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Once Again The Animals Were Conscious of A Vague Uneasiness
People tell me how wrong I am in my opinions concerning important public issues. Some of this instruction I receive by reading essays and interviews, and a good deal is delivered to me personally by acquaintances or co-workers, much of it rendered in an exasperated or condescending voice. That I remain recalcitrant may simply be evidence of my perverse nature and the inability of even good pedagogy to reach and save every soul. I may be crazy. Or I may be right.
Let me tell you that I voted for George McGovern. And I have more than once voted for Ralph Nader. And I have "thrown away" my vote once or twice on Green Party candidates. On the spectrum of American political thought and alliance I was for some years a liberal, believing or hoping that good ideas and good intentions could, through activism and education and the application of law and franchise, improve the lot of persons of modest means, reduce conflict between societies and inequalities within them, and reduce or reverse our abuses of the natural world. That was, to be sure, the person I was many years ago.
I have not abandoned these principles; I probably hold them more firmly now at sixty than I did even at twenty. But I no longer imagine any candidate or party allowed to function in this society will promote legislation, regulation or taxation to materially effect these goals. This is the vein into which so many wish to inject the corrective elixirs of hope and faith.
Conservatives, reactionaries, corporatists and warmongers don't argue with me. They laugh at me and my peaceable vegetarian life, but do not imagine I am correctable; I amuse but do not irritate them. They have their beliefs in the rightness of power and money and the God-given right of the white man to take and to use. I do not read their sacred texts and attend their services, so they do not much think about me. I seem, rather, to be at odds with liberals because we start from a very similar station but climb aboard far different trains when we take our feelings out into the world.
George W. Bush, President G. W. Bush, was and is an idiot. A shallow, stupid man of crude appetites when younger, his life would have been of no consequence had not the Republican party chosen him as the public face of the Cheney government. I doubt he has to this day any coherent idea of how he found himself in the White House or who made the decisions while he lived there. He was, in the words of Mr. Bob Dylan, "only a pawn in their game." You know it and I know it as we say here in the woods of Maine. And liberals and Democrats know it. Members of the print and broadcast press know it. Bloggers are well aware of this. Hell, Republicans even have an obvious degree of contempt for the sad little creature who was the putative president for two terms recently ended. They do still love and fear Dick Cheney though. And war. And greed.
Because Al Gore rolled over and played dead and did not misbehave or act out or fight for himself and his country, the Supreme Court short-circuited the system and gave us George Bush, his stupidity, his wars, his coddling of the rich and his courting of crazies in the far fringes of Christian American Medieval backwardness.
Then, because John Kerry was an inept fool who ran a campaign that largely ran away from everything honorable he had once done and believed in, we were blessed with a second term of Richard B. Cheney and his wooden-headed puppet.
Throughout those eight long, dark years, whenever I complained about what our poor nation had become and was doing, I was advised to vote Democratic, early and often, and to contribute money to that party and its candidates. Only a Democratic Congress and a Democratic president, I was told, could reverse the terrible damage.
It came then to pass that we received those tools. The Democratic president and Congress, and after some finagling even the sixty-seat majority in the Senate. I was advised to watch for the great change to come rolling over us like a flood; we would soon be awash in progressivism. Our boys would come home from foreign wars, we would close our illegal prison camps, abandon torture and rendition. The rich would again be taxed, environmental abuses rolled back, people put ahead of corporations. We would get universal health care. Some of this would happen immediately upon Barack Obama taking office. Much would be in place in a magical, marvelous "first hundred days." What great changes a year would bring.
I don't have to tell you there is great and crushing disappointment among those who most fervently supported candidate Obama and his campaign for Change We Can Believe In. "I don't want any more Clintons," one man told me often last year. (He did not need to tell me he wanted no more Reagans, no Romneys, no Giulianis.)
We are still wasting money and lives in Iraq. We are wasting money and lives in Afghanistan at the highest rate since we blundered into that misunderstood (and, yes, "misunderestimated) country eight years ago. We keep in wire cages and steel and stone cells persons we picked up years ago; we do not try them nor do we release them. Some we send still to places where men do to other men those things both Bush and Obama have said we do not do. Our wars are not ended, they are escalated.
This new government is generous to bankers. The worst sort of bankers. Crooks. Thieves. You've read the tales, each more lurid than the other, of the wild ride Wall Street has enjoyed at your expense. Your taxes go to clean up their mess. They continue to reward themselves with bonuses. Nobody goes to jail.
Where is our new energy policy? Foundered on the fantasy of "clean coal", I fear, with mountaintop removal accelerating the devastation in Appalachia and the mile-long coal trains still snaking out of Wyoming daily, hourly.
And here we are about to receive a piece of crap that will be called health care reform but will instead be a gift to the very insurance companies, their managers and their investors, who have given us the worst system in the modern world. You may well be required to buy their bad product (as Republican Mitt Romney required of Massachusetts) and fined or taxed for failure to do so. Perhaps you'll be allowed to join with your neighbors and form a happy group to buy a bad plan together. What you will not get is anything even vaguely similar to a progressive, fair, publicly-financed system such as the rest of the civilized nations enjoy.
What you can be sure you'll get is the assurance that we have "passed a plan" because that's all that this president formerly known as the candidate of change is now promising-we will get a plan this year. It will be satisfactory to the insurance companies. It will further enrich them. Thousands will continue to suffer and die because this Congress and this Democratic president have made deals with and taken millions of dollars from the corporations that have brought us to our wretched present sickness.
And so it goes. And every so often the triangulation and dealing and selling-out is concealed by the cloak of hope and promise and we are treated to another allegedly inspiring speech, often using the same inane chant we heard so often last fall: "I'm fired up! I'm ready to go! Fired up! Ready to go!" (Great and sustained applause follows.) We were desperate for a leader; we got a motivational speaker.
There is disappointment and there is disgust and there is anger. You can read well-reasoned, articulate essays every day that detail the hooks the war industry and the investment bankers and the coal and nuclear industries have so firmly set in the body of this administration, this Democratic majority administration. You can have, and I have certainly had, long conversations with intelligent, honest, decent persons who are as disturbed by the policy similarities between Bush and Obama as you are
But don't say it out loud. Don't predict that what we see is what we get. Don't look from man to pig and pig to man and pronounce them much the same. Or do it if you like, and think it if you do, but don't be bold and say that the Democrats are not much better for us than the Republicans.
Your betters will remind you that Dick Cheney was a worse human being than Joe Biden. They will tell you that Obama is smart. He is playing a careful game. He is more progressive than his actions. He's only able to get what the Senate will allow him. He means well. He would like to do the right thing. He's fired up and he's ready to go. He's inspiring. He's not George Bush.
When we elect a selectman who proves himself inadequate, unsuitable or ill-intentioned, we say so. We complain. We tell him he misled us. We make his year in office unpleasant. We do not make excuses for him. But in that case we see only the individual, the man or the woman. We are not bound into any notions that this or that party will take us in a different direction than another. We seem to hear and see and understand better when we are not encumbered by faith, by the religion of party.
So I am neither amused nor amazed that the candidate of hope and change is doing the same dirty deals with the same merchants of death and greed as his predecessor. They are both creations of the two-party system. Whether they are ignorant dupes or are happily complicit, Republican or Democrat, white or black, may not, when the bolts are tightened and the valves adjusted and the contributions tallied and the collusion concluded, make a great deal of difference in how thoroughly you and I and the uninsured and the unadvantaged and the troops in Taliban territory and the villagers in the several countries where our taxes are turned into terror from above are screwed.
And you tell me, over and over and over again....
Mr. Cooper works hard and gets by. But he does not have health insurance. He cannot afford it. Therefore he does not often seek doctoring. Mandating his purchase of the deficient, dishonest products of the industry will not induce him to do so; it will likely just further piss him off and cause him to generate more unwholesome, unhelpful essays such as this. Before he leaves this author wishes to tell you that he is one resident of the state of Maine who is not impressed with the work of Senator Olympia Snowe, political bed-partner of Senator Max Baucus. Just so you know.
- Posted in


157 Comments so far
Show AllEven with the presidency and this new big majority, the Democrats always seem to me to be like those opponents in boxing that prospects are put up against, they will lose but at least put in the appearance of putting up a good fight without getting hurt too much.
I keep waiting in vain for the progressive firebrand. Wish I was it but I'm not.
Re Paranoid Pessimist September 17th, 2009 1:14 am
Good analogy. I've also heard the Ds compared to the Washington Generals; their job is to make the Harlem Globetrotters look like they're playing in an unrigged game.
By starting the "health care reform" discussion with a nebulous public option that would at best be a marginal compromise, the Democrats are not even pretending to put up a good fight.
Flash back to Bill Clinton zealously promoting the 1993 passage of NAFTA sans any environmental or safety considerations...another example of Democratic Party capitulation.
Your "progressive firebrand" was Dennis Kucinich and most progressives blew him off as unelectable.
Kucinich was right on everything and on issues I would have loved to see him there, but there is a reason most progressives blew him off as unelectable. I'm waiting for someone who think and talks like a cross between Obama and Kucinich. There is little hope for a progressive revival unless someone like that appears on the scene.
I don't think most Progressives "blew off" DK until the Dem party, united with the MSM, marginalized him because they were scared of the truth. Calling him "too short" or a UFO nut or not recognizable enough were just some of the crap reasons they used to bring DK down in the voters' eyes...and as usual, we get screwed by the same old shit political expediency and corporate deal making. And we LET IT HAPPEN. Where was the outrage during the campaign?.... at home cowering.
Yeah. I've had it. The fascists have won.
The so-called democrats glare at me when I point out the crimes of omission and commission. They are really about rooting for the home team no matter how heinous their corporate bootlicking. Forget ideas and standards and morality and doing the right thing. We're keeping the repugs from getting too much corporate money by hoovering it up ourselves. The democrat harrumphs. "It's about realpolitik," they say in a fit of Kissinger channeling. "We've got to stay elected and to do what we can to be more like what our corporate sponsors desire."
Bullshit.
Nothing can be done. No one will have the rudimentary health care that all other industrialized nations enjoy, but the insurance companies will get even richer. Thank god. I was worried.
Yeah. You keep cooing nice things in our ears while you rape us, so-called democrats.
sigh...
Obama's "health care reform" will criminalize the Christopher Cooper unless he starts buying medical insurance from a private insurance company.
Very well put, and very well written. Thank you.
As Gore Vidal has said, "What we have in this country is a one-party system with two right wings."
It's just plain sad that there are so many people in this country who cannot see through that veil constructed by our motivational-speaker-in-chief, and grok that it is positive action that make a great leader, and not marketing slogans and bumper stickers.
"Yes we can!" (maintain the one-party system)
Thanks for quoting Gore Vidal. As usual, he put it into one concise sentence.
"We were desperate for a leader; we got a motivational speaker."
Well said, sir!
I'm am glad and proud I "wasted" my vote on Mr. Nader every time he was a candidate for president.
Methinks that what we have is corporate fascism, plain and simple. Money and power talks; everyone else had better step in line if they want to continue to walk.
Once Obama became the democratic nominee there was a major concerted effort by many progressive groups and news sites to suppress any form of Obama criticism. Third party advocates, especially the Nader supporters, were persona non grata and were victims of many verbal abuses, or were summarily erased from the discussion.
Most of those third party advocates were not snookered by Obama, why was that? How could some see through his slick rhetoric and try to expose him for the progressive fraud that he's proving to be? While others were so adamant that he was going to change everything?
Maybe it's like when your a kid, about the age when you discover, or at least question, the truth about Santa Claus. Some kids have figured it out and try to tell the others, but the others will have non of it, Santa is real. Maybe there's a fear that if you don't believe, you won't get the goodies under the tree, and I do think that much of the Obamamania was motivated by fear.
So here we are, so many Mea culpas later, so many articles expressing disillusionment and frustration. We watch as Congress sits on it's hands and pretend to discuss the issues (has there ever been a more pathetic weaselly bunch of incompetents?). Obama continues the sweet talking empty rhetoric and a few far right imbeciles with shit for brains get all the media attention, and Obama and Congress actually listen to them?! Instead of being isolated and ignored for the idiots they are, they get treated as if they are real force to recon with!
What a farce it's all become, a dangerous, murderous, and conniving charade. Each day there is more exposure of lies and cover ups, stories of torture, stories of random bombing and murder, so many innocent people blown apart, but the brass need more troops, more war funding, and of course they will get it.
Read Mike Whitney's article in counterpunch the other day, about the complete fabrication of the impending doom of a financial crisis by Paulson and how Lehman was sacrificed to make it all look dire so the incompetent Congress would fund the bailout for his cronies. Anyone know where all those billions went? Hell no, does Congress or Obama care?
Why should they?
The silent majority have pulled the covers over their heads waiting for their antidepressant meds to kick in.
"Maybe it's like when your a kid, about the age when you discover, or at least question, the truth about Santa Claus. Some kids have figured it out and try to tell the others, but the others will have non of it, Santa is real. Maybe there's a fear that if you don't believe, you won't get the goodies under the tree, and I do think that much of the Obamamania was motivated by fear."
-----------------------------
I agree that fear is the underlying emotion. But I don't think it's simple fear, it's the kind of soul-destroying fear that leads people to join, and then cling to, a cult. They feel such an emptiness and powerlessness that it's simply unbearable. They just plain can't tolerate it.
They're people who learned too well the lesson that they can't trust their own judgement, they can't trust their peers, and they will be punished if they don't wait for Authority --daddy, mommy, teacher, policeman, priest, politician, talking head-- to tell them what to do. They're never allowed to develop a feeling of personal power. So when maturation gives them a little more perceptive so that they can see that Authority is betraying them, they have absolutely nowhere left to turn. Both humans and non-humans actually die of that kind of despair, so it's small wonder if they cling desperately to even the most threadbare illusion of security.
We should make up a new batch of "Question Authority" buttons and bumper stickers.
In response to the decorous "Question Authority" phrasing, others followed on with "Challenge Authority."
Which led inevitably to the "Fuck Authority" meme...
It's a natural progression. :-)
There's a book just out "A PARADISE BUILT IN HELL", by Rebecca Solnit, in which she examines how ordinary people respond to the loss of Authority during disasters. She found, as have others, that ordinary people (not the emotionally-disabled ones we're talking about here) do very well without Authority to rule them. Often even better than when Authority is restored to power!
She suggests that the "conventional wisdom" that people always lose control and behave badly is self-serving propaganda put out by the elites to keep us corralled and in thrall to them.
I've got a reserve in at the library and will read it with great interest, especially having read the one review at Amazon.
What intrigues me is how the Republicans and their right-wingnuts, who have been thoroughly discredited and now have one of the lowest approval ratings in history, are still able to get all of the attention and are still allowed to set the agenda.
During the presidential campaign I frequently posed this question:
"Once the Democrats have their super-duper majority and are, at last!, standing stark naked in the light, what will they use as an excuse?"
We have our answer: They will use the ravings of a small percentage of vocal wingnuts, popularize it through the media, and voila! "Help our poor, too kind Obama! They want to bring him down!" When in reality, except for a relatively few and very rich exceptions, "our Obama" is bringing us all down.
As somebody else already said, "Very well put, and very well written."
After Bush the Idiot, we have Obama Double-Face.
Coca-Cola or Pepsi, but nothing else.
What are the internal causes that paralyze us people of the left (and even the sane middle), I wonder?
Paralyze us to the point that we almost never effectively organize anymore, on a whole range of issues, as the right fills the gap with its ever crazier fury?
I don't mean the external, institutional barriers that might dissuade or intimidate us.
I mean the internal, psychological features that have caused most of us to become so disastrously street-passive in relation to the right.
We leftists have our probably correct theories about the populist right's enabling power; how it issues from a comparitively small population segment of thinking-truncated, emotionally arrested people; how such people are easy pickings for the system's power managers and manipulators, etc.
But my intent here isn't to further investigate what motivates or enables the right to stoutly believe and act as it does.
It's to provoke more interest in the fact that the left, which I believe represents a deeper thinking, emotionally more developed segment of the population, unaccountably fails to probe its own internal mindset anymore, or its disastrous street paralysis, with any sustained interest.
We need more articles on CD that can provoke us to think about just such motivational questions (not uselessly sentimental, complaining articles like the one above.)
As the US left collapses into its own fatally insular anomie (reflecting the larger society's anomic collapse), we must use what energy we have remaining in us to try to identify and overcome the causes of our personal political paralysis.
Only from there, maybe, can we renew the larger, progressive societal energy it will take to turn back our nation's impending murder at the hands of the right.
"What are the internal causes that paralyze us people of the left (and even the sane middle), I wonder?"
Money, plain and simple. If you have money you can get your message out to more people, organize, and discredit the opposition. Why do you think the corporations want to equate money with free speech?
The right represents the interests of the corporations who for all practical purposes have an endless supply of money to manipulate the masses. Plus the large corporations own the airways and sensor the messages that get out. For example how many times have you heard the attacks of the right against Acorn, vs. how many times have you heard Wendell Potter rail against the health insurance industry?
We essentially have just one corporate party with two wings that is completely corrupted by money. And as one poster so correctly pointed out, the democrats are the subservient wing of that party. When the republicans have the majority they do what they want. When the Democrats have the majority they seek "bipartisanship".
Money rigs the game against the left and that is going to be a very difficult thing to overcome.
I agree. The rich have us all believing that the best things in life are free and that money doesn't buy happiness. YES IT DOES ! Ever try to live on free.
YES …money does make you happy and keeps you happy. Anyone who says different is either a dumb shit or a rich bastard.
Sioux Rose
NC: Right-on pragmatism and incisive comment. The right wing also buys the experts who write the theories that then become popularized in media aimed at convincing those feeling the natural response to so much gone amok that it is THEIR PERSONAL PROBLEM and should be treated with this golden or blue or purple pill. Presto. All pain gone. Welcome to the land of soma where big brother will do your feelings and thinking for you! It's really Okay, just trust them; and so much easier THIS way, too. "Now just take this pill with water, and you'll be fine... even if the sheriff is on his way to repossess your house thanks to that mortgage anomaly you thought your government was interested in correcting."
Thanks NC! "Money, plain and simple". Exactly. Now that you have said the obvious, I almost feel embarrassed to admit that I hadn't figured it out for myself.
NC-Tom, Dogface, gandydancer,
publius asks a question about why people on the left (there is no middle) don't examine themselves more thoroughly for INTERNAL causes and everybody immediately collaborates on blaming rich people and money, thus perfectly illustrating Tom's point.
Wow. This is heartrending. Even in the face of athe impending destruction of world civilization no one has the courage to look unflinchingly at themselves? Of course projecting our own unacceptable qualtites onto others and objects is easier, but one might at least ask WHY money is so attractive and corrupting? WHY the Democrats are so helpless against the right but are still able to competently and completely quash any movement or organizing to their left? How the right can move ever further out PAST the lunatic fringe and institute a new Red Scare 20 years after the end of any significant so-called communist threat?
And Souixrose, to ridicule those who have the wisdom to see that all our problems are at the root psychological is to align with the Democrats and Republicans in quashing any meaningful movement toward understanding and solving our real problems. It is also an expression of fear of anyone who DOES look unflinchingly at all of us. Which I understand: such courage makes everyone who won't do it look bad, feel bad and wish the problem away even more. But good psychology doesn't blame people for society's insanity, and it doesn't just look at individuals; (family) systems theory looks at how we all together create the reality we see; ecospychology and any good reg'lar old therapist in fact, will help people remove the blocks that keep them from acting in their own interest.
Try it. It will make you a better, more effective activist.
Sioux Rose
JZ: I really don't know how you came to that analysis? I think psychology only goes so far, but I don't see where you see me "ridiculing the wisdom to see that all our problems are at the root psychological," etc. I am a professional astrologer, and in my view psychology fails to go deep enough. I have studied it, it was my minor in college and I happen to have had a number of psychologists and psychiatrists as clients. One took a course in Divination with me. And another was the head of the department of mental health in Puerto Rico, and she read a book I recently completed on the astrological implications of our times and told me it was brilliant. In this forum, one can't go into everything they believe in. Perhaps I seemed glib in one of my responses and gave the matter of personal reflection short shrift. As I stated, I think psychology has SOME of the answers, but it does not go to the deeper roots of personality which in my view can be better explained through the Mystical Schools and their various instruments of analysis. And when it comes to the state of the nation, mass psychology and the tools of numbing the masses are of critical importance in any analysis. It would be easier for me to respond if you cited the EXACT statement I made that led you to your conclusions. Peace.
First, to correct: what I meant in the first sentence was “illustrating PUBLIUS’ point”. Oops. Sorry if that was confusing.
…
Siouxrose: This is the part:
"The right wing also buys the experts who write the theories that then become popularized in media aimed at convincing those feeling the natural response to so much gone amok that it is THEIR PERSONAL PROBLEM and should be treated with this golden or blue or purple pill. Presto. All pain gone. Welcome to the land of soma where big brother will do your feelings and thinking for you! It's really Okay, just trust them; and so much easier THIS way, too. "Now just take this pill with water, and you'll be fine... "
The fact that some people use tools to build tanks and guns instead of windmills doesn't make tools evil or shallow. The fact that some people use psychological tools for evil ends* (the difference between black magic and white magic) and the fact that some psychologists aren't brilliant and lack depth does not reflect on those who ARE and DON'T, or on the actuality and potential of the science. I've known shallow psychologists, psychiatrists and psychotherapists, too (as there are in every profession). I've also known, and learned from, quietly brilliant and wise women and men, in fact no other profession I’ve known has so many deeply wise people who have their eyes open, including open to the false and distracting projections of religion and mysticism and the importance and pervasiveness of shadow. It’s not accident or birth; it’s the focus on hard-work-with-help that allows people to grow.
Most of the psychology classes I had in undergraduate school were dull crap; a few had fascinating parts. None were more than a cracked-open doorway to the real stuff of psychology. The bad parts faded from memory; the good was just enough to make me look into it later as I realized through decades of work with bodies and my own life that what was missing—and crucial—was mind-body awareness. Every class ignored psychotherapy, but it’s the essential interface of the science and humanity, and the main limit to both the depth and effectiveness of psychology and our growth as a society is our near-universal fear of self-examination.
I think whatever depths are found in astrology and mystical systems that aren’t found in psychology are the result of psychological projections and the logical fallacies driven and hidden by them. I'm sorry I don't have space here for the more roundabout, diplomatic way I'd say that if I could. Carolyn Casey (the Visionary Activist, of Pacifica Radio etc.) is one person of genius who finds the wisdom of (for example) Jungian symbolism in astrological references, but most astrologers believe in their system because they make a number of mistakes--confirmation bias, confusion of causation and correlation, and so on. We don’t know the truth. We do not know. We-do-not-know. We can theorize and metaphorize and try to understand but to reach for certainty—whether in a system of philosophy or religion or a person or group—is to have faith in faith instead of in uncertainty, and truth is the first casualty of faith.
I'm not surprised that some of your clients find your book brilliant. (bandwagon fallacy, circular argument with an attribution twist that’s sort of interesting) Maybe it is brilliant. If it is, I suspect it is because it's a manifestation of inner wisdom, including the transpersonal wisdom (of Jung's collective unconscious, e.g.) unlimited by "faith"--investment in and submission to outside authority. I've found very very few people of "faith"--in any religious system--who weren't massively projecting onto their system to avoid real depth. Few in the psychological fields, too--but more than anywhere else, and more working on it, and more aware of their limits, and in the field of somatic, or bodymind, psychology, even more. When combined with systems awareness (as in family therapy)…genius! If you haven't found more depth there maybe you didn't look deeply enough at it, or with eyes that could discern real depth.
I think we probably agree that blaming victims and making everything personal (as for example, toxic waste-producing corporations and people do often to remove blame from themselves by talking about “lifestyle choices” etc.) is not useful. Therapy and the consciousness it can bring are crucial tools in the work to increase consciousness of the species, but are clearly not enough alone. Political action is absolutely necessary. But without consciousness, our goals, strategies, tactics and actions, and even the language we use will be the wrong ones and we will be ineffective at achieving real change.
*see Adam Curtis' film The Power of Nightmares, e.g.
publius,
I might be commenting too much on this thread-- Perhaps the article captures the mood the day after the health "reform" is announced, out of a democrat majority congress, with nary a mention for public option, after the speech Obama gave the other night. Well, MAYBE this is Step 1 to having repubs object to it, and after that the dems will just take it over and pass what they will? We'll see...
This article above is more than a complaint, it's a prompt to all of us to ask WHY the minority bullies with the fear-based thought system are having all the say. Why is thoughtful discourse so seemingly impossible. Brainwashing?
The Serenity Prayer has been a necessity for me to hold on to my sanity!
Also our local newspaper (newly Murdoch owned) just cancelled readers' comments forum. But yesterday I happened to catch an old man making a speech on our local cable channel and getting to the truth of our society especially since 9/ll. It was so heartening and I hope to locate him.
I have a theory about that.
Basically I think that the left is suffering from an odd sort of environmental clinical depression mixed with a fear of death(very briefly, right=guns=those people will kill us if they get a chance).
When most people think of depression they think of something that is occasional and very specific. For example, "I am depressed because I didn't get the PS3 I wanted this year." This is something that could likely be resolved in the immediate future(when the person gets the PS3).
Clinical depression is nothing like this. When the depressive has an episode, it is "time neutral", meaning that there doesn't seem to be a way out to the person that is suffering. The world takes on a very dark cast, horrors loom everywhere, and doom is always just around the corner.
Usually clinical depression is caused by a genetic predisposition and some sort of trigger(the trigger, btw, doesn't have to be anything that makes sense, although it does in some cases).
However, even in people who are not predisposed, if their environment is already like what a typical depressive suffers, then they will become clinically depressed themselves.
I think, on a very broad scale, this is mostly what has happened to the left.
It started with the assasinations of the Kennedys and MLK and is continuing even today. We as a force are suffering from clinical depression.
All true, but you are not helping the clinical funk I have been in for some weeks now.
I know. I wish I could help with the clincial funk, but I can't.
...but we CAN help with the funk. "The therapy for despair is action" (Judith Lipton)
The therapy for depression is not simple or bumperstickerable, but the personal and political act together to create depression and have to be brought together to cure it. Nature, mind-body therapy (one or more of many somatic psychology branches) with an added component of social-political movement... political action, and above all, following the impulse to heal by connecting in many ways... are all aspects of the cure.
Conservatism is essentially a whole-person, mind-body belief that we are each alone in the universe, a splitting away not just from the world but from parts of the self--feelings, awareness... etc. Progressive politics are not so much the opposite of that as the integration of the split parts into a whole that understands its place in and oneness with the universe, and of course it's far more than that. And its' a big part of the cure for what ales ya. Dive in.
Are there clubs or societies for lefties with depression? I have a close relative, (very left mind set)who just turned 30. He too experiences severe bouts of depression. He is also intellectually brilliant and very lonely, being somewhat of a social pariah. His good job is the only thing that keeps him from chucking it all. He says it's the only place where he feels competent. It may be an externally inflicted depression, not a "brain chemistry" problem at all(in most cases, imo). A year or so ago, I read an article about schizophrenia, written by one of the heads of the psychology dept at the NIH. I'll never forget this. He has come to the educated conclusion that the majority of schizophrenics don't need drugs at all, they need a life. I think the same may be the cure for depression too: a purpose driven life (and I'm not talking about religion!) And getting out into wild nature, preferably with a trusted friend, if you have one.
Stick around here. You're in good company!
Sioux Rose
RVR: I like your post. To the advice about "getting a life," I would also add that LOVE can sometimes perform miracles to those lucky enough to attract it.
Yes! Love is strong medicine, along with humor, dance, and music.
I think you might like my other posts too. I always appreciate yours. I'm a double Scorpio! ... so I'm told.
Sioux Rose
Love your screen moniker. If you're a double Scorpio (sun/moon or sun/Ascendant?) you're made of a very very tough fiber! Your sign is one of the ones best positioned for the changes ahead. Perhaps your advice about pacing our personal time and energy commitments will be fuel for your own progress. By the way, when I was in college my three roommates were all Scorpios. It was a lion living with 3 of those "creatures," but it worked!
NVRWALKER I know it is difficult for a person who is not familiar with mental illness to understand that it is a real disease in the same way that diabetes is a real disease. Clinical depression and schizophrenia need treatment in the same way that a diabetic needs treatment. Like with diabetes, life style is important, but not a cure. To suggest that all the mentally ill need to do is "get a life" is cruel and shows a lack of current information about mental illness.
Sioux Rose
GANDY: I read that about half of women over 50 are prescribed a hysterectomy. When I was a young child, the dental fashion was to take a tiny pinprick of a cavity and convert it into a toxic moon crater. I relate these two instances because about 10 years ago Ms. Magazine reported that over 25 million Americans were regularly ingesting anti-depressants drugs. The statistics led me to begin work on my book, Moon Dance. (It could be entitled Mood Dance.) Now the numbers diagnosed as clinically depressed are no doubt higher than the 25 million mark, and in my view, when that percentage of adult citizens are directed to use chemicals as a way of life, then Houston, we have a problem. It is true that a small percentage of persons suffer from very severe mental disorders and I would not ask that these persons give up medication, although I think exploring dietary changes could go a long way towards ameliorating many of the effects. If I seemed insensitive, I apologize; please understand it's the NUMBERS that mortify me. It speaks of a soma style society where too many are numbed with chemicals, whereas otherwise they might instead direct their collective angst towards the changes their despair potentially warrants (especially if taken on a collective scale).
Sioux, I am in COMPLETE agreement. Most depression is situational depression and medication is the last thing those people need. Situational depression should be seen as a sign that emotional help is needed in the same way that physical pain suggests that the body is not well. It is the greed of the companies that are manufacturing pills that have created the need for them. This applies to a lot of physical complaints as well.
I am speaking of clinical depression. I can't speak from a personal viewpoint since I've never been depressed. However, my daughter did have depression after the birth of her last child and medication was a blessing for her...and her family as well. There is plenty of evidence that suggests that clinical depression is related to a chemical imbalance, and I have met enough people that I must trust that it is a condition that they, no matter how hard they try, are unable to just snap out of. I feel that it is judgmental and arrogant to assume that these people should be able to cure themselves any more than I feel that a diabetic should somehow manufacture their own insulin.
OF COURSE depression is related to chemical imbalance--the same way that a broken bone seen on an x-ray is related to the fall that broke it.
Whatever we are as a whole, we manifest ourselves in the physical world--the world of physics and chemistry. The chemistry isn't the cause of depression any more than the x-ray or the fracture itself is the cause of the bone injury. You can fix either one with medical treatment but it doesn't change the fact that the injury took place, and if the person keeps falling down, the cast and pain-killers won't prevent new breaks. Only stopping falling will help that.
It isn't a choice between the ignorant and absurd idea of "snapping out of it" and drugs. There are other choices. Depression is usually a behavioral response to rage that is unacceptable to the sufferer and/or those around him or her. (in the widest sense of behavioral--mind-body behavior) Sometimes it's a similar reaction to grief. Grief is what we feel when something that was part of us is wrenched away. Anger and rage are a response to unacceptable fear; it's what we feel when our boundaries have been violated; it's a summoning of energy so we can defend ourselves physically. But the instinctual, age-old physical isn't as useful in "modern" society, where true expressions of anger are shushed and shunned and we're forced to redirect our anger by projecting. Shit is only allowed to flow downhill here.
We’ve lost Nature; we’ve been ripped from our rightful (primitive, close) society and birthing and parenting; from conception on we’re invaded physically, chemically, aurally, psychically. If our species doesn’t have reason to feel angry, fearful, grief-stricken and depressed, I’m not sure what any of those mean. But it’s treatable. We can start with ourselves and go on from there. We HAVE to start with ourselves; our Selves are the only instruments we have to make change in the rest of the world.
…
(An aside: Whatever part genes or chemicals have to do with it, all depression is situational; “clinical” is just a defined matter of degree and exact symptoms and length. Either way depression is caused by a particular mind-body response to a situation that keeps happening, and it can often only be gotten out of by changing the mind-body--by reaching a new understanding. Not just intellectual understanding but also a mind-body understanding--of the situation. Studies have shown that drugs alone are ineffective in long-term ending of depression; drugs and therapy together are as effective as therapy alone. In other words, drugs are pretty useless in curing depression. And then there are all those side effects... )
Cassius...compelling diagnosis...what's the cure? I've had very similar thoughts, please e-mail me if you want to compare: mattcourtman@hotmail.com
Peace,
Matt
First, a point of disclosure. I suffer from clinical depression and have been dealing with it for a number of years.
Now, with that said.
The first thing is to understand and acknowledge that there are thought patterns in progressive thought that are depressive/fatalistic/etc. This does not make progressive thought bad or incorrect anymore than depressive thoughts make the depressive bad or incorrect. They are just there and have to be dealt with.
The second thing that has to be done is to separate the depressive ideas from the negative circumstances.
For example.
1. Our current political setting is pretty damned grim. This is true.
2. There are times in the past where our political situation has been grim. This is also true.
3. Our political situation has always been grim and always will be grim and so we should just off ourselves ASAP. This is false and is a depression generated thought.
The third thing to do is that once these depressive ideas they should be gently but vigorously corrected(But NOT, repeat NOT supressed. Depressive thoughts don't go away just because they aren't voiced).
There are probibly more but I'm still working on them.
Thanks...I'll digest!
Cassius23, you're onto something important. But you need to pry a little further into our history in order to arrive at the real root of /our/ problem. It didn't start with the assassinations of JFK, RFK and MLK.
I was one of the first generation to grow up with "duck and cover" drills in elementary school. And I remember thinking all through my childhood that there was no way I'd survive to see my 21st birthday. I was not alone - in fact, everyone I've re-contacted after all those years admits to having felt the same way.
As a result of that peculiar start in life, I'm still surprised every time I look in the mirror and see a 60-year-old face looking back. And when in the light of this fact I reflect on my misspent life - a stupidly winding trail filled with repeated instances of horrible judgment - I'm unsurprised. My false moves could hardly have been otherwise: if as a child you think the human species has no future whatsoever, and will surely come to an end /any day now/ in one final, blinding, deafening explosion, then you will not cultivate the ability to plan for the future (what would be the point?) and will face a rising tide of fascism in a state of mute paralysis.
I have just described a great portion of the "baby boom" population of the U.S. The nuclear arms race and all its attendant psychological horrors drove a whole generation of human beings to a state of still unrecognized, unacknowledged madness. The suicidally hedonistic culture that we've built since then is explained neatly by this one great fact. The clinical depression I've suffered all my life is a microcosm of the culture - a culture that knows deep within its labyrinthine confusion that it has spent the last six decades dooming itself.
Those missiles, by the way, are still sitting in their silos. The clock is still ticking. Extinction by our own hand is unavoidable. When it happens, it will be as though we'd never existed - except, of course, for the fact that evolution from Cambrian-Period levels will have to begin all over again.
Thank you. I think I didn't correctly state one thing. It is a hypothesis, not a theory(and therefore is still very much subject to change).
One thing I do disagree with is the fact that extinction by our own hands is unavoidable.
Possible, definitely. Probible, maybe.
Unavoidable, though. Not a chance. The only things that are unavoidable are the things that have already happened. History is chock full of unlikely things smacking us in the face and unavoidable things being avoided.
With that said, I agree that the fear component could very likely and I will look into the history more deeply to see if that is the case.
Paul Boyer made a good start in 1985: http://www.thefreelibrary.com/By+the+bomb%27s+early+light:+American+thought+and+culture+at+the+dawn...-a04722838
Unfortunately, I don't think anyone's followed his lead.
Sioux Rose
MAELSTROM: I did those under the desk drills, too; and I recognize the shadow of nuclear extermination hangs over us all; however, I subscribe to the Buddhist idea that LIFE (especially most auspicious HUMAN life) is precious! We are not taught or encouraged to respect this axiom, And I think we must recognize the sacredness of life, and give thanks for the things we Americans so readily take for granted. When I wake up in the morning in a little modest home, I am grateful for its protection against the elements, glad to hear the rain that still comes, very appreciative of my cup of morning java. These are simple things that one must give thanks for. The remedy for depression is to get moving, or get the focus off self. There are many ways to do this. Carlos Casteneda's teacher Don Juan noticed the penchant for melancholy in his otherwise-enthusiastic student, and offered these words that have held meaning for me: "You dwell upon yourself too much. Seek and see the marvels around you, and you will grow tired of dwelling upon yourself." I think if we get that self out of the way, the miracles of nature come to befriend us. That's a guarantee. This prescription may not help everyone. There certainly are some persons whose blood sugar is so off-kilter as to generate an interior roller coaster of mood swings. Unfortunately most do not understand the dietary factors that support or give rise to such conditions. (There is also a potential karmic factor. I elaborated at length on my concept of how this operates in yesterday's post about Eric Prince, if any find such an analysis of interest.)
Da ya want to know what I learned from depression….although… I have never YET been diagnosed with it. YET! But I am close!
“‘Iffin” I was a teenager…and had no history to look back on…then depression would be understandable. As adults, we know and understand that there is a past and a future. Children do not know this. Sometimes they choose what seems for them the easiest route. That being suicide to end their pain because they do not realize that things will change. What they and sometimes we do not understand is that we are the “change”.
Having said that…when you are “stuck” in one place and DO NOT move…you are stuck…period. If you NEVER do anything and never move you are stuck. You will stay stuck until the end of time…that is unless you choose to blow your brains all over the ceiling.
HOWEVER, by taking that “one” step forward, you have just put yourself in another time and place and I guarantee that things will change, have to change, are changed. It is the law of physics.
It is so sad that the fear of change can devastate so many lives.
Dogface,
Great and really important point about getting stuck. That is the crux of depression and it's so important to remember that taking any small step forward busts it. The cycle of fear, depression, loss of forward momentum, increased fear, depression and loss of momentum is death is the source of our fear. Fear, not hatred, is the opposite of love, the source of life. Love is where we need to be filling our tanks. Regardless of what happens, it's all that fulfills the promise of life. It's a spiritual practice, and it's not easy.
I am afraid America IS "stuck". There are err... there “seems” to be so many people out there that are listening to the likes of the Glenn Becks. I would have never believed this of my country in this day and age. I then suppose black and brown America would call me naïve.
Too many people are stuck and just like the dinosaurs, they will all become extinct because they could not change/adjust when their environment called for it.