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Edited on Tue Jan-18-11 03:04 AM by clyrc
by Steve Crawshaw and John Jackson, a 2010 book. It's a really good book, except that it's making me angry. I make an effort to pay attention to the news, I read DU almost daily, and yet so many of the things I read about in this book are news to me. The chapter called "Women Say No" gave me a particular mix of admiration and frustration that I had never heard the stories of women resisting. If the book is available in the US, I recommend it.
But it is making me think, even more, about my role as a parent and what to teach my kids. How do I teach them to respect legitimate authority while making it clear that not all authority is legitimate? It matters so much to me because I was taught to respect authority no matter what. I was taught to accept and not question and keep my head down and do as I was told. And I am furious, simply furious about that now. It's hard not to see my whole upbringing as a conspiracy to keep the little people quiet. How could I not see the difference between the speeches about Democracy and freedom, and the way those things were repressed? I don't want my daughters to grow up in such enforced ignorance and helplessness, as I was, but I'm not so sure how to teach them differently. I want them to have some respect for legitimate authority, but how to tell them the difference between legitimate authority and oppressive authority?
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