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Proto-Fascism
in America: Neoliberalism and the Demise of Democracy - A Review
by Adam Fletcher
"War is peace, freedom is
slavery, and ignorance is strength." - George Orwell in
1984.
This book is an intelligent,
defining account of our times. Scholar Henry Giroux effectively and concisely
exposes the tyranny of the Bush Administration, and indisputably
links corporations to the highjacking of American democracy.
Throughout this publication Giroux draws powerful correlations
between news accounts
and critical analysis, without oversimplifying or patronizing
the reader. He offers a necessary
guide to how the issues tie together: prisons, police,
spies, weapons, soldiers + racial discrimination, demonizing
youth, targeting young people of color for the military +
defunding public services, defeating the Clean Air Act,
Christian conservatism = neoliberal terrorism in our times. Most
importantly though, Giroux details our need to develop a new way
of approaching democracy that embraces democratic action and
engagement for all people, especially young people.
Giroux explains that part of this
new approach is connecting the apparent intransigence of the
public today to the larger forces of the anti-community: crass
consumerism and the multi-national corporations which have
driven the marketplace into every aspect of public life:
education, health care, and the duties of the government across
the board. Giroux has gone beyond his former analysis of public
education and popular
media. Instead, his critical eye
turns now towards the entities that democratic society insists we
all be responsible for: government, community, and our social
fabric.
Through this lens Giroux
identifies the Bush Administration as hostile towards young
people, by militarizing public schools, over-incarcerating young
people of color, and defunding youth programs. He writes,
"…[F]ear,
punishment, and containment continue to override the need to
provide health care for… children, increase the ranks of
teachers… repair deteriorating schools, and improve youth
services that for many poor students, would provide an
alternative to the direct pipeline between school and the local
police station, the courts, or prison."
Giroux particularly identifies George Bush's refusal to ratify the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child, and carefully
deconstructs the effects of education systems that serve as the deliverers and enforcers of a neoliberal agenda intent on taking freedom away from children
and youth, people of color and working-class communities. By exposing a school reform agenda intent on taking
away the rights of youth, Giroux exposes,
"the
not-so-hidden curriculum... that kids can't be trusted and that
their rights aren't worth protecting. At the same time, they are
being educated to passively accept military-sanctioned practices
organized around maintaining control, surveillance, and
unquestioned authority."
Giroux contends that this agenda, doubled
with the agenda of the "military-industrial-education complex,"
reinforces the work of Army recruiters who are speaking directly
to youth today. By "discover[ing] hip hop and urban
culture," and disregarding the problems young people,
particularly urban and low-income youth, face at home today, the
Army lures young people with "the Hummer, where they can pep the
sound system or watch recruitment videos." Giroux explores the
effects this has on marginalized youth, as "school becomes a
training ground for their 'graduation' into containment centers
such as prisons and jails." One is that "young people no longer
learn military values in training camps or military-oriented
schools." They are learned through popular media and people:
movies, MTV, music, friends, and family.
Young people are not islands from
themselves, disconnected from larger concerns in society.
Through action for social change all young people can become actors in the larger spectrum of
society. It is through these actions that youth can
become engaged in democracy and effectively learn from their life
experiences. Neoliberalism is the attempt of consumerist, corporate America
to steal politics, history, and culture from popular society,
instead replacing them with an economy of greed, and consumption. This book
provides an critical bridge for facilitators of youth action to
connect young people to the fight against modern American
fascism, and challenge young people with a powerful, accessible
call to action.
In the end, Giroux calls on
us, individual people, to fight neoliberalism in our lives
and to end its widespread grips on our society. Young people are
central to this challenge. He ends the book with a call to
"act... now because the stakes have never been so high and the
future so dark." With George Bush continuing to damn young
people and escalating the war against youth, young people and
their allies are faced with no choice but to take action. These are
our times, and as The Freechild
Project has exposed, young people have the capacity. This book
can serve as a powerful weapon in the fight.
Proto-Fascism in America:
Neoliberalism and the Demise of Democracy
Authors: Henry Giroux
Publisher: Phi Delta Kappa
Education Foundation
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