"We Would Rather Die In Our Dread:" Moving beyond the debt ceiling canard; much more is at stake
by Phil Rockstroh
At present, most of us negotiate our days so distracted, disillusioned,
dazed, buffeted, bought or marginalized by the corporate state/ mass
media hologram -- the multi-headed, awareness-addling Hydra that guards
contemporary precincts of perception (apropos, the "debate" involving
the so-called debt ceiling "crisis") -- it is difficult to apprehend
what we are up against i.e., the forces of consolidated and calcified
power that degrade almost every aspect of life in the nation.
In contrast, throughout this past year, popular uprisings of
varying scope and degree of success have been unfolding worldwide. And the genie
is not going back in the neoliberal bottle.
The global power elite might
not like it, but (unlike the general population of the U.S., whose view
of life has been conditioned by the inundating, thus internalized,
narcissism proffered by media age hyper-commercialism, and who have come
to exist as self-involved consumer state dystopias of one) -- large
numbers of the people of the world are declaring to their overlords:
We've had enough of the world you've created...time to make it our own.
With this in mind, let us take a moment to pity our own poor, little,
economic despots (from the start, so misunderstood) they only built the
U.S. on the bones of African slaves and watered the soil with the blood
of murdered Indians, and, from that time on, proceeded to pile corpses
to the sky, only so they could climb atop and look out for us lesser
folks.
And from the soil rose a culture of kitsch, unhealthy food, and creepy,
over-priced banal distractions. Consequently, the U.S. seems an
over-priced, downscale theme Park -- Six Flags over Denial and Decay -- a
grotesque, kitsch-bewitched land of negative enchantment, unprepared for
the gathering, denial-sundering storm that, from all indications, will
leave the nation devastated.
What are the forces and factors that have wrought this circumstance?
One progenitor of the defiant idiocy of the general population of the
U.S. can be traced to the tendency of the consumer state to induce
impulsivity rather than reflection i.e., rendering individuals
self-involved, infantilized monsters of the id, dazzled by and
perpetually reaching for the next bright and shiny.
Antithetically, if a critical mass of the populace of the nation ever
gained a semblance of self-awareness that included traits of foresight,
critical thinking, empathy, self-restraint and a sense of conviction
regarding, for example, the dire state of the planet on an ecological
basis, as well as an apprehension as to their position as wage
slaves/debt serfs to their corporate overlords -- the corporate/consumer
paradigm would be in danger of collapse. While it is true, government
is often behind assaults on common sense and common decency, the
slickest, most self-serving ploy monopolistic capitalist pulled off
against the tenets and foundation of a just, equitable society has been
in their cunning framing of the situation e.g., the sales pitch of one
of their most effective salesman, that "government is the problem, not
the solution."
Ronald Reagan was half right; only, he, conveniently, left out the
following: In particular, when the politicians who operate the system
are beholden, as he was (and, at present, Barack Obama is) by
game-rigging operatives of the moneyed elite.
Ergo, the so-called "debt crisis" involved a similar dance of deceit and
distraction. As was the case, early into the Obama presidency, with the
healthcare "debate," the deal was struck before the faux rancorous
music began. The fix was in. The moneyed class works the system and
those without power and influence get worked over.
Regarding the persistent, liberal fallacy: Obama needs to stand up for
his convictions. Correction: Throughout his presidency, he has been
standing upon his convictions i.e. standing on the throats of the
powerless as we're being mugged by his elitist benefactors.
Moreover, how does he or anyone "change the tone" of political
polarization so evident in the nation, when the right is a walking
landfill of noxious arrogance and inexplicable self-regard? If
contemporary conservatives showed any indication of harboring even a
molecule of humanity or self-awareness then a dialog might be possible.
But we're dealing with grownups who believe God is some kind of cosmic
CEO -- folks who are certain; one listens closely, one can hear him
counting his money.
Therefore, we're warned: not voting for Democratic Party
(lesser-of-two-evils) candidates is a treacherous decision, and we're
advised we must goad President Obama to govern as the man he sold
himself as during the 2008 presidential election campaign. Given the
realities of political life within the age of corporate dominance, in
which reality is defined and distorted by the media hologram, hasn't the
thought occurred to progressive types that the sales pitch is, in fact,
inseparable from the product, and, consequently, to the most
media-savvy mountebank will go the spoils?
O.K. then, you've been betrayed. Good. Such a turn of affairs serves as a good vehicle for clearing away toxic innocence.
"We would rather be ruined than changed;
We would rather die in our dread
Than climb across the moment
And let our illusions die."
- W.H. Auden
(Excerpt from: The Age of Anxiety: A Baroque Eclogue)
Next step: Let the Democratic Party die and allow a true progressive party to rise from the ashes.
Although, first, the hidden in plain sight, inverted totalitarian powers
at large need to be drawn into the open e.g., as Dr. King did in regard
to Jim Crowe in the U.S. Deep South in the 1950s and 60s.
There is so much more at stake than simply a "debate" regarding the alleged debt ceiling.
To cite one collective peril: The oceans of the earth are the matrix of
life on our planet. As did all life on land, we human beings emerged
from ancient seas. And we will not survive for long by dramatically
altering its nature by the short sighted greed and hubris of the present
time. We will be pulled to our death by its destruction, like Ahab
lashed to Moby Dick.
Given the degraded quality of life in the nation, why do the people of
the U.S. stand for this culture of exploitation and diminished
prospects?
We resist the dread incurred by an attempt to climb our way past the
proliferate distractions of the moment thus avoiding this extant state
of affairs: Beneath the shimmering sea of the media hologram, a
monstrous virulence glides. Belying our consumerist habit of mind
(evinced in traits of feigned insouciance and blithe disregard) yawns a
system sustained by the blood and treasure-depleting apparatus of
militarism and economic exploitation -- a system that is reaping vast
destruction upon the ecological balance of the earth, the foundation of
community, and upon individual psychological well-being.
Accordingly, a gnawing emptiness is the constant companion of the
denizens of the corporate/militarist/consumer state. This emptiness is
the progenitor of its destructive nature. In a vain attempt to sate the
hollow ache and banish the gathering dread, the rapacious appetite of
empire rises and is perpetually reinforced.
There is the banality of evil and then there is the evil of banality.
Witness: The present banality of our ecocide-inflicting mode of being --
one that reduces the world to only those things that can be commodified
and thus reduces earth, sky and psyche to controllable (dreamless and
dead) bits. We stare at our appliances as exquisite things are
extinguished, forever...mistaking configurations of pixels for the
breath and brilliance of the world.
On a personal basis, the present system levels this dismal legacy upon
the nation: Minds made of internalized shopping malls; bodies built by
junk food; libidos informed by celebrity porn; agendas driven by a
crass, good versus evil, winners and losers, cartoon cosmology.
Congratulations, America, we've done the architects of the republic
proud.
Some people are fragile, and the system breaks them for life. In
contrast, others are resilient, but will grow callous and conformist.
Yes, life is a fistfight and a marriage and a dull evening of laundry
and a trundle through trivia and a flight of the sublime. The point: Be
alive within life…don't submit to any ass-backwards, assembly
line-modeled mode of being, gridded by comforting casuistry, maintained
by hierarchies of bullies, and settled for due to fear or convenience.
"When truth is replaced by silence, the silence is a lie."
-Yevgeny Yevtushenko
Insulated in our landscape of silence, we demand the ground beneath us
be salted with deceit, begetting the bone-dry wilderness of ignorance
and duplicity we know as late, neoliberal empire. Otherwise, fiery
incantations of outrage would bloom from within us -- a combustive
wildfire immolating to ash our tinderbox rationalizations…perhaps,
leaving an ash-fall to nourish sleeping seeds of renewal.
"What is to endure light must endure burning."
- Victor Frankl
Yet, this writer is bereft of a plan to redeem humankind. Who can afford
such hubris? In contrast, I negotiate the world with my heart and head,
and I sing of its joys and sorrows. Apropos, within the kingdom of this
breathing moment, I hear arias rising...auguring the decay of this
nation. In short, I am a poet and an essayist not a civic planner.
Accordingly, here are a few heart-wrought observations from the personal
ash heap of my poetically archaic sensibility and sent out to the
fear-bandying cynics of the elitist political and economic classes -- to
those who reduce all of life to the economic sophistry of Disaster
Capitalism (who have been disingenuously warning, "run for your lives;
the debt-ceiling is falling") -- who just can't envisage a world that is
not as degraded as their own mindset -- to those in positions of
insular, arrogant power who inflict great harm upon those bereft of
privilege and then proclaim, "this is just the way things have to be."
False, that is merely the way things exist in the confines of your
miserable cosmology. To the contrary, the world is a vast, ever-changing
tapestry...that you merely perceive as a dung rag for your exclusive
use.
"The most intense conflicts, if overcome, leave behind a sense of
security and calm that is not easily disturbed. It is just these intense
conflicts and their conflagration which are needed to produce valuable
and lasting results." - Carl Jung
We have a daunting struggle ahead of us. Therefore, I proffer the
following short message to those purer-than-thou souls who counsel that
art (including the arts of political resistance) should only be
uplifting, moderate, and beautiful:
Art (reflecting our world) is often sublimely ugly, monstrously so. The
image of a monster opens the soul to awe. Note: The word "awe" is the
prefix for both awesome and awful). Often, creating ugliness carries as
much purpose as creating beauty.
Everything has been figured out, except how to live.
Jean-Paul Sartre
Sartre's words notwithstanding, I am often asked by readers "practical"
questions such as: "You view the empire to be in a state of profound
decay, beyond repair and reclamation -- then how should we proceed from
here?"
I answer, appropriating a phrase from James Hillman: simply proceed into
"the thought of the heart and the soul of the world." The problem
contains the solution. The poison serves as its anecdote. The vastness
and complexity of life that (seemingly) endeavors to destroy me (in
contrast) renders me more like myself, and therefore I become more fit
for the struggle ahead.
Accordingly, Rainer Maria Rilke, from the opening stanza of the Duino Elegies:
Who, if I cried out, would hear me among the Angelic
Orders? And even if one were to suddenly
take me to its heart, I would vanish into its
greater existence. For beauty is nothing but
the beginning of terror, that we are still able to bear,
and we revere it so, because it serenely disdains
Phil Rockstroh is a poet, lyricist and philosopher bard living in New
York City. He may be contacted at: phil@philrockstroh.com Visit Phil's
website http://philrockstroh.com /And at
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