12.31.2010

Ring In… More Of The Same

Test-marketed over thirty years, and soon to eat up much media space.

On the agenda tonight: popular pricing, to draw a class other than the one Reagan actually served:
New Year's Eve Celebration 2010
8:30 p.m. – 1:00 a.m.
$125.00 per person for General Admission (tax and gratuity included; 21 and over only)
$150.00 per person for our VIP Package (tax and gratuity included; 21 and over only)

Please join us to celebrate the arrival of 2011 at our New Year's Eve celebration under the wings of Air Force One! Everyone had a fantastic time last year and this year is going to be bigger and bolder. Ring in the New Year at the Reagan Library, the only place to be this New Year's Eve in Southern California. Enjoy an elaborate night of celebration-extensive hors d'oeuvres, dinner stations, gourmet dessert and chocolate buffets, a champagne toast at midnight and all of the party essentials-hats, horns, streamers and more! Dance to fabulous live music performed by the incredible Pat Longo Orchestra! There will be something for everyone at this grand celebration. Watch the ball drop and more as you welcome in the New Year!

Reservations are required and are limited. Seating will be general seating at tables of 10.

A limited number of VIP Packages are now available! For $150.00 per person you can purchase our special VIP Package for our New Years Eve. This includes preferred seating with a private table especially for your group, as well as a wine for your table!
I'd rather party like it's 1941 or '42—Having fun at roller skating party at Savoy Ballroom.
Chicago, Illinois
.
Russell Lee, 1941

Brooklyn, New York.
Red Hook housing development. Jitterbugs at the community center party.

Arthur Rothstein, 1942
Photos: Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

1941-2: people were back at work, advocates for their interests were among those in power, and things were about to change for the better.

Our Depression, Less Than Great

Drought refugee's car on U.S. Highway 99 between
Bakersfield and Famoso, California
.
Dorothea Lange, 1939
Library of Congress FSA/OWI Archive
Regarding our government's economic priorities, the routinely brilliant image and text of Driftglass' take on our own Depression—"Napa Valley Grapes of Wrath"—says it all.

With a new year ahead, I plan to start focusing on some more recent history.


In preparation for what's coming up in 2011.

Freeloaders

A little something for under Georgia Christmas trees, 1940—
Cartoon ... Columbus, Georgia newspaper ... December 15, 1940 indicating boomtown and prosperity because of defense construction around Fort Benning.
Photographer: Marion Post Wolcott
Library of Congress FSA/OWI Archive
In the decades since Democrats lost the South, the disproportionate amount of guvmint cash going that way hasn't changed.

And no matter the degree of guvmint hating that's stoked there, it doesn't prevent spectacles like this year's parade of Southern politicians condemning the federal stimulus ... then claiming credit for projects funded in their districts and states.

With the most anti-tax states being tops in federal largesse, a recent Sadly, No thread had Spengler Dampniche proposing a "'get out what you put in'" state-by-state movement"—
The baggers will get behind it because they all think they're giving the most; if a couple of Repukes pick it up, the thing will amplify and wash up to the steps of the capitol. Of course it would never pass... But it might make a lot of coastal folks realize they’re getting screwed by the so-called heartland.

I suggest we call this movement No Free Lunch. Are you with me? Hey, gang! New idear to make all those WELFARE QUEENS in teh blue state urban centars SUFFER FOR BEING LAZY!!!!! NO FREE LUNCH! Your state can't take out more than it puts in!!! I think Idaho would be first in line, or Texas.

After me: a conservative is someone who believes if anybody but himself can win the game, the game is rigged.
More here
No Free Lunch. I'm telling you. They'll remember it: It started here at Sadly, No. Swept the nation. Alaska, most of the South, the core of the heartland, and some crackpot border states jumped hardest into the fray, demanding those freeloaders like California and New York get back only as much as they put in... only to discover the tit in their state was attached to the cow in another.
Brilliant idea; too bad about how far those ever get.

A very good thing this year: Catherine Russell's revival of a 1938 Andy Razaf/Paul Denniker song, "We the People."

Razaf's lyrics suggest a sensible nation, that's "Got to keep happy, Got to keep snappy... Got to have rhythm and song..."

And—
We don't give a rap about taxation,
Long as legislators give the nation,
Syncopation!
Those were the days...

But some things never change.

They may live in what are called "Red States" now, but they still are hopelessly challenged by spelling and grammar.

Some FSA examples, taken in Georgia, 1936-7.

Arnold Rothstein—
Dorothea Lange—

12.25.2010

Santas, For Rich And For Poor

Washington, D.C.
Christmas shopping in Woolworth's five and ten cent store.

John Collier, December 1941.
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive
Naughty or nice?

... Naughty, schmaughty
for some, it matters not one bit.

Not when bipartisan Santa came early this year, with those gifts of extra special tax rates and no estate tax; delivered to the top tier, which includes plenty of the Not Nice.

So, it comes as no suprise to see Emptywheel report: "Wal-Mart Hikes Toy Prices Just as Congress Gives the Waltons Huge Tax Breaks."

And another big, fat Christmas gift to the corporate masters; the peasants being told they'll receive a net neutrality package.

Thanks to efforts by followers of Republican Jesus, Christmas nearly arrived with nothing for Ground Zero first responders.

Until the last minute, and only after the brilliant shaming by Jon Stewart pushed the story into the media spotlight.

Riveting, too, was the contrast between those sleazy congressional Republicans, and Stewart's guests in a followup segment: some representatives of the first responders—four New York public servants who have made the most incredible sacrifices, and consider it a privilege to have done so.

It was striking because of its rarety, but still impressive to see 8+ minutes of national TV devoted to the stories of some articulate and unbelievably dedicated working people.

The ultimate victory for first responders—albeit with the fund halved, to soothe Republican hurt feelings—followed the thank God Almighty, free at last repeal of DADT, Thom Hartmann said midweek that Reid's threat of extra work days scared a few Republicans into being reasonable. Those two wins, and final ratification of the New Start Treaty sure seem to support that take.

Despite the seasonally inevitable frame of gift-giving—and the Republicans' power to play Scrooge—the DADT and first responder gains are in no way gifts. Not with the first being only one milestone on the road to full civil rights for a segment of the citizenry, and the second only what is owed to people who have sacrificed so much and need care so badly—including many who lost benefits when they became unable to work.

It's years since Woolworth's existed. The overly gifted rich plan to make the remnants of the New Deal disappear, too, and very soon.

Once unthinkable, it's now the direst of threats, what with the consensus of our bipartisan Establishment, the shameful media that serves it, and a broken political system.

After 30 years of bipartisan Reaganism—it could happen all too easily, and in an economic climate that already leaves plenty of people with nothing to fall back on.

Woolworth's is long gone; now there are dollar stores for the lower orders, if they can still afford to shop there.

But the goods at Woolworth's were better quality.

And, for most of the store's history, goods were manufactured by Americans who earned paychecks doing it.

12.20.2010

No Government Censor Needed

Photographer: Alfred T. Palmer. 1941 or 1942.
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive
The four freedoms. No government censor passes on what may appear in these publications. Crowded newstands such as these, with journals representing every political party and every social theory are possible only in a democracy, where there is freedom of speech and of the press.

Which reminds me of an old (no doubt apocryphal) story about Soviet journalists visiting the U.S. on a cultural exchange.

Noting the kind of stuff that got into print, the astonished Reds asked: "You don't have State control of your press? Then, how is it possible that they write such things?

I was just catching up on some LeShow editions, and December 5 features a long interview with Yves Smith, on the home mortagage meltdown.

The interview is a good one, with much detail on the abundance of scams pulled off, and the techniques used.

One striking, if unsurprising, point came when Shearer asked if it was mainly due to the financial illiteracy of journalists that this information failed to enter the public discourse.

Smith said that until robo-signing came to light, the people who perceived a nationwide, institutional pattern of crooked practices were mainly foreclosure defense lawyers. Whom journalists tended to view as stereotypical ambulance chasers. And, as these attorneys were often providing legal aid or working pro bono, they could be seen as low class—without the money that gives the banks "credibility," and thus, media access. Smith says the story's failure to come to national attention earlier was largely a matter of knowledge held by "two different sets of parties, with very different access to media."

And on other levels, the same kind of thing applies to figures like Geithner, whom Smith deems "a true believer"; thus, "more persusasive to the media than industry spokespeople."

Smith also says that Geithner, in a meeting with economics bloggers, admitted that HAMP, intended to help homeowners prevent foreclosure, had been gamed by lenders.

It all brings to mind how the prison industry is pushed as a source of jobs.

In this case, it seems like it would make economic sense for a segment of the populace to earn paychecks guarding a very large group of white-collar crooks.

... I can dream, anyway. As I dream of a news media that does its job.

12.12.2010

December Read: The Old Ideology's New Clothes

Tear Down This Myth: How the Reagan Legacy Has Distorted Our Politics and Haunts Our Future
Will Bunch; 2009

The Man Who Sold the World: Ronald Reagan and the Betrayal of Main Street America
William Kleinknecht; 2009
WPA/Federal Art Project: Newark, N.J., 1937 (Special Collections and Archives, George Mason University Libraries)
"Facts are stupid things," he famously mangled his line.

As the Reagan centennial approaches, two journalists bring up some stubborn facts—as did a few of their Reagan-era colleagues, back in the day.

One true thing about facts: they have a well-known liberal bias.

Something facts do not have: a lavishly-funded PR machine.

Reagan does.

Years before the man's death, efforts including Grover Norquist's "Reagan Legacy Project" set out to name every conceivable piece of public property after the man who encouraged Americans to hate government.

Will Bunch notes how, prior to Reagan's June 2004 funeral, former White House aides and advance men spent at least a dozen years pre-planning the televised week-long "'spontaneous' moment of national unity and shared grief."

When the day finally came, their prep work took the meticulously staged camera ops of the Reagan presidency to new levels of packaged spectacle, handed to a grateful corporate media.

Bunch quotes Richard Goldstein in the Village Voice
Each gesture was minutely choreographed, every tear strategically placed.
It's all to be expected: the Right has the money to invest in perpetual image polishing of a "PR outfit that became President," in the words of a former Reagan press secretary quoted in both books.

Both authors run through Reagan's lies, distortions, and fantasies; the economic and social depredations his policies set in motion; the myths his PR machine has promoted.

And there was the Democrats' reaction to Reagan's "popularity"—actually, not so great, during most of his eight years in office. Yet the party leadership's acceptance of the notion was the beginning of the end for Democratic effectiveness at governing—or at even managing a coherent message.

Bunch credits Reagan' willingness, as California governor, to combine "red meat rhetoric with closed-door compromise." Bunch believes that Reagan as president was often a pragmatist, and praises him for starting to ease tensions with the Soviets. But this was after Reagan had recklessly tempted raising tensions, with his Evil Empire cracks and other shenanigans.

Reagan may have been a sentimentalist, willing to acknowledge the humanity of his putative enemies—if he got to know them personally. Or if he saw something in a movie, which seems to have been his mode of perceiving the world.

Bunch describes at length Reagan's reaction to the 1983 broadcast of The Day After, and how its scenes of nuclear holocaust in a Midwestern town motivated him to work for an arms treaty.

Too bad no one ever showed him a movie about a struggling single mother; one wonders if that might have made it harder for him to turn real Americans into imaginary freeloading welfare queens. But he wouldn't have wanted them to be flesh-and-blood: the vision of dark-skinned, overly fertile women conjured up by his tall tales was too politically useful.

Just as—before being re-branded a "sunny optimist"—he advanced his career this way:
In 1969, as he geared up for a second run at governor, the students of Berkeley provided Reagan with another opportunity. Students and community activists rioted over a patch of campus-owned land they called People's Park.

Reagan sent in the National Guard. The image of a Guard helicopter dropping tear gas on the campus sent the governor's popularity soaring.

The next year, anti-war demonstrations caused more protests and a riot at UC Santa Barbara.

"If it takes a bloodbath to silence the demonstrators," Reagan said, "let's get it over with."
And Reagan's campaign for the presidential nomination was launched here: a proud symbol of "state's rights," best known as the site of murders committed very nearly with impunity.

There was no regard for the public good in Reagan or his machine.

Days before the 1980 election, Reagan blew off his handlers' attempts to prep him for debating Jimmy Carter, so confident was he of winning over his TeeVee audience.

Carter droned on about dull subjects like Americans going without national health care, which Reagan had long opposed.

Reagan replied with his foolproof zinger: "There you go again."

Reagan became president not merely to ensure that "America still lacks the national health-care program that Carter spoke about." [Bunch] The real goal was to undo the New Deal. At the time, unthinkable; now, distressingly far along.

During the Depression, both books note, the WPA wages Reagan's father and brother earned were all that kept the family afloat. For a time, Reagan was grateful, and considered himself a loyal Democrat. Later, as his acting fortunes fluctuated, he made helpful connections with the rich and powerful—and learned where to find the best pay for his loyalties.

Both authors cover similar ground on the impact of Reaganism since the man left office. Bunch writes in detail about the operatives and media strategies behind the post-presidency myth-making accomplished in Reagan's name. Much of Kleinknecht's book is a condemnation of what nearly thirty years of Reaganism has done to the country. This includes a look at life in Reagan's home town of Dixon, Illinois, before and since those policies triumphed.

Kleinknecht notes the political role of new wealth by the 80s, in bringing Reagan to power and promoting attitudes that remade the country. Of new wealth as a class with a certain mentality, Kleinknecht writes—
... the breed of businessmen who had been closest to Reagan during his rise in politics... were the ranchers, oilmen, and developers of the West and the South whose fortunes had been made in the postwar period... Most had built their businesses from the ground up in the booming communities of the sun belt, which left them with a raw notion of free enterprise that would not have been out of place in the Gilded Age. The wealthy families that had made up the eastern Republican establishment may have cherished their tradition of noblesse oblige, but this class of capitalists had little time for such altruism.
The business figures behind Reagan's presidential run manipulated the soft money loophole in campaign finance law; their innovation was the funneling of corporate donations to local Republican parties as a way around federal limits.

The payoff: Reagan's administration would be filled by figures fresh from corporate boardrooms. Here too, was a pioneering practice, but soon to become SOP for the GOP: the naming of corporate foxes to guard the henhouses of those regulatory agencies they had fought throughout their careers.

The press secretary quoted above had spoken to Mark Hertsgaard, for his 1988 On Bended Knee: The Press and the Reagan Presidency. Bunch describes how—
The nonstop PR offensive spin got to be too much for one deputy White House press secretary, Leslie Janka, who quit in protest after reporters were barred from covering the 1983 invasion of Grenada. "The whole thing was PR... This was a PR outfit that became President and took over the country. And to the degree then to which the Constitution forced them to do things like make a budget, run foreign policy and all that, they sort of did. But their first, last, and overarching activity was public relations."
Bunch writes of the real-life consequences of the image machine—
The Grenada operations indeed proved to be the place where deadly force and PR spin first met. The Pentagon's decision not to embed any journalists with combat troops in the first couple of days of the asualt was unprecedented; with the public clamoring for any kind of information about the fight, the only initial video footage of the invasion was what the government fed to the TV networks... Grenada created a new war template—heavily sanitized, easily winnable, boosting the president's popularity... Top Reagan public relations aide Deaver later admitted to Hertsgaard that he had backed the Grenada assault because "it was a good story" and added that "I think this country was so hungry for a victory, I don't care what the size of it was, we were going to beat the shit out of it."

The jingoistic military moves, the glow of hyperpatriotism, and the pure plays for public emotion, held together by the glue of Reagan's personal popularity and skills as a performer in the public eye, were critical to cementing the president's popularity in the mid-1980s, because of a dirty little secret so rarely reported in the press. The majority of voters disagreed with Ronald Reagan on most of the major issues facing America, from the time he took the oath of office until the day he left.
Kleinknecht's final chapter, "The Second-Rate Society," aims to sum up where we are now, after so many years of living with
...the most destructive element of the Reagan legacy: America's utter loss of national purpose... By discrediting government as a legitimate and meaningful presence in the lives of Americans... By exhorting Americans to place self-interest above all, [Reagan] undermined the spirit of sacrifice and the possibility of a common effort to solve our most pressing national problems.
"Second-rate": too high a ranking? For a country that starves public education; turns children into a captive audience for marketers; then names schools for the person who did so much to get us to this state?

An unaccountable elite has had impunity in looting whatever is left to loot of a hollowed out economy. At the level of the lower classes, we see daily how the Reaganite CEO mentality has trickled down upon us.

Most of my work has been in public or private non-profit institutions, and ever since Reagan, bosses have been eager to imitate the corporate big boys. They may not have stock options, but post-'80s non-profit managers have been happy enough to give themselves raises by laying off staff. And long-time staffers who built an organization became targets for termination—just in time to head off their collecting pensions.

Then there are the more recent employee-screwing innovations, including foreign outsourcing of whatever institutional functions can be auctioned off.

As if to mimic corporate mass media's role in a dumbed-down culture, the institutions that should be guarding our heritage are instead trashing it—as in libraries being run by people who despise those old-fashioned, unsexy books, and can't get rid of them fast enough.

But this is all just the tip of the iceberg that is the true Reagan legacy.

That real legacy, joined to Republican control of public messaging, has been hard at work, ensuring that only correct thought will be heard publicly during next year's centennial.

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12.10.2010

If A Tree Falls In The Forest

... Or the update might be:
did a Senate fillibuster happen, if it's only on C-span, and covered in a few liberalish places online?



The four freedoms. The news every hour on the hour. Americans live in one of the few nations in the world where their news is not censored. It is vitally important that all the news reaches the citizens of a democracy for they need this knowledge in order to govern themselves intelligently.
Photographer: Alfred T. Palmer, 1941 or 1942
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Digby here: on the need for a Wikileaks, in the face of the corporate manipulation allowed to present itself as a "news source."

Sanders began speaking at 10 this morning, and I listened to as much as possible, from noon to 4:00.

Besides confronting the problem of this current deal, and all the poison pills therein, it was a recitation of how the middle-class has been destroyed by decades of "free trade" and subsidies to the rich. And how the plan now is to kill off Social Security.

There's plenty of blame to go around: to Clinton, the DLC, et. al.

But whether Sanders mentioned the name or not: it was an indictment of three decades of Reaganism.

12.07.2010

Hoover Defeats Roosevelt

Unemployed youth. Washington, D.C., 1938.
Photographer: John Vachon
Library of Congress FSA/OWI Archive
















This "deal"
—made when the Dems still have Congress.

... Even before the mad tea party commences in January.

One good thing about their presumed presidential win of 2012: after that, we won't have to listen to Republicans pretending they care about any such thing as a "deficit."

Like all good suggestions, Blue Gal's won't be adopted by this administration.

And a hint of the final nail in the coffin, from Digby's post, above—
... Peter Orszag, recently departed from the administration (and reportedly headed to Citi), Dick Durbin, the president's proxy in the Senate, ex-labor leader Andy Stern along with numbers of Democratic Senators, [are] signaling that Social Security really is on the menu.
All lending support to Chris Hedges' thesis: that the establishment liberal class no longer has an institutional interest in or capacity for reform.

Next up: controlling access of the great unwashed?
... as I contemplate Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski's fake net neutrality proposal, and as I read news of MasterCard and Visa both freezing Julian Assange’s funds, I can't help but think this is the Titanic moment I've been expecting for years.

Sure, the crackdown–which puts our counterterrorism efforts to shame–is a response to the scope of this latest leak. Sure, it's an attempt to prevent the next leak, on Bank of America.

But just as much, it's about creating the excuse they need–the government and the legacy media protecting their turf–to undercut the power of the Internet.

12.04.2010

Obstructing Justice, Bipartisanly

California Federal Art Project
Library of Congress
Details this week on the thwarting of the most advanced attempt at prosecuting Bush adminitration torture and other war crimes.

David Corn's column is sub-headed, "A WikiLeaks cable shows that when Spain considered a criminal case against ex-Bush officials, the Obama White House and Republicans got really bipartisan."

Corn writes—
In its first months in office, the Obama administration sought to protect Bush administration officials facing criminal investigation overseas for their involvement in establishing policies that governed interrogations of detained terrorist suspects. A "confidential" April 17, 2009, cable sent from the US embassy in Madrid to the State Department—one of the 251,287 cables obtained by WikiLeaks—details how the Obama administration, working with Republicans, leaned on Spain to derail this potential prosecution.
The prosecution would have been of
... former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales; David Addington, former chief of staff and legal adviser to Vice President Dick Cheney; William Haynes, the Pentagon's former general counsel; Douglas Feith, former undersecretary of defense for policy; Jay Bybee, former head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel; and John Yoo, a former official in the Office of Legal Counsel.
Among other actions, the Obama administration used Republican emissaries to Spain, Judd Gregg and Mel Martinez, to put a stop to this.

That was during April 2009.

By August, there this little development: "Holder Overturns Justice Jackson and Nuremberg."

Peterr wrote at the time that, with Holder's statement that "the Department of Justice will not prosecute anyone who acted in good faith and within the scope of the legal guidance given by the Office of Legal Counsel regarding the interrogation of detainees"
... Holder baptized the infamous OLC memos as legally binding doctrine that validates the conduct of anyone who wishes to offer the same defense put forward by the defendants at Nuremberg: "Befehl ist Befehl," or in English, "an order is an order."
Scott Horton here, on Spanish media coverage of U.S. interference in the country's criminal justice system. Horton writes of the background—
The cables also reflect a high level of concern at the prospect that Spanish and German prosecutors ...would share notes and begin taking action. In fact exactly this sort of cooperation occurred (as it has occurred between Spanish, German, and Italian prosecutors in several other cases involving the CIA extraordinary rendition program), and U.S. concerns that it would block their efforts were proven correct. After political pressure was applied to Germany to withdraw the arrest warrants, they were simply reissued by the Spanish magistrates, who were better shielded against political manipulation.
Shielded from domestic manipulation, perhaps; not shielded from the awesome might of American bipartisanship.

12.01.2010

The Finest Products of Capitalism

Family of migrant fruit worker camped along railroad tracks.
Berrien County, Michigan. 1940
Photographer: John Vachon
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

A couple of stories on NPR this morning had some actual content.

As always, items are presented with no—or very narrow—context. Yet there are many dots that could be connected by a culture willing and able to do so.

Unemployed Iraq vet considers suicide after being wiped out by BP disaster...

The "we don't ask for help around here" mentality will never die, as it serves the owners so well.

Yet there was a time when we had a government that wanted the public to look around and see what needed to change.

From one moment in that time—July 1940—and from a single place in a landscape full of hurt: a few of Vachon's Berrien County photos—


Migrant child eating in front of tent home.


Father and son from Chicago picking strawberries...


Migrant woman from Arkansas in roadside camp...
















Migrant fruit worker from Tennessee...















Family of migratory workers from Texas.


Baby in back seat of migrant workers' automobile...

The right has used the same tactics throughout the years.

Today, it screams there is no poverty because people own TVs.

So I expect that the New Deal's opponents called that baby pampered, being born to parents who had a car with a plush seat.

But one thing has changed: in the 30s and 40s—or any time before Reagan—most people would have found it absurd to say that, because they had cars to camp in, the families John Vachon met were doing just fine.

Another difference: the Depression-era press was as Republican and slanted then as it is now, but before ownership concentration, there were commonly available alternatives.

Of the other story this morning, there's no cost to Republicans in causing Millions To Lose Unemployment Benefits.

Not when Fox has a large voting segment of the population cheering for the unemployed to be screwed.

The long-ago wisdom of St. Ronnie—that "Unemployment insurance is a pre-paid vacation for freeloaders"—is on its way to being unquestioned.

Later this morning, Clever Sister forwarded a local link.

The social safety net is truly renewed this holiday season: donate a toy, and area businesses will give you a free tattoo or an oil change.

Excess humans in an economy without jobs.

Fathers thinking their families would be better off without them.

In another place, and a bit earlier than the WPA, an artist had some things to say about the social breakdown around him...


John Heartfield
The Finest Products of Capitalism, 1932

















December WPA Calendar


Artist: Jerome Henry Rothstein
Library of Congress

11.29.2010

Once Upon A Time

... When government actually tried to ameliorate what was wrong in the country.




Doorway, Cincinnati, Ohio. 1939
Photographer: John Vachon
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive
...Instead of proposing a budget gimmick that will punish middle-class workers and serve only as an anti-stimulus.

Reducing government workers to a sub-minimum wage would save ever so much more than a paltry $2 billion.

And it would be ever so much more faithful to the Republican policies being pursued here.

Despite this insanity, one group of government workers has a winning formula:
• Take one worried parent who seeks help for his troubled teenager.
• Invest time and money to groom the teen until he can be tried as an adult.
• Make high-profile arrest, having foiled the plot that you created in the first place.

Voilà: the FBI has itself a make-work goldmine.
A family is devastated because Mohamed Osman Mohamud's father asked government agents for help.

Following Mohamud's arrest, some for-real terrorists are successful: in torching the mosque he attended
Most of the Mosque was destroyed and the FBI has issued a $10,000 reward for leads... Area Somali Americans are planning a peace and unity rally outside Portland City Hall today at 5pm. In their statement they say "The Somali American community strongly condemns any type of violence. We left Somalia because of violence."
In other events that will not make headlines: Boehner's Staff Meets With Terrorists.

11.20.2010

November Read (II): Lost in Idiot America

Ohio: WPA Art Program
Library of Congress
Idiot America: How Stupidity Became a Virtue in the Land of the Free,
Charles P. Pierce; 2009
Pierce's tour of this terrain is expanded from magazine pieces, for which he traveled to some varied places—historic and intellectual, as well as geographic.

The historic context has two intellectual touchstones.

One is the notion of "the American crank," as
... one of the great by-products of the American experiment. The country was founded on untested, radical ideas...

The American crank stood alone, a pioneer gazing at the frontier of his own mind the way the actual pioneers looked out over the prairie. American cranks fled conventional thinking...

... Very often, it was the cranks who provided the conflict by which the consensus changed. They did so by working diligently on the margins until, subtly, without most of the country noticing, those margins moved...
Pierce's premise is that the freedom to test ideas made America a great place for cranks, even though the public tended not to accept their ideas readily. If some cranks were self-deluded or mere snake oil salesmen, others dreamed up innovations with merits that might eventually be recognized. In our time, TV can make any charlatan an instant success.

The life and work of James Madison serves as the other point of historic reference. Of the Constitution's authors, "Madison was always the guy under the hood, tinkering with the invention he'd helped devise."
Madison believed in self-government in all things, not merely in our politics. He did not believe in drift. "A popular government," he famously wrote, "without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a tragedy or a Farce, or perhaps both." The great flaw, of course, is that, even given the means to acquire information, the people of the country may decline. Drift is willed into being.
Pierce surveys that "drift" in our current intellectual landscape.

First stop: Kentucky's Creation Museum. Where, to make the point about humans having co-existed with them, the museum entrance features a dinosaur—
Which was wearing a saddle.

It was an English saddle, hornless and battered. Apparently, this was a dinosaur that performed in dressage competitions and stakes races. Any dinosaur accustomed to the rigors of ranch work and herding other dinosaurs along the dusty trail almost certainly would have worn a sturdy western saddle. This, obviously, was very much a show dinosaur.
From there, Pierce goes on to examine the war on expertise, waged via "Three Great Premises of Idiot America"
... Any theory is valid if it moves units...
... Anything can be true if someone says it loudly enough...
... Fact is that which enough people believe. Truth is measured by how fervently they believe it.
We are surrounded by illustrations, and Pierce writes terrific stuff about the ones he's selected.

He looks at 2008's Republican presidential candidates in "debate," rushing to establish their fundamentalist Christian credentials and to outdo each other in promises to "double Guantanamo," and to claim the mantle of fictional torturer Jack Bauer.
This was not a serious discussion of the reality of torture, any more than the discussion about evolution had anything to do with actual science. It was an exercise in niche marketing. Evolution and torture were ... being discussed... in the context of what they meant as a sales pitch to a carefully defined group of consumers. They were a demonstration of a product...
After all, these candidates were competing to succeed a president with whom 57% of the electorate once wanted to have a beer—
Consider all the people with whom you've tossed back a beer. How many of them would you trust with the nuclear launch codes? How many of them can you envision in the Oval Office? Running a cabinet meeting? Greeting the president of Ghana? Not only was this not a question for a nation of serious citizens, it wasn't even a question for a nation of serious drunkards.
A chapter on AM radio tells the story of how, during World War II, visionary white DJs broadcast black music from Nashville's WLAC. Their late-night shows transmitted over a signal that reached much of North America; in the process, "integrating the country, even if the country pretended not to notice."

It's a sad commentary on cultural decline that AM was remade in the 80s, and that WLAC now follows the formula of airing nationally syndicated hate-talk shows.

Pierce visits a talk radio industry conference, where attendees puff with pride at the sponsor's praise of G. Gordon Liddy, the First Amendment, and America as "process," mashed together into a speech that "sounds like de Tocqueville filtered through Tony Robbins."
Since right-wing populism has at its heart an "anti-elitist" distrust of expertise, talk radio offers the purest example of the Three Great Premises at work. A host is not judged a success by his command of the issues, but purely by whether what he says moves the rating needle... If the needle moves enough, then the host is adjudged an expert... Gordon Liddy is no longer a gun-toting crackpot. He has an audience. He must know something.
This time around, Michael Savage is given the annual "Freedom of Speech" award.

He does not attend, but sends a DVD performance that plays "like a hostage tape"—
There is some stirring in the theater. This display is not what many of those present had in mind. This is the acknowledged leader of their profession, and he's acting like a guy you'd run away from on the sidewalk.
Pierce visits with some people particularly affected by the dumbing down. He writes the moving story of Alaskan natives watching their land sink into the sea; all while well-funded climate change denial efforts, including Bush administration suppression of NASA evidence, are being positioned to overcome science.

And there is a powerful chapter about the Florida hospice workers whose years of dedication led to their working in the face of death threats, as Terry Schaivo was made into the focus of fundamentalist political rage.

Pierce, as always, is a great read. Along with righteous anger at deserving targets, he supplies laughter at the darkness.

11.13.2010

November Read (I): Unreason

Ohio: WPA Art Program
Library of Congress
The Age of American Unreason
Susan Jacoby, 2009
This title and Charles Pierce's Idiot America (post to follow) are fitting reads, post-election. Both were published last year, but need no election tie-in—not when there's always ample evidence of the 'Murkan public's cluelessness. It just happens that we now are experiencing the full effects of the Right's mid-term election tactics. Having engineered the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision and made sure the media played up Koch-sucking tea partiers, the Right just keeps improving upon its ways of making the electorate stupider and more delusional than before.

Taking Richard Hofstadter's 1963 Anti-Intellectualism in American Life as a point of departure, Susan Jacoby offers a guide to the history of that anti-intellectualism, along with its forms and uses today.

From the country's start there were tensions between desire for learning and disdain for it, stemming from common disapproval of book learning or knowledge without obvious practical gain.

Also early was the divide between Jefferson and others who wanted to build public education, versus those unwilling to pay taxes to finance it. Southern plantation owners were the major opponents, and the strongest educational institutions would develop first in New England. By the end of the nineteenth century the mid-Atlantic, mid-West, and Pacific had caught up; the South would stay close to its origins in "a slavery-based class system... indifferent to the education of all but the rich."

Adult education would also take root in New England, with the start of the lyceum movement in the 1820s. The public popularity of lectures on serious topics grew in the 1840s and 50s, as a national literature was also emerging, with the first publications of Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville and Whitman.

Even so, "America stood with its intellectual house already divided." By 1800, what we now call Christian fundamentalism had developed in response to the social upheaval of the Revolutionary War and the freethinking of the Founding Fathers.

The period after the Civil War saw the rise of an "ideologically driven pseudoscience intended to rationalize the Gilded Age's excesses of wealth and poverty." Though the term was not yet in use, Darwin's work was distorted to become what we know as "social Darwinism." Business tycoons and important intellectuals would embrace what Jacoby deems America's "first mass-marketed wave of pseudoscience."

During the period
...there were really two culture wars over evolution—the first centering on the challenge to traditional religion posed by Darwin's real science and the second rooted in a pseudoscientific social theory that attempted to transpose Darwin's observations about man in a state of nature into a prescription for the way human beings ought to treat one another in a state of civilization. In the first culture war, nearly all intellectuals were on the side of science; in the second, many (though not all) succumbed to the pseudoscience... The attraction of upper-class intellectuals to a theory maintaining that "tooth and claw" laws of survival in nature were appropriate and inevitable in society did much to exacerbate a religiously based anti-intellectualism already aroused by evolution's challenge to biblical literalism.
Herbert Spencer's books won adherents to "the gospel of laissez-faire economics as the only way to ensure that the fittest would triumph in society through a process of 'social selection.'" Promotion of eugenics would become the next stage in upper-class intellectuals' embrace of these ideas.

Both poles of this "culture war"
...shared an inability to distinguish between science and social pseudoscience, and they passed on their confusion to a public that worshipped the fruits of science but was fundamentally ignorant of the scientific method.
Of the biblical literalist camp of the time, Jacoby writes that the influential William Jennings Bryan had a narrow education and no understanding of scientific method. Yet—
Bryan would no doubt have been astonished had anyone told him in 1896, when he made his "Cross of Gold" speech, that by the end of the twentieth century, many Americans who shared his religious beliefs would ally themselves with the political party favoring the interests of the rich—and that the Social Gospel, enjoining Christians to help their fellow man, would be replaced by the conviction that the Lord helps those who help themselves (and that the Bible tells us so).
Jacoby has an enlightening take on the "middlebrow" culture of the 1950s and early 60s, which she sees as a largely unrecognized secularizing trend, developing from changes in the publishing industry that began around the 1920s.

Those innovations began with Emmanuel Haldeman-Julius, son of an immigrant Russian book-binder, and
... a publishing genius who combined the pamphleteering of the Enlightenment, the ideas of cooperative economic effort that characterized the Progressive Era, and the new mass-marketing techniques of the 1920s.
His publications,
with a ... strong debt to... nineteenth-century freethought as well as twentieth-century psychology, philosophy, and sociology, represented the traditional American ideal of self-education...
Calling his project a "university in print," Haldeman-Julius published pamphlet-sized, 15,000 word books and sold them for $.25 each. These passed from hand to hand in the Depression, thus reaching a vast audience. 300 million Blue Books were published from 1919 to 1949; soon after that, large publishers would seriously enter the paperback market.

Jacoby sees a parallel between the aspirations of education-hungry readers who bought Blue Books and readers like her own parents, who later became Book of the Month Club subscribers. "Middlebrow" culture may have been derided by intellectuals, but along with forgettable novels, the BOMC published 1984 and Catch-22; Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man and titles by James Baldwin. Non-fiction included The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich and Silent Spring.

"Middlebrow," notes Jacoby,"was a reading culture"; readers were willing to buy thick books, and it wasn't unusual for popular novelists to incorporate solid information into their tales. Irving Stone's 1961 The Agony and the Ecstasy was a "703-page novel... faithful to what is known about Michelangelo and ... suffused with real art history." In contrast, Dan Brown's 2003 The Da Vinci Code, "distorts art history in the service of a supernatural thriller that has nothing to do with the real Leonardo..."

Jacoby cites figures on the post-war boom in symphony orchestras and local art museums [to at least some degree, I believe this may have grown from seeds sown during local WPA arts projects]. Jacoby also notes the growth of "art film" houses by the early 60s.

Jacoby finds the high point of American magazines lasted into the 70s and late 80s, years when she "made a good living writing serious articles for women's magazines—most between 3,000 and 5,000 words." She notes her 1988 assignment for Glamour, to write about the status of Soviet women under Perestroika. Jacoby also worked for Cosmopolitan; she cites a thank-you note she was sent by Helen Gurley Brown, in appreciation of a a long article and Jacoby's use of a quote from Paradise Lost.

A glance at either magazine today shows what a very different world we live in.

Chapters on recent years cover right-wing spin; the attack on science; the political rise of the religious right; Bush's wars; and the mass media's overall contribution to stupefying the public mind.

Which brings us back to elections. Jacoby tells how her relatives and most of their circle voted for FDR and Truman, but believed Adlai Stevenson—the prototype of an "elitist" Democrat, decades before the right's branders hit upon that term—"was too much of an egghead to have any understanding of ordinary people and their problems."
My grandmother, who before her death at age ninety-nine boasted that she had never voted for a Republican, was able to overcome her distaste for Stevenson's syntax and elevated vocabulary only by recalling the Depression and her beloved FDR. "Adlai talked down to people," she recalled, "and he didn't have the common touch. Ike had the common touch and I loved him, but in the end, remembering which party gave us Social Security and which party couldn't care less about starving old people, I just couldn't bring myself to vote Republican."
Stevenson lost, but Eisenhower was probably to the left of Obama in most things. Certainly, he never would have considered messing with Social Security, just to please "a few... Texas oil millionaires."

But Ike faced an electorate that knew very well what the New Deal had done for them.

The decades of dumbing down have paid off; the more we descend into feudalism, the larger the segment of the peon class willing to vote for having their lives made even worse.

11.08.2010

Weapon-Grade Toxic Material

S. Broder
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1942
Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections, Brandeis University
Sure, they feel cocky after the election. Plus, it's in their favor that public attention span and memory grows shorter daily.

Still, I think the Republicans will have to wait a couple of generations to pull off an effective whitewash of George Jr.'s image.

Even with the charm tour he's embarked on, full of visits with the finest journalists Rupert's money can buy.

But, finally: some print for Presidential Library.
(Artist's rendering: Steve Shepard)

11.06.2010

State of The Union

Klamath Falls, Oregon.
Russell Lee, 1942
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

From George "No Torture on My Watch" Washington...

To George - Torture? "Damn right" - Dubya...






It's the endless detour we've taken—
ever since Our Leaders made that turn down
It's-Not-Illegal-If-The-President-Does-It Lane...

Speaker Pelosi took impeachment off the table, all so Dems could accomplish The People's Business; Republicans extend their big fat thanks.

For our elite criminal class, it's as likely as any form of accountability ever will be. Still, the admirable Peter DeFazio is saying publicly that John Roberts deserves impeachment.

If only things could be... all up to DeFazio...

11.05.2010

It's Always Christmas...

...When You Are Republican.
Santa Claus in town square.
Columbus, Georgia.
Marion Post Wolcott, 1940

Library of Congress,
FSA/OWI Archive

The fat-cat class of Republican, that is.

For their hate-radio and Fox hypnotized base: not much Christmas.

Their betters are poised to finish looting what's left of this country and its tattered safety net.

Here's hoping the base enjoy the tea—while they can still afford to buy groceries.

Once they can't, they'll get the only gift Republican Santa ever brings them: the chance to blame the darkies and the hippies.

10.31.2010

Halloween

"Children at Halloween party, waiting for signal to come for refreshments. Shafter migrant camp, California."
Dorothea Lange, 1938
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive
Its proximity to Election Day becomes prophetic each cycle.




A segment of their religious nutcase base may call the date Satanic—and its candy cursed—but Republicans own this day.

They've got the costumes.

The terrifying tall tales.

Working in such plush, lavishly funded laboratories as they do, Republican mad scientists find it a breeze to create monsters.

More driftglass, on the unveiling of this year's model
... Mainstream Media began began predictably and endlessly fetishizing as Fresh!And!New! a Teabagger Movement which had clearly been fabricated almost entirely out of the body-parts of old Republicans, and reanimated by the same radical Right wing billionaire industrialists who have bankrolled every other Republican crackpot power-grab for the last 50 years.
The course of Republican denials...
From the century of quaint, old media: a mundane, "I'm not a crook."

To—excuse, me: am I in the 21st or 16th century?—"I'm not a witch."

(Also: not much of a look-alike here, but, good points)...
None of this matters, of course. It's not only for Halloween that Republicans get to dress up the Dems: as the Commie/Socialist/Muslim/fill in the blank boogeyman!

It has been pointed out by others before, but—
Weren't the Commies previously vanquished by St. Ronnie?
Speaking of ancient history: a caller to Thom Hartmann's show reminded listeners that St. Ronnie's Bitburg visit included placing a wreath at Waffen SS graves; any connection between that and candidate Iott's dress-up choice?

We've been on this haunted house ride, year after year...

Eight of the Cheney administration.

Followed by Dems... With a genuine mandate they never wanted to use. Their flailing only of use in reinforcing the noise machine's anti-government narrative. And in "proving" that "socialism" doesn't work.

We have a wide-eyed, low-information audience eager to believe tall tales, like this from Morning Edition
LIASSON: Democrat Dan Teters of Chicago is a party loyalist. He says he'll vote for his incumbent...

... But, like a lot of voters who wanted change in 2008 and still do, Teters doesn't have a problem with the prospect of Republicans controlling Congress.

Mr. TETERS: I'm a little bit like many people I know, who say let's try something else, what we've got isn't working. Just because one or the other party controls one or both houses doesn't mean that nothing gets done. Just sometimes the agenda changes.
Republican bait-and-switch goes seasonal, with the hand holding out a supposed Treat of "divided government." If the electorate falls for it, the reality will be classic Trick—shut down government...

... With one exception: staging investigations, and possibly, impeachment of the Kenyan Usurper.

Which may all be test marketing for launching the worst monster to date.

At the start of the campaign season, the media in my state immediately elected the Republican our new governor; it's all over but for that candidate's party counting the votes.

Working in a public institution as I do, a one-way ticket to the job market funhouse may not be far in the future.

A prospect that always reminds me of this.

Joyce McGreevy got it exactly, on interviews:
The process is an exercise in humiliation, and the prize for success is a nightmare -- employment by your torturers.

10.24.2010

Power of Reason

The Feast of Pure Reason (193?)
Jack Levine
It's taken decades and staggering amounts of money; the killing of newspapers and TV journalism as the right-wing gained its lock on mass media.

It all adds up to the average person either tuning in to propaganda, or just tuning out.

Except that they aren't really tuned out. After decades of the best, most pervasive propaganda money can buy, the messages—"taxes: bad"; "rich people create jobs"—come through loud and clear.

From Matt Taibbi's new book is this excerpt: "America on Sale." Taibbi writes on the scam of states and municipalities plugging current budget holes by selling off remaining infrastructure: to Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds unaccountable to U.S. scrutiny. And on this setting up
...yet another diabolic cycle for ordinary Americans, engineered by the grifter class. A Pennsylvanian like Robert Lukens sees his business decline thanks to soaring oil prices that have been jacked up by a handful of banks that paid off a few politicians to hand them the right to manipulate the market. Lukens has no say in this; he pays what he has to pay. Some of that money of his goes into the pockets of the banks that disenfranchise him politically, and the rest of it goes increasingly into the pockets of Middle Eastern oil companies. And since he's making less money now, Lukens is paying less in taxes to the state of Pennsylvania, leaving the state in a budget shortfall. Next thing you know, Governor Ed Rendell is traveling to the Middle East, trying to sell the Pennsylvania Turnpike to the same oil states who've been pocketing Bob Lukens's gas dollars. It's an almost frictionless machine for stripping wealth out of the heart of the country, one that perfectly encapsulates where we are as a nation.
We used to have a population with a sense of voting its self-interest. True, some would have found such work by Jack Levine overly Red—
The Feast of Pure Reason caught a capitalist, a policeman, and a politician in convivial discussion. The painting was done under the auspices of the WPA, which donated it to the Museum of Modern Art. But the trustees of the museum debated at length before allowing the painting to be exhibited, fearful of offending the capitalists who had endowed the museum.
–Marcia Corbino, American Artist, 1985.
But at the time it was painted, it reflected common knowledge about there being sides, as well as about who was on which one.

The creation of a large middle-class was a hard-won achievement. Its death is being marked in individual and family pain, not mass action. And Real Americans™ recoil in horror from action other than blaming the wrong targets, as instructed by Professor Glenn Beck.

Lee Fang lays it all out:
MEMO: Health Insurance, Banking, Oil Industries Met With Koch, Chamber, Glenn Beck To Plot 2010 Election
At long last, we have this suggestion for new, improved wingnut labeling—
"If you don't like being called teabaggers..."

10.22.2010

Hypocritical Oath

Quack doctor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 1938
Phototgrapher: Arthur Rothstein
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Over a billion in aid pledged to Haiti; funds frozen when a secret hold is placed by a senator.

Late September:
The maneuver is revealed to have been by Tom Coburn, M.D.

October 22:
A cholera epidemic in northern Haiti has claimed 135 lives and infected 1,500 people, an official said Thursday amid concerns of a wider outbreak.

10.20.2010

Justice

Photos below: Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Judge. Rustburg, Virginia.
John Vachon, 1941

From the days before public faces of power were groomed to look less overtly like gangsters...












County judge... Leadville, Colorado.
Marion Post Wolcott, 1941
Except for a little matter of timing, this would be no news: Republican feels entitled to apology—from the target of her husband's harrassment.

That husband long since being given that gift of a lifetime spot, with nary a conflict to be seen here—
Virginia Thomas has long been active in Republican and conservative politics. But over the past year, she has assumed a more prominent role, founding a group called Liberty Central, which advertises itself as linked to the Tea Party, and raising funds from anonymous donors to oppose what she has called the leftist "tyranny" of the Obama administration and congressional Democrats.
From Nina Totenberg's story this morning. I thought she also brought up Alito's plan to avoid the SOTU, but NPR has nothing posted about that.

I see references to Alito's saying he won't sit there "like a potted plant"—why bother going if he can't sass Obama. But today the phrasing I heard (or thought I heard, through morning brain fog) was that he refused to sit there "stoically."

Stoicism: good enough for the little people.

As we watch these vultures pick clean the remaining bones of a minimally functioning democracy.

Another FSA picture:
Royal Oak, Michigan.
Arthur S. Siegel, 1939
A long-ago demagogue claimed "Social Justice" as his motive.

Our currently loudest one turns his followers against the very notion.


A philosophy very pleasing to the company he keeps.

Punch Line...

... Not intended by NPR; yet Morning Edition asks,
How Can You Tell When A CEO Is Lying?
Gee, dunno; but... could it be...
His lips are moving?







"Manager with peacetime output of curlers. 1942?"
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Yes, I know I should pay attention only to the local announcer's letting me know how much time remains for getting out the door.

But the inanity is ever more grating.

This time, it's a gee-whiz story: Stanford School of Business study purports to analyze the signs of this unusual behavior. One sign being that "lying executives tend to overuse words like we and our team when they talk about their company." As one of the authors says—
If I'm saying I or me or mine, I'm showing my ownership of the statement, so psychologically, I'm showing that I'm responsible for what I'm saying.
While I realize this show has been on another planet for some time, I still get irritated by this stuff.

Because in the real world, everyone knows:
Boss + "I" = credit claimed for work done by someone else
The annoying Steve Inskeep is a master of what has become the program's format of choice: the lame, forced segue from one story to another.

As in, record spending on political ads introduced with, "let's go from struggling homeowners to struggling media companies."

Followed by a story with no substance: spending sure is up this year, and that sure is good business for media companies.

Because—except for the occasional rotten apple—CEOs make things great.

And it's natural that Republican CEOs should be running state governments.

In California.

In Michigan... It looks like I'd have to do quite a bit of digging around for local liberal blogs to find anything written against that guy, smitten as the state's media appear to be. Have to settle for this from the CPUSA: Michigan GOP Governor Ticket Favors Outsourcing, Privatization.

In Florida... well, that guy is too blatant a crook to be trumpeted all that loudly...

Everywhere else, though: those brilliant CEOs surely can be trusted to take care of... everything.

10.16.2010

Millions

Photographer: Alfred T. Palmer [1941 or '42]
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Caption: "The four freedoms. The people gather on a million street corners to discuss a million problems. Only in a democracy are they free to discuss the affairs of their nation and the affairs of the world. Only in a democracy would we find this free mingling of a dozen different races. The scene is Columbus Circle, New York."

Romantically overblown—and less than convincing about acceptance of "different races." The concept of "race" had even more weight then, with the caption writer detecting "a dozen" in this scene. That idea of "race" being determined by religion and country of ancestry isn't so common now, with skin color being the main preoccupation. Here, the camera here has caught a single, visibly uncomfortable, black person.

Hyperbole aside, it does seem that—way back then—our citizenry had some real eagerness to "discuss the affairs of their nation."

Today: millions of Americans are watching millions of TVs tuned to Fox, where Glenn Beck does the thinking for them.

This week, millions of workers took to the streets of Paris and other French cities, to protest Sarkozy's plan for raising the retirement age. Which is intended to subsidize the wealthy by imposing austerity on the masses.

Workers were soon joined by students—who understand that keeping older people in the workplace squeezes out younger workers.

From the Irish Times article in that link, above—

Sign:
GRANDPA, GRANDMA
AT WORK
YOUTH
UNEMPLOYED
NO THANKS

Photo: Reuters

While here, billionaires propagandize our youth, to turn them against Social Security and pit them against retirees.

A safety net for all being something the owners will never allow.

And after 30 years of capital flight and killing off of worker rights—our labor force closes ranks... behind the bosses.

This was a particularly bad week at the office, with my already unreasonable workload being made very much worse. The result of the latest power grab by someone my boss allows to call these shots.

It makes me livid. Especially when I don't have the freedom of speech to say a thing. There's just the single remaining right of America's peon class: the freedom to try finding another job.

It all brings up a lot of anger I can barely articulate. As the mindless demands increase, any pretense of civil society is dropped. Divide and conquer has always worked in this country, and the tougher the times, the more it's true.

I'm lucky to have a cubicle to myself; there's only the occasional unpleasantness of having to make trips to the area where my "co-workers" and the managers are. Where most of my encounters have a bullying undertone.

One person in the bunch is OK, another is semi-OK. From the majority I would expect to hear, "The guy didn't pay the $75, so he deserved to lose his house."