A captive nation
There are more young people of working age out of work than at any
time in recorded British history according to the latest government
figures.
I started the current version of my online presence as it were in
March of 2003 and have managed somehow to continue writing ever since,
though I've had my share of blank spots along the way. Writing on a regular basis used to be fairly easy for me but as the
years have worn on and no doubt me wearing out, it gets more and more
difficult for me to face up to a world that has gone from bad to worse
to downright dire in the course of my lifetime.
Thus these days, I'm more often reading and thinking about events
than writing about them, in an attempt to get a handle on why we
inhabitants of Empire are standing by as we watch our leaders head
straight for disaster yet again as they try vainly to keep the 'good
ship capitalism' afloat.
The myopia of the media is palpable in the face
of the disaster that unfolds around us.
"Sir Halford J Mackinder (1861–1947)…was a member of the
'Coefficients Dining Club' established by members of the ['socialist']
Fabian Society in 1902. The continuity of the policies of the elite is
indicated by the fact Brzezinski starts from Mackinder’s thesis first
propounded in 1904: "Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland: Who
rules the Heartland commands the World-Island: who commands the
World-Island commands the world."" -- The Elite, the ‘Great Game’ and World War III By Prof. Mujahid Kamran
Eric Walberg's otherwise excellent book '
Post modern imperialism geopolitics and the great games'
also utilizes Mackinder's metaphor of the 'The Great Game' to great
effect, to map out what he describes as three distinct 'games played',
the days of Mackinder's British Empire being 'Game 1'.
But I fear that the use of this metaphor, handy though it is in
shorthanding the machinations of imperialism brings with it the danger
of a kind of fatalism, reducing us to mere pawns on Brzezinski's 'Grand
Chessboard'. A view I might add, that reinforces our fatalism as it
transforms sociopaths like Brzezinski into a character out of an Ayn
Rand novel, possessed of super powers and the natural inheritor of
Mackinder's haughty and arrogant view of the world.
In turn, I think it reinforces the totally false belief that there is
no alternative to capitalism no matter that it's proved itself to be a
complete disaster for the planet. A kind of collective acceptance of the
status quo that is reinforced by the MSM that will not entertain any
kind of rational debate about the alternatives.
Not surprisingly, this 'Superman' belief concerning the
'inevitability' of capitalism is the bedrock of the neoliberal view of
how things work, harking back as it does to the days of Mackinder when a
handful of men effectively ruled an Empire without challenge, divvying
up an occupied world according to an imperial pecking order of power.
Meanwhile we get fed a diet of little more than mysticism and wishful
thinking from the media pundits and when that doesn't work the subject
is simply ignored. How the MSM manages the task of totally obscuring the
reality of the way capitalism actually functions can only be
accomplished by constructing an entirely false reality, one that omits
certain fundamental facts about the nature of capitalism, especially its
history.
Thus WWI was the result of a spat between aristocrats somewhere in
the Balkans and WWII was started by a deranged megalomaniac and the
destruction of Iraq the result of 'faulty intelligence'. And each time
we let them get away with it, they become more emboldened, more brazen
in their predations knowing full well that it will get no real
opposition from its captive public.
Meanwhile…
Our busted economy is simply the result of 'us' spending too much,
thus justifying the need to have 'our belts tightened'. Note that for
the rich 1% 'belt tightening' is obviously not a problem nor have any of
the previous crises of capitalism and the resultant 'belt tightening'
experienced by the rest of us affected the 1%.
'Boom and bust' no matter what the pundits say, is built into the
very nature of capitalism. At best 'tinkering' with it brings a
temporary reprieve from the inevitable and even the 'tinkering' is the
result of working class intervention into the affairs of capitalism eg,
the 'welfare state'. Ultimately, the outcome every time is war
and the bigger the better to chow all that surplus capital in an orgy of
destruction such as we are currently witnessing. Each 'small' war
leading inevitably to bigger and bigger wars.
Meanwhile…
SCROOGE AND CHORUS:
Christmas comes but once a year,
So you better cash in, While the spirit lingers,
It's slipping through your fingers, Boy!
Don't you realize Christmas can be such a Monetary joy!
/../
CHORUS:
On the first day of Christmas,
The advertising's there, with Newspaper ads,
Billboards too,
Business Christmas cards,
And commercials on a pear tree. . .
Jingles here, jingles there, Jingles all the way.
Dashing through the snow, In a fifty-foot coup-e
O'er the fields we go, Selling all the way. . .
Deck the halls with advertising, What's the use of compromising, Fa la la la la la la la la. -- Green Christmas by Stan Freeberg
Freeberg's cutting song on the commercialization of Christmas hit the
stores in 1958. So how does our corporate media handle the paradox of
Christian 'giving' with the making of money? Even more important, how
does the MSM handle boosting Christmas sales with the fact that it's
also boosting the myth that we 'all' have to tighten our belts in these
'times of austerity'? It really is a case of squaring the circle but how
does the MSM achieve this miraculous result?
Every Christmas/New Year the MSM carries a slew of stories about the
economy, prefacing every comment on the hoped for orgy of consumption,
that retailers make 80% of their profits over the holiday period. Is
this meant to make us feel bad if we don't consume the required amount
of tat?
So all the while as thousands lose their jobs, homes and social
rights, the MSM is punting the idea that basically everything is okay, a
temporary blip in the upward curve of capitalist 'growth'. Spend and
everything will come right? Right?
The UK economy will remain weak for the foreseeable future, but
recession is not inevitable, according to a survey by the British
Chambers of Commerce. -- 'UK recession 'not yet inevitable', BBC News 10/01/2012
Thus we are exhorted to spend, spend, spend- without producing
anything of substance. Even the much-touted digital revolution which
would have turned the populace into 'new media' entrepreneurs if you
listened to how the pundits describe it, relies on surplus cash to
exist. Three hundred quid on a piece of electronic junk that will be
'obsolete' this time next year when you can't pay the mortgage?
What it does reveal is the MSM has to avoid revealing the paradox of
austerity and conspicuous consumption coexisting and the reason's pretty
obvious: the UK doesn't produce much of anything anymore, relying
instead on consumption (and its supporting infrastructure) and of course
the financial sector, the mainstay of what passes for a British
economy.
The end-product is a parasitical economy, the result of maintaining
the rate of profit by exporting production to low-wage countries and
relying on debt-fueled consumption to turn over the local economy but an
economy that has become less and less relevant to international finance
capital. So kiss the 'good times' goodbye. Any 'recovery', should it
happen will be at a lower level of employment, with fewer real jobs,
more temporary, deskilled labour, to serve a shrunken 'middle class' and
the elite.
Social support will be cut to the absolute minimum the state can get
away with. Resistance will be met with the full force of the
corporate/security state with the Summer '11 riots serving as an example
of what happens when you deliberately allow 'them' to get on with the
lootin' anna burnin'. And so far, organized labour's response has been
half-hearted and sporadic without any clear direction of what to offer
as an alternative tied as it is to the Labour Party's coattails.
What's left of the local economy will be hi-tech, information-based
research and production as part of a global corporate,
military-financial-media complex over which we have absolutely no
control.
The situation is unique in the history of capitalism. The formerly
Great Britain, 'workshop to the world', the greatest Empire the world
had ever seen, the home of the Industrial Revolution, deliberately
de-industrializes its economy and relies instead on its control of the
global circuit of capital to produce 'growth' in the form of ficticious
money that in turn it lent to its captive consumers at enormous rates of
compound interest.
The 'wealth' created from the interest charged on the loans was then
used to create an even greater pile of ficticious wealth by manipulating
the markets on a global scale through the creation of equally
ficticious financial 'instruments'. Great fun while it lasted. Piles of
dosh, in fact far too much capital and all of it ficticious, sloshing
about in a system that has literally eaten itself alive.
The genesis of the current crisis can in part be traced back to
Thatcher's original decision to turn the UK into a 'property-owning
democracy' by selling off publicly-owned housing. A decision that
transformed the populace into a nation of debtors' and most importantly,
it locked them in debt for life (and beyond); a house being the single
biggest investment people ever make. At the same time, entire industries
were closed down and their coherent, class-conscious communities
destroyed. An entire epoch wiped out in a stroke. Enter the Age of
Credit.
Trapped on a treadmill of debt is it any wonder that no one wants to
'rock the boat'? This might sound somewhat melodramatic but it would
appear that only a wholesale collapse of the economy will produce the
right conditions for the potential for revolutionary change to begin.
But is this what we want to happen?
Meanwhile, given the the dire state of things, just as it did in the
1930s, the Empire ratchets up the case for war but war of a different
kind having learned a brutal lesson from media coverage of the Vietnam
War that thousands of Imperial troops dying in front of you, live on
your television screens was extremely bad for business.
Just as the Imperial blueprints
have made plain, the Empire, using a combination of media manipulation,
hi-tech weapons and its stranglehold on international finance, can wage
war 'at a distance' from its domestic populations. Using a professional
army plus of course its mercenary minions to crush all resistance with
barely a murmur from the metropolis. Imperial deaths, such as they are,
are given full state/media funerals, after all one imperial death must
be worth at least 100 (fill in the country) deaths.
Economic/political crisis at home equals wars abroad, it's that simple. Is the Empire insane enough to start a nuclear war?
Well as they've done before, they must think they can--in their
terms--get away with it again. It would certainly divert our attentions
away from our domestic woes- for a time. The 'collateral damage' would
be too immense to calculate let alone contemplate thus such things are
not touched upon when the MSM talks of the West 'losing patience with
Iran' echoing the Empire's threats of 'taking out' Iran's nuclear
facilities if it doesn't behave itself and do as its told.
It's also difficult to contemplate what the international
repercussions of a 'surgical nuclear strike' on Iran would be. I find it
inconceivable that the Russians and possibly the Chinese would not know
about it in advance. The Empire, in spite of its power, can't just go
lobbing nuclear weapons about willy-nilly (and by Empire I include
Israel, it's mini-assassin) although the use of 'Depleted Uranium'
has barely caused a ripple of discontent in the populace, no doubt it's
not dramatic enough. The name by the way, doesn't mean it ain't
radioactive, just less radioactive than its lethal parent U-235.
And just as importantly, it's a test of Russia's resolve just as in
1990 when the Empire decided that Saddam Hussein's regime had lived past
its sell-by date. What would the Russians do if the US encroached on
what been traditionally, Russia's patch? Well we know the answer to that
but what of the present? Once again is it to be left to a reluctant
Russia to stare down the Empire whilst we stand by, passive observers of
our own, and others, fate?