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Today's
Stories
September 9/10, 2006
Weekend Edition
Greg Grandin
Good Christ, Bad Christ: Testament
of the Death Squads
Ralph Nader
X-Raying Greed
September
8, 2006
Uri
Avnery
"I'm a Leftist, But ...":
the Liberals' War on Lebanon
Paul
Craig Roberts
Books Are Our Salvation
Bill
Quigley
Judge Says: "No Clowning Around Our WMDs!"
Robert
Jensen
Parallel Purges: Academic Freedom
in Iran and the US
Norman
Solomon
Perception Gap: The War on Terror as Others See It
Keith
Bolin
The Future of the Family Farm
Kristin
S. Schafer
The Global Trade in Deadly Pesticides
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Five)
Patrick
Cockburn
Gaza is Dying
Website
of the Day
Help the Bismark 3!
September 7, 206
Marjorie
Cohn
Why Bush Really Came Clean About the
CIA's Secret Torture Prisons
Sharon
Smith
Downward Mobility: No Recovery for Workers
René
Drucker Colín
The Fraud in Mexico
Michael
Donnelly
Bush Family Values: About Those Nazi Appeasers
John
Borowski
Scholastic Peddles a Fictitious Path to 9/11 to Kids
Lucinda
Marshall
Bombing Indiana
Charles
Sullivan
Katrina and the New Jim Crow: Ethnic Cleansing in New Orleans
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part Four
Jonathan
Cook
How Human Rights Watch Lost Its Way
in Lebanon
Website
of the Day
Rasta!
Reggae's Joe Hill
September
6, 2006
Stephen
Soldz
Protecting the Torturers: Bad Faith
and Distortions frm the American Psychological Assocation
Dave
Zirin
Cops vs. Jocks: the Shooting of Steve
Foley
Ramzy
Baroud
The Gaza Maze: Who Gained Most from the Fox Reporters' Kidnapping
Noel
Ignatiev
Democrats, Pwogs and the Lesser Evil Folly
Dave
Lindorff
Bombing Without Regrets: The US and Cluster Bombs
Norman
Solomon
Spinning Troop Levels in Iraq
Binoy
Kampmark
The Death of Steve Irwin and the Politics of the Zoo
Jeffrey
St. Clair
A Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Three)
John
Ross
The Death of Mexican Presidency
Website
of the Day
Flaming Arrows
September
5, 2006
Jonathan Cook
Will Robert Fisk tell us the whole story? Time For A Champion
of Truth to Speak Up
Patrick Cockburn
Better Not Meet at the Casbah
Mike Whitney
The Worst Secretary of Defense in U.S. History? You Be the Judge
Roland Sheppard
The Civil Rights Movement is Dead and So is the Democratic Party
James Petras
As Bush Regime Faces Twilight Slide, How Much Havoc Can Paulson
Wreak?
Alexander Cockburn
Will Bush Bomb Teheran?
September 4,
2006
Clancy Sigal
The Women Who Gave Us Labor Day
Jeffrey St.
Clair
The
Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part 2
Anthony Alessandrini
The
Great Debate about Aroma Coffee: Why I Boycott
Dennis Perrin
The
Great Debate in Tarrytown: Straight Zion, No Chaser
Daniel Cassidy
'S
lom to Slum
Paul Craig
Roberts
The
War Is Lost
September 2
/ 3, 2006
Uri Avnery
When
Napoleon Won at Waterloo
Jeffrey St.
Clair
A
Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon
Ralph Nader
The
No-Fault White House
Noam Chomsky
Viewing the World from a Bombsight
Allan Lichtman
Arrested Democracy: Letter from the Baltimore County Jail
Stanley Heller
When Criticism of Cluster Bombs is "Anti-Semitic"
Rana el-Khatib
Invasion's Child: the Making of Issa
Peter Montague
Taking on the Pentagon: Chemical Weapons to Burn
Laura Carlsen
Mexico on a Collision Course
Dr. Susan Block
Bush Hate Rising
Joe Bageant
Roy's People: Why Progressives Need to Listen to Orbison, Not
Policy Wonks
Scott Stedjan / Matt Schaaf
A New Generation of Landmines?
Gary Leupp
The Emperor Has Been Exposed
Stephen Fleischman
The Great American Oligarchy
Paul Balles
Has Ahmadinejad Already Checkmated Bush?
Ingmar Lee
Canada's $450 Million Gift to Bush: the Softwood Lumber Slush
Fund
Jane Stillwater
Burning Man: the Good, the Bad and the Evil Twin
Ron Jacobs
Dylan Faces the Apocalypse, Again
St. Clair /
Bossert
Playlist: What We're Listening to This Week
Poets' Basement
Grima, Engel, Orloski and Davies
Website of
the Weekend
To New Orleans: a Photo Journal
September 1,
2006
Uri Avnery
Olmert
Agonistes
Paul Craig
Roberts
Of
Wolves and Men (and Impotent Democrats)
Bill Ayers
Exclusionary Signs of the Times
Kevin Zeese
The Best War Ever
Xochitl Bervera
The Forgotten Children of New Orleans
Norman Solomon
Bush vs. Ahmadinejad: a TV Debate We'll Never See
Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah Denounces Nasrallah Interview as a Fake
Richard Neville
Rupert
Murdoch's Victims
Website of the Day
The Uranium Flood
| Weekend
Edition
September 9/10 , 2006
Madment and Sedatives
Inside the Iron Theater
By JOE
BAGEANT
Nobody
talks about it out loud, but a few million Americans are seriously
doubting their sanity these days. Or having their sanity doubted.
Or both. They seldom speak their minds because what is going on
in there is a vision of society that conjures grave doubt, if not
outright horror. It is the kind of stuff that will get your ass
kicked off the island in a heartbeat. Nobody wants to hear it.
Yesterday
I was gridlocked with my wife in traffic near the new mall, surrounded
by cars full of monsters. Every redneck face and bloated or coifed
middle class head in every vehicle was a grotesque, awful thing.
In them you could see the meanest kind of white man ignorance, or
smug middle class obliviousness, the kind that could care less if
all the babies in Iraq were fried on spits in the Green Zone of
Baghdad, so long as their nails get done on Saturdays. (Ah, you’ve
seen the monsters too, haven’t you!) There was that fleshy,
overweight killer ugliness America seems to produce these day, the
faces of a happy motoring people whose armies hold the world at
gunpoint so they can stuff down pizza and check out this town’s
newest mall. Underneath the ugliness, there's a festering mean streak
caused by frustration of knowing deep-down that government and commerce
are corrupt -- everybody knows this, but tolerates it for fear of
losing their bling. The choice was ever thus (DeToqueville noted
its beginnings) but now has become a waking nightmare. One that
brings up rage for some if us, rage that, if expressed in the wrong
places and too often will get me thrown into the psyche ward if
I tarry too much longer here in the land of the free.
“Lookie
there,” I told my wife, who was driving, “A fucking
car wash right over the spot where Nancy Hanks Lincoln’s mother
was born! I remember when it was in a cornfield. And all these zombies
who don’t give a crap about the bloody sand and sweatshops
they create, just so they can buy a cheap skirt and drive cars worth
10 years of wages in most of the world through a goddamned car wash!
If every American died tomorrow, it is unarguable that the planet
would be way more sustainable for not having to feed their greed!”
On the inside I was bawling and screaming at the same time. I go
off on these tirades increasingly these days. It is not good.
I
could see by my wife’s face she was wondering if “getting
Joe some help” was in order. Oh yes, getting some help---which
in America means calling the authorities, in this case the psychiatric
medical ones. Advanced technology and the skills of the medical
cadre of the super-state offer its citizens wondrous ways to reach
out to those in need of help. But it always comes down to prescribing
drugs or possibly of even being locked up “for your own good,”
until your ideations are more “normal.”
And
so it is that many of us keep the rage inside as best we can, unwilling
to destroy a job, or a marriage. And there are many of us, judging
from the emails I receive (see www.joebageant.com), men and women
alike, mostly over 40 with lots at stake, who fear being judged
unstable by the well intentioned folks around us who never in their
wildest thoughts would consider themselves good Germans. At any
rate, who wants to be seen as unbalanced at the very moment in our
lives when we unexpectedly find ourselves seeing Americans and America
as they really are (and may have always been) for the first time.
Not that it required insight. The sheer scale and pervasiveness
of our national condition, plus decades of exposure, made it so
damned obvious we could no longer escape it.
Regardless,
inside me it gives rise to an alter ego I call THE SCREAMING MAN,
who luckily for me, only screams inside my head. I’ve come
to learn lately that plenty of other Americans have their own SCREAMING
MAN and even see the same monsters I see in the traffic. (A big
thank you to the L.A. Times reporter who was the first to tell me
he saw the same creatures). The thought that so much of my readership
is comprised of such folks is worrisome at times.
Once
the monsters in the traffic reveal themselves, life can never be
the same. We are left to go about doing all the ordinary things
we always did, but with the building inexpressible moral outrage,
living out our lives as rote actors in a theater of iron. Inside
the iron theatre---a place surrounded by high walls of normalcy,
where to discover a window to the outside is considered madness---the
majority have apparently learned their scripts too well. So we are
left in sitting in traffic jams to fester on our evil situation.
The
great evils both past and present---the American genocide against
the red Indian, My Lai and the uncounted others like it, Chairman
Mao’s purges, the Israeli war crimes against the Palestinians,
the Muslim slaughter in Darfur, Bosnia, and most notably the Holocaust---were
not carried out by sociopaths, but by ordinary people who believed
in their states their leaders and their gods. The machinist who
made instruments for Nazi Germany felt no guilt. Nor does the anonymous
mailroom employee in the Department of Homeland Security. I make
a living editing military history magazines, thereby providing “pompous
reaffirmations of a great past amid present mediocrity and immediate
disorder,” as Marguerite Yourcenar put it. And right next
door to my workplace Pakistani and Croatian programmers design death
dealing aircraft circuitry for Curtis Wright, yet inside our florescent
lit, air conditioned reality, there is not an ounce of guilt, much
less a sense of accountability. Our work feels unquestionably ordinary,
just as does the work of the traffic monsters, most of who work
in Washington DC or the beltway around it.
(Vertigo,
a taste of vomit in the throat, then…)
SCREAMING MAN HERE! AND I SAY FRY ALL THE PORK-FACED PUD-PUMPERS
WITHIN A HUNDRED MILE RADIUS OF DC! BULLDOZE THEIR WINE-SOAKED CONDOS.
RAZE THE BELTWAY AND SOW IT WITH DEPLETED URANIUM! WE NEED A REAL
KILLER ON THE JOB. WHERE THE HELL IS THAT MURDERING GODDAM NAZI
JEW SHARON WHEN YOU NEED HIM? GET ME MOKTADA AL-SADR ON THE PHONE!
Sheesh!
Oprah,
LSD and the Lycra Micro Jukebox
How
did we become so numb to the greatest moral issues of our time?
Our time? Probably in human history, considering the irrevocable
destruction of our ecosystem. Especially considering that 40 years
ago they seemed to dominate the national arena…The Vietnam
War, civil rights… A hell of a lot of wrong choices built
the 200-year long road to where we now find ourselves, and I must
admit that my generation did its share of the paving, laying down
much of the roadbed during the Sixties. Despite much talk since
then about the Sixties fight for moral justice, talk still easily
launched by the pop of a chardonnay cork or the appearance of The
Grateful Dead at the local arena, nearly to a man or woman, my generation,
regardless of affluence, has traded principles for simple materialism.
Assuming of course, they had any identifiable principles, which
most didn’t.
Perhaps
it was only part of this country’s ongoing struggle to accept
successive waves of immigration, but the Sixties saw a push toward
openness toward diverse viewpoints and values. There has always
been great pressure on our social and public institutions to be
capable of accepting the diversity thronging at its doors, a pressure
yielded to only when it looks like things are about to blow sky
high: “OK niggers, you can ride in the front of the bus. Pssst!
Jeeter, get out the fire hoses and turn the dogs loose.” No
institution is more pressed than the educational system. “Aw
now the Mexicans want bilingual education!”, which has been
handed the responsibility of building character by parents, and
charged by the state with creating obedient, functional citizens
who can multiply at least to the sixth power, are willing to file
income tax forms, and at least pretend they don’t smoke pot.
We are talking bare minimum standards here, although lately the
multiplication standard has been dropped in favor of a willingness
to be subjected to surveillance and mass body cavity searches at
football games. In a nation where real education remains under suspicion
by both the devoutly religious right, and the all-but-antireligious
left, it was natural that school administrators and 10 million or
so state teachers college graduates---themselves products of the
mediocrity characterizing our common denominator approach to democracy
and education---would arrive the “morality-is-all-a-matter
of opinion” solution. It was the only way out. And, besides,
from their standpoint, it looked true.
(Hissss…crackle…can
this truly be a signal through my fillings?)
AW,
SHUT THE FUCK UP BAGEANT! NO MORAL ISSUE EVER GOT "EXPLORED"
IN THIS COUNTRY. NEVER! THEY JUST GET EXPRESSED IN LOATHESOME SHORTHAND
AT DISGUSTING LENGTH BETWEEN G.O.P. CRETINS WHO, IN THEIR HALF-WITTED
SELF-DELUSIONS BELIEVE THAT RONALD REAGAN SHOOK HIS FIST AT THE
BERLIN WALL AND ENDED THE COLD WAR…AND FAGGOT DEMOCRATS, A
MISERABLE LOT NOW FORCED TO PRETEND THEIR VOTES WILL EVER GOING
TO BE COUNTED AGAIN!
Godammit,
I was trying to establish rational discourse here. Now where was
I? Oh yes. The erosion of moral principles…
So
we now we find principles treated as mere opinion by most young
people and their parents, call it diversity tolerance overshoot,
and any answers posed to the great questions of our age neatly written
off. Global warming? Just some scientists’ opinion. The unjustness
of our wars? More opinion. Inequity in society? In whose opinion?
Wastefulness of our lifestyle? A matter of opinion.
Over
the course of two generations of this, a predictable thing happened.
Because the first generation avoided the questions, the second one
never learned that they could be asked. The atmosphere could not
be riper for pure triumphant consumer capitalism and its inherent
militarism (Somebody has to clear the way for Wal-Mart democracy.)
If there are no overarching public moral or intellectual questions,
then the only remaining questions are material ones: Which is best?
The iPod or the RCA Lycra Micro Jukebox? Headphones, cell phones
and polyphonic ringtones, everyone is plugged into the white noise
of pure commerce. It’s the new “Turn on, tune in, and
drop out.” I liked then old version better. Used appropriately,
LSD posed the great questions. And sometimes highlighted a few answers,
too.
But
it doesn’t take a psychedelic experience to pursue the kind
of truth inherent to fleshly human existence, the kind that seeks
justice from within our bones. In fact, it takes effort to avoid
it. I’ve never seen a culture or human being that did not
have an inherent sense of justice, an innate desire for balance.
Most consider this to be the spiritual side of man, if they consider
it at all. Most do not. A huge portion of the world is commodity
addicted, while another portion is simply looking for a warm dry
spot in which to shit or lay down and die. There is not much room
for contemplation of the finer points of existence in either instance.
Whatever the case, the American lack of even minimal spiritual observance
inducted us into the Empire’s cast of featureless players
inside the iron theater. Nobody needs answers to meaningful questions
that are never asked, or dare not be asked.
Some days however, change does seem to be afoot, as it certainly
must be, given that change is the world’s only constant. A
majority of Americas now disapprove of the war in Iraq. Just three
years ago when I started writing from this town’s taverns
and churches, working people therein absolutely loved George Bush.
Now they have returned to their normal state of political apathy,
seldom speaking of Bush, but with one difference---they no longer
approve of his war, and express disapproval generally in the form
of grumbling. They grumble because television has given them permission
to do so, through its constant touting of polling results expressing
“dissatisfaction” with the war. Being “dissatisfied”
with something, a war in this case, is more in accordance with their
programming as consumers, not citizens. They will never get permission
to be really pissed off, much less pissed off enough to burn anything
down.
Television polls never specifically count the outraged and the heartbroken,
thus reducing our deepest emotions, once more, to mere opinion in
another opinion poll. Outrage is impermissible, except for the pretend
outrage of Crossfire, etc, which has entertainment value, thus profitability.
Which is why the majority of Americans know little about Cindy Sheehan.
Sorry to say that here in lefty blogdom, but it’s true. Cindy
Sheehan has never been on Oprah.
When and if Sheehan ever is on Oprah, we will know we have won regarding
the war in Iraq. We will have won if your standard for victory is
acknowledgment by the high priestess of emotional vapidity and Barnes
and Noble sales, talked to by a woman who uses her child rape as
a credential. In her particular celebrity delusion, she considers
herself the emotional caretaker of the nation, the Martha Stewart
of the soul. Lusting for proximity of your cause to celebrity may
be a gratifying short term antidote, but lusting for universal justice
is the ultimate cure.
But
even assuming getting within four feet of Oprah Winfrey constitutes
victory, we will have won far too late for the already dead on both
sides. Vietnam proved that the Empire’s wars are easier to
stop than the overall trajectory of national hubris and folly. Winning
is stopping wars before they start, or creating a society wherein
war is the last resort, not a casual preemptive option. As for the
growing rejection of the war, copping to the obvious in the face
of defeat, then claiming moral high ground after we have scorched
it and everyone on it, well, that’s no victory at all.
Which
leaves me here to fester on celebrity and moral victory under the
looming possibility of forced medication by the state. Hmmmm….
Where
the hell are you Aldous Huxley?
So
are they gonna medicate me and you or what? Surely I must have some
time left before that happens. And if they don’t, then I’ll
have to do it myself anyway. You cannot win in the Iron Theater.
What its producers and directors want to happen is destined to happen.
They are always in control. And when it comes to control, you can’t
beat the good ole US pharmaceutical industry, which has clearly
met the challenge of adult rage and despair, and is now doping down
the kids before they even hit puberty. Over the past six years mental
health drugs prescribed to children have jumped 550%.
Recently
the NFC (New Freedom Commission on Mental Health) recommended the
mandatory mental health screening for 100% of America’s school
children and drug treatment for all children “judged to in
need of drugs.” Hell, every kid in the whole damned country
needs drugs, if only to face their future in the global gulag being
constructed for them.
Godammit,
Huxley, you saw it coming, didn’t you? But I don’t think
it will be nearly as much fun as your grim vision. You held out
the possibility of science perfecting bread and circuses—Soma.
Now THAT was an idea, bud! Three brands of pharmacological reality:
Technicolor Soma a pleasant hallucinogen; Soma medium, a Valium-like
tranquilizer; and El Crusho black gold, the heavy sleeping pill.
And for the rugged freedom loving individualist, you offered those
tropical islands offshore. There was really nothing coercive about
it all. If the corpocracy had listened to you Hux, about how to
do oppression the right way, I’d be curled up in the lap of
Halliburton right now, gurgling happily. I have nothing against
state-controlled euphoria if they don’t skimp on the euphies.
By the way Hux, can I do the Technicolor on the Island? Or will
I be kicked off that one too?
Anyway,
we seem to be truly dicked now. Man the machine making monkey is
so proud of the machines he has created he now pushes toward the
machining of human nature itself. Why not? It was always so damned
unpredictable. So yes, by dammit, let’s do’er! Let the
scientific and economic machinery we have created remake us in its
own likeness. Let there be technology without wisdom and efficiency
without human benefit. Let there be one blissful nation of highly
medicated sleepwalkers in a scientific hell that, if you get doped
up enough, feels like paradise.
A
visitation from Diogenes and Stonewall Jackson
So
what about that rage, huh? My own personal experiences tell me that,
being part of human nature, it’s also unpredictable stuff.
Tonight I went to a dinner party given by a freedom-hearted couple,
the female half of which is probably the most intellectually courageous
woman in town. I can’t know that with certainty because even
the most liberal people in this Southern burgh would never dare
to invite me to dinner. Word has gotten around.
Two
hours into the dinner party, I did a bad thing. I called a nice-enough
but gutless, apolitical guest, “one more ignorant motherfucking
American wanting respect for his self-imposed blindness,”
adding that “Everything is not just an opinion, you know.”
My good wife stood horrified. (Yes, there was alcohol involved.)
Now, I know I am not the judge of that man’s days, and that
he has the right to his opinion or non-opinion. But some days I
cannot find even the dinner party pretense of respect for American
denial, and this was one of those days.
By
way of rationalization, I tell myself that if Diogenes of Sinope
could live under a tub and take shots at the entire Greek world,
then I am entitled to a snootful and an occasional outburst, despite
the disparity between my talents and the long dead old Greek’s.
It’s either that, or the deer rifle and water tower solution.
Or the cheap online polemics you are now suffering. All of which
is more bullshit, but it is the best I can do at the moment to rationalize
bad behavior.
It
is 11 pm, after the dinner party, and I sit in this muggy summer
darkness on a bench in front of the Stonewall Jackson Headquarters
Museum, located right behind my house.
Stonewall
Jackson sat on his horse and sucked on lemons while he calmly managed
the slaughter of thousands. I should probably take up lemons instead
of gin. But at least I am guilty of mere stupidity, not slaughter.
Tomorrow I will repent. Maybe. Depends upon whether anyone with
legal authority finally decides I need help. Meanwhile, any kind
of resistance, even the stupidest sort waged against fools, gives
relief on a hot night inside the iron theater.
This
anger will all come out in the morning as prose. Most likely, bad
prose. (It did and you are reading it now.) But at least it will
be out. Hell, there is only the world at stake.*For Al Aronowitz,
“The Blacklisted Journalist,” (1928-2005). A friend
and mentor in art.
Joe
Bageant is the author of a forthcoming book, Deer Hunting
with Jesus: Dispatches from America’s Class War, from
Random House Crown about working class America, scheduled for spring
2007 release. A complete archive of his online work, along with
the thoughts of many working Americans on the subject of class may
be found at: http://www.joebageant.com.
Feel free to contact him at: joebageant@joebageant.com.
Copyright © 2006 by Joe Bageant. |
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