Another Brick in the Wall

Another ‘take’ on Pink Floyd’s 1979 Release

I happened to be listening to the radio the other day and this Pink Floyd song was played again, as it regularly is. It haunts the mind with its dark, brooding and atmospheric rhythm, which is quite ironic for something supposedly against “thought control”.

It never struck me so clearly before, but I realized this time how very stupid it is and how much I really dislike the message it has given to generations of kids. Let’s have a closer look.

We don’t need no education: Oh yes you do, matey! It is in fact the ONLY THING that will SAVE you from “thought control”. The irony of this is breathtaking. What are you going to do WITHOUT education then? Without it you certainly WILL become just “another brick in the wall”, no ability to exercise any kind of judgement, no decent job = no money = no power of decision ….

As a teacher myself, I am frequently faced with spoilt, fairly mindless, ill brought-up, uninterested children who can’t concentrate for more than two minutes because their minds have been rotted by too much television and video-and computer games, plus of course the prevailing ethos in society of: “The world owes us a living.” and “We have a right to cars, houses, holidays and all the rest without having to work our socks off for them as our parents did.”

And of course, one needs to define “WE”. I suppose in fact you mean “YOU” , since who gave you the right to speak for everyone else? In my experience 95% of kids want to learn (i.e. develop their brains to avoid this dreaded ‘thought control’), whereas the remaining 5% of utter morons utterly muck up the class. Given the nature of your ranting I would place “you” in fact among the 5% of selfish morons.

So, the first line is idiotic. Does it get any better?

We don’t need no thought control: No, you don’t, but you don’t get it from teachers; they are overwhelmingly there to FREE your mind. If they tell you to “Shut up” then it is usually in the best interests of A) you yourself  B) everyone else in the classroom. If you are looking for the best purveyors of “thought control”, why not have a go at politicians, advertisers and the like? Or indeed sections of the the media? (or even your own song – another great irony)

You are not FREE in a classroom to “do your own thing” (another prevailing ethos), since that is not possible in a largish group trying to concentrate on something. Your idiotic chatter and behaviour is extremely anti-social and of course humungously selfish.

No dark sarcasm in the classroom: Teachers are frequently driven to distraction trying to help eager kids learn while a minority of mindless, anti-social morons creates havoc. Teachers may indeed resort to occasional sarcasm in the face of this onslaught of idiocy, but they are overwhelmingly reacting to the tsunami of negativism that sweeps over the class from the utter morons.

Teacher, leave them kids alone: Actually Sonny Jim, it is not the teacher’s JOB to “leave them kids alone”. His duty is to HELP THEM, to DEVELOP THEIR MINDS. “Leaving them alone” is the LAST thing he should do.

Astonishingly enough (and it may not have occurred to you – but then you are of course a moron, so what do you expect) the teacher even tries to HELP the morons who make his life hell. That is his DUTY. That is why he BECAME A TEACHER instead of flogging houses or mortgages and making lots more money.

All in all it’s just another brick in the wall: The bricks in the wall are the mindless, uneducated plebs who live unfulfilled lives, and their lives are NOT unfulfilled because they are not Wayne Rooney or don’t have loads of money but because they have no education, like you presumably.

If you don’t eat yer meat, you can’t have any pudding: Too bloody right. Growing children need protein; you don’t in general get that from pudding, but from meat. But then you don’t know that, do you, because you are an uneducated moron.

Don’t you think the teacher has better things to do than constantly moan at kids to eat a balanced diet? But instead of  slumping in an easy chair in the staffroom at lunchtime he gives up his time and more importantly nervous energy (since he gets a lot of negative crap from you) to HELP you A) get more protein B) avoid getting fat and C) learn something about nutrition so that when (God help us, or more pertinently ‘them’) you yourself have kids you might have some chance of bringing them up in a healthy way.

You may not be aware that an insanely-ludicrous percentage of British kids are clinically OBESE. Yes, VERY FAT (though these days it is probably not at all PC to use the word “fat”.) This means their lives will be much more uncomfortable, they will be very unattractive, will be subject to more illness than the healthy and will no doubt die younger.

So, the teacher who sacrifices his own nerves to try to get kids to eat properly is a HERO.

Sorry, your song is utter rubbish from start to end. Worse than that, it is pernicious and also insulting to teachers, whose overwhelming intention and indeed effect is to improve the present and future lives of their pupils.

The song may indeed refer to a personal experience of bad teachers (no section of society is without its black sheep) but the trouble is that it comes over as a blanket generalisation of negativism against teachers, and it is time someone stood up for them.

By Chris Snuggs

12 thoughts on “Another Brick in the Wall

  1. And it is going to remain popular because it does not refer to “education” but to the very natural wish of rebelling against stupid authorities.

    Sing along with me Chris!

    We don’t need no regulation.
    We don’t need no discriminating capital requirements for banks control.

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    1. My article is about the song and not banks; that is another topic. I can’t see the point of mixing the two up, since they are unrelated. Except that without education kids won’t know whether the banks are ripping them off or not and will be reduced to relying on what other people tell them rather than their own judgement. You cannot HAVE judgement without education.

      As for the article, you’ve lost me. It says “We don’t need no education.” and “Teacher, leave them kids alone.” Both fairly idiotic things to say and to seek to make penetrate impressionable kids’ minds. Kids NEED education and the NEED teachers.

      This is pretty obvious so I can’t see the need to argue about it. It is so easy to have a go at teachers, who in fact have a bloody difficult job given the raw material many modern parents serve them up with.

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  2. Oh come on Chris!
    It’s such beautiful song… Not even among Pink Floyd’s best, but still so good… Relax… Just think of it as a critique of bad teaching… Any complaint can have a correct target. I am a teacher myself, but there is nothing I hate more than a bad teacher. It’s sort of the ultimate violation…
    And, indeed, as Per said, we are being taught inanities about banks… And please don’t criticize the Stones next, because they said some things about some girls…
    PA

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  3. I am not exactly FR Leavis, but I see no reference to “bad teachers”. What I DO see is:

    “We don’t need no education.”

    “Teachers, leave them kids alone.”

    … which are moronic statements.

    Seems to me my comments were quite justified and in fact bleedin’ obvious (my speciality).

    It is also BLEEDIN’ OBVIOUS that A) there ARE bad teachers about and B) this is not desirable but this is C) inevitable (nobody’s perfect) and in any case in most schools poorer teachers are balanced out by better ones. It was always so, no? Unless you went to Eton or somewhere.

    AS I said in my post, I abhor the generalised rubbishing of education and teachers that I perceive from this silly song. Lack of either leads to greater susceptibility to the dreaded “thought control” of which the writer complains. (hence the irony)

    As I also said, if you are incensed by thought control, then have a go at politicians and the media and LEAVE THEM TEACHERS ALONE.

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    1. OK, OK, OK, I was just suggesting to take the song with a big grain of salt… When the Beatles sang:…”you better run for your life, little girl” in one of their early songs, one ought not to have taken them too literally…
      Poetry is all about not saying it the right way.
      PA

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  4. Patrice – sorry; I am no doubt a bit irascible – must be the heat; we are “enjoying” a heatwave down here in Bavaria … as you say, better not take songs too seriously. The trouble is, the music of this song seems to demand that you take it seriously, so I did …..

    But inspired by your comments I am going to look for more silly song lyrics that shouldn’t be taken too seriously!

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  5. Here you go — this is what I listen to when I
    I’m all fired up about teaching and feeliung under appreciated!

    THAT’S what you want for inspiration…

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  6. I enjoyed this story , It captured the same emotion as listening to the song/melancholy sort of. and it’s always fun reading people that use the word rubbish to discribe shit that rhymes)

    Just one addition, the last line might also reflect some of things uncovered, so to speak, in some isolated schools…

    And this song was written before the fall of the Berlin wall I beleive. I think I recall this song was playing in Poland when lek W. led the union to stike, against the communist government..

    lots more here than picking on teachers– even when it’s making fun of teachers nothing like being under the microscope eh

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