Showing posts with label SocializedMedicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SocializedMedicine. Show all posts

Thursday, December 17, 2009

ALA Professional Limits: The Case for Saying Less

Steve McKinzie, 590:  Local Notes The American Library Association and Professional Limits: The Case for Saying Less,
21 Against the Grain 5, 76 (November 2009)
© Katina Strauch

     The American Library Association (ALA) recently threw its weight and influence behind specific federal health reform legislation.  On August 19th, the Association sent a letter to every member of Congress urging the passage of a “public option” in reference to health care legislation.  The letter stated emphatically that the association … “supports a “single-payer” option and believes [that] removing public options … would not accomplish the strong reform needed.”1

     Of course, such pontifications by the ALA on non-library issues are nothing new.  The ALA has a record of speaking out on a wide range of issues – environmental topics, gender concerns, foreign policy – even the treatment of terror suspects.  Nevertheless, this habit of the ALA’s speaking out so frequently presents some real problems.  Whatever may be the merits of these various views (and some of the perspectives do indeed have merit), the association takes enormous risks by such political arm twisting and maneuverings – risks that have far-reaching ramifications for the organization.   By passing numerous political resolutions on non-library related questions, by heading the recommendations of the ALA’s Social Responsibilities Roundtable, and by indulging its desire for political relevance – by saying, in short, so many things about so many topics – the association squanders precious political capital.  That’s right.  Such actions inevitably undermine the ALA’s unique and valuable role – its voice for librarianship and its advocacy of libraries.

     Everyone has had the experience of witnessing the phenomena of someone whose boldly brazen posturing does more harm than good:  the articulate faculty member who seems bent only on making his own views known, the fellow librarian who doesn’t know how to listen, but has a way of making sure everyone else hears what she thinks, or the local town gadfly ready to volunteer an opinion the minute the town-hall floor opens for debate.  These folks aren’t necessarily wrong.  They simply talk more than they should.

     Most of us have also likely had the opposite experience – instances where you find yourself in the presence of individuals who carefully weigh their words – who speak out when the time is right and on matters close to home.  People such as this have a way of winning your admiration.  You instinctively respect someone who speaks rarely but speaks well.  Such people gain a hearing.  Sometimes they have a expertise to share.  Often they have a constituency to serve.

     Their voices you heed – not because you necessarily agree (often you don’t) – but because you respect their understanding and their advocacy.  You recognize that they are not easily drawn into peripheral issues, that they’re not the slaves of one political ideology or another.  On the contrary, they have a mission. They have a purpose.

     You may not know, for instance, what Amnesty International thinks about global warming (for the record, they don’t have a official view on the topic) but you likely know a lot about the organization – that they care about human rights abuses – that they champion the rights of the politically oppressed, whether such people find themselves abused by the left or mistreated by the right.  To be sure, the organization is political and outspoken, but the leadership of Amnesty International is also unabashedly judicious.  They weigh their words.  They choose their fights.  They know their mission.  They understand their purpose.

     I think the ALA should be like that.  We should be outspoken in our advocacy for libraries and access to information, and just as importantly we should be careful to speak well and to speak infrequently.  Let us remember that like any professional organization, the ALA has only so much political capital.  If we squander that capital, that influence, on issues unrelated to librarianship, we will have just that much less clout – that much less influence on issues that touch our profession directly.

     The ALA’s mission statement makes this point better than I. It insists that we, librarians and library staff alike, are to “provide leadership for the development, promotion, and improvement of library and information services” – that we should do so, as the statement delineates, with a view “to enhance access to information for all.”2  Such professional perimeters embolden our advocacy, but they also narrow our focus.  We should speak out eloquently on censorship, champion literacy, and insist on the promotion of First Amendment Liberties.  Doing so is within our sphere of influence, within our expertise and responsibility.  Speaking out on non-library-related issues, however, only weakens our fundamental, primary mission.   That we should never do.

     Consequently, the ALA must reexamine its tendency (tempting though that tendency may be) to advocate certain controversial political positions that have little or no specific relation to the profession.  ALA must, in a sense, regain its focus, remember why we are here and what we are about.  Most importantly, the association should employ its precious political capital for the promotion and advocacy of libraries and librarianship – that and nothing more.


Endnotes

1.  For a copy of ALA’s press release and letter, see ALA’s Washington Office page:  http://www.ala.org/ala/newspresscenter/news/pressreleases2009/august2009/pubop_wo.cfm.

2.  From the Coalition for Networked Information, A Compilation of Position Statements, Principles, Statutes, and Other Pertinent Statements.  http://www.cni.org/docs/infopols/ALA.html.

The preceding is related to my recent blog post, "ALA Blowhards."  I hereby thank the author, Steve McKinzie (Library Director, Corriher-Linn-Black Library, Catawba College, Salisbury, NC), pictured above, and his publisher, Against the Grain and Katina Strauch, for permission to republish.

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Wednesday, December 9, 2009

ALA Blowhards

The Annoyed Librarian discusses another annoyed librarian and American Library Association [ALA] "blowhards."  Here is an excerpt from "Another Annoyed Librarian," by Annoyed Librarian, Library Journal, 9 December 2009, (and be sure to read the comments) emphasis mine:
The November issue of Against the Grain ... published "The American Library Association and Professional Limits:  The Case for Saying Less," by Steve McKinzie. McKinzie argues that:

"By passing numerous political resolutions on non-library related questions, by heading the recommendations of the ALA’s Social Responsibilities Roundtable, and by indulging its desire for political relevance — by saying, in short, so many things about so many topics — the association squanders precious political capital.  That’s right.  Such actions inevitably undermine the ALA’s unique and valuable role — its voice for librarianship and its advocacy of libraries."

He was prompted for action by the latest Council resolutions about health care legislation, which apparently library associations have some special expertise on that it's important to share with everyone else.

My argument is that such ALA political posturing just makes the ALA in particular and librarians in general look silly.  The ALA Councilors should speak to some non-librarians sometime to judge the response.  When I tell non-librarians about some of the more irrelevant resolutions, the response is always the same.  Why would anyone care what the librarians have to say?  When we speak about library-related issues, we speak with authority.  When we speak on issues of no direct concern to libraries, we're just blowhards.

McKinzie makes a similar point, asserting that "Everyone has had the experience of witnessing the phenomena of someone whose boldly brazen posturing does more harm than good," and contrasting this with the "voices you heed — not because you necessarily agree (often you don’t) — but because you respect their understanding and their advocacy."

When library associations speak about non-library issues, why would anyone respect what they have to say?  For McKinzie, it's the divergence from the ALA mission and purpose that makes these pronouncements irrelevant and endangers our credibility on relevant issues.

There's also the loss of political capital.  By speaking so often on any possible topic, the ALA makes it less likely anyone will take them more seriously when they speak on library related topics.  He concludes that "ALA must, in a sense, regain its focus, remember why we are here and what we are about.  Most importantly, the association should employ its precious political capital for the promotion and advocacy of libraries and librarianship — that and nothing more."
I agree, and I have previously said something similar:
And think about that sentence where McKinzie says, "Everyone has had the experience of witnessing the phenomena of someone whose boldly brazen posturing does more harm than good."  Banned Books Week, anyone?

Speaking of the Annoyed Librarian and BBW, remember:
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Saturday, August 8, 2009

ALA Orders Troops to Town Hall Meetings to Promote Single Payer Health Care; Library Funding is Secondary Interest

[alacoun] Re: [srrtac-l] Re: Please Attend a Town Hall Meeting Near You!, Diedre Conkling, 08/08/2009
  • From: Diedre Conkling
  • To: "Kristin Murphy, American Library Association" , SRRTAC-L , ALA Council , publib@webjunction.org
  • Subject: [alacoun] Re: [srrtac-l] Re: Please Attend a Town Hall Meeting Near You!
  • Date: Fri, 7 Aug 2009 23:05:35 -0700

Al is very correct in stating this and I wish I had thought of it. I also hope that we can bring up the universal health care issue and the fact that it is supported by ALA at the town hall meetings. This is why it was important that we pass the resolution this summer - so that we would have a clear and updated message to share with our Senators and Representatives this summer.


If you can't make it to a town hall meeting then please call, write, and/or email your Senators and Representatives about health care and library funding.


On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 1:25 PM, Al Kagan <akagan@uiuc.edu> wrote:
Dear Ms. Murphy,

Since you mention health care, remember that the ALA Council has again just passed a resolution in favor on universal health care, Council Document #54. I ask that you include that information in your messages immediately since the fate of health care will be decided very soon. ALA first endorsed single-payer health care in 2006. The current resolution states that ALA "Reaffirms its support for affordable universal health care program, including the option of single payer health care program."

Please don't ignore the Council.

Al Kagan
SRRT Councilor, 1999-2009


On Aug 7, 2009, at 1:07 PM, Kristin Murphy, American Library Association wrote:


This month, Congress has adjourned for a district work period, enabling them to meet with constituents and discuss critical issues facing our country.
Lately, Congress has focused much of its attention to health care, and House and Senate leadership have encouraged members to hold town hall meetings to discuss this topic as well as other important issues. During these public meetings, elected officials want to hear about what matters most to the community. Thus, town hall meetings are the ideal venue for sharing specific stories about the valuable resources libraries are providing to constituents - at no cost for usage and a minimal cost to taxpayers - and the need to invest more federal funding in these critical community institutions.
Your legislator is hosting a town hall meeting in your area within the next few weeks, and we encourage you to take advantage of this opportunity to publicly tell your elected official about the services your local libraries are providing to his or her constituents and to ask what they will do to support our nation's libraries. As an added benefit, sharing this information will not only inform your elected official but also the individuals attending the meeting who may not know about the many resources and services a 21st century library offers.
If you are able to attend, the ALA Washington Office has resources for you to use. Please contact Kristin Murphy by e-mail (kmurphy@alawash.org) or by phone (800.941.8478) and she will walk you through the town hall meeting process and provide you with talking points and any additional materials you may need.


Official: Rep. Timothy Johnson
Topic: Town Hall
When: 08/10/2009
Starts: 07:00 PM
Where: Pontiac City Hall, 115 W. Howard Street, Pontiac, IL




http://www.capwiz.com/ala/lrm/feedback.tt


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Diedre Conkling
Lincoln County Library District
P.O. Box 2027
Newport, OR 97365
Work phone & fax: 541-265-3066
Work email: diedre@beachbooks.org
Home email: diedre08@gmail.com

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

ALA Trifecta: Socialized Medicine, Gay Marriage, and Animal Cruelty Depictions

What do socialized medicine, gay marriage, and animal cruelty depictions have to do with public libraries? Nothing. But that does not stop the American Library Association [ALA] from officially supporting all three in an ALA trifecta.

As reported in "Librarians for Terror," by Lee Kaplan, FrontPage Magazine, 17 August 2004:

Dr. Stephen Karetzky, a noted librarian, wrote more than 20 years ago about the ALA's embracing, Soviet-style totalitarianism in the American library system in his book, Not Seeing Red: American Librarianship and the Soviet Union, 1917-1960. He contends that the ALA has always advanced radical socialist doctrine as being positive.... Library Science is closely tied in with today's university atmosphere where Marxism now thrives....

Is he right? Consider the following. It is not proof positive, but it may help to inform:

None of that has anything to do with public libraries, despite what the American Library Users Association says.

What say you?

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