,000. Your recent surgery, if paid out without adequate insurance, would soon bankrupt most families. Please be a patriot again. Finish on the top side, the good side, of your legacy.

© 2017, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

All the King’s Men…

09-18-2020

Pundits struggle to find the right analogy to describe our political dilemma. One might be a well-known nursery rhyme. Humpty Dumpty. No, I am not referring to the current fragile, thin-skinned occupant of the White House, though it would be easy to see Donald Trump as the anthropomorphic, egg-shaped character of children’s books. Humpty Dumpty for me is the United States.

The history of the United States, from well before its establishment, has been a balancing act of controversy and even conflict over government, rights, economy, and culture. The nation was founded in large part on the removal and decimation of first inhabitants and the capture and enslavement of Africans. Capitalism, a system premised on balancing self-interest and greed, was blended in this country with mainly protestant religious views, and strong sense of white superiority.

Just like Humpty, our country is a sitting precariously on a wall. But our wall is not a support wall, but a divider between darkness and light. The growth of partisanship and particularly the public ascent of the radical right augur an inevitable crisis. Up-coming election may answer on which side we fall.

© 2020, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

Americans Rarely Resign on Principle

Reluctance to resign when warranted is an important glitch in our national character. We usually define ourselves in relation to our work. When we first encounter another person, often the first or second question is what that person does for a living? In other countries, this question comes further along in the conversation or hardly at all and more often the questions revolve around family/clan or other community related issues. People in other cultures tend to consider their own personal worth and the respect they have for their family and community to be an important factor in deciding whether an ethical situation at work would jeopardize that respect. We, in contrast, tend to think of the job as defining our personal worth, while in other countries it is more how one another relate to family and position in society. Shaming one’s name, one’s family, etc. is more important in other cultures.

Another factor in the difference is the social safety net. Most developed economies have greater socialized support systems. In the US., there is less of a concept of a safety net. Individuals here are conditioned to fear losing their jobs. When one loses a job, one feels that one loses respect, but also one loses the few benefits (such as health insurance) that come with employment. This is a weapon employers use to discourage workers from changing jobs.

One suggestion to improve this issue is universal health care. If we had an adequate health safety net, it would help individuals when they consider moving on from challenging job situations. Of course, it would be even better if the safety net would be even better, but at least with universal health care individuals could be secure in knowing that at least during any period of job transition, the bottom would never completely fall out.

An observation about the “Great Resignation”: Pundits have puzzled over why millions are not returning to work after the COVID economic downturn, especially to full-time work. Many Americans are voting with their feet. They are reevaluating their relation to work and searching to re-balance their life. If employers want to preserve as many workers as they can, they should consider four-day work weeks, more flexible hours, work at home, etc.

This video speaks volumes on the serious political consequences of people not sticking to their principles and remaining in office (!coarse language):

Anti-Trump Republicans, this is your fault, too

Philosophy in Schools

A major area of knowledge neglected in primary and secondary education is philosophy. This is remarkable since it both ancient and foundational to other areas of knowledge such as language and thought development and the sciences and has influenced many aspects of the world’s cultural and religious expressions. The Pre-Socratic philosophers, for example, introduced a rational approach to understanding the world, the culmination of which is modern science. Computing came to us at the end of a long line of philosophical contributions, including Aristotle’s language of logic, the calculating machines of Pascal and Leibniz, and the insights of mathematician and thinker Alan Turing.

Perennial philosophical issues are typically encountered even by young children “What is justice?”, “What is beauty?”, “How can I be sure of what I know?”, “What is the right thing to do?”, “What is real?”, “What happens at death”, “What makes someone a best friend”, and so on.

The study of philosophy promotes critical thinking; explores the ethical, political, and aesthetic dimensions of experience; improves language development, expands social and communication skills; and helps develop tolerance of other points of view.

The study of philosophy can be introduced as a course within the curriculum and/or incorporated in language, literature, and history classes. An example is using works of literature that lend themselves to discussion of ethics, aesthetics, logical thinking, and so on. Emphasis in history classes should be expanded to deal with discussion of content, development, and controversies of philosophical ideas and arguments.

The first R: why we need to teach philosophy in the classroom

Delphi Philosophy

Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children

Philosophy Learning and Teaching Organization (PLATO)

Paths Not Taken

Thinking in Stories: Reviewing Philosophy in Children’s Literature (gives examples of how to treat philosophical topics by using contemporary children’s literature)

Tackling Homelessness: New Approaches

I. Regional Governance Approach

In the San Francisco Bay Area, the burden of dealing with the issue of homelessness has fallen mainly to a few so-called “liberal” municipalities: San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland, and Richmond, while neighboring communities contribute less to the solution and/or actively try to deter the homeless in various ways. A single municipality or county cannot be expected to be able to solve this problem. Once a homeless population is “chased” from one location. They often move on to another location, often in another city. There have been many attempts at the municipal, county, and state level to address homelessness, most have proven inefficient. And while there may be better solutions for single aspects of homelessness, I suggest that these may not in the end be effective until we reexamine and reform our system of federalism.

In the US there have been a few attempts to address regional problems to deal with some levels of community safety, health, development, and infrastructure such as ABAG in the Bay Area, the governance structure is weak and often suggestive rather than authoritative.

I believe we need to consider implementing, widening, and strengthening the power and scope of regional governance. This system could be applied to the major population regions in the state–San Diego, Los Angeles, Bay Area, and Sacramento.

In the case of homelessness, in a regional governance scenario,

  • All of the neighboring municipalities would be obliged to contribute materially and monetarily to the issue.
  • This would entail coordinated construction of housing infrastructure distributed evenly throughout the Bay Area and not only in the usually overburdened municipalities.
  • Proportional taxation to even out resource imbalance would also be implemented.
  • No bending of regulation via exceptions would be allowed (such as the community of Woodside’s attempt to declare itself a mountain lion sanctuary to avoid building affordable housing).

Mayor weighs charging other towns if their homeless people move to Oakland

II. Nuts and Bolts

  • Increase access to housing affordable (construction and subsidies) to households making less than 30% of the Area Median Income.
  • Expand homelessness prevention (financial support, legal assistance, and support for behavioral health needs).
  • Increase household incomes through evidence-based employment support (training, support for job search, and transportation).
  • Increase outreach and service delivery to people experiencing homelessness.
  • Embed a racial equity approach in homeless system service delivery.

California Statewide Study Investigates Causes and Impacts of Homelessness

Knight Tales

College basketball legend Bob Knight passed away this past week. His impact on the sport is undeniable, both good and bad. For more than a decade, he and his teams were quite a force in college sports locally, nationally, and even internationally. The news brought up a few Knight-related memories:

1. On the evening of the 1976 national championship, my newly minted wife and I decided to go over to the downtown Bloomington bars to join in the big celebration. We felt that parking would be hard to find if everyone came out, so we found a spot in the campus main library lot, approximately four blocks from the center of town.

There was quite a fete. The whole campus and town populations it seemed had turned out. Beer and spirits were flying liberally about, poured down gullets, on heads, on shoulders, on pavement, and so on. Naked streakers proliferated mixing and dancing maniacally with students and faculty on the streets amidst dozens of stalled, honking and flashing cars and pickups.

Once we had our fill of the crazed festivities, we turned back towards our car to return home. As we approached, we unhappily discovered that the party had spilled over to the lot. Drunken students were racing and leaping about among the parked vehicles, AND on top. Some were jumping up and down on and crossing over to the hoods, including ours!

Fortunately, this had a happy ending. A friend of a neighbor who worked in a body shop worked out the depressed hood for little charge – a kindness in response to our victory celebration plight.

Welcome to Hoosier Basketball!

2. We were attending the Cream & Crimson Scrimmage, to which faculty and staff are invited to watch the last full-court practice before the start of the 1981-1982 season. My wife, daughter, and I sat on an aisle one row up from the court, on the opposite side from the team bench and coaches. We were closer to one basket, but still had a great view. In March, IU had won its second national championship in Coach Knight’s tenure, and there was naturally great anticipation and much attention being paid by the devoted audience to the prospects for the new season. For the scrimmage, the players were as usual divided into two squads – one sporting Cream-colored jerseys and the other Crimson – the school’s colors. The squads were putting on a good show, not letting up steam. Of course, they were being prodded on by the master himself, the revered Coach Knight, who fully orchestrated the performance, continually barking out commands from the opposite side of the court.

Although it was not a regular season contest, the scene looked and sounded real. It was very noisy, both from the cheers of the crowd and from the action on the court. As the squads thundered toward our direction, there was a sonic boom created by the pounding of feet and the screeching of shoes. The collective sounds roared and oscillated like ocean waves. The din would subsequently subside as the players reversed and drove themselves back down the court. My barely one-year-old daughter was caught up in all the commotion, seemingly entranced by the rhythmic tide. She would stand up as high as she could on my lap whenever the squads approached our area and then let out a small roar of her own. This pattern continued for several minutes.

I sat there fixed, eyes focused on the flow, observing and examining how the players maneuvered for each attack on the basket, or how then raced back into position on defense. Over time as the action continued intensely on court, I started to sense something odd. I briefly spied a small blur in the distance. At first, I paid only passing notice. Next, I detected some movement on the upper periphery of my vision. A figure or sorts began moving slowly towards the left; then picked up pace. Again, I did not make much of it and continued to turn most of my attention to the action on court. But the blur  or figure kept getting larger and larger as it continued to the left. But then I lost track, pulled back by a great layup. But there was something that I found strange, no more barking from Coach Knight AND he was no longer standing on the opposite side. Did I miss something?

Suddenly a large looming person appeared out of nowhere. He thundered out, “Get that kid out of here!”

It was Coach Knight towering above us in our seats.

“What what did you say?” I asked, stunned by moment. “What’s going on, Coach?” I tried to laugh, or giggle, or something, but could barely get anything out.

“I want that kid out of here,” he shouted again.

I was blown away. Incredulous. My wife sat dumb-founded.

“What had we, our daughter done to merit this treatment?” I thought.

We were not given much time to think or react. A coaching assistant who had accompanied Knight into the stands said, “Sorry, you’ll have to leave.”

“But why?”

“Coach says you’re disturbing our practice and have to leave.”

We reluctantly packed up, grabbed my daughter, and exited. It made little sense. Surely, he and the team encounter great volumes of noise and disruption during a game; and we were on the opposite side of the court. I wonder to this day how one small infant could so profoundly disturb the great Coach Knight.

Of course, my daughter has no memory of this incident, and it did not at all affect her love of playing basketball.

3. One afternoon, my wife and I were playing tennis on the university’s varsity courts when were joined in the next court by Coach Knight and another person. Seeing who it was, we did not bother to stop our play, We still held a grudge from the time he had kicked us out of the stadium six years earlier because our year-old daughter’s impassioned yells were apparently too much for the coach’s ears.

As continued our play, we began to hear the Coach raise his voice in discussion with his partner. We couldn’t discern what he was talking about, but soon several of their balls started ending up on our court. This is very normal for action on adjacent courts, so we had no issue about hitting their balls back whenever there’s the need. However, the heated talk turned to yelling, louder and louder; and the stray balls, particularly those off the coach’s racket, grew more and more frequent.

In the past, I had seen Knight play tennis. He was a decent player, so I didn’t understand the lack of control. His opponent did not seem to be extraordinarily formidable. I paused and approached my wife to whisper a question.

“What’s going on with Knight?”

“Who cares. He’s a jerk and probably a sore loser.”

“Perhaps, but it still seems odd. He has some bee in his bonnet.”

Soon we wrapped up our play. As we exited, Knight continued fuming on court.

The next day, we got the answer. It was reported in Herald-Times, Bloomington’s local paper, that Knight had been approached by one of the paper’s reporters on a downtown street. As the reporter was trying to pose a question, Knight had allegedly pushed the hapless fellow back through a hedgerow. Well, what can you say?

******

Dear Hoosierland,

I must remind you that according to our contract if you had wanted to continue to have championships in Indiana, you needed to provide Ken’s family the necessary financial support. They held up their end of the bargain through their major family events: 1) When they got hitched in 1976, Indiana went undefeated and won its first championship right after they had arrived on campus. 2) In 1981, when their daughter was born, Indiana achieved its second national championship. 3) In the year that their son was born, Indiana again attained the championship; however, you subsequently stopped giving them financial aid support. A contract is a contract. With no more support, they of course consequently stopped producing offspring resulting, as you very well know, in no further championships for you (even for the major pro sports), even if you cried about it.

BTW: As a signing bonus, I did throw in Mike Pence. Oh, he just dropped out, you say. Well, tant pis!

Meph

© 2023, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

War: Afghanistan Withdrawal

Our mission in Afghanistan should have solely been to pursue Bin Laden and Al-Qaeda leaders and focus on ways to prevent future attacks. Instead, it morphed into a perceived anti-muslim occupation and a nation-building effort. We attempted a hearts-and-minds campaign that never could put any roots in a country that we never understood. The souls of Afghanistan are just too hardened as history attests. President Biden realized this and has acted appropriately, not easily. Waging the war was ugly and costly, ending it would be likewise. Nevertheless, we cannot keep making the same mistakes over and over again. Twenty years was too long. We have great difficulty improving the rights and livelihoods of our own citizens, let alone those of a distant nation. Now that we have left, it behooves future leaders to make earnest efforts to consult with and enlist our allies, nations in the region, and the UN. We need to create a framework to monitor and improve Afghanistan through aid and diplomacy effort to mitigate future threats, pressure Afghan leaders, and preserve social progress made during the intervention. In addition, we need to assess more accurately future threats and attacks before we act rashly to avoid long, blood-and-treasure-draining ventures.

Press: Loss of Local News

School board and city council meetings are going uncovered. Overstretched reporters receive promising tips about stories but have no time to follow up. Newspapers publish fewer pages or less frequently or, in hundreds of cases across the country, are shuttered completely.

The scope of the problem is far worse than most people realize. In the U.S., 200 counties do not have a local newspaper, nearly 50% of counties only have one newspaper, usually a weekly, and more than 6% of counties have no dedicated news coverage at all. Other media sources have been unable so far to fill the gap. Digital startups are focused on population-dense communities rather than the rural areas most often abandoned by local newspapers, while many subsidized public media outlets rely primarily on non-original content. The result is that local news coverage in the United States many Americans woefully uninformed about local developments.

One of the major reasons for this situation is that the economic dynamics capable of sustaining a profitable model for local journalism have changed. Technological and economic assaults have destroyed the for-profit business model that sustained local journalism in this country for two centuries. While the advertising-based model for local news has been under threat for many years, the COVID-19 pandemic and recession have created what some describe as an “extinction level” threat for local newspapers and other struggling news outlets.

Suggestions:

Policymakers should intervene and ensure a sustainable future for local journalism in every community in the U.S. by pursuing the strategies outlined below.

1) Provide public funding for local journalism

  • A tax deduction for personal subscriptions to eligible local news organizations might incentivize more individuals to pay for local journalism and boost the revenues of local outlets.
  • Tax offsets for eligible production expenditures incurred by newsrooms could help defray the costs associated with original reporting.
  • The tax code could encourage more newspapers to operate as nonprofits by treating newspapers’ advertising and subscription revenue as tax exempt and contributions as tax deductible.
  • A public fund for local journalism could provide grants to local newsrooms to experiment with new models and fund local reporting fellowships.

2) Address the ways large online platforms undercut the business model for local news

  • Antitrust investigation into Facebook and Google’s conduct in digital advertising could determine whether the companies’ dominance in the market is due to anti-competitive behavior and address practices in the digital advertising market that unfairly disadvantage news publishers.
  • A tax on large online platforms for displaying publishers’ content would force companies that aggregate and distribute publishers’ content to share their profits with content creators.
  • A temporary exemption from antitrust laws would give news publishers the ability to collectively negotiate with large online platforms and create a fairer, more balanced relationship between publishers and platforms.

3) Other regulatory and policy suggestions include:

  • Educating the public to explain the work of journalists and the value of local news. This means helping people to better understand the harms associated with the collapse of local news, and to develop strategies for evaluating the information sources they currently use.
  • Rebuilding local news begins with ensuring that local news organizations have the resources to hire enough reporting staff and giving them the tools and training they need to succeed. This support can range from direct government funding to indirect support in the form of regulatory, tax, and other legal changes that strengthen journalism and allow local news organizations to thrive.

Pledge of Allegiance Revamped

The Pledge of Allegiance was written in August 1892 by Francis Bellamy. Bellamy, a Baptist minister who believed in the absolute separation of church and state, had hoped that the pledge would be used by citizens in any country.

Original version:

“I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

In 1923, the words, “the Flag of the United States of America” were added.

“I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

In 1954, in response to the unwarranted fear of communism, Congress added the words “under God.”

“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

Suggestion:

Change the Pledge to: “I pledge allegiance to the Constitution and the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

Democratic Resistance: Nonprofits

Saving democracy is more important than any individual nonprofit’s cause. In a sense, the entire structure nonprofit sector serves entrenched interests by dividing groups of citizens along multiple, competing interests. 

However, taking the example of religious organizations that have become blatantly political despite being legally obliged to be apolitical, nonprofit organizations should direct their members to become more political.

Once the nonprofit sector is collectively mobilized in this fashion, two or three prominent corporations that donate to malevolent causes could be targeted for boycott and therefore make resistance much more effective.

Gaza

Second message on Gaza (to White House 5-28-24):

Don’t keep getting pushed around by Netanyahu. He only wants to weaken and help DJT succeed and protect his butt from loss in Israel. Act more decisively not tactically. Americans appreciate decisiveness. Look how DJT keeps hold of his followers by acting tough. Act tough for Justice! Be decisive on the right side of history. No more offensive or dual-use weapons to Israel until they announce a real ceasefire. Take the initiative. Come up with your own peace plan. Bring in Arab, European, and other partners as guarantors. You may be criticized, but that comes with the territory and shows the leadership we need.

Publicly announce that only a two-state solution will resolve this issue. I suggest you propose a $200 billion fund (US, Europe, Arab countries, etc.) to finance the building of an international airport in the West Bank, a regional airport in Gaza, a seaport in Gaza, a rail connection if technically feasible between the West Bank and Gaza. Only this framework will make a Palestinian entity viable. I wish someone on your staff could give me a ring or start an email correspondence for further advice on issues.

Consider some sort of Fireside chat approach dealing with a few important issues to reach the greater public such as the Gaza crisis, preserve our democratic voting traditions, your fight to hold inflation down by calling out greedy actors, improving access to good healthcare, preserving Social Security and Medicare. We have to win and win decisively in November.

The Right’s Logic*

Why should one vote for HIM?
Because HE deserves it.

Vote for Him, so you won’t be a loser.

Isn’t He worried about His reputation?
No, it’s okay. HIS dad cheated, and he had a reputation.

If you are right wing, then you’re a patriot.
I’m not.
Then you’re not a patriot.

Right-wing ideas are superior to “Democrat” ideas.

Drinking bleach cures COVID.
No, it doesn’t …
You can’t say that! You’re a Democrat!

We should use masks against COVID.
No! The Democrats are the ones who support that!

They say HE doesn’t tell the truth.
But you don’t either.

Don’t you think lying is wrong?
Yeah.
Well, he just lied!
Ok, but HE’s a good guy.

Banning guns is nonsense.
Criminals will find a way.

Dictators make you snap on command.
Dictators must be smart.

Have Democrats stopped cheating at the elections?

What proof do you have HE did not suffer from millions of fraud votes?

The Afghanistan withdrawal was Biden’s fault.

Democrats are commies.
I don’t believe it.
Prove they aren’t.

No Jew votes for Democrats.
But my friend Aaron votes for Democrats.
Well, he isn’t a TRUE Jew.

Before we argue about immigration, let’s define it as “vermin control.”

HE says that dictators are his friends.
HE also said Biden was a dictator, so was Biden his friend?

Slaves learned useful skills on the plantation, so more education was a waste of time.

Stripping rights is bad, but HE still has to finish it.

Imposing larger tariffs will stop China.
Genius?!?

Project 2025 is too long for me to read,
but worth every word.

I can’t believe they said HIS debate was awful.
Awful originally meant that it inspired awe!

Springfield officials said no one’s eating dogs!
I’m entitled to my opinion.

They say they’ll lower your taxes.
Don’t listen to them. They’re Marxists.

Can you assure us that HE’ll help finance child care?
I can’t, but HIS new tariffs will solve everything.

If you don’t vote for Him,
You won’t be safe,

Your kid will change sex,
YOU’LL GO TO HELL!

*The Right’s Logical Fallacies

© 2024, Kenneth Koziol. All rights reserved.

Shorts

Real reason President Musk tanked the CR deal: Criminalizing the publication of “nonconsensual intimate visual depictions,” including deepfake pornography, and requiring social media to remove the content after being notified by a victim.

Tone deaf: After likening tribes, environmentalists, and other communities opposing the Sites Reservoir to NIMBYs, Newsom sucked up and said: “Donald Trump, this is your kind of project.”

Mika and Jo’s Mar-a-Lago report: It tastes GREAT! (Journalists or sycophants?)