http://prorev.com/2008/05/corporate-curse.html
It's long. It's basically about how solutions have been replaced with bullshit and silly business cliches and slogans. Large institutions are bent on perpetuating themselves not solving anything because they might be part of the problem.
...
"There's a widespread feeling these days, both here and abroad, that America has lost its way, that we've gone crazy, and that school has something to do with it. Personally, I agree. But what change in schooling could restore our lost national vigor?
"Since 1983, the answer from policy circles has been: even more of the same. More hours, more days, more homework, more tests, more college, and a more coercive transfer of officially-approved curricula designed to make classrooms teacher-proof. In this tight prescription, critical thinking, artistic expression, and actual applications of learning have received short shrift. But what if regimented schooling is the disease making us sick and not its cure?"

It was always easier to make money through fraud instead of productive work. The difference between historical greed and modern greed is that our current information systems make enacting fraud ridiculously easy. Witness Enron.
What should have kept all that under control is the use of the power of government to audit businesses and enforce the existing laws against their frauds. However, the rise of the Information Age coincided with the rise of both Neo-Liberalism and Neo-Conservatism. Both factions are overly concerned with money, and only differ in how that money is manipulated and by whom. Hence, the US and state governments became completely corrupted by these allied factions, and utterly changed their goals, so that they considered the pursuit of wealth to be more important than any other concern (by a long, long range). I think of it as a marriage between the soldiers in the Reagan Revolution and those struck by the "Apple-millionaires disease". (Let's not forget the gold and silver bugs of that era.)
So the government in general was not going to stop the business culture that was creating a lot of this fraudulent, paper wealth. The businesses enacting these frauds hardly needed to bribe public officials via campaign contributions; the rounds of stock frauds alone allowed these fairly-wealthy public officials to make themselves obscenely wealthy purely from playing the stock market on their own. The government was PHILOSOPHICALLY unable to audit and enforce things like tax and securities laws, not matter how many of those were on the books. Officials just got used to letting the business culture dictate their regulatory response.
(To use a biological metaphor, the body politic became so used to the presence of cancerous cells of criminals in business suits, that the anti-body reaction of regulation ceased to trigger on them. Predictably, the cancers then grew exponentially.)
So, I'm coming down the topic path to explain how schooling is just not the issue. Even enlightened and educated people simply can't compete with the money-only culture in Washington DC and in each state capitol. What needs to be fixed is the CRIMINAL government we have as a base fact regardless of how we vote.
The foundation of criminal government has to change. To change it, sure, I agree that education should be provided to even demonstrate the existence of our criminal government. But beyond that, our legal system at the working end has to ignore the corrupt legislature and just ENFORCE the laws that now exist. The tools and authority already exist in the courts; the prosecutors and judges just have to get with the program of re-taking our Republic back from the moneylenders and merchants.
posted by GuestZero on May 09, 2008 at 08:08:10 pm #