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Wanted to hear more on Syria. I thought Al Assad did a very noble thing that likely prevented much bloodshed...we will see. Our western machinations there were as bad as Iraq and Libya. We formented conflict. We stole resources. We ran many false flags and blamed the Syrian government.

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yes, all of that is true AND from the perspective of many Syrian people, he was also a dictator who needed to go. Obviously, the US has their own purposes and reasons.

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You turned 40 at the same time that I turned 71! On my part, I became disillusioned with higher education. [https://unbekoming.substack.com/p/heresy]

Aging is not a choice. For the writing of your memoirs, I would aptly suggest my French colleague's book, "WACQUANT Loïc, 2009, Punishing the Poor: The Neoliberal Government of Social Insecurity (a John Hope Franklin Center Book). Durham, Londres, Duke University Press Books, 408 p., illustr., index". I reviewed his influential work for Amazon.ca. The French version of this book review can be found on Amazon.ca.

"WACQUANT Loïc, 2009, Punishing the Poor: The Neoliberal Government of Social Insecurity (a John Hope Franklin Center Book). Durham, London, Duke University Press Books, 408 p., illustr., index (Luc Lelièvre)

Here is a moving book on the condition of the poor in the United States in the wake of post-welfare. Without calling the protagonists of the draconian measures of post-welfare hypocrites and corrupt politicians, the French sociologist Loïc Wacquant does not mince his words about them in this biting work. Indeed, the author is not tender towards the American political and financial elite, which favors socioeconomic inequalities in a society subordinated to the market and free enterprise. A society that wants to be "meritocratic"; the perpetuated myth of the “American dream”, still there, which delivers its most destitute to a pack of capitalist wolves, under the pretext of making them responsible, in a neoliberal way.

This work often cites The unclassifiable Michel Foucault, as are other great names in sociological literature, Émile Durkheim, Erving Goffman, C. Wright Mills, Ralf Gustav Dahrendorf, and Pierre Bourdieu. The book is divided into four main parts and nine chapters. A prologue and an introduction precede the first chapter of the work. However, the book ends with details on the political-economic neoliberalism that is now practiced on both sides of the Atlantic. (In our opinion, it is better to read Wacquant's book in its entirety before starting to read the passage.)

In this book, the author evokes a lot of the thesis according to which the deregulation of the market economy (i.e., the most aggressive form of excessive capitalism that we currently know), and the reduction of social protections in Western countries mean that poor populations very often find themselves in the clutches of justice (and most often confronted with the prison monster). This is only one of the theses of the book: the judicialization of poverty, which most often affects African Americans and Latino Americans in the United States. According to Wacquant, it is not so much a question of fighting crime, but rather the poor themselves, whom a new neoliberal economy pushes into the greatest destitution; those whom the elites ignominiously call "social waste". A situation that reduces the underclass of the major American metropolises to the humiliating condition of people with leprosy, says Wacquant, who teaches us what we already knew, and which we can guess, of course: the United States is a police state, a large laboratory of social control—a “panopticon” à la Michel Foucault is punitive surveillance in a post-welfare society.

In an even more striking and devastating perspective, the famous psychologist Albert Bandura identified all the mechanisms mentioned by Wacquant. In his theory of disengagement, Bandura (2016) mentions the following mechanisms, listed and very well translated from American by Psychomédia: “[T]hey sanctify their harmful behavior as serving laudable causes, as being better than certain behaviors of others…; they discharge themselves of the blame for the harm they cause by displacing and diffusing responsibility, etc.” » (Psychomédia 2016)

In our reading of Wacquant, we have noticed that the American State uses these cognitive mechanisms in profusion to discourage applicants for social assistance. (Having read each word carefully, the author's entire book boils down to this.)

Wacquant reveals specifically that the United States uses incarceration (prison!) more than any other State in the world to solve the social problems that it itself creates, by further reducing the social protections of individuals (namely in the States of New York and California), by refusing to tax wealthy families and transnational corporations, and then using the pretext of necessary budgetary austerity.

Furthermore, fashionable politicians have nothing but contempt for the poor in this country. American morality, that of the work ethic, among others, makes this country prefer to spend billions on building new correctional facilities rather than helping its poor properly and humanely. Things will only get worse as new police surveillance techniques develop, such as data mining and AI (artificial intelligence), with the avowed aim of making the existence of the poor even more miserable. Ultimately, this is a clear destruction/regression of the advances in human rights (if there were any truly elsewhere than on paper);

In the end, it is a clear destruction/regression of the advances of human rights (if there were any other than on paper); that is to say, a painful post-Fordism (or post-Keynesianism), which is observed both in the United States and in Europe (more particularly in France and the United Kingdom for the European counterpart and this, to conform to the American model, as the last two chapters show), in the area of the social and economic rights of individuals. The book, which has a very rich vocabulary, is nevertheless accessible to all who have a good command of English. Although an original French version of this work had already been published in 2004 under 'Punir les pauvres', the English edition was more complete.

Luc Lelièvre

Social Scientist

References

BANDURA Albert, 2016, Moral Disengagement: How People Do Harm and Live with Themselves. New York, Macmillan.

PSYCHOMÉDIA, 2016, « Théorie du désengagement moral de Bandura : comment les gens peuvent faire du tort et garder bonne conscience », consulté sur Internet (http://www.psychomedia.qc.ca/psychologie/2016-05-27/desengagement-moral-albert-bandura) le 2 mars 2018.

WACQUANT Loïc, 2004, Punir les pauvres : le nouveau gouvernement de l’insécurité sociale. Marseille, Agone Éditeur."

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