Fascinating, Hil. He seems to be deeply confused in many ways, but what strikes me most are two things. First I am a bit boggled that he finds a great deal of similarity between yoga and Nazism. But what really gets me is his whole argument that mental discipline doesn't lead to killing Jews. It's so completely wrongheaded that it's hard to actually get in there and point out what's wrong with it without giving yourself a headache.
'Safe'
Natter 62: The 62nd Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
But what really gets me is his whole argument that mental discipline doesn't lead to killing Jews. It's so completely wrongheaded that it's hard to actually get in there and point out what's wrong with it without giving yourself a headache.
Yeah. It's just so weird, and so completely missing the point.
I had to stop reading that page really pretty quickly, because I was so creeped out.
I also just found an archive of the school newspaper from that time period. Seems like that teacher was pretty controversial in a bunch of ways. The next year, he claimed to be a member of SDS planted as an informer in the National Guard, and then claimed it was to teach about China in the early 1900s. He was also trying to get something called "Idea Forum" approved as a class. (I suspect many high schools in 1967 had something like Idea Forum floating around. My high school used to have some sort of "hippyish" history curriculum, but by the time I got there, the only thing really remaining was class names -- Modern World (Middle Ages, Renaissance, Reformation); Revolutionary World (US History up to about 1880); Industrial World (US History from 1880 to as far as the teacher was able to get); and Contemporary World (senior year choice of US Government, Modern Europe, Psychology, and one other thing I can't remember right now.)
Now I have to disengage my brain from him so I can get back to grading. Phew!
I so need chocolate right now. Why have the chocolate fairies forsaken me?
Mmm, chocolate. I don't have any, either.
Interesting. Neil Howe was in that high school at the time.
The Idea Forum thing was going on the same week as The Third Wave -- he was trying to get the school to adopt a new class, where for three hours a week students and teachers could meet and study whatever they wanted, outside the "stereotypical" roles of teacher in charge and students as listeners. It would also "bridge the generation gap."
Revolutionary World (US History up to about 1880);
Considering how much upheaval was going on in the world at that time, that's a good name.
Timelies all!
I have separate vacation and sick leave. Both roll over from year to year(though there is a cap on the amount of vacation you can roll over - not that I'm anywhere near that amount). G has the PTO thing now.
Neil Howe was in that high school at the time.
Neil Howe, as in Generations co-author?
Neil Howe, as in Generations co-author?
Yep.