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Vol. 22, No. 6, 2023
 
     
 
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HIJACKING FREEDOM


by
HENRY A. GIROUX

__________________________________________

Henry A. Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department and a Distinguished Visiting Professorship at Ryerson University. He is the author of more than 50 books including The Educational Deficit and the War on Youth and Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism. Many of his essays, including The Spectacle of Illiteracy, appear on his website at www.henryagiroux.com. His interview with Bill Moyers is must viewing. He was recently named one of the century's 50 most significant contributors to the debate on education.

Fascism is capitalism in decay.
Lenin

Canadians have a great deal to learn about the various debates and policies regarding freedom unfolding in the United States. At a time when conspiracy theories and far-right nationalist groups are gaining strength, it is crucial to understand how authoritarian movements in both countries are using freedom to undermine crucial notions of justice and liberty.

In the United States, under the banner of right-wing demagoguery, freedom is being employed to ban books by people of colour, Indigenous people and members of the LGBTQ2S+ community. Reduced to a banal throwaway term, freedom is invoked increasingly to indoctrinate students by censoring history, eliminating critical thinking from the school curriculum, and criminalizing the actions of librarians and teachers who encourage historical consciousness, pluralism and social justice.

In Canada, the concept of freedom has failed to include the inherent rights of Indigenous Peoples and often served as a cloak for maintaining illegitimate relations of power. As professor Elisabeth Anker noted, these are “ugly freedoms” far removed from principled ideas, connected more to tyranny than emancipation.

Canadians and Americans live in a time of menacing freedoms. The current age of emerging authoritarianism is increasingly defined by questions: Who qualifies as a citizen? How do we determine the meaning of freedom? And what kind of future do people want to create? The presence of “ugly freedoms” is not new and its history is repeating itself with a politics that is as cruel as it is dangerous and widespread.

Historically, freedom has often been used not only by advocates of social justice, but also by those speaking in the name of authoritarianism and savage acts of violence to legitimize all manner of injustices. For instance, it was used as a force for racial cleansing and elimination, most notably in the slogan “Work sets you free,” deceitfully posted at the entrance to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

In Canada, the appeal to dictatorial freedoms has worked in service of acts of genocide against Indigenous Peoples, including forced removal from their lands, the horrors of residential schools and a widespread cultural assimilation. In the U.S., it produced acts of genocide against Native Americans, slavery and the incarceration of Japanese Americans, among others. The appeal to unjust freedoms continues in the present era to legitimate and promote censorship, systemic racism and naked forms of political opportunism.

What can be done to preserve freedom as a crucial issue in the struggle for democracy? Educators, parents, young people and others need to ask: what does freedom mean in the service of democracy? And how to radically rethink it as a central political and educational category? A democratic conception of freedom must primarily address the staggering levels of inequality in wealth and power, the poisonous legacy of systemic racism and an anti-intellectual culture that turns reason monstrous.

In the struggle for freedom, what must be made clear to both the American and Canadian public is what the poet Adrienne Rich called the “concrete reality of being unfree, how continuous and permeating and corrosive a condition it is, and how it is maintained through culture as much as through the use of force.”

The hijacking of freedom not only raises crucial questions about whose freedom is at stake in a time of tyranny, but also how to fight for a version of freedom that is as expansive as it is just — one that furthers rather than destroys the promise of a substantive democracy.

For freedom to breathe, it must join a revolution of values with the crucial task of building a mass struggle over time. Under such circumstances, we need not only a new definition of freedom, but a notion of impatient hope rooted in the burning imperative of collective resistance.

By Henry Giroux:
America at the Crossroads
Gangster Capitalism
Historical Amnesia in Age of Capitalist Apocalypse
The Inequality of Freedom
The Nazification of Education
Killing Fields in Age of Mass Shootings
The Pedagogy of Resistance
The Death of Ethics
Banning Books
Homage to Paulo Freire
Plague of Manufactured Ignorance
Racial Cleansing and Erasing History
Plague of Historical Amnesia
Recovering from Trumpism
Tribute to Noam Chomsky
The Ouster of Trump
White Supremacy in the Offal Office
The Plague of Inequity
Covid and our Embattled Society
Trump and the Corona Death Waltz
Neoliberal Fascism
The Terror Unforseen
Interview of H.A.Giroux
The Normalization of Fascism
The Public Intellectual II
Bertrand Russell: Public Intellectual
Thinking Dangerously in Dark Times
Democracy in Exile
Authoritarianism in America
Violence: US Favourite Pastime
Losing in Trump's America
In Dark Times Teachers Matter
The Age of Civic Illiteracy
Exile and Disruption in the Academy
What Society Produces a Donald Trump
From School to the Prison Pipeline
Orwell & Huxely
American Sniper and Hollywood Heroism
Selfie Culture
The Age of Disposability
In the Shadow of the Atomic Bomb
Killing Machines and the Madness of the Military
The Age of Neoliberal Cruelty
The Politics of the Deep State
Challenging Casino Capitalism
Crisis in Democracy
America's Descent into Madness

 

 

 

 

 


 

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