Brainwashing the polite, professional and British way
In Britain as in America, the object of training professionals in everything from banking to the med
By John Pilger Published 23 June 2011
One of the most original and provocative books of the past decade is Disciplined Minds by Jeff Schmidt (Rowman & Littlefield). "A critical look at salaried professionals," says the cover, "and the soul-battering system that shapes their lives." Its theme is postmodern America but also applies to Britain, where the corporate state has bred a new class of Americanised manager to run the private and public sectors: the banks, the main parties, corporations, the BBC.
Professionals are said to be meritorious and non-ideological. Yet, in spite of their education, writes Schmidt, they think less independently than non-professionals. They use corporate jargon - "model", "performance", "targets", "strategic oversight". In Disciplined Minds, Schmidt argues that what makes the modern professional is not technical knowledge but "ideological discipline". Those in higher education and the media do "political work" but in a way that is not seen as political. Listen to a senior BBC person sincerely describe the nirvana of neutrality to which he or she has risen. "Taking sides" is anathema; and yet the modern professional knows never to challenge the "built-in ideology of the status quo".
Outsource your curiosity
A key to training professionals is what Schmidt calls "assignable curiosity". Children are naturally curious, but along the way to becoming a professional they learn that curiosity is a series of tasks assigned by others. On entering training, students are optimistic and idealistic. On leaving, they are "pressured and troubled" because they realise that "the primary goal for many is getting compensated sufficiently for sidelining their original goals". I have met many young people, especially budding journalists, who would recognise themselves in this description. For no matter how indirect its effect, the primary influence of professional managers is the extreme political cult of money worship and inequality known as neoliberalism.
The ultimate professional manager is Bob Diamond, the CEO of Barclays Bank, who got a £6.5m bonus in March. More than 200 Barclays managers took home £554m in total last year. In January, Diamond told the Commons Treasury select committee that "the time for remorse is over". He was referring to the £1trn of public money handed unconditionally to corrupted banks by a Labour government whose leader, Gordon Brown, had described such "financiers" as his personal "inspiration".
This was the final act of corporate coup d'état, now disguised by a specious debate about "cuts" and a "national deficit". The most humane premises of British life are to be eliminated. The "value" of the cuts is said to be £83bn, almost exactly the amount of tax legally avoided by the banks and corporations. That the British public continues to give the banks an additional annual subsidy of £100bn in free insurance and guarantees - a figure that would fund the entire National Health Service - is suppressed.
So, too, is the absurdity of the very notion of "cuts". When Britain was officially bankrupt following the Second World War, there was full employment and some of its greatest public institutions, such as the NHS, were built. Yet "cuts" are managed by those who say they oppose them and manufacture consent for their wider acceptance. This is the role of the Labour Party's professional managers.
In matters of war and peace, Schmidt's disciplined minds promote violence, death and mayhem on a scale still unrecognised in Britain. In spite of damning evidence to the Chilcot inquiry by the former intelligence chief Major General Michael Laurie, the "core business" manager, Alastair Campbell, remains at large, as do all the other war managers who toiled with Blair and at the Foreign Office to justify and sell the beckoning bloodbath in Iraq.
The reputable media play a critical role. Frederick Ogilvie, who succeeded the BBC's founder, Lord Reith, as director general, wrote that his goal was to turn the BBC into a "fully effective instrument of war". Ogilvie would have been delighted with his 21st-century managers. In the run-up to the Iraq invasion, the BBC's coverage overwhelmingly echoed the government's mendacious position, as studies by the University of Wales and Media Tenor show.
Security matters
However, the great Arab uprising cannot be easily managed, or appropriated, with omissions and caveats, as an exchange on the BBC's Today programme on 16 May made clear. With his celebrated professionalism, honed in corporate speeches, John Humphrys interviewed a Palestinian spokesman, Husam Zomlot, following Israel's massacre of unarmed demonstrators on the 63rd anniversary of the illegal expulsion of the Palestinian people from their homes.
Humphrys: . . . it's not surprising that Israel reacted the way it did, is it?
Zomlot: . . . I am very proud and glad [they were] peacefully marching only to . . . really to draw attention to their 63-year plight.
Humphrys: But they did not march peacefully, that's my point . . .
Zomlot: None of them . . . was armed . . . [They were] opposed to Israeli tanks and helicopters and F-16s. You cannot even start to compare the violence . . . This is not a security matter . . . [the Israelis] always fail to deal with such a purely political, humanitarian, legal matter . . .
Humphrys: Sorry to interrupt you there but . . . if I marched into your house waving a club and throwing a stone at you then it would be
a security matter, wouldn't it?
Zomlot: I beg your pardon. According to the United Nations Security Council resolutions, those people are marching to their homes; they have the deeds of their homes; it's their private property. So let's set the record right once and for all . . .
It was a rare moment. Setting the record straight is not a managerial "target".
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57 comments
OK Ivan i see what you're saying. i think you're talking about human behaviour and the usual covering your own backside approach to retain your job, status and money.
I have already experienced this and in so many different contexts.
It won't be too long before we are all enslaved to one or other corporate "master", privatisation being a major step in this power exercise.
Even if you are not public school educated, you soon learn that the only way to "advance" is to comply with "authority", under any circumstances. A new generation of students heavily in debt will have no choice but to comply.
This is such a major threat to individual and global liberty and we will be hearing a lot more about it, even if it will take worse before people believe it, and then it will be far too late to carve back our hard won rights.
Yes, lets just completely ignore Israel's security concerns. So Native Indians can march into American homes with flags and stones and claim they are being treated unfairly when Americans are worried about security.
@Mr. Danger: John Pilger is always outsourcing his curiosity, primarily to the readers of his blog. In fact most of John's work is outsourced to writers who spend their time in outback Australian RSL clubs pushing in front of their local headmasters in the pavlova queue. In the meantime John is down at the Pig and Whistle in Putney overlooking the River Thames with his unregistered car in the disabled parking spot collecting a mountain of parking tickets which he has no intention of paying.
John Humphrey's is one of the BBC's best attack dog interviewers.
Unfortunately, the new hybrid government minister yelps like a wretched cur when exposed to BBC interviews with these undomesticated werewolves.
Let's get real. however. Would John, Jeremy or Andrew be allowed full rein to savage harmless establishment figures if they handled the West's adversaries, or awkward neutrals, with kid gloves.
It's not only the police force that are concerned about their pensions.
Mock Battlers
"Native Indians" ?
Say no more, James (if I were you).
Managers are merely people who try to ensure the organisation achieves its goals.
If you don't agree with the goals of the Daily Mail or British American Tobacco, then don't choose to take a job with those organisations.
Successive attacks on management tiers has created an environment of fear. The obsession with housebuying has locked people into debt and a lack of security. This has resulted in a culture of not speaking out or seeming to step out of line. I'm constantly being 'dumbed down' and told to not voice my opinions. Frankly, if something is not right then you should have the backbone do speak out and the strength of your convictions. If people hadn't been willing to stand up and be counted we'd be living under the Nazis now. The reason why this country is not doing so well is because we haven't taken a stand against (mostly foreign owned) big business, the banks and the EU.
John Pilger describes in this article things that I have believed for sometime now. As a wage slave in offices in the private and public sectors (and the ones inbetween in the so-called community and voluntary sector) I agreed completely with his description of the 'managerial' role. I have also noticed how the control has increased over the past 15 years or so.
There has been a cultural shift and it's towards blaming the poorer members of society for the ills of the age. We are a less civilised society than we were 30 years. There is an acceptance that we should kill huge numbers of people in far off lands because our government says it is in the national interest yet there is no debate over what the national interest is. We get plenty of platitudes about freedom and democracy but never do our leaders talk about gas and oil the route cause of so many of the conflicts.
History will describe our age as the age of oil wars we living through it seem to be oblivious to it.
Beware analogies! As with most of them, James, yours is not quite sound. Deplorable as the stealing of Native American land by the nineteenth century settlers was, the expulsion of Palestinians from their territory is much more recent, and indeed is carrying on now. Nor are Americans living in any houses built by the Aboriginals. Many Palestinians still carry the keys for the homes their grandparents were evicted from.