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The Greeks Get It
Here's to the Greeks. They know what to do when corporations pillage and loot their country. They know what to do when Goldman Sachs and international bankers collude with their power elite to falsify economic data and then make billions betting that the Greek economy will collapse. They know what to do when they are told their pensions, benefits and jobs have to be cut to pay corporate banks, which screwed them in the first place. Call a general strike. Riot. Shut down the city centers. Toss the bastards out. Do not be afraid of the language of class warfare-the rich versus the poor, the oligarchs versus the citizens, the capitalists versus the proletariat. The Greeks, unlike most of us, get it.
The former right-wing government of Greece lied about the size of the country's budget deficit. It was not 3.7 percent of gross domestic product but 13.6 percent. And it now looks like the economies of Spain, Ireland, Italy and Portugal are as bad as Greece's, which is why the euro has lost 20 percent of its value in the last few months. The few hundred billion in bailouts for other faltering European states, like our own bailouts, have only forestalled disaster. This is why the U.S. stock exchange is in free fall and gold is rocketing upward. American banks do not have heavy exposure in Greece, but Greece, as most economists concede, is only the start. Wall Street is deeply invested in other European states, and when the unraveling begins the foundations of our own economy will rumble and crack as loudly as the collapse in Athens. The corporate overlords will demand that we too impose draconian controls and cuts or see credit evaporate. They have the money and the power to hurt us. There will be more unemployment, more personal and commercial bankruptcies, more foreclosures and more human misery. And the corporate state, despite this suffering, will continue to plunge us deeper into debt to make war. It will use fear to keep us passive. We are being consumed from the inside out. Our economy is as rotten as the economy in Greece. We too borrow billions a day to stay afloat. We too have staggering deficits, which can never be repaid. Heed the dire rhetoric of European leaders.
"The euro is in danger," German Chancellor Angela Merkel told lawmakers last week as she called on them to approve Germany's portion of the bailout plan. "If we do not avert this danger, then the consequences for Europe are incalculable, and then the consequences beyond Europe are incalculable."
Beyond Europe means us. The right-wing government of Kostas Karamanlis, which preceded the current government of George Papandreou, did what the Republicans did under George W. Bush. They looted taxpayer funds to enrich their corporate masters and bankrupt the country. They stole hundreds of millions of dollars from individual retirement and pension accounts slowly built up over years by citizens who had been honest and industrious. They used mass propaganda to make the population afraid of terrorists and surrender civil liberties, including habeas corpus. And while Bush and Karamanlis, along with the corporate criminal class they abetted, live in unparalleled luxury, ordinary working men and women are told they must endure even more pain and suffering to make amends. It is feudal rape. And there has to be a point when even the American public-which still believes the fairy tale that personal will power and positive thinking will lead to success-will realize it has been had.
We have seen these austerity measures before. Latin Americans, like the Russians, were forced by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to gut social services, end subsidies on basic goods and food, and decimate the income levels of the middle class-the foundation of democracy-in the name of fiscal responsibility. Small entrepreneurs, especially farmers, were wiped out. State industries were sold off by corrupt government officials to capitalists for a fraction of their value. Utilities and state services were privatized.
What is happening in Greece, what will happen in Spain and Portugal, what is starting to happen here in states such as California, is the work of a global, white-collar criminal class. No government, including our own, will defy them. It is up to us. Barack Obama is simply the latest face that masks the corporate state. His administration serves corporate interests, not ours. Obama, like Goldman Sachs or Citibank, does not want the public to see how the Federal Reserve Bank acts as a private account and ATM machine for Wall Street at our expense. He, too, has helped orchestrate the largest transference of wealth upward in American history. He serves our imperial wars, refuses to restore civil liberties, and has not tamed our crippling deficits. His administration gutted regulatory agencies that permitted BP to turn the Gulf of Mexico into a toxic swamp. The refusal of Obama to intervene in a meaningful way to save the gulf's ecosystem and curtail the abuses of the natural gas and oil corporations is not an accident. He knows where power lies. BP and its employees handed more than $3.5 million to federal candidates over the past 20 years, with the largest chunk of their money going to Obama, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
We are facing the collapse of the world's financial system. It is the end of globalization. And in these final moments the rich are trying to get all they can while there is still time. The fusion of corporatism, militarism and internal and external intelligence agencies-much of their work done by private contractors-has given these corporations terrifying mechanisms of control. Think of it, as the Greeks do, as a species of foreign occupation. Think of the Greek riots as a struggle for liberation.
Dwight Macdonald laid out the consequences of a culture such as ours, where the waging of war was "the normal mode of existence." The concept of perpetual war, which eluded the theorists behind the 19th and early 20th century reform and social movements, including Karl Marx, has left social reformers unable to deal with this effective mechanism of mass control. The old reformists had limited their focus to internal class struggle and, as Macdonald noted, never worked out "an adequate theory of the political significance of war." Until that gap is filled, Macdonald warned, "modern socialism will continue to have a somewhat academic flavor."
Macdonald detailed in his 1946 essay "The Root Is Man" the marriage between capitalism and permanent war. He despaired of an effective resistance until the permanent war economy, and the mentality that went with it, was defeated. Macdonald, who was an anarchist, saw that the Marxists and the liberal class in Western democracies had both mistakenly placed their faith for human progress in the goodness of the state. This faith, he noted, was a huge error. The state, whether in the capitalist United States or the communist Soviet Union, eventually devoured its children. And it did this by using the organs of mass propaganda to keep its populations afraid and in a state of endless war. It did this by insisting that human beings be sacrificed before the sacred idol of the market or the utopian worker's paradise. The war state provides a constant stream of enemies, whether the German Hun, the Bolshevik, the Nazi, the Soviet agent or the Islamic terrorist. Fear and war, Macdonald understood, was the mechanism that let oligarchs pillage in the name of national security.
"Modern totalitarianism can integrate the masses so completely into the political structure, through terror and propaganda, that they become the architects of their own enslavement," he wrote. "This does not make the slavery less, but on the contrary more- a paradox there is no space to unravel here. Bureaucratic collectivism, not capitalism, is the most dangerous future enemy of socialism."
Macdonald argued that democratic states had to dismantle the permanent war economy and the propaganda that came with it. They had to act and govern according to the non-historical and more esoteric values of truth, justice, equality and empathy. Our liberal class, from the church and the university to the press and the Democratic Party, by paying homage to the practical dictates required by hollow statecraft and legislation, has lost its moral voice. Liberals serve false gods. The belief in progress through war, science, technology and consumption has been used to justify the trampling of these non-historical values. And the blind acceptance of the dictates of globalization, the tragic and false belief that globalization is a form of inevitable progress, is perhaps the quintessential illustration of Macdonald's point. The choice is not between the needs of the market and human beings. There should be no choice. And until we break free from serving the fiction of human progress, whether that comes in the form of corporate capitalism or any other utopian vision, we will continue to emasculate ourselves and perpetuate needless human misery. As the crowds of strikers in Athens understand, it is not the banks that are important but the people who raise children, build communities and sustain life. And when a government forgets whom it serves and why it exists, it must be replaced.
"The Progressive makes History the center of his ideology," Macdonald wrote in "The Root Is Man." "The Radical puts Man there. The Progressive's attitude is optimistic both about human nature (which he thinks is good, hence all that is needed is to change institutions so as to give this goodness a chance to work) and about the possibility of understanding history through scientific method. The Radical is, if not exactly pessimistic, at least more sensitive to the dual nature; he is skeptical about the ability of science to explain things beyond a certain point; he is aware of the tragic element in man's fate not only today but in any collective terms (the interests of Society or the Working Class); the Radical stresses the individual conscience and sensibility. The Progressive starts off from what is actually happening; the Radical starts off from what he wants to happen. The former must have the feeling that History is ‘on his side.' The latter goes along the road pointed out by his own individual conscience; if History is going his way, too, he is pleased; but he is quite stubborn about following ‘what ought to be' rather than ‘what is.' "
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217 Comments so far
Show AllCicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
A friend of mine who works at the local library was telling me that in our city of 6 million people with 30,000 homeless and over 750,000 unemployed the only aid organization that regularly assists people with bus/fare money to allow them to search for jobs only gives out ten (10) rail cards per week. The lines to get these 10 cards usually a couple hundred people in them--most of whom don't know about the limit.
To say that America is not prepared for another more severe economic crash is putting it mildly. That's why I want to get the fuck out of this fascist red anthill before the bottom truly falls out.
Yes indeed- but where can one just simply "go" ? I could run away to one of the PIIG countries with which I am eligible for citizenship, but "they" have all ready destroyed that economy ~ of what value would a "broke", "American" refugee be to any country now that the world is totally sinking into a hell that will be almost biblical in its description?
There is no escape. We Americans will have to make our stand for the people right here where we were born. Let's face it. it's right here where we will die, in victory or defeat. This at least removes all the frantic running around seeking an escape. It's right here where it'll end, or begin anew, for us. We can at least TRY to make the ideals of 1776 real FOR ONCE in our history, before the curtain drops on us.We don't even have to wonder about how it'll unfold.We'll know when we see it. We'll know the time & place.
Inb, i wish i resonated with that 'Founding fathers' idea. I am always running into it. Yet i just don't.
I see it as the u.s. version of organized religion. I really do.
America is a church unto itself. "God bless america". Manifest destiny. I get the enlightenment idea. However. We see where it ended up. Obviously, something was deeply amiss.
Because, it isn't about the 'state', it is about each individual's mind and heart. The State is merely the sum of it's parts. Which is human beings. It doesn't just come from the sky.
Sorry. I didn't mean to go on in response to you.... This is a general post, really.
But i do resonate with what you said, about knowing when and how it will happen, when we see it and feel it. Absolutely....
peace,
rita
Yes, rita! I, too, have always felt that way about the mystification of the "Founding Fathers." I just don't get it. If some of their documents can be used to counter the current fascistization of the country, then so much the better, of course. But let's be clear-eyed about this! The "revolution" advanced by those slave-holding men was a bourgeois revolution at best, and merely served to consolidate gains acquired by the sheer force of colonialism. Indeed, in many respects the policies of the English throne were kinder to the Native Americans than were the wishes and acts of the American settlers. What we really need is a whole new paradigm, and if, in creating one, we can recuperate SOME of the principles of the "Founding Fathers," I have no objection. On the contrary. It might help people through the transition. But, as your moniker implies, we must transform! And we must be ready!
Peace,
C
Maybe let's take the spirit of the OP as intended. It's a good post to just nod your head in agreement and get to it. As everyone on here knows, we can find unlimited reasons to carp and nitpick, but at some point we gotta lower our heads and start charging the wall, trusting that we'll figure out the restof the puzzle later. We can't afford to delay any more.
I agree! inb is the radical side; I am the progressive side; we need each others ideas and energy.
it's going to take everyone to do their part. and no way we're all going to agree on everything. there are way too many areas of agreement between almost all of us. the one-upmanship regarding who knows more about what places our egos in front of our goals. here's to hoping we can start moving from the process of internal radicalization that's been happening for the last decade to the hard part: action.
this summer, for those of you inclined to more socialist ambitions, the conferences are going to really need your presence. we have got to start networking for real. liberals fighting the good fight need to do the same and start mobilizing in those communities as well. especially fighting the corporatist dominance in your organizations. we can argue about the rest later, but for now, corporate power, neoliberal power, and government corruption must be stopped as soon as is possible. nothing else matters, and just these three tasks will keep most of us very busy for the forseeable future.
i'd also like to petition CD to implement an IM system in here so people can try to connect with each other out of public view. if anyone is interested in that project, please notify the CD staff. there's too much we can't say in a public forum that needs to be said.
>>there's too much we can't say in a public forum that needs to be said.<<
I totally agree, and this is a good example of what they've done to us already. We are afraid to really speak our minds in a public forum. There is no real freedom of speech in this country anymore. One of GWB's press secretaries, Ari Fleischer, once warned us, "Americans need to watch what they say."
Count me in , you guys! And this includes everyone. And those who posted after my own post, including ibn.
And the 'canadian' poster as well.
I think we need a CD conference. I really do. We need to connect.
I have paradigm shifting suggestions, as i truly do work with the transformation of consciousness. Truly. I offer this with urgency, commitment and caring.
rita
i'm going to try and set up a facebook page in my screen name and use that as a clearinghouse to move communications so people can choose whether or not to come out of their shells. thanks to both kent and rita for the support. try finding ways to mention it on other relevant threads as well from time to time.
drone, how will that work? Post back here about it, ok? Thank you.
clovis,
This is the reason we are in hell: you (and your whole generation) "don't get [the founding fathers] wisdom of refusing to bow to a King or a tyrant, I wager, because you don't know them. You haven't read about them from recent historians who have made a living exposing the warts and all accounts that reveal they are you.
Right now, it is safe to assume you are typing on an Asian wage-slave-labor keyboard since nearly 100 percent of keyboards are made in Asia. In fact most of the items you buy at Walmart were produced under the watchful eye of security and police forces of Asia, who brutally abuse any worker who tries to form a Union or raise wages or otherwise escape their plight. Do you wear clothes? Workers on Sapian must surrender their passports to the corporation and are entrapped on that cursed island until they die or are released by the textile giants who enslave them.
So, who is the real slavemaster?
Look in the mirror, clovis.
It is you.
TJ
clovis,
The Spirit of 1776 was short-lived and was not ever intended to solve all of the British Empires evils: that utopian objective was futile, and the pragmatists at the Continental Congress knew it. They were just lucky to patch together a Confederation to overthrow the crown.
We are in the same situation today. We must bury the hatchet with the tea party, and join them, otherwise, we will never have the numbers to affect change. No, we don't like them anymore than New Englanders of the North liked the slavers of the South, but the fact is WE NEED THEM.
TJ
"We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately" - Ben Franklin, July 4, 1776
It's ok. No offense taken. I come late to the patriot game & claim no in-depth knowledge of it. It all boils down to "the-words-on-the-paper" for me. The preamble sums it up for me: promote the general welfare, establish justice, provide for the common defense (ie.: love one another, take care of each other; be fair; defend the commoners, the little people, especially the helpless, against the depredations of the arrogant "high & mighty"). I can express these sentiments without nodding & winking, or feeling embarassment. They are timeless ideals & universal. Now's the time to make these words a living reality, because there is a ferocious Predator set loose upon the world trying to make these very notions disappear. It must be brought down before it destroys all.
Good response, lnb.
As a non-American and one who has never lived in the US, (just a little further north) my observation is that America* views itself as the only place on earth with a unique "relationship" with God. God apparently blesses and curses only what happens in America and nothing much exists outside its borders. I think this view needs to be challenged at every turn, and for this reason: The problem faced by all nations is the same, despotic rule by the large corporations. If one nation is able to loosen the grip of the corps, then all nations will benefit. But, if a nation is inward looking as America tends to be, then it will fall victim to the corporate lords.
The challenge is to carry this message to people who are not receptive to it. Can one find a way to convince and persuade people and still manage to keep the lines of communication open? Can one convince people that their so-called freedom of religion and freedom of life is threatened by the very forces that appear to uphold that freedom? Having such a group of people onside is crucial to the success of any sort of campaign to dilute the power of the corps enough to take it back from them.
SayBlade,
If i do say so myself, (sorry, but i am not being unhumble here. Just very truthful)...I have experience in the area you bring up and i think it is highly insightful.
I work with people of many different perspecives. As a psychologist (but much more than that,really), i tald to vets about their experiences in Iraq (only a couple right now, actually). But also people who actually believed it was o.k. to torture to get that all important iformation from them.
And i always have a way to talk about it in a way that is respectful and speaks to their inner sense of humaness (only if i can sense and see that is one that is strong enough to reach. That is the basis. And then i speak to them very individually based upon who i sense they are and how they process their world. I am not even judgemental about it. But the intentionality and my definitive speaking from my own deep caring about and sense of justice is always quite strong.
I hope this is speaks to you and what you have been pondering and wrestling with.
rita
lnb, I have taken my every breath here and refuse to be chased away. The whole founding fathers thing is a steaming pile. It is time for a new way, a new nation or nations to form. Tom Paine thought government should be adjusted, modified, or dismantled and reconstructed, to accommodate the ever changing times. So it is now, times like never before in need of a government like never before. The challenge is arduous. The foe extremely powerful.
It makes no sense to run like a coward, especially if one has spent so much time complaining. Part of the mindset adjustment should be selflessness, sacrifice for the cause one professes to hold in esteem. I find the suggestion revolting and lose respect for those willing to turn their backs and run.
Peace and goodwill, Buck
Buck,
Please reconsider your comment. I choose to leave the U.S. going on 5 years now. I don't think I can come back except to visit family and friends, and even that is getting tough. I have never been in a physical fight, but I doubt you would call me a coward to my face. You couldn't intimidate me intellectually, or physically. Personally, I found that, as our parents admonished, "You are the company you keep." I left the U.S. because I could no longer handle the superficial and adolescent conversation taking place, and the many Limbaugh, O'Reilly, Beck fans who find independent thinking a crime. And with no hint of national IQ improving any time in the near future. I don't watch sports or like to go to malls. So Buck, why should I have stayed? I no longer wanted to be there. My and "my country's" values are no longer the same. The vast majority of Americans have no sense of justice or equality. They've bought into the trickle down philosophy. Let the rich keep getting richer and hope a few crumbs come our way. How well is that working out after 35 years of listening and buying into that shit? I've watched very closely for my 50+ years. I have written hundreds of letters to the editor and guest editorials, complaining, as you say, Buck. The "cause I profess to hold in esteem" is to live more simply, more quietly, and treating fairly all those I come in contact with. The U.S. is a war mongering, torturing, lawless empire. And, the vast majority of it's citizens have been thoroughly brainwashed. Brainwashed enough to think there is really something of substance in the U.S. to hold onto. I don't. Sorry, Buck. I've struggled with this. This idea of yours, so militarily American, of losing respect for people "willing to turn your backs and run" is a feeble copout itself. I see it as a matter of survival. There you are Buck, walking along the side of the road minding your own business. A tractor trailer runs off the road and is heading right for you. What are you going to do, Buck? Turn your cowardly ass and run? A prudent business person knows when it is time to cut and run. Or would you just stay and lose money year after year. What makes the U.S. so special Buck. The way I see it, the U.S. is inhabited by a people who have acquiesced to crimes against humanity, crimes against nature, and who are wholly decoupled from reality. When you make statements like, "The challenge is arduous. The foe is extremely powerful." I realize the fantasy world you must be inhabiting. One question for you. Are you willing to kill people, Buck? The reason I ask is that this will be the only way to wrest power from those who currently hold it. Were they to see you as a threat, you would be killed in an instant. Buck, I am sorry to say that your life, my life, or any other person's life is absolutely meaningless to our government. Absolutely valueless. Once I realized that, Buck, when I was absolutely sure of that, I sort of wanted out. Can you relate to me, just a little bit Buck? I don't want to kill people and I don't want to live next to someone who has, or someone who thinks it's alright for their tax money to be spent killing people. Buck, the U.S. embodies a culture of death. Oh, and I absolutely deplore violent movies and TV. What should I have stayed and fought for, Buck?
So very well said. I wish I could leave. For all the reasons you've stated. But if I'm forced to stay here, I hope that somehow fundamental change can come about without a bloody revolution. (I have extreme doubts about that, however.) Look at South Africa. I always assumed that the only way the whites would be driven from power would be through a bloody revolution - remember the book, "Time Is Running Out"? But that country was able to realize a transformational shift in power and government through peaceful means. Is that possible here? I guess we'll find out soon enough.
Wayout, Intimidation was never my intent. I have gone through all the same thoughts. I have virtually the same perception of this degenerate society and that includes the people on this site. There are three that I perceive to be morally sound with strength of conviction, but I don't "know" many of them. The problems are clearly larger and more widespread than the corrupt government. It is sickening to watch my 20 yr old nephew play those horrid killing games, disheartening to listen to my college grad nieces talk the Limbaugh talk, disgusting to hear the calls for blood and ropes here.
So what is a man to do? It is simple really, follow your conscience. I spent my years going from one forest to the next. Under the warm embrace of their canopy is when I feel at ease, at home, in tune with Nature and the wonderful Universe I was gifted to inhabit. Deserts are beautiful, but just something I drive through to get to the trees on the other side. I've done all of the lower 48, seen the little towns with their ethnic architectures, talked to all people encountered, listened to their dialects and philosophies, watched as the buildings melted into corporate genericism.
I've had an aversion to authority, all authority, my whole life (too much to tell). I first started taking action when they decided to cut down my trees in the National Forests. Letters to editors, trips to d.c., marching through towns holding signs all proved futile.
I tried again during the cheney administration to stop the spread of war's destruction. Same result. Then a strange thing happen. I had one of those moments like no other moment. Time seemed to stop and everything came into focus crystal clear. It wasn't about me. I'm no one. It isn't about humanity. Humanity is but a specie. It's about life, all life, and I decided to do something for it, give back in gratitude for the delights I was given.
I lost my appetite for wealth and hungered for simplicity. Most of the possessions were cast off. I became determined to live as a pauper surrounded by prosperity. I would never pay tribute to the oligarchs again. Life itself is the greatest treasure.
So, you decided to leave and have to live with that decision. I decided to stay and fight because I'm needed. Who else will tell those children that there is more to life than videos and electric toothbrushes? What better way exists to show them that there is another way of living? In this world of barred doors, locks and chains, people trust me. I've surrendered myself to my cause. You have just surrendered.
I doubt that anyone who knows me would say I've surrendered. I just refuse to live under illusions, Buck. Good luck and Peace in your fight.
Thank you and I wish you the best in all things. I reread your first response and we are not that different. I couldn't help noticing that you kept saying our country and our government. I believe your words are sincere, all of them, and that you haven't surrendered. Do what you can wherever you are. I've been saying that the best chance for change in this country is help from elsewhere. We are losing in this struggle and I know it, no illusions. Reading the rest of the posts makes that clear.
The American people will change because it will be forced on them. Most Americans spent 12 years of their lives in American indoctrination camps called public schools. Copied from the Prussians. The State is God. They will lose their faith when the state collapses. That will be the time for change
Wayout,
Your are absolutely right, moved to New Zealand 3 years ago, with no good reason to move back. Get out while you can people, the Titanic has hit the iceberg. They keep telling you it can't sink, you let them convince you not to get onto the life boats, THE SHIP IS LOST LEAVE NOW.
I wouldn't imply such a thing. We , all of us, aren't "walking the same path". I think the illusion is that there is any "safe haven" to be found anywhere in the world, so you'll make your stand where you are, & we'll all make our stand where we are. There is , I believe, a non-material/non-atheist aspect to the challenge coming down upon us at this time (& no, I don't believe in the cartoonish "armageddon" scenario, but there is, I believe, a "purification/transition" coming our way, which will be traumatic for many, & fatal too).
Thank you for writing this.
Wayout: I admire your courage and conviction for standing up for the right thing and acting accordingly.
May you have good health and much happiness wherever you choose to live!
I agree with both wayman and buck 50/50. Moving out of the country isn't easy and one thing that does not get discussed is that the conditioning of society in this nation makes it difficult to properly adjust in other nations unless one breaks out. As you and I know, breaking out of the conformity can be painful and tearful but once it becomes clear that the long term rewards make up for that, there is less to feel like regretting about. Then there is also cost and affordability. Even visiting Europe isn't cheap let alone living there. Accommodation is mixed in Europe but more open in South Africa. Another thing to consider and I think Buck has it here is that the dysfunctional poison in the US is spreading to other nations. What do we do? Do we move or stay and fight it out? Moving is a great option since expats can warn people in other nations about the USA's neocon/neolib tricks and help them withstand the storm. On the other hand, staying here to prevent the poisonous storm at its source could equally help. At my age and single, I could only afford to do the latter. Maybe when I get older I might be better prepared to move. On the other hand, if my fighting it out here leads to improvement and isn't marginalized, I might stick to staying.
.
Nice post, lnb.
Yes, the Wall Street banksters have poisoned the wells in so many nations that it will be hard to find refuge.
While Americans' understanding of the new world economic order may be delusional, most people in other nations have a better understanding and their disdain for Americans will grow as global human suffering escalates.
Isn't it about time to drop the Cicero tag?
I'm reminded every time I see it of the quote I first saw attributed to Oliver Wendell Holmes...consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds.
By repeating it over and over you diminish the quality of your perceptive observations...
Interesting quote, generalcommander.
Pardon me ... it depends on what is being repeated ... propaganda and its constant repetition worked for george, dick, and the Republicans a la 9/11, Iraq, Afghanistan ... and their 'gift' keeps on giving!
"Do not be afraid of the language of class warfare-the rich versus the poor, the oligarchs versus the citizens, the capitalists versus the proletariat."
Finally, an author that speaks my language.
This is war. People are dieing.
It matters not whether by bullet, bankruptcy, or poisoned bayou.
The capitalist's ducks are in line.
They have control of almost everything; land, food, shelter, clothing, energy, water, governments and their armies, media, and of course have a praetorian guard under contract.
What they don't have control of is you,
if you choose not to let them.
An excellent analysis by Chris Hedges! It should be required reading for all americans, with a quiz to follow for testing comprehension.
Hedges gets it, too. Superb article.
That's why he sounds half-mad in many of his articles. "Getting it" is making him desperate.
More of the American people are awake to this than most people realize. Money is "Man Made", the international banking system is "Man Made", the value we attribute to "Money" is "Man Made" and the comming global collapse of the worlds economy is "Man Made". In addition their (the powers that be) coming solution will be "man" made in the image and likeness of their desire to control all.
They will fail for the most part because those of us that are awake, know what to do. Let's get busy!
It's only called rioting when reported by the owner class-owned megaphone known as "The Media." In truth, mass street demos no matter how unruly they get in situations like these, are righteous acts of rebellion and dissent.
They are life-affirming.
Good point, coyote. Long life life. Down with the death-merchants.
I'm sixty years old, a nice long life in my opinion. I'm still in pretty good health. Frankly, I'd much rather die in the streets fighting a class war than spend two years in pain fighting cancer. Unfortunately I'm not much of an organizer or a leader. I am, however, willing to be a grunt for the cause.
We can borrow an infinite amount of money forever on our American Express card. Just remember, don't open any letter if it comes from a bank.
Later we'll say, well it was nice while it lasted.
At that point, (which will never come in your lifetime, right?) we will have a choice:
1. 70% unemployment like Argentina had when they went bankrupt.
OR
2. Cashier the U.S. military to the size of, say, France's military, and get out of the business of propping up dictators with death squads. Also legalize pot, get a justice system that aims to restore people into taxpayers (otherwise we lose a trillion dollars), stop playing with ginormous health care and banking crooks (more trillions). Cashier all nuclear power subsidies. Tax coal for all the problems it causes the nation.
Your senator will choose number 1. Then you'll choose number 2 in November.
Extremely well stated, Dr. Hedges. Sadly, I fear we will end up seducing ourselves by what we want to believe rather than what is reality. Self-imposed ignorance is a sure route to social oblivion. The oligarchs have fed us the elixir and we have willingly drunk it. Soon the death throes will rise from our throats and our country will lie in ruins. The opiate was, in the final analysis, "Change We Can Believe In!"
I found the whole campaigne disingenuous to the point of nausea.
I even thought there was a subliminal quality to it in my more angry moments. It seemed that everyone was in love with this guy overnight. I didn't get it.
And the belief that just one vote would take care of every evil the u.s. had wrought. Reminds of the church's 'sale of indulgences'. Get out of purgatory for a quick fee.
Redemption doesn't come cheap. The fact that people actually believed it would all be different because they went out and voted for a biracial man. That is part of the lack of depth of understanding i see around me.
And it isn't just america. People around the world were celebrating. It only made me feel more alienated and distraught.
This article demonstrates exactly why we need to thoughtfully make up our minds before deciding what to do as we try to stop this Empire building madness. I know that someone will show up here and say that Europe is failing because it's somehow their own fault while speaking nothing about Washington's and Wall $treet's involvement in trying to tickle Greece and the rest of Europe into bankruptcy and then try to make it look as if neoliberalism and disaster capitalism are Europe's only hope while blaming socialism for the downfall when it was socialism that saved Europe from falling grace unlike the US where the economy crashes and gives us butt sores ! Some people would ask me whether I think I should stay and fight it out or leave the country all together. 3 months out of the country may not be enough to get a perfectly accurate view but I will admit that it takes a lot of preparation, years of it, to be able to make the move and our younger generation will have a much harder time mustering the money needed to be able to afford staying in most any nation outside the US. I was lucky to have relatives to help me cut down a lot of the traveling expenses that would have otherwise made it cost prohibitive for me to visit overseas. Then there is the problem of the US spreading its poison to other nations. I think that what has to happen is that some of us stay here and try to stop the poison from spreading to other nations and others who want to move out of the country prepare to move and warn those nations of US tricks and strategies so that they can be prepared to withstand the storm. Right now at my age, I can only afford to do the former option. Maybe I will do the latter option when I muster enough money to move out of this country. As part of my efforts, I will continue to spread the word for Midge Potts, Green Party for MO Senate, and continue advising my small business clients on strategies and moves to fight off conceding to big corporate criminals. I will also continue to apply what I learned from overseas to the problems right here at home so that I just might be less jealous and upset that Europe is laughing at the US.
Revolution ... long overdue.
From the article:
"Fear and war, Macdonald understood, was the mechanism that let oligarchs pillage in the name of national security.
'Modern totalitarianism can integrate the masses so completely into the political structure, through terror and propaganda, that they become the architects of their own enslavement," he wrote.' "
Terror and propaganda....9/11. It didn't start in 2001, but the 'New Pearl Harbor' that was perpetrated in NY then was the 'golden spike' in the railway to perpetual war with unseen, unknown enemies.
The thousands of people who know the truth about that day need to speak up and make sure the truth is known. If millions of Americans can be shown and can come to understand why, how and who perpetrated that abomination - a major step could be taken to pierce all of the lies and begin the process of 'disenslaving' ourselves to the globalist, elitist cabal.