Thursday, September 30, 2010

Why Is Beck?

photo "Roswell Main Street" (c) Bill Hicks


Brief note today. 

Limbaugh spent a lot of time yesterday talking about President Obama's religious views.  Of course he accused Mr. Obama of changing them to suit the moment.  In Limbaugh's universe, absolutely nothing Obama says is as it seems.  Yet--at least to me--Limbaugh, Beck, Hannity, the rest of these ranters--seem fundamentally to be a mystery.  Why are they ubiquitous.  Why and how are they convincing anyone at all.  Where did this reality come from--a world where right-wing commentators dominate the radio and one whole TV network, where you have a choice of pretty bad music or Limbaugh, et al.  It's no wonder they've gotten some traction--repetition is an effective tactic, and repetitious they certainly are.  Still.  Why are they there?

http://seaton-newslinks.blogspot.com/2010/09/kochs-paying-to-keep-america-dumb.html

Give a listen to Mr. Seaton.  This particular link is a good starting place.  More recent posts of his develop the theme.  We all should try to get a handle on what's going on.  It's a useful thing to have.  And a hat tip to James Wolcott, who put me on to Mr. Seaton this morning.  Wolcott writes for Vanity Fair. 

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

NPRepublican

photo Rbt. Miller, NY Post



There's been more than enough discussion about how Fox News is a propaganda arm of the GOTP.  NPR, on the other hand, has a pretty decent reputation as being a serious news outlet.  I was riding home yesterday from work and listening to some chat and analysis about the state of the New York governor's race.  I'm not sure who the conversationalists were--one was the usual NPR anchor in the afternoon, the other was either a GOP pol, or a supposedly "neutral" political analyst.  The names don't matter.

The analyst (let's call him Analyst) said that this year the social issues are not of interest, e.g., "no one" cares about abortion or gay marriage (his two examples)--nope, it's all about economics.  Then the two fellers lit into a conversation about the GOTP gubernatorial candidate, Paladino.  Andrew Cuomo, his Dem opponent, is suddenly realizing that he's got a serious challenge, precisely because Andrew Cuomo has been in government and is thus in the cohort of folks "they" want to toss out.  Our intrepid NPR guy (Guy) agrees.  Conversation continues along those lines, and possibly even as we speak.  I cut off the radio and told myself never to send another dime to NPR.  It was after work.  My feet hurt.  Who knows, I might reconsider.  Or maybe not.

Seems to me Guy's job is supposed to be journalism.  Perhaps you're familiar with the GOTP candidate for Governor of one of the top three states in the United States, not to mention the home of Ground Zero?  This character, a Tea Party favorite, has sent around racist emails featuring photo-shopped race jokes about President Obama and his wife Michelle.  His defense?  "I'm in construction."  He's also promising to stop the "Mosque at Ground Zero" if he's elected.  Well, how convenient, then, that all social issues are "off the table," as the Analyst has previously stipulated in the conversation.  Apparently that means that Guy can't point out to NPR's listeners that this GOTP candidate is a radical racist who shouldn't be allowed anywhere near the levers of power (and possible he shouldn't be running a bulldozer either).

How can it be that Guy let's this contradiction stand?  On the one hand, no social issues allowed.  On the other, GOTP'er is actually running on social issues, with only a thin icing of economics to mask what's really going on.  The social issues are, for the still unaware, that there's a "N****R" in the White House, and that the muslim religion has a "foothold" in the United States.   This is the social program the GOTP is running on generally, by the way.  Here's how Paladino campaigns on the "social issue" of "Muslims At Ground Zero":
http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Candidate-has-plan-to-stop-mosque-587733.php 
It's not rocket science, this here "journalism." 

So where's Guy.  Where's NPR?  I don't know, but I thought this was a journalist's job, to see through the "frame" and help us out.  What we get on this particular interview is just puff.  Poor Cuomo might get defeated by this populist champion of sensible economics.  It's actually very depressing.  And that's a political act too, isn't it?  Depressed folks tend to stay home in November.   You have to wonder.  I think it's time to put the wallet in the front pocket, like I do when I go to the State Fair.

Update.  Here's my basic premise--no one, in either major party, should find racist themes acceptable--and if a major party candidate is using race or xenophopia, he or she should be called on it.  It's a journalist's duty, and it's not partisan.   Apparently, for the GOTP, the "Southern Strategy" is still quite acceptable. 

Friday, September 24, 2010

Is That All There Is

Noam Chomsky
Peggy Lee


I ran into Chomsky in graduate school, in a class on something called "deep linguistic structure" that was the second hardest class I took in grad school, after one that I just audited and dropped out of eventually whose subject matter was set theory.  Chomsky was sort of a more practical Wittgenstein, attacking the problem of looking at your microscope with your microscope, so to speak.  I got through the course, taught by the remarkable Dr. Richard Zaffron, then went my way. 

Much later I ran into Chomsky again, in his writings on American politics and the kind of categorical structure of politics.  He was as deep and complex a thinker as ever.  Once in the late '80s or early '90s Libby and I went to hear him give a talk over in Chapel Hill.  His view of things was, of course, that America was pretty deeply fucked up, no matter which party happened to be in control of Congress or the White House.  During the questions afterwards, some kid stood up and said, "Well, so what would you do if you were President?"

The kid thought he'd really nailed Chomsky.  The answer was exactly what you might have predicted, had you (or the kid) actually listened.  I paraphrase: "Why I'd do nothing if I was elected, because to be elected means to hold such positions."  That is to say--getting elected President has a bunch of deep implications about the person elected--there's no such thing as starting out with a nice blank slate, with a plan to just "Change Things."  It's contradictory--that's how serious the problem is, if you're wanting to actually Change Things I mean.  It's a veritable paradox. 

A better question, a question not asked, would have perhaps been, "So, Noam, does anything happen?"  Not that he wouldn't have had some interesting response, some wry questioning rejoinder which would have lead to further puzzlement, and at this moment, to a possibly different bit of writing.  Still.  

The thing is, as co-opted as the poor Democrats are right now, with the people who believed in them the most having as a whole the worst time of it, with all the beautiful rhetoric of the Inauguration having faded to a classic pile of legislative compromised crap called the Health Care Reform Act, with two wars still on-going, with a continuing of creepy Bush era policies such as the current "legality" of assassinating even American Citizens not to mention anyone else--there's still a difference, still a sensible hope. 

Mrs. Palin used to like to taunt, "So how's your hopey changey workin' out?"  I was surprised she was willing to do that, given the implications--which are nhilistic and bleak indeed: There Is No Hope, No Change.  That's the Republican message these days, and with the current crop of spokesmen they're finally saying it out loud.  That such a taunt can be cheered is only further evidence of the mist of hate, fear, and anger that drives the Republican Base out of their redouts and into the streets. 

The fact remains--a majority of voters reasonably chose Mr. Obama and a majority of Democratic Party legislators in 2008 over the alternatives.  Imagine the world with McCain as President.  I'm shocked, really, that he managed to defeat the radio jock who ran against him this year in his primary--must be yet another testimony to the power of money.  Yesterday the GOTP offered up it's vacuous pledge, another variation of There Is No Hope.  That's absolutely all they've got.  It's not much, is it? 

The GOTP has no awareness of paradox.  Democrats, on the other hand, surely are capable of both seeing the paradox, and still working to move forward towards a better world.  That is, unless enough Democrats just get depressed by the eternal paradox of being inside a system to the extent that they don't get out and vote at all.  It's happened before--it happened in '68, when the Democratic Party was split into smithereens by the betrayal of the Vietnam War and the murders of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy--not to mention the remarkable events in Chicago during the Convention itself (see Steve Goodman's wonderful song on the subject).  We're not in 1968 thank God.  But we're not going to escape the paradox of living inside a system either. 

Last night on the History Channel I watched a fairly silly piece on how the sun was going to explode in 10 billion years or so, so we'd better be working on a system for moving the planet out to a Jupiter-distant orbit or something.  Ergo, why bother to vote at all.  I have to say, in reply, "Look, the water's rising, just keep bailing, I'll pass your bucket on up to the next guy, you're falling behind."  Not that Peggy Lee doesn't always have a point, mind you.  I wish she'd asked her question of Chomsky that night at Memorial Hall.  But I know what he'd say:

"Yes." 

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

In Walks Bud/Exit Zahra


photo (c) Bill Hicks


Aside from politics, the acorns are hitting the tin roof like the start of a hail storm right now.  We live in an oak and hickory forest--I tell people, when I built my house I thought I was pitching a tent for a week or two, and basically found a nice space in the forest rather than clearing anything--I think I cut down one big hickory that seemed obviously threatening (it was hollow as it turned out).  Now all the trees are twenty feet higher, and Hurricane Fran took some of them down, fortunately none hitting the house itself.  But it was damn close.  So anyways--having no rain in the region for several weeks has caused some aspects of fall to press forward, including the leaves turning yellow and falling (particularly the poplars), and this acorn thing (possibly aided by squirrel foraging in the cool dawn).  I ought to get out the old 4-track and put up an mp3 for you.  I got a great rain-on-the-roof track like that one time.

Fall's the best in NC--a long drawn out meditation with many facets.  We can have a hurricane or two, a cold west wind, an Indian summer at Thanksgiving.  The trees, depending on their species, treat us to color from now until November, the oaks usually waiting till last, and the sweet beeches, ancient relics from a very different epoch, holding their light tan arrow-leaves all winter and heralding spring by dropping them in late March or early April.   Now we're in the bombard phase, and I've put off painting the tin until the leaves and acorns won't let me--it would be stupid, wouldn't it, to let the drying paint capture dozens of acorns.  Dang!  Where's the head-slap key.

I'll go out and take some pictures for you.  These, truth be known, came from a fall a couple of years back, a wetter fall.  I was walking up the driveway and this bouquet lept out at me from the side that drops off and down to the creek.  Never have seen these guys again, but I do keep an eye peeled.  Maybe some rain in October will bring them back for a repeat performance. 

photo (c) Bill HIcks
(c) Bill Hicks
(c) Bill Hicks
I don't think I'd try eating these, if'n I was you.  They're as pretty as Christine O'Donnell tho, ain't they.  Speaking of which, here's a rather fine post, revealing some of the deeper truths about this woman who wants to be a star so bad she's put the rest of her life entirely on hold to get 'r done.

http://tbogg.firedoglake.com/2010/09/21/no-time-to-pet-the-pearl/

& Furthermore.

This link goes to one of the most beautiful elegies I've ever read.  It makes many points, has many facets.  Today I have to read it in the context of these people--including people as supposedly exalted at former Speaker Newt Gingrich--who seem quite pleased to be villifying nearly a billion of our fellows on the basis of their religion.  How sad.  Let's look a bit closer, shall we. 

http://selfstyledsiren.blogspot.com/2010/09/zahra.html