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Among Ciphers, Barn Burners and Confidence Artists: A Comb-Over Treatment for Declining Empire
Like postmodernist architecture, in which the aesthetic criteria of a structure's exterior often possesses little correlation to its interior function, media age journalistic and political style exhibits a similar disparity between facade and content: The political content aired by mass media institutions and the cant of the governmental class are the political equivalent of the useless ornamental pediments, context-devoid cupolas, and empty atriums of postmodernist architecture.
It is not a coincidence that Donald Trump has been responsible for having erected some of the gaudiest, emptiest, architecturally dishonest structures, blotting the landscape, east of the Atlantic Ocean, west of the sands of Dubai.
Citizen Trump is a human analog of these characteristics: a man possessed of an extroverted, confident public persona that serves as cover for an interior emptiness. In fact, he is possessed of an unswerving self-regard (as extreme as it is inexplicable) that seems a form of derangement.
From Sarah Palin to Barack Obama to Donald Trump, these personality types, minted and forged within the aggressive superficiality of the current era, are going to be as good as it gets. These are the varieties of ciphers, confidence artists and quislings who will front the present day corporate order of Botox Politics, the quintessence of an era that has conjoined the shallow and the grotesque in a marriage made in the witless limbo of the media hologram.
Born into wealth and privilege, Trump -- this cross-hatched haired, reality television popinjay -- is marketed as a man of the multitudes. Perhaps, he is: On one dismal level, he is the very emblem of the callow, infantilized, highchair tyrants spawned by the Viagra Capitalism of late U.S. empire.
Strange and amusing, in a grimly ironic way, unlike Trump, it is the political left, bereft of power in the structure of corporate oligarchy, who stands accused of being out of touch elitists. In a political culture as far down the rabbit hole as the one that exists, in the U.S., the surest way to be branded an elitist is to refuse to serve the elite.
All who are reading this article are, therefore, excused if the Bilderberg Group calls while you're in mid perusal of it…Rather, on second thought…let them wait; they'll just want you all the more for it.
President Obama, on the other hand, could never be accused of failing to serve his true constituents – the moneyed elite. Accordingly, insofar as coming to the aid of oppressed, suffering working people, he could be termed the anti-Tom "I'll be there” Joad. He has not been present in body nor spirit for the less-than-privileged classes of the declining nation. Rather than serving contemporary versions of the downtrodden denizens depicted in The Grapes of Wrath -- Obama has chosen to be of service to the high-flying connoisseurs of the fermented grapes of Château Mouton-Rothschild.
On almost every dispiriting occasion, Obama and the Democrats hit the mat without so much as trading punches with the Republican practitioners of the art of sucker punches and low blows.
Could the fight be rigged? I mean they work for the same corporate oligarchic bosses. One should be wary of betting on a match where a mobster owns both fighters.
Obama rah-rahs, nice liberal apple-polishers and crackpot pragmatist of the Church of Incrementalist Salvation -- I will grant you this -- the Republicans are a cult of doom. They are the two-legged, all thumbs, character-devoid embodiments of The Second Law Of Thermodynamics that arise when empires are in a death swoon. Yet Obama and the Democrats of Congress are quislings of corporate power, and thereby function as true to form characters playing out their roles within the entropy-ridden dynamics of failed states.
Have the Democrats even lifted a finger, whether in power or out, to fight corporate oligarchy? The only finger the players of the Democratic power establishment have lifted is to give the progressive left -- The Finger. I say screw you back, you soul-dead ciphers -- and the faux reform/hidden corporate class agenda Trojan Horse you rode in on.
Moreover, how have the policies of the Obama administration departed, in any real world way, from those of the Bush administration? Hence, we arrive at the painful, depressing crux of the matter and the cause of the denial befogging the minds and enervating the will of the liberal class: The dismal fact that under the present structure of corporate oligarchy, a functioning representational democracy cannot exist.
As for everyday citizens, neither going to the polls to vote, nor manning phone banks and licking envelopes at local party headquarters, nor canvassing to register new voters will change the nature of the national security state nor reform corporate hegemony nor end US imperium abroad…It just isn't going to happen.
Acknowledging to oneself the reality that under the present arrangements between the U.S. government and the corporate order -- the aforementioned acts of citizen participation are exercises in futility, and that an individual is essentially powerless -- can give rise to profound states of cognitive dissonance. In short, all the exasperation and concomitant scorn leveled by Democratic insiders and their apologists upon members of the marginalized and alienated left.
When a mainstream liberal sort deigns to tell me, I need to acquire a more "positive attitude" -- which, in tone and intent, amounts to a kind of passive-aggressive douche-rocketry -- I reply: I (or anyone else for that matter) can evince all the winning qualities and uplifting attitudes in the human lexicon of emotive experience -- positive, upbeat, giddy, elated, ecstatic -- we can be as happy as a bliss-besotted idiot, with a love of all things shiny, who happens upon a cache of gleaning stainless steel cutlery -- We can become so aglow with positive energy that rays of sunshine will coruscate from out of our every orifice -- yet still, our attitudes and actions would have little to no effect on the status quo.
As far as reforming the hopelessly corporate money-compromised Democratic Party from within…that constitutes, merely, polishing the brass railings on the Titanic, because Democrats have shown, over the years and with increasing regularity, whose interests they serve.
Perhaps, instead, progressives should deploy a tactical retreat and allow the damage incurred by Disaster Capitalism (that now even includes the obscene manipulation of global food prices) to create so much pain by way of Republican rule that the toxic agendas of the oligarchs cannot be papered over by sham elections that bring (at best) "incremental" change, while the juggernaut of the corporate/national security state hurtles forward unchecked and unabated.
In the long run, it might prove propitious (in a "cruel to be kind" turn of affairs) if the nature of corporate state control shifted from the soft totalitarianism of the present to a more overt form of hardliner rule. This way, the self-serving authoritarian powers begot by big money interests will be drawn into the open…will have to reveal and define themselves and their agendas; they would no longer be able to hide (Koch Brothers style) within the loose-knit, yet proto-fascist in nature, structure of the corporate state.
Indications augur that regardless of the pain inflicted and protests proffered, the dismal criteria of this strategy will be made manifest: The berserker cult from the Chicago School of Economics will not quit until the reforms, from the Progressive and New Deal eras, responsible for creating the US middle class and affording dignity to the laboring classes, are burned to ash and blown from collective memory.
Incongruously, it is this criminal cartel who has the ear of the white underclass, while, concurrently having them by the throat…as, all the while, they ply them with the poisoned pills of Disaster Capitalism, managing to bamboozle them into calling the toxic concoction ingested the sweet fruit of liberty.
Yet, because of their privilege-engendered insularity, the Democratic Party elite are bereft of a credible counter-narrative. Moreover, President Obama, in deed and action, has governed like an alumnus in good standing of the Chicago School of Economics.
This is the modus operandi of present day U.S. duopoly: Democratic Party, corporate tools, faux reformers follow rightwing death cults. Hence, little of importance changes for the big money interests who own both major parties.
President Obama has proven he can give a stem-twister of a speech. But what he has displayed, time and time again, is the damning extent of his insincerity. Obama's job is to create pretty clouds of obscuring smoke -- while the right plays the role of crazed barn-burners -- as the oligarchs make off with more and more of the people's loot.
This is what is so pathetic about the present day Democratic Party whose political platform seems to be: We deliver nothing, but broken promises, and we continually betray our base -- but those other guys, those rightwing Republican bogeymen -- they keep their wicked promises. They are mean, ruthless and crazy. And did we mention, you should be afraid -- be very afraid...BOO!
This is the method by which mainstream Democrats work reluctant progressives into a dither. The ploy operates by the same devices Republican Party strategists game the base-born bigots of their political base, by raising the fearsome specters of child-recruiting gay pedophiles, in alliance with Islamic Caliphate plotters, all of whom, at the behest of dirty hippie socialists, have designs to redistribute their lawn furniture, outdoor grilling equipment, and pool toys to dark and dusky sorts.
What is amazing, since there is no formal plot in place, is how close and perfect to type almost all involved act out their roles. Ergo, we ordinary citizens can play our roles as extras as well; we can go to the polls and vote for either of these two wings of The Money Party who serve the kleptocratic class and military industrial/national security state, and thereby co-sign it all and give the fraud a patina of legitimacy.
This is the dim and diminished social and political milieu that gave rise to Donald Trump. Trump, son of inherited wealth, who had his own "reality" show (watched by folks who apparently have no notion of the concept) is the embodiment of our era; he mirrors the lamentable zeitgeist of the U.S.
The troubles of the U.S. are many and spreading. As a nation, our prospects at home and prestige abroad are thinning. Apropos, Donald Trump is the man of this empty hour -- just the manqué of the moment to give the problems that are besetting the nation a comb-over treatment.
Trump wears the gruesome visage of empire's end, and his style of blustering ignorance serves as perfect marching music for the country's ongoing, blind strut towards the abyss, now unnervingly close, yawning before us.


110 Comments so far
Show AllWell, I don't have anything as profound or articulate to offer compared to this excellent piece except that I love your writing and the depth it demonstrates. I look forward to reading your articles and hope I see more and more of them. You are spot-on, right up there with Chris Hedges when it comes to telling us a truth no one wants to hear. A refreshing and sobering change from the corporate owned media, and the right and left wing loonies selling us one lie after another daily. I also say let the chips fall where they may. I never thought it could get as bad as Palin, but here's Trump again. God help us. I guess I'm guilty of my own denial. I'm not voting in 2012 for the very reasons you state: it's a sham on both party sides. I no longer wish to participate in the big corporate raping of the world.
I agree that this article is as stimulating and enjoyable as the first cup of coffee in the morning. Hope to see more pieces!
I do disagree about leaving the scene of the crime. You are participating in the voting process by not being there, you strengthen the "stupid vote" by one. Ralph Nader or Cynthia McKinney or somebody decent will be on the ballot.
Wrong. Our elections are totally rigged.
The media selects the two party candidates and shut the door.
They weed the others out by trashing or ignoring them.
Party candidates are selected based on cooperation with the status quo.
In addition to the scam of our pirmaries, our voting machines are a hackers haven. There always seems to be one or two districts with very late returns. It's usually in a red state so they can sell the desired outcome. The sacrificial Dem usually concedes in a hot minute. The exception was Franken. The Dem establishment kept still while that asshole Coleman played it out to the bitter end. It didn't take Franken long before he was just another tool pretending to care about the "little people."
Anyone participating in this sham signals approval and encourages them to ram their shit down our throats. I will fully abandon the Democrats. They are unworthy of my support. Everyone says the Republicans are cruel and they are. But I think Democrats are worse because they pretend to care while holding the dagger behind their backs.
I plan on voting for every batshit Republican on the ballot box.
No need to prolong the torture. Forget the death by a thousand cuts
from the Dems. This train wreck is unstoppable.
The American people require a sledgehammer of oppression
and grinding poverty. They still want to believe we are a great nation.
The fastest route to a mass epiphany is with the Republican Party.
You understand the problem, but your reaction is simplistically stupid. Your "mass epiphany" would more than likely result in endlessly ramped up fear and hate mongering. More rallies against non-whites, Muslims, socialists, and on and on. Do not underestimate the power of corporate propaganda to convince angry people that their hatred should be aimed at other poor bastards.
WTF?
Nothing is simplistic and stupid about everyone realizing corporations are in total control of government, and they are the reason for all our hardship.
Racism and hatred? Shessh.
That's not the epiphany I had in mind.
Quite the opposite.
What I am saying is that the idea you have in your mind concerning some universal realization followed by your idea of a likely reaction, are pie in the sky.
freepressmyass
Yesterday Chris Hedge's piece struck a chord much like this one. Many decried the 'doomers' as in need of more positive attitude, which Phil Rockstroh calls 'passive-aggressive douche-rocketry'....
This empire is not sustainable and will fail, the sooner the better. Therefore I, like you, will vote for the 'batshit Republicans' .
BTW I consider myself a realist.
Mr. Rockstroh, you had me at "deign." But then the ideas stumbled with the veribage. Read Joe Bageant. But still, this is brilliant:
"When a mainstream liberal sort deigns to tell me, I need to acquire a more "positive attitude" -- which, in tone and intent, amounts to a kind of passive-aggressive douche-rocketry -- I reply: I (or anyone else for that matter) can evince all the winning qualities and uplifting attitudes in the human lexicon of emotive experience -- positive, upbeat, giddy, elated, ecstatic -- we can be as happy as a bliss-besotted idiot, with a love of all things shiny, who happens upon a cache of gleaning stainless steel cutlery -- We can become so aglow with positive energy that rays of sunshine will coruscate from out of our every orifice -- yet still, our attitudes and actions would have little to no effect on the status quo."
Absolutely brilliant!!!
Double post.
Our election system makes every vote stupid. Vote Republican? Stupid, you're voting against your own best interests. Vote Democrat? Stupid, you're voting for the party of roll-over wimps. Vote Third-party? Stupid, you're throwing your vote away.
It's lose, lose, lose. The lesser of evils is still evil.
E.T. I second everything you wrote. Phil, this scathing analysis reads like a wonder! Your use of metaphor is brilliantly executed. Bravo. Listen closely and you'll hear my clapping hands, no doubt along with those of others.
Someone hand this man a long stem perfect rose!
I just wanted to say that "barn burners" made me think of Wm Faulkner's Snopses. Quite an apt bunch of folks to study in our curious times!
Yes, the dark age of America has come.
Great characterizations. (Regarding my government's policies, I often feel like the child in the short story "Barn Burning" whose parent is a source of shame and fear.)
But I have to disagree with two points.
1. The characterization of the white underclass is drawn from stereotypical depictions in the press, TV, movies. It shows a lack of real life contact of any scope. There is more depth and complexity among poor and working class whites than mentioned here or is covered in the media. Accepting a stereotypical view coming from the more privileged whites means writing off an important sector of the population that is suffering and can be organized to resist. The Tea Baggers et al are primarily from a more cash rich, if ignorant, stratum.
2. "Do nothing" should not be an option. The situation is dire as you say. The old ways of working, such as relying on voting and street demonstrations do not seem to get any traction for the reasons you point out. In the least, by speaking the truth and living a life that exemplifies your morality and goals, you can influence people around you. People are hungry, jobless and homeless every day, every hour. People are being bombed and killed every night while our money disappears. People should not be asked to wait and do nothing until some as yet unknown set of criteria emerges. All struggles are dependent on consciousness and many little acts of resistance. While we figure out what else to do, we can prepare the ground, break the thought monopolies of the corporatists, reinforce critical views of the current injustices. Some may have better ideas than I about how to organize. I wish us all strength.
Yes, jclientelle - you're right, we should not take the "do nothing" option,. If we do not resist at every turn, others will not know there are alternatives, they will not know they do not have to capitulate.
No, I do not want to allow things to get as bad as they can, hoping that then people will rise up. This will cause needless ignorance and suffering along the way - and there is no guarantee that impoverished people will "rise up if mistreated badly enough.
No, we need to speak out every day, write letters to the editor (surprisingly effective as everyone who reads, reads them), testify before Legislative committees in our home states to let them know we're watching, demand paper ballots in all venues with watchers from all parties including independents, talk to TParty people with logic and common sense (pose alternatives), live lightly on earth so one is walking the walk while talking the talk, talk to grocery store managers to get more local organic food on their shelves and point out the foods that contain genetically-altered "food," grow some of your own food because prices are only going up and help others get their own gardens started, and so on.
There is much that can be done outside political parties - which are useless and hopeless these days.
Find common ground with your neighbors on 1-2 issues, and work with them on those issues, ignoring for the moment the issues on which you disagree.
Doing nothing is lazy and ineffective and treasonous, as it gives in to the enemies of the people.
Do what you can, every single day, to resist
I disagree with your first point of disagreement. It is very dangerous to underestimate the level of ignorance of the average American. You want some 'real life contact' examples? O'tay! I work at a small UPS center in rural MN. I am the resident 'weirdo intellectual' on my shift as I am the only one with a college degree, experience with traveling outside North America and the only one who reads books rather then watching TV and following sports. Now don't get me wrong, I really like my coworkers and consider some of them to be good friends, but if you think you are going to organize working class Americans into some sort of solidarity movement consider these 'real life' examples:
'Joe' is in his early 20s, has 3 young kids, a stay at home wife and a mortgage, He makes $30-40k a year driving our 'air shuttle'. His biggest worry in life is that our 'socialist' government is going to raise his taxes and keep him from getting ahead. He listens to AM talk radio and is working on expanding his gun collection. He really hates Obama.
'Mindy' our chief clerk, has 2 teenage boys at home and a ex marine husband. She drives a Dodge Durango SUV with the usual support the troops bumper stickers, does all her shopping at Wall-Mart and does not like unions - even though we are a union shop.
'Kurt' was a high school football star who had to get married when the condom broke. He and his wife have a beautiful little girl and a new house in a small town. He hates his 'mexican' neighbors with a passion. Says they are all on welfare and steal stuff from him. Loves to get drunk and get into fights on weekends esp. with 'mexicans'.
I repeat these are great people to work with and they would be the first to come running to help you if a storm blew the roof off your house, but there is no way you would get them on board with a progressive solidarity movement!
Hello, my fellow Minnesotan. I think your examples are exceptionally common. What is needed are re-education camps for our fellow citizens (just kidding, unfortunately).
Thank you for your post.
RE: I repeat these are great people to work with and they would be the first to come running to help you if a storm blew the roof off your house, but there is no way you would get them on board with a progressive solidarity movement!
If "a storm blew the roof off your house" the liberals would say "hope you have good insurance" but otherwise would not lift a finger, whereas these people (your coworkers) would provide real help, real solidarity. As Chris Hedges has said repeatedly, for the last several decades, working people have little to be grateful for from the liberal class (and their progressive progeny). Liberals dissemble and/or give wishy-washy explanations for why working people are getting screwed. Conservatives give them somebody to blame, to hate, to scapegoat. Neither narrative is true but which is more satisfying?
Your post points to the inchoate potential for revolutionary solidarity, but maybe not for a "progressive solidarity movement."
Sydlitz: Have you ever thought about doing a documentary?
verumestmortuus[at]yahoo[dot]com
No, I have not. Are you suggesting I attempt a Michael Moore style expose on the rural working class?
I have a compelling film suggestion, if there is a documentary-maker in our midst:
Along the lines of "My Dinner With Andre," set up a round table and invite Chris Hedges, Elizabeth Warren, Phil Rochstroh, Dave Lindorff, Naomi Klein, and one or two others... then let the conversation RIP.
The documentary could pull a "Jay Leno" and get straight commentary from the street.
"How do you feel about derivatives replacing currency?"
"Say What?"
"You, sir, are you in favor of insurance companies continuing to under-write access to health care?"
"Insurance companies? I thought Obama just passed health care reform."
... those were some ad hoc examples of how such a venture might work.
These are great examples of actual Americans. And, as much as I loved this article, I wonder if any of the coworkers you described would have read past the first paragraph...not because of its content, but because of style and tone, all the things CD readers loved. What I trying to say is, when we talk to them (and yes, I feel we must talk to them), are we speaking their language? These folks--my coworkers too-- are so turned off by what they perceive as aloof or pretentious that they tune us out, and listen instead to Palin, Limbaugh, etc. I'm in New Jersey, and Chris Christie is solidly in this group too. He speaks to people on a gut level, and that in and of itself wins many of them over. It's definitely a lesson for progressives regarding building solidarity: simple speech patterns, a simple message, a little Chris Christie swagger.
That said, let me repeat that I loved this article, but its not going to go far with those who most desperately need reached.
Share lunch with them...repeatedly. And listen. And be patient. Life is long and just (mostly.)
They would be the first to help if a storm blew off the roof of your house. That means there is something there, some core decency that you can work with. I speak with a lot of people like the ones you describe. If you listen enough, there are many who feel used and resentful. Problem is that resentment gets directed at others who are not responsible for most of what is going on. Sometimes all you can do is figure out how to plant a seed of doubt about the official story. But that is a good place to start. And sometimes they will surprise you with insights they already have.
Sylitz:
I live in rural MN, and am probably the one to whom you deliver guitar parts quite often. That said, let's shake hands if we truly meet...
1. Nothing is quick and easy. I became an elementary teacher 38 tears ago to "change the world, one chid at a time." The jury (proof) is still out on that one.
2. The fact that you seem to accept your co-workers and still communicate with them is PRECIOUS. People seldom change in the manner of Paul on the road to Damascus. Keep "working them."
3. Work on yourself. Be strong. Have faith in yourself and your friends. Make connections with others. I was raised catholic, and with time morphed into an evangelical Lutheran. My church now does everything from feeding the poor with our own garden to providing the best music available in our small wc MN town.
3.1 IGNORE all posts dissing religion. They are a cancer on the Progressive cause.
4. Get around. I ate lunch for a year with a Hispanic para at my school, and I learned that we had more similarities than differences. Personal connections bring communities together. So try to find ways to bring your co-workers together. (Food and drink help!)
5. Relax. It's not all upon you or me. But the fact that you are here proves that you have the true Spirit. We will prevail!
I hope you are right about your first point. I agree they are realizing the
unfairness of many things, but I think the majority is in denial about
the entire system being against them.
I do like your second point. Talking to people can matter.
Moved.
Brainwashing has gone on for decades, and that explains the disconnect between what politicians are ACTUALLY doing, and what voters (in part due to long-established political team affiliations) THINK they are doing. Blame it on PR and the Bernays-tracked society.
Jclientelle, Greg R, and others have raised valid points. We're all looking at the contours and apparent options from WITHIN the existing "box." Most of us realize that the structures have become so corrupt and compromised that ONLY when the thing comes apart due to its own inverted momentum will real change be possible.
Everyone should do, speak, and process what they feel compelled to do, speak, or process. There is no singular recipe for the liberating change most of us sincerely want... and work towards.
As addicts learn, the first part of any rehabilitative process is acknowleding the extent of the dis-ease. Phil did that, and many in this forum are able to look at the beast without pretending things are otherwise. If the future were already known, our respective roles in manifesting it would become irrelevant.
Nonetheless, a number of tipping points spanning the range from global economics to world ecology point to the inevitability of Paradigm Change!
Write on!
Great comment. The intellectuals on the left have to learn how to build solidarity with members of the working class or it truly is hopeless. The plutocrats win when we allow the social/cultural issues and simplistic stereotypes to divide us (frightened and vulnerable people can be convinced to believe in any number of bogeymen, but their fundamental interests remain the same -- health and health care, a non-toxic environment, job security and a secure retirement, educational opportunities for their children, having a decent standard of living) . We are all being crushed together and we will all have to stand together to ever have any chance of successful resistance.
As for any advice from a "liberal sort" whom states that the liberal message has to be "positive" which is the same as the sociopathic, psychopathic, happy talk psychobabble optimism of mindlessness propaganda that is used by the Republicans to stupefy the American public, using the MSM. This psychobabble happy talk is using the same techniques that the Republicans use which is just doing more of the same that the Democrats have copied and used to deceive those whom think they offer a viable alternative to the Corporate fascists whom steal the forced contributions, withholding taxes, using the USG to transfer the wealth created by labor to the WEALTHY PREDATORY CAPITALIST WELFARE KINGS FOR UNPRODUCTIVE PURPOSES. As for Trump using the Reagan model for economic and financial policies, these policies were established by Reagan who had Alzheimer's and due to political correctness cannot be mentioned, that a policies of someone whose policies have failed and may be attributed to a incapacitated mind.
Mr Rockstroh has a wonderful way with words! I agree with most everything he says here, except, perhaps, his giving all the credit to FDR and progressives for the prosperity of the US middle class in the decades following WWII. In my interpretation the Capitalist Imperialists (USA and Britain) the Racist Imperialists (Nazi Germany) and the Communist Imperialists (the USSR) squared off to see who would dominate the world. The Capitalist Imperialists won. While the Anglo-American lions of Imperialism (the bankers and industrialists) gorged themselves on the world's resources their retinue of jackals and foxes (clerks, sales people, small entrepreneurs) grew fat and sleek sucking the marrow from the bones of the carcasses. Now the great Anglo-American lions, while still able to frighten everyone with their mighty roar (aircraft carrier battle groups etc.) are starting to look a little run down, old and mangy. They often return from the hunt with out having made a kill. They have even lost kills to newly aggressive bears and tigers from the east. So, of course, there is less to eat for the jackals and foxes of the middle class. I think they will have to find a new game or go hungry. Perhaps learn how to make and export things again (like the Germans), instead of waiting for lucrative government contracts.
SYD: I don't know if you're new to this forum, but I'd like to also compliment you on your use of language (metaphor, in particular). Excellent post.
Thank you for the compliment! I have been around here for years. I seldom post comments on any internet forums anymore as it seems like people rarely take the time to read them and try to understand them. There is too much childish name calling so I tend to remain aloof.
Well stated, Sydlitz!
I enthusiastically second your analysis, and would only refine your vivid and compelling metaphor of omnivorous predators and scavengers on a couple of points:
A small privileged elite of prides have managed to greedily hoard and stockpile enormous caches of game, and withdrawn to private, exclusive, pest-proof game preserves sufficient to keep themselves, their cubs, and grand-cubs fat and happy.
To the extent that wealth and resources are zero-sum quantities, and the myth of "trickle-down" economics notwithstanding, these disproportionately-accumulated concentrations mean that there is less to go around for everyone else.
Also, "the great Anglo-American lions", now indeed a little run down, old and mangy, and having exhausted their abundant hunting grounds, have themselves begun to devour the the jackals and foxes of the middle class that formerly grew fat and sleek sucking the marrow from the bones of the carcasses.
That is, I think it's more than just a case of there being less to eat for the jackals and foxes of the middle class foraging upon a shrinking gutpile. I think the jackals and foxes themselves are being eaten, and have become the lean and stringy carcasses-- and, in this increasingly savage behavioral sink, even their dwindling kind turn on each other in what is aptly called a dog-eat-dog world of diminishing returns.
Lunch, anybody?
Obedient
How depressingly amusing,
Indeed, Obama is the antithesis of Steinbeck's Tom Joad. Joad, who assumed the leadership role of his family's journey out of the Dust Bowl of poverty and despair to the utopia of Weedpatch, the well-run government-managed camp that offered hope to those ravaged by the Great Depression. Tom Joad is the salt of the earth character, who vows to fight against the injustice that pervades the Amerikan culture.
On the other hand, Obama, who based his presidential campaign on the hope and change that Steinbeck's Joad family sought, delivered precisely the opposite. Instead, Obama, who had the opportunity of being another FDR, chose the path of W. Bush, the sadistic warmonger who is the prototypical "greed is good" icon that is the darling of the celebrity culture in this nation.
Amen! Hallelueh! Amen!
Who can say it better? Who can say it in song? Step up. Rise up.
Join Us Every One!
In the war against the middle-class the government has been outsourcing jobs for decades. Now the government is going one step further. They are outsourcing citizenship to bring corporate citizens into their constituency, and give them the rights that go with it. This country started with an agreement between citizens and leaders. Over time we have evolved into shareholders (all shareholders are not equal) and owners. Our Constitutional rights as citizens have been stripped away while the Constitutional rights of corporations have grown. Today, a corporation has the same value as a natural citizen and made the law-of-the-land by the Supreme Court. This corporate citizen acts like a natural citizen. It looks to the government for the conditions to be productive so it can continue to grow.
Corporate citizens have become a weapon in the war against the middle-class. They can be used to take away the power of the vote form the middle-class. Corporate citizens can get congressman to listen to them and ignore the voice of the voter. This is why all polls in America show the government completely out of step with the majority of its natural citizens in every sector in society. On healthcare, education, taxes, war, environment and a host of others the people and the government are not on the same page. It’s not the government following the will of the people. Instead, it’s the government doing the bidding of its corporate citizens by writing legislation to legalize the assault on unions and teachers.
But, the needs of a citizen and the needs of a corporation are not the same. Natural citizens need and want opportunity and means to be successful and happy. They want government to provide a level playing field for all. Corporate citizens want and need control of the market to maximize profits. The natural citizen wants to live the American Dream and retire while the corporate citizen will be struggle to grow into an empire- builder. Natural citizens used to say their thanks with a handshake. The corporate citizen says thanks with a cash contribution.
The only weapon of the natural citizen is being taken away. He’s being disarmed. But, it’s not his guns he’s losing. What is being taken away is his VOTE. Given to those with citizenship, by the Constitution. The vote – the most effective weapon of the citizen to force the government to listen to him, is being given to corporations. Today their votes are meaningless. They have been made meaningless by a political system driven by money. Who can own the most government? A citizen’s vote has no political value to a congressman, he can’t put it in his war chest. In the battle between the natural citizens and the corporate citizens you only have to look at D.C. and see who represents who. There are thousands and thousands of these corporate citizens. The lobbyists and the think tanks and the media are grafting themselves onto the three branches of the government. It’s Ike’s worst nightmare.
Presidents throughout my lifetime have initiated foreign wars without the approval of the Congress. So why doesn’t Congress take back its power? Since all wars are now political the Congress would rather the White House start the war. The Congress will manage them. With war so profitable for corporate citizens why would they ever want to limit such a money making product? They wouldn’t. That’s why war is no longer a few pages every couple of hundred pages in history books. War is a part of our daily lives.
The government doesn’t have to be afraid. Votes don’t matter anymore.
Hoa binh
"On healthcare, education, taxes, war, environment and a host of others the people and the government are not on the same page." So true. We have to figure out how to slap the government in its arrogant face, but we do not yet know how to do so.
The vast majority of Americans want single payer health care. So why isn't that fact reflected in the legislation? Why were we not given single payer? In both wars being fought today the majority of American people want out. But that isn't happening and they are talking about extending the troops in Iraq. If we were anything close to a democracy then the politicians would be following what the people have said. Instead we get a government that listens to and works for corporations. The same guys who finance all the major political campaigns and control the media. We've got to change the kingdom, not just the royal family living in D.C..
Hoa binh
This sounds much like President Washington's Farewell Address!
Well said once again Mr. Rockstroh!!!
You've got some power in your prose.
very witty
"The second law of thermodynamics is an expression of the tendency that over time, differences in temperature, pressure, and chemical potential equilibrate in an isolated physical system. From the state of thermodynamic equilibrium, the law deduced the principle of the increase of entropy and explains the phenomenon of irreversibility in nature. The second law declares the impossibility of machines that generate usable energy from the abundant internal energy of nature by processes called perpetual motion of the second kind."
i'm not sure that science has a law to describe the self-impaled left - probably doesn't need one anyway
in amerika it is the law of the loon that rules
we are metaphorically speaking the "good" part of german society that was unable to do a damn thing about the rise of the nazi party, though as is true today, some tried
just remember - germany lost ww2 but the fascists won
likeitornot:
Once again, your obtuse and banal comment reveals your obvious semantic aphasia. It's sad, really, but your vapid inner landscape, which prevents you from appreciating the mastery and truthfulness of this essay, is evident to most everyone but you. The irony will, of course, be lost on you, but your monumental lack of insight renders you incapable of appreciating the nature of your own disorder. Pity.
What's this, Giovanna, a parody of Rockstroh?
...obtuse, banal, obvious semantic aphasia, vapid inner landscape, nature of your own disorder...
I just wish you coulda worked in "context-devoid cupolas" somehow.
GollyGee:
Parody? No. In no way was I attempting to mock, deride, or ridicule Rockstoh's essay for comedic purposes. My intent was to mock, deride and ridicule likeitornot's inane comment, sans parody, however.
The Rockstroh essay was beautifully written, which is why I was deadly serious in my response to likeitornot nee: mightymite, prometheus, veritas, etc....
Likeitornot's comment (s) ARE obtuse, banal and evident of semantic aphasia. If you can't see that, than perhaps you suffer from the same affliction.
Ah, how the proud and resentful anti-intellectual common folk band together to scoff and sneer at articulate eloquence!
Writers like Rockstroh flash high over their heads, and all they hear is a disagreeable sonic boom.
Such toffee-nosed frippery really rubs them the wrong way, like fox-hunting aristocrats on thoroughbreds leaping over the hedgerows and needlessly trampling their prize turnip beds.
And now even you're getting boos from the bleachers, Giovanna! Similar to critics who object to comments that aren't short, shallow, and commonplace enough for their tastes, they view sophisticated vocabulary-- even monosyllabic sophisticated vocabulary-- as supercilious conceit.
Speaking of whining, I'm surprised they didn't hurl the supreme put-down of your using "fifty-cent words". They really take umbrage at those fifty-cent words, you know. They're disrespectful, and a sure sign that you're far too full of yourself.
Sometimes the comeuppance shows a rare and rewarding flash of wit, e.g. "Put down the thesaurus, Poindexter, and slowly back away."
Hey, I'm no expert on semantic aphasiastistic disorder, Professor, so I'm glad to go with your diagnosis that the three of us (likeitornot, his comment and I) all suffer from it.
And hey again, you've certainly hammered a writing lesson down on likeitornot. That stern repetition of "mock, deride, ridicule" has a real whip-snap stutter to it, while the "s" in parenthesis and the subsitution of "than" for "then" ARE stroke (s) of writing genius. Thanks.
Try not to get too worked up, and remember, not everyone has your talent for clear, elegant compositon.
Still, despite your persuasive reasoning (ad hominem) I'll probably just go ahead and keep on liking both Rockstroh's essay and likeitornot's astute comment on it.
In high school, my best friend had the surname "Poindexter." Please remember that in your future "put-downs."
Harsh words, but true, likeitornot.
That's not to say I didn't enjoy reading all that knife-sharp poetry in prose, but although it's an excellent whine piece, you're right, it's still a whine piece.
"In the long run, it might prove propitious (in a "cruel to be kind" turn of affairs) if the nature of corporate state control shifted from the soft totalitarianism of the present to a more overt form of hardliner rule." Does anyone here really believe that?
Most people here are aware of the nightmare unfolding, but I doubt many are going to give up.