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Blood in the Machine
I have spent the past hour typing and deleting, typing and deleting, struggling like mad to find the right words to begin this piece.
We are lost, people. We are so very, very lost. We go further adrift with each passing day, and the ways to mark how far we have strayed are countless.
Here is another:
In America, land of the free, home of
the brave, a Wal-Mart
employee was trampled to death by rabid Black Friday shoppers.
Jdimytai Damour, a 34-year-old temporary
employee at the store, was crushed underfoot as thousands of shoppers,
chanting "push in the doors," did just that -- ripping the doors
right off their hinges, these desperate-for-a-deal maniacs stampeded
into the store, massacring Damour under their heavy, relentless feet,
which I guess were so caught up in marching to the capitalistic tune
of consumerism that they just couldn't register the life they were
squeezing out of the man beneath them.
There are no reports of any shopper attempting to help Damour. On the contrary, Damour's co-workers, as well as paramedics and police officers at the scene, all tell of hostile shoppers who impeded assistance to Damour and who became angry when the announcement came over the PA that the store would be closing because of Damour's death.
Since hearing about this horrific murder -- and this is a murder -- I have made myself nauseous imagining Damour terrified, gasping for air, the weight of all those shoppers grinding him into the floor. But, the truth is, I have also found myself unable to stop thinking about the connections between his murder, and capitalism, and consumerism. I cannot help but think that this horde's behavior really isn't all that far off from how consumers in a capitalistic society are programmed to behave. Think of this: if a corporation's purpose is to maximize profit, isn't a consumer's purpose to minimize price-paid? That is, in order to be the very best consumer you can be, don't you need to seek out the lowest-priced goods? Further, capitalism teaches us to celebrate those who achieve success and material wealth, even as we acknowledge that "getting to the top" often involves scrambling up over the backs of fellow human beings. Sure, driving your heel into the flesh of a man trapped beneath you is a bit more visceral than the sort of bloodless exploitation that corporate climbers employ, but the impulse -- the drive for personal success or satisfaction; the ambition to meet one's own needs at any cost -- springs from the same notions of individualism that lay at the heart of a capitalistic system.
In the movie Dirty Pretty Things, a character, Okwe, makes a statement about the sorts of people with whom we share our world yet often do not acknowledge -- he says:
"... we are the people you do not
see. We are the ones who drive your cabs. We clean your [hotel] rooms.
And suck your cocks."
I think about this whenever I think
about one of this country's most enduring mythologies: the American
Dream. As the story goes, everyone is born equal in America,
into a country with a level playing field, where, with hard work and
perseverance, anyone can achieve economic stability and financial success.
Integral to the idea of this American Dream is the notion that those
who do not "make it" fail because they choose
to fail. This is an important part of our mythology, and it is
convenient for explaining the existence of the people Okwe mentions.
How do we reconcile the poverty and desperation we see all around us?
Or the knowledge that we share our world with people whose lives are
miserable and hopeless and grim? By believing that they are responsible
for their own wretched existences. Otherwise, we have to admit
that the system is flawed. And if we admit that the system is
flawed, then we will have to change it. For many people, this
is not only a terrifying notion, but it also seems impossible.
Further tempering any impulse to demolish the capitalistic system is
the fact that we are so seduced by the elusive promise of wealth and
privilege that the falsehearted dogma of the American Dream is a stronger
motivating force than is the reality that we see all around us.
We are complacent.
And gluttonous.
And divided.
And, in the words of poet Reetika Vazirani,
We say America you are
magnificent
and we mean
We are heartbroken
-"It's a Young Country"
I will admit that this tragedy at Wal-Mart is an extreme occurrence and that my parallels are stretched. Still, I really do believe that within a capitalistic society, especially one that is teetering, seething, and grasping as desperately as ours is, this sort of brutal, every-man-for-himself mentality is likely to manifest in more and more everyday occurrences. Capitalism can behave in no other way -- it exists for only as long as there is a class of people to exploit. As Ezra, the prophet of Elle Flanders's brilliant documentary Zero Degrees of Separation, says: Without the cogs, there would be no machine.
We are all cogs in this plutocracy we call "America." And we chew each other up to bloody bits while we keep this brutal machine running.
Jdimytai Damour, I am sorry beyond words. Sorry for your brutal, inexcusable murder and sorry that I used your tragedy as a springboard to other issues.
Whenever a loved one dies, there are words I say, and I say them now, softly, for you:
May the stars welcome you home.- Posted in



15 Comments so far
Show AllI concur entirely with Bellestri, and don't think she's overstated anything. Just as our obsessive addiction to capitalism ultimately brought us the scourge and curse of George Bush and Dickhead Cheney, it also led ineluctably to the absurd death of Jdimytai Damour. Will we ever outlive the shame? Or rather, should we? We might at least begin by boycotting Wal-Mart, but of course that would only lead to another multi-billion dollar taxpayer bailout for the most egregiously greedy retail outlet in modern history. Boycott the bastards anyway.
Is there any difference between baring witness to the barbaric and the cannibal and the undisclosed bloodless murder of countless millions by western capitalism. Especially western medicine. Walmart is a representation of false beliefs and misplaced faith. Pandering becomes a favored sport the instant life is cheapened. "to know thy self is to know the gods in heaven and the universe".
"exploitation is the essence of violence" Gandhi
Jdimytai Damour - Present!
When all values are subsumed by commercial values, this is the world you get.
There's a Republican congressman from Virginia named Cantor who will be the new Repub House leader or whip or some such, and during a radio interview today he couldn't stop repeating the word "entrepeneur" as in, "Let's make the auto workers feel that they too own the companies, let's encourage all our potential entrepeneurs..." Entrepeneur this; entrepeneur that.
It was a Republican vision of heaven; everyone thinking of themselves as mini Morgans and Vanderbilts and Rockefellers.
If this sort of thing doesn't appeal to you -- too bad, he seemed to say -- this is the USA and this is what we all must aspire to.
What's everyone bitching about? Hey, Wal-Wart's stock has been going up lately.
I pray that God is a loving and forgiving God. For if she is not, then I don't expect to see too many Americans in Heaven. And since I share the guilt, I will not be there either.
After all, we tore this land from the 50 million or so people who already lived here. Killing most of them with diseases for which they had no defense. Then we imported slaves from Africa and Ireland among other places to serve the ruling class.
Against the advice of President Eisenhower we have become the arms merchants of the world with the most powerful military known to man.
The policies of our nation are responsible for the loss of millions of innocent lives each year. Our wealth and technology that we have failed to use for the common good, costs a life every 13 seconds for lack of food or clean water. Food and water that is within our power to provide. Every time you blink an eye someone dies prematurely.
God Save America! We embody both good and evil, which will win the struggle is not certain. I believe we have the power to save the world from the destruction unleashed in our generation, but only if we open our eyes, confess our evil ways and change course. We must or surely God will Damn America.
LaForest Sherman
It's not called being capitalists, or consumers, or whatever modern appellation you choose. It's being human. From European football games, to overcrowded holy shrines, to passing parades, to fires in buildings..... people have been trampled to death all through history. It's simply crowd dynamics, not the end result of a consumerist American culture. We forget we are also mammals with emotional animal natures. Our civilized side sometimes meets the animal side, with astonishment that it still exists. It will always exist, whether we are socialists, capitalists, vegetarians, whatever.
You are wrong it has very much to do with American aggression and doctrine that we must be "competitive" that is inculcated in American children at an early age. Do you hear of this sort of thing happening in more equal civilized countries like Sweden? No? I didn't think so. Sad citizen of the cruel vicious American empire here, sadly I think we will have to collapse completely before the sociopathic culture of greed and nihilism disappears here. Sadly most of the rest of the world quite rightly views American as sociopathic, self centerd, greedball, douchebag, assholes.
"mairs December 5th, 2008 10:35 pm
It's not called being capitalists, or consumers, or whatever modern appellation you choose. It's being human. ... We forget we are also mammals with emotional animal natures. Our civilized side sometimes meets the animal side, .... ..."
WHAT THAT actually describes is not being [human], but being [inhuman]. Since when do we consider other animals as 'human'? We don't, and when we're bestial, we're inhuman too; except other animals are better in character and conduct than the most disgusting animal of all, the one called "man" or "human". Of course that's not true with the truly human(e) human, but awfully many "humans" aren't but very barely human(e).
Nonetheless, greed, selfishness of obviously excessive kind, ... was evidently the problem with these "Black Friday shoppers", and that's to be [inhuman(e)]. And the U.S. evidently is the strongest example I'm aware of for greed, etcetera.
Welcome to the land where disneyland came to be, upon the most genocidal continent of all over the past several centuries or more, and where genocide still remains ongoing; the Americas, the U.S., Canada, and certainly some So. American countries.
Europeans trampled some of themselves at soccer games, it's true, and it's Europeans who also genocided nearly all of the indigenous peoples of the Americas and continue to do so; while their genocides are also applied in Australia and Africa, now the Middle East, including Palestine, given the Euro-U.S. and Europe are the parties ensuring that Israel gets to perpetrate its extreme genocide, holocaust of the Palestinians; ensured that Israel could commit and get away with war of aggression against Lebanon in 2006; ensured genocides in Central Asia; and so on.
Perhaps they were too seriously brainwashed by the Roman Empire; maybe?.
ALSO, mairs says that this story isn't illustrative of "capitalists, or consumers, or ...", using Europeans trampling each other at soccer games as an example, and while I agree that that's an animalian act, Europeans are formally socialist, many anyway, but that does involve capitalism too.
If the U.S. wasn't as extremely "capitalist" as it is, and which is not a true kind of capitalism, for that requires a healthy way of governing govt and of operating businesses, etcetera, but a perverted, extremist, ... capitalism, sure the U.S. is about that kind of way; well, there wouldn't be the extreme disparity between rich and poor as there is, and whereever else there's such extremes and therefore injustices, it's always related to perverted capitalism and anti-human rights, -democracy, -justice, ... and anti-sanity. If the U.S. had a [fair] system of govt and fair economics, then this Black Friday incident of murder likely would not have happened, for people wouldn't be as [desperate] as the herd of animalian shoppers were this year.
Extreme poverty in a society like the U.S. has expectably will have desperation purshing people to animalian, inhumane extents.
So, while there's some parallel to European soccer madness, I don't think that that suffices for explanation.
Babylon oh Babylon...the smoke of you STINKS in the distance!!! Burn baby burn....and we shall!!!
I just read the NY Daily News article and viewed the picture slides. It's a good article, and a caption with one of the slides says a pregnant 28-year-old woman shopper was also trampled.
Very sad morning that was, and it's surprising, yet also not. It's not the first time I've heard and/or read about mad crowds of shoppers waiting to rush like wild animals into stores with sales, but the repeated trampling of the 34-year-old clerk who was killed and the sick killing of him is definitely tragic and sad.
Too bad those shoppers don't have the spine to do what they did but at the White House, Congress, and Senate, where it might do some real good.l
Nanoo
Walmart is responsible for this by baiting the crowd with unheard of bargains and no doubt limited quantities of merchandise. I hope Walmart is sued bigtime. I'm sure there were many people who stepped on the young man not even knowing he was laying in their path.
I find it amazing that on March 19th when my peace group gathers, 18-20 people, the police go by every 5 minutes while we're freezing holding our signs. Plus a government agent close at hand keeping an eye on us old people. The nearest Walmart around here is open 24 hours a day, but I don't shop there.
nanoo:well done. And good luck with your peace group.
This was a very impassioned piece, and I was very impressed by it. Thank you for writing it, Tani. And no, I don't believe "your parallels are stretched." What you write needs to be heard.
As George Carlin said, "They call it the American Dream, because they know you gotta be asleep to believe it."
Land of the Greed, Home of the Slave.