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	<title>Doc Searls Weblog &#187; education</title>
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		<title>The madness of man</title>
		<link>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2008/11/08/the-madness-of-man/</link>
		<comments>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2008/11/08/the-madness-of-man/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2008 12:32:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Doc Searls</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/?p=1097</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[(This post began as a response to this comment by Julian Bond, in response to this post about Mad Men. When it got too long I decided to move it here.) Smoking and drinking were standard back then. &#8220;Widespread&#8221; doesn&#8217;t cover it. They were nearly universal. It&#8217;s easy to forget that Industry won WWII, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(This post began as a response to <a href="http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2008/11/07/civilized-discourse-in-the-age-of-mad-men/#comment-101884">this comment</a> by <a href="http://www.voidstar.com/">Julian Bond</a>, in response to <a href="http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2008/11/07/civilized-discourse-in-the-age-of-mad-men">this post</a> about Mad Men. When it got too long I decided to move it here.)</p>
<p>Smoking and drinking were standard back then. &#8220;Widespread&#8221; doesn&#8217;t cover it. They were nearly universal.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy to forget that Industry won WWII, and that the military-industrial complex crossed the whole society. All young men served in the military, either voluntarily or via the draft. Industry and its companion, Science, ruled. And &#8212; to an unhealthy degree &#8212; the former drove the latter.</p>
<p>Tobacco was an leading agricultural product, and cigarette manufacture was a leading industry that drove consumption through advertising so thick and ubiquitous &#8212; on TV and radio, in magazines, newspapers and on billboards &#8212; that for most people the only choice was which brand to smoke.</p>
<p>I remember thinking, as a child, that lighting sticks on fire and breathing the smoke was absurd and unhealthy on its face &#8212; and later being the only one of my high school friends who didn&#8217;t smoke. But I was weird. Common sense then was pro-smoking.</p>
<p>Drinking and driving was only a little harder to rationalize. I remember statistics that said one in twenty-five drivers at night in the U.S. were drunk.</p>
<p>Industry and Science also together decided, among other things, that &#8211;</p>
<ul>
<li>Breast feeding was bad for babies, and &#8220;formula&#8221; was better. Thank you, Nestle.</li>
<li>Children at birth should be taken from their mothers and stored in nurseries.</li>
<li>All boys should all be circumcised at birth. So much for the Hippocratic oath: &#8220;First, do no harm.&#8221;</li>
<li>Tonsilitis&#8221; was a disease, and every severely sore throat should be treated surgically, involving removal of adenoids from the nose as well.</li>
<li>Intestinal infections were likely to be appendicitis, so the appendix had to go too.</li>
<li>Education is a manufacturing process, the purpose of which is to fill the empty vessels of childrens&#8217; heads with curricula approved by the State.</li>
<li>Childrens&#8217; intelligence &#8212; their most unique and human quality &#8212; was a fixed quantity (a &#8220;quotient&#8221;) that could be measured, as if by a dipstick,  with IQ tests, so herds of students  could be sorted into bell curves to better manage their progress through systems that regarded them &#8212; with the acquiescence of themselves and their parents &#8212; as &#8220;products&#8221; of their education.</li>
</ul>
<p>I could go on. For what it&#8217;s worth, I have my appendix, but lack tonsils, adenoids, spleen and foreskin, all of which were considered &#8220;vestigial&#8221; or otherwise bad by the medical fashions at the times of their removal. My known IQ scores have a range of 80 points. If my parents hadn&#8217;t believed in me, my low IQ and standardized test scores in the 8th grade would have shunted me to a &#8220;vocational-technical&#8221; high school to learn wood shop, auto mechanics or some other &#8220;trade&#8221;. I shall always be grateful for that.</p>
<p>Mad Men is close to home for me in another way: I was long in the advertising business too, though a generation after Mad Men&#8217;s time, well after the &#8220;creative&#8221; revolution of the mid- to late 60s. It was one of the great periods in my life, but I&#8217;ve moved on. Similarly, I had a hard time watching the Sopranos, because I grew up in New Jersey, knew people like those, and was not entertained.</p>
<p>I think drugs and self-abuse are rituals of youth rationalized in their time by a sense of exemption from the due invoice we call aging. How long before fewer people are being tatooed than those having tattoos removed? I&#8217;m giving it 20 years.</p>
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