The Short answer is: Nobody knows what it's all about. And that's pretty encouraging to me.
When the Tea Party thing first popped up, it had a kind of organic feel to it, but almost immediately, when Michelle Bachmann jumped in front of it - and then when Dick Armey slithered in - suddenly it was all about GOP talking points or some other templated 'conservative' nonsense. The rallies had all the authenticity of an Up With People performance from 1970, and the original themes that grew out of a reasonable rejection of Tax Payer bailouts for the crooks on Wall Street morphed into the old familiar bits about Tax-and-Spend, Deficit Hawkery and National Debt Anxiety. It was one of the slickest bamboozles anybody'd ever seen (and btw: it made Dick Armey a fuckload of money).
So along comes OWS. Basically the same thing as the Tea Party (albeit without all the blue hair). And while there have always been crazies of the type who always gravitate towards any kind of power center, OWS has maintained a very different feel to it. They don't have a real org chart. They don't have designated spokespeople. They have a generally stated list (of sorts) of the things they want to see addressed and/or remedied, but they're resisting efforts to be defined and then co-opted by the very entities they're determined to push against. By staying more or less passive and unconfined by conventional politicking, they gain strength while they wait to discover what OWS is to become.
If you want a fair parallel, go back and watch The Social Network again, and pay close attention to the conflict between Zuckerberg and Saverin when facebook was still just a college campus thing. As facebook was starting to take off, the 'normal' next step was to figure out how to monetize it - to make it make money. But Zuckerberg resists, saying they don't know what it is yet - that they may have created something that fundamentally changes the way people interact; on a truly global scale. Trying to shoehorn the thing into the standard Harvard Biz School model would be like Secretariat pullin' a plow.
So there's absolutely no need to make OWS fit neatly into whatever frame of reference we have on hand right now today. In fact, I think what OWS needs is to resist all efforts to rein it in and to make it into something it's not. I get a weird feeling that OWS is a very close approximation of what democracy is supposed to look like. Maybe that's why we're having such a hard time recognizing it.
Nov 16, 2011
Nov 15, 2011
Today's Shitty Little Fact
Of the 100 biggest economies in the world, 53 are corporations - which is up from 51 a year ago.
The Story Of Stuff
"Our enormously productive economy...demands that we make consumption our way of life, that we convert the buying and use of goods into rituals, that we seek our ego satisfaction, our ego satisfaction, in consumption. We need things consumed, burned up, replaced and discarded at an ever-accelerating rate." --Victor Lebow
Let's figure out how to move from a linear system to a circular one, but let's try to be careful about the disruption that must always accompany such great shifts.
Nov 14, 2011
We Are So Fucked
I'd like to think there was a time when this shit didn't go on.
Watch the video from 60 Minutes at CBSNews.com.
The next national election is now less than a year away and congressmen and senators are expending much of their time and their energy raising the millions of dollars in campaign funds they'll need just to hold onto a job that pays $174,000 a year.
Few of them are doing it for the salary and all of them will say they are doing it to serve the public. But there are other benefits: Power, prestige, and the opportunity to become a Washington insider with access to information and connections that no one else has, in an environment of privilege where rules that govern the rest of the country, don't always apply to them.
Watch the video from 60 Minutes at CBSNews.com.
Nov 12, 2011
Obama Meets The GOP Women's Caucus
Always looking to connect a few dots - even when they seem pretty far apart.
At about 30:00, talking about The Unibomber and Eric Rudolph - "As a side note, I have no idea what it is with white folks and the woods - but whatever it is probably explains why black folks don't do a lot of camping."
Nov 11, 2011
Turd Blossom Rides Again
Elizabeth Warren scares the holy bejeebers outa some folks. Kinda like bleach scares a fungus.
Penn State Update
From Michael Collins at The Agonist:
I'm not advocating violence - don't kick him in the nuts and don't throw anything at him - but if you see this Sandusky guy out in public, he needs to be made to feel as small and unwelcome as it is humanly possible to feel.
The relentless deviate, former PSU defensive coordinator, Jerry Sandusky, is accused of sexually assaulting children for years. According to the grand jury, he gained easy access to children and early adolescents through a foundation he founded in 1977, the Second Mile Foundation. He continued the assaults at his home and in the PSU showers on at least one occasion. The foundation serves over 100,000 at-risk youth. Sandusky started the foundation as a group home for "troubled boys" in 1977. Since hiring Jack Raykovitz, PhD, a licensed psychologist, as president, the foundation has grown into a multimillion (sic) enterprise serving over 100,000 children throughout the state.
I'm not advocating violence - don't kick him in the nuts and don't throw anything at him - but if you see this Sandusky guy out in public, he needs to be made to feel as small and unwelcome as it is humanly possible to feel.
Nov 10, 2011
Nov 9, 2011
Art vs Life
One way to put it:
"Art is not a mirror to reflect the world, but a hammer with which to shape it." --Vladimir Mayakovsky
"Art is not a mirror to reflect the world, but a hammer with which to shape it." --Vladimir Mayakovsky
I don't know what that really has to do with anything right now, but I got to thinking (usually kinda dangerous for me) about parallels and coincidences and intersections, and I can't help but assume that there's no way I'm the only one in the world who wonders about the eerily converging similarities between the Duke brothers from the movie Trading Places and the Koch brothers.
Mortimer and Randolph Duke |
Chuckles and Davy Koch |
Olbermann On Joe Pa
It's one of the saddest things ever. Joe Paterno has been a hero for a lot of us for a very long time. And while I think this is something that happened as much in spite of his management rather than because of it, I also think this is a good example of what can happen when somebody stays in a position of great power for way too long.
Word is that Paterno will resign at the end of the season. I have to agree with Keith on this one (fire his ass today), but I'd go one more step and say that Paterno should be in front of a judge right now, trying to make a case for why he should not be in jail.
Word is that Paterno will resign at the end of the season. I have to agree with Keith on this one (fire his ass today), but I'd go one more step and say that Paterno should be in front of a judge right now, trying to make a case for why he should not be in jail.
NYT Late To The Party - Again
Some pretty decent analysis from Numerian at The Agonist, on the main reason our 4th estate is in the middle of an Epic FAIL.
As an ex-subscriber to The New York Times, I too have been outraged by such stories, but not because I read them in the paper of record, which is not simply very late to the game of reporting on this phenomenon - it is too late. I’ve been outraged by these stories because I have been reading about this for years on internet blogs. Some of the most persistent reporters and analysts who write about this problem include Glenn Greenwald at Salon.com, Yves Smith at the Naked Capitalist blog, and Karl Denninger at the Market Ticker blog. All three of these writers have no doubt lost some readers over the years because they write about these stories over and over, and manage to maintain a sustained fury over the debasement of the rule of law that is evidenced by the way the big banks operate, and the inability or refusal of the government to do much about it.
These are the sort of people who have been criticized for years by The New York Times for sloppy reporting because they don’t have to live by the strict journalistic standards that are upheld every day by the mainstream media.
Whether or not this is true – and for the most part these writers have been careful about ensuring that the facts they present are verified – it is definitely the case that mainstream media reporters and analysts have not taken the angry, vituperative, and in some cases vulgar tone that bloggers take when talking about the collapse of the rule of law.
Therein lies a problem, and it is one that the mainstream media is only now beginning to comprehend. The undermining of the US Constitution and the laws as passed by Congress, and the refusal by government to investigate or prosecute these violations, which are now rife, represent some of the most serious challenges imaginable to a democracy based on a republican form of government. Anyone who takes their responsibilities as a citizen of the US seriously should be outraged by these circumstances.Maybe we're starting to see some signs of revolt from inside the closed-loop crony-driven system which has tied Business, Government and Press together into a neat little bundle. We need that rebellion because we've allowed our little experiment in self government to slip into the oldest game in the world - ie: once everybody's guilty, nobody can be held responsible. We have to figure out how to split it all up again, and put clearly discernible dividers back into place. Balance has gone out of the system and must be reestablished.
Nov 8, 2011
Let Herman Be Herman
The allegations of sexual misconduct against Herman Cain will win him the nomination.
And here's the frame-up: "It's just another instance of racist America's eagerness to condemn a black man for daring to approach a white woman. The Democrats have a shameful history of this, you know. All that Jim Crow stuff was because the Democrats were in charge of things in The South for way too long." (that's in quotes because it's what I expect to hear - not what anybody has actually said)
It doesn't matter what Limbaugh and all the others said about how Clinton's philandering exposed a character flaw that made him unfit to serve - this is the age of Confirmation Bias after all. We can cherry pick the coverage and the analysis, and just choose what we wanna believe.
It just seems so fucking weirdly typical. The leading lights for the Repubs and 'conservatives' do, in fact, display a veiled racism on a pretty consistent basis. Welfare Queens; Barack The Magic Negro; Food Stamp President; etc. But now they've decided to play some kind of intra-race game. They look at Obama, and they see a guy who's done almost exactly what they always say everybody should do. He came from humble beginnings; he dreamed big; he worked hard; and he made it all the way to the White House. He's devoted to his wife and kids; he loves his job; and he wants to serve his country. What have the Repubs been telling us they want in a president that's any different from ANY of that?
Well - here it is: Plenty of people in general (and Repubs in particular) believe the crap about a big chunk of the 'black community' being anti-smart. They're expecting a lot of black people to look at Obama and think, "he needs to back off a little - he's acting too white". Cain fits their frame because he's their anti-intellectual black guy, which makes him the perfect anti-Obama.
Like Ann-The-Man Coulter said: "Our blacks are just so much better than their blacks".
And here's the frame-up: "It's just another instance of racist America's eagerness to condemn a black man for daring to approach a white woman. The Democrats have a shameful history of this, you know. All that Jim Crow stuff was because the Democrats were in charge of things in The South for way too long." (that's in quotes because it's what I expect to hear - not what anybody has actually said)
It doesn't matter what Limbaugh and all the others said about how Clinton's philandering exposed a character flaw that made him unfit to serve - this is the age of Confirmation Bias after all. We can cherry pick the coverage and the analysis, and just choose what we wanna believe.
It just seems so fucking weirdly typical. The leading lights for the Repubs and 'conservatives' do, in fact, display a veiled racism on a pretty consistent basis. Welfare Queens; Barack The Magic Negro; Food Stamp President; etc. But now they've decided to play some kind of intra-race game. They look at Obama, and they see a guy who's done almost exactly what they always say everybody should do. He came from humble beginnings; he dreamed big; he worked hard; and he made it all the way to the White House. He's devoted to his wife and kids; he loves his job; and he wants to serve his country. What have the Repubs been telling us they want in a president that's any different from ANY of that?
Well - here it is: Plenty of people in general (and Repubs in particular) believe the crap about a big chunk of the 'black community' being anti-smart. They're expecting a lot of black people to look at Obama and think, "he needs to back off a little - he's acting too white". Cain fits their frame because he's their anti-intellectual black guy, which makes him the perfect anti-Obama.
Like Ann-The-Man Coulter said: "Our blacks are just so much better than their blacks".
Nov 7, 2011
Shocker In Ohio
From a local NPR affiliate:
Listening to this, I got the feeling that I was hearing the famous Left-Leaning Bias that 'conservatives' are always carping about. But when I listen to the national shows on NPR (eg: All Things Considered), there's nothing even approaching this. The Repubs have done such a thorough job of brow-beating CPB, nobody has the balls to say anything bold on the air. All we ever get is the notion that every side of every issue is perfectly valid, and oh yeah - "both sides do it".
Am I to understand that some random 3rd string nobody on public radio in Ohio is actually The Liberal Media? And how long before the anti-media harpies swoop in to pluck out his eyes?
Listening to this, I got the feeling that I was hearing the famous Left-Leaning Bias that 'conservatives' are always carping about. But when I listen to the national shows on NPR (eg: All Things Considered), there's nothing even approaching this. The Repubs have done such a thorough job of brow-beating CPB, nobody has the balls to say anything bold on the air. All we ever get is the notion that every side of every issue is perfectly valid, and oh yeah - "both sides do it".
Am I to understand that some random 3rd string nobody on public radio in Ohio is actually The Liberal Media? And how long before the anti-media harpies swoop in to pluck out his eyes?
Nov 6, 2011
John Mayer And Herbie Hancock
I think this is what Weather Report and Brian Auger always had in mind, but could never really make work on a regular basis. This album is a little spotty too, but when it's good, it's really good.
Professional Left Podcast 100
Episode 100 from The Professional Left:
(hacked from Crooks and Liars - how proud my mom would be)
Featured links:
Newt Gingrich lauded by WaPo
Rachel Maddow rips on Paul Wolfowicz
The Pentagon's double-dip on weapons
The Perpetual War Portfolio
Nov 5, 2011
The Late Great Washington Post
The only reasons I go to The Wa Po any more (other than the Sunday crossword - which is usually awesome) is to mock George Will, or to find new ways to call Marc Thiessen an asshole.
James Fallows at The Atlantic has by far the best reason to tell Wa Po to pound sand.
James Fallows at The Atlantic has by far the best reason to tell Wa Po to pound sand.
Headline: "Where job measures go to die"
Subhead: "Another bill fails in Senate"
What actually happened: The bill got a majority in the Senate, 51-49.
But because Mitch McConnell's GOP minority has resolved to filibuster everything the Administration proposes, the measure never came to a vote on the merits. The Democrats, with "only" 53 votes (including 2 Indeps), cannot get 60 votes to break a filibuster, since the Republicans with 47 always-unified pro-filibuster votes, can stop anything they choose.
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