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Just Gimme Some Truth
The layers of the American political pathology are so multiple and so deep, it's sometimes hard to know where to start.
It's not so much that we're a country with problems. Every country has its challenges, and compared to much of the rest of the world I'd take our particular batch hands-down. It's just that so many of ours are self-inflicted.
Still, looking out across the panoply of peril, all the unfortunate ways in which we get it wrong as a society, I can't help but think that what's at the bottom of the stack, providing a foundation for the rest, is a profound national stupidity. Maybe it's my professional bias as an educator, but I often think that our biggest single problem is our (often willful) ignorance. Moreover, that's the single national characteristic that enables so many of our other maladies. If only we would allow ourselves to think, it seems to me, so much of the inanity that passes for normal in our politics would be laughed off the stage, and we'd all sure be a lot better off for it.
Honestly, this was the single thing I found most compelling about candidate Obama (as opposed to President Obama, who's more or less been one disappointment after another). Whether he was talking about dumb wars, or the fear-marketing of guns, gays and god, or addressing the question of race in America, Obama would sometimes do something that America hadn't seen in its political class since Jimmy Carter was in the White House: He would sometimes tell the truth.
Mind you, not often, and not even the whole truth. But the comparison was nevertheless startling, so long has it been since we've seen anything like this. Ronald Reagan not only began the era of "America, The Movie", he personified it as president like no one else ever has. Why worry about national problems when you can have yellow ribbons, poignant sunrises, and kick-ass wars against mortal enemies like Grenada instead? America has never quite recovered from this turn to the fantastical, this Hollywood spectacle of a government. Indeed, so deeply rooted has it become that, in order to help hold onto our comforting delusions, we now have a tenacious mythology which has arisen around the Great Mythologizer himself. The mythmaker has become myth too. New lies promulgated to prop up the old ones.
Whatever. My guess is that if we can ever have a serious discussion of Reagan in the future, one of the great crimes that will be attributed to his presidency will be the same supposed virtue that our lame punditocracy ascribes to it now. They say it was a revival of the American spirit and a restoration of our national confidence. In fact, what it was instead was a grand journey of self-delusion taken by an entire country, and at great cost, much of which we continue to pay to this day.
Thirty years of this disastrous turn in American politics could make even the half-truths of someone like Barack Obama refreshing and welcome, sometimes even stunning. I had almost forgotten what it was like to have a politician talk to me like I was an adult with a brain, rather than some Sunday School kiddie in short pants, who could only distinguish between Mr. God and Mr. Satan, the one with the beard and the one with the horns. I had almost forgotten what it could be like to see a president describe the world in three dimensions, complete with nuances and complexities, rather than some silly faux dichotomy between Good and Evil, with our team always representing the former.
Since becoming president Obama has cracked that door open a bit once or twice, though far from sufficiently and even less than during his campaign. His Cairo speech had some of these elements. And then he did it again a couple of times last week, especially when he visited the Republican House retreat and held a televised Q and A with those scary monsters.
Much as I hesitate to say it, the changes in the Obama White House this last week are slightly encouraging. It's even possible that they've recognized what a suicide mission they've been on this last year and have taken some baby steps in the only direction available to them for survival, let alone any sort of redemption. Obama doesn't strike me as constitutionally able to throw a punch at an adversary. It's just not in his character. But this week, at least, he flicked a couple of spitballs. For this White House, that's progress.
In any case, there was much that was telling about the event. First, that this semi-hostile dialogue - which many have compared to the British weekly tradition of Prime Minister's Question Time - transpired at all was a somewhat profound development. Of course, that statement says far more about the pathetic nature of the American political system than it does about Obama or the cavemen from the Valley of the Right who questioned him. It's also enormously telling that the GOP resisted until the last moment allowing the cameras to roll during the question and answer period - they really didn't want to go there. Think about that. You had a single meek politician going up against two hundred rabid bullies, and which side wanted to make sure the public didn't see the engagement? Did Republicans know something in advance that made them fearful of public exposure, even when going up against President Neville O'Bambi?
Perhaps it was the same thing that caused FOCS (Frighten Old Children Silly) "News" to cut away from the broadcast in the middle of it, despite the food-fight event being the very epitome of what television loves to show in politics. Uh-oh. Not only was Obama occasionally holding Republican feet to the fire, but he was even doing it without a Teleprompter! Evidently, the sight of the nice, genteel, reasonable black man helping a bunch of white sharks make themselves look like the stupid liars they are was all too much for Mr. Ailes and company. Seeing this was causing smoke to pour out of the ears of robo-regressives all across America, their circuits frying all at once. Cut to American Idol reruns, boys! Fast!
Why? Because Obama was actually making these lying thugs own, even slightly, the consequences of their destructive deceits. Here he was with the Republicans at their retreat, for example: "There was an interesting headline in CNN today: ‘Americans disapprove of stimulus, but like every policy in it.' And there was a poll that showed that if you broke it down into its component parts, 80 percent approved of the tax cuts, 80 percent approved of the infrastructure, 80 percent approved of the assistance to the unemployed. Well, that's what the Recovery Act was. And let's face it, some of you have been at the ribbon-cuttings for some of these important projects in your communities." Similarly, the next day he was tweaking seven Republicans who actually walked away from their own proposal for a bipartisan debt-cutting commission, just because the socialist president had subsequently agreed with them on the idea.
The Kumbaya Kid is considerably more gentle about whacking these Joe McCarthy protégés than I would be. I'd like to see a lot more Harry Truman out of him, and a lot less Harry Reid. A lot more Betty Friedan, and a lot less Betty Crocker. Just the same, the Massachusetts election may go down as an inflection point in this presidency, the moment at which the White House figured out that standing by silently and watching yourself get your ass kicked by dress-up cowboy cowards unarmed with anything but lies and bullying tactics turns out to be, amazingly enough, something of a strategic error in national politics.
But what I find so astonishing about moments like this is how revealing they are of simple truths that somehow manage to get lost, particularly in the ranks of the Democratic Party. To begin with, Barack Obama has been hard at work for a year now, crashing an enormously promising presidency that just happens to also have his name attached to it, and the way forward has always seemed to me so transparently clear. Regressives in Congress (some from his own party), representing parasitical special interests, are sucking the blood from the American polity, even as the corpse begins to stiffen in rigor mortis. Maybe I'm just a sucker for that old fashioned democracy gospel, but I still believe that many times good policy can also be good politics. How much greater public fury at banks and other corporate predators does there need to be before the president realizes that actually taking on the malefactors of great wealth in this society also happens to be the best thing that could happen to him politically? How many times does he have to lose public support because of the astounding fabrications people are promulgating about him before he decides to stop playing nice and call the liars liars?
After seeing the president in action this week, the obnoxiously abrasive pundit Chris Matthews opined that Republicans should fear Barack Obama's learning curve. That one gave me a real chuckle. As far as I can see, no one in America has more to fear from Obama's learning curve than the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, who is currently slated to be very much on the housing market in January of 2013. Indeed, the single thing most utterly astonishing to me about the Obama presidency is how such a politically astute candidate could turn out to be such an absolutely lame, slow-to-get-it, president. And I'm not even talking about the guy's policies or ideology, much of which I abhor, since they frequently amount quite literally to warmed-over Bushism.
I'm just talking about Obama's lack of street smarts. The health care bill was paradigmatic, though hardly the only example. When it comes to selling his policies and strategic communications and winning the battle, he is decidedly not Bush-like. That reality is made all the more ironic by the fact that, unlike Bush, Obama doesn't even need to resort to outrageous lies in order to pitch manifestly evil policies (even if his are considerably less than wonderful). Never has a president failed so dramatically to employ his best weapon - the bully pulpit - to market his proposals for the country. Never has a president gotten so little from such favorable conditions for presidential success as Obama did this last year.
All of which begs the question of what American politics might look like if we had a president who was out there swinging for the fence, telling big truths, and mobilizing the public behind some new, healthy, and not even necessarily so hard-to-swallow national choices? The results could be astonishing.
The lists of areas where honest political discourse combined with presidential leadership could produce huge effects is fairly endless, though there is of course the danger of overload and distraction with too many initiatives at once. Just the same, here's my top ten:
* Start with campaign finance reform: No other single domain has more potential to unleash more necessary change in America. The simple truth is that American government is for sale, and about eight or nine tenths of what ails the country is attributable to these daily acts of treason, in which government officials sell out the national interest in favor of their own, and that of their political benefactors. This problem will never be solved by Congress. It requires a president who lays it out, pounds the drum incessantly in public, and humiliates the legislative branch into action. However, that would, of course, require telling a whole bunch of truth.
* America is in fiscal crisis right now, and the president's current solution is to pretend to seriously cut spending, and to locate all those cuts in the domain of domestic spending, just as some folks argued long ago was the real conspiracy behind Reagan's massive deficits. What astonishes me almost daily is that there is not a single serious actor in American politics who is talking about slashing ‘defense' spending. The United States today drops twice what the entire rest of the world combined spends on their militaries, and there is not a single state actor anywhere in the world who does or could threaten us. There is no Nazi Germany or expansionary Soviet Union. And yet we spend like we're in a great power death match, despite the fact that we are bleeding red ink in order to do so. Couldn't somebody speak honestly about this, especially since our finances are in a meltdown, or must we all continue to tip-toe around the drunkard in the family, pretending not to notice all the damage?
* Deregulation has produced the all too predictable results almost everywhere it has been applied, but especially in the financial sector. There's a reason we have jails and courts and police and laws against robbery, rape and murder, you know. There's also a reason why, following the debacle of the Great Depression, we regulated banks and Wall Street. The reason for both is the same. If you make it easy for people to commit crimes (especially by no longer making the acts in question crimes at all), they will. How many times do we have to go down this path before we learn that greedy bastards will kill us all if we let them? And yet, even today, when there is so much anger at Wall Street, no prominent voices are seriously talking about the paradigm shift that is necessary to protect the society and indeed the world against these predatory sociopaths.
* The health care fiasco has (once again) been just that. But even if the administration had gotten its bill through Congress, it would have only been a fiasco of another sort. Democrats on either end of Pennsylvania Avenue looked like circus freak contortionists, trying to write a bill that brought positive change to the country's massively broken system, but doing so without going anywhere near the systemic, fundamental source of the breakage. No one can quite come out and say the truth here, as simple as it is: Introducing private insurers into health care provision adds nothing in terms of care, and dramatically degrades the system in every respect, from cost to complexity to coverage to care. We don't require people to buy insurance - or have a job which provides it - if they want national security from the military or home security from the fire and police departments. So why should we do health care that way? The short answer is because nobody with a platform has the guts to tell that truth.
* Education is another area with fundamental issues that nobody dares speak about. There are lots, actually, including the stupidity of making a college education increasingly out of reach for current and future generations. How brilliant is that, even if all you care about is global competitiveness or national security? There's plenty more where that particular lunacy comes from, but the one that is the most sickening of all, and that most betrays our supposed commitment to equality of opportunity, is local funding of schools. While dollars spent don't directly equate to quality of education, they sure do matter, especially in their absence. It is a national crime that kids growing up in one neighborhood get vastly greater educational resources than the (probably darker-skinned) kids from just down the street. It seems to me that a little public education, pardon the pun, on this issue might go a long way toward shaming America into living up to its professed values.
* Global warming is another area where an astounding vacuum in pedagogical leadership from our political class has created a planetary suicide pact in place of what should be a plethora of prudence preventing post-apocalyptic peril. It's one thing to allow the tail of narrow interests like pharmaceutical, health insurance, sugar, tobacco or weapons industries to wag the dog of public policy and murder tens of thousands of people every year. It's quite another to allow the short-term stock price of Exxon-Mobil to take out an entire planet. Where is the political leadership educating the country on the nature and imminence of this threat?
* It might be nice if we could have an honest conversation about some of our recent foreign policy crimes, too, especially now that other countries like the Netherlands and Britain are at least cracking that door open. There is already so much evidence out there proving the magnitude of lies we were told about Iraq and torture and 9/11 and more. Would it be too much to ask for a little bit of truth to come out? We spend countless hours and unending rolls of yellow ribbon trying to convince ourselves how much we care about our military personnel. In fact, by continuing to allow them to die for lies, we hide from ourselves how little we actually care.
* We could be a lot more honest about our foreign policies in general, as well, especially when it comes to the Middle East, where some pretty whopping ongoing lies cost us dearly, every day. Americans not only get just one side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict represented in their media, they even get just one side of the debate within Israel. There's a greater range of dialogue inside Israel about that country's policies than there is in America. Supporting the paranoid Likud version of reality is not the same as supporting American interests in the world. Indeed, it's not even the same as supporting Israel's interests, truth be told. But how could most Americans ever figure that out, when they are limited to only one side, of one side, of the story?
* The United States has a sickening approach to world governance, as well. Whether it comes to land mines or the rights of children or global warming or family planning or just about any treaty, norm or initiative you could name, we are right there alongside Somalia and Libya as the outliers in international morality. Our attitude toward the United Nations and other global institutions is similarly self-reverential. These organizations are seen to exist for the purpose of supporting American interests (and those, worse yet, as defined in corporate boardrooms), and are ignored, defunded or otherwise trampled upon whenever they do not. How refreshing would it be if our political class might reeducate the country to start acting like we're the five percent of the world's population we actually are, rather than ninety-five percent?
* And while we're at it, we could really make some profound changes to our attitudes about governance at home, as well. For thirty years now, regressives have been teaching Americans that it's well and proper to hate their own government. Never mind that those same right-wingers most often have been the government over the last three decades. And never mind what it means to hate a government in a democracy, where the people doing the hating have chosen that government. The effects of this massively destructive impulse have been profound, and go a long way toward explaining the unraveling of American society and political culture we're now living through and living with. Governments do some truly horrid things sometimes, it's true, along with some pretty wonderful things as well. But policies, and the vehicle for those policies, are not the same thing. It's time that we had some leadership who reminded Americans that government, for all its flaws, is not inherently evil. Indeed, it can profoundly impact people's lives for the better, including protecting people from predators of all sorts. Which is precisely why the purveyors of unmitigated greed in America so badly want us to hate it.
I know, I know. It's a lot to ask, talking honestly for once about all these issues and so many more not even listed here.
Actually, it is and it isn't. So many people in America already get so much of this stuff. In so many cases, the public is ahead of its politicians.
The ground is fertile and the moment is pregnant with possibilities. Once you start talking about these things honestly, you can never go back. And creeps like just about every politician in the GOP, along with their enablers on radio and TV, can no longer commit their verbal and legislative outrages with impunity once people know better, and once they are regularly exposed to an alternative narrative.
People in this country are ready to seek solutions again. We just need a little honesty to make the critical difference, and prevail over the frightened Neanderthal tribe and their politics of fear.
Won't somebody just give us a little truth?




125 Comments so far
Show AllExcellent statement, but what do you do when the Country's direction is so heavily influenced by a willfully ignorant and easily manipulated and lead stump-broke populace? It's an Obamanation!
"but what do you do...?"
Write up a single sheet briefly explaining the realities of American politics. Just enough to catch attention.
Recommend joining the Green Party.
List your phone number and/or email address at the end.
Make some copies.
Leave them on the doorsteps of your clueless neighbors with a small stone on top so they don't blow away.
Resolve not to get pissed off regardless of what they might reply.
Expect some interesting conversations with your neighbors.
After all the disastrous moves Obama made, he finally tells the truth and he calls that "progress"? Sounds like another faith based article again. Green can make his wishlist but as long as he and most progressives keep showing their "faith" in the Democratic Party when they could turn to leadership ala Zinn and Nader, they will continue to live in fantasy land. When you are done dreaming of Obama to turn a new leaf, please let us know.
Right on, Martian Bachelor, the d-party is not a vehicle that can take us on the journey of truth or liberation. It is owned lock stock and barrel by the corporations. It consumes progressive resources and energy and spits out garbage like the recent health care disaster.
Time to create a movement thatis of, by and for the people.
Martian, you do know that Howard Zinn just died, right?
I said ala Zinn. Of course I know he's dead but his spirit lives on.
Martin B, you must not be familiar with David Michael Green's other pieces on Obama. He certainly does not go easy on the big guy or on the democratic party. When "praising" Obomber's half-truths here, he is merely showing, relatively speaking, how far we've come from having any concern for the truth.
And, while we're at it, let's give Green a hand for this statement and question:
"There is already so much evidence out there proving the magnitude of lies we were told about Iraq and torture and 9/11 and more. Would it be too much to ask for a little bit of truth to come out?"
Clearly, the good professor is not afraid of the word "truth" in the context of 9/11, as some people are.
I have nothing personal against Green but his wishy washy writing in this article baffles me. I will keep an eye out for his other articles now that you mentioned it.
Excellent, David.
One thing I did to improve my citizenship is give up television. As long as the people are content to sit on their ample backsides and accept crumbs packaged as wisdom, they will, because it's easier than action.
Clearly Americans can endure much as long as it's packaged as a metaphor. Look at the number of fools who believe the Bible is received whole from above, in spite of all evidence to the contrary, and none in favor.
But what to focus on first? Truth. Each of us has to speak truth. Thanks for the essay.
"Start with campaign finance reform: No other single domain has more potential to unleash more necessary change in America. The simple truth is that American government is for sale, and about eight or nine tenths of what ails the country is attributable to these daily acts of treason, in which government officials sell out the national interest in favor of their own, and that of their political benefactors. This problem will never be solved by Congress. It requires a president who lays it out, pounds the drum incessantly in public, and humiliates the legislative branch into action. However, that would, of course, require telling a whole bunch of truth."
Obama is a dilettante who jumps this way and that way with no follow-through. I believe that we the people must demand campaign finance reform over and over again until we have it and then the other things you mentioned might be possible with congressmen and presidents who are not polluted with lobbyist bribes.
One sentence pop[ed out at me in this excellent (as usual from Mr. Green) piece: >>If only we would allow ourselves to think, it seems to me, so much of the inanity that passes for normal in our politics would be laughed off the stage, and we'd all sure be a lot better off for it.<<
Indeed. Where is our Great Debate over these important issues; inflated budget, corporate personhood, lobbyists writing legislation; to name a few Green didn't manage to get to.
It is up to the American people (God help us!) to seek out the Truth. To see through the smoke and mirrors. Rise from their easy-chairs and hit the streets and demand real truth from our politicians.
Now if they only would do so -- we MIGHT have a real democratic republic instead of the corporate dulogy we have today.
Gary
“The truth should never die. It is our mission to keep the true history of 'our' side alive for our descendants.”
-- Grady Howell
"Won't somebody just give us a little truth?"
You're doing a bang-up job of that, DMG.
Sit back, relax and enjoy your remaining days, Gore Vidal. Your legacy is in good hands.
Well, kudos to Green, as I said above, but I think it's a bit much to compare him to the great Vidal, whose verve and courage on these matters is close to unparalleled.
Here's Gore from an interview about 4-5 years ago, talking about the country's situation (which of course has not changed a whit under Obomber):
"We've gone barbarous. We've gone back two-three thousand years in human history, to almost pre-Roman times."
Granted, the great Vidal will be a hard act to follow, but I think Mr Green has the potential. He certainly doesn't lack verve and courage and his style might provide him a larger audience than Gore Vidal, who did not take pains to appeal to the masses, which will be necessary if we are to see substantial growth in the incipient progressive movement.
Well-written and a few interesting things, but this article seems to me to be a disappointing giant leap backward for Green.
He talks about how dumb the citizenry is (which is true in general) with no mention of the very deliberate dumbing down by the corporate structure through the Advertising Council, National Association of Manufacturers, National Chamber of Commerce, and numerous "free market" think tanks. Reagan was a political operative (and an effective one) in the corporate/military agenda. Of course, Obama clearly works for the same folks. (Obama, btw, uses the same kind of high-sounding, vague appeals to the nostalgic mythology and is closer in his public style to Reagan than the intervening presidents, in my opinion. He shouldn't be let off the hook for his major and consistent part in keeping citizens in the dark while corporations and the MIC continue to rape cultures and the earth. It is not enough to just say he is "weak".)
I may be one of the dummies because I didn't catch the "stunning" "half-truths" during Obama's campaign. (Maybe I have a weird idea that half-truths aren't stunning.)
This article amounts to more wishful thinking on the basis of zilch. Green is the pot calling the kettle black.
It appears that the USA suffers from too many wealthy people who inherited their riches, never worked a day in their lives and never applied themselves (nor were they expected to) at school. Hence their appalling delusional ignorance.
These are the public face of whoever it is that runs the USA.
A vastly ignorant, wealthy, powerful upper class representing the rulers and a citizenry intentionally dumbed down and drugged out when not fighting foreign wars of conquest or working three jobs to make ends meet or doing wasted hard time under hurtful unhelpful three strike laws. No middle class, no working class, just coppertops.
It's like Meyer Lansky never died, his pickled malevolent brain lives on in some Tel Aviv warehouse pulling the cultural and economic strings of the USA.
Sophie Scholl-The Final Days
David Michael Green provides a clear and concise diagnosis of our country's terminal illness.
The question is: are we brave enough and secure enough in our belief of our own ability to change things?
I hope a genuine leader surfaces in our country who has the guts to say exactly what Prof. Green states in his clear thesis and urges us to follow her/him towards the goals such as Prof. Green declares we must move and achieve.
Certainly there is NOT A SINGLE POLITICIAN capable, interested, or willing to do this!!! And it's nothing less than totally idiotic to settle for a bunch of so-called "elected" officials "debating" these issues in their little meeting chambers without any citizens even present to raise questions or disagreement. We all know that the underlying issue of any debate in Congress relates to which corporation is going to be rewarded for its largesse in the form of lobbying money.
Debates on all public issues should be completely and openly televised and include panels of knowledgeable people like Professor Green providing input based upon their pertinent knowledge, credentials, expertise, and wisdom!
That way the do-nothing members of Congress would have NO EXCUSE WHATSOEVER to omit the most important and salient points that must be part and parcel of any such serious debate, ending in a decision that deeply affects and involves the lives of all citizens.
Prof. Green,
It seems to me that we have returned to the "guns or butter" debate. Being a military empire that supports over 738 military bases globally, and gives more money to the Pentagon than most global GDPs, it appears we have decided in favor of guns, which means the situation we currently are experiencing. Your wish list can be as long as you want it to be, but when the shadow government and shadow banks control our politicians, it is hard to envision any of your wishes coming true, much as many of us would like them to. I apologize for my cynicism, but given the current political climate, including racist pigs like Tom Tancredo calling for literacy tests at the American Association of Dimwits gathering, er Tea Party Convention, with chief dimwit Sarah Palin as the keynote speaker who has to scribble notes on her hand with a Sharpie to remember what to say, it does not give me a lot of hope. I have lost a tremendous amount of faith in the government and electorate.
As a young boy growing up in Philly I remember watching the McCarthy hearings on the television and My dad who was a unionized factory worker at GE told me "never underestimate the stupidity of the american people." and when Bush used 9/11 to realize the neocon dream of taking over Iraq helped by the hysteria of the american media my dad repeated the same reminder. Once you have accepted this fact everything becomes much easier to understand.
I,too, watched those Army/McCarthy hearings as a very young boy. Most of the nuance escaped me at that tender age but I just knew that Joseph Welsh, army council, was saying something very,very important about our democratic process.
I am a bit puzzled as to your Dad's impression that these hearings were a signal of stupidity, especially as they contributed greatly to the downfall of a real demagogue...... in large part precisely because they were televised to that maligned public.
I remember vividly McCarthy standing there holding a sheaf of paper which, he claimed, contained a list of thousands of army officers who were communists or homosexuals. Just as he had done earlier with the teachers. I found his exposure and downfall to be a signal of something right with our political process, all those decade ago.
Today, we find ourselves, once again, in an imperiled democracy, and, once again, I think the solution will be found in the basic intelligence and common sense of the majority of Americans. I understand that, amidst the images of "teabaggers", of that national disgrace, Sarah Palin's idiocy, in a time when our Chief Executive betrays his own intellect and the faith many placed upon him, when corporations and special interests buy legislation, how easy it is to think there is no hope, that we are all far too stupid for justice to prevail. But I refuse to give in to such thoughts, as, if we all do that, there will truly be no hope.
I think you mean either that you can't OVERESTIMATE their stupidity or UNDERESTIMATE their intelligence.
Here's some truth no one ever seems to get to; the stupidity of male domination and horrendous violence against women used to keep it in place.
On the Huffington Post Peter Daou, who once worked for Hillary Clinton, writes about male monsters and records several examples, amongst millions, of male violence agaisnt women. He mentions the recent burying alive of a young girl by her father and family because he didn't like her talking to boys. He then says;
"It comes down to this: there simply isn't sufficient public outrage about gender-based violence to spur political action."
He is right about that. And I appreciate the work he and others like NicK Kristoff are doing in bringing this issue to the attention of the world. But there is a big void here and that void is telling the truth about the women's movement of recent history. Many of us, certainly Kate Millet, Robin Morgan, Andrea Dworkin, Katherine McKinnon, Mary Daly talked, taught, organized and worked to explicate and end that violence. And we were called man haters for mentioning male hatred of women. We were held up to the next generation of young women as the kind of feminists they don't want to be. We were reviled and lied about and became victims of all kinds of mayhem amongst not only the right wing but the left wing protectors of pornography at all costs and the liberal and left men who didn't really think leadership ought be shared with women.
The relationship to Mr Green's piece here is that this is such a basic underlying truth that it goes unsaid and when women say it they are witch hunted. When men say it it gets a bit more attention but the men in power still don't take it in. And the truth is that underlying so many of our problems; Wall Street greed, torture and lack of democracy, lack of decent healthcare is an ethic that celebrates maleness as hardness and caring as a female, weak trait to be avoided. Its the essence of the Republican right but for the Dems women's rights are the first to be traded away and nowhere are women represented in proportion to their numbers in governing. And the world is still more comfortable with men speaking to protect women than with women standing up for themselves.
Still in desperate times I appreciate Mr. Daou and Mr Kristoff and the handful of other men who recognize the horrors women worldwide experience. But the truth is the biggest transformation we need to make is to a world where the values that have been seen as feminine and therefore devalued ascend again as they did in developing the human race. Some of those values are caring and cooperation and connection to nature. Really of course these are universal traits. But the stupidity and dishonesty of male dominance and the horrible fundamentalist structure of patriarchy continually make war against women. Patriarchy begins with men claiming dominion over women and the earth. It was always a suicidal ideology and it is now in its end game. Will women throw off this backlash and rise again and will men finally see the roots of our destructive stupidity. I think we'll soon find out.
Sioux Rose
Dear ARTEMIX: A post of great importance, especially today, in concert with the the macho hubris spectacle of spectacles: Superbowl. You can expect MARTIAN BACHELOR to show up with his empty rhetoric and uneducated spouting of "what about all the violence to men." Or some other male will show up to remind us that Hillary Clinton and Margaret Thatcher are guilty of the same sort of violence generally associated (with good reason!) with men. On numerous occasions I have deconstructed the archetypes to explain WHY violence is rampant in our society, and been called a "man hater," or that I had problems with men. And when I related the absolute depravity of an infectious sort of porn spreading (based on the research of Robert Jensen, his book entitled, "Getting Off,") there were some pretty appalling apologies FOR pornography in this forum, or scant voices of conscience speaking out against this DESECRATION of women's bodies, the zone where life begins.
The black-white world view, also seen through the prism of intense polarization, sees its higher reflection in the enduring myths. Venus and Mars are the love stars, the romantic consorts of Olympus. When Mars shows LOVE for his mate and perceives her as equal partner, the world knows peace. When Mars abuses his mate, casts her image and likeness into degrading portrayals, and distances himself from the capacity to care about his lover, or to know the vulnerability that comes from feelings/empathy, he aborts the realization of the great ONEness, and the world knows war. And that IS where, led by America's pompous celebration of the oily muscle, we collectively find ourselves.
It took me 17 years to complete a serious examination of how the ancient archetypes affect our lives. And I want you to know that whereas Uranus is the official "ruler" of the sign of Aquarius, I used Artemis in Moon Dance. Did you know that she is the twin sister to Apollo, god of the sun? If he is the sun-god, then his twin sister is equally Divine. Aquarius as the sign that breaks with convention, in my view represents the arrival of the "Divine Daughter," in a sense the twin principle to the long tradition of humanity being taught to only worship the masculine side (the son of God) of "the force." That force, or essence demonstates the ultimate input of both sides/genders... from the dancing DNA molecule with its endless swirls of twin chains of proteins, the genetic sum of both parents, to the yin and yang of electricity... it's negative and positively charged particles creating the very dance of matter. Artemis awakens the realization that it takes a partnership between the Divine son and Divine daughter to make and sustain a world that operates in accord with the Higher plan, a world where harmony and joy as opposed to abuse and war become the norms. Who would argue for other, the lop-sided, Mars rules, asymmetric madness that passes for modernity or civilization... but is anything BUT the latter.
Thank you for your courageous post. Sacred unto Aquarius/Artemis is Truth, and you have exposed the big one!
Are you talking about astrology?
You do know astrology is a belief system, don't you?
And then you throw in some genetics ( so you use the product of scienctific methodology but won't use that same methodology to examine astrology) and toaism, and do I spy some Wicca as well or is that some kind on native stuff going on there.
My point is , I suppose, wth does astrology and a syncretic new age belief system have to do with reality?
Our world and all the peoples in it are worth the effort of examining how we come to conclusions about reality and how we test those conclusions. Decisions based on bad methodology are not generally the best possible decisions. And we need really good decision making processes right now, what with so much wrong in the world.
Morticia and Martian Bachelor, you both are right. We need to make it simple. I don't understand how some progressives think they can win by sounding too complicated and using only their belief systems to explain everything. Nobody had to study astrology or Christianity to make it through the Great Depression.
Sioux Rose
MORTICIA: You can take your chronic Virgo disease and shove it. You can't follow any of my arguments or points due to your own narrow-minded self-serving prejudices. You are apples, to my oranges, and I am not in the mood for fruit salad. Besides, for all the times I have laid out fairly astute cases in this forum, if you've been deaf or blind to them, I'm not going to take the time to educate you. Clearly, the twain here cannot meet. Meanwhile, enjoy being in the company of Shawn and Martian, that's almost on a par with the US having its human rights record (capital punishment and the like) with the world's bottom feeders.
If this is how you treat students, it's a good thing you weren't my teacher. Do you really expect people outside your circle to take anything you say seriously? Give her a chance. Just because they don't follow your "astrology" doesn't make them your enemies. Maybe you should run for president and see how many people you can reform to your ways. I'll mortgage my house and pay you if you run. I guarantee.
I don't support violence and desecration against women so we have some agreement but I don't think that you can resolve that issue by focusing only on the female victims of violence while leaving the men out. A simple plan of addressing violence regardless of gender should work without having to necessarily blame patriarchy or matriarchy for violence.
Patriarchy isn't always a bad thing just because a few men abuse it. Sometimes it can help. Dominance isn't about men over women. A woman can control a man and then what? She has been taken over by the patriarchal complex? To solve the horrors of women, all you have to do is stop targeting women to help. Let's help everyone regardless of gender.
Huffington Post is about as trustworthy as Fox News if you can believe either one of them.
Sioux Rose
MB: Read some history you babboon. You think patriarchy = male, it's way beyond such a simplistic notion. It's a complex system based on hierarchy, one that has led to all the other ism divisions that divide a society so that a few can conquer it, and keep everyone else fighting over crumbs, redundantly. You truly qualify as the absolute living embodiment of ignorance. And apparently are proud of it? Go watch superbowl, you troll.
I don't see how you expect to be taken seriously by anyone outside of your circle. If you want to solve problems, at least try to get some basic agreements. The history of the US comes from compromises. I didn't have to go to college to learn that. You can call people anything you want but did you notice how Bush like you sound. You remind me of "you're either with us or against us." Please, try to show some compassion and reach out. It's ok to be simple. Nobody's ignorant unless you and your circle define "not passionate enough" as ignorance. I'm enjoying the Superbowl too.
"You think patriarchy = male"
That was what you implied when you tied patriarchy to male domination and you're blaming the male species for everything. That's old school.
" It's a complex system based on hierarchy, one that has led to all the other ism divisions that divide a society so that a few can conquer it, and keep everyone else fighting over crumbs, redundantly. "
I agree on that.
"You truly qualify as the absolute living embodiment of ignorance. And apparently are proud of it?"
No need to get touchy. If you don't agree with someone else's point of view, just say so bur don't go making generalizations.
"Go watch superbowl, you troll."
Superbowl was fun to watch thank you but that has nothing to do with this discussion. You hate watching Superbowl, fine but that has nothing to do with this conversation. You don't know what a troll is unless you mean it as a short hand way of saying that you simply disagree.
It is weird how you call the Super Bowl just "Superbowl", all one word, no "the".
Is that your Martian accent showing or were you just trying to politely use SiouxRose's poor construction. ;)
Seriously, nice attempt to keep things civil.
I sometimes think that the "intesity" (read histrionic/overly emotional) of comments here and on other "lefty" sites is 30% of why the "left" does so poorly in our society, with another 30% being similar "intesity" in in-person "leftist" discussion (I'll leave you to fill in the other 40%).
So... good on ya.
-matti.
You got me on the spelling. I wouldn't have forgotten but come to think of it, I suppose I might have been unsuccessfully trying to get to her level of seeing things by using her language that I forgot the minor spelling error. I think she is way off in some of her posts.
Now that 40%. I don't know how much I'll fill but I'll say one thing about myself. I err on the side of Nader and Mckinney like most posters here. Where I differ with some is on gender ideology but I think I have some agreement even there. I had some great discussions with teddy and metal on male dominance, patriarchy, and stereotyping males and females in general. I have been on other progressive sites and despite all these years of people taking my name and automatically assuming that I have a problem with women, I'm still proud of my name. I may not be married but that doesn't mean I have problem with women.
Calling it old school to mention male violence against women doesn't make it not so. The evidence is everywhere. The chief reason women show up in the emergency room is battering. In Yugoslavia, Darfur, the Congo and many other places rape is a rampant weapon of war. The biggest industries of patriarchy are arms sales, pornography nd sex trade and drugs. The movies are filled with endless blowing up things and endless depictions of one man saving everyone through more violence or more realistic violence or more special effects violence.
It is a world and certainly a United states defined by militarism and corporate greed. Though there are women who want to participate in that power they are few and did not design this system of capitalist patriarchy and its hatred of women and the earth itself and its worship of war and violence. Now the Wall street types use money to control governments and of course to buy women to service them. Patriarchy is where we started to go wrong. It has just gotten more technologically sophisticated and entwined with capitalism. Patriarchy thinks it should control reproduction through wars rather than allow women to control their own fertility through self determination thats the Christian and every other religious patriarchy. Every study has shown the best way to proceed to development around the world is to empower women and girls. But men are so terrified of losing their status and project that women will turn around do the same to them They can't even seem to imagine a world that is not about domination by one set of males or another.
"Calling it old school to mention male violence against women doesn't make it not so. The evidence is everywhere."
I don't oppose speaking out against male violence against females but why limit it to that when female violence against male violence is on the rise and at a faster rate?
"The biggest industries of patriarchy are arms sales, pornography nd sex trade and drugs."
Patriarchy is about fathers controlling their families. The industries you mention are independent of patriarchy and matriarchy. I meet women who are proud gun owners and yet matriarchal in nature. I don't see the wisdom in blaming patriarchy for this.
I see what you are saying on patriarchy but while it used to be easy to associate patriarchy with militarism and corporate greed but there have been more women keeping feminism and yet supporting militarism and corporate greed. I don't mind empowering women and girls but we cannot afford to have one gender dominate the other. Hillary Clinton is matriarchal in nature but hasn't backed away from corporate greed and militarism. I understand where you are getting your information from and I respect that but there is growing proof from business and politics that replacing patriarchy with matriarchy will not necessarily defeat corporate greed and militarism. The group "Feminists for Life", Carly Fiorina, Marilyn Musgrave, etc... are examples.
The dictionary definitions of matriarchy and patriarchy only mention which gender controls the family or a nation. Maybe patriarchy got intertwined with wars and greed because men used to be the ones doing them the most are rarely women but the times have changed so I think it's getting even.
repeat deleted. oops.
The more I think about this article, the more I realize it is representative of the struggle of our own population to come to the truth.
In tone, this particular article is much less critical of Obama and the status quo pol structure than previous DMG. It's a step back from a head-on critique, less of a call for revolution.
Yes, Obama made the republicans look bad last week. Yes, it's about time someone callenged their house of cards.
BUT, DMG, I count on you to challenge the d-party house of cards, you know, the one that is replicating the republican house of cards, except for war mongering, where the d-party is challenging for the crown.
DMG, I have no doubt you've been feeling the heat. You've been right on the trail of the truth for some time now.
The door is opening out here in the real world to let in some real change. Yes, it migh be messy. It migt get worse before it gets better.
But the correct strategy is not what we've done in the past, "RUN AWAY! RUN AWAY!!!
To do that now, DMG, would be unbearably stupid.
Sioux Rose
Green's analysis of the items in need of rehabilitative therapy are right-on, but he still wants to believe in the democrats/Obama, as "the home team" ready, willing, and potentially eager to come in to score that much-anticipated democracy-saving home run.
ARRY: Great point about the tools of indoctrination that have been used to create a public totally unaware of the state of its own nation, or the true species of "foreign policy" being furthered by the MIC cum presidency.
I want to recommend the film, "The Good Shepherd" if any have not seen it. It is a somewhat historical reflection on the emergence of the CIA and how its members take it upon themselves to enact their own version of justice with self-proclaimed impunity.
Also, "Silkwood" is a powerful film worth viewing again, especially to dislodge any delusions about "clean nuclear power."
I've always felt that film, a compelling, near-magic medium, is the greatest tool for awakening minds. Unfortunately, most media has been bought out by those with a very real agenda to fulfill. And it's not one that does much for the greater good. "Century of the Self" explains what this is, how it works, and also constitutes an item worthy of viewing.
Nicely stated.
It is the job of the 'true believers' to believe, SB is the obvious case in point. Take a crumb and turn it into a five star meal. If the election of Scott Brown has any lesson for the sheeple, it is that Obama will move further to the right than he already is.
True believers as in the power to reform and correct? Scott Brown should be a message that Obama is leaving his supporters behind. We'll have to wait until after midterm to see what happens to Obama. If he does what you predict he'll do, then you're on.
What's wrong with taking someone's strengths and improving on it? It could solve their weakenesses.
Thanks for the film recommendations, Sioux Rose. You are right to say that Green "wants to believe" in Obama and the Democrats. In fact, I think one of the reasons DMG vilifies them so violently is because he had hoped in Obama so much. Like so many of us he really wanted to believe that the "hope" offered by Obama might have a little reality in it, despite his better instincts. Even now, you can see him trying to make Obama's feeble defiance of Wall Street into another sign of hope. But the bitter taste left behind by false hope should lead us to take the risk of embracing the new. As hard as it is to face, the old dream of America is dying - and waiting to be reborn in a new form, where material abundance is replaced by spiritual abundance and freedom means not freedom to bury ourselves in commodities, but in rich and satisfying relationships with free people.
The truth you ask for Professor Green. You've hit on a number of truths yourself. However, I believe you err in suggesting that "the public gets it". Professor Green, you state, "...,if only we would allow ourselves to think". What? This from an educator? We don't allow ourselves to think, anymore than we just allow ourselves to become accomplished musicians, or doctors, or professors. Thinking; solid, level-headed, critical thinking takes time and practice to develop and hone. Since before the Reagan era, we, as a nation, have handed that silly thing called thinking over to the "experts". Then, we celebrated the greatest country on earth and ceased devoting the time to thinking. We were entertained, and as the history shows, also very effectively brainwashed, all of us. Professor Green, you also cite a "profound national stupidity." Quite right! But, I would add to that, a profound national immorality and hypocrisy. And, the list could go on, couldn't it? Profound arrogance, profound racist, profound national fanatical Christian, profound torturing, and brutal national...
If we see societies and nations as loose affiliations of people seeking a common good, I choose to no longer affiliate with the United States. As the admonitions of our parents in becoming the company we keep, the polls of American's values scare the shit out of me, and I simply can no longer deny this basic truth. On torture, on war, on women's rights, on health care, the Tea party people, the Birthers, Republicans and Democrats, help me. That was the choice I had to make when I faced the truth. I really no longer care to enter into the shallow, self-interested and immoral discussion that passes for dialog in the U.S. Even among the educated and informed, we are forever tainted by the power of money. The bankers own the place. National governance is over. What is not adding up, Professor Green? Do the economic trends of all the wealth going to a handful not convince you? Was this "financial crisis" all an accident? I'm just over 50 years old. I identify with most everything in your article. And, I am completely with you on this quest for truth. However, you seem to stop short of facing the truth as to who has now gained the upper hand. Under the guise and fraud of national security, with the wholesale corruption of our political and judicial systems, the truth will never be known. Ever. We live in a world where the truth-tellers have, and will, be labeled as terrorists and jailed, killed, or commit suicide, or die in a mysterious plane crash. The truth is a casualty of this bloated and run amok military regime and the small group who always profit from the senseless slaughter of human beings. Dig deeper for the truth, Professor Green. It's there, but I would think hard about putting it all out on the table. The truth can be a very dangerous thing. Forget Obama. Forget Congress. They're the puppets. Look closely, Professor Green, There's someone behind the curtain. We were supposedly a country based on the rule of law. Now that that's gone, what next? Look closely at whose laws we're increasingly following. Follow the money, Professor Green. That advice alone has led many an investigator to the truth. Beware, however. Terrorists will increasingly be turning up on college campuses.
The truth is, Professor Green, if you really think about it, it just doesn't look good for the U.S. You've acknowledged a profound national stupidity which cannot be cured for a generation, or more. There are no selfless savior statesmen left. The ones with all the money and political influence are not inclined to lessen their grip on power and control. They have the biggest guns, the most prisons and secret weapons we haven't even heard of, yet. The U.S. intelligence and homeland security work for who? I'm just thinking, Professor Green. The truth? Yeah, it's out there. But, we will never, ever, know it. That is built into the system. The truth is that our country has terminal cancer and we have not faced it.
It's also important to understand that this is not a conspiracy theory. Conspiracy theories are a distraction from the study of the real power relations that exist in this country. Pointing out the class nature of American society is not equivalent to a "conspiracy theory." The inability to distinguish the two concepts is part of the stupidity which DMG points out so ably.
"The rise of the elite, as we have already made clear, was not and could not have been caused by a plot; and the tenability of the conception does not rest upon the existence of any secret or any publicly known organization." - C. Wright Mills
However, mass stupidity doesn't just happen by chance. DMG and many similar writers published on Common Dreams share his inability to draw the logical conclusion from the facts which he lays out so well. "America, the Movie" was produced and sold for a specific purpose by a specific class of Americans for their own purposes.
One of the most widespread illusions propagated by media left and right is that politicians have a great deal of actual power to make changes. This illusion serves many useful purposes. It hides, however, the truth that at the very least several decades, politicians, including Presidents, have become mid-level functionaries in the power elite, essentially go-fers, not go-tos for that elite.
DMG seems to think that if only we could get back to good old liberalism of FDR and Obama could throw a few punches like Harry Truman that we would be on the road to recovery. His astonishment at Obama's slow learning curve and the public's learning curve could be quickly overcome if he would drop the democratic illusion and realize that we live in a managed democracy, as Sheldon Wolin put it. The sickness, as you point out, is much deeper than he suspects.
Sioux Rose
BOYD: As usual, elegant and incisive post. Thank you for sharing your insights.
RE: "Won't somebody just give us a little truth?" - David Michael Green
ME: But...but...but, the truth is so sc...sca...scareeeey! It's so much easier to just worry about all those terrorists "over there" than to deal with reality "over here".
I think DMG might be on to something. I know Obama has been a big letdown but finally Obama had the chance to be honest about himself and he didn't blow it. Look, I know I've come under fire for not being passionate and some people can call me a naive boy and I think I understand but let me ask you people one thing. When you all were children, did your parents raise you by trashing you 24/7/365 all through your childhood? Maybe this sounds stupid but I always thought that the best way to correct a child's weaknesses is not to beat and torture them all the time about it but to make them focus on their strengths and then try to help them find some ways to get them around their weaknesses. I don't think Obama is like a child but maybe he doesn't really understand his weaknesses very well because the right wing is putting more pressure on him into believing that he's strong by following their authoritarian beliefs while there less progressive pressure to make him think differently and get his real strengths out there. I know Obama's been a big letdown but at least he speaks well and honestly so there must be a good chance he can be convinced to turn things around. I think I understand that there was no high tech stuff to brainwash people in the 1930s that exist today but I still believe that maybe they wouldn't have been as brainwashed as they are today and just maybe there might be a way to overcome it? Maybe it's not just about Obama but it's us.
Shawn,
I am saying this with kindness and sincerity, but you are being naive. Obama, like other politicians, merely is a puppet for the super wealthy, corporations, and military industrial complex. He does not make the decisions. They tell him what to say and do. This system has existed for decades. While DMG points out some undeniable truths, he also is being naive thinking Obama and the Dems will change all of this. Fact is, they will not nor do they want to because they know who butters their bread when it comes to reelection. Right now, there is a huge orgy taking place of Democrats and Republicans courting Wall Street for campaign contributions. Obama tries to play Mr. Popular by trying not to anger either side of the aisle. Thus, he is willing to make tremendous sacrifices to appease Ds and Rs (reference the health care bill) at the public's expense. Do what you want, believe what you want, but don't be fooled by the shell game.
Well said, gracchus. I wonder if the reason for the resistance to this viewpoint is that it seems to make American history into a conspiracy theory. But I don't believe that it does. Conspiracy theories are a distraction from the study of the real power relations that exist in this country. Pointing out the class nature of American society is not equivalent to a "conspiracy theory." The inability to distinguish the two concepts is part of the stupidity which DMG points out so ably.
The rise of the power elite was not the result of a conspiracy, but of a confluence of shared interests in an economic system that favored those adept at capital accumulation. Professional party politicians, including Presidents, were long ago relegated to the middle levels of power where they serve a specific function according to their skill in serving the interests of the elite.
DMG seems to think that if only we could get back to good old liberalism of FDR and Obama could throw a few punches like Harry Truman that we would be on the road to recovery. His astonishment at Obama's slow learning curve could be quickly overcome if he would drop the illusion of democracy which has been so skillfully managed and realize that our system is an "inverted totalitarianism", as Sheldon Wolin put it. The sickness, unfortunately, is much deeper than he suspects.
What you said about politicians being relegated to the middle levels of power I was thinking about the same thing. There's got to be some way to get it back.