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The Library is America's last truly socialized institution and you're about to lose it

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Democrats Ramshield Donating Member (90 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-02-11 10:26 AM
Original message
The Library is America's last truly socialized institution and you're about to lose it
(Cross posted by author from the Daily Kos.)

(Written by an American expat living in the European Union)

Did you know that the library is America's last truly socialized institution and that everyday you come a bit closer to losing it! As a male who is a business librarian, (that is to say someone who holds graduate degrees in library science and an MBA degree in marketing), I understand very well that fee for service in America's library systems are creating a class of information have-nots. For some of you this means that your children aren't going to be able to read as well. It also means that as voters in a democracy, you will no longer be as well informed without full library services. As the series, the American dream vs the European dream which I was able to generously publish with the support of the Daily Kos community, we have seen that we cannot depend on the plutocrat owned radio and television media. Sometimes we have to go to print sources, even international print sources of the variety and scope that you can't possibly afford as an individual to subscribe to them all. Additionally libraries make online databases available to their patrons that allow you with the touch of a button to read international media sources from around the globe. You're in the process of losing this all and a lot more.

Now let's ask why should you be interested in defending America's last truly socialized institution? Well, let's get down to it shall we? So you don't think the library is a completely socialized institution. Well, let's talk about the theory of a library for just one minute, which is everyone who walks in the door and holds a library card has access completely to the same services. It doesn't matter if they're the mayor or a homeless person. Everyone in the library is supposed to be treated the same. It is the one place in America where equality doesn't just get lip service. The American Library Association has produced a wonderful statement called the Freedom to Read Statement wherein it is believed that your freedom to read comes directly from the first amendment of the constitution of the United States. You're about to lose that and that's pretty darn important.

You can think of the library as a repository of everyone who has ever thought and everyone who has ever written! That's a lot to lose access to.

Now we know that by in large, we are not really in tight budget times at all but rather we know that a lot states have ran up artificial deficits just like in Wisconsin wherein they give tax breaks to wealthy individuals and corporations and then try to balance the budget on the backs of working class Americans and their unions. So it is that library systems all over America are running out of money and this is in danger of tearing the guts out of the last truly socialized institution in America, where everyone is supposed to be equal and it is in danger of creating a division in the population of the information haves and have-nots.

-----------------------QUOTE-----------------------------------
L.A. Weekly - L.A.'s Library Measure L
There's lots of hidden City Hall fat to fuel the 73 shuttered libraries
By Patrick Range McDonald and Mars Melnicoff Thursday, Feb 24 2011


Last summer, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the City Council achieved a grim milestone. With little discussion, the mayor and 10 of the 15 council members approved unprecedented, punishing library cuts that made L.A. the only significant U.S. municipality, aside from the dying city of Detroit, to shutter its entire public library system two days a week. At the Cypress Park Branch Library in northeast L.A., children once streamed in on Mondays to work on computers many families can't afford at home, while other students read and avoided the violent Avenues gang after school. Now, with Sundays and Mondays dark and his staff cut far back, librarian Patrick Xavier says, "It's a struggle."

Source: http://www.laweekly.com/2011-02-24/news/l-a-s-library-measure-l/
-----------------------END OF QUOTE-----------------------------

Literacy among adults and children in the information age is the lynch pin to education, retraining and full employment. No institution in America does more to support literacy than your friendly neighborhood library. I'm not just talking about story hour and reading programs for children but serious efforts in supporting young adults and working adults literacy and continued education efforts. Let's understand that there is a strong correlation between literacy rates and crime. That is say that most people in America and there are over 2 million of them who are in jails and prisons traditionally suffer from low literacy rates. Why is it that America can find plenty of money for prisons but has problems in finding money for libraries? All of this is to say nothing of the staggering lost of human potential of the American prison population. In fact we have about as many people in prison as we do have in the military. Oh yes and did you know that most American military manuals are written at the 9th grade reading level? Did you also know that there are millions of Americans today who cannot read this diary because they are functionally illiterate? Now we start to understand what it is that America is losing, when it is losing the last truly socialized institution in America.

Fee for service
There is a trend in American librarianship that refers to fee for service. That is to say that services are made available only to those library patrons that can pay for them. This trend has been growing in recent years and now it's threatening to become an American national epidemic. Some people will always argue that there always will be some basic library services available without fees, but the issue is what is the cost to American society of a less well read public? What is the cost to American society of not fully supporting our children's literacy and then there's the issue of quality of life and the joy of reading which can also be diminished by fee for service advocacy.
Yet another alarming development is the privatization of libraries in the creation of the information have-nots. Here's a link to the American Libraries Association information page on that issue.
Link: http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php?title=Library_Privatization_and_Outsourcing_Current_News_Reports

Information retrieval
Some people believe wrongly that they can find everything they need on the internet and therefore don't want to support libraries anymore. The simple fact is this is not true because there is too much irrelevant information on the internet that people retrieve. In library jargon, we say its high volume retrieval with low pertinence. In fact what we want is low volume with high pertinence. That is to say, you want a small manageable amount of information that is relevant to your information needs and that's why you need professional library collection development working for you, both behind the scenes and at the reference desk. The more information that becomes available in the bibliographic universe, the more we need the professional information management of librarians to help us navigate the information maze. We don't want to create a system where only the affluent on a fee for service basis can afford to have the librarian as an information professional assisting their information retrieval needs through database searches, reader guidance, children and adult literacy issues. The library must continue to be the social leveling institution that it has always been where <em>everyone</em> has equal access to have their information needs met. Libraries collections must continue to mirror through their collection development policies the full populations of the communities (to include non-English speakers) that they serve rather than have library collections and services developed around the needs of a few affluent library patrons population driven by their ability to pay in a fee for service structure.

This diary encourages you to support your local library by writing a letter to the editor today and telling them why it is that you support libraries, that you support literacy and that you support intellectual freedom for both authors and readers. Also please consider joining your friends of the libraries group. We need everyone's help to defend the last fully socialized institution in America which is your local library.

Thank you for your support of American libraries.

(Finally it should be noted that the famous philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, who in the minds of many was a noted socialist set up libraries all over America.)

-----------------------------

PS: I'd like to take this opportunity to invite anyone interested in joining the Progressive Friends of the Library group, newly formed at the Daily kos. Please send me email at democratsramshield@yahoo.com or visit our page below. Thank you.
http://www.dailykos.com/user/friendsofthelibrary

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no_hypocrisy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-02-11 10:28 AM
Response to Original message
1. First, they came for the libraries and I said nothing, because I didn't go to the library.
Then they came for net neutrality and I said nothing, because I could pay for premium service.
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TreasonousBastard Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-02-11 10:31 AM
Response to Original message
2. Had me until he called Carnegie a socialist.
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Tigress DEM Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-02-11 03:40 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. It seems to say that people of the time CALLED Carnegie a socialist.
As in whenever someone is ahead of their time, there are always those who will fearmonger and try to put some specter in the minds of average people about someone who is simply trying to do something for the better good.
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former9thward Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-03-11 07:53 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. No one 'of the time' called Carnegie a socialist.
Carnegie was the primary capitalist of his era. He was ruthless. He broke a union strike at his Homestead Steel Works in 1892 by killing 7 strikers. A rich man's hunting and fishing club he belonged to was responsible for 2200 deaths in the Johnston flood in 1889. The club owned a dam above the city which collapsed due to poor maintenance sending a flood on the city. Carnegie gave what remained of the city a library.
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CTyankee Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-02-11 10:51 AM
Response to Original message
3. Even here in liberal New Haven, our poorest neighborhood had gone without a library
for 40 years before a new one was finally built there. As a Literacy Volunteer, I know the value of a library to the people of the community. A whole generation of folks had gone without a library but when the new one was finally built, they were delighted at the prospect of free book loans and space where community services could be rendered, such as the free tutoring in Basic English andin ESOL provided by Literacy Volunteers of Greater New Haven. They instantly saw the real value and have been actively using the library since then...
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