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'Empire of Illusion'
Socially networked, but literate?
In an opening chapter called "The Illusion of Literacy," (and in a book partly sub-titled "The End of Literacy"), Hedges has surprisingly little to say about the subject, almost as if he's not particularly interested in the possibility of literacy as a remedy for cultural mindlessness. There's a scant couple of paragraphs citing an approximately 40 per cent functional illiteracy rate in North America, but nothing about the decline of book reading, especially among young people, nor anything about other "knowledge deficits" in history, geography, science and civics, and really not much about how the Internet is actually used by its consumers (9 out of ten of young people's most visited sites are devoted to "social networking"). For that sort of information you have to go to books like Mark Bauerlein's The Dumbest Generation, Susan Jacoby's The Age of American Unreason or Andrew Keen's Cult of the Amateur.
The paucity of literacy discussion in a book that advertises itself as being about that topic is only part of a larger problem. The "illusion of literacy" chapter is followed by others that explore the "illusions" of love, wisdom, happiness and America itself. There's a lot about porn, the pretensions of higher education, pop psychology, and the dismaying condition of a pseudo-democracy. Most of what Hedges says is factually true, yet I found myself periodically surfacing from the account of cultural and political sludge to mumble, "Yes, yes, but this isn't what all of life is about or how I experience it." At least in some monastic corners of the world, the kid who's playing Modern Warfare is also reading Italo Calvino's Mr. Palomar. That Hedges thinks bleak catastrophe is indeed the whole of contemporary life appears to be Hedges' own illusion.
It's never quite clear who Hedges is writing for nor what he wants his readers to do. Certainly, his unrelieved polemical essay is not aimed at the benighted masses watching Ultimate Fighting Challenge and poker on TV, clicking onto YouTube or YouPorn, "friending" strangers on Facebook, or blowing up imaginary worlds on Grand Theft Auto and Modern Warfare video games. It's not for them, since they're not reading at all.
So, it's a book about rather than for the unwashed but shampooed masses whose minds are inundated by junk culture. Hedges must be writing for the rest of us, the -- let's be generous -- 10 or 20 per cent of us who read books, participate in politics and civic culture, and who keep a worried eye on the CO2 counts in the atmosphere. But most progressive middle-class intellectuals already know most of this stuff, and some of them have even read theoreticians like Guy Debord on "situationism" and Jean Baudrillard on "simulacra" (neither of whom is mentioned by Hedges), both of whom early on spotted "the triumph of spectacle." Moreover, Hedges' intended intellectual audience, while dimly aware of most of the phenomena Hedges excoriates, live lives that only peripherally partake of mass popular culture. Given that his readers likely pay only corner-of-their-eye attention to the details, maybe Hedges' intention is to present mass culture to us as a form of at-home exotica.
Porn as cruelty
The chapter on the "illusion of love," which is entirely devoted to a journalistic visit to a pornmakers convention in Las Vegas, is characteristic of Hedges' perspective. Beginning with an epigraph that offers a lurid passage from the late Andrea Dworkin's Pornography: Men Possessing Women, Hedges hews to her particular version of feminism, presenting an Inferno-esque, "graphic" account of heterosexual commercial porn that emphasizes its increasing violence and degradation of women. Interviews with porn performers, peddlars, and recovering porn actors reiterate the sadistic nature of this particular illusion, and in case we're unfamiliar with its contents, Hedges provides extended snatches of porn video dialogue and detailed descriptions of how tab A is slotted into inserts B, C, etc., in such productions. After a few pages of this, you realize Hedges isn't planning to go beyond the confines of the commercial sex industry, and you idly wonder why the chapter isn't billed "the illusion of sex," since it doesn't seem to have much to do with love or any similar affectional state.
This cinema verite presentation builds to the climactic message that "porn reflects the endemic cruelty of our society. This is a society that does not blink when the industrial slaughter unleashed by the United States and its allies kills hundreds of civilians in Gaza or hundreds of thousands of innocents in Iraq and Afghanistan." Mr. Hedges goes on (and on). Porn is soon linked to the plight of the mentally ill and the unfairly imprisoned, as well as the dangers of gun ownership, obnoxious nationalism and "rapacious corporate capitalism." Predictably enough, porn is soon equated to the infamous Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and we're assured that "torture and pornography inevitably converge."
I'm puzzled by the rhetorical overkill, both here and throughout Hedges' tract. While it's reasonable to sharply criticize both the content of hetero porn and the conditions under which it's made, it's not immediately clear what the purpose is of a hyperbole that insistently ties porn to all of the world's assorted ills. It's as if, in the name of some form of radicalism, Hedges' intent is to crush all possible discourse about the subject. In this leftist vision of liberation, one can sense the mirthless commissars just over the horizon.
In any case, Hedges' edicts about the meaning of porn seem designed to render any further discussion of sexual representation either trivial or irresponsible, or both. A question like, "Momentarily leaving aside the egregious conditions and content of contemporary pornography, is there a moral objection to the representation of sex between people and the viewing of such representations by other people?", becomes irrelevant or even blasphemously incorrect. Why would one want to ask such a question?
Where's the debate?
Well, for one thing, the question challenges some North American attitudes about sex. While porn may represent commercial views about sex, a dominant religious attitude among Christian fundamentalists (and perhaps the view is held more broadly than merely as a religious tenet) is that sex ought to be strictly regulated -- preferably, within heterosexual marriage and utilized primarily for procreational purposes. The debate about attitudes toward, and practices of, sex had a lot to do with both feminist and homosexual political struggles in the last half century. None of that will be found in Hedges' Empire. Nor, when it comes to cruelty and wanton killing, will readers find anything about porn-deprived jihadis, who manage a good deal of slaughter and torture without the aid of salacious imagery.
Maybe Hedges just isn't a very good sociological writer. In service to agitprop, Hedges excises anything that complicates his "correct line." In my experience of gay porn, while it's true you can find niches for everything from S&M to foot fetishism, mainstream homo porn is overwhelmingly focused on the vanilla sex of "twinks" (18-21-year-old, more or less clean-cut, late-teen beauties). While one can probably criticize the conditions these boys endure while making porn, and can cite the ways in which porn sex distorts ordinary real sex, the behaviour of the boys is generally friendly and non-violent -- there's lots of kissing and gestures of affection, they use condoms in the name of "safer sex," and the sex, apart from being hot (if you're inclined to find such sex hot) is pretty inoffensive unless you find the whole thing offensive. I'm not offering a brief intended to mitigate the sexist horrors of heterosexual porn, I'm just suggesting that the world is more various and complicated than Hedges, in the grip of an ideology, allows.
Subsequent chapters on higher education and positive psychology are similarly uneven. Hedges opens his chapter on the "illusion of wisdom" by saying, "The multiple failures that beset the country, from our mismanaged economy to our shredding of Constitutional rights to our lack of universal health care to our imperial debacles in the Middle East, can be laid at the door of institutions that produce and sustain our educated elite. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Oxford, Cambridge, the University of Toronto and the Paris Institute of Political Studies... do only a mediocre job of teaching students to question and think. They focus instead... on creating hordes of competent systems managers... The elite universities disdain honest intellectual inquiry... They organize learning around specialized disciplines... [they] have banished self-criticism. They refuse to question a self-justifying system. Organization, technology, self-advancement, and information systems are the only things that matter." Naturally, Hedges doesn't want to lay at the door of those elite universities such things as the end of slavery, free speech, civil rights, notions of ethnic and gender equality, sexual orientation, or even the attempt to reform health care in the U.S.
No fun with sexbots
But if elite universities are that bad, it makes me almost glad to be teaching in a non-elite, marginal, backwater university where we're still allowed to read Italo Calvino and modestly rant about the mindless culture foisted on the young by the capitalist Axis of Evil that manufactures those Modern Warfare videogames. Since I'm likely to be accused of frivolity anyway, I might as well confess upfront that at the end-of-the-semester "Goodbye Class" in ethics, where one of the students, Veronika, provided us all with cupcakes that she'd stayed up baking the previous night, we spent a rollicking hour discussing the morality of David Levy's Love and Sex with Robots (2007), a review of which was the subject of Veronika's final essay of the semester. Having debated the ethics of everything from abortion to vampires, it was fun to imagine "sexbots" at the end. The class and I found the discussion pretty hilarious, even educational. Mr. Hedges would perhaps think otherwise.
If Hedges can offer sweeping, half-true, generalizations about elite education, he's also capable of astutely pointing out that in our "deteriorated educational landscape," it's the case that "there has been a concerted assault on all forms of learning that are not brutally utilitarian. The Modern Language Association's end-of-the-year job listings in English, literature and foreign languages dropped 21 per cent for 2008-09 from the previous year, the biggest decline in 34 years. The humanities' share of college degrees is less than half of what it was during the mid-to-late '60s... Only eight per cent of college graduates, about 110,000, now receive degrees in the humanities." There have been precipitous declines in all fields, from English to mathematics to social sciences. "Bachelor's degrees in business, which promise to teach students how to accumulate wealth, have skyrocketed. Business majors since 1970-71 have risen from 13.6 per cent of the graduating population to 21.7 per cent. Business has now replaced education, which has fallen from 21 per cent to 8.2 per cent, as the most popular major." All true, too true, but this isn't the place for a full-scale dissertation on the plight of the shaping of the educated mind.
Hedges is much better when he gets to the "illusion of happiness." That's where he skewers various self-help gurus peddling "positive thinking" and punctures the intellectual pretensions of various psychology departments to put "Positive Psychology" on a scientific footing. Barbara Ehrenreich's Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America (2009) does a more extensive and thorough job on the topic, but Hedges' acerbic view of the matter ought to be enough to get you to stash your "Smiley" buttons and shelve your copy of Rhona Byrne's The Secret.
'Only the shell remains'
The worst is saved for last. It's Hedges' chapter on the "illusion of America," and clearly the one he was most itching to write. As is his wont, the screed is unrelieved, but tinged with bitter affection for a land that once was. "The country I live in today uses the same civic, patriotic and historical language to describe itself... but only the shell remains," Hedges laments. "The America we celebrate is an illusion. America, the country of my birth, the country that formed and shaped me, the country of my father, my father's father and his father's father... is so diminished as to be unrecognizable. I do not know if this America will return, even as I pray and work and strive for its return."
In place of the recognizable America, "our nation has been hijacked by oligarchs, corporations, and a narrow, selfish, political and economic elite, a small and privileged group that governs, and often steals, on behalf of the moneyed interests... During this plundering we remained passive, mesmerized by the enticing shadows on the wall, assured our tickets to success, prosperity and happiness were waiting just around the corner."
Hedges makes it clear that Barack Obama and the "bankrupt Democratic Party" is not the "hope" he "can believe in." About the only closing-line relief Hedges can offer is "love," whose power is greater than the power of death. "Love will endure," Hedges asserts, "even if it appears darkness has swallowed us all, to triumph over the wreckage that remains." Hmm, bleak stuff.
Somewhere in the course of Hedges' final sermon (he was trained, he remarks in passing, as a seminarian), I think I figured out who he's writing for. The intended readership, I suspect, is left liberals and social democrats, and Hedges' polemic is designed to persuade moderate progressives that they don't fully understand the gravity of the situation. In failing to understand the situation, the moderate leftists become, in Hedges' view, the real enemy, more culpable than the right wing conservatives, because they prop up the shell of the system, even when they should know better. If that's what's going on here, it echoes the 1920s Communist Party's verbal and physical assault on social democrats as "social fascists," and at least some of us remember where that revolutionary strategy led.
A modest alternative
Hedges' Empire of Illusion is a difficult book to deal with because much of it contains more than a grain of truth. Even if he could persuade left liberals and social democrats to repent and see the light, I'm not sure what he wants them to do. Become cadres in the true Revolutionary Party and set off to free the masses from their illusions? I don't recall that working the last time it was tried.
It might be more helpful to see the situation as one of a divided polity, a divided culture in the midst of "culture wars," in which there are left-of-centre Democrats and social democrats, Obama included, and right-wing Republicans and angry anti-government libertarians and self-proclaimed "independents." That perspective at least makes possible an answer to the question, "What is to be done?" What we should do is continue to teach people to read books and to criticize the gadgets and content of capitalist pop culture. We should continue to try to reform health care, regulate and restrain capitalism and attempt to save the planet. We should do the little things in our neighbourhoods, and we should join political parties and other organizations and try, as we used to say, to change the world.
This modest program is admittedly less spectacular than Hedges' despairing vision of spectacle and decline. But what's the alternative? I saw an ad on TV the other day advertising the latest apocalyptic movies and games, the screen filled edge to edge in high definition exploding objects. The voice-over punchline said, "The end of the world never looked so good." ![]()
'Empire of Illusion': Page 2 of 2




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OilbertaRedTory
2 years ago
The End of America
... should come as no surprise to any Canadian.
A nation founded on the property rights of slave-owners like Jefferson, tax-avoiders, native land-grabbers and the monocultural reactionaries (mostly against French Catholics) wrapped in rhetorical flourishes as devoid of intent as any Glen Beck rant, is hardly the beacon of freedom is pretends to be.
It's no accident that slave trading wasn't ended by the US. It's no accident of history that institutional slavery split the country into a brutal civil war. It's no accident that women's suffrage didn't originate in the 'land of the free'. It's no accident that civil rights for minorities and miscegenation took a century to abolish. Or that equal rights for gays is spinning into reverse south of our border.
It's built into their constitution. As designed.
Their revolution fossilized the privileges afforded the 18th century gentleman. Parliamentary flexibility was sacrificed to 'checks and balances' leading to brittle fragility.
Canada needs to stay as clear as possible as they 'rage, rage against the dying of their light'.
CONservative go...
2 years ago
interesting book - subjective review
Hello,
I know everyone has their own opinion. I think one major problem with Canadian society is only to give destructive criticism and not constructive criticism. I think that the negative linguistics of this article portray which spectrum the author uses. I know my reaction is also somewhat hypocritical. I think that the article did review the book but focused to much on the negative.
I think you were almost correct in this statement:
"10 or 20 per cent of us who read books, participate in politics and civic culture, and who keep a worried eye on the CO2 counts in the atmosphere."
How can you conclude that we live in the society of the spectacle yet you eat the anthropogenic global warming BS that is spewed out as rhetoric. The book No Logo by Naomi Klein clearly outlines the idea of branding culture and this is clearly what has happened to the environmental movement. Talk to physicists about the impact that solar radiation (measured by solar flares) has on the magnetic field of the earth. Then look at the proportion of anthropogenic CO2 to natural CO2 levels. The "hockey stick" graph is quite an exxageration. I agree that we need to improve our environmental footprint, but CO2 is not even close to what we should focus on. Water pollution is way more serious than CO2.
The CO2 spectacle for surely fooled me as well, until I continued to search for truth. "CO2 climate catastrophe" has become the new fundamental religion of our society. We no longer believe in "gods" in western culture (to the extent we used to) and they need to give us a new "god" to worship.
The real issue is that nobody asks the why and how anymore.
G West
2 years ago
Actually, I know several young physicists
They disagree with what you're saying relative to AGW - in fact, the cutting edge theoretical and experimental physics is almost totally concerned with a few rather difficult - and exceedingly difficult to understand - problems. None of them have the slightest connection to global warming...and even less connection to religion.
Freeman Dyson, of course, notwithstanding. But be assured that brilliant octeganarians have little or no influence on the actual physics being done these days....Civil heretics are interesting - as artifacts.
OilbertaRedTory
2 years ago
The 'How' and the 'Why'
How AGW causes global warming:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn11637-climate-myths-assessing-the-evidence.html
Why Denial?
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/12/climate-psychology/
How and Why our Empire next door is Ending:
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20020923/greider
Frank
2 years ago
Stan Persky
As to be expected, a well-written article from Mr Persky even if I disagree with his conclusion.
Hedges simply thinks the situation is more dire than Persky does and therefore Persky doesn't see any reason for action.
However, the chance that Hedges is right and Persky is wrong is just as likely as the reverse.
Urbanismo
2 years ago
Clear insight on Chris H Stan
Huh, its only the ignorance of arrogance that makes us Canadians thinq we are any different
Jeffrey J.
2 years ago
Excellent Book
There are some books that remain in ones memory, leaving an impression that just won't go away. Shake Hands with the Devil continues to haunt me to this day; Guyland is another; and Empire of Illusion is a third.
Hedge's book, short and concise, has an impact greater than most. I agree with Stan Persky that it is a hard book to summarize. I encourage everyone to read it. You decide.
The chapter about women who work in the world of pornography is deeply moving and deeply tragic.
The Hurt Locker begins with a quote from Chris Hedges, which speaks volumes about the Director of this years Best Movie.
Hedges sees an empire in free fall, accelerating into chaos. He finds the prospect of failed democracy frightening, and perceives a growing rise in authority, violence and arbitrary rule.
I wish I didn't agree with Hedges. But sadly, it appears he may be correct. Time will tell. What citizens can do to reverse this frightening spectacle is the ultimate question. One we should all participate in.
Great coverage as usual!
Booker
2 years ago
Arguments
Superb article by Persky. I've heard Hedges debate before and he really does seem to wear blinders -- he has the rigid mind of a compulsive scold. I'm more familiar with his attack on the non-religious ("I Don't Believe in Atheists"), which, again, showed a severe rigidness of thinking and inability to process views that differ from his own. One wonders how he could not find at least a little something positive about America electing an African American to the presidency, but I guess he's not one to look on the bright side (to, um, understate things a little).
Booker
2 years ago
One more thing
I guess I would as Hedges, if he thinks that America is currently going to hell in handbasket, to which America he would want to return? That of the 1980's when Reagan was aiding genocide in Central America, and Wall Street was beginning its takeover? To the 1960's when women were still chained to the kitchen, African American's were still segregated and oppressed, and thousands were dying in Vietnam every week? When was America any better than it is now?
max von smartt
2 years ago
SUPERPOWER
"Superpower" is an award winning DVD documentary on the rise of the American Empire, which is a continuation of the same ol British Empire supported by lackey satellite states like Oz and Kanada. Host Christy Johnson interviews various intellectuals, academics, retired military officers etc. who warn we are heading for a New World Order unless we reclaim democracy. Like imperial Rome the masses can be distracted with bread and circuses (think 2010 Olympics) while the legions fight abroad.
www.SuperpowerTheMovie.com
bpither1
2 years ago
The US Supreme Court can not
The US Supreme Court can not define pornography but readers can look to Joseph Campbell"s "The Way of Art" or James Joyce for an intriguing delineation between "art" which tickles emotional craving or that which "shatters your ego"
Selling desire is key to marketing whether it imbues sex or power. Possessing the Other and having your way with them is deeply embedded in the unconscious. You can chose to exercise it or not but it's there. I'm sure that every reader on this forum has either succumbed to temptation or imagined themselves to be in control.
Freud's nephew Edward Bernays, deeply impressed by the dissemination of propaganda from the First World War, was fundamental in channeling these methodologies into what he called "public relations" in the 1920's. The art of advertising shifted from marketing the uses of a product into selling a fetish (if I can buy this car I can get the girl). Your deeply psychological need to desire, and control, could be tooled into consumption. Campbell, invoking Joyce, called this pornographic.
Some may think this rather bizarre since pornography is deeply associated with violence but that is about as extreme a definition as defining an original Campbell Soup painting worth millions as art which leaves one's ego shattered. I have my doubts about that one although some would disagree. Fine.
The point is this. You don't need to see adults entangled in various sexual positions to accentuate your appetite for violence/and possession of the Other. You can read it in the bible and imagine it to be true in clerical dictatorships such as Saudi Arabia without the graphic advertising.
On the other hand every curbside convenience store I ever saw in Sweden displayed the most vividly "erotic" magazines imaginable. And Denmark was the first country to legalize pornography in 1969 and I certainly don't think a woman feels unsafe walking the streets alone in most of Scandinavia. That's just a part of their political culture. Saudi Arabia is a different matter.
Whatever your practice, enjoy it in the privacy of your home while respecting the privacy of your neighbor. If you're getting into debt because of your consumption of sexual material, see a psychologist or a financial adviser.
CONservative go...
2 years ago
I have spoke extensively
I have spoke extensively with old physicists who study the ionosphere specifically. I was just making a statement that shows the fundamentalism that has gripped the environmental movement. Regardless of who is right or wrong, dissidence is dismissed from the anthropogenic global warming community.
CONservative go...
2 years ago
The mentality, you are
The mentality, you are either with us or against us can turn into a very dangerous situation.
RickW
2 years ago
The Creation of the US of A....
....was carried out for the specific task of exploiting the burgeoning riches of the continent. The idealists such as Thomas Paine, Henry David Thoreau, et al, are interesting side notes, but the Federalists of the time
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federalist_Party
wanted a strong central government (rather than ad hoc) the specific task of which was to ensure this expoitation.
So, 200+ years later, the task is about completed, and with that, there is no other raison d'être.
Jerry Munro
2 years ago
Illusion and Reality...
Enjoyed your comment immediately above me here, Rick. An interesting perspective founded on good evidence. It's been a while since I did my "deep study" of the founding of Amerika, of course, but if my memory serves, there was a faction at the table, which included George Washington, that favoured the creation of a US "nobility" or "aristocracy" on the "British Empire" model.
Now, I'll 'fess, that I haven't yet read the entire article here by... What's his name? Persky? :-) (Ehhh, I was there at the betrayal of Operation Solidarity.) Which I will read before I comment further, because it does seem to have some depth to it.
BUT, reacting simply to the title, "Empire of Illusion", I think it is becoming increasingly clear that the US Empire, while still dangerous in its gung ho fascist mentality and ideology, is already largely an "illusion". It is attempting to attend with a brave face still, to the "illusion" of its post WW2 takeover attempt of the fallen British Empire, but the reality is already falling far short.
The US Empire, despite its inheritance by extreme and brutal treachery of a continent of unimaginable riches left from its founding aboriginal population, is already showing signs, which actually began post-Vietnam, of increasing fatigue, economic vulnerability and flagging analysis/understanding and will. In short, it is displaying evidence already of "Empire over-stretch": that point where the "cost of Empire" exceeds "the benefits" of same. Which is the collapse "tipping point" of all Empires.
In short, The US Empire is already drawing on the illusion of itself, as opposed to its reality. It is now all about a fight to "save face"; the last desperate act before defeat.
Even its client state Israel understands that, itself tied to the fate of the Empire by more ways than IT really understands. That is why the contempt it displayed in recent days, toward US Vice-president Biden, the hand that feeds it and is its only real source of sustenance and strength.
But, another story.
We are in a time of illusion. The reality of the viability of capitalism, on whatever front you look, is already far different. We are but on that cusp tipping point, between illusion and the soon to be unavoidable reality of collapse and decline.
And Persky is right, much as I find Persky insufferable from time to time, we really don't have to do anything in this regard. Unless, of course, you see the possibility of opportunity in this reality, and a future worth beginning to fight for. Certainly I do.
But then, my cynicism has not yet reached the level of a Persky. (Whom I could be reading wrong. Hopefully. :-)
Takuan
2 years ago
illusion versus reality
http://sfreporter.com/stories/born_poor/5339/all/
RickW
2 years ago
coyoteman
http://www.ifamericansknew.org/stats/usaid.html
Capitalism, with it's "mantra" of "cornering the market", is transmogrifying into dictatorship, as it fulfills it's "marching orders" by concentrating wealth into fewer and fewer hands. To draw from history (even though it has become a tired old comparison), the US has changed from a republic into an empire -- and this empire is on the verge of becoming fractionated (even though, seen from afar, it still looks cohesive).
homeostasis68
2 years ago
I grew up in Europe and
I grew up in Europe and moved to LA when I was 25. For the last 13 years I tried to make sense of 'America' and their people. To this day, I am amazed how different we all are, and America screaming for Globalization I only can laugh out loud. They do not seem to understand that we are all different. I have been in Canada for a year and I think it is such a sensational country, with the nicest people I have met so far in the world. I am very disappointed though that Canadian TV seems like a recycling station for American TV. I want to see Canadian TV, I want to see Canadian characters on TV, not people who run with guns through the city all day long!!!
I absolutely loved 'Empire of Illusion', one of the best books I have read in a long time.
What bothers me most in the US is how their capitalism affects every single person. People become aggressive hustlers, running for goals, missing the moment. Reaching higher and higher, what they have is never enough. To me it is a country of perversion, and especially LA is a city where people seems to be on steroids 24/7.
RickW
2 years ago
HS68
Watch Little Mosque on The Prairie (among others)
lynn
2 years ago
Mirage
An Empire of Illusion depends, and critically hinges on, a parallel Empire of Distraction, and that is the point Hedges makes especially well......
We are mired...engrossed in distraction, with almost everyone paying attention to all the wrong things.
Hedges, I think, feels it is too late to ask Persky's question: "What is to be done?"
It probably is, but it is still a good question.
We are either going to sink in these stormy seas or we are going to re-invent a new compass that will effectively guide us to shore.
Right now we are distractedly rowing round and round in circles....happy in our illusions... as the waves break ever harder and higher.
(Speaking of a new compass:
Takuan: loved your link to that great article ....not surprising that Sam Bowles is a behavioral scientist...)
RickW
2 years ago
lynn
And distractions tend to live in the shallow end of the pool. Deep thought hurts peoples' brains.
max von smartt
2 years ago
rejoice with a glass of red wine or a bowl of herb
amerika is on a long slow slide to has been despot; like all other other tyrannies before now crumbled rubble and dust. ditch the last of ur yankee dollars for anything else, even pesos!
Jerry Munro
2 years ago
Distractions and Elephants I
A discussion that has not gotten the attention it deserves, including from me. (The weather is so nice outside, that I'm practically living on horseback this last while.) That said, there are still some brilliant observations here, from my old friend Rick, and that especially good link provided us by Takuan, and of course, our inimitable, Tyee Lynn, who never fails to blow me away with the depth of her insights.
"Hedges, I think, feels it is too late to ask Persky's question: "What is to be done?"
It probably is, but it is still a good question."
Indeed, I think, even if it is too late already, it is THE critical question that needs to be gotten to with all haste, even as Rome burns. And for which there is no really easy or glib answer, I fear. Things simply have to run their course here, even if it is too late.
But what says to me that it is going to be gotten to is an observation by the journalist Margoli recently on RealNews, that "The Empire of Illusion" that is Capitalist Amerika, is on the brink of ruination, that it is indeed, "... already financially bankrupt", he said. It would already be fully apparent even to its own people, who don't want to talk about the elephant in the room, but for Capitalist China and Japan, who have continued to bail it out and maintain the appearance of buoyancy, to a tune in excess of one trillion dollars.
And this elephant in the room that even the US citizenry don't want to talk about, for fear of the consequences to their "distractions", Margoli points out, is the Pentagon military establishment, which is fully one third of the US Budget. Indeed, with the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the entire package is in excess of one trillion dollars annually. Which produces nothing of material or intellectual value, but only death and destruction, more debt, and the cost of which is the real source of the ruination of The Empire.
Continued next post...
Jerry Munro
2 years ago
Distractions and Elephants II
From previous post...
The Empire of Illusion will only take its first step on the road to recovery, on the day it walks away from its wars for Empire in the Middle East. Along with that, closing down its thousand or more military bases around the world, brings them and their hundreds of thousands of armed "imperial troops" home, and begins the restructuring necessary to recreate a real "national economy" that meets the needs of its people.
As for the endless growth need of the capitalist market system that drives the Wars for Empire, without which there is no future for capitalism, that is just going to have to be faced up to as well. Faced up to along with the attendant "immigrant" over-population of many capitalist countries, their depletion or seriously damaged resources base, such as created their "imperialism drive" in the first place, along with the despoliation of all the main environmental systems that is s consequence as well.
All the "distractions" in the shrinking world available to the capitalist system are about to become soon not enough, to hide the bellowing and destruction of the elephant, no longer containable behind the living room drapes.
RickW
2 years ago
It's Just Too Bad.......
....that the death throes of the elephant, can (and will) be so destructive.
However, in all of this discussion, there is a small (but insistent) voice that keeps whispering to me, "But what if 1984 IS possible.....or Soylent Green?"
Both scenarios require an excess of population - because as we have come (are coming) to see, more people means more control and less freedom. Already, there is a movement afoot to allow inanimate objects to vote in municipal elections; and the days of the "rugged individual" are increasingly poo-poo'ed (one is the lonliest number....); don't let children play alone; the intimation that "loners" are somehow sociopathic. The list goes on, and it all contributes to a tendency to "herd" -- and herds have drovers.
John Greg
2 years ago
RickW said ...
Yes, that is true, yet paradoxically the opposite is also true in that, in large part due to computer technology and the false perception of increased crime and reduced public safety, people are becoming more and more isolated and disinclined to actually physically participate in the world. The contemporary herd comprises a filthy field of dust and dirt overflowing with individual cows stuck in tiny, personal pens.
dorothy
2 years ago
Just asking...
“I certainly don't think a woman feels unsafe walking the streets alone in most of Scandinavia. That's just a part of their political culture. Saudi Arabia is a different matter.”
The only problem, and one which is in the process of altering this picture is that Saudi Arabia, or rather what it signifies, does not care to stay home. The claim to female feelings of security in Scandinavia is fast becoming history, as it has now in some Danish cities I used to know, become ‘uncomfortable’ for women to go out in the evening without covering up their hair and other natural adornments, as they can get accosted and shouted at by mobs of imported men who deem them to be ‘sluts’.
“…will only take its first step on the road to recovery, on the day it walks away from its wars for Empire in the Middle East.”
So this is where I am wondering if the ‘wars for empire’ is not simply a new version of the old ‘terror balance’ from the cold war days? If everyone wants to go somewhere else and throw their weight around on someone else’s turf, what of the people who are just staying in their own land minding their own business? As far as I can see, they are going to be the underdogs and victims. Should we then take that lying down? Are we not dumping on those who are willing to show some teeth on behalf of a culture that we also treasure at least most elements of?
lynn
2 years ago
Is that an elephant behind those drapes?
Quote:
"And this elephant in the room that even the US citizenry don't want to talk about, for fear of the consequences to their "distractions", Margoli points out, is the Pentagon military establishment, which is fully one third of the US Budget. Indeed, with the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the entire package is in excess of one trillion dollars annually. Which produces nothing of material or intellectual value, but only death and destruction, more debt, and the cost of which is the real source of the ruination of The Empire." End of Quote
coyoteman:
That is some elephant that you write about so eloquently here - the sheer size and scope of it and how it's movements are tied to the drive for endless growth. (I didn't know there were over a thousand US military bases now scattered round the world - that is an incredible number.) Imagine the withdrawal symptoms from that massive addiction....imagine the unparalleled nature of that unraveling when those "living room drapes" finally fall....explains why Canada has become an invisible beachhead for US interests. ( I'm not sure if I am using that term beachhead correctly....I mean, as in securing a new front.)
Rick W:
Quote:
"Already, there is a movement afoot to allow inanimate objects to vote in municipal elections" End of quote
I have been reading about this lately, too.
Scary, disturbing stuff. When a culture can't recognize dead matter from living matter, it is in real trouble - especially when it awards special privileges/rights to "things" over living beings.
It is a curious world of connection/disconnection. these strange days...and increasingly harder to tell which is which.
There is refuge, I think, in keeping things simple...not always easy but worth the try...and I am no saint...I have certainly had my "shallow end of the pool" moments....I guess we forge on and try to answer... and act on that critical question of Persky's: "What is to be done?" as best we can....what else is there to do?
RickW
2 years ago
John Greg
Either way, this is fodder for those who want to control and manipulate. Another manifestation of divide and conquer.......
iwannabefrank
2 years ago
what a bore
saw the opinion piece just as smug disdain for Hedges who perhaps persky feels is unqualified to take shots at our upper halls of learning.
freebear
2 years ago
Just like the Romans did
Distract the masses while we rob them!
max von smartt
2 years ago
north american union
on a positive note the north american union is dead for now. mexico is deeply embroiled in drug wars gone wild, between colombia and amerika. what has become of that superhighway trucking goods from abroad through mexico to usa and kanada??