Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Michael O'Hare and the future of America

This is a letter written by Michael O'Hare to his students. I found it on Obsidian Wings. It says a lot about the state that we've gotten ourselves into.

Welcome to Berkeley, probably still the best public university in the world. Meet your classmates, the best group of partners you can find anywhere. The percentages for grades on exams, papers, etc. in my courses always add up to 110% because that’s what I’ve learned to expect from you, over twenty years in the best job in the world.
That’s the good news. The bad news is that you have been the victims of a terrible swindle, denied an inheritance you deserve by contract and by your merits. And you aren’t the only ones; victims of this ripoff include the students who were on your left and on your right in high school but didn’t get into Cal, a whole generation stiffed by mine. This letter is an apology, and more usefully, perhaps a signal to start demanding what’s been taken from you so you can pass it on with interest.
Swindle – what happened? Well, before you were born, Californians now dead or in nursing homes made a remarkable deal with the future. (Not from California? Keep reading, lots of this applies to you, with variations.) They agreed to invest money they could have spent on bigger houses, vacations, clothes, and cars into the world’s greatest educational system, and into building and operating water systems, roads, parks, and other public facilities, an infrastructure that was the envy of the world. They didn’t get everything right: too much highway and not enough public transportation. But they did a pretty good job.
Young people who enjoyed these ‘loans’ grew up smarter, healthier, and richer than they otherwise would have, and understood that they were supposed to “pay it forward” to future generations, for example by keeping the educational system staffed with lots of dedicated, well-trained teachers, in good buildings and in small classes, with college counselors and up-to-date books. California schools had physical education, art for everyone, music and theater, buildings that looked as though people cared about them, modern languages and ancient languages, advanced science courses with labs where the equipment worked, and more. They were the envy of the world, and they paid off better than Microsoft stock. Same with our parks, coastal zone protection, and social services.
This deal held until about thirty years ago, when for a variety of reasons, California voters realized that while they had done very well from the existing contract, they could do even better by walking away from their obligations and spending what they had inherited on themselves. “My kids are finished with school; why should I pay taxes for someone else’s? Posterity never did anything for me!” An army of fake ‘leaders’ sprang up to pull the moral and fiscal wool over their eyes, and again and again, your parents and their parents lashed out at government (as though there were something else that could replace it) with tax limits, term limits, safe districts, throw-away-the-key imprisonment no matter the cost, smoke-and-mirrors budgeting, and a rule never to use the words taxes and services in the same paragraph.
Now, your infrastructure is falling to pieces under your feet, and as citizens you are responsible for crudities like closing parks, and inhumanities like closing battered women’s shelters. It’s outrageous, inexcusable, that you can’t get into the courses you need, but much worse that Oakland police have stopped taking 911 calls for burglaries and runaway children. If you read what your elected officials say about the state today, you’ll see things like “California can’t afford” this or that basic government function, and that “we need to make hard choices” to shut down one or another public service, or starve it even more (like your university). Can’t afford? The budget deficit that’s paralyzing Sacramento is about $500 per person; add another $500 to get back to a public sector we don’t have to be ashamed of, and our average income is almost forty times that. Of course we can afford a government that actually works: the fact is that your parents have simply chosen not to have it.
I’m writing this to you because you are the victims of this enormous cheat (though your children will be even worse off if you don’t take charge of this ship and steer it). Your education was trashed as California fell to the bottom of US states in school spending, and the art classes, AP courses, physical education, working toilets, and teaching generally went by the board. Every year I come upon more and more of you who have obviously never had the chance to learn to write plain, clear, English. Every year, fewer and fewer of you read newspapers, speak a foreign language, understand the basics of how government and business actually work, or have the energy to push back intellectually against me or against each other. Or know enough about history, literature, and science to do it effectively! You spent your school years with teachers paid less and less, trained worse and worse, loaded up with more and more mindless administrative duties, and given less and less real support from administrators and staff.
Many of your parents took a hike as well, somehow getting the idea that the schools had taken over their duties to keep you learning, or so beat-up working two jobs each and commuting two hours a day to put food on the table that they couldn’t be there for you. A quarter of your classmates didn’t finish high school, discouraged and defeated; but they didn’t leave the planet, even if you don’t run into them in the gated community you will be tempted to hide out in. They have to eat just like you, and they aren’t equipped to do their share of the work, so you will have to support them.
You need to have a very tough talk with your parents, who are still voting; you can’t save your children by yourselves. Equally important, you need to start talking to each other. It’s not fair, and you have every reason (except a good one) to keep what you can for yourselves with another couple of decades of mean-spirited tax-cutting and public sector decline. You’re my heroes just for surviving what we put you through and making it into my classroom, but I’m asking for more: you can be better than my generation. Take back your state for your kids and start the contract again. There are lots of places you can start, for example, building a transportation system that won’t enslave you for two decades as their chauffeur, instead of raising fares and cutting routes in a deadly helix of mediocrity. Lots. Get to work. See you in class!
The comments on O'Hare's original post say even more. Those comments, like so much else in our nation these days, seems divided squarely into two camps. One comment sums up the frustration of so many on O'Hare's side:
It is amazing how the greatest generation gave birth to the absolute worst generation of all-time. What a bunch of no good, selfish whiners. The boomers ruined America.

Technically, I'm a boomer, barely, but I've always associated myself more with GenX. I was born in 1964, which places me at the transition point for these two demographic groups. I understand where the commenter is coming from, entirely. It often seems to me that the Me generation, the greed is good folks, are the ones that have set us on the path to ruination.

The other side is represented by a woman who calls herself "sick of hands on my pockets".
Is this the land of the free or not? I personally am sick and tired of people TELLING me I am responsible for anyone other than my husband and children. I am not!! If I want to be charitable, I will be charitable. But if I choose to not to be charitable, that is MY choice. I have been endowed by my Creator with unalienable rights. The US govt does NOT HAVE THE RIGHT TO FORCE ME TO BE CHARITABLE! God loves a cheerful giver, but it is my choice whether or not I WANT to give. GOD gave me FREE WILL!!! So, if you want to give, DO. And if you don’t, don’t. But don’t tell me I have to just because you want to. Think me stingy, I am not, I give plenty! But I refuse to be forced or guilted into giving!”
My point. Our govt is too big. Each person is responsible for THEIR OWN WELL BEING. I reap what I sow. And if I choose to sit on my @$$ and not work…then the natural consequence will be I go hungry. Period! If you want a ” good life” you have to work for it. That means going to college, trade school, or getting a job. No one deserves anything!
Get rid of 90% of govt. Keep only what is absolutely necessary. Stock options & Day trading are not necessities. The less the 535 people in DC meddle in our lives, the better! Investing on yoursrlf gives the most return on your investment
Sounds familiar. Personal responsibility was the trademark of my parent's generation. They understood the idea of working for a living. I'm not knocking that at all. At some point, however, taking that idea to its extreme and being unwilling to help the greater good is essentially selfish.

And really, we shouldn't be surprised that the Boomers are so anti-government. As youth, they rebelled against their parents, were avidly anti-establishment and seem to have carried that idea to its logical conclusion with the Tea Party. 75% of Tea Party participants are over the age of 45, which places them squarely in the Boomer generation. 

Let's hope the Millennials do a better job.


3 comments:

Frank said...

As a boomer, born in 1950, I resent the current fashion of blaming me for the selfishness and bigotry of wingnuttery.

It's stereotyping. Generational stereotyping, but still stereotyping, no more true that Grace's "Don't trust anyone over 30." She's over 60 now.

Otherwise, keep up the good work.

And, while I'm at it, I resent having to use my Google login, which I try to keep confidential, to post a comment as opposed to name/email/URL.

Stacy Hackenberg said...

@Frank-
1) I have no control over how Blogger does comments. The only thing I have done is disable anonymous comments. Since Google emails are free, set one up with a pseudonym.

2) I understand your frustration with the stereotyping. I know plenty of folks who would fall into the Boomer generation who I would not classify as a wingnut, myself included. These things are not set in stone, but they are revealing.

Anonymous said...

Ugh. I feel like the woman on the other side, "sick of hands on my pockets," wasn't really comprehending what Professor O'Hare was writing. Paying taxes to build good schools and safe roads isn't charity. She uses those things, doesn't she? And if she or her kids don't go to school anymore, well, she still makes use of people like doctors, who need the schools she is contributing toward. She may be sick and tired of "hands on her pockets," but I am sick and tired of people who so resent the idea of anyone besides themselves having a say in their lives that they forget that, weather we like it or not, weather it makes us feel too much guilt or responsibility or not, the things we do have an effect on the people around us. Humans require society to thrive, and that means contributing to that society beyond the concerns of ourselves and our children. Government is an attempt to maintain and advance that society and is necessary. If she doesn't like it, she can go see how she likes living in places like Darfur that have only anarchy.