Time | We're used to choosing to join together for a goal—or not—whenever we want to
Over
the course of the last 15 years or so, there’s been an explosion in the
number of charter schools around the country. According to the latest figures (from 2012),
some 2.1 million students are enrolled in schools run by private groups
awarded public money. The schools bear optimistic names like “YES Prep
North Central” (in Houston) and “Animo Leadership High” (in Inglewood,
California). Beyond the specific concerns about education, the charter
school movement is powered by a particularly American world-view, one
rooted in the ethos of the dissident Protestant churches that were the
foundation of early American culture: Citizens opting out of a
hierarchical system to pursue personal goals by joining together in a
local, voluntary society.
This ideological impulse – which I and others call “voluntarism” – is a
cultural trait that helps explain why the United States remains
different from comparable wealthy, western nations. Broadly speaking,
voluntarism is not another term for American individualism, although it
entails individualism. Voluntarism is the way Americans reconcile
individualism and community. And we can feel the weight of
American voluntarism in our approaches to public issues, not only in
charter schools, but in debates about issues like Obamacare and gay
marriage as well.
Other western nations, by contrast, consider health care a civil
right of citizens and a moral obligation of government. American
tradition, however, treats health care as an individual’s personal
responsibility, or at least as a personal responsibility exercised
through voluntary association, as in workplace health insurance. When
the debate around gay marriage shifted from a discussion of God, gender,
sex, and propriety to a debate over individual rights, tolerance, and
the personal freedom of Americans to choose their partners, the struggle
for marriage equality became easier.
American voluntarism makes it hard for social-democratic reformers to
persuade their fellow citizens to accept the types of ambitious
state-run initiatives common in most western democracies, such as
universal healthcare, free pre-schools and guaranteed labor rights.
Conversely, the spirit of American voluntarism makes it harder for
non-Americans to understand our public policies, which are often
caricatured as being nakedly Darwinian.
That American society was notably different — exceptional was the term —
from other western societies was a staple for much of twentieth-century
social science. Researchers have offered up lists of hows and whys,
trying to distill the difference. I joined the enterprise when I started
researching my 2010 book, Made in America, and the evidence spoke to the centrality of voluntarism in understanding American culture and its so-called exceptionalism.
8 comments:
Still not too late...." Has the wing confirmed holding at their failsafe points?"
lol, no saving throw for you and you'n either, except for fresh protective gear and powered respirators. Better buy yours before the rush is on. Those things'll be more valuable than AR-15's were a few years ago.
Dunno if it would be safe to go out even if you had the yellow suit, etc.... Bangers would kill you for it just like they do for Michael Jordan's and iPhones....BD"s plan is to self-quarantine till things cool off...
Too bad for you, I send out my fpv drones with nightvision and surveil the busters before going outside to streetsweep them and harvest their tallow...,
"Everything but the squeal"
Damn brav...., you went hella hard today. LOTS to think about. Thanks!
Where do you come down on these questions? Social democratic inclusion or individual sovereign/intentional communitarian exclusion and competition?
My man..., intelligent questions tend to be rather vanishingly rare - very much appreciated! So, where I come down on it is simple. We're well down the road of the anthropocene extinction and that means environmental, ecological, and ethological musical chairs. Given our current levels of mass psychological maturity and development, as a species, we can't help but fight viciously among ourselves for what we instinctually consider the last chair in the dwindling collection of musical chairs.
Some precious few humans will escape and survive, off-world, deep underworld and under the sea. I am confident that that WILL happen, and hopefully these few will survive and learn and be more having made it through the bottleneck we've brought upon ourselves and most multicellular and vertebrate animals living on the surface of the earth.
Social democratic inclusion would require a degree of moral development (spiritual development) unimaginable to 99.99999% of these humans.
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