Just another Reality-based bubble in the foam of the multiverse.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

The Revolution was not Televised

...and so it never happened.

Ronald Reagan was, and did.

Chris Hedges starts out right on:

There are no longer any major institutions in American society, including the press, the educational system, the financial sector, labor unions, the arts, religious institutions and our dysfunctional political parties, which can be considered democratic. The intent, design and function of these institutions, controlled by corporate money, are to bolster the hierarchical and anti-democratic power of the corporate state. These institutions, often mouthing liberal values, abet and perpetuate mounting inequality. They operate increasingly in secrecy. They ignore suffering or sacrifice human lives for profit. They control and manipulate all levers of power and mass communication. They have muzzled the voices and concerns of citizens. They use entertainment, celebrity gossip and emotionally laden public-relations lies to seduce us into believing in a Disneyworld fantasy of democracy.

The menace we face does not come from the insane wing of the Republican Party, which may make huge inroads in the coming elections, but the institutions tasked with protecting democratic participation. Do not fear Glenn Beck or Sarah Palin. Do not fear the tea party movement, the birthers, the legions of conspiracy theorists or the militias. Fear the underlying corporate power structure, which no one, from Barack Obama to the right-wing nut cases who pollute the airwaves, can alter. If the hegemony of the corporate state is not soon broken we will descend into a technologically enhanced age of barbarism.

Investing emotional and intellectual energy in electoral politics is a waste of time. Resistance means a radical break with the formal structures of American society. We must cut as many ties with consumer society and corporations as possible. We must build a new political and economic consciousness centered on the tangible issues of sustainable agriculture, self-sufficiency and radical environmental reform. The democratic system, and the liberal institutions that once made piecemeal reform possible, is dead. It exists only in name. It is no longer a viable mechanism for change. And the longer we play our scripted and absurd role in this charade the worse it will get. Do not pity Barack Obama and the Democratic Party. They will get what they deserve. They sold the citizens out for cash and power. They lied. They manipulated and deceived the public, from the bailouts to the abandonment of universal health care, to serve corporate interests. They refused to halt the wanton corporate destruction of the ecosystem on which all life depends. They betrayed the most basic ideals of democracy. And they, as much as the Republicans, are the problem...


Well, hell yes.

But as for solutions? He gets a serious whiff of Nader. As usual, Nader also starts out in the right place:

“The corporate state is the ultimate maturation of American-type fascism,” Nader said. “They leave wide areas of personal freedom so that people can confuse personal freedom with civic freedom—the freedom to go where you want, eat where you want, associate with who you want, buy what you want, work where you want, sleep when you want, play when you want. If people have given up on any civic or political role for themselves there is a sufficient amount of elbow room to get through the day. They do not have the freedom to participate in the decisions about war, foreign policy, domestic health and safety issues, taxes or transportation. That is its genius. But one of its Achilles’ heels is that the price of the corporate state is a deteriorating political economy. They can’t stop their greed from getting the next morsel. The question is, at what point are enough people going to have a breaking point in terms of their own economic plight? At what point will they say enough is enough?


Chris, Ralphie, the breaking point isn't a bug of the $ystem. It's a feature. The better to control you with, my dear.

The best broken are those who don't know it with their heads, but accept it, who expect it, the divine corporate Faith in their hearts. They're the ones most stridently calling to keep things they way they are and end up making it all worse for themselves and everyone else. The physician who works over 80 hours a week for a corporate medical entity, who might be wealthy if he didn't owe so much. The Wall Street trader who does the same for a financial institution. The money flows into their hands and back out of it again, always eluding the grasp of most of them, slaves to values they use to ensnare and enslave everyone else as well as themselves.

3 comments:

Wiglaf said...

Resistance means a radical break with the formal structures of American society. We must cut as many ties with consumer society and corporations as possible.

Yeah. And in addition to all the woes leftists normally cite, I also feel more and more like computers will be our* undoing. We forgot how malleable our brains are, and now postmodern-medianet-culture has us bouncing around between periods of ecstasy over viral memes, punctuated by empty depression.

(*By "we" I mean Americans about my age (24) and younger, the raised-to-be-feckless humans Neal Stephenson warned about ten years ago in In The Beginning ... Was The Command Line. But I'm sure the ruling class is shielding their own children from the worst of it...)

My aspiration is to co-found a kind of secular humanist monastery somewhere rural. It will be overwhelmingly difficult, though. Intellectual radical breaks are all very well. But where cutting ties from mere consumerism is easy, cutting ties with the industro-agro Machine is extremely nontrivial.

Anonymous said...

And how would you attract others to join a humanist monastery?? What would be the incentive for that?

kelley b. said...

Just wait. If the unemployment rate climbs to, say, 30-40%, and it becomes impossible for anyone except robber barons to really own property, I think you might find many takers for a secular humanist monastery.

Especially if one is fed and has a roof over one's head on a cold winter night.