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On Regaining a Spirit of Defiance: 'I'm Worried Now but I Won't Be Worried Long'
The course of action taken by the present day U.S. political class in addressing the era's rising tide of economic hardship and ecological peril has proven as helpful as tossing an anvil to a drowning man.
The following two, axiomatic headlines reveal much about the dovetailing mindsets manifested by members of both the drowning class and the moral compass-bereft captains of the ship of state:
Nike Foamposite Galaxy Shoe Spurs Frenzy At Malls (Associated Press, Saturday, February 25, 2012)
Mitt Romney: Wife Ann Drives ‘A Couple Of Cadillacs’ (The Washington Post, Friday, February 24, 2012)
Inadvertently, Mr. Romney's declaration, stated in his own blandly deranged way, captures the As Above/So Below nature of consumer state psychology.
By means of incessant, womb to tomb, commercial propaganda, the corporate class has promoted the idea that an individual's identity is based solely on the sum total of his worldly possessions. Yet, when young people, denied a decent education and stranded in circumstances where they have been deprived of a means to gain a sense of identity by acquiring the skills and the development of the talents necessary for the pursuit of their individual aspirations, have the temerity to reflect the societal values they have internalized -- for example, by acting in an aggressive manner in a mindless pursuit of material items that they have been conditioned to believe will bestow a sense of self worth -- then media elites and bamboozled bourgeois should not, as they can be counted on to do, react with consternation, carrying on as if these acts of desperation on the part of the young are wholly devoid of any cultural context.
A defining trait of declining civilizations: A yawning, unbridgeable chasm develops between the ability to connect cause and effect e.g., between the excesses of the privileged and powerful (apropos, a multi-millionaire, presidential candidate's braggadocio involving the multiple ownership of luxury automobiles) and the causative effect that evincing such an arrogant and self-serving worldview exerts on the actions of the so-called underclasses.
As a consequence, a demeaning view of the world--and of themselves--has been instilled within the young: According to the internalized cosmology of the consumer state, individuals, sans materialist signifiers, register as non entities.
When the one percent crash the global economy and loot national treasuries, this is termed the neoliberal economic model, but rowdy behavior, including the coveting of relentlessly hyped athletic shoes by a few of the least powerful denizens of the consumer state, evokes waves of condemnation. Existing in a culture that robs people of self-respect by countenancing the ongoing crime wave, perpetrated by the one percent, we should not be shocked when those born bereft of privilege, at times, conduct themselves in a less than polite fashion.
The emptiness of consumer state existence leaves many so wanting for purpose and identity that, in their confusion, they seek meaning at a mall…Lost in endlessly proffered distractions, swooning in the negative enchantment of the commercial hologram, it is no mystery why so many in the general population of the U.S. cannot approach, neither on an emotional nor intellectual level, the dire situation presented by, for example, feedback loops of escaping methane gas now active in the Arctic, Siberia, and the Gulf of Mexico, and the manner that this manmade phenomenon imperils their own survival.
In this regard, predictions of doom are not the stuff of dour old men, afflicted with Cassandra complexes, long, unkempt beards flapping, as they hector passersby with gloomy auguries of a rapidly arriving "time of reckoning"--when what they mean is, their libido is waning, and it feels to them like the end of the world.
No, this is truly bad news. And if these effects of climate chaos are not mitigated and begin to be reversed--and soon--then there will come, in the not too distant future, mass suffering, in the form of a great die-off, on a scale almost impossible to envisage.
We're talking peer-reviewed scientific inquiry not crank-speak here. These are extraordinarily dangerous circumstances.
The cultural, social, and political arrangements that have created this approaching catastrophe must be radically confronted and changed. Accordingly, the times call for extraordinary action. Business as usual will constitute a death march.
Not being an advocate for the dreariness intrinsic to compulsive self-denial, I accept the need for almost all forms of human excess...with the exception of those actions and pursuits that are deliberately cruel, belligerently ignorant, and sadistically or mindlessly destructive. You can pursue excess to the point of collapse, as far as I'm concerned, just don't harm any innocent bystanders or leave others to cleanup your mess.
These forms of excess are anathema: the agendas of the corporate/consumer state that are reducing the spicy resonance of the global agora into a bland shopping mall food court, and demand excessive work hours and debt slavery to maintain the system; overfishing that has reduced the stocks of large fish in the world's oceans by ninety percent; the carbon footprint, created by excessive industrialization, that has become an iron boot on the neck of all living things; the commercial/ entertainment/public relations/advertising complex, specializing in endless self-referential spectacle, that offers neither revelation nor cathartic release; the defining traits of our present economic system which are identical to the actions and attendant rationalizations of an addict on a death-besotted bender…desperate, joyless, and devoid of the shared sublime of a communal bacchanal.
The Road of Excess might lead to the Palace of Wisdom but one cannot arrive there by modern jet travel or by any interstate highway; conversely, one has to give oneself permission to get lost in a wilderness of inner states of being. Wander long enough, descend deep enough, take enough wrong turns, resist intransigent power creatively enough, and when the night becomes dark enough above the tangled tree-line you will find your lodestar.
Nowadays, one must cultivate a high tolerance for being lost. Because, in a doomed culture, in order to have a chance at gaining an original sensibility, one must wander far beyond the royal court of flatterers, uninspired fools, and scheming courtesans who are driven to spend their days truckling before a senile king nodding on his throne.
We find ourselves, currently, stranded in a crisis of selfhood, engendered by a system that demands that the untamable yearnings of the human heart be expressed almost exclusively within the limited lexicon of consumerism, that the path of self-expression be obstructed at the velvet rope-fortified domain of corporate state show biz types and elitist-approved artists, that the imagination is useless unless it generates vast monetary rewards for the one percent.
In short, because the known thoroughfares now dead-end into a wasteland.
"Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go. -- T.S. Eliot
The vehemence of the imagination motivates. It rages against oppression, as it, in equal measure, both protects and frees one's heart. It creates and endures. The heart, the alpha and omega point of the imagination, rebels against sensible centrism as it serves to transform demons of conformity into recalcitrant angels who are the sworn enemies of mindless power.
Moreover, the implications of this predicament extend far beyond the essential struggle for individual selfhood, for this situation is interwoven with a larger struggle for the survival of our species--a crisis that is rapidly reaching the ecological tipping point.
How we negotiate this perilous landscape will not depend on an ability to adapt to the prevailing madness of the present order. To the contrary, our chances of avoiding catastrophe will hinge on an ability to embrace novel understandings wrought by imaginative engagement with emergent realities.
This approach will also prove helpful in withstanding the inevitable conflicts that will arise with the defenders of the societal arrangements of the present whose reactionary tactics will grow ever more ruthless and brutal in direct proportion to their escalating level of panic, inevitably provoked by the collapsing certainties of the entrenched (but unsustainable) order with which they have aligned their fate.
Those are the types of fears that have kept us estranged from each other, atomized, alienated, mistrustful of the vitality of communal engagement, afraid of movement building…waiting for instructions from the powerful on how to proceed through life, as opposed to going about the business of making the world anew.
"It takes a worried man to sing a worried song…I'm worried now but I won't be worried long," so go the lyrics of the traditional folk song.
By what means do people who have experienced a lifetime of economic hardship and official oppression endure and continue to sing out in defiance?
Because they have learned this: the forces of repression might buffet your body, might zip-cuff your wrists, might lock you in jail -- but they cannot gain entrance into your mind, unless you allow them in. They cannot imprison your soul unless you let them.
"There is no week nor day nor hour when tyranny may not enter upon this country -- if the people lose their confidence in themselves -- and lose their roughness and spirit of defiance." -- Walt Whitman
Whitman's admonition is known innately by some, by those whose spirit of defiance are helping us to remember our innate roughness: by Bradley Manning, by the people of Greece, of OWS, by those stopped and frisked, humiliated, harmed, and jailed on false charges daily on the streets of the U.S. police state, and by the spirit of defiance being displayed in ever increasing degree by oppress people the world over--by all of those souls who will no longer accept the dismal fate of being imprisoned by fear.
In truth, the one percent would not be capable of building a propaganda apparatus slick enough, nor be able to hire enough cops, nor assemble armies with enough troops, nor build prisons rapidly enough nor large enough to keep us enslaved--if only enough of us awoke to the reality of our common plight.
Therefore: "I'm worried now but I won't be worried long."
Comments
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47 Comments so far
Show All"Nowadays, one must cultivate a high tolerance for being lost." (Phil)
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Beautiful article Phil! As the mountain man said when asked if he had ever been lost:
"powerful confused - but not lost" (The Mountain Men - Brian Keith & Charlton Heston)
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We are now daily reminded of the police state we have become (here in Canada as well as the US).
And we need to be reminded of the state of the environment, as you have done here.
It's going to be a tough fight - and a close thing.
Manysummits
======
That one line, "Nowadays one must cultivate a high tolerance for being lost" got to me, too.
"Plato said in The Symposium that one of the greatest privileges of a human life is to become midwife to the birth of the soul in another. When your soul awakens, you begin to truly inherit your life. You leave the kingdom of fake surfaces, repetitive talk and weary roles and slip deeper into the true adventure of who you are and who you are called to become. The greatest friend of the soul is the unknown. Yet we are afraid of the unknown because it lies outside our vision and our control. We avoid it or quell it by filtering it through our protective barriers of domestication and control. The normal way never leads home."
I borrowed that quote from an essay by John O'Donohue. It seem to fit Phil's essay in general and more specifically, the sentence that suggests nowadays we must cultivate a high tolerance for being lost. May we all bear witness to each other's souls soaring as we carve out a new and more loving path for ourselves and the Earth.
To the unknown path!
Thank you, great comment and I'm inspired. After all, it's been said "not all those who wander are lost." Peace.
Lose your mind - Find you way.
http://riversong.wordpress.com/a-collective-rite-of-passage/
"If you look into your own heart, and you find nothing wrong there, what is there to worry about? What is there to fear?" - Confucius
"Because they have learned this: the forces of repression might buffet your body, might zip-cuff your wrists, might lock you in jail -- but they cannot gain entrance into your mind, unless you allow them in. They cannot imprison your soul unless you let them." - Phil Rockstroh
they can imprison your mind if they can access it externally w/out your control.
psychotronic warfare.
- - - - - - - - - -
The Threat of Information, Electromagnetic and Psychtronic Warfare
by Mojmir Babacek - Global Research, September 29, 2005
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=1016
{According to the director of FAPSI, Alexander Starovoitov, the information attack could place out of order all electronic systems controling Russian defense as well as electronic systems of government infrastructure, transportation, energetics and nuclear systems. In this way the army would lose ability to fight and the government ability to direct defense of the country. It is known that such effect could produce an electromagnetic pulse following nuclear explosion, but the Russian daily Segodnya described in most of the article "mysterious information-psychological" means capable not only to harm human health (and according to Russian scientist A. F. Okhatrin to kill people [2] ), but as well to "block on subconscious level human free will, cause loss of ability of political, cultural and other self identification of human being" and even "cause destruction of indivisible informational and spiritual space of the Russian Federation." Underneath the article the daily Segodnya published a review of weapons affecting human psyche which it obtained from the Russian Department of Defense. Together with ultrasound and microwave weapon there is listed as well "psychotronic weapon" which is, aside of capability to "transfer information among people" able to act on communication and electronic systems [1].}
................................
Electronic Mind Control by Mark Bond
Archived in Science section | Latest Approved Revision on: Sun. 07/21/2002
http://www.newsfinder.org/site/more/electronic_mind_control/
{Present day US Government use of synthetic telepathy was described in the October-November 1994 issue of Nexus:
Directed-energy weapons currently being deployed include, for example, a micro-wave weapon manufactured by Lockheed-Sanders and used for a process known as Voice Synthesis which is remote beaming of audio (i.e., voices or other audible signals) directly into the brain of any selected human target. This process is also known within the US Government as Synthetic Telepathy.
Microwave Zapping
Much of the work done with microwaves was developed by Project Pandora, which was put into place by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research to study the effects of microwaves that were being beamed into the American Embassy in Moscow by the Russians. Some of the findings of the scientists involved with Pandora are quite disturbing. Dr. Joseph C. Sharp and engineer Mark Grove were able to hear and distinguish one-syllable words by pulse-modulated microwaves.}
- - - - - - - - - -
...peace...
Agreeable sentiments, my friend, but your sentences are overlong and overstuffed. The purpose of writing is to communicate, not baffle.
"Stevespang"
Your comment says more about you than the work of beauty which you would edit.
Your desire for simplification is understandable, but it is what you have been trained to want. What you call "overstuffed", I would say is rain water within a drought.
Please try to slow down and be thankful for your own benefit.
This article almost brings tears of joyous relief to my eyes. I do not want less.
Please let it touch you.
Ditto your sentiments Birdbrain Alley! Thank God for writers like Phil who make us pause and reflect. The "Twitter" syndrome doesn't apply to all of us!
We are all writers like Phil, if we let ourselves be (to parapraise the Zapatistas :-}).
agreed tj........it just seems to me that life is critiqued enough in terms of what we look like, what we wear, how much money we have, or don't have. Posting a comment to an official CD writer in here that criticizes his writing, as opposed to discussing or rejecting ideas, seems a little arrogant.
Getting published on CD is not an easy feat. (And I'm not saying because one is published that's synonymous with excellent writing). I've suggested several people who write well try to get a feature column in here, or just published once for that matter. Those same people have never heard back from the CD editors nor even been politely rejected. I'm not sure who or how one qualifies for this site but once you're on, maybe focusing on their ideas is more productive.
You raise some interesting points ET. My guess is that CD editorial decision-making is fairly arbitrary and at times irrational. That's true of most editorial decision-making.
It's even true when we write as responders. Can you answer how exactly you select your words and the pieces that you respond to?
That said, I think that CD editors -- given the title of the site and the general trend of articles/essays -- has a responsibility to be more transparent about their intentions and actions.
If there answer is "we'll do what we feel like doing at the moment," that is at least honest.
J.B. Priestly once said that his writing style was the result of a lot of hard work. He did not want to impress people with the stock of items in his memory and with all of the associations he could call upon. He wanted them to understand his point. It takes a lot of discipline to write clearly.
Although I agree with the principle mentioned by Birdbrain alley, above, when you preach to the choir, you have less effect than if you preach to everyone.
Adlai Stevenson once contrasted his style of speaking with that of J.F. K. He said that "when I speak, people say 'How well he speaks,' but when J.F.K speaks, people say 'Let us march.'"
"sheepherder"
Do you think that Bobolinks would be more significant if they sang more like Robins?
Of course not. But you don't get my point. Wiliam James once said that music gives us ontological information. James was right about that, but the problem is that ontological information is not easy to articulate, much less communicate to a wide audience.
As eloquent as this fellow is, he is not communicating to very many people.
~To the unknown path!~ Elizabeth Tjader
~Please let it touch you.~ Birdbrain Alley
inspiring writing, i agree. phil always says it well! and thank you, elizabeth, for sharing plato's thoughts. i LOVE the unknown path, "ah sweet mystery of life!"
~when you preach to the choir, you have less effect~sheepherder
i know what you mean, 'sheepherder' but we continuously learn from one another and it sure helps to realize that we, the stubborn ones, lone wolves as it were, who have marched off to a "different" drummer; we who "find the lodestar" within the mind meet together in such awesome harmony of thought. haven't we all tilted at those windmills constructed of "demons of conformity" in vain attempts to awaken those yet slumbering, snuggled under a tattered security blanket seductively woven into the shroud of entropic civilization? several years ago i joined a moyers’ “faith and reason” db on a mission from a big gorilla, ‘ishmael’, to alert a mere ten people to the inevitable catastrophic circumstances as Nature reacts to the concrete jungle where humans live as segregated from life’s energies. to make a long story short, ‘sheepherder’, all my patient efforts have utterly failed to startle even one from the anthropocentric “and they all lived happily ever after” dream fantasy. oh well, Mother Nature, now sings an aria, sure to awaken the dead. i no longer worry (well, sometimes) ‘cause i like being a part of Her chorus and not trying to be the conductor when there’s so much left for me to learn!
~To the unknown path!~
This is a beautiful post. As beautiful as watching a hummingbird flash its radiant colors. I know what you mean about trying to wake the anthropocentric dead. I've failed miserably in my own demographic which is why I turn to these articles so my respirations will calm. Peace!
He wrote a long article because he didn't have time to write a short one. But I repeat myself.
He wrote a long article because he didn't have time to write a short one.
Ah yes newspeak!!
A beautiful article and a powerful reminder to all of us who claim to be progressive. As wicked and dehumanizing as the growing gap between the wealthy and the have-nots is, we must remember that the better world we wish to create is not simply one in which we all have the greatest amount of monetary wealth.
I do disagree with the the claim that the forces of repression "... cannot gain entrance into your mind, unless you allow them in." What makes our age unique is that the forces of repression have recognized that they can do that that very thing - and so we are the most propagandized people in history, sitting for hours watching the televised message that consumer goods will make you fulfilled.
In the 1970s, Hans Magnus Enzensberger pointed out that the major flaw in the Capitalist system is not ownership of the means or production, and it is not the profit-seeking motive. Instead, it is the worship of commodities.
sheepherder:
Re. That capitalists' flaw, and Americans' flaw [mostly] can
be termed, as you say " ... worship of commodities": Good
observation! It is of course on display every day in the city.
I would only add that such "worship" is not new. It is the same
attitude that was once termed "idolatry"; by that was meant
the spirit of worship, adoration, praise, etc. of somethings that
are merely THINGS. I now cite a scenario from the Bible, not
so as to advocate either theism or atheism, but to show ancient
understanding of what is deluding Americans now. It seems that
old king Nebuchadnezzar of Bablyon had a dream, and it greatly
troubled him, but he had forgotten what the dream was. (Maybe
his having forgotten the vision made it all the more troubling.)
It remained for Daniel to retell the king his dream, and to give it
an interpretation. It was an image of a statue, which had a head
of gold, body parts of other metals, and finally feet of part iron
and part clay. [From such image, we today have the expression
that some eminent person may be mighty in part, but he has
"clay feet", meaning that he cannot stand tall very long, for his
footing will soon disintegrate.] Daniel gave the interpretation in
terms of old Nebuchadnezzar's kingdom as follows: " ... as ...
the feet were part of iron, and part of clay, so the kingdom shall
be partly strong and party broken." (Daniel 2:42). SO ALSO IS
AMERICA TODAY. We as a nation are STRONG IN PART, but
we are also WEAK IN PART, in consequence of our delusions
and our dreams; these are the new idols, set up by the elite
image-makers so as to keep us deluded and disorganized, even
without our being fully aware of what deludes us. (Like the old
king's forgetting his dream.) Of such is our nation's clay feet;
it cannot long stand with such weak footing. We can turn away
from the delusion; we can wake up. But if we don't, we shall fall.
Alternatively, you can go much closer to modern times and get the same ideas from Marx.
pjd412:
What you say may be true enough of Marx's thinking
in the original. But Marx's thoughts [in history] became
Marxism, which was seized upon by Leninism, which
morphed to Communism. The latter doctrine, under
Stalin, was (once again) very deluded: The Communist
state became the new idol, and an uttermost cruelty to
millions in the gulag. [I do not say that the Capitalist
state is anything other than a new idol itself.] I think we
would do better to read Thomas Jefferson than Karl
Marx: Anyone who expects a nation to be both " ... free
and ignorant expects something that never has been
and never will be." As I read Phil Rockstroh's article,
I think he advocates our being/becoming non-ignorant
and not any more non-free. As another poster on this
thread said, the wisdom to become not lacking in basic
freedom is not necessarily new; it is what never was
old. Marxism-Leninism partook of wisdom -- both old,
and newly re-discovered -- but [in history] it took some
good enough ideas and extended them too far, as is not
rare among thinkers. I don't see how a "dictatorship of
the proletariat", as that notion came to be a maxim of
governance in the Soviet Union, was so much different
from the corporate/consumerist maxim of governance
in the U.S. now. The Soviet Union fell. Does the U.S.A.
soon fall also?
Not all Marxists have been Leninists, much less Stalinists.
Marx's insight that commodity worship is part of capitalism is as valid as ever. He also points out that by turning everything into a commodity -- including work -- capitalism alienates people from themselves and causes them to define themselves as objects, rather than subjects.
The idea that a corporation is a "person", is an abomination that is easily turned into every person is a corporation, i.e. nothing but a business seeking profits, and adopting behaviours that are designed to turn a profit.
Now, does anyone need help preparing a resume guaranteed to sell you to the employers out there?
Leezasky:
I am not in disagreement with you regarding truths.
I just prefer to access the same truths from [somewhat]
distinct sources. As glenn ford pointed-out in this
thread at 12:05 PM: "We need not wander ... to find
'the Way'; it has been illuminated for eons by the
enlightened among us." Wisdom is not confined in any
such a way as, for example, greedy men seek to define
and then own "intellectual property". No way! Wisdom
is from the "great beyond", as has been seen by it's
lovers forever. If wisdom arrives to our minds via
several routes (all in the public domain, so to speak),
we can thus be more sure that it is true wisdom.
The comments and the lead article in this thread are
very enlightening, awfully close to being just what
humanity needs now. My congratulations to Phil
Rockstroh.
Sorry this is so late, but life intruded. We are building a compost bin and my wife drove in with a truckload of concrete blocks that had to be unloaded and moved.
Your comment about THINGS is good. Today, things are made to be sold, not to be used. In college in the 1960s I sometimes used a fountain pen my father used in college (he graduated in 1932). Today a marketing specialist would laugh at the thought of making something that persisted for two generations. Things are made to be sold, discarded and replaced.
The pen finally died when the rubber ink reservoir dried out and cracked.
And replacing it was impossible.
"the major flaw in the Capitalist system is not ownership of the means or production, and it is not the profit-seeking motive. Instead, it is the worship of commodities."
You're quite right that who owns the means of production - beyond the individual owning the means of his/her own productive capacity - matters little. Private shareholders, the central state, even cooperatives or collectives matters little if the underlying economic paradigm is not changed.
But commodification, first of nature as "resources, then of things as "goods" and then of relationships as "services", is not the cause but merely the symptom of our dysfunction. The essential dysfunction is, in a foundational sense, the whole notion of "profit" or creating more value than one needs - which requires the exploitation of place, people and relationship.
For millions of years, homo habilis lived in the gift economy (what was mythologically known as the Garden of Eden), taking only what was needed, wasting not and wanting not, with lots of leisure time for community and ritual and artistic engagements.
It was when we turned our backs on the gift of Nature (or God, if you're so inclined) and decided to extract our livelihood from the world - first through violently clearing fields and plowing up the ground, then manipulating genetic traits and enslaving animals to better serve our purposes (and thereby exposing ourselves to all the epidemic diseases), and eventually by the wholesale industrial modification of the world to produce (and then, of necessity, create) wants rather than essential human needs.
Once the economic paradigm shifted to creating more than we needed in order to trade with others or accumulate extractive and exploitive "wealth" - in other words, profit - then first things and later relationships had to be commodified to maintain both the market trade and the perpetual growth of the economy to feed the insatiable demand for wealth.
The creation of a broad middle class in America was nothing more than the democratization of the profit/wealth paradigm, but now we believe that it's the only way to live and the imperative is merely to bring more people into that democratic wasteland - to share the wealth more equitably.
The only way out of this dead-end paradigm, is - as Phill so eloquently suggests - to get lost, to delve below the current suicidal paradigm and into the dark, wet realm of our essential humanity. It is only there, lost within our authentic nature, that we might rediscover the essential nature of the world we occupy.
OCCUPY THE WORLD. Occupy the world we abandoned and nearly destroyed - the Garden, the gift, the sensual paradise we chose to leave for an artificial hell.
Lose Your Mind - Find Your Way
http://riversong.wordpress.com/a-collective-rite-of-passage/
RR: Amazing how you use the pronoun WE and totally paper over the naked subjugation of women all down the centuries. Before the hierarchy, societies were not arranged on the basis of the male dominator model, or any hierarchy for that matter. If a man presents himself as a thinker, scholar, or lay-philosopher, he ought to be in the know about the historical facts that led to the disequilibrium in values (and all other things) that's taken humanity to the edge of the abyss where we now find ourselves.
Your post presumes that the Indigenous of various continents had the same rights as those who invaded and took hold of their lands and resources. It presupposes the Black race had the same rights to destiny and sovereignty as the White race, or that women were co-equal partners with men in formulating the societal designs, along with the economic systems that supported them.
So quit the WE B.S. until you understand that most of history has been written by the conquerers, and they have largely consisted of those sworn to guns (or more efficient weaponry). Mobs of angry White Christian soldiers under a variety of national banners, with small elites their sponsors, laid claim to much of the world. It's a bigger world than their false claims can copyright... nor does it speak for all. Indeed, given the evidence of this small group's domination, it has lost the authority to speak for all. There are other more viable, humane and egalitarian ways for societies to organize themselves. Pretending such models never existed is a treason against reason, truth, and any conceivable continuation of the human race.
Good article, but Western civilziazion has been a hyperbole for the least half dozen to dozen millennia. Civilzation died out for most that many millennia ago. Maybe we can get back some semblance of same by learning from those still civlized people in the Pacific untouched by European contamination and colonization.
Beauty is its own reward, thanks Phil. A couple of differences in opinion. We need not wander unknown paths to find "the Way", it has been illuminated for eons by the enlightened among us. Although in a specific, detailed sense of particular actions our own imaginations and creativity may need to wander into unknown paths. Secondly in the folksong, I sense the "not be worried long" refers to the supposed release of death.This Earth is facing a continuous, coordinated global violently aggressive attack by those who worship the material at the expense of Life and Beauty. Any Opposition to this attack is defensive Opposition. Phil's list of undesirable excess actions is extremely coherant and relevant. Finally, in serious disscussions, we need to move from the term 1% ( in the USA income $250,000 and above) to the more accurate, as Chomsky uses 0.1%.
Actually, I think we need to go the other way. The top 20-30% (Marx called them the "petit-bourgeoisie", Albert calls them the "coordinator class") are basically the enemies of progress. I know, becasue I work with them every day.
glen ford:
A terminology is common in languages other than English: "per mil", or
(rarely) "permille", meaning the number of items that you're considering
from among an entirety of one thousand items. For purposes of a more
convincing conceptualization, one might better say that we're dominated
by the one permille of the citizenry. As our language evolves, so does
our thinking. I reckon that one permille is closer to true than one percent.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Per_mil
Thanks Phil. It's unfortunate your spirit is not an option in the political front.
The junta broke the fingers on Victor Jara's hands
They said to the gentle poet "play your guitar now if you can"
Victor started singing but they brought his body down
You can kill that man but not his song
When it's sung the whole world round.
It could have been me, but instead it was you
So I'll keep doing the work you were doing as if I were two
I'll be a student of life, a singer of songs
A farmer of food and a righter of wrong
It could have been me, but instead it was you
And it may be me dear sisters and brother
Before we are through
But if you can sing for freedom
Freedom, freedom, freedom
If you can sing for freedom I can too .......Holy Near
Phil, your mind is a museum full of treasures; and many of us are grateful that you invite us to walk through it...
This poetic work has so many powerful insights and allusions, that I'll refrain from pointing out my favorites. (And thanks for mentioning that today's Cassandra can hardly do other... than point to some rather bleak assessments.)
On this point, I think you're being too optimistic:
"Because they have learned this: the forces of repression might buffet your body, might zip-cuff your wrists, might lock you in jail -- but they cannot gain entrance into your mind, unless you allow them in."
As a matter of fact, Naomi Klein opens her book, "The Shock Doctrine" by exposing psychological tests done on persons that featured isolation. Hardly to the credit of the psychology profession, some of its numbers have been paid to study specific ways to break down the human mind. And these methods have been under use, and likely "improved" upon as a result of that process.
Using hoods, denying a window to the outside world, blasting music, breaking up the natural sleep cycle, using bright lights, and animating a person's greatest fear, these methods added to pain-inducing torture in fact DO get inside minds. And break them, often irreparably.
When you have to urinate, the reflex at some point becomes involuntary. The human mind has many defenses, but the sickest f--ks in our society have been busy studying ways to turn warfare upon that last of sovereign sanctuaries.
Blake was right about discovering eternity in an hour or the world in a grain of sand; however, that was before his imagination had any need to conjure the likes of today's MIC and its make-warriors trampling upon every sector, from star wars to the neuron centers inside our very brains.
When was the last time you viewed Terry Gilliam's amazing film, "Brazil?" He definitely pointed to this era...
Siouxrose,
good post. you flushed out many of the feelings i had when i read this piece. i realize there`never was a golden era, that each human epoch entailed suffering (part of the human condition). however, recently i've found myself dreaming/wishing that i could have lived about 130-160 years ago when people still had the opportunity to appreciate nature w/out electrical lines, freeways and airplanes.
i also cherish the idea of solitude and privacy. as i type this afternoon - three people are sitting in the adjacent room being brainwashed by a television. if i walk into the room and say, "hey what are you watching ?" i doubt one of them will be able to give me a coherent answer. more likely than not, i'll hear the words, "i don't know - blah, blah blah ". it's not a source of new ideas - or even a conversation; it's merely interfacing w/ the magic blue light (a drug).
the feelies and soma are animated and teeming w/ artificial visions stimulating simulated human emotions. the dissenters (mr tuttle - not mr buttle) will be easy to identify - generally as a rule many of them will not be plugged into the matrix.
of course there is nowhere to escape to - to just appreciate life, without being forced to engage w/ the ubiquitous life numbing force, essentially nullifying any subjective creativity and joy.
as to traditional methods of torture versus the types of information gathering (and thought projection) that will take place in the neural network of the hypothetical victim. it's essentially the same. yet for me, there's one difference that stands out. the illusion of freedom of thought. when a person is detained, restrained, tortured, starved - they're intimately aware of where they are and what is happening.
the 'experimental' technologies will read minds, subvert thought and create irritable sensations and imagery from a distance. hence, it will be challenging to know whether one is having a breakdown or whether one is experiencing a projection of a breakdown. perhaps it's irrelevant as the sensation is the same. and when your memory is replaced w/ new memories - what difference will it make ? maybe it's a subtle distinction (tortured in a cell - forced schizophrenia in an apartment).
my fundamental concern is expressed by Ellen M. McGee and G. Q. Maguire, Jr....
http://www.synthetictelepathy.net/
"Changing human thoughts and feeling might render the continued existence of the person problematical. If one accepts, as most cognitive scientists do, “the materialist assertion that mind is an emergent phenomenon from complex matter, … cybernetics may one day provide the same requisite level of complexity as a brain.” On the other hand, not all philosophers espouse the materialist contention and use of these technologies certainly will impact discussions about the nature of personal identity, and the traditional mind-body problem. Modifying the brain and its powers could change our psychic states, altering both the self-concept of the user, and our understanding of what it means to be human."
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http://www.synthetictelepathy.net/our-mission/
"Neurosciences of today are carried out by multidisciplinary civilian-military research.
New technologies for “Home Land Security Systems” is progressing by using civilian citizens.
Progress in Neuroscience fueled by new and advanced brain imaging techniques (Brain-computer-interface) to visualize processes in the human brain and to link these with specific types of human thinking is expected to provide a basis for rapid advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and mind reading/Synthetic Telepathy.
Mind reading and artificial intelligence can seriously threat and even damage your identity, privacy and autonomy. Thousands of citizens are already aware of these facts."
w/
...peace...
Perhaps true for an atheist or one unwilling to read Tolle, mediate, or expand their higher consciousness -- but in so doing all that, and more -- I must object to this :
"of course there is nowhere to escape to - to just appreciate life, without being forced to engage w/ the ubiquitous life numbing force, essentially nullifying any subjective creativity and joy."
LIFE itself is my beloved, I revere this vulnerable blue-green life-boat poised on the edge of cold deadly space. It is God's world (not ours) more borrowed from future generations' children, than ever even conceivably bought and sold for heinous profit.
The Garden of Eden, and all the fruits of this Earth -- were bestowed upon a reverent, responsible and honorably Adam & Eve. We've broken that covenant, and hell has come to pay, or sway our new directions.
Grace guides us, as what feelings we're internally sensitive to and are aligned with Love and kindness -- taking as the Redwood does, just what it needs from the soil.
The contrast quickens my appreciation, the fragility inspires action, and thereby being resolute and steadfast -- in the face of somewhat likely extinction.
We can choose to 'HOST God, or be a HOSTAGE to ego' (W. Dyer) -- at every minute of every day.
My abiding faith is that an inevitable reversal is coming, but that material things will of necessity grow the klaxon louder -- to awaken ever more sooner -- the immaterial thing-less no-things, that fill our souls' connection to eternal (timeless) oneness, that inform our hearts' what really matters.
LIFE is no dummy
Homeostasis,
i agree w/ you and william blake/siouxrose that the perception of time/place can be perceived/experienced in a visionary and constructive way (and even krishnamurti or nietzche or bertrand russel). human tools certainly can be used by a person who is being interrogated.
i have used meditative techniques as a part of a daily practice and have experienced the sensation of the separation of self and ego. people have been practicing these techniques for eons.
although i am not a muslim, i'm certain the faith of the detainees in guantanamo is critical for them as they resist torture and interrogation.
it's true there are alternate ways of living, in this materialist consumer driven society, that can mitigate our cognitive dissonance. the cognitive dissonance we experience is real b/c our social/cultural construct mandates we destroy the planet for resources and enslave people around this beautiful lifeboat of life - earth.
a voluntary massive global a shift of consciousness - comparable to the slaves walking out of plato's cave and appreciating sunlight - is possible, but seems unlikely - even w/ the potential of the omnipotent wifi cloud engulfing the space above the ground.
however, the corporate surveillance state, increasing in strength daily, is very real and is stifling political opposition. they will use any technological breakthroughs to their advantage (the reference i made earlier - initial post) - was in the context of this quote.
- - "Because they have learned this: the forces of repression might buffet your body, might zip-cuff your wrists, might lock you in jail -- but they cannot gain entrance into your mind, unless you allow them in." - -
whether a person consciously eliminates all thought for weeks (extended vipassana meditation) or can project positive counter thoughts or even just internally recite religious texts inside of the mind 24/7 - at some point their mind returns to the present (unless you're highly enlightened - say a bodhisattva).
my point is the govt is developing technology that will understand your thoughts, unbeknownst to you - based on electrical readings of the neural activity in your brain from a distance. privacy is a word linked to property - in a sense, separation. but retention of thought - is ancient, it precedes property, it's a characteristic that is literally primal.
"of course there is nowhere to escape to - to just appreciate life, without being forced to engage w/ the ubiquitous life numbing force, essentially nullifying any subjective creativity and joy."
yes a person can temporarily go to the woods to escape, yes a person can immerse themselves in a hobby, yes a person can have the faith and conviction of viktor frankl during difficult times and yes some people have developed super yogi heightened altered states of consciousness. it's true.
my point is in the future you're thoughts will be harvested, no choice or free will involved. choosing the path of self enlightenment as opposed to the communal path of active resistance - you still will not be immune from observing others suffering.
project love and compassion into john boehner's and leon panetta's heart - in the future you won't have to type the thought. the end.... maybe?
...peace...
btw..., have you read neil gaiman's novel "american gods". very entertaining - reminds me of your perspective. namaste...
reviews from publishers weekly and library journal....
http://www.youseemore.com/oas/hotpicks.asp?isbn=0380973650&Author=Neil+Gaiman&Title=American+Gods
{ Library Journal
In his latest novel, Gaiman (Neverwhere) explores the vast and bloody landscape of myths and legends where the gods of yore and the neoteric gods of now conflict in modern-day America. The antihero, a man of unusually acute intellect through whose eyes we witness the behind-the-scenes dynamics of human religion and faith, is a convict called Shadow. He is flung into the midst of a supernatural fray of gods such as Odin, Anansi, Loki One-Eye, Thor, and a multitude of other ancient divinities as they struggle for survival in an America beset by trends, fads, and constant upheaval an environment not good for gods. They are joined in this struggle by such contemporary deities as the geek-boy god Internet and the goddess Media. There's a nice plot twist in the end, and the fascinating subject matter and impressive mythic scope are handled creatively and expertly. Gaiman is an exemplary short story writer, but his ventures into novels are also compellingly imaginative. Highly recommended for all libraries. - Ann Kim, "Library Journal" - 2001.
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Publishers Weekly
Titans clash, but with more fuss than fury in this fantasy demi-epic from the author of Neverwhere. The intriguing premise of Gaiman's tale is that the gods of European yore, who came to North America with their immigrant believers, are squaring off for a rumble with new indigenous deities: "gods of credit card and freeway, of Internet and telephone, of radio and hospital and television, gods of plastic and of beeper and of neon." They all walk around in mufti, disguised as ordinary people, which causes no end of trouble for 32-year-old protagonist Shadow Moon, who can't turn around without bumping into a minor divinity.
Released from prison the day after his beloved wife dies in a car accident, Shadow takes a job as emissary for Mr. Wednesday, avatar of the Norse god Grimnir, unaware that his boss's recruiting trip across the American heartland will subject him to repeat visits from the reanimated corpse of his dead wife and brutal roughing up by the goons of Wednesday's adversary, Mr. World. At last Shadow must reevaluate his own deeply held beliefs in order to determine his crucial role in the final showdown.
Gaiman tries to keep the magical and the mundane evenly balanced, but he is clearly more interested in the activities of his human protagonists: Shadow's poignant personal moments and the tale's affectionate slices of smalltown life are much better developed than the aimless plot, which bounces Shadow from one episodic encounter to another in a design only the gods seem to know.
Mere mortal readers will enjoy the tale's wit, but puzzle over its strained mythopoeia. (One-day laydown, June 19) Forecast: Even when he isn't in top form, Gaiman, creator of the acclaimed Sandman comics series, trumps many storytellers. Momentously titled, and allotted a dramatic one-day laydown... }
...peace...
Some interesting points in the piece, if you're willing to wade through the pointless verbiage. Latinate words doth not good writing make. Philosopher/bard? Pretentious much?
Sorry, I pushed the button once too often.
It's not all that Latinate, just pretty disorganized. On balance, a good, though overly long, article.
Not everyone wants to adopt the bluff, Mr. Average persona that can alone protect you from being called "pretentious" by the bluff Mr. Averages out there.
BTW "Latinate words", being plural, takes "do", not "doth", which is singular. Who cares? I do. That's why I mention it.
Hey, I enjoyed it immensely.
A thread like a burbling brook for a twenty minute break. Snow is falling for only the second serious time this winter. Life is good. Poessay on Philip Rockstroh and friends
The people that complain about the length of this article remind me of a neighbour who went to the same Grocery Store i did for years to get groceries and never realized that he drove over a bridge that ran over a creek.
Hey if you just want groceries who the heck cares about some silly creek, right?
They are complaining that Phil is swimming in the creek wearing a frilly tuxedo instead of speedos.
Well polished grammar and ideas. A good write indeed!
A quote to engage the many that want to be engaged: "It takes a worried man to sing a worried song…I'm worried now but I won't be worried long"! Surely in consonant with "the business of making the new world": a perfect sense of service - if only with much love .... at the end of which there is no regret!