Fair Use Notice

FAIR USE NOTICE

OCCUPY THE COMMONS


This site may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in an effort to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. we believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law.

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

FAIR USE NOTICE FAIR USE NOTICE: This page may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. This website distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for scientific, research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107.

Read more at: http://www.etupdates.com/fair-use-notice/#.UpzWQRL3l5M | ET. Updates
FAIR USE NOTICE FAIR USE NOTICE: This page may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. This website distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for scientific, research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107.

Read more at: http://www.etupdates.com/fair-use-notice/#.UpzWQRL3l5M | ET. Updates

All Blogs licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0


Thursday, May 26, 2011

America the Heartless

Several articles


Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community

Published on Friday, August 17, 2001
by Peter Phillips

Are Americans becoming heartless? Are we less sensitive to others? Is our society really becoming corrupt and degraded?

As we follow American corporate media today we could only answer yes to each of these questions. Washington sex scandals, celebrity expos's, gruesome murders, schoolyard attacks, gangs, crime, corruption, and conspicuous consumption fill the airwaves and newspapers. Media representatives say they need to protect their bottom-line, and that these types of news and fictionalized stories increase ratings. Corporate media seem to have abdicated their First Amendment responsibility of keeping the public informed. The traditional journalist values of supporting democracy by maintaining an educated electorate now take second place to profits and ratings. When questioned about the appropriateness of sensationalized news coverage and heartless human episodes, corporate media responds by saying, "we are just giving the public what it wants." Media shift the responsibility for sensationalized coverage to a prurient citizenry's market demands for more blood, gore and opulence.

Is the public really screaming for more body dissections, crime coverage, and gossip news? Are ordinary people to blame for this daily parade of heartless gluttony?

Somehow I firmly believe that as a society we are just as innately compassionate and sensitive as ever. I ask my freshmen classes each semester what the most important values are in their lives. After a brief discussion, wealth and material acquisitions are invariable dismissed and core personal values of love, friendship, trustfulness, emerge to the forefront.

As a former director of a family service center in Dixon, California, I remember the dozens of phone calls offering help when our local newspaper covered the plight of a homeless family.

The willingness to care, love, build friendships, and respond to the needs of others is very much alive in American society. Regretfully, we have been led to believe otherwise. Because of the enormous coverage of Gary Condit, Monica Lewinski, and Columbine, we tend to believe that we are all somehow less then we were-that we live in a "Survivors" society. We watch with increasing numbness the killings and scandals. Through limited daily personal interactions we amplify the very essence of our numbness through media fed gossip with our friends and associates. We blame human nature and believe the worst about ourselves. The spiral turns inward, twisting the soul of society into an alienated artificiality. We hide in gated communities, consuming media-supplied episodes of fear, disgust and lovelessness.

How can we resist? Individual isolation or rejection of all media is not a societal answer. (I gave my TV away fourteen years ago, but I remain a media activist.) Responsibility for media content lies with the media themselves. We need to collectively ask corporate media to return to covering the important issues of our day and away from sensationalized hype. If they fail to listen, our task is to re-diversify media by creating media options in our daily lives. By using the technologies available to us today, we can connect with independent news and entertainment services all over the world and share our stories. In the past two years a global Internet news system has emerged, involving over sixty-five independent news centers in a dozen countries, with another thirty planning to come online in the next few months. They can be seen on the Internet at www.indymedia.org. There is now Indymedia radio and special files for printing newspapers for local distribution. Indymedia and similar groups show us that we can re-build media from the bottom up. We can share our success stories, maintain an informed electorate, and reconnect to our communities' heartfelt values.

Independent media comes from the people and is emerging around us. Local cable TV, independent radio and micro-transmitted radio, alternative newsmagazines and newspapers are everywhere. We can add to and expand these vital sources of news and entertainment and, in the process, reconnect with our society and ourselves. We can tell the stories of struggling and overcoming together-stories that strengthen and unite our hearts.

Peter Phillips is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Sonoma State University and Director of Project Censored a media research organization.



Fiction


America, the Heartless Continent (Amerika: Hido no tairiku)
Tawada Yoko
187 pages, Seidosha, 2006

In this sequel to Tawada Yoko’s much acclaimed Yogisha no yako ressha (Suspect on the Night Train), which was set in Europe, a second-person narrator (“you”) embarks on travels through the United States. The novel follows you as you attend a poetry-shouting event in New York, look down from the top of a skyscraper in Chicago, participate in a literary festival, and encounter all sorts of people and adventures. At the end a naked woman with a crow’s mask appears before you at a hotel and says, “Let’s go!”


Tawada’s novels beckon readers onto a journey to a dimension filled with a floating sense of release, and this work—Tawada’s century-late answer to Amerika, which Kafka wrote without setting foot in the country—is no exception.



AMERIKA


Pretending war will not come

You can mark how far into decay a society has fallen by how much it does not recognize its own cliches.

For example, “History repeats itself.”

If the Crusades and the Mongol invasions can be explained away as not part of history, our solipsistic little homily about history repeating itself might be safe again.

But instead we know that unresolved conflicts lurk in our past — and so, our future.

  • Class warfare. Smart people make society, proles breed like rabbits, then blame their overlords for not magically inventing more arable land, water and free stuff. Look at the world population.
  • Religious warfare. Five big religions — Buddhism, Islam, Christianity, Hinduism and Judaism — are warring it out across the world stage. One can prevail per continent. One will attempt to prevail worldwide.
  • Cultural warfare. Inside every developing nation, a war continues over whether the country will be conservative (reverent toward abstract goals) or liberal (demanding power to the individuals). Liberalism causes countries to dissolve, where conservatism builds great empires.
  • Civilizational warfare. As Samuel Huntington pointed out, we are no longer in the age of the clash of political ideologies; it’s civilizations themselves. Some are fighting over type of civilization, e.g. traditional versus modern, and for others, it’s just the oldest form of warfare: territory and resources.
  • Hegemony. Who’s the next superpower? Twenty years ago the Soviet Union bowed out, and now the USA is our only superpower but facing a challenge from the BRICs — Brazil, Russia, India and China. Only one can rule, and that one shapes the world with its culture and economy and gets preferred status in everything.

No one wants to think about war.

All war does is lose elections, end conversations, make girls not call you back and make your friends think you’re an angry person.

So we cannot mention war publicly.

Luckily, this is a blog, so we can mention war as a “thought experiment” and point out how all of the above conflicts are going to converge in the relatively near future. You might have to wake up, stop pretending war is optional, and defend yourselves.

Imagine for a moment that the Crusades were not about religion, but about dominance of the middle east as a means of preserving European integrity; imagine that the Mongol invasions were not the act of a lone madman, but part of a ten thousand year struggle for who rules the Eurasian landmass: Europe, Asia, or the “Eurasians” e.g. mixed people in the middle, including Eastern Europeans, parts of the Middle East and parts of former Armenian territory.

When do the Mongols invade again? When does the middle east attack again? It’s ongoing and we’re just in denial.

China has officially put the United States on notice that Washington’s planned attack on Pakistan will be interpreted as an act of aggression against Beijing. This blunt warning represents the first known strategic ultimatum received by the United States in half a century, going back to Soviet warnings during the Berlin crisis of 1958-1961, and indicates the grave danger of general war growing out of the US-Pakistan confrontation.

Responding to reports that China has asked the US to respect Pakistan’s sovereignty in the aftermath of the Bin Laden operation, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu used a May 19 press briefing to state Beijing’s categorical demand that the “sovereignty and territorial integrity of Pakistan must be respected.” According to Pakistani diplomatic sources cited by the Times of India, China has “warned in unequivocal terms that any attack on Pakistan would be construed as an attack on China.” – EUT

Of course this is moronic posturing. Pakistan isn’t China. The underlying message is: are you a sick old man, USA, since you elected your least qualified president ever just because he was black? Your economy is failing, your society cut up by racial and class conflict, and you can’t figure out if you’re going to be a liberal failed state or a conservative rising state. Maybe it’s time to challenge you.

The saber-rattling goes on as the USA tries to maintain a technological edge, despite the hard efforts of millions of useful idiots who believe that if we just stop making weapons, world peace will reign:

A new Pentagon forecast showing the total cost of owning and operating a fleet of F-35 Joint Strike Fighters topping $1 trillion over more than 50 years has caused a case of sticker shock in Washington.

And that price tag doesn’t even include the $385 billion the Defense Department will spend to purchase 2,500 of the stealthy planes through 2035.

During a Senate hearing this month, Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.) called the $1 trillion figure “jaw-dropping,” particularly when compared with the costs of operating other aircraft.

“I appreciate this estimate is still early and subject to change, but we need to know that the program is going to bring that number down,” he said. – WSJ

Welcome to fifth generation fighters. China has one, based loosely on a Russian design (no, this is not a repeat from 1961). They’re expensive because they’re basically flying radar platforms that are fast, stealthy and can direct all sorts of munitions simultaneously to blow things up very efficiently. The next empire will have a bunch of them. Who will it be?

But, the voters don’t want to think about this; war is terrifying, and we’d just rather not deal with it. Maybe we can sing kumbaya, plaster everything with stickers that say DIVERSITY IS OUR STRENGTH and then make a new hit television series based on that concept. Hey, we’re rolling in money… as long as the rest of you think that us buying our own products constitutes “value.”

Asked in March if he would consider putting a Muslim in a top position, the Atlanta businessman told the liberal blog Think Progress he wouldn’t.

“And here’s why: There’s this creeping attempt, there’s this attempt to gradually ease Sharia law and the Muslim faith into our government.”

In the appearance on Beck’s radio show, Cain admitted that he responded to the question hastily.

“I immediately said – without thinking – ‘No, I would not be comfortable,’” he said. “I did not say that I would not have them in my cabinet. If you look at my career, I have hired good people regardless of race, religion, sex gender, orientation and this kind of thing.” – Politico

Take it from a (realistic) black dude — that boilerplate crap about diversity being our strength is not to be believed. It’s there to keep you thinking that our problems don’t exist and to keep the proles from rioting. That’s all. It is pure manipulation, not an actual value, and the TV watching wide-eyed idiots (who have never encountered reality in their lives, think meat comes from a grocery store, and are sure war is never necessary) lap it up because they want to believe that the world will just be fine if we leave it alone.

That way, they can keep living their anonymous lives of quiet desperation without the threat of their fragile neurotic stability being upended.

When you get to be president, they take you out of that amorphous pleasant illusion zone and make you face hard political facts: if you don’t maintain power everywhere, someone else will. And they will gun for the guy at the top. That’s you.

Why else do you think the Patriot Act still exists? It’s necessary. We’re surrounded by enemies and their spies. That’s why Obama didn’t touch it.

Why else do you think we’re still waging war worldwide? Because if we don’t smash back our enemies, they gain power; if we smash them and don’t occupy the places we bashed, someone else will surge in and take power.

The US has more than 200 troops in Pakistan helping to train the army. But there are said to be intelligence and special forces operating there.

A spokesman at the Pentagon said that within the last two weeks Pakistan had asked the American military to reduce its footprint, and the Americans were doing so, pulling out some troops. The numbers are quite small. – BBC

For example, look at Pakistan. The USA was once their sugar daddy; now, they want China to be big daddy.

What’s going on behind the scenes is maneuvering for power. Pakistan resembles the Islamic parts of India. Hindu versus Muslim, China versus India, China versus USA — it’s all in there.

We can deny the beast within, but it, too, is always there. It waits to be unleashed in some Pearl Harbor style moment when the voters finally realize that they can no longer camp out in oblivion, and need to return to focus on reality. Until then, democracy does what it does best — space out and buy stuff.

When it comes time for war with China, Russia, India, Brazil or a combined Eurasian or Middle Eastern front, the USA and Europe are going to be at a disadvantage. First, since we’re seen as the Caucasian tribe, if one of us gets attacked, the other will as well. Second, we’re tiny in people numbers compared to these enemies, and nations full of starving people don’t mind high casualties — but first world European-style nations do.

For all of our bluster about brotherhood in democracy, we will have one way to win this conflict. We cannot put together a professional soldier class and send them out with full expensive equipment to meet this challenge; we will simply not have enough people.

Instead, we will have one choice, which is to meet our enemies using the methods they use.

Normally, we lose wars by fighting Asian wars like European wars. The Eurasian and Asian challengers to the hegemonic throne will send a sea of soldiers at us, each armed with a rifle and/or grenade launcher. We will kill then of them for each one of us they kill, but they will outnumber us 7-to-1, so we’ll tire first.

The only way we can win is to produce a sea of inexpensive, disposable, terrified and manic soldiers and send them rushing at the enemy. We’re going to need to round up all the illegal aliens, web designers, diversity consultants, administrative assistants, cigarette salesgirls, window washers, baristas, interior decorators, marketing directors, ESL teachers and other people without whom our economy will function just fine (or better, since it will focus on value-production instead of consumer products).

We will need to hand them all rifles, give them very basic training, and put them on unheated boats to sail into the combat zone. Like the successful Russian invasion of Germany in the middle 1940s, we too will feature a new motivational factor: machine guns at the rear not front of the troop column. It will be rush forward to die, or just die, for our disposable heroes.

If you’re like most people, raised on a steady diet of media illusions and pleasant lies, the above will be shocking and horrible. But it is reality, and it has always been here; you just took a vacation on your post-WWII wealth and the comforting deceptions of liberal politics. Now war is upon you, and there’s no point pretending it will not come.

Posted in: Politics.


No comments:

Post a Comment