A Q and A For The People Of A Forsaken Republic: Addressing the origins of the Who’s-Your-Daddy Nation

Date October 2, 2007

posted by Phil Rockstroh

“We must become the change we want to see.”
– Mahatma Gandhi

“In any case, I hate all Iranians.”
–Debra Cagan, Deputy Assistant Secretary to Defense Secretary, Robert Gates

How many times do we, the people of the US, have to go around on this queasy-making merry-go-round of propaganda and militarism before we shout — enough! — then shutdown the whole cut-rate carnival and run the scheming carnies who operate it out of town? It is imperative the nation’s citizens begin to apprehend the patterns present in this ceaseless cycle of official deceit and collective pathology. This republic, or any other, cannot survive, inhabited by a populace with such a slow learning curve.

Over the last three decades, the authoritarian right has risen to create the nation they have been longing for since their humbling by the Watergate scandal. After being subdued and humiliated by the mechanisms of a free republic, the right has turned the tables — and subdued and humiliated the republic. If the trend continues, all but unchallenged and unabated, we might as well replace the torch held aloft by Lady Liberty with a taser.

How could it come to this? How did so many US citizens grow so apathetic, oblivious, if not flat-out hostile to the tenets of a free republic?

The authoritarianism inherent to the structure of multi-conglomerate corporatism is antithetical to the concept of the rights and liberties of the individual. Most individuals — bound by a corporation’s secrecy-prone, hierarchical values — will, over time, lose the ability to display free thinking, engage in civic discourse, and even be able to envisage the notion of freedom.

This is true, from the florescent light-flooded aisles of Wal*Mart to the insular executive offices of Haliburton to the sound stages of CNN and Fox News. Under the prevailing order, reality, for the laboring class of the corporate state, has become debt slavery; in contrast, the simulacrum of reality, in which, the striver class exists, is a milieu defined by obsessive careerism. Under the hegemony of corporatism, freedom might as well be fairy dust. It only exists in an imaginary land, not the places one arrives by way of one’s morning and evening commute.

In addition, economically, by way of decades of financial chicanery, perpetrated by the nation’s business and political elite, we are eating our seed crop, and the consequences of this harvest of deceit have left the people of the US, intellectually and spiritually malnourished.

As a result, many attempt to sate the keening emptiness and mitigate the chronic unease by gorging themselves on the Junk Food Jesus of End Time mythology, which is a belief system wherein corporeal events and actions (personal and collective) have no lasting consequence because even the human body is to be cast aside, like a junk food wrapper, when the cosmic CEO decides to make the earth a part of his heavenly franchise.

Accordingly, the corporate state requires modes of being that evince obliviousness and obedience (the defining traits of the US consumer) on the part of the majority of the populace. Ergo, the rise of both Christian consumerists and the vast apparatus of the right-wing propaganda matrix that dominates news cycles via the electronic mass media.

All coming to pass, as George W. Bush — the reigning mascot of this fantasyland of infantile omnipotence and instant gratification — is rocked to sleep by his handlers cooing preposterous tales of how history will place him in the pantheon of those men whose greatness was unrecognized by the shallow and petty minds of their own era.

When, in fact, Bush, whose ruinous wars of aggression, deficit-ballooning tax breaks for the wealthy, and policies of crony capitalism (that enabled the economy-decimating, easy credit banking scams of the present) displays the character traits of a man ridden with severe psychological trauma; his attempts to tamp down immense inner turmoil, by means of his grandiose bearing, his absolute certitude regarding his own infallibility, and his bullying behavior, have resulted in an exteriorizing of his pathologies on a global scale, and this is playing out ugly, for all concerned.

Why do the people of the nation (for the most part) slouch, slack-jawed and passive, before this assault upon their collective integrity and personal dignity?

For generations, the ephemeral dazzle of pop culture paternalism and tabloid Manichaeism, as confabulated by advertising and public relations hacks and corporate news courtesans, has overwhelmed gravitas, history, even self-awareness. As all the while, shallow opportunists have been elevated to the status of pundits, experts and sages. Withal, the present system generously rewards those individuals who have mastered the art of impersonating human traits and responses in utterly contrived environments. As a whole, the majority of the populi have come to garner information about the world at large, and, worse, their own self-image, from a medium where phoniness is a treasured commodity, while authentic human traits and responses are banished to a beggar’s road.

Is it any wonder that the media types who thrive in these artificial settings have come to define authenticity as being only those attributes that appear authentic on television? Apropos, if you ask these “media personalities” about the shortcomings and corruption of the present system, they will plead the careerist’s Nuremberg Defense … of only being a stormtrooper obeisant to the “bottom line.”

Fantasy alert: One would hope that if one were to descend down a ladder constructed of these layers upon layers of bottom lines, one would arrive in a Hell reserved for those possessed with such shameless cupidity.

Reality redux: Yet as much as the human heart might yearn for such outcomes, there will never arrive the terrible majesty and bitter reckoning of anything resembling Judgement Day, heralded by celestial trumpets and legions of naked and cowering sinners; instead, in human affairs, there arises dire exigencies that can no longer be ignored nor explained away. The arrival of such a moment for the US is nearly at hand.

When a nation manifests a mixture of mass ignorance and official mendacity, in combination with uncheck power emanating from an insular and arrogant elite, a golden age of peace and plenty is as possible as holding a tea dance in a tsunami. As sure as a village of desperate fools who devour their seed crop, a nation that refuses universal health care to its children — yet rushes to the aid of its parasitic class of wealthy “speculators” and “investors” from the consequences of their own greed-besotted, fiscal debacles — is doomed.

This is the classic pattern of collective immolation experienced by a nation when power and privilege is increasingly consolidated in fewer and fewer hands. In essence, this is the key to the conundrum paralyzing the leadership of the Democratic Party: In a culture in which an individual’s worth is determined by the degree one can be exploited by the corrupt interests that control both the private and public sector, the public at large has little value to the political establishment … That is: other than, every few years, being bamboozled for their votes in the sham spectacles known as the US electoral process, a scam mostly financed, hence controlled, by the aforementioned big money interests.

In sum, this is the reason the Democratic Party feels little allegiance to their base. In turn, the political classes themselves are only of value to the big money corporate elite, because, by their delivery of staggering amounts of pork, massive tax cuts, and the passage of desired anti-regulatory legislation, they serve as their errand boys.

Moreover, the corporate control of congress is a microcosm of US society as a whole. Accordingly, the increasingly corporatized, ever more submissive people of the US should be termed, the Who’s-Your-Daddy Nation.

Yet, since life does not exist in stasis, within this hierarchy of deceivers and dupes, we will gnaw at one another’s ankles until the whole pathetic pyramid collapses.

All around us, we can feel the shoddy structure starting to sway and buckle. Axiomatically, the value of the dollar is collapsing like the smooth facade of a con man called-out by a group of wised-up marks. At present, in the wake of the bust in the housing market, repo men are retracing the tracks of real estate grifters who fleeced legions of wishful thinkers who brought the American dream and now only possess the misery of debt slavery.

One would think the time for insurrection has arrived — that, at long last, an awakened and enraged public would rise up and foreclose on these reprobates and ne’er-do-wells squatting in the White House and skulking through Congress. The power and privilege of the corporately controlled elite of Washington should be repossessed like the Lexises of Atlanta real estate agents and the oversized pickup trucks of Tucson contractors, confiscated in the wake of the collapse of the housing market. Foreclosure signs and repossession notices should festoon the whole of official Washington.

Turn about would be fair play. Since, the rise of Reaganism, the financial sector has been engaged in selling off the assets of the nation’s public sector to the highest bidders. It is amazing that, at this point, this klavern of kleptocrats haven’t yet torn from the walls and absconded with all the copper plumbing fixtures and fittings on Capitol Hill.

Is a turnaround possible?

If we wake-up and smell the jackboot. From the miasma of right-wing media propaganda, to the proliferation of predatory capitalism, to the corruption and cupidity of the prison industrial complex, to the pandemic of police brutality and the trampling of the rights of the accused, to perennial civilian shooting sprees, to the muzzling of descent, to the rise of the national surveillance state, to the use and acceptance of torture as state policy, to the adoption of an unlawful, immoral foreign policy doctrine that promotes policies of perpetual war, one is forced to conclude that bullying, and deferring to bullies, has become the dominate mode of being in the US.

Remedy: In order to turn this trend around, the people of the US must begin to acquire the anti-authoritarian traits of empathy and engagement. The gaining of empathy alleviates the pathological need to be a bully, while social and political engagement mitigates feelings of powerlessness that authoritarian bully-boys, such as Bush, Cheney, Giuliani, et al., exploit.

In short, remedial human lessons for the US population, in general, and for the corporate and political classes, in particular.

Let us start the process by having a period of grief and repentance for the death and suffering that our government, in our name, has inflicted on the people of Iraq. This should be done as the US begins the process of a complete military withdrawal from their decimated nation, and the bestowing of economic reparations upon the millions of Iraqis who have suffered under the brutal machinations and murderous mayhem unloosed by our country’s contemptible invasion and occupation.

To do so, might save the people of our next target, Iran (as well as ourselves) a world of grief.

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Netvouz
  • DZone
  • ThisNext
  • MisterWong
  • Wists
  • Reddit

10 Responses to “A Q and A For The People Of A Forsaken Republic: Addressing the origins of the Who’s-Your-Daddy Nation”

  1. RML said:

    As much as most of us sentients would like nothing better than to actually be living in America again, short of Depression II, I don’t see it happening.

    For a “Christian” nation to be diametrically opposed to the very tenants of Christianity, and who would surely crucify the very one who’s return is opined; crucify him simply because his/the Universal Message, the Golden Rule, is now anathema to these whatevers-in-the-hell they are.

    My question to you: where can we go? Even in the worst-case diaspora, the remnant actually had a place to escape to. Where to we go? There’s no more space. No more America over the horizon like there used to be.

    I’m waiting for someone like Chavez to offer US expat’s living space so that we can start this again. As you so succinctly state, this downward spiral has been sucking us all down for decades. It won’t be reversed quickly or easily.

  2. philrockstroh said:

    I think you’re correct in turning a hopeful eye toward Latin America … I believe after decades of neo-liberal, shock and awe economics that the people there have wised-up. (Watch the John Pliger Video, on this website for more on this point.)

    As far as your remarks on the so-called Christians of the US: They’re so obsessed with the figure of Satan that it almost seems like a crush.

    Carl Jung wrote a good deal on the subject of sorts such as these — folks who grow so convinced of their own purity, in order to shield themselves from their own dark motivations and actions … This is what makes them so dangerous.

    In short, they can never kill enough “evil doers”, because it is their own dark side they are both fleeing and stalking.

  3. Case Wagenvoord said:

    The trouble with religion is that all too often the ego farts and the sould thinks the breath of the Spirit is upon it.

    Relgion, today, is a burnt out whore. But, it contains within it the seeds of antiauthoriantism that you spoke of. One of the most anticapptalist selections in the bible is the Ten Commandments which tell us: don’t kill, don’t steal, don’t lie, don’t exploit, and don’t covet. How in the fuck can you run a multinational with an albatross like that hanging around your neck.

    Remember, when Jesus trashed the Temple, he went after the beancounters.

    There is a reasonReligious right wants its followers to focus on end times and the threat of their externalized demons. God forbid they should read the Prophets with their demands for social justice here and now.

  4. Curt said:

    Man, I think that picture of Debra “I hate All Iranians” Cagan in the red leather jacket and white “Iron Cross”would have aided your essay in showing how bad it’s gotten!

    Here is a link:

    http://palestinianpundit.blogspot.com/2007/10/i-hate-all-iranians.html#links

  5. philrockstroh said:

    Thanks for the picture, Curt , I think … It does strike fear in the heart.

    I think the myth of the End Times speaks of the exhaustion of the Christian Era itself. The figure of the Anti-Christ stands before contemporary Christians who are truly anti-Christ. This fantasy figure embodies everything that they deny and displace about themselves and their actions: deceit, aggression, a desire to rule the world by ruthless means.

    We are witnessing the end of the myth cycle of Christianity; our struggle is to not allow them to take the entire world with them as they self-destruct.

  6. Case Wagenvoord said:

    Phil,

    You are partially right when you speak of the end of the Christian Myth, but not for the reason you cite. Only a small majority of Christians buy into the end-times bullshit. It’s not even in the New Testament. The myth of end times arose in the nineteenth century via a gross misinterpretation of the Book of Revelation, which was an allegorical polemic against the Roman Empire. No serious Christian believes in naked bodies floating up to heaven. (In the spirit of full disclosure, I am a practicing Christian, though I am more of a renegade Christian than a dogmatic one.)

    There is a different dynamic at work. From the 1820s until the 1960s, a White, male dominated Protestant church was the defacto state religion of America. All of the Neocon nonsense and militant rhetoric coming out of the religious right is simply the spectacle of White males of Western European heritage trying desperately to cling to a power that is slowly slipping through their fingers.

    The sad truth is that we humans find it difficult to live without some sort of mythology to shore us up. It makes no difference if the myth is secular or spiritual, rational or poetic, or whether it gives rise to charity or consumerism.

    Every myth has its dark side. The rationalism of the Enlightenment fed into the nightmarish social engineering of Hitler and Stalin.

    If I must live a myth, I prefer one grounded on a prophet who preached a love of life’s unity. As a Christian, this is quite a challenge given that Christianity has so much blood on its hands it is impossible to tell where the fingers end and the fingernails begin. Some have suggested that the world’s only Christian died on a cross.

    We seem to be in a dark age when all three of the monotheistic religions have entered a period of war and pillage. Perhaps rather than the death of the Christian myth, we are seeing the death of a Bronze Age tribal god who can only be sated through the shedding of innocent blood.

    In case I haven’t mentioned it, I enjoy the hell out of your writing.

  7. philrockstroh said:

    Case,

    Have you read James Hillman, the most original thinker of the post-Jungian school, regarding the problems inherent to monotheistic religions? In short (and to, sadly, give Hillman short shrift) the one-sidedness that resonates from monotheistic belief causes immense tension within the unconscious of true believers, because their pantheon has banished the drives of other gods.

    Hence, their energies are driven underground (repressed) and rise as projections and displacements. A dark eros to reunite with their displaced whole ensues — and a “terrible love of war” results. Of course, Aphrodite (Love) will, fall into the lover’s bed with Mars (War). This is what happens when you turn your back on the gods.

    I agree with you: We need myths. We are in the myth of the Wasteland at present. the Grail King of the present paradigm is enfeebled and sick, and like him, those of us who are paying attention, scan the horizon for a glimpse of Percival’s return bearing the Holy Grail.

  8. Case Wagenvoord said:

    Thank you for reminding me of the pleasure I had many years ago reading James Hillman. I’ve decided to go back and reread his The Soul’s Code.

    I have always agreed with the Greek concept that we are all born with a daemon and that our greatest struggle is trying to balance the demands of this daemon with the demands of a society that views all daemons as manifestations of neurosis. The irony, of course, is that the source of most neurosis the denial of this daemon.

    There is a reason the church recast the daemon as a demon, or devil. The daemon is an antiauthoritarian agent of diversity, and the church wants a conformity that responds well to the social mores as it defines them. It was when the church began to pursue political power that dogma turned deadly and has been so ever since.

    A clergyman, Roger Williams, the founder of Rhode Island, created the concept of separating state and church. His experience with the Puritans of Massachusetts and the Anglicans of England had convinced him that nothing corrupted the church like the acquisition of political clout.

    You are quite right when you trace our love of violence and conquest to the suppression of the gods and goddesses who once inhabited the world of the unknown. When we suppress a daemon, a god or a goddess, the result in always a negative energy that destroys. (Though one could wonder about the barbarity of the Romans with their pantheon of gods and goddesses. Perhaps they politicized them as well.)

    However, the monotheistic God is a shape shifter, ever evolving and changing. I sometimes feel the God Hillman criticizes is on his deathbed. For many of the faithful, God is no longer an Old Fart in the sky doling out rewards and punishments. Many of us see Her as the Ground of Being, a life force that permeates all of creation, both animate and inanimate. It is an expansive view as opposed to the restrictive view shilled by the traditional church. So instead of the union of Aphrodite and Mars we are seeing the gradual and painful ascension of Eros over Thantos, for in the hands of the traditional church, the male God became Thantos. A femininized Eros is slowly forcing him out. But there’s a hell of a long way to go. As I said in my last comment, much of the teeth gnashing we hear from the Religious Right is born of a desperate denial of their waning influence. They are broken gongs reverberating in a toxic fog of their own making.

    I would suggest that we are the bearers of the Holy Grail and the horizon is the here and now.

  9. Sounder said:

    Excellent writing and comments. I am in a rush right now, but I will certainly be back for more.

    Thanks Phil and Case.

  10. Curt said:

    Another world is not only possible, she is on her way. On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing.

    -Arundhati Roy

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.