http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2011/09/the_curse_of_tina.html
Here's the intro:
The guiding idea at the heart of today's political system is freedom of choice. The belief that if you apply the ideals of the free market to all sorts of areas in society, people will be liberated from the dead hand of government. The wants and desires of individuals then become the primary motor of society.
But this has led to a very peculiar paradox. In politics today we have no choice at all. Quite simply There Is No Alternative.
That was fine when the system was working well. But since 2008 there has been a rolling economic crisis, and the system increasingly seems unable to rescue itself. You would expect that in response to such a crisis new, alternative ideas would emerge. But this hasn't happened.
Nobody - not just from the left, but from anywhere - has come forward and tried to grab the public imagination with a vision of a different way to organise and manage society.
It's a bit odd - and I thought I would tell a number of stories about why we find it impossible to imagine any alternative. Why we have become so possessed by the ideology of our age that we cannot think outside it.
The first story is called:
CARRY ON THINKING
It is about the rise of the modern Think Tank and how in a very strange way they have made thinking impossible.
And its some pretty fascinating stuff, going all over the place as Curtis's stuff tends to do -- covering "chickens, pirate radio, retired colonels, Jean Paul Sartre, Screaming Lord Sutch, and at its heart is a dramatic and brutal killing committed by one of the very men who helped bring about the resurgence of the free market in Britain." Its sorta like one of his documentaries in text form, and there's lots of obscure video clips interspersed through.
Edited by germanjoey ()
the research on think tanks is pretty fascinating, especially the historical almost-seems-like-fiction background, albeit nothing no one didn't already know, at least intuitively... but its def. important to remember that basically every institution in and out of academia is lovingly fucked by capital
the best clip is certainly hayek espousing his thinly veiled and coded metaphysics concerning the free-market. i absolutely adore the bourgeois mentality that can so effectively mask a belief system as a factual science
Edited by aerdil ()
dm posted:
i read it and it was interesting b/c the development in the US was quite a bit different but the impact has been identical. in the US they aren't so much a distinct thing or phenomenon as they are a byproduct of how we do philanthropy
What is the story there? I mean I know about the early days, with the Rand Corporation and cold war strategy and all that, and it actually seems a logical consequence of what our enormous WW2 intelligence apparatus would morph into once they had no Nazi codes to crack. But how do we get The Center for American Progress out of *that*?
babyfinland posted:
you know joey im a think tank
yeah, a think tank like one of them little shermans, whose drivers had to duct-tape a cardboard tube around the barrel outta shear embarassement
germanjoey posted:dm posted:
i read it and it was interesting b/c the development in the US was quite a bit different but the impact has been identical. in the US they aren't so much a distinct thing or phenomenon as they are a byproduct of how we do philanthropyWhat is the story there? I mean I know about the early days, with the Rand Corporation and cold war strategy and all that, and it actually seems a logical consequence of what our enormous WW2 intelligence apparatus would morph into once they had no Nazi codes to crack. But how do we get The Center for American Progress out of *that*?
RAND is kinda different because its pretty much a quasi-government agency. he did a series on it that he mentions in that covers it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZ6t5JA7OBA
it's mostly just private foundations with tax exempt status to promote whatever. they've been around since the early 20th century and grown ever since
e: yeah this
aerdil posted:
i think dm was touching on the american phenomenon of "philanthropic" foundations, the supreme example being the Ford Foundation, which hand out all their grants to ideologically free-market and capitalist think tanks, tilting institutional power and reach in their favor? tell me if i'm off-track here
i mean the choice is to pay taxes or try to spend it on things that will enhance your political power
e2: as of 2003, there were: 58,000 independent foundations, most of which are local with 9.7 percent donating over $500,000 a year and 2,362 corporate foundations which have grown rapidly since the 80's.
Edited by dm ()
http://www.jstor.org/stable/2712297
Edited by aerdil ()
aerdil posted:
hmm for some reason whenever i start researching how shitty some aspect of academia is, it always relates back in some way to american propaganda about the cultural revolution lmao
you might want to check out this book by C. Wright Mills. it was more or less a critique of a bunch of emerging trends in the social sciences back in 1959. he really clearly identifies what we now call "scientism" and related issues. another was what he called "abstracted empiricism" involving the fetishistic use of statistical techniques. this one passage really struck me and has a lot of relevance to what Curtis was talking about:
During the modern era, physical and biological science has been the major common denominator of serious reflection and popular metaphysics in Western societies. 'The technique of the laboratory' has been the accepted mode of procedure and the source of intellectual security. That is one meaning of the idea of an intellectual common denominator: men can state their strongest convictions in its terms; other terms and other styles of reflection seem mere vehicles of escape and obscurity.
the themes related to technology and the "____ of the future" that characterized popular culture at the time come to mind.
Edited by dm ()
dm posted:aerdil posted:
hmm for some reason whenever i start researching how shitty some aspect of academia is, it always relates back in some way to american propaganda about the cultural revolution lmaoyou might want to check out this book by C. Wright Mills. it was more or less a critique of a bunch of emerging trends in the social sciences back in 1959. he really clearly identifies what we now call "scientism" and related issues. another was what he called "abstracted empiricism" involving the fetishistic use of statistical techniques. this one passage really struck me and has a lot of relevance to what Curtis was talking about:
During the modern era, physical and biological science has been the major common denominator of serious reflection and popular metaphysics in Western societies. 'The technique of the laboratory' has been the accepted mode of procedure and the source of intellectual security. That is one meaning of the idea of an intellectual common denominator: men can state their strongest convictions in its terms; other terms and other styles of reflection seem mere vehicles of escape and obscurity.
the themes related to technology and the "____ of the future" that characterized popular culture at the time come to mind.
since this keeps coming up i figured i should probably go ahead and read it. already found a phrase i really like: "The very structure of opportunities has collapsed"
dm posted:
That is one meaning of the idea of an intellectual common denominator: men can state their strongest convictions in its terms; other terms and other styles of reflection seem mere vehicles of escape and obscurity.
that quote also seems pretty damn prescient about positivist or analytical critiques of continental philosophy & post-modernism
Anybody see Tribulation 99, by Craig Baldwin? It's a coded read on imperialism in Latin America. He has a piece about the Zaire space program too. His style is a reaction against the deadening of information, which ties into this thread re: the role of the think tanks.
animedad posted:
actually it would be cool to shake things up in the ol think tank world, like write a bunch of articles about how liberals dont understand freud, and how the poor are much better off with their accidental lack of power instead of just being dumb/ugly/shamed in an "egalitarian" world. it would own.
zizek already wrote that book
aerdil posted:animedad posted:
actually it would be cool to shake things up in the ol think tank world, like write a bunch of articles about how liberals dont understand freud, and how the poor are much better off with their accidental lack of power instead of just being dumb/ugly/shamed in an "egalitarian" world. it would own.zizek already wrote that book
ya but not for the institute of REason and Freedom or w/e. thats the joke!!
Myfanwy posted:
What's the antidote to the think tank? Like how do you combat the received idea world. Youtube videos seem to be pretty effective at spreading little belieff systems that reinforce peoples suspicions, like loose change/zeitgeist/that illuminati music video stuff. Could it be as easy as making a little catchy movie and convincing everyone to be a reasonable leftist :tongue:
www.rhizzone.net
i dont think changing peoples minds is honestly a tactic for anything. a lot of people have really strong political opinions but they dont do anything about it. the key is organizing people towards some project, and that takes community building and old fashioned hard work. if anything i think those youtube memes just reinforce social isolation and paranoia about your neighbors
babyfinland posted:
www.rhizzone.net
i dont think changing peoples minds is honestly a tactic for anything. a lot of people have really strong political opinions but they dont do anything about it. the key is organizing people towards some project, and that takes community building and old fashioned hard work. if anything i think those youtube memes just reinforce social isolation and paranoia about your neighbors
yeah agreed on all points