Posted on 08/17/2005 1:10:26 PM PDT by T-Bird45
I'll admit to liking the Harry Potter books, but I can't suspend disbelief any longer. The kid lives in the realm of big government, and it's interfering with my enjoyment of the Half-Blood Prince. Consider these facts about life in the wizarding world:
Huge government bureaucracies: Every time another department within the Ministry of Magic is mentioned, I wonder if the real threat to Harry's liberty is Voldemort or the Leviathan government, which has a branch overseeing all aspects of wizard daily life. There's the Improper Use of Magic Office, the Department of Magical Accidents and Catastrophes, even the Department of Magical Games and Sports, which may be needed to investigate steroid use among Quidditch players.
Most ministry departments are regulatory agencies, suggesting that Ronald Reagan's observation about how government operates ("If it moves, tax it; if it keeps moving, regulate it; and if it stops moving, subsidize it") applies to the wizard world as well as to Washington. The ministry has a Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures; a Decree for the Reasonable Restriction of Underage Sorcery; a Misuse of Muggle Artifacts Office; even a Broom Regulatory Control agency. The ministry interferes with free trade by banning the importation of flying carpets and prohibits the ownership of certain pets such as dragons. Animagi (wizards who can turn themselves into animals) and werewolves are required to register with the ministry. Gun owners could be next.
The police power of the state is also worrisome. The Department of Magical Law Enforcement acts as a sort of KGB, rounding up citizens to appear before the Wizengot, where the accused are tried in a dungeon while bound to a chair. The guilty might be sentenced to Azkaban, a prison worse than Abu Ghraib under Saddam Hussein; at least he didn't employ Dementors as guards. Government agents known as obliviators go about brainwashing people by erasing their memories. The Floo Network Authority gives the ministry the ability to monitor communications, sort of like your boss reading your e-mails at work. I hate to say it, but the wizarding world could use the ACLU.
Everyone works for the government: Aside from George and Fred Weasley, the young entrepreneurs who dropped out of Hogwarts School to start a joke shop, everyone else seems to work for the government. The private sector is limited to a handful of merchants on Diagon Alley and in Hogsmeade Village, and most of them seem essentially to be government contractors who supply Hogwarts students. The one bank, Gringotts, has a state-protected monopoly. Even the heretofore obscure Office for the Detection and Confiscation of Counterfeit Defensive Spells and Protective Orders has a staff of 10, we learn in the most recent book. Harry himself aspires to become an Auror, a government agent, when he grows up. Do any witches and wizards earn their knuts, sickles and galleons by providing goods or services that add value?
Free national health care: No one admitted to St. Mungo's Hospital for Magical Maladies and Injures is ever asked about insurance, not even victims of the entrails expelling curse, which sounds very expensive to fix. It's the sort of situation a goody two-shoes know it all like Hillary I mean, Hermione must love.
Government run schools: Children are taken away from their natural parents at age 11 and remanded to a government-run school, where they are required to wear uniforms and tuition is free. After five years of indoctrination, they are given a mandatory test, the O.W.L., the results of which define what vocation students can pursue. Unhappy with the independent-minded leadership of Professor Dumbledore at Hogwarts, the ministry installed Professor Umbridge as High Inquisitor in his place. And some think No Child Left Behind represents heavy-handed federal intervention in public schools.
State-controlled press: Although the Daily Prophet is nominally independent, it is clear the ministry is able to control what stories get printed and how they are presented.
Mass Transit Subsidies: The Knight Bus and Hogwarts Express are subsidized more than E-ZPass transponders. Why anyone would need buses or trains in a world with portkeys, floo powder, Nimbus 2000 flying brooms, and travel by apparition? All these transportation systems must require costly infrastructure, which brings up another point:
No one in the wizard world seems to have to pay taxes for any of this. Now there's some real magic.
Can't get excited about a discussion with no spoilers. It's been a month now. time to move on.
There is a lot anti authoritarian /anti government satire in Harry Potter. A part of the Order of the Phoenix was supprising very anti government control of education and had a Strong anti gun control/pro selfdefence message
Mmmm... yes and no. Harry Potter became famous via word of mouth from children to children. At first, J.K. could barely get it published since most publishers told her no child would read a book that complex and long. But once it did get published, children ate it up. The media, as usual, was an also-ran, looking for a story, and came in well after the fact. The media doesn't have a single creative idea now days.
According to JK all that stuff Hermione learned from Hogwart's a History and other wizarding history books is basically just a device to explain things to the reader. She said in the interview on Muggle.net that's why Harry will never read those books, because if he reads them then he won't need anybody to tell him stuff and given the narative style she's chosen the only way to tell the reader is to tell Harry.
I think on the JK Rowling Biography on A & E she said her ex was Spanish.
I admit to being an admirer of her writing. I put her in the same league as JRR Tolkien and others that use a mythical environment through which to chart a large morality tale and a mulititude of little moral lessons along the way.
With a thoroughly good writer, those elements are discovered in the reading of the story, not in a philosophical discussion in the text. Like color and taste, they are experienced and you know them to be true without having that truth explained.
In the Middle Ages, some Christian religious orders developed practices for learning from the Bible in the same way, as a religious experience - letting the text speak to the spirit, as opposed to seeking an intellectual understanding by textual analysis.
She has often been interviewed about her Christianity and goes to the (what is called in the states) the Presbyterian Church. Like all people, only God knows her heart, I guess.
Articles on the "Inking" issue are here:
http://www.nationalreview.com/kopel/kopel062003.asp
http://tmatt.gospelcom.net/column/2003/06/18/
As for the tin-foil hat Christians, I'm a freemason, and they think we sacrifice children or something. (Idiots attacking one of the finest service organizations, ever! Yeah, the Scottish Rite hospital is so EVIL!)
To take but one example: children aren't "taken away from their natural parents at age 11 and remanded to a government-run school, where they are required to wear uniforms and tuition is free." For example, Stan Shunpike didn't go to Hogwarts, and the expense of attending Hogwarts (just including clothing, books, and supplies) is borne by the students, not by the government.
Perhaps Our Author is merely ignorant of the details of English boarding schools?
Unfortunately for the Wizarding community, it doesn't appear that the free health care includes dental. Based on what I saw in the third movie, over half the wizards need some serious orthodontia and about ninety percent need a good cleaning.
I stand corrected.
I do believe that tuition IS required at Hogwarts, and it is not government-run, it has board of trustee-like group.
There WERE laws passed giving the government more control over the school, but they were all rescinded, and Dumbledore kicked the Ministry to the curb.
"The fundamentalists"?
Pretty broad brush you are using there....
Stan Shunpike is a squib, so he is ineligible to go to Hogwarts.
Just as it should be in real life, the Weasleys sacrifice a lot to send their kids to the best school.
"Unfortunately for the Wizarding community, it doesn't appear that the free health care includes dental. Based on what I saw in the third movie, over half the wizards need some serious orthodontia and about ninety percent need a good cleaning."
Once again, it's just an accurate portryal of conditions in the UK. :)
The recent book makes it clear there is a cost to go. Potter is rich so it doesn't phase him, Tom Riddle got a free ride thanks to a charitable fund (he being an orphan and all) so once again welfare helps create a menace to society.
Someone posted here that she is using her zillions to hire lobbyists to pressure the English Government to provide more benefits for single parents. In other words, she's not giving HER money to the single parents - she wants other British taxpayers to do it.
Can anyone else confirm that?
Ok, then, the extreme paranoid. Is that better?
MUCH better!! : )
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