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Jcrowley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-25-07 10:55 PM
Original message
To Hell With Good Intentions
I do have deep faith in the enormous good will of the U.S. volunteer. However, his good faith can usually be explained only by an abysmal lack of intuitive delicacy. By definition, you cannot help being ultimately vacationing salesmen for the middle-class "American Way of Life," since that is really the only life you know. A group like this could not have developed unless a mood in the United States had supported it - the belief that any true American must share God's blessings with his poorer fellow men. The idea that every American has something to give, and at all times may, can and should give it, explains why it occurred to students that they could help Mexican peasants "develop" by spending a few months in their villages.

Of course, this surprising conviction was supported by members of a missionary order, who would have no reason to exist unless they had the same conviction - except a much stronger one. It is now high time to cure yourselves of this. You, like the values you carry, are the products of an American society of achievers and consumers, with its two-party system, its universal schooling, and its family-car affluence. You are ultimately-consciously or unconsciously - "salesmen" for a delusive ballet in the ideas of democracy, equal opportunity and free enterprise among people who haven't the possibility of profiting from these.

Next to money and guns, the third largest North American export is the U.S. idealist, who turns up in every theater of the world: the teacher, the volunteer, the missionary, the community organizer, the economic developer, and the vacationing do-gooders. Ideally, these people define their role as service. Actually, they frequently wind up alleviating the damage done by money and weapons, or "seducing" the "underdeveloped" to the benefits of the world of affluence and achievement. Perhaps this is the moment to instead bring home to the people of the U.S. the knowledge that the way of life they have chosen simply is not alive enough to be shared.

By now it should be evident to all America that the U.S. is engaged in a tremendous struggle to survive. The U.S. cannot survive if the rest of the world is not convinced that here we have Heaven-on-Earth. The survival of the U.S. depends on the acceptance by all so-called "free" men that the U.S. middle class has "made it." The U.S. way of life has become a religion which must be accepted by all those who do not want to die by the sword - or napalm. All over the globe the U.S. is fighting to protect and develop at least a minority who consume what the U.S. majority can afford. Such is the purpose of the Alliance for Progress of the middle-classes which the U.S. signed with Latin America some years ago. But increasingly this commercial alliance must be protected by weapons which allow the minority who can "make it" to protect their acquisitions and achievements.

<snip>

http://www.swaraj.org/illich_hell.htm

A classic.
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razors edge Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-25-07 11:41 PM
Response to Original message
1. Speaking as someone intimately familiar with asphalt...
we have been paving that road for a loooooong time. Hard realities are coming and the non reality based community will put off that reckoning as long as possible.
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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 05:04 AM
Response to Original message
2. Good read; thanks for posting.
It's amazing how unaware we've become.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 07:09 AM
Response to Original message
3. While I Have No Sympathy for Evangelical Missionaries
I think that those who believe that the US way of life is immoral should give it up==safe water, sanitation and public health(as much as we have left) transportation systems, energy distribution systems, etc. Or they could STFU and see that the rest of the world gets peace and a chance to develop some of the infrastructure of civilization as defined since Roman times....
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Jcrowley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 09:11 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. The US way of life
as it has come to be known is really just an extension of the European colonial culture of conquest. Certainly clean water is not one of the hallmarks of this "way of life" that is if looked at honestly responsible for an extraordinary amount of death all around the world.

As for the energy distribution systems in America you'd be hard pressed to find a more wasteful and polluting enterprise.

I'm not sure if this is what you are getting at.

And of course we don't need to get into the sad state of affairs as regards the public health of America.
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 07:28 AM
Response to Original message
4. I disagree with this article
these well-intentioned folks that he castigates are the ones who build political consensus for anything righteous that our foreign policy achieves -- no matter how small. He is correct to attack the hypocrisy and point out the limitations. But Rome does not get built in a day. Accepting his critique only isolates people. There needs to be some dynamic that leads to a meaningful dialog. Just go home and forget about it leads people into the right wing do-nothing philosophy.

He is right about the limitations of vacation philanthropy. Meaningful change only occurs when you devote decades to the struggle. But, You gotta start somewhere. There is a need to generate support among people who work at other professions other than philanthropic ones.
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architect359 Donating Member (544 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 10:20 AM
Response to Original message
6. Interesting read but I disagree
Edited on Fri Jan-26-07 10:21 AM by architect359
This writer is another example of someone seeing only what they want to see. Sure, not all "do-gooders" end up doing what they have originally intended. Some in the Peace Corp find out that they're over their heads. There are others that do stay on for 2 years, 3 years, doing something that they believe will make a difference. I am acquainted with 2 individuals who had spent 3 years in Africa with the Peace Corps. I hardly think that they were "vacationing" or being "pretentious". Currently, I do have a closer friend than the two previous individuals I mentioned that's in her second year volunteering as a mid-wife in Malawi. I don't think that she's being "pretentious" or "vacationing" or "slumming" it with the locals, seducing anybody with her wiles to the American way of life.

This article, the more I think of it, is making me frustrated with its cynicism and narrow minded one sided, well, bull-crap. But than again, what do I know? I only know 3 people that have done a whole lot than I to go out of their way to leave the comforts and security of home to help other people, and to not only gain a better understanding of other cultures but also what their place in this world can be. Their actions contradict the message in the article.
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Jcrowley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 09:07 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. I'd suggest
you read much more of Ivan Illich who is by all accounts one of the intellectual giants of the 20th century on a par with Edward Said.

You missed the whole point of the article.

Paternalism and charity are pretty nasty when you scratch beneath the surface. Malcolm and Martin taught us this.
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