It tries to regulate your information access (what you are allowed to know and not know and when). They like to dictate your body (like where you need to be and when you go to the bathroom). Scoring systems are manipulative and exploitative and actually not constructive to learning. The edu system is more about conditioning kids for capitalism more than anything else.
Academia tries to act as fact bearers and they like to keep a monopoly on stuff like research. They are professional gate keeper credentialists. Some thought policing vibes I get from some people. Seems like all the radical thinkers were sadly cleared out and what’s left is dominated by boot licking liberals and reactionaries.
I’m Californian.
It’s one example people like to cite at how controlling the edu system is. But really it goes a lot deeper than that.
Luckily I get to opt out a lot because I live in an more affluent five acre lot community with my parents. But it sounds like a total piss scape out there.
We can’t make this revolution happen fast enough!
“If I can’t piss, I don’t want to be a part of your revolution.” – Emma Goldman
Did you know that urinary analysis for job screenings is new as hell? In the U.S. they’ve only been using it since the early 2000s and I don’t think it’s common almost anywhere else, maybe the UK. In Rogue State (2000), William Blum makes reference to UA “trials” in “some parts of New Jersey” as an example of the totalitarian nature of the U.S. As someone younger, it staggered me to learn that.
As far as I can remember I haven’t needed to get urine tested in my life. I have done it for medical reasons but never for a job or school or anything like that. I can’t see why your school or workplace has any business knowing what you do for recreation. Looks like that’s being targeted at poor people specifically.
I haven’t read that yet but it should be on my phone so maybe soon on my backpacking trip.
It may be reflected more in my work experience as someone who has had jobs mostly being around prescription drugs in one form or another, but they don’t test for those as much as they test for cannabis or other illicit ones. I also had some manual labor jobs that didn’t deal with drugs at all that still required UA. It also may be more of a regional thing, being more prominent in the midwest. In Illinois where cannabis is recreationally legal, 70% of jobs still drug test, making it de facto illegal for a majority of proletarians. I also think the further you move up in the corporate ladder, the less and less prevalent they become.