Saturday, December 30, 2006

The Death of Sadaam Hussein

It is clear that U.S. policy makers in this administration can proceed without fear of opposition from any quarter. The Democratic Party's "victory" in the last election was to have fooled the U.S. electorate into believing that its wishes for an early end to the debacle in Iraq would be heeded. These guys can't backtrack fast enough at this point. What is at stake here, however, may be more significant than Democrats and Republicans alike realize. If voting for the so-called opposition party does not bring about a change in direction, voters are left with essentially two options: (a) join the ever-increasing mass of citizens who show little faith in the democratic system and refuse to use the ballot box; or (b) create additional political parties. Perhaps we should all hope for option B. That would mean that at least one good thing will come of the arrogant disregard for the people's will currently being demonstrated by both parties. The assassination of Sadaam Hussein has evocations of Tolstoy's "Hadji Murat" or of the decision to have Marat assassinated by Charlotte Corday. This is the politics of nineteenth century intrigue--a tradition that owes more to Machiavelli than it does to Tom Paine.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Before--


After--


A Modest Proposal to CBS News

I have a great idea for the CBS News folks. Buy out the rest of Katie Couric's contract before she embarrasses the station any more than she already has. Then, hire Gwen Ifill away from public television's Nightly News. Gwen is an actual journalist as opposed to an entertainer/media personality. She is more than capable enough to do the job and is far more in the tradition of Edward R. Murrow or Dan Rather. She started out as a bright young journalist, is seasoned in television as a result of her years on PBS and is clearly ambitious. Frankly, I find her smiling engagingly at clearly inappropriate times troublesome, but that shouldn't be an issue on network television, and she might even be coached out of some idiosyncrasies she should have abandoned years ago. CBS would win ratings, curiosity seeking viewers, the reputation of being ahead of its time for "discovering" a talented newsperson who happens to be both female and black.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Representative Dennis Kucinich: A Voice in the Wilderness?

It is interesting that many callers to C-Span talk-in shows preface their remarks with, "Thank you for C-Span." As a latecomer to the joys of C-Span, I have only recently learned why that is. It is on C-Span alone that one can access a range of opinion rarely encountered on what the left calls the "corporate media." Sadly, that characterization more and more fits the programming on PBS which, since the Gingrich revolution, shifted its political spectrum severely to the right. Even the Nightly News Hour and the now occasional work of Bill Moyers can no longer be depended upon to represent the true diversity of the political spectrum in this country. And thus we are down to Amy Goodman's Democracy Now and the overall broadcasting efforts of Pacifica radio stations such as WBAI here in New York. It is only on C-Span that one could hear the full remarks made by Representative Dennis Kucinich as he announced his candidacy for President on an anti-war platform.

Rep. Kucinich can be seen as a voice in the wilderness. He has already been caricatured as a quixotic figure. And, indeed, while citizens of the U.S. can take pride in the fact that a Dennis Kucinich is still possible, it is alarming that his is one of the very few voices among the Democrats who has called for an immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq. Kucinich alludes to the estimated 650,000 Iraqis who have died as a result of the U.S.'s illegal invasion and occupation of their nation. Millions more have been injured or forced to flee their homeland. Six hundred and fifty thousand people. Imagine over 200 World Trade Center attacks on our own land. The argument that we must avoid leaving in defeat, that such a departure would not only be a humiliating defeat for this country but disruptive to conditions in the area, an argument which like all big lies, is repeated endlessly, brings political disingenuity to new depths.

The facts is that we have already been humiliated, that the longer we stay, the deeper our humiliation will become, that our only hope for restoring the world's confidence in the people of the U.S. is to demonstrate that we can acknowledge a grave political mistake and begin to make reparations. As for disrupting the area, it is the presence of U.S. troops that is disrupting the area. There is every likelihood that their complete withdrawal--"temporary" bases and all--will bring greater calm to the area.

If the Democrats waffle, temporize, stall on this one, they will be inviting their demise as a U.S. political institution. As of now, it appears that they do not get it. They have a very brief window in which to save themselves.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Manifest Destiny?

After stealing the richer, northern half of Mexico in the name of a (divinely inspired?) destiny that was manifest from our nation's origins and then spending the next 150 years smugly confident that Mexico would no longer be a threat, events seem to be getting out of hand. With Venezuela, Chile and others of our neighbors to the south turning to populist left wing leaders, the very real possibility of a Cuba-like regime south of the Rio Grande is giving U.S. policy
makers pause. Oaxaca is in flames and the floor of the Mexican congress is looking more and more like a rumble. It appears that U.S. immigration policy, namely turning a blind eye to illegal immigrants from Mexico, designed to relieve some of the pressure--and divert some of the votes--may not be enough to stem the tide of radical change.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Civil War in Iraq: The Goal of U.S. Policy?

The Bush administration's refusal to characterize the situation in Iraq as a civil war is understandable since it would then have to acknowledge a civil war as the net result of its invasion. The real question is whether or not this was an unforeseen by-product of our policy or, in fact, the goal all along. No one who had not drunk from the poisoned well of the Bush propaganda ministries could ever have found our stated rationale of "democracy building" anything but at odds with reality. It appears that the Iraqi operation can be counted as an enormous success. It has destabilized Iraq for the foreseeable future and has created the conditions for instability--if not expanded military operations--from Lebanon to Afghanistan. No U.S. president could put the lives of our men and women in harm's way with a policy that announced in advance that it had chaos and destruction as its goals.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Eyes on the Prize II

Reaction to illegal immigrants in receiving communities is in many ways, if not most, akin to that evinced by the migration in the post World War II years of African Americans from the South and, here in the Northeast, Puerto Ricans from the Commonwealth. These were internal migrations of people with the full rights (at least on paper) of citizenship. Both Black Americans and Puerto Ricans had the right to live wherever they wished. The story of what happened to hundreds of American cities in the North as a result of those migrations has yet to be told in full. “Block busting”, “white flight”, urban insurrections, riots, the era of “Burn, baby, burn!” have left a legacy that includes vistas of the South Bronx and East New York in Brooklyn resembling firebombed Dresden. Things are seemingly a lot calmer now. The era of the Black Panthers is over. There is no Bobby Seale or Stokely Carmichael or Malcom X to stir up discontent, no call to arms except in the lyrics of rap singers who, if they become violent, seem only to turn on one another. The objective conditions of many Black Americans have improved dramatically. Black Americans and the Latinos (mostly Puerto Ricans) who grew up alongside them are certainly not as invisible as they were in the pre-Civil Rights era that writers like Ralph Ellison and Piri Thomas describe in their writing. Few Black or Latino children would recognize the U.S. cultural landscape of the era before the Civil Rights movement. They would immediately sense the absence of Black and Latino newscasters, television personalities, and politicians; they would sense that there were far fewer sports figures and entertainers in the public eye; but they would also sense the absence in their everyday life of Blacks and Latinos in all the myriad jobs—in banks, in offices, in shops, delivering the mail, putting out fires or walking a neighborhood beat—whose presence we now take for granted but who are in fact present only as the result of a long struggle. Yes, for these reasons and many more, things are a lot calmer now. But the rioting that took place in Los Angeles as recently as the 1990s is a reminder that we are never far from a rekindling of the violence that was for a period of time so common in this country. Things are a lot calmer now. This in spite of the fact that U.S. citizens who happen to be black or brown suffer high unemployment, poor schools, inferior housing, a culture of violence, an illegitimate birth rate of 75% and far less aggregate wealth. Large cities broadcast news stories from their Black and Latino communities every night, stories out of housing projects and poor neighborhoods, stories chronicling the bleak symptoms of an unfinished revolution in the “post”-Civil War, post-Civil Rights Era America.

Eyes on the Prize

The rebroadcast of PBS’ Eyes on the Prize over the past weekend, some twenty years after its original appearance, has evoked in me (and no doubt others of my generation) a sense almost of disbelief: Did we have any sense of what was happening to this nation as those events were occurring? True, documentaries are narratives; they retell a story, telescope events and give them a dramatic form. What they document is not reality as lived so much as reality given meaning. Yet, I know I am not alone in being shocked at my inability to recall the shooting of thirty-five U.S. Marshalls by Southern rebels protesting the admission of James Meredith to the University of Alabama. Did the press cover this story—or suppress it? The voice of Julian Bond, the series’ narrator, intones that this event may be seen as “the last battle of the Civil War.” Yet, we know that this is not true, that the phrase has been used many times, to characterize many events, and that, most importantly, may be presently in reserve for some future event, since what the series makes clear is that the Civil War is still not over.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

With Murtha's Defeat, the Lights are Already Going Out

News that Rep. John Murtha has been cast aside for another candidate is a signal that the Democrats still don't get it. The selection of Murtha would have been a clear signal that the party was prepared to move for rapid withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. Should they temporize on this issue and allow the U.S. presence to linger, they will seal their fate as a viable political party with a significant sector of the voting public, a public that clearly wants the bleeding in Iraq to stop. The Democrats are living on borrowed time. Evil in its own right, the war is the political right's and the large corporations' greatest weapon of mass distraction from the myriad other issues that require remediation following the long years of corrupt Republican rule. There is the environment and a host of other "quality of life" issues that range from FCC deregulation to disinvestment in the infrastructure to the evisceration of the union movement. If we are to be treated to endless hearings and investigations about the war and the treatment of prisoners to the exclusion of all other issues, there is little doubt that there will be another Republican in the White House in 2008 and the opportunity for meaningful reform will be postponed possibly for decades. U.S. politicians often treat elections as popularity contests rather than as mandates for substantive change. We didn't vote for you, boys and girls; we voted for you to get something done. Trent Lott and Steny Hoyer are place markers for business as usual. Really shameful.

God, Zilla!


The Ultimate Occupation Failure

After watching the Senate hearings on C-Span this evening, watching the General and the State Department expert on Iraq twisting and turning, getting redder and redder in the face, repeating the same mantras, utterances without any link to reality, watching both Democratic and Republican senators looking more and more at a loss as to what to say, it finally dawned on me that there is an historical parallel to the war in Iraq. Like, Iraq, the parallel I have in mind was also costly in life and treasure and ended in dismal failure: the occupation of the American South after our own Civil War. What will happen after we leave Iraq? What happened in the South after the federal troops left? A reign of terror ensued that lasted into the lifetime of living Americans—that’s what happened. The only way that the freed slaves could have held onto the gains of the Reconstruction period was to have federal troops stay indefinitely, perhaps for generations. When they left, the Klan took over, the Black Codes or Jim Crow laws were put in place and African Americans lived lives little removed from their former conditions as slaves. The “Union” was preserved in name only.

The Ultimate Occupation Failure: II

The occupations we choose to focus on in the U.S. are the successful post-World War II operations in Germany and Japan. The problem with using Germany and Japan as models for Iraq is that they have exactly nothing to do with one another. We like our popular myth of exporting democracy and our images of G.I. Joes giving out smiles, Hershey bars and Lucky Strikes. It’s a Norman Rockwell image we are all comfortable with. The reality, however, is that the governing elites in Germany and Japan were happy to do all that the U.S. asked if they could be spared the profoundest fear they had—communist take-over. Fear of communism played a large part in the growth of militarism in both countries and was one of the major reasons for the war. It was out of fear of communist take-over that General Macarthur allowed Hirohito (who should have been executed as a war criminal) to maintain his empire—even if in a figure head role. With the cooperation of Germany and Japan, both nations became permanent bases of U.S. military power. The Japanese island of Okinawa is still a base for nearly 40,000 U.S. service personnel and the Japanese government "happily" foots the bill.

The Ultimate U.S. Occupation Failure: III

No, it is not Japan or Germany we should look to. It is the American South. Stay—perhaps for decades--and maintain semi-chaos, or leave and let the chips fall where they may. The fact is we can never leave Iraq without admitting it was a war based on deception, that it was a humiliation to this country, that it was a waste of tens of thousands of innocent lives, that we are aware that blood will flow and that the violence must take its course. There will be no miracle cure, no quick fix, and if the Democratic Party allows itself to get nickeled and dimed to death in some queasy compromise with these facts, the ultimate result will be the demise of the opposition party and political chaos here in the “homeland.” The only way to make Baghdad look like Tokyo or Bonn is to have Godzilla rise out of the Tigris river and force the Iraqis to look to us for protection—and then drown the place in dollars for about fifty years.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

The Right Wing Rationale X: Hitler = Stalin = Communism = Socialism

In a review of a new biography of Rene Descartes published in The New Yorker this week (Nov. 20, 2006), author Anthony Gottlieb points out that Pope John Paul II “went so far as to suggest that the origins of Nazism and Communism are somehow linked to Descartes.” Right wing historians and intellectuals have repeated this equation practically since the moment Hitler came to power in Germany. Now, with the end of the cold war, the equation is repeated so often that it has taken on the trappings of what in football would be called a pile on, something equivalent to kicking a dead horse. There is, of course, a danger in rebutting this notion, namely, that one leaves oneself vulnerable to the charge that one is defending Stalin or that one is even a “Stalinist.” Nevertheless, I believe that this bit of casuistry is dangerous and needs to be corrected. During the whole of the 1960s and in the years since, I encountered many who would call themselves Marxists, but rarely, if ever, met a self-designated Stalinist. In fact, with the appearance of Nikita Krushchev onto the political stage, we saw the repudiation of Stalin’s regime by the Soviet Government itself. On the other hand, it was the same Nikita who pounded one of his shoes on a desk at the United Nations and predicted, “We will bury you.” He who laughs last… Although the Soviet Union appeared ultimately to have self-destructed, right wing intellectuals seem now in a hurry to bury communism so deeply that there can be no danger of its resurrecting itself. Will there ever be a better time? Yet even the right wing propagandists do not have the temerity to create an equation between Nazism and Communism as philosophies per se. Who has ever read a work of Nazi philosophy? Certainly Mein Kampf does not merit the term. So, if you can’t take on a whole philosophy, use the old straw man; make Stalin a symbol; then let that symbol stand for the philosophy. Crude, but, unfortunately for the sake of clarity of understanding, it works.

The Right Wing Rationale XI: Hitler = Stalin = Communism = Socialism

In yet another reference to the Hitler/Stalin Equation, an unsigned review in The Economist this week (Nov. 11-17, 2006) of Norman Davies' Europe at War 1939-1945, one finds the observation that “The biggest and bloodiest struggle by far of the European war was between two gangster regimes whose awful treatment of their own people and neighbours is unmatched before or since.” Putting aside some doubts about whether even the horrors of the second world war can compare to the genocide performed on the native Americans and the African slaves who were brought to the Americas to replace their lost labor power, it is the first part of the statement that is interesting. “Two gangster regimes.” Hmm. This raises the spectre of two barbarians having a chance encounter in the forest and just having at it until one of them falls. Supposedly, Mr. Davies’ book serves to correct the impression here in the U.S. and apparently in England as well, that it was largely through Anglo-American sacrifices that the war was won. If so, this is no news to the left, which has always understood what the war was really about. Present day historians spend vast amounts of ink documenting Stalin’s evil ways, very little ink documenting the huge amount of support that Hitler received from the West while it was itself struggling to survive the Great Depression. And although the Soviet experiment certainly did implode due to its own internal weaknesses, (weaknesses which most Marxists outside of the Soviet empire themselves tirelessly chronicled), one should not overlook the fact that the U.S.S.R. was in a state of siege virtually from the moment of its inception and that terrified capitalists expended untolled trillions of dollars of their citizens’ wealth in their efforts to remove the threat. By equating Stalin with Hitler, more is at work than merely documenting a communist or socialist experiment under a “gangster regime;” the clear intention is to impugn communism and socialism in themselves.

Monday, November 13, 2006

The Right Wing Rationale XII: Hitler = Stalin = Communism = Socialism







In this country, the desperation to separate oneself from a Stalinist regime was evident even on the left. Thousands of left wing U.S. students who found value in the Marxist critique of capitalism and who looked to some form of socialism preferred to attach themselves to Mao. The little red book, the “Quotations from Chairman Mao,” was being read by student protesters here in the West more avidly than it was in the streets of Peking. Of course, Mao, too, can be rolled into the evil equation, as can any and essentially all Marxist leaders (elected or not, as we saw in the C.I.A. sponsored assassination of Salvador Allende). Practically within seconds of Mao’s death, China was once again under a regime in which “it is good to be rich.” A similar outcome is no doubt hoped for in Cuba as the vultures hover hungrily over Fidel Castro’s death bed. All of these political twists in the road have been accompanied by endless sectarian battles among leftists. From the old days of the Communist table in the City College cafeteria, texts have been flung back and forth. Lenin’s “Left Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder” ended the argument for some; Trotsky’s collected writings for others. The American intellectual Sidney Hook spent a good part of his life repudiating the words he had inscribed in his essay “Why I Am a Communist”. Susan Sontag would endear herself to the right and alienate her erstwhile leftist friends by attacking American intellectuals as “soft on communism.” Yesterday’s anti-Soviet Marxists became the next day’s neo-conservatives. We still hear—yes, even now in the land of Hamburger and Oral Roberts universities—that U.S. campuses are hotbeds of Marxist thought.

The Right Wing Rationale XIII: Hitler = Stalin = Communism = Socialism

What the right wing understands is that ideas die hard. While a slew of right wing texts bear titles like “Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism”, we see regimes friendly to Cuba rising in the Americas to the south. Even Daniel Ortega has risen out of his own ashes, dragging in his path ghosts of Iran-Contra and Gazal frames purchased on Fifth Avenue. It is important to keep in mind that our own nation was formed by founders who saw in Classical civilization ideals to emulate: republicanism, democracy, reason and humanitarian values. These ideas had to wait over a thousand years to be brought to life again while, in the interim, Europe evolved through a dark, theocratic age and a period of absolute monarchy. The right wing knows that the battle is not really quite over. And so, they must tell their version of history, tell it and retell it until it becomes accepted truth, received wisdom. “The poor shall always be with us” is a far more comforting text for them to take than “Workers of the world unite; you have nothing to lose but your chains.” There can be no heaven on Earth, just as Augustine knew that the City of God could not exist on Earth, that more than that, earthly pleasures are elusive, dangerous, and perhaps best not pursued at all.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Armistice Day: On "Cutting and Running"


The rhetoric of “cutting and running” must be abandoned. The only rational course of action is for all U.S. troops to leave Iraq no later than the end of this year. Rather than being the sign of weakness that all of the war’s advocates and apologists suggest, it would in fact be a sign to our own people and to the people of the world of the strength of this nation’s democratic processes. Representative John Murtha’s plan to have U.S. forces “redeployed” should be adopted immediately. The newly elected Democratic congress has a very short time in which to turn this country around. It is what the people of the country asked for through the ballot box. Should the chaos that some predict will take place in Iraq occur, we can always offer humanitarian aid to a sovereign Iraqi government. All of the predictions of disaster we heard prior to our leaving Saigon are deeply ironic in light of the fact that the nation of Vietnam is now a favored tourist destination for Americans. We can leave Iraq now with dignity—or we can wait too long and make a humiliating retreat from the rooftops of Baghdad. A timely withdrawal is the best way of honoring those who have already fallen or been injured in the name of a policy even its former advocates now admit was misguided.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

MacArthur in Color

Upon re-reading my post of November 1, the text of General MacArthur’s radio broadcast from the deck of the U.S.S. Missouri, my eyes kept straying back to the color photograph of the event. It occurred to me that in all the years I have seen references to that famed event—either in photographs accompanying text or in film documentaries—I had never before run into a color photograph. I chose it from among the better known black & white images when it turned up on a Google images page. As a recent PBS series, something titled “World War II in Color”, makes clear, there is something eerie, almost alarming, about seeing color photographs of the war when one has spent a lifetime with thousands of embedded black & white images chronicling the war. The PBS documentary reveals that the color footage of the war was largely suppressed, or more accurately, “classified”, until recently. In fact, alone among the services, the Marine Corps battles were shot exclusively in color but then released only in black & white versions. War strategists in Washington may have decided that color just made war too real. Of course, they were right, as all that color footage from Vietnam broadcast on new Sony Trintrons in the 1960s would later prove. And as the highly censored images from our post-Vietnam battlefields continues to prove.

Democratic Victory

The election has proved to be more a democratic victory than a Democratic victory. The pressure is now on the Democrats and the long term viability of the two-party system. The party members who have just been elected ran under a party banner that represented an almost unanimous stand in favor of the war in Iraq and in favor of the Israeli attack on Palestine and Lebanon. Their comfort with taking stands on other issues having to do with the plight of the working class in this country and on issues of the environment and corporate power in the full awareness that their votes would not carry—and therefore not matter—has now been disturbed by a cri de coeur from a majority of voters. No more posing; they will have to walk the walk rather than talk the talk. If this country is ever to be saved, it will be because of the attitudes of common U.S. citizens who are decent, have an essential sense of fair play, and who will not allow themselves to be pushed too far. They believe the story of a nation marked by a commitment to freedom and human rights. So, to the newly elected majority party, congratulations. But don’t drink too much champagne ladies and gentlemen; you’ll have to keep your head about you if you’re not going to be back in your law offices by 2008. There are millions of decent citizens who will be watching you carefully. And this may be your last chance.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

The Right Wing Rationale IX: Election Day

Well, it looks like we are going to find out by the time the polls close tonight whether the right wing gravitation to more and more fascist tinged policies will be deflected a bit even if it is too late to entirely reverse the curve. It has been a frightening ride up until now as more and more power has been invested in corporations, and the oligarchs, in an effort to consolidate that power, demonstrated a complete lack of inhibition about unleashing the dogs of war and some of the uglier elements in our society. As is always the case with the patrons who make policy for “the greater good,” who proceed as if “the end justifies the means (there is more than a little fondness for Stalinesque leadership among this type),” the lesser evil(s) can be formidable indeed. This is particularly true when one rules via a coalition of thugs in suits, Elmer Gantry style demagogues and the vast spectrum of zealots who have always been part of the U.S. landscape and are often difficult to distinguish from outright bigots. Gone since the Reagan era, perhaps even since Goldwater’s infamous “extremism in the defense of liberty” speech in 1964, are the so-called moderate Republicans. The Northeastern Establishment may still rule, but it rules from behind the wizard’s screen, and that is always dangerous. Like New Testament Pontius Pilates, their hands are clean. Unlike Pontius Pilate, they will remain for all time anonymous entities to all but a handful of Americans. Southern good ol’ boys, Western cowboys, the prim and the pious will do the dirty work. As recent events have vividly illustrated, this coalition, like the crowd on the Mississippi river boat in Melville’s The Confidence Man, will occasionally harbor an honest individual. More likely, however, these children of less than patrician roots will succumb all too easily to corruption—financial as well as sexual. Or, more correctly, be less facile when it comes to keeping their misdeeds a secret. So, now that the contract with America seems to have developed some serious flaws, the other party will return—unless, of course, Americans are a lot less committed to democratic government than they so loudly proclaim…or we see some egregious ballot box tampering.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

"We have had our last chance."

A new era is upon us. Even the lesson of victory itself brings with it profound concern, both for our future security and the survival of civilization. The destructiveness of the war potential, through progressive advances in scientific discovery, has in fact now reached a point which revises the traditional concepts of war. Men since the beginning of time have sought peace.... Military alliances, balances of power, leagues of nations, all in turn failed, leaving the only path to be by way of the crucible of war. We have had our last chance. If we do not now devise some greater and more equitable system, Armageddon will be at our door. The problem basically is theological and involves a spiritual recrudescence and improvement of human character that will synchronize with our almost matchless advances in science, art, literature and all material and cultural development of the past two thousand years. It must be of the spirit if we are to save the flesh. (Words spoken by General Douglas MacArthur in a radio broadcast delivered after accepting the Japanese surrender on the deck of the U.S.S. Missouri.)

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

The Right Wing Rationale VIII: Contradictions of Capitalism


How, some may ask, does a right wing rationale supposedly based upon suspicion of earthly pleasures and sexual freedom tolerate the brand of whorehouse capitalism that seems to have proliferated since the onset of the Reagan/Thatcher counter-revolution? How explain a deregulated mass media that has seen the proliferation of Jerry Springers, infomercials, a torrent of advertising such that the 30 minutes supposedly devoted to network national news barely holds onto 17 of those minutes, the concentration of all media—including print media—in the hands of fewer and fewer corporate owners? How explain the availability of cheap foreign made goods facilitating a buying frenzy of shoddy merchandise? Disinvestment in the infrastructure leaving deteriorating mass transit, school buildings, rusting bridges, neglected parks and common areas? How does the right wing manage, at the same time, to tolerate literally unbelievable rewards for CEOs, sports stars and entertainers who live in hedonistic splendor? How explain the proliferation of sexual enterprises running the gamut from Internet porn to Strippers bars peppering the highways and byways of towns large and small? A methamphetamine epidemic in the West? Legalized gambling? Why, it’s as if George Bailey had never lived and old Mr. Potter was allowed to run Bedford Falls!

The Right Wing Rationale VII: "...rather to have not heard the singing."

“…and then I should wish rather to have not heard the singing.” There is a long tradition in the U.S. of shutting one’s ears to the singing. Many of the spiritual and political descendants of Augustine have mistrusted the sound of music. It is a manifestation which obviously cropped up in the English colonies of North American. A period of two hundred and sixty years separates the Puritans of Salem’s witch hunts (1692) from Senator Joseph McCarthy’s attempts to root out the communists then in our midst. The witch hunters of 1692, the communist hunters of 1952 and the Islamo-phobes of the current period all share a zeal and a commitment to demonizing the foe that is all too common on the American political landscape. Always present is the snarl, the curled lip, the ironic wink in response to those suspect of a willingness to compromise with the Devil. Often, the visceral response to political demons goes beyond mere facial expressions and is converted into overt violence. The sanctioning of “extremism in defense of liberty” is all too easily interpreted as license to commit mayhem. Few of the anti-war protesters in 1970 would forget the hatred on the faces of the hard hat contingent who began beating them in the corridors of Wall Street. Similar expressions of hatred have been seen in the faces of Southern white housewives protecting their children from school integration and rabid anti-abortion protesters. And, again, we are often just a dangerous step or two from translating contorted expressions of hatred into violence. Forty-five U.S. marshals were shot by white mobs attempting to keep James Meredith out of the University of Alabama, and there are numerous cases of doctors willing to perform legal abortions being shot at or murdered. When Augustine wrote, the barbarians were at the gate. Always there are new barbarians in the wings. It is always the most dangerous of times, slouching toward Armageddon. As a Bishop, Augustine knew his congregants needed to be kept under control. The devils he wrestled with within were real for him, and he knew they were in the minds and bodies even of the faithful. Appetites, pleasure, concupiscence, were distractions from the path to virtue. Only the elect, the select few, have the discipline to steel themselves from their dangers. In the political discourse of twenty-first century America, modern notions of sexual freedom as it manifests itself in the debates over contraception, abortion, gay marriage resonate with these ancient fears. It may seem a precious argument to some, but those rare occasions in U.S. history when it seemed that ordinary working people could lead lives of comfort—well housed, their medical needs met, organized into unions, empowered—only proved that too much “prosperity” led to Spock babies, sexual promiscuity and anarchy. Better to spend down, pauperize, the resources of the state and make any further attempt to create a welfare state impossible. Who knows when there will ever be a better chance?

Monday, October 23, 2006

Fair Use

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The Rapture...




and the snarl.



"More moved by the singing..."

The Right Wing Rationale VI: The only thing we have to fear...is our own thoughts.

A line of thought can be followed from Augustine’s Confessions through Luther’s On the Jews and Their Lies on to Wagner’s Parsifal and ultimately Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Ironically, it would be wrong to look for the roots of anti-Semitism in Augustine per se. In fact, if anything, Augustine can be seen as a church philosopher who reintroduced the Old Testament God into Christian thought. The resultant tendency within Christianity is a certain mean spiritedness that fifteen hundred years later the nascent U.S. conservative movement would evoke in such utterances as Barry Goldwater’s “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice.” We are, after all, fighting the Devil. It is just possible that Marx was mistaken when he characterized religion as “the opium of the people”. In its most extreme manifestations, far from having a sedative effect, religion has launched one bloody crusade after another. It may be more accurate to lay any manifestation of drug-induced behavior at capitalism’s door. The right wing seems to find in globalized capitalism a kind of thorazine for the masses. Characterized as essentially schizophrenic by the U.S. right wing, Islamic fundamentalists and revanchist communist leaders in former Soviet states alike are being asked to take the cure at the Thorazine-dosed waters of globalized capitalism. Salman Rushdie, a poster boy for the Islamic bashers, (he was, after all, the victim of a fatwa placed upon him by the Ayatollah Khomeni), looking plump, shiny and affluent as a result of the rewards heaped upon him for his “martyrdom,” told Bill Moyers on PBS television that Islam needed to “modernize.” Mr. Moyers neglected to ask Rushdie what he thought of the U.S. president’s having resorted to a regimen of medieval torture and abnegation of both the Geneva Convention and a right of habeus corpus that goes back to the year 1215 in the Anglo-Saxon tradition. Another of the right wing poster boys, in this case, Zbigniew Brzezinski, when asked during an interview on C-Span to comment on the brutality of the regimes that have cropped up in various post-Soviet states, including his own Poland, laughingly concluded that politics in those countries was irrelevant, since they are now rolling in “money, money, money,” and that’s all that really counts. Telegraphing his own deep roots in medieval tradition, Zbigniew caught himself referring to Poland’s “peasantry,” then paused and said, “perhaps I should say ‘farmers’.” In order to truly understand the right wing rationale one must never lose sight of its roots in a tradition of Holy War that, as the example of Augustine makes clear, goes back to the very origins of what historians once unabashedly referred to as the Dark Ages. Without a demon to fight, perhaps it would be more direct to assert without the Devil to fight, the right wing has no driving force. Over the long course of history the devil has worn many disguises—Muslim hordes, Jews, Freemasons, free thinkers, communists, abortionists—but most menacing of all is the devil that lurks within each of us. In Book 33 of the Confessions, Augustine worries that "whenever it happens that I am more moved by the singing than by the thing that is sung, I admit that I have grievously sinned, and then I should wish rather to have not heard the singing".

Saturday, October 21, 2006

The Right Wing Rationale: V

Now this brings us to the nub of what is at work in the neo-conservative (or the accompanying Orwellian term, neo-liberal) ideology. In order to deconstruct this phenomenon one has to look at a political and quasi-religious tradition that goes far back in history. Augustine, a founder of the Christian faith and a neo-Pauline master of the Christian realpolitik, who wrote down his ideas as his beloved Roman Empire was about to fall to the invading barbarians, might be a good place to start. It is no accident that Martin Luther, another Master Builder whose influence would ultimately extend to the creation of the Protestant Ethic and the Gospel of Wealth, was an Augustinian monk. But one needs to go back further, to the roots of Augustine’s philosophical writings. Although his City of God would find echoes fifteen hundred years later in Ronald Reagan’s “City on the Hill,” the secret of Augustine’s utopia is that he did not believe it was realizable here on Earth, only in the hereafter. It is from Augustine that we get the concept of the elect, of salvation by grace alone, of a terrestrial life which drives humans to the brink of madness because of (and this was a favorite word) “concupiscence,” that is, human appetites and desires. If we look a bit more deeply into who Augustine was, we find a converted Manichaean, a follower of the philosophy that sees the Evil Empire and the Axis of Evil as ubiquitous. Augustine was also a careful reader of Plotinus, a Platonic idealist. (The late Carl Sagan, in his closing remarks on the televised rendition of Cosmos, stated that all Western philosophy, down to the present day, has been a battle between Plato and Aristotle.) Some may recall R.W. Apple’s surprising first page comments in the New York Times on the event of the destruction of the Berlin Wall, “the most significant event since the revolutions of 1848,” and then, a short time later, Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s characterization, again placed on the first page of the Times, of the fall of the Soviet Union as the end of a tradition that went back not merely to 1848, but to the French Revolution and its roots in the Romantic tradition. The all-American Apple and the brooding Russian Solzhenitsyn expressed a shared sense that what was at work in these events was an ongoing political and philosophical battle with a long history. If we look at the other side of this political coin, it also explains how Putin can characterize the fall of the Soviet Union as “the greatest catastrophe of the twentieth century,” and a short time later, in an interview with Charlie Rose, find Gorbachev agreeing with Putin’s sentiments. What is at war here, and I would argue what those who see in the present neo-liberal/neo-conservative agenda real dangers need to understand, is an ancient battle of ideas at the center of which is our fundamental definition of human nature. This may seem rather esoteric, but fractals of this ancient debate are with us every day. And I would argue that unless one can see the present conflicts resolved through the sharper focus afforded by an understanding of these longer historical currents, a viable response to the millennial types now running the U.S. hegemon will be long forestalled.

The Right Wing Rationale: IV

Much of what the Bush administration has done seems to contradict orthodox conservative principles, particularly its willingness to allow enormous deficits to form. In the past, “deficit spending” was associated with Keynesian economics, while it was Republicans who looked to balanced budgets. Upon closer inspection, however, (not that much closer; it is fairly obvious), this apparent contradiction turns on a crucial difference, namely, Democrats were willing to borrow on the future in order to subsidize social programs or to maintain full employment, while Republican deficits are almost entirely the result of military spending and redistributing tax surpluses to the wealthiest sector of the population. In a return to an almost medieval and feudalistic economic arrangement, the rulers tax the people and then lavishly distribute those tax dollars to the warrior class, the upper class (nobility?) and the churches leaving the mass of the population to engage in the vagaries of the marketplace. (Remember when such people were called “reactionaries”? A perfectly fine word that is crying out to be restored to our political vocabulary.) While there is often a lot of accompanying rhetoric about a rising tide lifting all boats and how money in the hands of the entrepreneurial class is good for the whole economic spectrum, the result is an inarguable degradation in the economic and social conditions of the vast majority of the citizenry. Some see this phenomenon as driven by pure greed and an abuse of power in order to secure ill-gotten gains for as long as possible. And there is no doubt that greed and the maintenance of the prerogatives of power are what it is all about. But lots of folks here in the U.S. have difficulty believing that the old WASP establishment (and their entourage of pious social climbers and a handful of highly visible [two Black secretaries-of-state in a row—and one of them a woman] arriviste ethnics) look themselves in the mirror each morning and say, “Let’s see, what can I do today to feather my nest and guarantee that my power is secure?” The fact is they don’t ask themselves any such question. On the contrary, they see themselves and the work they do as virtuous, all in the name of our old friend, “the greater good.”

Thursday, October 19, 2006

The Right Wing Rationale: III

In the U.S., Democrats, liberals and others to the left of the Bush government look on with dismay and outrage as a once prosperous middle class loses more and more of its economic prerogatives and half a trillion dollars is spent on a war that even their side considers a mistake. Half a trillion dollars. Translate that into schools, health care, repair of the infrastructure, affordable housing, a modern transportation system. Surpluses disappear and are replaced by enormous deficits. The rich do not merely get richer, they become obscenely richer. Unionized workers, such as those in the auto industry, are replaced by non-union workers manufacturing automobiles with Japanese names here in the U.S. The Walmart phenomenon of disingenuously labeling workers “associates,” and thereby desensitizing them to their actual position as workers is just one part of a general trend away from unions. Outsourcing has taken away what leverage unions once had. “If you ask for too much,” the owners will threaten, “I’ll just have to close this business and have the work done for a fraction of the labor cost overseas.” More and more workers no longer have access to viable pension plans and are being told that even their social security insurance should be “privatized.” Keynes is dead. Milton Friedman has won. Socialism is dead. Free enterprise has won. And the process is apparently far from over. The policies of the Republican Party make it clear that there is still a way to go. Government must be completely extricated from the lives of the people. Thus, the protection of government lands must go; the regulation of industry, business, the drug industry, the food producers and the media must disappear. “Faith-based initiatives” are the answer to the needs of the poor and disadvantaged states the president who claims Jesus as his hero. More than ever, it is God in Whom We Must Trust. And the counter-revolution is far from over.

The Right Wing Rationale: II

As the counter-revolution continues, we see a dramatic degradation in the quality of life. Cheap goods from China flood the market. While the slick magazines that cater to the ruling class are thick with advertisements for $30,000 wrist-watches (the ones you don’t own but merely take care of for the next generation of the obscenely rich), $500,000 baubles and billion dollar homes, the American masses are induced to drug themselves in a consumer frenzy (when they are not actually drugging themselves) of shoddy merchandise and even shoddier entertainments. Well-meaning missionary of blonde suburban Chicago housewives Oprah Winfrey—in a gesture out of the pages of Nathaniel West’s Day of the Locust—gives free cars to everyone in her audience. How America has changed! Where else could a poor, abused little Black girl grow up to give out free cars to white folks like birthday party favors? Seventy-five percent of Black children are born out of wedlock to single mothers who will then listen to themselves abused and degraded by their fatherless sons in a nightmare artistic and cultural phenomenon known as Hip-Hop which sees its practitioners killing one another with abandon while white lawyers and corporations reap enormous profits and shelter themselves completely from the social quagmire they have helped to create in all-white enclaves of the super-rich. A hurricane in New Orleans cracks open a window into the reality of the conditions of millions of Black Americans and their oblivious and uncaring rulers, but there is no longer a Martin Luther King to come to their aid, no Stokely, no Black Panthers to feed the poor, and the neatly clad adherents of Malcolm soon dispersed after his assassination. There is certainly no threat from the brothers making their bling in the rap business. While the descendents of slaves live more sequestered lives than ever before, their white brothers and sisters, living in equal isolation, lose themselves in a methamphetamine haze. For the fortunate few, there are the all-white suburbs, the smell of cut grass, colonial-style shopping malls and the tank-like protection of gas-guzzling SUVs. For the tiny percentage of super rich, there is the even greater isolation from the conditions they have created in sequestered estates and high rise urban luxury. Society magazines now speak not of multi-million dollar spreads, but multi-billion dollar spreads. Out of sight, out of mind. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer. And so it goes. Could there possibly be a rationale to justify this still evolving social order?

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

A New World Order in a Can

The invention that could truly bring about a new world order is the spray-on contraceptive. The pill, even if it could have survived the propaganda campaign against it, was clearly limited in the protection it offered, that is, it could prevent conception but it did not protect against disease. The latex contraceptive, though it both prevents conception and disease, is universally unpopular and therefore underutilized. Diaphragms and other devices so far introduced all have their limitations. But think about this: a cheap, effective, spray-on medication that would both protect against conception and disease. Sex without fear. Sex without guilt. Truly safe sex. The widespread distribution of freedom in a can would end religious fanaticism, almost instantly provide a check on over-population and change the politics of the world overnight. A New World Order in a Can. Freedom in a Can. A dangerous idea? You bet. It doesn't get more dangerous than this.

Population Control: Sources of the Taboo

A conflation of interest between religious fundamentalists and right wing political extremists has made any rational discussion of the subject of population control almost impossible. There are stories of advocates for population control receiving death threats for expressing their views on the air, a phenomenon all too familiar to those who work in the area of family planning. Urban black populations in the U.S. are told that family planning is a form of covert racism, even genocide. All of the U.S. population was treated to horror stories of enforced sterilization both here and abroad as well as to tales of Chinese women living under the regimen of the “one-birth” policy and being dragged down their village streets for brutally enforced abortions.
An equation has been established and is being promoted even now with growing intensity. That equation is: population control=family planning=abortion=genocide for black, brown and yellow peoples. It is extremely important, I feel, to present a parallel equation that works in tandem with the first: globalization=access to a vast supply of “surplus” labor=non-unionized workers=powerless workers=docile workers=workers oppressed, repressed and depressed, just plain too tired to rebel (or—as a bonus-to sin)=secured low wages=fatter and fatter profits for the rich.

Population Control: Yet Another Taboo Imposed

What predisposed me to being so receptive to the implications of Michael Pollan’s work on the impact of ammonium nitrate fertilizers was a growing awareness of the huge price we are paying for allowing global populations to increase at their current rate. Each new fact about the condition of our environment that emerges from the field and from the laboratory seems more alarming than the last. Currently, we are being told that half the world’s population does not have access to a supply of fresh water. Every zoo in the U.S. has a light display showing the decimation of the world’s tropical forests taking place right before our eyes. Air pollution, water pollution, over-fishing and over-farming, urban sprawl, the misuse of chemicals and anti-biotics in agriculture, the uncontrolled appetite in the developing world for more cars, more industry and therefore even more pollution and misuse of irreplaceable resources are chronicled daily even in the so-called corporate media. One would think, then, that there would be widespread interest in taking steps to check the growth of population and avert a global disaster. The fact is, however, that even a cursory glance at what is available on this subject will soon demonstrate to the inquirer that--since around 1980 and the onset of the Reagan presidency—the term “population control” has been expurgated from rational discourse. It has, in effect, been rendered a taboo subject.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

The Haber Effect: III

What distinguishes Fritz Haber’s work from that of Einstein is that the implementation or application of the idea, far from being seen as a human tragedy, is celebrated as a great victory. A recent example of this celebratory tone was published in the New York Times on Saturday’s Op/Ed page (10/14). In a piece by John Tierney titled “The Kids Are All Right,” Tierney ridiculed those who, in the 1960s, tried to warn the world of the dangers of over-population. Now, while the global population has increased from 3.5 billion in 1968, when Paul Ehrlich wrote The Population Bomb, to its current figure of 6.5 billion, Tierney apparently sees no crisis. Tierney smugly points out that Ehrlich et al. were in error in predicting food riots in the streets within decades of their predictions. We have, by this index, averted the Malthusian catastrophe. If Michael Pollan is right, that catastrophe was averted largely through the application of Haber’s work, that is, enough ammonium nitrate was infused into the earth’s surface to give us more people chow (aka corn) than we ever dreamed of to keep every belly full. Back to that “greater good” notion. In a way, I am surprised that the Times published Tierney’s piece at all. There has for decades now been a conspiracy of silence with regard to population growth. In the years before Paul Ehrlich wrote his book, public service announcements about the dangers of over-population were ubiquitous. When is the last time you saw one of those? Of course, 1968, the year Ehrlich’s work was published, is the year the world ended—at least the world as we knew it once. Hippies, riots, Vietnam, revolution everywhere—and the pill. Good lord, you could have sex and not worry about getting pregnant. Free at last, free at last. Too free, obviously, for some’s taste; some like the Catholic Church, (which had a long history of campaigning against birth control and family planning even before the pill came on the market), and just about any organized group on the planet that saw in freeing men and women from the wages of sin the opening of the door to larger, ever-increasing freedoms. The full panoply of weapons was used in the battle to suppress this dangerous possibility. The Church unleashed its propagandists, used what political power it had, the dangers of the pill were writ large, (and out of all proportion to the actual risks), the poor were told that they were being made sly victims of genocide, China’s one birth policy offered as proof of the totalitarian nature of all such tampering with nature. And then, after millions and millions chowed down on all that corn, we had (to borrow a felicitous metaphor from John Tierney) 13 billion hands to work at sewing machines for the entrepreneurs of the new global empire. Now, no one talks about the dangers of over-population. Or, if they do, it's hard, very hard, to hear what they are saying in the din of all those sewing machines.

Saturday, October 14, 2006

On the nature of blogs...

It appears that it is in the nature of the blog beast that one can go back and change (edit?) one's blog after having posted it. This feature seems to raise a moral issue. On those occasions when this is done, does the blogger have a responsibility to acknowledge the change? Mistakes--in grammar, style, or, more importantly, facts--are always embarrassing. How convenient to go back and change--more or less surreptitiously--one's original text. I am brought to this juncture because I found in reading over the Smithsonian article on Fritz Haber that has caused me to post quite a few blogs that I had an important fact wrong. Haber's wife did not kill him; she killed herself--still a shocking story, perhaps even more shocking than the mistaken scenario that I posted, particularly when one learns the details. Nevertheless, this is both a confession and an acknowledgement that I went back and changed the post so that my error was no longer there. I am also tempted to state here that I vow never to do that again, that I will instead check my facts carefully, and that I will take the time to patiently proofread my work. Then again, I have quit smoking many times.

The Haber Effect: II

Let's take a second look at the quote from Vaclav Smil. "He estimates that two of every five humans on earth today would not be alive if not for Fritz Haber's invention." (Italics mine.) At current estimates of over 6 billion humans on the planet, that means that we have Haber's invention to thank for the existence of 2.4 billion human beings. Let us, at the outset, stipulate that once a human is born, it is a life to be respected and cared for. On the other hand, is it not now clear that the cost to the planet of maintaining such a large population represents the single greatest threat to our survival? (Let us further stipulate that even if Einstein or Haber had become musicians rather than scientists, others would likely have gotten credit for the scientific breakthroughs with which they are credited.) Now, let's look at another characterization of Haber's work, this time from the on-line encyclopedia, Wikipedia: "The sudden availability of cheap nitrogenous fertilizer is credited with averting a Malthusian catastrophe, or population crisis." This conclusion, it seems to me, is the exact opposite of the truth; rather than averting a Malthusian catastrophe, the use of ammonium nitrate fertilizers has in fact caused a Malthusian catastrophe.

The Haber Effect

"He estimates that two of every five humans on earth today would not be alive if not for Fritz Haber's invention." Thus writes Michael Pollan of Vaclav Smil's conclusions regarding Fritz Haber's work. The moral relationship between scientific invention and the uses to which inventions are put is one most of us are familiar with in the context of Einstein's, and, later, the Los Alamos crowd's more direct contributions to the development of nuclear weapons. Is Einstein to be blamed for the bomb? The end result of the debate for most of us is to conclude, along with the gun lobby, that ideas don't kill people, people do. It is even difficult to blame figures like J. Robert Oppenheimer who worked directly to develop the bomb when one considers the frightening consequences of allowing extremist nation-states sole access to such weaponry. The moral debates around atomic weapons, however, usually share consensus on one essential point, namely, that every effort must be made to avoid their actually being used. Is Einstein's work per se to be considered evil? Few would argue that this is the case. At the same time, the results of Einstein's and the other physicists' ideas make it painfully obvious that with power, comes responsibility. And few can imagine scenarios in which the actual use of nuclear weapons against populations could be characterized as anything other than a human tragedy.

An excerpt from the Smithsonian article...

In his book Enriching the Earth: Fritz Haber, Carl Bosch and the Transformation of World Food Production, Vaclav Smil pointed out that "there is no way to grow crops and human bodies without nitrogen." Before Haber's invention, the sheer amount of life earth could support—the size of crops and therefore the number of human bodies—was limited by the amount of nitrogen that bacteria and lightning could fix. By 1900, European scientists had recognized that unless a way was found to augment this naturally occurring nitrogen, the growth of the human population would soon grind to a very painful halt. The same recognition by Chinese scientists a few decades later is probably what compelled China's opening to the West: after Nixon's 1972 trip, the first major order the Chinese government placed was for 13 massive fertilizer factories. Without them, China would have starved.This is why it may not be hyperbole to claim, as Smil does, that the Haber-Bosch process for fixing nitrogen (Bosch gets the credit for commercializing Haber's idea) is the most important invention of the 20th century. He estimates that two of every five humans on earth today would not be alive if not for Fritz Haber's invention. We can easily imagine a world without computers or electricity, Smil points out, but without synthetic fertilizer billions of people would never have been born. Though, as these numbers suggest, humans may have struck a Faustian bargain with nature when Fritz Haber gave us the power to fix nitrogen.Fritz Haber? No, I'd never heard of him either, even though he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1918 for "improving the standards of agriculture and the well-being of mankind." But the reason for his obscurity has less to do with the importance of his work than an ugly twist of his biography, which recalls the dubious links between modern warfare and industrial agriculture: during World War I, Haber threw himself into the German war effort, and his chemistry kept alive Germany's hopes for victory, by allowing it to make bombs from synthetic nitrate. Later, Haber put his genius for chemistry to work developing poison gases—ammonia, then chlorine. (He subsequently developed Zyklon B, the gas used in Hitler's concentration camps.) His wife, a chemist sickened by her husband's contribution to the war effort, used his army pistol to kill herself; Haber died, broken and in flight from Nazi Germany, in a Basel hotel room in 1934.

The Haber Gallery










This is Herr Haber (second from the left) with some canisters of poison gas.

Friday, October 13, 2006

A note to the readers

While I am asssembling my notes for future blogs on Fritz Haber, let me take this opportunity to point out that it is important that everyone watch: Judicial Proceeding Slave Reparations Case Oral ArgumentU.S. Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit to be broadcast on C-Span at 7:00 pm tomorrow, Saturday, October 14th. If this country is ever going to get turned around, there is no doubt in my mind that a prerequisite for change is the payment--long overdue--for the labor extorted from those peoples who, against their will, were brought to these shores. It took almost a century for the U.S. to roll back the post-reconstruction neo-slave state laws that dominated the South. Ultimately, the other shoe must drop. Forty acres and a mule? Not nearly enough.____________________________________________As for Fritz, I am planning on posting highlights from the Smithsonian article as well as a bibliography. Interested readers can profit from "googling" Fritz Haber. Check the "images" and "scholar" search engines as well as the general site. And, while I am at this, allow me to anticipate myself. I have come to believe that there are certain macro issues that cry out for more attention, for far more public awareness. Primary among these is the issue of overpopulation. Remember when there was so much concern regarding overpopulation that it was the subject of televised PSAs, or public service announcements, in the 1950s? Whatever became of that concern? If, when the world population was a mere 3 billion, there was so much attention given to the problem, why has the issue disappeared from the public view when the planet now has 10 billion people? Embedded in Fritz Haber's largely suppressed story are important clues to why this has occurred.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Fritz Haber

Study this face carefully.

How Stubbing One's Toe Can Change One's Life Forever

So, there I am visiting my doctor’s office after having (yet again) stubbed my toe on a stone planter in the hall of my apartment. After flipping through copies of People and Golf Digest, I finally come upon the July 2006 edition of Smithsonian magazine. It will be a longer wait than I anticipated, and I am sent off to another building to get the toe X-rayed, and thus I have the kind of time with a magazine that leads one down literary paths one does not ordinarily take. After reading every word of the articles on Egyptian artifacts and the like, I find myself reading a piece titled “What’s Eating America”. At first, it seems like yet another expose on how our techno-food is killing us, but, as I read on, my eyes widen and my pulse quickens as I learn one shocking fact after another about the life and work of one Fritz Haber. The revelations about this man’s life and work have an impact upon me comparable only to the impact of having learned where babies really come from when I was a little boy. Now, I consider myself (or did up until reading that article) a fairly well-educated man. The gaps left in my knowledge of how the world works, (left by hard-working Catholic nuns, public school teachers and the professors at a college for the working classes), I believed I had largely filled through my own, independent inquiries and through serendipitous encounters with a few key individuals. Then, born yesterday, I find this article in a doctor's waiting room. There, seen in the above photograph standing next to Einstein, (up until now the leading 20th century candidate for ill-starred sorcerer’s apprentice [unless, of course, one believes the rumors that he plagiarized his relativity theory from his talented shiksa girlfriend]), is Fritz Haber, inventor of ammonium nitrate and a variety of poison gases, winner of the Nobel Prize in 1918, collaborator with the Nazis, left a widower when his first wife takes his service revolver and kills herself out of despair over his work. Fritz, the inventor of Zyklon B, was Jewish. His work has brought the world closer to the brink of human extinction than any mere nuclear device ever could. Why hadn't I known of this man before? Why doesn't everyone know about this guy? Run, do not walk to this link, and stay tuned to this blog for more: www.smithsonianmagazine.com/issues/2006/july/presence.php?page=2

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

A Mascot for a New Party


One of my regular correspondents, (in the name of full transparency, my brother, Joe), suggested that the blogs I have posted argue for the formation of a new political party. His early contribution to the movement is the suggestion that we adopt the beaver as our mascot. I pointed out that the beaver is a traditional icon of the City of New York as well as City University, (some will recall the beavers immortalized in mosaics at various subway stations), but, hey, all the more reason to go with it. Now all we need is a name for the party, a platform and members. If you have visited this site before, you know that an early draft of the platform must include a call for the U.S. to adopt the parliamentary system, thereby ending the imperial presidency and opening opportunities for smaller political parties to form that truly reflect the political diversity of our nation. More details later. Suggestions are of course always welcome.

Monday, October 09, 2006

On "Constitutional Crisis": Part V

The history of the U.S. presidency since the end of World War II seems incontrovertibly to argue for its replacement as an institution if democratic norms compatible with the realities of twenty-first century politics are to be created. The U.S. need a parliamentary system that would encourage a multiplicity of parties; it needs a democratically elected prime minister. The imperial presidency represents a danger both domestically and in terms of our relationships with other nations. Take this morning's news as an example. President Bush's response to the detonation of an underground nuclear device by North Korea included statements to the effect that "the United States is committed to diplomacy," and that the detonation was "a provocative act." Only a child could take such rhetoric seriously coming from the head of state who recklessly baited the North Koreans by citing them as part of the axis of evil, issued policy statements that reserved our right to pre-emptively attack our enemies, and then proved that his government was willing to do so by fabricating intelligence as a rationale for an illegal invasion of Iraq. The imperial presidency invites Alice in Wonderland rhetorical inversion delivered with sublime arrogance. No head of state liable to the standards of transparency, of "open covenants openly arrive at," would dare such disingenuous rhetoric.

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

Well, now that Kim Jong Il has detonated a bomb in an underground test, it seems inevitable that all hell will break loose--at least on a rhetorical level. Were there not real perils to humanity in this kind of power game, the sequence leading to the event would be the stuff of a black comedy. The neo-conservative cabal that took over the reigns of U.S. government, (which, as I pointed out earlier was, even before 9/11, clearly determined to go to war somewhere), early on sabotaged any hope of peace on the Korean peninsula by labelling North Korea part of the "axis of evil." This, in spite of the fact that during the Clinton years, North and South Korea seemed to be moving closer to rapprochement, if not actual reunification. The "Sunshine Policy" seemed to be working. Trade agreements had begun, family members were reunited, movement across the DMZ had begun. Kim Dae Jung was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end the fifty year old bifurcation of the peninsula. The axis of evil speech, in combination with the almost insane saber-rattling of the U.S. statement of its security policies which put forth a policy of pre-emptive war, put a rapid end to any hopes for an end to conflict in that part of the world. Why, if our new, post Cold War enemy had been identified as Islamic terrorists, the cabal decided to throw into the political stew the regimes in Pyongyang and Havana is only a mystery if we look for rational behavior from the cabal. If a declared enemy of the U.S. had any doubt about our capacity for violating international law and invading and occupying a declared enemy state, all such doubts ended after the invasion of Iraq. It was only a question of time before Kim Jong Il would puff up his feathers and brandish the only weapon the U.S. seems to respect. As this political time bomb ticks away, the ticking in Tehran seems to get louder and louder. The existence of nuclear weapons anywhere represents a threat to humanity. But this is not what drives U.S. policy. The Bush administration in fact has torn up its own treaty commitments with regard to proliferation, and has perversely shown a willingness to dangerously augment the Indian nuclear arsenal--an arsenal that came close to being somewhat depleted in a recent conflict with India's erstwhile brothers in Pakistan. We seem only interested in not allowing nuclear weapons to proliferate in any but our client states. If there were a list of responses to the question, "Why do they hate us?", an admittedly disingenuous parlor game in any case, probably only second to the maltreatment of the Palestinians would be Israel's hardly secret possession of over two hundred nuclear warheads. More fundamentally, "proliferation" is an interesting concept. Whatever happened to "disarmament," a word and a concept that seems to have disappeared from the dictionary of U.S. policy. In the absence of a threat from a counter-balancing super power, why does the U.S. need a nuclear arsenal at all? Imagine how the 21st century might have begun had the U.S. celebrated the end of the Cold War by announcing its commitment to the total abolition of nuclear warfare.

Friday, October 06, 2006

On "Constitutional Crisis": Part IV

There are those who argue that until the modern period, the presidency was essentially ceremonial in nature. Others point to how close the independent confederation formed after the American revolution came to crowning George Washington, effectively exchanging one King George for another. Washington is often depicted as nobly turning aside the crown, sparing the newly forming nation a monarchy. Here in the "new" world, in the western hemisphere, we see many nations ruled by presidents elected to terms of office. I will argue here that, ironically, it is in the old world once ruled by absolute monarchs--kings, caesars, tzars and kaisers--that representative democracy became more highly evolved. Perhaps it is precisely because the old nation states knew intimately the dangers of absolutism that they took care to prevent its re-emergence. It is here, in the Americas, that ruling classes--often seated precariously atop empires large and small populated by surly native populations, imported slaves, indentured servants, adventurers and arrivistes--took special care to secure their own safety. A parliamentary democracy composed of such constituents would be dangerous, first of all, and secondly, (given the low opinion of white Christians for their lessers), to give the notion that such populations could rule intelligently, with any dignity at all, would not only be irresponsible, but laughable. The U.S. presidency thus evolved into a role partly ceremonial, partly that of a colonial administrator and partly that of a war chief. It has proven itself to be, from the perspective of those who continue to look to government for democratic norms, a tragic failure. Its further impact, since parliamentary advantages have been abandoned in favor of what is essentially a system of serial monarchy, is to have encouraged an extra-constitutional two-party system, hitched to the failed star of a flawed presidency, which has been less and less friendly toward actual political diversity and has evolved into an institutional party representing only one segment of the society it is mandated to represent--the monied class, large corporations and a military-industrial complex which looks more and more like a permanent government.

On "Constitutional Crisis": Part III

"To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water." So reads Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution. As any beginning student of the document knows, there is nothing in the constitution that gives the President any such rights. The article gives those rights solely to the legislative branch. As Commander-in-Chief of the armed services, it is the President's role to execute the will of the people as expressed by their elected representatives. Nevertheless, ever since President Eisenhower left office in 1961 warning the nation in his farewell address of a military-industrial complex, we have seen, with only a brief interlude, a succession of presidencies mortally compromised by the abuse of constitutional power. Eisenhower's immediate successor, John F. Kennedy, is assassinated. His assassination is linked--by Americans of all political stripes--to the C.I.A.'s Bay of Pigs invasion. Lyndon Johnson is virtually hounded out of office for his conduct of the war in Vietnam, and chooses not to run for a second term. Richard Nixon, on the brink of impeachment, is forced to resign after a long list of crimes related to his attempts to "neutralize" opposition to the same war as well as covert operations in Laos and Cambodia. Ronald Reagan, with the complicity of the sitting Vice-President and former C.I.A. director, George Bush, would have been impeached for the Iran/Contra debacle, perhaps the most egregious abuse of presidential power yet to come to light, were it not for the belief among the nation's elder statesmen that the nation could not bear the stresses upon the system of another Watergate. Bill Clinton is impeached. The last of these episodes seems to have nothing to do with foreign adventures, (although some would question a la "wag the dog" whether that was entirely true), and may in fact have been a form of delayed Republican retribution for the bloodbath of Watergate. Thus, from 1961 until the end of the twentieth century, the U.S. saw a succession of failed presidencies. The final tally: one assassination, one impeachment, one resignation, and two impeachments which should have taken place. There were only two exceptions--Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, essentially interim caretaker presidents. At the end of this trail of tears there appears on the scene a man who would remove what little doubt remained that the American presidency had evolved into an extra-constitutional invention. For only the second time in U.S. history, a president would be chosen by the electoral college. (The first instance, the election of Rutherford B. Hayes, saw a deal brokered in which the occupying forces of the U.S. Army were withdrawn from the defeated Southern states. The result was the end of "reconstruction" and the institution of a regimen of state terror toward the freed slaves which would continue unchecked for nearly a century.) After days of dark comedy involving "hanging chads," and allegations of rigging at the ballot boxes, a conservative Supreme Court gave a conservative favorite son, a man whose profoundest dream was to be baseball commissioner some day, the gift of the American presidency. The will of the majority of the American people had been successfully thwarted.

On "Constitutional Crisis": Part II

If a constitutional crisis means anything at all, it means an action or actions taken by a branch of government which calls into question the very coherence of the constitution, its actual viablility as a document. In other words, a constitution is truly in crisis not merely when there are forces that violate its words or its spirit; that happens all the time. A true crisis tests the value of the document itself. Why "crisis?" Because certain actions render the Constitution (as Sam Goldwyn once observed of verbal contracts) not worth the paper it is written on. Theoretically as well as practically, the litmus test of whether a true constitutional crisis exists is the existence of a citizenry ready--and determined--to rewrite the document. Now the extreme form that such a movement would take is a call for a constitutional convention, a phenomenon that both left and right in this country have always feared. But the founders, a sophisticated group who understood the real danger of inflexibility, created an intermediate protocol, namely, the offering an amendment to the constitution. In fact, as we saw in the aftermath of the Civil War, a series of amendments may be necessary. To some extent, these amendments may be seen as designed to preserve and maintain the state. During periods of severe crisis, however, their actual role may go so far as to redefine the state.

On "Constitutional Crisis"

Ultimately, the Bush administration may do our nation a great favor. By governing in such a manner that its behavior has, in one instance after another, elicited the reaction that we are being pushed toward a constitutional crisis, we may be forced to actually come to terms with what that phrase actually means. The manipulators of the language and their various propaganda outlets have so abused the meaning of what language means that one symptom of this abuse is numbness. i.e., we become inured to the real impact of certain terms. They do this, of course, to attain their objectives without risking any real accountability. ("Golly," says the President, "unless you guys give your blessing to torture, ignoring international law, and the tenets of our constitution, they'll charge us as war criminals!") That is an unbelievable utterance from the head of a nation that considers itself the world's greatest democracy. Let's step back from the political debate for a while and give the term constitutional crisis a fresh look.

Saturday, September 30, 2006

All Politics is Local: Spitzer's Fall from Grace

I have decided this morning to come down from my usual Olympian heights and comment on a local political event. It seems that here in New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi has been caught spending $80,000 of the taxpayers' funds on limousine service for his ailing wife. Attorney General Eliot Spitzer decided that the appropriate response to the criminal behavior of his political crony is forgiveness. With a fifty percent lead in the polls in his "race" for Governor of our fair state, Spitzer must be feeling a bit Olympian himself. Hevesi's behavior should have generated a speech from Spitzer along the lines of, "Much as I had come to respect Comptroller Hevesi and his acknowledged efforts on the part of the people of New York, his theft of city services requires me to ask for a criminal indictment." So far, this has not occurred, and given Spitzer's lack of an immediate response along these lines, an indictment will come too late to change the fact that he has revealed his clay feet even before taking office as governor. (Even if not too late to apprehend a corrupt politician.) That fifty percent lead in the polls, Eliot, is not an index of how much people love you or how charming they find you. It is not about love and you don't give off much charm. It is a vote for a style of governance that many citizens feel they see all too rarely in an era of deepening corruption by fat corporate types. It is, in other words, a self-congratulatory vote for having the perspicacity to find in your persona as Attorney General an honest man who will go after the bad guys. The people are so desperate for such governance that they even chose to turn a blind eye to the unbridled ambition that you manifest from the very first day you appeared on the political scene, yet another rich guy buying himself a political office. Try to get this straight, Eliot, the people who are voting for you are not voting for you as an individual but as an agent of their desire for decency. Do not make the mistake others before you have of misreading the true nature of your "popularity" and giving yourself carte blanche to pardon the wrongdoing of your political allies.

Wu, Kucinich and the Bomb

C-Span is a wonderful thing. I have always refused to subscribe to (read pay for) cable television, but when the roofers told me I had to remove my roof antenna, I was forced to look around for an unused cable and hook up. Now I see why so many people are addicted to C-Span. It is a news and politics junky's ultimate stash. What truly amazed me about it is that it actually allows, (or to be kinder? fairer?), one might say even promotes diversity of opinion. Since one of my themes of late is that we presently have only one political party in this country, the Repubricrats, C-Span's programming forced me to take a closer look at that notion. C-Span's coverage of debates on the floor of the House of Representatives and the Senate would seem to put the lie to the notion of a single, tweedle-dee-tweedle dum party. There is definitely finger waving, dais thumping and exhortation going on a lot of the time. And, it is obvious that if there were literally one party, there would be no need to take votes on resolutions. Voting takes place a lot on C-Span. Of course, 99.9% of all voting is along party lines, and since there is a comfortable Republican majority, and there are only two parties, this creates an interesting opportunity for the opposition party: it can rant and rave all it wants, showboat, grandstand, flip-flop and do handstands in full confidence that all these pyrotechnics will have no impact whatsoever. Sometimes, of course, an aura of sincerity emerges, a call to delve into one's sense of what is right, moral, just, fair, or just sensible. The discomfort that such expressions cause is fortunately short-lived, since they occur only rarely, and usually at one o'clock in the morning (at least here on the East coast) when anyone who might make a difference has probably gone to bed three hours earlier. One such outburst took place this morning. The words expressed were rather startling words, particularly given the fact that they would be among the last words recorded in the House of Representatives until early November, as the Congress recesses to take part in elections. In a colloquy between himself and Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, Oregon Representative David Wu stated that if a mushroom cloud ever rose over the American heartland, he would like to be on the record as having pointed out that the responsibility for such an outcome could be laid at the steps of our own Capitol as it threw all reason and caution to the winds and fed the appetite of India and Pakistan for fissile material. Pretty heady stuff. The temptation is to say, "Yeah, but he and Kucinich were the only two guys on the floor of the House, it was one A.M., and no one was watching." But, you know, someone was watching. Maybe there is some hope. We still have C-Span, and we still have a few honest citizens.

Friday, September 29, 2006

Keep the Aspidistra Flying

While I contemplate the implications of the congressional votes taken over the last twenty-four hours, I invite everyone to contemplate this the most recent of my messages from the fortune cookie printing presses:

Better to understand little than to misunderstand a lot.