NOTE: This was originally posted on September 9, 2015, and was reprinted September 21, 2018. It has been re-formatted, but the message remains timely, without needing updating. Because the Power Seekers are always with us.

by NONA BLYTH CLOUD
Whenever a small group hungers for power over a larger group, the weapons they use are the same: Terror and Guile.
The larger the target area in geography, the greater the population, the more Guile must initially be the weapon of choice. Rhetoric and Dogma are smoke-screens of Guile – the lust for power can, though not as often as you might think, drive a Power Seeker mad – but overwhelmingly, Power Seekers have no belief in the politics or religion they espouse, and will either revise or jettison a set of beliefs that fails to get them what they want.
Items high on any successful Power Seeker’s check list: Control of the Media, and of Education. Freedom of the Press is not merely an ideal of democracy, it is a primary requirement. Enslaved peoples are always denied education – they are trained, not taught – a most important distinction.
But once a person can read, they have in their hands a great weapon in the struggle to become or remain Free.
All of the Arts are acts of rebellion. They kindle self-awareness and curiosity. Power-Seekers rightly distrust the Arts. They stop Arts programs in schools, cut government subsidies to the Arts, they forbid music and dancing, they destroy or subvert cultural treasures, but they spend fortunes to own Art, or they steal it outright. If they own it, they believe they control it.
The Guile of the Power Seekers can be undermined by Ridicule. It is hard to control people who see through your propaganda. The Emperor Has No Clothes. Pay No Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain. A ridiculous enemy is much less frightening, which diminishes their power.
Whether you are out to control the lives of millions of others, or you are one of the millions fighting to keep control over your own life, you must gain the Hearts and Minds of the Young to prevail. Part of the narrative of the Power Seekers is derision of any words not of their making, so they are dismissive of the importance of children’s literature, while at the same time railing against the “corruption of our children” by any book which would lead those children to thinking and asking questions.
Mother Goose; Grimm’s Fairy Tales; The Ugly Duckling; The Wind in the Willows; The Wizard of Oz; Nancy Drew; Brown Girl Dreaming; To Kill a Mockingbird; Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret; The Story of Chopsticks; Nadia’s Hands; Harry Potter; The Circuit: Stories from the Life of a Migrant Child; The Book Thief; The Hunger Games
Goodnight Moon and Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star make children look up at the sky and wonder.
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Shel Silverstein’s “charming little verses” give Power Seekers an uneasy feeling:
from Where the Sidewalk Ends:
INVITATION
If you are a dreamer, come in, 
If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar,
A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer…
If you’re a pretender, come sit by my fire
For we have some flax-golden tales to spin.
Come in!
Come in!
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