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The Grubby Species
Nobility is a bitch, and a real seductive one at that.
I’m capable of some serious cynicism, but these days I kinda wish I had a lot more of it. I kinda wish I had born and raised in a more cynical time. Then maybe I wouldn’t get my heart broken so often.
That’s a funny thing to say about the time I grew up in, in a way. It was the era of Vietnam and Watergate, the era of police attack dogs and burning cities. My Lai, Kent State, Nixon, Watts. What’s uglier than that? And can’t one make a very compelling case that these are significantly better times today? I mean, after all, the government isn’t beating and murdering our kids on America’s streets. And while we’re still fighting wars (of course), there are a lot less casualties on either side these days. Aren’t things better?
No. They’re worse. What’s absent today from the America of my younger days is hope and understanding. Back then, everyone understood there was a struggle going on, and lots of people did just that. And they generated enormous successes, ranging from changing both racial civil rights laws and norms, to doing the same for gender equality, to demanding cleaner government, to improving the New Deal social safety net, to ending the Vietnam war, to distributing the national wealth more fairly, to changing environmental consciousness and law, and more.
It was a painful process, but one that came with an outstanding record of achievement, a record which therefore justified the sense of hope. There was solid and robust empirical evidence to prove that having high expectations for the country was not some pollyannaish exercise in naivete.
That’s all gone. It’s been replaced by something far worse than a tired stasis. And, really, when you consider the present picture in its full glory, you’re left with something beyond despair. For this is not only a story of deceit and hypocrisy, of rampant greed, of sociopathic disdain for the lives of others, but, finally, also a story of complete betrayal and the predatory exploitation of innocent people.
As in any crime story, it’s crucial to understand the who, what, when, why and how in order to unravel the true tale, and to have any hope for crime prevention and remediation in the future.
The ‘what’ of this crime scene is crucial, and so many people still don’t understand it (despite the rampant prevalence of CSI dramas all across the television dial – or perhaps because of it). It’s been said that the perfect crime is one of which the victim isn’t even cognizant. That’s all too true here. This lack of comprehension of what has been done, who did it, and why is the single most depressing feature of American politics today. How can 300 million people hallucinate so deeply all at once? Is there really that much LSD to go around? Or do we just get our drugs from the end of a cable nowadays?
There’s really only one main theme to the story of American politics in the last century (if not more), and that is the question of the distribution of wealth. This is particularly true of the last three decades, a period during which other important things – not least including wars and civil rights struggles – transpired, but were ultimately peripheral to the real story. And yet people still don’t understand this central concept and the crime committed around it.
A hundred years ago the distribution of wealth in this country looked like that of any standard issue banana republic. The rich had almost everything, and all of the rest of us barely got by, working (alongside our children) long hours in horrid conditions, for low pay, no benefits and zero respect for us as humans deserving of an equal regard for our welfare, happiness, opportunities, fortunes and basic dignity. We were ‘human resources’ (though the term was not in use until the ethos was revived in the present era), who were to be used and abused in the processing of natural resources, and discarded when our usefulness ceased. This approach to class relations within the society produced the expected result: wealthy Americans lived long and highly comfortable lives, while the rest of us resembled something nearer to characters out of Hobbes.
But then Franklin Roosevelt, easily the most transformative figure in American history, gave us a New Deal, which was quite literally that. Roosevelt and his fellow travelers in and out of government changed the essential terms of political economy in America, such that it was no longer a game entirely for the benefit of the wealthy. Mind you, those rich folks still did real well, thank you very much, and it is correctly argued that Roosevelt actually saved capitalism from capitalists – so, when it comes to FDR, we’re not talking about Leon Trotsky here. But Roosevelt’s program changed the rules of labor relations, taxation, government spending, regulation and so on, a reform that had the ultimate effect of redistributing wealth in America, so that the richest among us no longer had it all. And, in the process, this massive sea change in public policy also created a giant middle class that had not existed before, and launched an era of prosperity in this country that may have no equal across all of human history.
Which brings us to the ‘who’ of this murder mystery. They are the predatory plutocrats who hated FDR and the New Deal then, and have not stopped doing so down to this day. They despised Roosevelt so much for being “a traitor to his class” that many of them had to refer to him as “that man”, because they couldn’t bear to actually spit out his name. These people, with their infantile obsession for acquisition coming right out of some Freud 101 textbook, have never gone away. But they were marginalized during the half-century of the New Deal era. In fact, they were marginalized by the core mainstream of even the Republican Party. Dwight Eisenhower referred to them – in particular, to those who wanted to abolish Social Security twenty years after its launch – as “stupid”.
Eisenhower’s comment points to another answer to the ‘who’ question here. Plutocrats need agents to commit their crimes for them. That includes cadres of cops and soldiers who are either clueless as to their place in the scheme of things, or satisfied to be bought off for a few shekels and/or a pittance of prestige in the social hierarchy. In the contemporary context, however, it mostly means politicians. In our time these (alleged) people are little more than kabuki dancers, who job is to maintain a layered set of illusions. On top is the idea of political debate, as if there was fundamentally any difference between the two parties in America. As if Harry Reid and Barack Obama get up every day wondering how they can spend their waking hours fighting off Republican intransigencies to make life better for you and me. At the next level down is the idea of patriotism and the national interest. This facade brainwashes us to believe that while we may disagree with leaders of the other party, at least they are well meaning patriots who just happen to be wrong-headed – but right-hearted! – in their prescription for what ails the country. Finally, we have the last veil, the democracy ruse, where we are told that our government is responsive to the public will. Never mind all that corporate money washing around in the system – it doesn’t actually effect anything. It’s one person, one vote. Where your representatives are concerned, you count every bit as much as the CEO of Goldman Sachs.
Almost without exception, our contemporary political class serves the function of acting out this tawdry little soap opera, this elaborate diversionary scheme. That’s why there’s so much overlap between Madison Avenue and Hollywood and Washington, America’s politicians are B-rate actors (sometimes literally), playing a role in a lame white-hat-versus-black-hat pseudo-drama filmed on a soundstage called Washington, and doing the commercials in-between as well. But it wasn’t always thus. We used to have (at least some) limits, and we used to have (at least some) politicians genuinely committed to the public interest.
That crucial difference gives us the ‘when’ to this tale. For fifty years there was a broad consensus in America around the values of the New Deal and the lessons learned from the period preceding it. That consensus began unraveling in the 1980s, and has continued to do so ever since. The essential narrative of the last thirty years is the story of the dismantling of the New Deal, and with it the broad and shared prosperity that Americans once enjoyed. This process has occurred piecemeal, because it had to, because in fact both the deal of the New Deal era and the values it personifies are highly popular with the American public.
So the ‘how’ was to lie, cheat and steal in order for the rich to redress the ‘crime’ of the New Deal and get ‘their’ money back. Trade deals that seemed on their surface plainly to be disastrous for American workers – perhaps because that is exactly what they were – were sold to us as beneficial. Union busting, a la Reagan and PATCO, was made to seem an act of necessary national toughness. And who needed unions, anyhow? Didn’t we already have good wages? Deregulation – hey, what a great idea! Let Wall Street banks do whatever they want – you know, like in the 1920s! They didn’t call ‘em “roaring” for nuthin’, pal! Tax slashing for millionaires and billionaires was another big winner. It’ll trickle-down to the rest of us when these job-creators create jobs, it won’t cost the government any revenues, and it will jump-start the economy. So what if regressives went zero for three on those claims? We have to cut taxes even more! And then there are the diversions to keep you voting for the kleptocrats at every turn, such as foreign evil-doers (Ooooohhh, Saddam! Very scary! Noriega! Plenty bad man! Castro! An athiest, for Christ’s sake!), job-stealing Mexicans (you would have wound up being a rich attorney – even though you didn’t go to law school, or even college – but some sneaky wetback crossed the border and took your job), and predatory gays who want to deflower your innocent daughter – er, well, something like that.
Really, you have to give this country credit where credit is due. No contemporary developed nation in the world can touch us where political stupidity is concerned. We’re the best at that! American exceptionalism, man! Take that, you cheese-eating European socialists! Having repudiated the rampant regressivism of the last president – a shit-kicker Texas Republican governor who made his bones frying people on death row – and having spent four years with more of precisely the same politics (except with much more niceness) from our present Social Worker-in-Chief, we are now very likely to turn again next to an even more radical version of the Bush debacle, that being the current shit-kicker Texas Republican governor, Rick Perry. I mean, it all might even have a certain entertainment value to it if Americans had any sense of irony whatsoever. Alas, that is far from the case, and this will all somehow make perfect sense to voters in 2012. The Democrat who governs like a Republican couldn’t do squat to fix the crises created by the Republicans, so we’ll need to get an even more Republican Republican in there to do it right! Far, far right.
I have to confess that I am deeply despondent about politics today, in a way I don’t remember feeling, even during the ugliest days of George W. Caligula. It was awful then, but those actions and ethics were only a natural extension of what had already been going on within the GOP for twenty years. Each successive wave of thuggish animals was uglier than the last (as continues to be the case today), from Reagan to Gingrich to Bush. The Obama presidency, on the other hand, has been crushing to the spirit, and more so because even disappointed liberals still don’t get it, thinking he’s a wimp or a lousy poker player, when in fact he is – like Clinton before him – just another kleptocrat, come to sell out not just the country, but also the ideology of liberalism and the political party which once embodied those principles. That’s quite a trifecta, really. Most horror story politicians would be satisfied just to wreck their country in the name of personal narcissism. Obama is additionally destroying a set of crucial and hard-won ideas along with a political party in the bargain.
He is the anti-FDR in every meaning of that term. FDR saved the country. Obama is burying it. FDR created the Democratic Party as we (used to) know it, once probably the most formidable political machine in American history. Obama is dragging it curbside. FDR gave America its social contract. Obama is dismantling it. FDR reveled in the hatred of the greedy thuggish scum who despised him. Obama keeps hoping they’ll like him and invite him over for a beer if only he lets them pass his limp body around the jail cell one more time. FDR was America’s greatest president. Obama is undoubtedly one of its worst.
This cuts deep, man. Perhaps I should have been used to it after eight years of Clinton (whose adoration to this day by Democrats is a thing of sad wonder and another unrelenting source of despondency) and the absolute nothingburgerness of Nancy Pelosi and crew following the 2006 election. Just the same, I’m having an “Et tu, Brute?” moment as I watch the complete sell-out of 300 million people by a handful of traitors. I’ll give Obama credit for achieving one goal, though. This is a truly bipartisan act of treason. Good for him. Working together with Republicans seems very important to this president.
Meanwhile, though, what is there to do, say and think when the avenues for seeking solutions – hell, even for just ending our suicidal tendencies – all seem to be closing up at once, and every iteration of American politics is about losing more of what matters? Like I said, it’s getting harder and harder to have hope, and even to care. I guess at some point if stupid people want to do stupid things to themselves, you gotta let them. I kinda wish the rest of us weren’t dragged down the toilet with them, though. That’s just rude.
It’s even tempting to think that a Republican sweep in 2012 would be good for the country. Since conservative prescriptions can only continue the destruction they’ve begun, perhaps this disaster could mark the repudiation of the ideology forever. ‘Course, that’s what some of us thought in 2008, and now it is only worse. Far worse. Who could have imagined that, after a decade of Bush, regressivism and disaster that two years later the right would be back with the tea party and stronger than ever? Kafka? Dali? Timothy Leary?
The most disheartening thing about the American political condition is the degree to which people don’t get what has happened to them, and still continues to happen, destroying the body politic. It’s as if you were staring at an x-ray of a giant tumor in your belly, and nevertheless still sat there in befuddled consternation, wondering what the hell was making you feel so ill. It’s as if you then thought to yourself, “Oh, what the hell, I guess I’ll just drink a keg or two of this here Tumor Growth Potion. Maybe that will cure me.” In the latest sign of this diagnostic idiocy, voters in Wisconsin this week had the opportunity to respond to the tumor that is their Republican governor, through the mechanism of recall elections. The results were hardly a ringing endorsement for sanity, or even self-protection from the predators for whom Scott Walker and his party (as well as most of the other party) shills. That’s really depressing.
What is most disheartening is that Americans don’t even understand the experiment they’ve been subjected to these last thirty years. They seem to get the fact that it has failed, but they don’t know what “it” is. How many people know that regressives have won more or less every single economic policy battle of the last three decades, from taxes to trade to labor relations to deregulation to privatization to subsidies and beyond? How many Americans know this? How many know, to simply choose the most obvious example (but the same logic applies across the board), that taxes are far lower in America today than they have been for almost a century? And how can they possibly reject this regressive experiment in political economy if they don’t even know that it has been conducted?
One reason they don’t know, of course, is that nobody is telling them this. Sure, there are a couple of real liberals in Congress and even a socialist senator. But the real truth is that there is absolutely no left in America today, as a serious political movement. None. Liberalism hasn’t had a real voice in America for thirty years, perhaps forty. What we have today, instead, is an insane tea party right, whom people like Eisenhower would have utterly abhorred. Then we have the ‘mainstream’ GOP, like John Boehner, who are simply yesterday’s regressive tea party revolutionaries, and who therefore look moderate only through (faux) comparison to the Michele Bachmanns and Allen Wests of this world. Then you have the so-called ‘centrist’ or moderate Democrats in Congress, who can always be relied upon to provide any non-GOP votes necessary to stuff the plutocratic stocking with Xmas gifts, not to mention the one in the White House who signs the bill a day or two later. Finally, there are the Nancy Pelosis and Chuck Schumers of our political firmament, whose job it is to provide the image of an opposition to oligarchy and the military-industrial complex. “We’ll shut down the war as soon as we get control of Congress”, they say. Until they actually do win majorities, that is, when it becomes, “Oh, did we say that?”
And so on. Like I said, there is no one out there – and hasn’t been for over a generation – who is leading the progressive charge, or even trumpeting the liberal narrative, to counter the absurdly manifest lies of the right. Fox News only makes sense if you’re stupid. Similarly, more tax cuts for billionaires as a solution to an economy and a federal budget wrecked by tax cuts for billionaires only makes sense if no one else is out there pointing out that this particular imperial monarch is standing before us buck naked (if you catch my drift). I wouldn’t mind quite as much that my country was committing national suicide if I thought that was the intention. In fact, it’s more like murder by giving poisoned lollipops to middle-aged babies who gleefully grab for them. Hence my despondency.
If there is a small ray of hope out there, it is that more people are beginning to catch on. There has been a large spate of articles in the media lately with the theme of Obama’s complete ineptitude and insignificance as a serious political force. Liberals are by and large finally, amazingly, beginning to understand that he is not a liberal champion by any stretch of the imagination. That’s progress, at least, over reading for the last two years that Obama is a liberal or socialist or has a far-left agenda. What sickening, Orwellian, bullshit that is. Sadly, however, while commentators and the voting public are starting to recognize that Obama is not one of us, they have not yet realized the full truth, which is that he is one of them. As if somebody else picked Larry Summers and Tim Geithner and Bob Gates to serve in his cabinet. As if someone else decided to bail-out Wall Street while doing nothing about jobs or mortgages. As if there was another guy in the White House who tripled American forces in Afghanistan, or maintained Guantánamo in its fully operational state. This is what is, ultimately, so sickening about our current political condition. As a country, we don’t even know what it is.
If there is another slightly larger a ray of hope on the horizon, it is the premise that there is a breaking point out there somewhere. We’re seeing it in Israel (though, of course, the US media declines to cover the story), where huge swaths of the population have been on the streets protesting against – not Palestinians – but rather plutocratic plundering and the diminished lives it has left them with. We’ve seen that right across the Arab Spring countries, and in Greece and Britain.
Just the other day someone correctly noted that, “There is no excuse for violence, no excuse for looting, no excuse for thuggery, and those who are responsible must know that they will be brought to justice. I think this is about sheer criminality.” I couldn’t agree more, except that I was thinking it applies to the greedy bastard thugs whose sheer criminality, looting and – yes – violence has brought the world’s economy to its knees, rather than to the response to that on the streets of London, which was what Tory Home Secretary Theresa May meant when she made that comment. In any case, maybe we’re seeing the beginnings of the breaking point. Perhaps people are at last starting to say Basta! to impoverishment of the many in order to serve the greed of the few.
Maybe such restored political nobility will even come to America.
Maybe it isn’t the entire human species that tramples on nobility in its grubby pursuit of greed, but just Homo Sapien Americanus.
And maybe even we children of the Neanderthal can do better, if pushed hard enough.
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149 Comments so far
Show AllExcellent point that we do not need a "great president" we need popular mobilization that makes demands and threatens the powerful.
DAVE: Since yours is a politically keen mind, could you do the forum a favor and share your view of Ron Paul? Of late, there are at least ten posters who are suggesting this individual is anti-war and would be a positive change for the nation. If my understanding of libertarian philosophy is on the mark, it would seem Paul would give industries a continued free pass to pollute/exploit the environment. And his record on women's rights seems utterly retrograde.
Could you elaborate, please, if you return to this thread.
Thank you in advance.
The problem with RP's brand of libertarianism, is that while he says he could cut down dramatically, on foreign military invasions, and the bailing out of big banks etc,:
1. he wants to cut down "social" parts of gov.
2, he wants to cut down on "regulatory" parts of gov (that make life difficult for corporations
3. he does NOT want to cut down on ALL gov, which would be the logical extension of 1&2. You do not see him saying that he would shut down the courts, the laws that protect rights and properties of corporations.
Thank you, RFLOH. I don't understand why some on CD would support a person who so readily stands behind the corporate DESTRUCTION of our shared home, The Planet. And if Paul identifies (however peripherally) with the Fundamentalist Christian ilk, that is BAD news for women's rights, not just abortion. The Republican banner has always been about these items, while the Democrats mostly recently got on board. In part I blame the system which has gotten on its knees before big money. Money is 'the god' in this land of the anything but free. It corrupts everything, and I am beginning to see funds as little more than a currency soaked in the blood of innocents. How many peope in the US are happy, healthy, comfortable, or possessed of security?
And if one answers that "the elites" have all of the above, I would beg to differ. IF no soul is present, that could be true; yet however black the soul from deeds that damage others, a price is exacted; and somewhere inside the structures of cognition that understanding remains intact. Drugs and alcohol, two of America's favored psychological coping mechanisms, may act to dilute the truth; but ultimately, it is Truth that remains, Truth that determines the ultimate karmic "score."
KITAJ: Thank you for the posts about expanded consciousness. In this era, I would not recommend psychedelics because not everyone is prepared to open their psychic pores to heightened empathy. US culture is so imbued with the dark ethos of Mars rules, violence championed everywhere, even imprinting our foodchain, that to take all this in could do real damage.
In the time of ancient Egypt, when Initiations were performed inside the great Pyramids, souls were prepared with a lot of inner development before they faced opening themselves to higher forces. "Initiation," By Elizabeth Haich speaks about this.
I completely agree that the US ethos has to change. The fact that media, religion, the war machine, the corporate machine, and Hollywood all reinforce memes that make danger and violence seem to be natural components of life, makes it harder to bring a better vision into minds and hearts. That is my personal challenge... and it's an issue I explore in my new book.
in some manner all plants and all animals capitalize from the biosphere in order to survive and preserve the species. however, human-less-than-kind has turned survival of the fittest into a false canard of survival of the fattest. as the human population grows exponentially, precious resources run low and the term "renewable" resources no longer applies in an economic fu*-*up where consumption outpaces our ability to "prime the pump" for the next thirsy traveller. you and i have both enjoyed the company of wealthy and the not so wealthy. buck, i remember your saying that those who do a hard day's labor bring a greater sense of joy and friendship than many of the image-oriented moneyed. true!
all along the way humans have believed ourselves more intelligent than the cosmos. we have turned preservation of the species into a competition to the death where to win; survival of the individual is the point. a vain and silly anti-social game in which the winner is the "one who get all the toys!" obviously, we have not outsmarted Nature.
only ourselves.
Darwin used the word profitable, as in ... it's profitable for Monarch butterflies, as a specie, to lay eggs on Milkweed.
Christianity plants seeds of vanity ... special creatures made in god's image ... mini-gods that worship themselves.
Nature provides us with all that is needed. The trick is to live off the interest and never touch the capital.
Great post & analogy, Buck.
"FDR saved capitalism FOR the capitalists"
You got that right, Buck.
He realized that a little Keynesian massage might work to revive the gasping monster. So he went for it, believing that a little progressive tinkering with capitalism would be preferable to its collapse followed by a genuine socialist revolution.
A revolution might have proven to be irreversible, while the tinkering could easily be reversed by future administrations, which is what we see happening today.
While his underlying motivation was to save capitalism, I think he does deserves respect for the decades of fairly decent living that he gave to the working class by his compromise with socialism. But while it was a step in the right direction, we should never be satisfied with FDR's kind of tinkering.
The moral of the story is: if we don't eventually pull capitalism up by the roots, jump up and down on it, feed it through a wood chipper, then commit it to the flames, it'll some day rise and again try to strangle us.
Correct . In essence the New Deal helped to "Kill the left" by saving Capitalism. The anti-socialist hysteria reached a peak in the United States shorty after the second world war.
McCarthyism finished the job on the left and they offed JFK, but then the oligarchs were caught by surprise by the Civil Rights Movement and then the Women's Movement and the hippies and the anti-war movement and Earth Day and the "New Left", but they sacrificed Nixon and tossed some more hay and then succeeded in the Reagan Revolution and have never had to look back.
We need to give them reason to look back, to fear the people, we need to give them a popular movement to contend with.
"Think not wealth distribution.
Think equality."
Exactly right Buck.
The difference between revolution and incremental liberalism, which ensures the cyclic struggles that currently engage us.
We continue to struggle within a universe that excludes the potential for our liberation. There are valleys (where we are now) but no actual peaks. The New Deal era was a hill.
Time to make the leap forward to the mountaintop.
I wonder if this is what MLK referred to in that last speech?
Think also accountability, the unsustainable delusion of predatory capitalism "at any cost" - which now includes critical planetary well being gobbled by hyper-industrialization with an excretory cost that is, in such demure terms referred to as "externalized" - dehumanized in other words.
Capitalism has been built on usury since before the days of colonization and that history is something the likes of Zinn, Galleano, Chomsky and so many others have been fighting for. Capitalism in any conceivable sense of a "just" system could not today carry the moniker - but must be differentiated. In the process the hue and cry of "patriots" for threat to the empty word and promise they have been so systematically sold would probably need a lot of people standing in public squares banging pots from their kitchens to return to some semblance of tranquility.
David, no doubt about it. This is your best piece yet. Excellent. Well done. Thank you.
Madison Avenue and Hollywood and Washington
always glad to read david micheal green, the keen observer! karl marx wrote that "history always repeats itself; first as a drama, then as a farce. all thoughout the absurd comedy and suspense as we approached the debt ceiling deadline with the big question being, "will the democrats and republicans work together to save the u.s. credit rating?" all white knuckled realizing that world economic stability and peace on earth depend on 535 u.s. people frantically working out a deal. ANY DEAL! hurry, huury! no time to think! i saw forums with frightened pundits right and left (rite-lite) fearing an end to civilization unless these two parties learn to play nice. when did "democracy" become all about the leaders, not the people? i read lots from team blue and team red championing the hero of the moment, but little effort to understand the policies which, as you say david, have for 30 years or more contributed to the great divide as skilled labor lost its hold on wealth. a new, more apt term to replace "the haves and have nots" might be the establishment and the people" in a CD keystone pipeline discussion one woman supported the idea because the pipeline meant jobs for her struggling state and more importantly, her family members. i tire of people seemingly banging their sippy-cups on the highchair tray in a tantrum fit, "give us jobs!" that to me constitutes an empty non-specific demand.
a year or so ago, you wrote an excellent piece about the privatized penitentiaries. that sparked a lot of discussion and information sharing for a few of us on a political forum. however, we preached to the choir as most of the kiddies preferred the fun of personal attacks on one another or the perceived villains reading soliloquies in the fading d.c. limelight. jobs, you say? just learned this week that prisoners, the majority held indefinitely for non-violent crimes are finding great job opportunities while incarcerated--room, board and TWENTY CENTS AN HOUR! i do cringe whenever i hear the words "post-racial america" because as you well know, david, black men disproportionately get those jobs.
a bright spot for the future may be that toddlers and youngsters in modern society cannot be fooled into the american dream of living indulgently and lavishly. they'll be getting socks, underwear and jeans for birthdays, et al because mom and dad cannot put the latest over-priced tickle-me-elmo gimmick on the credit card to be paid in time with interstest. the ecological resource pantry looks bare and yet too many citizens in fear grasp a tight hold on that tattered comfort blankie in our fat and grubby little fingers, that one or another or perhaps a third party leader can get us back on the road to an ever growing, ever increasing economy. we expect to be supported in the life-style to which we have become accustomed, consume more in order that we may leave our childen better off than we had it.
the generation growing up right now may escape the me-me tunnel vision and rose colored glasses syndrome. yep, we're in for tough times, but these times abound with opportunities to accomplish something. in my mind a sense of accomplishment lifts the spirit more than a wish-i-could-take-this-job-and-shove-it paycheck. step one to a better life?
"DONT WORRY, BE HAPPY
NOW!"
We really need a way to organize a challenge to Obama for 2012.
The only challenge to Obama will be from the other party. Either you hold your nose and vote or you reinstate his rule. We have no other choice. For me holding a failed administration to a four year limit is enough at this point.
Open Letter To President Obama No. 2
Dear Mr. President,
How many people are entering the starvation age of their lives ... hourly?
When extreme hunger has become endemic throughout the nation, how many acts of cannibalism will have taken place?
Are we being moved, inexorably, towards a time when there will be overweight cannibals on our streets?
Mr. President, are high-level meetings taking place, involving FEMA, Interior, State, Military and Human Services, for dealing with the starving millions ... as expeditiously as possible?
Will special funds be set aside for burying the indigent dead, deep so that they can't be dug up for human consumption?
Will a law be passed making it illegal to eat members of your own family?
Will a program be put in place which will make human skeletons available for housing construction?
So much to think of, Mr. President, so little time.
Yours Kindly,
Leland Mellott
Unless something changes drastically, I'm going to support Ron Paul. I'm tired of the financial criminals (starting with Geithner & The Fed) destroying this country. I want some financial sanity and stability. And goddammit, I want an end to these wars. None of this will occur under the democrats or under any other republican. Arguing over this failed president and his party is now off my radar. Both are a waste of time. Its time to move on.
From my perspective, nothing is going to address the core root of our problem unless we address the private ownership/oversight of the Fed, and we shift to a nationalized monetary system. The arrangement of the We The People being in constant debt to the banks with their usurious system of interest, as well as their abuses within a laissez faire international market is what is killing all of us, and perpetuating all the ravaging of the planet's ecosystems, and the need for endless war profiteering.
Its all a sham, a ponzi scheme that has no other consequence than to place all of us into the pockets of our overseers, the big banks.
Move back to the Greenbacks! (or a modern day equivalent)
I have considered a vote for Ron Paul in 2012 for this reason alone, even if I must plug my nose for most of the rest of his policies. Anyway, I don't think I'm alone in stating that I'm beyond caring about 'well measured' approaches to politics... as if thats what we're currently confronting. Is he my first choice? Will I ever get my first choice? I doubt it.
But this should be clear: No true liberal, progressive or lefty worth his or her salt would ever give Obama their vote. He IS one of them... OBVIOUSLY. He is the agent of change and hope — for the ultra rich, ONLY. They must have calculated that his skin color would be the perfect ruse to convince us that he'd never sell us out... It was all camouflage, and its worked so well just until recently.
At this point, I feel, as this article pointed out, it may even be better to just give Rome over to the Neros and Caligulas, and at least allow blame to fall where it belongs. Soon, we can rebuild out of the ashes of what was the U.S.A. — Putting a Bachman or Perry in charge would surely bring the whole shebang to a rapid close. So, a vote for Ron Paul would be my more hopeful approach that there *might* still be a chance for America to survive when its all said and done.
I'm sorry to all the Dem apologists out there, but you are now nothing more than another part of the problem. You let Obama, and his asinine race to the 'center' (constantly shifting further right) and the DNC sell you out down the river. I will not vote Democratic Party again, choosing 3rd party or upsetter from now on until this travesty of American and international political intrigue/smoke and mirrors/kabuki theater comes to an end.
Some good points in your comment. But no one gets to be Pres unless they are commited to the rich. Why do you think they killed JFK, MLK, RFK? JFK, was going to dismantle the CIA. As DMH pointed out, this bribing of congress has gone on forever.
We have sham elections. And while Bachman will bring the country down, so has every President since FDR. He wasn't a saint either.
How many Presidents have furthered manifest destiny? All of them. They were all wealthy.
We are screwed. Always have been.
re: "We have sham elections. And while Bachman will bring the country down, so has every President since FDR. He wasn't a saint either."
Reluctantly, I must agree, but relatively speaking, FDR was one of the best presidents the US has had.
But your point is correct. Our elections are shams. They are obviously rigged, taking advantage of the advent of 'electronic' i.e. untraceable, easily-manipulate-able voting. Before campaign finance reform, before repealing of Citizens United, before tossing out 'first past the post' elections and adopting 'instant runoff' balloting, American's MUST address this issue.
Why the hell do people think this topic gets NO real discussion or coverage in the mainstream media?! Because they know this is how they've got us... This is their 'option B' whenever they don't like the results of of 'option A', or in other words, We the People's choice? It used to be they'd have to "Wellstone"/Bobby Kennedy" the unlucky bastard. Now, its a lot less messy to pull a Kathy Nickolaus on 'em (or should we call it pulling a Ken Blackwell?).
How else can anyone explain why "Voter Fraud" always trumps priority in all the media to "Election Fraud"?
jfk, rfk, mlk, malcolm x, cointel pro, the gulf of tonkin incident, guatemala, el salvador nicaragua, allende, argentina, now honduras, the bombings murders and frameups by the cia through the gladio network in europe, the greek fascist rule of the generals, and now, 9/11....the war is over and the good guys lost..everybody knows....
Right on the mark.. once again Prof Green....
unfortunately for us, democracy requires an informed electorate....
distract them with junk food, TV, and a endless stream of misinformation.. make them think their petty prejudices are some kind of high philosophy... and you have them....
and they will never notice the bugulars in the kitchen...
give them a myth in which they can live...and they are yours for the taking...
I expect this polity will finally collapse under the weight of its systemic corruption.. it will not be pretty..
thank you DMG
Yeah, well, DMG, no matter how cynical we get, it's never enough to keep up.
You wrote: "If there is a small ray of hope out there, it is that more people are beginning to catch on. There has been a large spate of articles in the media lately with the theme of Obama’s complete ineptitude and insignificance as a serious political force."
Where do you see us catching on? The meme that Obama is inept is equally debilitating. It serves to obscure the fact that, as a member of the new and improved Democratic Party, he is a corporatist like 99% of our current crop of politicians. As such he supports the oligarchs and plutocrats that pull the strings, whether they were served by Dick Cheney's energy committee, Joe Biden's banking committee, Max Baucus's health/pharmaceutical committee, Chuck Schumer's Hedge Fund cabal, or Carl Levin's military committee.
Democrats and Republicans are all tied in to the Grand Rip-Off; they just wear different masks when appealing to the serfs, I mean the public, i.e., the former care about the safety net while the latter save us from taxation. In the end the two parties in Congress, the President, as well as his colleagues on the Supreme Court, are simply Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum working to sustain the same lords and masters that call all the shots.
Your point is? Your solution is?
Folks,
In a similar vein to Americans who have no clue, I am looking for a word that describes someone, when shown overwhelming evidence, logical/rational-even emotional-argumentation for a certain position/stand and then acknowledges said evidence but still refutes your argument with "It' just your opinion". I've been exposed to this line many times and the person believes that it is a credible comeback. I've thought of the term ignorant f*#k but that implies a lack of knowledge with which they have been presented. Perhaps the best is dumbf*#k but I need something that I can use in writing (especially for the educational realm where any "profanity" is instantly looked down upon and then dismissed as crude and impolite.
I know that there are a number of excellent wordsmiths here in CD land. I need your help coming up with a phrase or word to describe the above.
Thanks,
OYE
OYE - I'm not a wordsmith, just someone who's experienced the same mind-boggling situation so many times I just feel like screaming. But I know that if I start, I may never be able to stop.
I think these people are in a deep state of hypnosis, or so totally brainwashed there's no wiggle room for anything else to seep in.
Just my opinion.
They're not hypnotized. They're fully awake and cognizant. They're just waiting for the right return on their investment. And today they are being promised more by the "teaparty" and the republicans than they are by the democrats.
American citizens are desparate and holding a yard sale and the republicans and "teaparty" are willing to promise more for their bits and bobs than the democrats. It's been proven that the democrats can't seem to pay up anyway. So who do you think is going to win, after all these "pickers" gambled on "hope and change" last time and got nothing in return? Hard to pay the bills on optimizm alone.
Authoritarianism, oye.
http://members.shaw.ca/jeanaltemeyer/drbob/TheAuthoritarians.pdf
Words that spring to mind:
Stuck Inside The Matrix
Automotons
The Programmed
The Conditioned
Inside the Box "thinkers"
Pavlov's Best
Christian Theocrats
Deluded True Believers
Jim Jones' Left Behind (series)
etc.
Good one... I forgot that lyric.
I knew you all would come through, THANKS!
OYE
I'd say FDR's biggest political mistake was letting the Smedley Butler Business Plot coup conspirators off the hook and not hanging them in public by the scruffs of their necks.
I agree. That would have broken the Bush family line.
Excellent article, excellent comments, and no we do not need to focus on the 2012 president race, we need to go into our families and communities and workplaces and tell the truth and organize a popular movement.
Excellent, David Michael Green. For a book length perspective read Morris Berman's Dark Age America: The Final Stage of Empire. Written pre Obama but we all know the trends and agenda of the ruling elites have been at work for some time and that BHO is just the latest front man for the oligarchy.
Another super and very readable piece Prof DMG. Thank you!
"....there is no one out there – and hasn’t been for over a generation – who is leading the progressive charge, or even trumpeting the liberal narrative, to counter the absurdly manifest lies of the right"
And... nobody coming forward to challenge the Prez and to counter the betrayal of the pretend left. All have been bought and paid for.
Yes, it's depressing, but not so much that you didn't write the article.
Remember - depression is just anger without enthusiasm. Let's roll up our sleves.
Hey Going Green,
Did you make up "depression is just anger without enthusiasm"? If you did, WELL DONE!
Have to agree. It's a well turned phrase. I am betting we'll see it turn up more. Hope he get's paid for it.
Mr. Green describes exactly how I, a child of the '60's, feels about politics today. Totally depressed. At least when Bush was still in office, I had hopes that if, and when, another Democrat finally got back in control of the White House things would change and get back on the right track again. And when a black man got elected to the highest office in the land, I was elated. I just knew things were going to get better. Wow, what a let down. And that's just putting it mildly. Now there is nothing left to believe in. That's what is really so depressing---nothing left to believe in. And here I am 66 yrs old AND NOTHING LEFT TO BELIEVE IN. God help us.
And there isn't even a God.
Now that we know that, let's roll up our sleeves, grit our teeth, work side by side and start cleaning up...
That's what we should do. But some will always work for the other side when promised riches without effort. But, I am willing to roll up my sleeves and work towards a common good.
Skin color is not really the determiner is it? No more than sexual identity is.
Funny thing is I still have hope and believe that humanity will win out. We just have to come to the realization we all have a limited time on this earth and it shouldn't be dedicated to exploiting others for individual gain.
No matter how much money we leave our kids, once we are gone it's up to them to live their own lives. We can't guarrantee they won't squander it or allow what we worked so hard for to be stolen.
Life is the real treasure. We can demonstrate that value more by living as loving humans than we can by seeking wealth at the expense of everything else. We can share our love and appreciation of all other life or we can live shallow consumer driven lives of desperation.
Exploitation of others is just a short term gain. In the big schem not so much.
Wahooooo! Another old hippy. You voiced everything I've been feeling for a very long time.
Madison Ave is the problem. When we swallowed the changed name of "personnel departments" to "human resources" we were doomed to the agenda if we accepted that "rebranding" by a group of overpaid social idiots. We allowed ourselves to be commoditized. No longer people, but seen as some vague faceless resource.
Our generation accomplished a lot contrary to Tom Brokaw claiming we were lame. He and his elitist friends have done their best to push this country and the world in the state it's in. Too bad we didn't stick it out and pass ERA. I think if we had a lot of this wouldn't be coming to pass. Women and all other workers would be making more, and "gay" wouldn't even be a distracting issue.
http://blogs.denverpost.com/ostrow/2010/03/01/brokaw-busts-boomers/2295/
Why is it talking about increasing taxes is always taboo, but we never consider high interests on credit cards as immoral?
As a gardener I am always a bit "grubby". I wouldn't be alive if I wasn't. What I am not is "dirty. I never do anything that harms another and is not in balance with nature.
You're playing a game of symantics and I wonder why? Is it pro-hippie, or pro-the financial world of today? You say we buried the hippie movement...were you there? Did you write this piece? If so please, identify yourself. And who did the burying? Madison Ave.? I find it strange that the one that buried it was "anonymous". That always stinks of a marketing campaign to me. If you are basing your statement on this:
http://www.redhousebooks.com/galleries/haight/death.htm
If "Once something goes mainstream, it's dead." is true why isn't the teaparty dead? It's been mainstream since the beginning.
I am sixty one I didn't come to it late. I was and am a part of it. And will forever until I die maintain it's ideals. War will never be the answer, and I'll will never worship at the church of the corporation.
"This is a truly bipartisan act of treason."
This rings true to me. We have a small group of politicians, paid for and controlled by a small group of plutocrats, preparing to destroy the lives of the rest of us. People need to rise up. As Chomsky would say, we need to organize. We are many, they are few.
But DMG's point about the Kafkaesque nature of the rise of the tea party hit home yesterday. While walking down the street I ran into a neighbor who recently lost his job. He has been working temporary jobs and has really struggled. But he remains staunchly conservative and wants the rich to do as well as possible because only the rich can give him another full time job. No matter what I said to him, he would not budge. He believes Obama is a socialist and he lost his job because of overtaxation and overregulation of the rich. Operant conditioning's excellent result.
I see that a lot where I live right now as well. It's a hard thing to watch. So mny tragic lives still pathetically clinging to the belief tht their rapists are relly their only true friends.
Heartbreaking.
Nobility isn't really a bitch, and it's not something that can be purchased or measured. It's not really something that can be passed on to the next generation as in royalty or riches. Nobility has nothing to do with class or status and everything to do with actions and being. Nobility is about outstanding qualities....I know very vague, but not really genetic or monetary in nature. I'd venture it has to be demonstrated in it's most basic form. Mankind has just allowed it's definition to be adulterated to serve the needs of those that wish to remain as powerful and pass it on to their progeny without really requiring such progeny to perform up to the actual minimums of the definition or they themselves remaing noble. I think like all things in life noble characteristics are not infinite they must be consistently demonstrated to remain authentic. One can be noble one minute and a craven pervert the next.
Kind of like a Nobel Peace Prize doesn't actually make for a peacemaker.