Farewell Mon Amour: Prospects on Democracy's Electoral Defeat
Tuesday 26 October 2010
by: Henry A. Giroux, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: th.omas, Javier Carcamo)
Something is profoundly wrong with the way we live today. For thirty years we have made a virtue out of the pursuit of material self-interest: indeed, this very pursuit now constitutes whatever remains of our sense of collective purpose. We know what things cost but have no idea what they are worth. We no longer ask of a judicial ruling or a legislative act: is it good? Is it fair? Is it just? Is it right? Will it help bring about a better society or a better world? Those used to be the political questions, even if they invited no easy answers. We must learn once again to pose them. -Tony Judt
In the midst of one of the greatest economic disasters the United States has ever faced, the Gilded Age and its updated "'dreamworlds' of consumption, property and power" have returned from the dead with zombie-like vengeance.(1) Poised now to take over either one or two houses of Congress, the exorbitantly rich along with their conservative ideologues wax nostalgically for a chance to once again emulate that period in 19th century American history when corporations ruled political, economic and social life, and an allegedly rugged entrepreneurial spirit prevailed unchecked by the power of government regulations. Wild West, casino capitalism, unhampered by either ethical considerations or social costs, has reinvented itself and become the politics of choice in this election year. Enthusiasm runs high as billions of dollars flow from hidden coffers into the hands of anti-public politicians, whose only allegiance is to power and the accumulation of capital.
In spite of almost unprecedented levels of inequality, hardship, human suffering and widespread public despair caused by the financial robber barons of Wall Street, the politics and values of Gilded Age excess are now celebrated by conservatives and Tea Party politicians, who define their retrograde politics as "having a flair for business, successfully [breaking] through the stultifying constraints that flowed from the New Deal" and using "their successes and their philanthropy [to make] government less important than it once was."(2) There is more at work here than a neo-feudal world view in which the future can only be measured in immediate financial gains and the amassing of colossal amounts of economic and political power. Massive disparities in wealth and power along with the weakening of worker protections and the destruction of the social state are now legitimated through a set of market-driven values in which politics is measured by the degree to which it evades any sense of actual truth and turns its back on even a vestige of moral responsibility. Under casino capitalism, politics increasingly becomes a front for the legitimation and exercise of ruthless corporate power. As politics loses its social purpose, not only does the state increasingly resort to modes of punishment, but the rules of politics are eviscerated of any moral and social responsibilities. Robber barons now decide the rules, and one consequence of such actions is that politics loses all sense of moral direction. Indeed, under such circumstances, the pathologies of inequality and injustice that cripple viable democracies are now rendered as inevitable and often celebrated as both a cleansing element and condition of politics itself.
If the first rule of robber baron politics is to make power invisible, the second is to make it unaccountable and the third rule is to give as much power as possible to those who revel in barbaric greed, social irresponsibility, unconscionable economic inequity, corrupt politics, resurgent monopolies and an unapologetic racism (parading as an attack on political correctness no less). The mainstream media and its rarely changing talking heads may wax endlessly about the populist anger fueling the current political climate, but it is a tragic mistake to overlook the fact that populism driven by authoritarian politics, while supplying an unmistakable enthusiasm to the current phase of electoral politics, is distinguished by and should be analyzed critically for the threat it poses to a democratic society.
A marauding market fundamentalism now rules most aspects of American life and the ever present and aggressively marketed forces of insecurity, fear, racism and retrograde common sense have become the organizing elements shaping everyday life. Global flows of capital now work in tandem with the logic of deregulation, privatization and commodification, while democracy at home is invoked under the conceit of the all encompassing "war on government," portrayed by Republicans in some cases as even more dangerous than al-Qaeda. This tawdry mobilization of fear and vitriol in the service of the most naked financial interests and elements of economic power is now staged as a 24-hour media performance that mimics the tawdriness and deceit of a rampant culture of corporate corruption and secrecy, now fully sanctioned by a Supreme Court, which in its 5-4 passage of the Citizens United decision, has willingly handed the government over to the Wall Street bankers, energy companies, insurance giants, hedge fund executives and the likes of the high flying stooges from the likes of Goldman Sachs. As finance capital reigns supreme over American society bolstered by the new and peculiar depoliticizing power of the corporate controlled media, democratization along with the public spheres needed to sustain it becomes an increasingly fragile if not dysfunctional project. Civic courage along with critical dissent are now in short supply, expunged to the margins of the alternative media and disdained by official power, even at the highest levels of government. Left and progressive critics are now described as whiners by both Obama and his politically and ethically deaf advisers. And while President Obama surfaced initially as someone who symbolized the antithesis of the moral vacuity and politics of illegality that characterized the Bush presidency, moral courage and civic leadership have been in short supply during his last two years in office. Rather than giving new life to the values of civic courage, economic justice and political idealism, Obama sacrificed such ideals to the advice of the gang of thieves who became his chief advisers. Consequently, Obama's unwillingness to fight for the democratic ideals he gave lip service to during his election campaign has given way in the last few years to a willingness on the part of his administration to overlook both the crimes committed by the financial elite, who brought us the current economic recession, and the political elite, who savaged civil liberties and made an illegal war and torture itself officially state-sanctioned policies. Forever appealing to the ideal of post-partisan politics, Obama lost sight of his moral compass and his capacity to fight for the democratic ideals he gave lip service to in his presidential campaign. One small indication of his bad judgment and the cleansing nature of his Harvard University acquired cultural capital came early in his presidency when he chose Beyonce over the inimitable Etta James to sing the latter's signature song "At Last" at his inaugural ball - a glimpse of the poor judgment and bad faith to come. James embodied the courage, poverty, bawdiness, passion, desire, history, suffering and perseverance of groups that Obama left behind once elected - a stark reminder of the kind of cultural and intellectual capital he would avoid as he began to surround himself with the alleged best and brightest.
Dark clouds are forming on the political and economic landscape of America, and while the precise nature of the current election is still unclear, one thing is resoundingly obvious. We have now entered another and more dangerous period of Gilded Age excess in which the primary political and economic forces dominating American life add up to what is unique about the current political conjuncture: its hatred of reason, freedom and democracy.(3) The possibilities of democracy are now addressed not through reason and critical debate, but with lies, stupidity, ignorance and a seething disdain for critical analysis, thoughtfulness and truth, all bought and sold through the power and money of goose-stepping billionaires such as the Koch brothers and Rupert Murdoch, who view democracy as a disease that must be crushed.(4) In an age of great insecurity marked by a persistent fear of losing one's job, house and control over the routines of daily life, the billionaire demagogues offer a politics without substance, shared fears rather than shared responsibilities and freedom without the benefit of social protections - and they do it by drowning out other voices through the sheer power of their deep pockets of wealth and power. There is no language about injustice and unfairness in these discourses, just the ramped up anger and noise of those who want to hand over all the social obligations of the state to private agencies so that "nothing remains to bind the citizen to the state but the fear of authority." And as Terry Eagleton has pointed out, "The result ... is an 'eviscerated society,' one stripped of the thick mesh of mutual obligations and social responsibilities to be found" in democratic states that celebrate rather than demonize the common good and public values.(5)
As the economy collapses and the call for austerity is used to punish the victims rather than perpetrators of economic corruption, the welfare state and social protections are relegated to a jaded memory. At the same time, a market ideology and morality reminiscent of the Gilded Age has once again become a triumphal success aggressively narrowing the meaning of freedom and the relevance of all public good and public institutions at odds with the logic of privatization and capital accumulation for the rich. With these transitions the more abstract concepts of individual agency and citizenship have been utterly devalued, stripped of any substantive meaning in an aspiring democracy. Right-wing politicians spend millions to win elections, distinguish themselves by calling for the dismantling of the social state and refer to those who need social services as burned out houses or jerks and freeloaders. The ideology of privatization is used to disparage not simply social services, but all public institutions whether they be schools, hospitals or transportation systems. Violence and a culture of cruelty now spread through the society like a wild fire and the costs can be seen in the suicides of gay teenagers, heartless images of firefighters laughing while a house burns down because the owners did not pay the required fee for the service, talking heads equating all Muslims with terrorists and billionaires such as Bill Gates calling for cuts in the pensions of hard working teachers. The survival-of-the-fittest ethic is no longer the narrative driving reality TV; it is now a central conception of politics and everyday life. Economic discourse now trumps social justice, reinforced by the ever popular chant of market evangelicals who unabashedly call for a society, if not a world, in which "all human activities and spaces can and should be absorbed into economic systems."(6) But there is more at stake here than the rise of iniquitous relations of wealth and power and the profound hardships that ensue for most Americans, there is also the rise of a punishing state that increasingly views a number of everyday problems as matters of law and order. With a prison population of 2.3 million, the United States now incarcerates more people than any other nation in the world; it also resorts increasingly to governing through a crime complex to deal with social problems far removed from the discourse and culture of criminality. How else to explain the return of debtor prisons, the modeling of urban public schools after the culture of prisons, or the recent call by a county prosecutor in Michigan for a law that "could punish parents with jail time for repeatedly missing their children's parent teacher conferences"?(7) As the state is removed from supplying public services, the only relationship the public increasingly has with it is one marked by suspicion and fear. The lesson here is that the rich get rewarded for their bad deeds as made clear in the Bush-Obama bailouts of the too-big-to-fail banking and investment houses of Wall Street, while the middle class and the poor are evicted from their homes under threat of criminal action or threatened with jail time if they don't pay their soaring debts. Fraud in high places becomes an investment opportunity as indicated in the case of Angelo Mozilio, the godfather of subprime mortgages and the former chief executive of Countrywide who managed to pocket $521 million as a result of criminal practices, but was "punished" by the Securities and Exchange Commission by having to pay back only $47.5 million out of his own pocket. Crime truly pays, except for the poor and middle class.(8)
We have become a country in which democracy is no longer a viable dream; rather, it is a living nightmare haunting those who now control the reins of financial power, the media and the Supreme Court. What we are witnessing in the 2010 elections is the triumph of an "argument against politics, or at least against a politics that attempts to govern society in social rather than economic terms."(9) If we are to believe Sharron Angle, Sarah Palin, John A. Boehner, and all the other cheerleaders for free-market fundamentalism, freedom only becomes meaningful when decoupled from any vestige of the social, while most welfare provisions are seen as benefiting those deemed immoral and lazy, if not utterly unworthy. Government responsibility only applies to servicing the defense budget, providing tax relief for the rich and providing handouts for corporations. When used to service the public good, government responsibility is disparaged by being called a form of socialism, a term that no longer has any meaning except to discredit an idea unacceptable to market-driven fundamentalists. At the same time, those who opposed the notion of social provisions and the social state now wrap themselves in the mantle of victims who are being unduly taxed and victimized by a government that is out of control. This is more than the hypocritical mourning of the super rich who somehow have become the primary victims of the Obama government, but also the hard-wired common sense ideology that floods the right-wing pedagogical machines such as Fox News. While it is often pointed out that there is a contradiction among railing against deficits while supporting two wars and supporting tax cuts for the ultra-rich, what is missed in this critique is that there is more at stake here than faulty logic, but also an unabashed support for a politics that despises democracy and welcomes an authoritarian economic system that largely benefits mega-financial corporations and the ultra rich.
One of the most distinctive features of politics in the United States in the last 30 years is the inexorable move away from the promise of equality, human dignity, racial justice and freedom - upon which its conception of democracy rests - to the narrow and stripped-down assumption that equates democracy with market identities, values and social relations. Hollowed out under a regime of politics that celebrates the trinity of privatization, deregulation and financialization, democracy has been replaced by a politics of disposability and a culture of cruelty. Driven by the imperative to accumulate capital and consume at all costs, the current form of casino capitalism rewards those who participate in casino capitalism with the protections of a devalued form of citizenship, while those who can't take part as consumers are seen as "failed" and "ever more disposable."(10) In this scenario, freedom is transformed into its opposite for the vast majority of the population as a small, privileged minority can purchase time, goods, services and security, while the vast majority increasingly are relegated to a life without protections, benefits and support. For those populations considered expendable, redundant and invisible by virtue of their race, class and youth, life becomes increasingly precarious. But if consumerism and an indifference to the common good are the defining features of citizenship under casino capitalism, a galloping inequality and the privileges it brings to powerful corporations and the ultra rich is the ultimate badge of acceptance and success.
Mounting signs of increasing redundancy, dispensability and social death are evident in the depression-level jobless rates in which one in six Americans are either unemployed or underemployed,(11) 44 million live in poverty, one in seven adults receive food stamps and 51 million people are without health insurance.(12) It gets worse. As David DeGraw points out:
we have over 50 million people who need to use food stamps to eat and a stunning 50 percent of U.S. children will use food stamps to eat at some point in their childhoods. Approximately 20,000 people are added to this total every day. In 2009, one out of five U.S. households didn't have enough money to buy food. In households with children, this number rose to 24 percent, as the hunger rate among U.S. citizens has now reached an all-time high.... Over five million U.S. families have already lost their homes, in total 13 million U.S. families are expected to lose their home by 2014, with 25 percent of current mortgages underwater.... Every day 10,000 U.S. homes enter foreclosure. Statistics show that an increasing number of these people are not finding shelter elsewhere, there are now over 3 million homeless Americans and the fastest-growing segment of the homeless population is single parents with children.(13)
Such statistics give new meaning to the slogan "live free or die." The cost of this politics of disposability becomes clear in heartbreaking stories about 15.5 million young people who are living in poverty, dropping out of school in record numbers, suffer serious health problems that go untreated, or literally end up in prison. What advocates of casino capitalism ignore in their homage to market relations and individual responsibility as the essence of our national spirit are the growing numbers of bodies, the mounting despair, the ever-growing forms of social death and disposability under a regime of market-driven discourses and policies that support the irrational belief that the market can solve all problems. The collateral damage that reveals the lie of this allegedly unassailable form of common sense can be glimpsed in the fate of millions who are now homeless, out of work, out of luck and living in despair, as well as in the moral vacuum that has overtaken a country awash in the idiocy of celebrity culture, game shows and a dominant media that shamelessly refused to exercise any sense of political and moral accountability. Instead of focusing on the uncomfortable truths that emerge daily in the expanding narratives of despair and neglect facing millions of families caught in the grip of economic devastation, the country is treated daily to an infomercial provided by the ultra rich and aired through all the channels of the official cultural apparatus, urging us to mimic the very values that brought us the current recession and the ongoing human hardships it has produced.
Social and political death becomes the fate of more and more people just as the current crop of right-wing politicians and anti-public intellectuals argue that social problems can only be solved through the depoliticizing vocabularies of the therapeutic and emotional, often enmeshed in the rigid political and moral certainties of bigotry, intolerance, racism, ideological purity and religious fundamentalism. The language, values and policies of casino capitalism have become the template for solving all of society's problems. As such, it employs the first rule of politics in which power becomes invisible and the root causes of our social, economic and political problems are simply canceled out through a shameless appeal to the discourse of self-help, personal responsibility and self-reliance, operating under the conceit of neutrality and efficiency, while effectively erasing everything required both to understand the demands of responsible citizenship and to address the major social issues of our time. As Frank Rich points out, casino capitalism has done more than create an economic crisis, it also offers a future for the United States in which an obscene inequality and economic unfairness drive young people into careers in which getting rich is their only motivation, public services collapse and a economically stressed middle class loses faith in government and turns its back on any sacrifice in favor of expanding the public good.(14) Young people are increasingly presented with a future in which there is no language of democracy, justice, solidarity and the public good. Instead, they offered a language that maximizes self interest, undermines any shared sense of purpose and devalues public service. Under such conditions the formative culture necessary for critical citizens and a vibrant democracy collapses into a Hobbesian world in which the competitive, self-absorbed, unattached, materialistic individual consumer is the only meaningful category of citizenship.
There are many commentators who believe this upcoming election is a referendum on the policies of Barack Obama and they are partly right. But more importantly, this election is a referendum on the call to do away with democracy once and for all, to make the politics of disposability a central feature of everyday life and to usher in a form of casino capitalism in which the democratic state is replaced by the corporate state. Obama's failure of nerve now seems beside the point. His deplorable record has less to do with bailing out the rich, undermining crucial civil liberties and reinforcing the permanent war policies of the United States than with losing touch with any vestige of moral and civic courage in confronting myriad attacks on democratic life. His is the pathetic legacy of squandered public faith and support that ushered him into office; he could have drawn upon it to make power accountable while mobilizing those populations for whom democracy has always been more of an ideal than a reality. The collateral damage we now suffer is not only the frightening image of a soon to be governing party that embraces enthusiastically all of the sordid elements of casino capitalism, but one that will do its best to put democracy to rest once and for all.
Footnotes:
1. Mike Davis and Daniel Bertrand
Monk, "Introduction," Evil Paradises (New York: The New Press, 2007),
p. ix. On the return of the Gilded Age, see Michael McHugh, "The Second
Gilded Age: The Great Reaction in the United States," 1973-2001
(Lanham: University Press of America, 2006).
2. Louis Uchitelle, "The Richest of the Rich, Proud of new Gilded Age," The New York Times (July 15, 2007). Online here.
3. Jacques Rancière, "Hatred of Democracy" (London:
Verso, 2006); Henry A. Giroux, "The University in Chains: Confronting
the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex" (Boulder: Paradigm, 2007);
Henry A. Giroux, "Against the Terror of Neoliberalism" (Boulder,
Paradigm, 2008); Henry A. Giroux, "Politics After Hope: Obama and the
Crisis of Youth, Race and Democracy" (Boulder, Paragidgm, 2010).
4. See Lee Fang, "Memo: Health Insurance, Banking, Oil
Industries Met with Koch, Chamber, Glenn Beck to Plot 2010 Elections,"
Think Progress (October 20, 2010). Online here.
5. Terry Eagleton, "Reappraisals: What is the worth of social democracy?" Harper's Magazine, (October 2010), p. 78.
6. Lawrence Grossberg, "Caught in the Crossfire: Kids, Politics and America's Future" (Boulder: Paradigm, 2005), p. 117.
7. Duborah Brunswick, "Prosecutor Proposes Jail Time
for Parents Who Miss Teacher Conferrences," CNN.com (October 21, 2010).
Online here.
8. See Frank Rich, "What Happened to Change We Can Believe in?" The New York Times (October 23, 2010), P. WK10.
9. Ibid., p. 117
10. Jean Comaroff and John L. Comaroff, "Millennial
Capitalism: First Thoughts on a Second Coming," Public Culture 12: 2
(Duke University Press, 2000), p. 301.
11. Paul Krugman, "Defining Prosperity Down," The New York Times, (August 1, 2010), p. A17.
12. Erik Eckholm, "Poverty Rate Rose Sharply in 2009, Says Census Bureau," The New York Times, (September 16, 2010).
Online here.
13. David DeGraw, "The Economic Elite Have Engendered
an Extraordinary Coup, Threatening the Very Existence of the Middle
Class," Alter Net, (February 15, 2010). Online here.
14. Frank Rich, "What Happened to Change We Can Believe in?" The New York Times (October 23, 2010), P. WK10.

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Comments
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This election reveals all
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 19:58 — Anonymous (not verified)This election reveals all the forces at work in American politics working away as they always have, with one huge exception.
What's missing is the elan of burgeoning industrial capitalist/imperialist power.
American decline in some sense--as a power, as the benchmark of a certain kind of competence and "know-how"--is a reality, however difficult it may be for cultural critics to conceptualize and for the rest of us to measure and calculate.
There will be no more Kitchen Debates.
That, however, doesn't make it necessary to find explanations obsessively in the interface between "soft" culture and individual depth psychology. It's a matter of cold, hard economics and cold, hard political power.
"With a prison population of
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 20:42 — Anonymous (not verified)"With a prison population of 2.3 million, the United States now incarcerates more people than any other nation in the world; it also resorts increasingly to governing through a crime complex to deal with social problems far removed from the discourse and culture of criminality."
The next step to this prison complex culture is one that we only need to look at history for what other military-complex-fascist states have devolved into from them:
Uber profitable large scale concentration camps for essentially slave labor, and profit incentives for the purchase of land for large scale trenches that provide for the elimination of dissenting and counterpoint voices to the said military-complex-fascist state.
Is this the world we are devolving into too?
"Under such conditions the
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 21:11 — Anonymous (not verified)"Under such conditions the formative culture necessary for critical citizens and a vibrant democracy collapses into a Hobbesian world in which the competitive, self-absorbed, unattached, materialistic individual consumer is the only meaningful category of citizenship."
Sprinkle in a little Calvinist theocracy, and you've got what Watterson was trying to show us with his politically charged comic strip in the 80s. Calvin and Hobbes philosophies are alive and well, and most importantly, severely lack the sophistication, intelligence, and depth that a society demands of citizens today.
Sadly, analysis of this kind
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 21:13 — Andrei Vyshinsky (not verified)Sadly, analysis of this kind hasn't much of an audience and that in no small part due to the embrace of identity politics given by progressives for three decades or more . There is today no mass movement on the left commanding anything like the bulk of working class allegiance in part because progressives have treated the social and religious sensibilities of all too many working people with contempt. And to look for a progressive answer to the problem of encroaching corporate values when modern feminism is all but defined by them is simply mind numbing.
Progressives will wander in the wilderness until an exclusive focus on unifying economic themes is achieved. Its time to place an emphasis on people, not on types of people.
If ONLY it were "his last
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 21:15 — Vic Anderson (not verified)If ONLY it were "his last two year's in office"! Baby Bush squandered 9/11 world compassion and now Bush Shadow's squandered the rest of US!! O.B.U.M.M.E.R.!!!
"His(Obama's) is the
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 21:52 — EDGEOFNOWHERE (not verified)"His(Obama's) is the pathetic legacy of squandered public faith and support that ushered him into office..."
Nice turn of phrase -- couldn't agree more.
In other words, throughout
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 22:26 — A true patriot (not verified)In other words, throughout world history dictatorships have far outnumbered democracies. Every previous attempt at establishing democratic governments has ultimately failed.
In this country today we are witnessing before our very eyes the dying of yet another one of these attempts. Human nature has not changed. What made us think that this time things would be different?
Great article, however I
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 22:27 — Johnathan Mann (not verified)Great article, however I think your assessment of Obama is way too harsh. The political atmosphere he is engaged in limits what he is able to accomplish. Two, three, maybe four more Democratic seats could have brought forth better and stronger reforms. Universal health care, stronger financial reforms, more robust stimulus! It’s amazing he got anything done at all. Sure he made mistakes, but compared to the previous administration, Obama was infinitely better even with his many weaknesses. Democrats do make mistakes, the Republicans make disaster. Criticizing Obama at this point can only help the GOTP.
You can readily tell where the Republican really stand about our country. Mitch McConnell the Republican senate minority leader said yesterday, “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”
There’s the real Republican ideology! To hell with the economy, to hell with unemployment, to hell with the deficit, to hell with the middle class, to hell with the country, the most important thing we want is to win!
Are we only pawns to them in their quest for power? Do they care more about politics and winning than restoring our country? Do we really want these unpatriotic bastards back in control?
I have been feeling this all
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 22:35 — Anonymous (not verified)I have been feeling this all day, and it has been building up in me to this point. You have articulated the way I feel, and you have done it so very well. Thank you so much.
Perhaps the pixels will be found by some future format and someone will say that you "told it." Regardless, I thank you for helping me, at least, to not feel so alone in this devastation of the America I so wanted to believe in.
"Do they care more about
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 23:05 — Georgi Malenkov (not verified)"Do they care more about politics and winning than restoring our country?"
And you actually think that this sordid little eel has been about "restoring our country"? Restoring bankers bonuses perhaps but, please, restoring the country?
Sorry, Charlie, but nobody's buying the "those-evil-Republicans" pitch this time. All the last election gave us was another Republican anyway. Save your excuse making for someone whose stomach can handle it.
Re: Farewell Mon Amour:
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 23:13 — Scott ffolliott (not verified)Re: Farewell Mon Amour: Prospects on Democracy's Electoral Defeat
When was it that the U S of A experienced democracy? Perhaps what we mourn is the belief that ” the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice.” We mourn for we stopped participating in our communities and fell into the belief that our social value is our family. Family values have destroyed our belief in social democracy and kept us from understanding the entire meaning: “It bends towards justice, but here is the thing: it does not bend on its own. It bends because each of us in our own ways put our hand on that arc and we bend it in the direction of justice...."
Social democracy comes when we disobey our rulers and join together to rule ourselves.
“Voting is easy and marginally useful, but it is a poor substitute for democracy,
which requires direct action by concerned citizens.” -Howard Zinn
THIS ARTICLE HAS MUSCLE..THE
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 23:38 — cheyennebode (not verified)THIS ARTICLE HAS MUSCLE..THE DREAM FOR WEALTH IS A DREAM FOR A SOFT LIFE..BUT THAT'S THE FLAW..NO MATTER THE AMOUNT OF WEALTH..IT JUST DOESN'T DELIVER THAT SOFT SECURE LIFE...SO THEY TRY FOR MORE..AND MORE..LIFE IS MADE TO BE TOUGH SO TO TOUGHEN...THESE MAD MEN BENT ON MONEY ARE SPOUTING A PHILOSOPHY OF ALIENATION THAT IS FUELED BY THEIR OWN ALIENATION...THEIR INSECURITY IS PATHOLOGICAL...THAT'S WHY THEY ALWAYS INCREASE THE GRASP FOR THAT STORIED SECURITY..
Friend, you are preaching to
Tue, 10/26/2010 - 23:39 — Anonymous (not verified)Friend, you are preaching to the choir - again - and at great length. And the members of the choir number fewer day by day as, discouraged and knowing not how to take "direct action" as "concerned citizens," they give up for want of constructive commentary.
Truthout has faithfully reminded us what is wrong - repeatedly. And correctly so. But Truthout seems to have no more idea of what to do about it than anyone else of sound mind and good intentions.
A wonderful piece which
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 00:03 — Kyle in Athens (not verified)A wonderful piece which encapsulates every bit of despair I have felt for my country over the past decade.
Maya and others, thank you for publishing such a bold, thorough, and well thought statement. Please keep up the great work.
If you vote for anybody but
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 00:22 — Johnathan Mann (not verified)If you vote for anybody but a Democrat or not vote at all, you will help "those-evil-Republicans" back in power. This is what you get for it:
Since WW2 there were no major bank failures until Reagan started the deregulation of the financial industry. Every major bank failure since has been under a Republican especially under W. Trickle down economics (tax cuts) has never worked, has increased the deficit and has never created significant job growth. It has, however made the rich vastly richer. Most of the money for tax cuts goes to the rich way out of proportion to the population. Deregulation only profits the rich. Outsourcing our jobs overseas is destroying the middle class. Middle class income and buying power has gone down since Reagan and has only gone up during Clinton’s term. That’s just a start! So much for conservative, small government, less regulation and big tax cuts.
If one reviews history then
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 01:23 — fredboy (not verified)If one reviews history then takes a long, careful glance at the future, it is clear all the viciously selfish are doing to our nation will come back to bite them on their individual and collective asses.
Giroux's piece is
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 01:39 — Mike W. (not verified)Giroux's piece is beautifully written. But the act of writing this at this time is a little like the musicians on the Titanic who sat in their chairs and played on while the ship was sinking. I agree with 'preaching to the choir' above. The left is brilliant when it comes to critique, but how do we get beyond critique?
Is there a mass of passion,
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 01:55 — Tom Beaver (not verified)Is there a mass of passion, energy, anger, frustration in our society today that can present any hope, any chance at all, for a collective push back against capital-feudalism? I have abandoned Christianity because it has long ago sold out to this 21st century form of serfdom, even though no true, loving Christian, no sincere adherent to Christ the Revolutionary, would silently watch what is happening to the poor, the homeless, the hungry, and all the other victims of this cruelty.
The ignorance and mental
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 02:05 — Anonymous (not verified)The ignorance and mental laziness of our people are their worst enemy. The republicans and the democrats alike exploit this ignorance to mislead people. Our elections are based on hatred and antipathy. This time the republicans will win because people “hate” democrats, seasoned with a little bit of racism. The same “hate” they had for Bush, very well exploited by the democrats. The next election will be for the democrats after the BIG MESS that the republicans are gong to create. You think the congress is a bordello, just wait for the next to come and see. Remember the house of Newt Gingrich? Boehner and McDonnell and all the “crazy” republican candidates to be elected are posed to create the world greatest spectacle of corruption, big economic and social catastrophe and dismantling of what remains of any social protection for the poor. The congress is already on sale. Corporations are buying their congressmen/women who will enact their laws and further reduce all regulations and taxes and increase government subsidies. Just two years and people forgot what the republicans left behind. But this is our reality. Maybe people realize that our political system is a circus and they just want to rotate the clowns.
THE ARTICLE HAS
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 02:16 — cheyennebode (not verified)THE ARTICLE HAS MUSCLE...MERCANTILISM HAS BEEN THE FORCE THAT INFILTRATED GOVERNMENT AND NOW RULES ..AND THE ETHOS IS MONEY ..THE STANDARD OF SUCCESS NO MATTER THE MEANS...AND YET THOSE THAT RULE THE EMPIRE ARE POOR IN THE SECURITY THEY CRAVE..MONEY AS A GOAL ONLY BECOMES A NEUROSIS THAT DEVELOPS INTO A PSYCHOSIS AT THE HIGHEST STRATUS...MURDOCH EQUATES ACQUISITIONS WITH SECURITY BUT IT STILL IS JUST BEYOND HIS GRASP...IF ONLY HE COULD RUN THE COUNTRY..
Pardon me while I walk to
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 02:35 — Tea Party Truth-Out-Er (not verified)Pardon me while I walk to the corner and PUKE!
WHAT A BUNCH OF WHINERS!
"That's it man, game over man, game over! What are we gonna do now? What are we gonna do?" - Aliens
Yes, you're gonna lose...and lose BIG in the mid-terms. Not because of a failure of capitalism, but because of a MAJOR REJECTION of your PROGRESSIVE/SOCIALIST/MARXIST attempts to fundamentally change our nation. We don't want it. You're going to get fired. Everything you have tried, you did without public support and you're paying a steep price. Ouchy, boo boo. Pubs felt it in 2006 and 2008 and the left was elated....magazines and newspapers predicted the extinction of the right.
Man up!
Truth-out? Or, Pathetic therapy session?
I agree with Jonathan Mann.
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 02:39 — Anonymous (not verified)I agree with Jonathan Mann. Obama's heart has been in the right place, but the Party of No has had absolutely no plans except to obstruct. Their obstruction, in light of the economic disasters many Americans have faced, has been downright treasonous. Rethugs have only cared about themselves, and no one else, and they've always been, in recent history, the political party most aligned with the haves and have mores! It sickens me that all that I learned in school regarding how this country has been a 200 year old experiment in democracy, is now on the verge of turning into another failed "empire."
I'm 56. I'm not willing to take it to the streets unless there are many other younger Americans willing to take it to the streets before I decide to do so. I have lots to lose if I ever got arrested for some sort of political revolutionary actions. All I can do now is vote on November 2, and I know damn well if every Democrat and Independent who voted for Obama actually votes for anyone BUT a Rethug or Tea Gagger on the same day, this country might be saved for the short term! The Rethugs and Gaggers will continue to be a political MINORITY!
I am George Soros. I bid you
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 02:46 — George Soros (not verified)I am George Soros.
I bid you welcome.
Listen to the blog. Children of the night. What music they make.
These spiders spinning the webs for the unwary fly. The blood is the life, Mr. Murdoch.
You are too late. My blood now flows through America's veins. She will live through the centuries to come, as I have lived.
Van Hesling: Should you escape us, Mr. Soros. We know how to save America's soul if not her life.
Soros: Only, if America dies by day. But I shall see that she dies by night.
Happy Halloween!
George
ARRGG!!! (Stake driven thru heart, blood squirting, music fades)
To pardon me: Get stuffed,
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 03:07 — Anonymous (not verified)To pardon me: Get stuffed, right-wing whackadoodle! It's words like yours that only convey to me your real message: try to incite a civil war. After what that Paul supporter did the other night, and that hasn't been the only violence Tea Gaggers have tried to incite, I only have one thing to say to people like you who call people like me a Marxist and Socialist: Go to Hell, un-Amerikan un-patriotic Tea Gagger!
The amazing thing about the
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 03:10 — Johnathan Mann (not verified)The amazing thing about the Tea Party is that it is controlled and funded by the people that profit the most from deregulation and have no real concern about the middle class or the constitution or the country.
In a perfect world where everyone is honest, wants their country to succeed and wants to promote the general welfare of the people, small government would be fine. Otherwise, we will need good strong government to promote the general welfare, as has been giving and ordained to Congress by the constitution to promote the general welfare (Preamble and Section 8). I prefer to say, Smart Government, Smart Regulations!
Tom
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 03:11 — Anonymous (not verified)Tom Beaver10/27/2010-0155:You clearly are a believer,despite "I have abandoned Christianity".Don't give up your real belief despite what you see as selling out to serfdom-at best an individual interpretation.Humans make mistakes-that's what forgiveness was for!Peace.
That it is in the Preample
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 03:22 — Anonymous (not verified)That it is in the Preample that the government is to serve for the general welfare of the people is totally lost on T ea Gaggers, multi-billionaires like the Koch Brothers, and other right-wing whackadoodles who need to apply for visas to Russia where Kapitalism runs rampantly de-regulated! Get out of America and take your right-wing whackadoodle ideas elsewhere! You are not Real Americans, but real loony-tune idiots!
okay, Bubba, where's your
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 03:31 — Anonymous (not verified)okay, Bubba, where's your place on the barricades?
Are YOU gonna DO anything CONCRETE at all?
If We're Not Yet At The
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 03:40 — Bill O'Rights (not verified)If We're Not Yet At The Point, as a Nation, of realizing that the Left/Right Paradigm was a cultivated hoax to maintain an electorate divided enough so as to take the bit of serfdom in our mouths in order to avoid the evil other party, we are on the way to having that realization. The sentiment is there to move power away from centralized power (all things Federal) and back to local communities, where the politicians face the people they tax on the sidewalk, and the contractors also face the people who are paying for it - very intimate - very much less waste. What we have become now is like what the Revolutionary War was against centralized control and taxation - and to hear people say 'the Constitution was written by wealthy landowners' note that we haven't followed it and now property ownership is a luxury - the poor used to be able to own a little Farm - 'dirt poor' is now just for the rich - this situation didn't come from following the Constitution, it came from becoming a collectivist economy controlled by bankers not unlike the British of the 18th Century.
less polemicism and more
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 04:00 — gabe (not verified)less polemicism and more real actionable ideas that the masses can carry out to get this country back on the track it needs to be on. i respect and admire the intentions but the time for waxing poetic, even if its for the truth, is over. we need to act
Where, O, where were you
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 04:09 — MOHAMMED N. RAZAVI (not verified)Where, O, where were you guys for the past ten, fifteen years while I was clamoring for rationality? Have I not been warning about all of this, Writing on Slone.com and my local paper, the Dothan Eagle. While you and your ilk and the Republican counterparts told the Americans that all they had left to do in this world to obsess about sex, now we are all Ucked.
Mr. Giroux: you used the
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 05:37 — Ernie (not verified)Mr. Giroux: you used the word "feudal" exactly right in your essay, but you only used it once.
It is critically important that the citizenry of the US understand clearly that it is not just that democracy is withering, but that it is being replaced by exactly the form of government that democracy was intended to replace.
It doesn't matter that the feudal lords will be corporations or the ultra-privileged individuals. We are regressing hundreds, if not thousands, of years, in terms of our government.
In the past, it has been said by pundits and experts that whoever controls the terms used in the debate, controls the debate. It is time for those not part of the ultra-privileged minority of would be autocratic rulers to start calling a spade a spade, and start referring to those who rule, or attempt to, by the old denotations given to prior forms of government, terms such as baron, count, earl, and most importantly, lord.
If the corporations and ultra-privileged play their cards right, they could even bring about a tyranny.
The collapse of capitalism
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 07:02 — Anonymous (not verified)The collapse of capitalism is commencing.
Henry A. Giroux is welcome
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 08:37 — Anonymous (not verified)Henry A. Giroux is welcome to his despair, if that is the dark cloud under which he prefers to live.
If he gets his view of reality from the main stream media or from his hopeless colleagues in their ivory towers, he will never discover that his view is of his own making using superficial depressing thought. That is why he has nothing to offer.
All causality is ultimately immaterial; it is spiritual. Habitual thoughts of disease, despair and deprivation are the causes of the same. That is the self-created prison that most of humanity lives in. Those are immaterial mental causes, but they do not define reality.
We can use the same innate power, to choose our thoughts, and create a better, harmonious, workable life if our thoughts are of wholeness, love, strength and power. This is our own power that God is giving us every moment with immediate results. God is not remote, but right with us.
We all have the ability to live a life of hope and peace when we discover who and what we really are and nobody can sell that to us or take it away.
Improved education has the
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 09:47 — Anonymous (not verified)Improved education has the potential for empowering the people to vote out the exploiters and the ignorant. But what is education in the context of politics? To empower the electorate it must strongly focus on the long evolution of government from authoritarian models to democratic beginnings,and culminating in the democratic American Constitutional Republic, - based on the innate Rights of Man. The history of our country, and its two centuries of struggle to make a living reality of the inspired vision of the Founders must be taught to every American. The painful events of the various civil rights movements, and the great populist dynamics of Progressive Reform, must be refreshed for every citizen. Only by an intense learning experience in this vital narrative can the American voter be equipped to reject the plutocratic oligarchy now being foisted on the nation. I recommend that this be an organized Adult Education program, as well as a coordinated school and college one.
I have watched with dismay
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 10:53 — robert (not verified)I have watched with dismay as Obama has squandered the public faith and support that ushered him into office. He has demonstrated no committment to combat the forces of greed and ruthless exploitation that will not be checked while there is still something to exploit - be it resources human or material. We are witnessing a huge gamble as casino capitalism wagers unrestrained wealth against our world. We were deceived by the inanities shouted by Obama from the hustings - slogans such as YES WE CAN and CHANGE. But the working people of France have shown us how to act to bring about change, while we remain mesmerised by Fox News, celebrity culture, and game shows.
Giroux is an academic
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 12:25 — Anonymous (not verified)Giroux is an academic narcissist of the first water. Furthermore, his prose is awful.
The sycophants who applaud this defeatist corpse of an essay are far more frightening than the Nazi cowards of the Tea Party.
Forget the New Wave pop psychology. Forget about Giroux. Fight back.
As for the Tea Party scum, let them come to Washington. Washington is our town. Fuck them.
How long could corporate
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 12:44 — Jane (not verified)How long could corporate power survive, if we all stopped giving them our money? Think of it - we'd all have lots of money but could only buy from each other. For ALL of us to stop paying All bills, would be a most effective way of causing revolution in our country. No bloodshed - just quit enabling our oppressors.
The elitist "robber baron"
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 13:03 — Anonymous (not verified)The elitist "robber baron" cabal love money more than anything, yet, they do not understand the most basic thing about money. Money is a medium of exchange. What gives money its value and preserves its value is the nature of the exchanges; are they reasonable, fair and honest? These words do not seem to be in their vocabulary, but they are the essentials of wealth. Everyone who uses money has a hand in giving value to and sustaining the value of money or destroying it. The robber barons have unwittingly mapped out their path toward self-destruction.
Real people can negotiate exchanges with labor, apples, chickens and hog jowls, but the elitists may well find themselves out of the loop before they figure out what happened to them.
i'm sending this to all my
Wed, 10/27/2010 - 13:48 — bob (not verified)i'm sending this to all my friends, you should too.