State of Fear

"Is there a short version?" Evans said.

 

"Not really. That's why headlines aren't news, Peter. But I will try to be succinct," he said. "The point is this: the world has changed in the last fifty years. We now live in the knowledge society, the information society, whatever you want to call it. And it has had enormous impact on our universities.

 

"Fifty years ago, if you wanted to lead what was then called 'the life of the mind,' meaning to be an intellectual, to live by your wits, you had to work in a university. The society at large had no place for you. A few newspaper reporters, a few magazine journalists could be considered as living by their wits, but that was about it. Universities attracted those who willingly gave up worldly goods to live a cloistered intellectual life, teaching timeless values to the younger generation. Intellectual work was the exclusive province of the university.

 

"But today, whole sectors of society live the life of the mind. Our entire economy is based on intellectual work, now. Thirty-six percent of workers are knowledge workers. That's more than are employed in manufacturing. And when professors decided they would no longer teach young people, but leave that task to their graduate students who knew much less than they did and spoke English poorly--when that happened, the universities were thrown into crisis. What good were they anymore? They had lost their exclusive hold on the life of the mind. They no longer taught the young. Only so many theoretical texts on the semiotics of Foucault could be published in any single year. What was to become of our universities? What relevance did they have in the modern era?"

 

He stood up, as if energized by this question. Then abruptly, he sat down again.

 

"What happened," he continued, "is the universities transformed themselves in the 1980s. Formerly bastions of intellectual freedom in a world of Babbittry, formerly the locus of sexual freedom and experimentation, they now became the most restrictive environments in modern society. Because they had a new role to play. They became the creators of new fears for the PLM. Universities today are factories of fear. They invent all the new terrors and all the new social anxieties. All the new restrictive codes. Words you can't say. Thoughts you can't think. They produce a steady stream of new anxieties, dangers, and social terrors to be used by politicians, lawyers, and reporters. Foods that are bad for you. Behaviors that are unacceptable. Can't smoke, can't swear, can't screw, can'tthink. These institutions have been stood on their heads in a generation. It is really quite extraordinary.

 

"The modern State of Fear could never exist without universities feeding it. There is a peculiar neo-Stalinist mode of thought that is required to support all this, and it can thrive only in a restrictive setting, behind closed doors, without due process. In our society, only universities have created that--so far. The notion that these institutions areliberal is a cruel joke. They are fascist to the core, I'm telling you."

 

He broke off and pointed down the walkway. "Who is this fellow pushing toward us through the crowd? He looks oddly familiar."

 

Evans said, "That's Ted Bradley, the actor."

 

"Where have I seen him?"

 

"He plays the president on television."

 

"Oh yes. Him. "

 

Ted came to a halt in front of them, panting. "Peter," he said, "I've been looking everywhere for you. Is your cell phone on?"

 

"No, because--"

 

"Sarah has been trying to reach you. She says it's important. We have to leave town right away. And bring your passport."

 

Evans said, "We? What does this have to do with you?"

 

"I'm coming with you," Ted said.

 

As they started to walk away, Hoffman clutched at Evans's sleeve, holding him back. He had a new thought. "We haven't talked aboutinvolution, " he said.

 

"Professor--"

 

"It is the next step in the development of nation-states. Indeed it is already happening. You must see the irony. After all, twenty-five billion dollars and ten years later the same rich elitists who were terrified of power-line cancer are buying magnets to strap to their ankles or put on their mattresses--imported Japanese magnets are the best, the most expensive--in order to enjoy thehealthful effects of magnetic fields. The same magnetic fields--only now they can't get enough of them!"

 

"Professor," Evans said, "I have to go."

 

"Why don't these people just lie back against a TV screen? Snuggle up to a kitchen appliance? All the things that terrified them before."

 

"We'll talk later," Evans said, pulling his arm away.

 

"They even sell magnets in thehealth magazines! Healthy living through magnetic fields! Insanity! No one remembers even a few years ago! George Orwell. No memory!"

 

"Who is that guy?" Bradley said, as they headed off. "He seems a little wound up, doesn't he?"

 

 

 

 

 

SANTA MONICA

 

 

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13