Monday, November 1, 2010

The Phantom Left - Chris Hedges










Posted on Oct 31, 2010 @ truthdig













 

These idiots that attended the rally with their stupid signs really make me feel extremely outraged.  Obviously they haven't been paying attention. ~jg

By Chris Hedges

The American left is a phantom. It is conjured up by the right wing to tag Barack Obama as a socialist and used by the liberal class to justify its complacency and lethargy. It diverts attention from corporate power. It perpetuates the myth of a democratic system that is influenced by the votes of citizens, political platforms and the work of legislators. It keeps the world neatly divided into a left and a right. The phantom left functions as a convenient scapegoat. The right wing blames it for moral degeneration and fiscal chaos. The liberal class uses it to call for “moderation.” And while we waste our time talking nonsense, the engines of corporate power—masked, ruthless and unexamined—happily devour the state.



The loss of a radical left in American politics has been catastrophic. The left once harbored militant anarchist and communist labor unions, an independent, alternative press, social movements and politicians not tethered to corporate benefactors. But its disappearance, the result of long witch hunts for communists, post-industrialization and the silencing of those who did not sign on for the utopian vision of globalization, means that there is no counterforce to halt our slide into corporate neofeudalism. This harsh reality, however, is not palatable. So the corporations that control mass communications conjure up the phantom of a left. They blame the phantom for our debacle. And they get us to speak in absurdities.

The phantom left took a central role on the mall this weekend in Washington. It had performed admirably for Glenn Beck, who used it in his own rally as a lightning rod to instill anger and fear. And the phantom left proved equally useful for the comics Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, who spoke to the crowd wearing red-white-and-blue costumes. The two comics evoked the phantom left, as the liberal class always does, in defense of moderation, which might better be described as apathy. If the right wing is crazy and if the left wing is crazy, the argument goes, then we moderates will be reasonable. We will be nice. Exxon and Goldman Sachs, along with predatory banks and the arms industry, may be ripping the guts out of the country, our rights—including habeas corpus—may have been revoked, but don’t get mad. Don’t be shrill. Don’t be like the crazies on the left.

“Why would you work with Marxists actively subverting our Constitution or racists and homophobes who see no one’s humanity but their own?” Stewart asked. “We hear every damn day about how fragile our country is—on the brink of catastrophe—torn by polarizing hate, and how it’s a shame that we can’t work together to get things done. But the truth is we do. We work together to get things done every damn day. The only place we don’t is here [in Washington] or on cable TV.”

The rally delivered a political message devoid of reality or content. The corruption of electoral politics by corporate funds and lobbyists, the naive belief that we can somehow vote ourselves back to democracy, was ignored for emotional catharsis. The right hates. The liberals laugh. And the country is taken hostage.

The Rally to Restore Sanity, held in Washington’s National Mall, was yet another sad footnote to the death of the liberal class. It was as innocuous as a Boy Scout jamboree. It ridiculed followers of the tea party without acknowledging that the pain and suffering expressed by many who support the movement are not only real but legitimate. It made fun of the buffoons who are rising up out of moral swamps to take over the Republican Party without accepting that their supporters were sold out by a liberal class, and especially a Democratic Party, which turned its back on the working class for corporate money.


Fox News’ Beck and his allies on the far right can use hatred as a mobilizing force because there are tens of millions of Americans who have very good reason to hate. They have been betrayed by the elite who run the corporate state, by the two main political parties and by the liberal apologists, including those given public platforms on television, who keep counseling moderation as jobs disappear, wages drop and unemployment insurance runs out. As long as the liberal class speaks in the dead voice of moderation it will continue to fuel the right-wing backlash. Only when it appropriates this rage as its own, only when it stands up to established systems of power, including the Democratic Party, will we have any hope of holding off the lunatic fringe of the Republican Party.

Wall Street’s looting of the Treasury, the curtailing of our civil liberties, the millions of fraudulent foreclosures, the long-term unemployment, the bankruptcies from medical bills, the endless wars in the Middle East and the amassing of trillions in debt that can never be repaid are pushing us toward a Hobbesian world of internal collapse. Being nice and moderate will not help. These are corporate forces that are intent on reconfiguring the United States into a system of neofeudalism. These corporate forces will not be halted by funny signs, comics dressed up like Captain America or nice words.

The liberal class wants to inhabit a political center to remain morally and politically disengaged. As long as there is a phantom left, one that is as ridiculous and stunted as the right wing, the liberal class can remain uncommitted. If the liberal class concedes that power has been wrested from us it will be forced, if it wants to act, to build movements outside the political system. This would require the liberal class to demand acts of resistance, including civil disobedience, to attempt to salvage what is left of our anemic democratic state. But this type of political activity, as costly as it is difficult, is too unpalatable to a bankrupt liberal establishment that has sold its soul to corporate interests. And so the phantom left will be with us for a long time.

Politics in America has become spectacle. It is another form of show business. The crowd in Washington, well trained by television, was conditioned to play its role before the cameras. The signs —“The Rant is Too Damn High,” “Real Patriots Can Handle a Difference of Opinion” or “I Masturbate and I Vote”—reflected the hollowness of current political discourse and television’s perverse epistemology. The rally spoke exclusively in the impoverished iconography and language of television. It was filled with meaningless political pieties, music and jokes. It was like any television variety program. Personalities were being sold, not political platforms. And this is what the society of spectacle is about.

The modern spectacle, as the theorist Guy Debord pointed out, is a potent tool for pacification and depoliticization. It is a “permanent opium war” which stupefies its viewers and disconnects them from the forces that control their lives. The spectacle diverts anger toward phantoms and away from the perpetrators of exploitation and injustice. It manufactures feelings of euphoria. It allows participants to confuse the spectacle itself with political action.

The celebrities from Comedy Central and the trash talk show hosts on Fox are in the same business. They are entertainers. They provide the empty, emotionally laden material that propels endless chatter back and forth on supposed left- and right-wing television programs. It is a national Punch and Judy show. But don’t be fooled. It is not politics. It is entertainment. It is spectacle. All national debate on the airwaves is driven by the same empty gossip, the same absurd trivia, the same celebrity meltdowns and the same ridiculous posturing. It is presented with a different spin. But none of it is about ideas or truth. None of it is about being informed. It caters to emotions. It makes us confuse how we are made to feel with knowledge. And in the end, for those who serve up this drivel, the game is about money in the form of ratings and advertising.  Beck, Colbert and Stewart all serve the same masters. And it is not us.



Chris Hedges, who writes every Monday for Truthdig, is the author of the new book “Death of the Liberal Class.”

30 comments:

  1. "The rally delivered a political message devoid of reality or content. The corruption of electoral politics by corporate funds and lobbyists, the naive belief that we can somehow vote ourselves back to democracy, was ignored for emotional catharsis. The right hates. The liberals laugh. And the country is taken hostage."~Chris Hedges

    Great Artilce. *****

    Spot on...werph aucht. The DIAL turned all the way to LECTIC. Plasticized duck soup made from the DNA of a petroglyph.

    \\ll//

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  2. Jon Stewart Leibowitz...The full name just, oh I don't know....what...it just looses its pazzaz.

    For me, Stewart lost his pazoinka the first time I saw him on TV at my brothers place in 2004.
    Rick, my brother is a gay liberal, and Stewart and that cartoon show East Park {or whatever} were the cats meow to him. "Outrageous and over the edge" for his sensibilities.

    I saw it as mediocre and stupid. I haven't seen anything on TV that isn't mediocre and stupid. In fact I see very little in Amerika that isn't mediocre and stupid.

    Am I a hard man to please?

    When it comes to fucking with my liberty, with my rights...yea, I'm a hard man to please, I see no area for compromise on such issues. I see these issues are compromised absolutely here. I am NOT pleased. I am discontent immaculate.

    Guys like Leibowitz piss me off as much as guys like Cheney, and Bush, Obama, and the whole police state cabal.

    It's all Jingoberry pie. There's no business like bullshit.

    \\ll//

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  3. I was there. Hedges is correct. BUT- a much younger crowd than I have seen at all the anti-war rallies (which also changed nothing). I didn't have a sign or anything... I was just looking forward to seeing a "slacker Woodstock."

    I'm not sure if it was that... I'm not sure it was anything... but I'm glad I saw it.

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  4. Good for you Waldo,

    I was nowhere that day too...and glad to be there. Hate crowds.

    \\ll//

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  5. Chris Hedges nails it as usual. And Mr Obtuse feels like a dumbshit for thinking the event was just a benign gag.

    The good news is: the lefty media is all over it, echoing Hedges' sentiments.

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  6. ...oh- and the signs were a bit more original:
    http://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/the-100-best-signs-at-the-rally-to-restore-sanity

    ...and most seemed quite aware of "...the hollowness of current political discourse and television’s perverse epistemology." I think that was the point. If there was a point. Maybe that's what I liked about it.

    "Political discourse" isn't just hollow... it's gone. It's difficult to "demonstrate" the obvious. "I masturbate and I vote" makes a lot of sense when you think about it. Really- what's the difference? Hedges still seems to believe that some kind of "political process" exists.

    Banal? Sure. Lightweight? You bet. Not a cop in sight either. A couple hundred thousand went to DC... blew a razz... and then went home. I fail to see the purpose in taking any of this shit seriously any more.

    We are on our own.

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  7. guys like cheney, bush, obama etal would not be successful without guys like leibowitz, colbert, huffington etal.

    therefore...

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  8. Take it seriously? Anyone who knows what's really going on should take it seriously. Obviously, the majority of the people that attended that sorry excuse for a comedy show are sheeple.

    Having comedians tell us to tone it down....basically to sit down and shut up is not something I take lightly. I don't think any of the signs were funny. In fact, every one I've seen so far has pissed me off.

    To me, the event just demonstrated once again just how friggin' stupid Amerikans truly are. The French get out in the streets to protest raising the retirement age to 62. Our people? They attend a rally to prove just how much they don't have a clue and that they don't give a shit..

    Relax..nothing to see here just continue to ignore the man behind the curtain that is stealing your money and your country you lameasses.

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  9. That's good news than Mr O. No one says it better than Chris Hedges.

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  10. Da, Arcadia

    \\ll//

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  11. "We are on our own."~Waldo

    Yes. As clear as an azure lake in early spring.

    But Winter approaches, and it looks dark and cold.

    \\ll//

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  12. Eventually you will hear the whisper and thud of rubber bullets, and the cops grining; tacitly saying, "Why'd you bring a sign to a gunfight idiots?"

    This joke is on the peeepelz.

    \\ll//

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  13. I talked to a lot of people... and every single one knew 9-11 was an inside job. If we "take it to the streets" we'll get scalar weapons and tanks... microwave pain rays. Sorry... after 40-some years of being outraged... I'm getting a bit tired of it. I didn't give a razz about the "celebrities," in fact-- I didn't even SEE any of that. We approached from the west end of the mall at about 2pm. It was just refreshing to see all the "signs" spelled correctly. My daughter's friends asked her to pick up a discarded sign... there weren't any.

    The people I talked to knew all about that shit. Most were there to "mock the dummy," and I'm down with that. They aren't ignoring anything. They're mocking it. It was one of the most polite huge crowds I've ever seen... and mind you, I really hate crowds. That's why we spent almost 2 hours walking in. I went all that way to have a look at the crowd... and saw what I wanted to see. The "gummint" and the PTB are gonna do what they're gonna do.

    BUT... they are going to use the dummies and puppets to do their heavy-lifting. We don't have any "money" and we don't have any "country." All we have is each other. That was the idea... as I saw it.

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  14. It gives me the feeling of Prague---like in the Unbearable Lightness of Being.

    The days before the tanks we know are coming and guarded chatting in the streets, and raging inside closed rooms. That gnawing on futile anger.

    The almost surreal 'high' of it persistently hanging like a fog of doom as the days tick by like seconds on a time bomb.

    In the 60s at Haite Ashberry and other venues, there was also this spiritual feeling, like some power was present amongst us...

    Things seem mush darker now.

    \\ll//

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  15. Sounds like the ptb have worn you down then Waldo. I'm still mad as hell.

    How nice that the crowd was so well behaved and there were so many 9/11 truthers there. If they weren't there as a counter rally than I have no respect for them. Jon Stewart mocks them. Why on earth would they want to attend a rally that is led by a man who has all but called them lunatics?

    Screw Jon Stewart. I suspect, along with his wall street brother and CFR writer he works for the other side .

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  16. "Hedges still seems to believe that some kind of “political process” exists."

    Actually, I don't think that's true. He's become an advocate of taking it to the streets--as opposed to participating in the electoral process. He and Derrick Jensen have come as close as they dare to suggest violent opposition.

    http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/KtQbuPgq/Chris_Hedges_and_Derrick_Jense.html

    What we're getting instead unfortunately, is an orchestrated civil war courtesy of the PTB. I doubt Americans will never be smart enough to know who the real enemy is.

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  17. I didn't see a lot of people really giving a shit about the "entertainment." It was the overall meme that was catchy... who else thinks this whole thing is nucking futz. We came to see each other... not "john."

    This WAS the "unbearable lightness of being." Prague Spring... DC Autumn.

    I wanted to teach the kids "The Internationale," but they prefer "They Might Be Giants." I am beginning to appreciate their wisdom. "...you're not the boss of me now and you're not so big..." Electric car. heh heh.

    "Personalities were being sold, not political platforms." I didn't see a whole lot of buying into either one. I just saw a lot of young people enjoying one of the last good days before Winter.

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  18. Yeah, dem were the days. Something fresh in the air. We were all free-wheeling revolutionaries until we had to go out and get real jobs.

    ...and the damn Hell's Angels killed the vibe at Altamont.

    To bad Jon Stewart isn't Abbey Hoffman. Oh, shit, was Abbey just another zionist?

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  19. Yea...I just never got a "real job"...

    Maybe that's why I am as radical--more than I've ever been.

    \\ll//

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  20. Wish I could find that Firesign skit between the bass player and Mr Rogers. But something tells me you've probably already heard it.

    Don't know why I think of that now. Must be the strength I see in you.--

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  21. Never know the peoples real motivations for being there--very personal thing.

    It was that way in Frisco in the late 60s...all sorts of motivations--just the fascination with the "happening"...it was so much freer then...even the weird police and military shit that came down wasn't so sealed and hardened then.

    We face Storm Troopers out of some sci fi movie now...pinchi vada.
    Even robo-hounds...no shit. These could so easily be armed--what a bizarre nightmare will be unleashed when things really come down. I don't think people have any idea what they are in for.
    Drones in the sky...robo-wasps with syringes full of poison...scaler waves that can put a whole city in psycho-stress. It is almost metaphysical--insane high tech * magic. The Golem.

    \\ll//

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  22. I have heard a lot of Firesign...
    I'd need reminding...
    Roller Maidens...well Bozos...well,
    Hard to place a favorite.
    Enlightinment ala Surreal.
    Yum.

    \\ll//

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  23. Here it is...funnier than shit

    http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=fe6_1275961425

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  24. Oh yea...years sence I heard that.
    Rogers just sound deranged...but like seriously
    its almost spooky but the bass players come backs
    are so natural too...and really funny.

    Did you know that the real Mr. Rogers had been a special forces scout? His job was to take out the other sides scouts silently. An incredibly lethal person--who totally turned around and becomes a model teacher of children.

    Reality is as weird as any science fiction.

    \\ll//

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  25. JG is right, of course, it is maddening that the "Left" should be scolded of acting with impropriety. We should be ashamed of ourselves for sitting back and taking it. The corporate stooges and captains of finance should be afraid for the crimes they have committed. Instead, I'll bet they are smirking at each other while sipping cognac and eating caviar in Davos.

    What galls me most about the Rally is the reaction by the mainstream media, that pretty much ignored hundreds of thousands of people turning out, as compared to tens of thousands of Tea Party dumbasses. It really points out what information is supposed to get air time and what is to be ignored.

    I will give Stewart, Colbert, Olbermann, and Maddow some limited credit. They push the Empire's buttons as far as they can get away with and still remain employed by the corporate world. We all know that is nowhere near enough.

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  26. We might look at scripted events like this as "release valves"...a means of defusing expanding emotions. Co-opting seems to be a standardized play in the gamebook anymore. Nothing ever really seems to come to a head in America. A bunch of hot air that never bursts the balloon of the elites -- they just keep "stretching" their rubber world and containing the majority of backlash.

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  27. "they were there at the behest of the empire. it was a scripted manipulation. doing the bidding of the corporate empire IS their job."~arcadia11

    Yes indeed, it's not like you or I nailed a notice to a tree in the park and a hundred thousand people showed up...this is 'show business'.

    I too live very simply as you are...lotsa local produce and such in this, once primarily a farming area.

    The local eggs...wow Anyone who hasn't had fresh local eggs knows not what an egg really tastes like.

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  28. The margins on this page really suck.

    the very first post-back typing area looses
    the up down control.
    who's the tech for this site?
    I want action
    I want relief
    I want some pro yada here now damnit,

    \\ll//

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  29. Yeah, well if they know about 9/11 it didn't seem to bother them that Stewart doesn't mind mocking Truthers or that a member of his staff just got arrested for assault on a We Are change member for trying to ask Stewart a question.

    Just look at the faces in that crowd, all grinning idiots looking for their comic relief as though these two ass-clowns can save us through laughter. If they're believers that 9/11 was an inside job and they still applaud these two jack-asses (one for sure) than they're also hypocrites for not calling Stewart out.

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  30. "...first a country goes a little bit senile, then noticeably demented, then completely stark raving running-around-naked-smearing-feces-all-over-yourself insane. Then it hurts itself."
    http://cluborlov.blogspot.com/

    So it was a pimp "rally to restore sanity." How could I stay away? There is a need for sane people to recognize each other.
    http://www.activistpost.com/2010/10/5-key-principles-that-unite-populist.html

    I've given up harping on "inside job." I hold no hope that the war criminals will be indicted and prosecuted. But maybe... just maybe... there is enough time to stop the feces-smearing part.

    "Stewart's message is basically that all Americans have the ability to just not be assholes, and the press has a responsibility to not reward being an asshole."
    http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2010/10/30/jon_stewart_sanity_rally/index.html

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