Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Surrendering to the empty heart

 

1154cbCOMIC-counter-earth-age-discrimination
Ruben Bolling riffs on one of the more puzzling and ultimately depressing aspects of "those darned kids" — the way 18-to-20s are treated as half-citizens. And he's right in his "what if it were any other demographic?" reductio.

My question is, is this a call to arms for the 18-to-20s, or is he asking everyone to change it? Because, yes, if it were happening to a different demographic, one used to the benefits of society, then "everyone" would be rising up.

But it isn't. And they aren't.

RiseupI hate going into Andy Rooney mode over this, but I honestly don't understand the lack of fury, or at least the lack of some kind of movement to gain full rights.

Maybe it's more understandable in 2013. Monsanto is kind of a theoretical threat, and Bank of America may be screwing the whole country but it's hard to show that they're actually screwing you except in the abstract.

Back in my day, grumbled Andy, we took the voting thing pretty seriously because the old people were actually, actively trying to kill us right now, with bullets and explosions, not high interest rates and long-term health issues.

I remember a discussion in seminar of the Crito, the dialogue in which Socrates, condemned to death, declines a chance to flee Athens, saying that, having accepted the benefits of citizenship, he is morally obligated to accept the outcome of the legal system.

This seemed, to the hawks in the class, a justification of the draft, or, at least, a justification of not resisting a legal system of conscription.

But the doves neatly parried with the observation that we were not citizens.

True, we had enjoyed the benefits of living in the United States, but our parents had determined where we were born and where we would live. Without the franchise, we were not citizens and we had no share in making the laws, so that the obligation Socrates defined was not applicable in our situation.

The argument over the franchise was not confined to the seminar room, however, and the combination of our raising hell and the potential power of a new group of discontented progressive voters gave Congress and the various state legislatures motivation to pass the 26th Amendment in 1971.

And then, in 1972, George McGovern lost anyway, which probably had something to do with the fact that his name wasn't Ed Muskie, which had a lot to do with the Nixon White House getting to choose who they had to run against, but he certainly did lose nonetheless.

And while the draft ended in 1980, men — and only men — are still required to register, and then, in 1984, they took away the right to drink beer.

Okay, the rest of the stuff might all seem pretty theoretical and remote, but I was stunned that the 18-to-20s didn't at least try to overturn the part about beer. Maybe if the current crew hadn't been grandfathered into the new drinking laws, but, still.

Y'all do know about beer, right?

Maybe nobody told them they could do it. Maybe somebody told them it would never work. But there is a point at which nihilistic despair goes from being a fashionable pose to becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Lc130914
Lalo Alcaraz makes a point that ought to resound with the most recent generation of voters, but, then again, if they thought like that, Ruben Bolling would have had nothing to cartoon about today.

Despair-1-01I had this comic book. I wish I still did, because it was funny and great and, best of all, it was about somebody else. It sure as hell wasn't about us. That was what made it so funny and so great.

Giving up wasn't fashionable back then, and when we read about people trapped in the labyrinths of their own despair — Willy Loman or Gregor Samsa or Oblomov — we saw their stories as cautionary, not inevitable.

They were what we swore we would never be, and to become them would be, not an acceptance of reality but a failure of effort and of vision.

Then again, those stories exist for a reason, and there are more ways to sink into despair than by sitting watching "American Idol."

"We have no one yet, no men, look where you will. Everywhere, either small fry, nibblers, petty self-absorbed Hamlets, or darkness and subterranean chaos, or idle babblers and wooden sticks. Or else they are that other kind: They study themselves to the most shameful detail and are forever feeling the pulse of every sensation and reporting to themselves 'That's what I am feeling, that's what I think!' A useful, rational occupation! No, if we only had some sensible men among us, that girl, that delicate soul, would not have run away from us, would not have slipped off like a fish into the water! What's the meaning of it, Uvar Ivanovitch? When will our time come? When will men be born among us?" — Pavel Shubin ("On The Eve," Turgenev, 1859)

 

Better half
All of which thoughts made me chuckle ruefully at today's Better Half, and to go searching online for a video of "These Days," with its lyric of "We used to talk about changing the world, now all you want to do is change your name. Oh, come on, baby, don't surrender now to the empty heart of these days." (Not embeddable, but well worth the click)

I've seen Johnny Clegg in the lecture hall and in concert and he hasn't abandoned the fight.

He's also not 18 years old, but isn't growing older supposed to be the reason you do give up?

 

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 5

  1. Well, for one thing, kids that young are still naïve enough to buy the “working for free to get experience” line. It’s the ones that are older that have become serial interns, going from one to next for years (or even as long as a decade)… they’re the ones that look at that line and realize that they have a degree and all sorts of experience now, and yet, that makes companies even less willing to hire them because they don’t want to pay what they’re actually worth. And so they ironically end up in jobs working for nothing. The more extreme capitalism gets, the closer it seems to get to communism… were it becomes increasingly the job of the state to make up for companies not paying their workers enough to live.

  2. I’m not 100 percent sold on the recent fight against unpaid internships. Certainly, the system is abused, and I’m also uncomfortable with the idea that a student should pay for the credit hours thus earned, unless it’s funding a stipend for a true, hands-on mentor in a true apprenticeship setting.
    But if you allow a company to call something an “internship” that is not part of a degree or certificate earning process, that is not properly assessed and monitored by a university, craft union or professional body, and if those groups allow an internship to degenerate into a go-fer position, well, that’s not the fault of the concept.
    The concept has a lot to offer. Once. Multiple internships? That’s just silly. You’d be better off waiting tables.

  3. I think unpaid internships have gotten too corrupted and should have to go. I mean, supposedly, these things are regulated, and are supposed to provide training while not displacing a paid worker. In practice, regulation is so poor that most internships get away with breaking one or both of those. The recent scandal over busboy internship positions in a Vancouver hotel show that the companies are getting pretty brazen in an economy where youth unemployment is double the average. Which just makes it much less likely that young interns are going to blow the whistle on the really exploitative ones… that just tosses everything you’ve gained from the internship away, with a good chance of also getting blackballed out of your chosen industry for being a whistle blower.
    But mostly my position comes because of my alma mater. The Co-operative education program at University of Waterloo was pioneering and has spread to most of the universities and colleges in Canada. It’s a massive program that has students spend pretty much every other term out on a job placement. Where they get all the benefits of an intership (training, networking, etc.) AND you do productive work because they’re required to pay you (as opposed to not being paid to do work illegally). Sure, it’s not full professional money… but it was much better than minimum wage, and way back when I was in school, it could pay for your next school term, allowing many people to get through university without debt at that time (no longer true because tuition has gone up a lot). Unpaid internships as part of a degree program just sounds like straight up exploitation to me, because I was part of a system that has worked for decades (and is still going strong) without ever stooping to that. In fact, it’s one of the things that’s required to be an accredited Co-op program in Canada.
    So, in short, the concept does have a lot to offer. And it works quite well without the “unpaid” part.

  4. I’m a couple of years out of the age range, but amid my job-hunting, I’ve refused to consider interning anywhere, despite my family’s suggestions (I don’t know if that counts as any kind of a stand). Rather than experience, though, their point was it’s a way to get my foot in the door at some place.

  5. It’s a very poor way to get your foot in the door, because, and this addresses Brent’s point as well, it’s either a way to get your foot in the door of an exploitive cheater or else in the door of someone who probably can’t afford to hire you.
    I say “probably” because, at one paper where I worked, the local college called us all the time to take interns. We took them not as an alternative to hiring someone but because they could free up our reporters to work on stories they wouldn’t have otherwise had time to do, so, yes, we got something out of it, but they also were doing actual professional work, if on a rookie level, since we were a small paper where few in the newsroom had prior experience (either).
    And if an opening occurred while they were still in town, they might well be offered it, but most of them only stayed for a cup of coffee and a line on their resume, which is life at an entry-level newspaper.
    I placed a high school intern, who was unpaid through the second semester of her senior year, but then came back as a part-timer whenever she was home for the holidays and for two summers, but then, after her junior year, got a summer internship at the Boston Globe. No idea if they paid her, but I hope they gave her real work, because she was up to it.
    I placed a second intern for a summer stint in the newsroom who was a prospective English teacher working on her masters. She got six hours of credit and we’d have hired her in a heartbeat, but she was headed for the classroom, albeit with some authentic practical background in journalism to help her teach that aspect of writing. The editor told her if she ever wanted to take a 30 percent cut in pay, though, to give him a call. (I didn’t make as much as a teacher until I became an editor.)
    My two interns were history majors who (in their turns a year apart) compiled a weekly local history feature, which they could pretty much do on their own schedule, coming in only to input it and get my most excellent tutelage, editing and mentoring. It wasn’t much different than taking a course in primary-source research with a short paper due each week, and nobody pays you to take those.
    Again, it was professional work under direct supervision and mentoring, but in terms of the value to me, it freed me up to do some other things, but, overall, the process of getting them up to speed kind of offset that, given what a brief time they were around.
    I never asked either of them to get me a cup of coffee. In fact, when I had a paid assistant at a later job, I didn’t expect coffee service to be part of the deal. If you can afford to pay someone to bring you coffee, you’re making too much money.

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