News Roundup
Is this the early 1900s again? If so, who would be this era’s William Jennings Bryan? Regardless, class relations have worsened since Reagan took the throne. The financial crisis just showed that the rich get bailed out by their connections in the government while the “common man” can barely afford to buy food. All that rage (partially their own fault for overconsumption and leverage) has to be channeled somewhere. We’ve seen it directed at AIG executives, congressional Republicans, and now Democrats. The only surprise is the resiliency of the American Myth (formerly American Dream) of upward mobility. People still cling to that antiquated romantic notion and steadfastly avoid uprisings and revolutions. Right now, soak the rich is as far as they’re willing to go, perhaps because most people still entertain absurd notions that they’ll ever be rich.
On a similar note, the same disenchantment can be found in the former Soviet bloc, where the market has failed to deliver on improvements in standard of living. Already there are yearnings for the “good old days”. How long there before blood spills?
Perhaps some of the distrust of politicians has spilled over into political science as a field, even though most politicians are lawyers by trade, not political theorists or professors. As a result, people (Tom Coburn et al) are asking whether political science is even relevant as a field of study. They have the academics scrambling to justify their department’s existence. Having taken a single class in the field during my undergraduate years, I have fond memories of abstract discussions on power, systems, and gatekeeper institutions as well as more applicable overviews of industrialization, the Soviet Union, and South Africa.
My personal take on the future of political science is that it is best served by delving into modern affairs and proposing policy. Leave the models and theorizing about resource distribution to economics, a more suitable field for the arcane and theoretical.
When I was in Berkeley, Teach For America was quite a big recruiter on campus, and I got to know (and almost signed up for) the program. Ostensibly, it is a social work group targeting low-income kids in need of a quality education. In practice, it is a resume building experience for privileged kids, most of whom will step into the corporate life at some point. I have no doubts that the teachers are motivated, bright, and effective in teaching. The only issue I have is that the participants are not career teachers, so most of them will only teach for 2 years.
As for the unions’ argument that TFA teachers are underpaid scab workers, I have to disagree. Obviously there are people willing to do the work for less pay than what unions currently pay. Many of them achieve good results in standardized tests. I pose the question to unions: why are your teachers not meeting the same standards as a bunch of scabs?
I’m not usually a big fan of Paul Krugman when he mouths off about political economics (too much Greg Mankiw influence), but he’s usually sound when highlighting social failings and doing technical work on macroeconomics. He is mostly spot on by sounding the alarms on education, as many education secretaries have done so before. Having spent many years in academia, I have witnessed firsthand that most of the US’s top tier talent is imported. That source, while welcomed, can be volatile. If the US falls behind in research output, new discoveries, availability of funds, or quality of life, students will go elsewhere. A particular concern is that the underclass does not seem interested in advancing through education. I’ve got no ideas of what incentive program can be devised to help them realize that education is their best shot at social mobility.
How Business Supplanted the Humanities
Most undergraduates today in public schools choose some form of business/economics as a major for good reason. The expected return in terms of income is much greater than if the student had chosen a more academic discipline such as English or history. One can make the argument that engineering offers on average higher returns than business, but when you weigh the expended effort, the potential for professional degrees, the higher social status, and a vastly higher earning ceiling, business still wins out.
Where do I see the English and history departments headed? Obscurity. It’s up to them to reinvent themselves as applicable to attract more students. Until then, they can at least take comfort in the fact that they’re being subsidized by larger departments within a college. I don’t mind that subsidy since any well-rounded individual will take at least one course in those disciplines, and that requires faculty and an accompanying department.
Who Are the Most Racist People?
In my experience, it is East and South Asians (not South-East Asians, mind you) in a tie for the title of most racist. Those groups have large populations, relatively homogeneous populations but with a significant ethnic presence that discrimination becomes habitual. Though whites in the US get the most press for hating on blacks and Hispanics, they’re actually pretty tame in their outward interactions (discrimination tends to be subtle and based on avoidance rather than confrontation). In Asia, racism manifests itself as verbal slurs, hate crimes, and sometimes enforced policy. In the article linked, there is a NYT piece on race relations in South Korea. Notice the amount of flak received by the woman for consorting with a foreign man.
Oh My, What a Big Beard You Have
In a twist, operatives in Afghanistan who grew long beards to blend in and to be socially accepted are now stigmatized b/c of their aggressive behaviour. Their characteristic beards are now ways for the local population to identify and avoid these rough sorts. I think most people knew from Iraq that using independent contractors as security detail did not turn out well. Using them in Afghanistan as infiltrators is not going to work any better. There may be more culturally sensitive ways to carry out investigations, but some of what these special ops do is unavoidable.
It’s a good position in China to be an only son. Parents spoil the child and cater to his every whim. It’s much better, however, to be born to a rich family as well. The divide between rich and poor has been steadily accelerating since market reforms began, but unlike the West, poor Chinese families do not have the social safety net to care adequately for their children. Corrupt officials and the high-rolling lifestyles of the rich has led to nationwide resentment and social unrest, not a good situation for the ruling party.
The Need For a Human Rights Watch
According to Nickelback, Amnesty International was founded by a British lawyer who was shocked to read that two Portuguese students had been imprisoned for toasting freedom. It turns out that societies like AI are as needed today as ever. One criticism though is that they don’t focus enough attention on western countries, such as the US, when they commit human rights violations. Guantanamo is a sore thumb in that as long as it exists, people will wonder what sort of violations take place there because of its reputation. The only reasonable course of action is to return to Geneva Convention accords with respect to treatment of prisoners of war. Otherwise, I would happily endorse sanctions against the US in violation of human rights.
Not much to comment about here other than to say: “click through to the article”. Kathy Collins is an outstanding professor and researcher at Berkeley, and her work on telomeres will be critical to controlling the aging process down the road.
Spanish or Spanish
So, I’ve basically decided to dedicate this summer to studying Spanish and touring a foreign country. Looking around, there are two programs that I’m wavering between. The first is Celas Maya, a host-family + intensive Spanish immersion program in Guatemala. The second is GeoVisions’s Conversation Corps program. I’d have to work 15 hours a week as an English teacher for a host family. In return, I can take classes in my spare time and wander the country. Both cost around the same.
Does anyone have experience in these programs? Are there other ones out there that are any good? My focus is on quality and the experience, rather than cost.
Europe and the Recession
During my time in Europe this summer, I caught a glimpse first-hand of how the recession is affecting everyone. I noticed that in England, there were many youths laying about in parks and wandering the streets instead of working. The numbers behind the scenes are quite shocking as well. Britain is dangerously close to heading the way of Japan with respect to a lost generation of disenchanted youths. If anyone has forgotten what youth unemployment and underemployment can do to the social structure, just consult my previous post on the matter.
The rest of the Eurozone is just hard-hit, as Gordon Brown observes. Aside from the expected diminishment in tourism, there are quirks to each country that I will describe. My friends in France tell me that most young people graduating from universities can’t find jobs, so they try one rung lower by looking for service jobs in restaurants and hotels. However, they face stiff competition from those who went to trade schools and were trained for such professions. As a result, many just sit around on benches along the Seine looking glum or hang out in packs at crowded intersections smoking and harassing tourists.
In Germany, things were a bit better, but most nationals who still had jobs still looked a bit more frazzled as they try harder to keep their jobs and justify their employment. The happiest ones seemed to be the self-employed people who manage their own time and career.
Gordon Brown is right though in that the EU needs to increase its cooperation to get through this. That means to resist the urge to enact protectionist policies that Obama is doing. Conveniently, such actions are against the Eurozone regulations, so while some countries may suffer greater unemployment as foreign workers flood in, recovery will happen faster on average. Europe also has the advantage of falling back on a strong education system and many creature comforts. Talented folks like Katie are thus enticed into staying and contributing to the local economy.
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