One of the best said Malthusian libertarian summaries of the current state of affairs that I've come upon to date. It begs the question of whether we can stop distracting ourselves long enough to concentrate and generate a feedback loop of sufficient intensity to alter our trajectory into the economic phase transition. Note this is only about altering our trajectory because there's no question that we're coming to ground shortly. All that remains in question is whether we execute a landing or whether we crash.
It is a bitter truth to swallow that the American peace movement, by itself, did not end the Vietnam War. It ended, primarily, because the Vietnamese people fought tenaciously, purchased freedom with their own lives and bloodied America's nose. It ended because America's soldiers, mostly Black, began to mutiny, and because college-aged boys, mostly White, declined to fight or die for a war that meant nothing to them. It ended because of the massive stresses in the American economy, the inflation, the devaluation of the dollar, the crisis caused byskyrocketing oil prices due to the 1973 oil embargo. It ended because the feedback loop of the Vietnam War threatened to rip apart the carefully engineered society of America.
Pat Robertson was right when he suggested that the United States would assassinate Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.
Robertson, of course, is a hypocrite and one of this country's most effective ad men for atheism. In the main, Pat Robertson is a medieval, witch-burning, fool. However, he moves among people who are either within or near to the circles of power. They are not nice people, but they are not fools. Robertson has either heard directly from this country's rulers' own lips, or heard from reliable sources close to them, that the US does, indeed, have President Chavez in its cross-hairs.
Robertson sees himself as a prophet with a direct line to God. All medieval witch-burners do. He is a fool because he could not resist opening his mouth and blabbing to the whole world that he had foreknowledge about America's black bag operations to assassinate yet another democratically elected foreign leader. By speaking so brazenly -- and prematurely -- Robertson caused two immediate effects: First, he provoked sanctimonious denials from other political witch-burners like Minnesota's Republican Senator Norm Coleman and Secretary of War Donald Rumsfeld. Second, Mr. Robertson's intemperate prattling has, in essence, spilled the beans about the all-too-real US plan to kill President Chavez. Thus has Pat Robertson unwittingly spared Hugo Chavez from the death that was, indeed, prepared for him -- at least for the time being -- and earned Mr. Robertson a public scolding from those liars whose dark secret he has disclosed.
There are numerous wonders associated with what Mr. Robertson said. Why, for example, are so many Americans shocked by the notion that, covertly or overtly, their leaders would assassinate another country's head of government?
It is one thing to have forgotten our history from the last century, when the US helped to violently overthrow the popularly elected governments of Chile (Allende) and Iran (Mossadegh) and nearly every country in Central America from Panama (Omar Torrijos) to Guatemala (Jacob Arbenz). Can the majority of Americans have already forgotten that even in this century we have forcibly removed Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the duly elected president of Haiti, and unhesitatingly supported undemocratic governments in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the Philippines and Kazakhstan? Political assassination, of course, is not an exclusive tool of American foreign policy. This country's readiness to covertly kill political leaders who offend us puts the US in league with Ariel Sharon, Stalin, Rome's Caligula, feudal Europe and the medieval despots of the declining Byzantine Empire.
It is no surprise that Mr. Robertson and his fellow medievalists have most in common with the theocrats of Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the Taliban in Afghanistan. The word “assassin”, after all, is derived from the medieval French word, “hassassis” (hashish takers) given to Muslim fanatics who committed to “assassinate” Christian crusaders who had occupied the Middle East. Thus has Mr. Robertson eschewed the peace-extremist teachings of Jesus of Nazareth and endorsed the tactics of medieval, anti-occupation, Crusader-killing, dope-smoking, Islamic insurgents.
The Administration's more-or-less official response to Mr. Robertson's statements was that such an assassination would be “illegal” under US law. But why would the public accept that explanation when it is obvious that the 'rule of law' in America applies only to the lesser classes, and not to them at the highest level of policy making? Political and social leaders have been assassinated within and without the United States for decades, usually without the sanction of law; and if the US government had not its own finger on the trigger, then it found the usual collaborators who, for the purchase of power or money, would pull the trigger as America's proxy.
Meanwhile, America's perpetually vacationing medieval king says nothing while he shakes spears at the world and mutters disingenuously, like Henry II, “Will no one rid me of this meddlesome chaviste?”
The election of Mr. Bush and the influence of Pat Robertson and his dominionist ilk are markers of a degenerate medievalization of America. So, too, are the efforts in some quarters to push Science back into the Middle Ages and to undermine evolution with oxymoronic notions of “intelligent design”. Notwithstanding advances in technology, America is regressing backwards from its Enlightenment origins into medievalism. The people who scream their patriotism the loudest seem to be the most determined to destroy the Founders' dreams by creating a medieval theocracy like only Torquemada could love.
History often shows that blind religious fervor, superstition, sectarian violence, witch hunts and intolerance increase in society commensurate with increasing economic stress. Thus, “technology”, in and of itself, does not protect a society when economic surpluses start to disappear and the competition for depleting resources becomes sharp. Technology will not brake the superstitious, frightened flight into medieval religious irrationality when the people find their jobs disappearing, their purchasing power devalued, their houses becoming too expensive to heat, their cars too expensive to fuel, everything costing more for less value -- in short, as the brief historical blip of American middle class prosperity between the age of coal and the age of the Internet evaporates. It is in times like these, historically, that the people turn to charismatic religious leaders.
Why do we seem so unable to arrest America's backsliding from modernity? Other than the occasional demonstration, protest march or election between greater or lesser evils, concerned American citizens cannot seem to gain any traction. Except for the spontaneous actions of people like Cindy Sheehan, organized resistance to the witch-burning medievalists has, at least in these United States, resulted in more disappointment than quantifiable success. Why is this?
Partly, it is because beginning around the time of the First World War, America has been a laboratory for very successful social engineering on a grand scale. By a deliberate, decades long, coordinated training of the American people -- through print, film, radio and television and their infusion into the institutions of education -- the most powerful business/political interests have thoroughly inculcated the citizenry with a medieval serf's docility and acceptance of authority. Our colleges and universities have been re-made into incubators for obedient corporate employees and consumers. Whereas once we were a wilder, more independent pack of dogs, now we tend to bark when told to bark, shut up when told to shut up, and lick the hand that merely refrains from striking us. We have been trained to be collared, to walk on a leash, and to think of it as though we were walking the master and not the other way around. We eat the kibbles that trickle down to us and we have been trained not to bite.
In part, enlightened Americans have become politically impotent because we have been purchased with the excesses afforded by abundant, cheap energy. Like peasants in Pieter Bruegel's Land of Cockaign, we luxuriated in a relative life of ease and forgot that we were once a revolutionary people who had to wrest our Enlightenment from an empire by blood, force and strength of will. Now, when the hard labor of political effort beckons to us, we can, instead, do the institutionally approved, time-consuming things like go shopping, go to the movies, watch a baseball game, play the slot machines, drink a beer, play a video game, anything that entertains and distracts us from the task of democracy. There is Michael Jackson to titillate, Pat to pontificate, American Idols and more American idles.
In part, even the Enlightened portions of the citizenry have been enervated by the soma of this Brave New World. Some think that occasional charitable deeds, or a few dollars contributed to this NGO or another, or a weekend demonstration (time permitting), or effusions of love and understanding will change the world. While they cannot hurt, by themselves, none of these actions will accomplish anything. In fact, the control tendrils of surveillance, monitoring, and foundation grants, we should have no doubt, have already so vascularized, so infiltrated into even the highest levels of the most noble appearing organizations such that only the spontaneous, non-hierarchical actions of the Cindy Sheehans of this world can hope to effect real change. It is as though the Powers tolerate, even indirectly fund, the ineffectual organized protest that they do permit to take place because these are a social pressure release mechanism that dissipates resistive energy, a controlled burn intended to prevent a larger conflagration.
It is a bitter truth to swallow that the American peace movement, by itself, did not end the Vietnam War. It ended, primarily, because the Vietnamese people fought tenaciously, purchased freedom with their own lives and bloodied America's nose. It ended because America's soldiers, mostly Black, began to mutiny, and because college-aged boys, mostly White, declined to fight or die for a war that meant nothing to them. It ended because of the massive stresses in the American economy, the inflation, the devaluation of the dollar, the crisis caused byskyrocketing oil prices due to the 1973 oil embargo. It ended because the feedback loop of the Vietnam War threatened to rip apart the carefully engineered society of America.
As painful as the end of the age of cheap, abundant energy will be, it may allow Americans to bust out of their gilded cages. It is, after all, in the less affluent countries of today's world -- where there is less time for social foppery and fewer resources for idle consumerism -- where we find the lessons Americans must learn if it is to avoid descending into a new medievalism.
In Mexico this year, more than a million citizens turned out, effectively shutting down the capital city. They prevented the ruling mainstream parties from contriving, through judicial machination, to extinguish the presidential ambitions of its popular, left-leaning politician, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. In Ecuador, the people rose, first to oust their unrepresentative president and, second, to shut down the oil industry until it renegotiates its national contracts. In Bolivia, in June 2005, a coalition of indigenous and working class people threw out a leadership that had sold off the nation's mineral and energy patrimony to western corporate interests. In the years while Americans disputed the limped electoral contests of Bush versus Gore or Bush versus Kerry, the citizens of Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina and Uruguay also practiced enlightenment and swept their political houses clean.
In Europe this spring, the EU proposed a constitution that was, in essence, a carte blanche for multinational corporate rule. Overriding the cajolery of their leadership, the citizens of France and Holland overwhelmingly voted NO, thereby extinguishing (for the moment) big business's attempt to undo Europe's social safety nets and remake the continent in America's neo-liberal/neo-conservative image.
We can relearn lessons in enlightenment by looking abroad. The lessons will not mean anything, however, until the economic stress in this country equals that of the nations we would learn from; until the seductions of a surplus society yield to the reality of scarcity. That time could be coming sooner than you think: as soon as your next trip to the gas pump, as soon as your next winter heating bill, as soon as your next electrical power outage.
It is then that America's descent into medievalism could begin to be seriously checked. May the Enlightenment prevail.
Zbignew Zingh can be reached at Zbig@ersarts.com. This Article is CopyLeft, and free to distribute, reprint, repost, sing at a recital, spray paint, scribble in a toilet stall, etc. to your heart’s content, with proper author citation. Find out more about Copyleft and read other great articles at www.ersarts.com.
Article source at dissidentvoice.org
the other thing i forgot was the juxtaposition of "black soldiers" with "college-aged boys, mostly White." so, the black soldiers were what age? college-age, but not going to college? if that's the case, say so...if it's something else, say so, but don't leave it like that - especially when we are left to assume that his definition of powerless enlightened Americans does not include the BLACK folks here who have ushered in the MAJORITY of democratic, MODERN (non-medieval) reforms in this country from the actual formation of this MF, to the civil war, to public schools (check cruse's comments in plural but equal) to the CRM. this marxist BS is annoying on a certain level because dubois already went through this s!!* with them 100 years ago.
Posted by: Temple3 at August 28, 2005 01:40 PMahem, my observation was that it is;
One of the best said Malthusian libertarian summaries of the current state of affairs
what's percolating nicely in this thread at P6 brings the bass in a more or less contemporary time frame that you quite correctly note as missing from this piece.
Posted by: cnulan at August 28, 2005 01:49 PM"...the supposed revolutionary character of white folk is pure myth..."
I'd argue that this contention is supported by the failure of those Whites (Democrats as well as as those others who voted for Gore) to revolt in some fashion when they were DISEMPOWERED as a result Black disenfranchisement in FL. in 2000. '04 wasn't significantly different. The jig was up when the state of Fl. and others moved to an eletronic voting system to eliminate a paper trail or a recount. And then there was Ohio...
Posted by: bibtecario at August 28, 2005 03:48 PM
I gotta say that the bottom half of this essay is some revisionist bullshit that is elitist and racialist in its construction - and it betrays the nature of resistance in american history. it's a classic marxian approach which ignores the nature of white supremacy as an organizing doctrine in american life...
for example: marking the time of america's inability to react in a revolutionary manner to the time of rockefeller (and the progressive's) in the early 1900's ignores the genesis of the nation and the repeated failure of the people to respond to challenges of democracy.
the revolutionary war was a not a widespread democratic american response to the need for representation in the face of onerous taxation. the cats who organized the war were paid and pissed...they used the sons of liberty to terrorize the american people and enjoin popular support. the crew even engaged in activities to foment the conflict with the british - but upon achieving the requisite economic latitude from the crown, the leaders of the american revolution sought to reconcile their ties with the former crown, albeit on new terms. the us has not had a more tenacious ally in global politics than england...and the reverse is equally true.
democracy as it relates to class is one thing, but as it relates to race is quite another. the declaration of independence was signed in 1776, but the constitution was not ratified until 1789. in the interim, 9 presidents sought to establish a union which would not be established until the three-fifths compromise was devised. the national unity of america was contingent on the resolution of a question of representation with respect to black folks. this process did not occur as part of a reformist, radical, revolutionary or even participatory democratic process. wealthy plantation owners in the south and wealth capitalists in the north (of differing political stripes) cobbled together an agreement - above the sight lines and activity of the common man, so to speak.
the same was true in 1877, when the nation's patience with these issues lasted only 12 years. the removal of union troops from the south (as part of the Hayes-Tilden compromise) also took place beyond the scope of radical, revolutionary, reformist or participatory democracy. the american people, broadly, did not decide this. in fact, the supposed revolutionary character of white folk is pure myth - and we haven't even approached the age of Rockefeller, Dewey and others. besides, JP Morgan served as the BANK of the united states long before the first progressives were born.
the civil war, clearly, was not an example of a democratic revolutionary fervor. in many ways, it resembles wwII, in that the confederacy, as a separate, non-aligned "state" posed a threat to the intended structure. the people were led like sheep to the slaughter and they were slaughtered, but in the end, all was forgiven, northern troops were removed and the south was allowed to disenfranchise black folk.
the cat who wrote this article assumes that "enlightened" americans are actually college-educated/upper-middle/middle class white folk...if that's the case, this is not the first time in american history that this group has distanced itself from the most downtrodden folks here: be they enslaved africans, native americans, etc. this tradition is long-standing and can hardly be said to be a product of the modern era. the american labor movement wanted no part of black labor during critical junctures in forming their movement. the same can be said of suffragists in the early 1900's.
anyway, enough on this...I agree with his point about Robertson, but I certainly disagree with how he gets to that point - and would argue that AMERICA has always been medieval and will remain so...lynchings, state-executions, wild speculation about gold in them thar hills; speculation about stock markets and home prices; "hollywood" (mythical image making), etc. are all parts of the historic fabric of america since day 1. marxists continue to ignore the tenacity of culture at their own analytic peril. not my cup of tea.
Posted by: Temple3 at August 28, 2005 01:31 PM