As the idiocy goes on - the people behind the NY Times lead online page seem to have completely lost their wits, with ideology-tinged blitherings leading the site for two consecutive days this week (one about Obama's "overreach" when dealing with corporations, the other stupidly wondering just how big is the Gulf oil disaster...smaller than it seems, they would have it)...with all this idiocy, there's always Frank Rich. He came up with this gem today: While the greatest environmental disaster in our history is a trying juncture for Obama, it also provides him with a nearly unparalleled opening to make his and government’s case. The spill’s sole positive benefit has been to unambiguously expose the hard right, for all its populist pandering to the Tea Partiers, as a stalking horse for its most rapacious corporate patrons. If this president can speak lucidly of race to America, he can certainly explain how the antigovernment crusaders are often the paid toadies of bad actors like BP. Such big corporations are only too glad to replace big government with governance of their own, by their own, and for their own profit — while the “small people” are left to eat cake at their tea parties.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
let em eat cake with their tea
As the idiocy goes on - the people behind the NY Times lead online page seem to have completely lost their wits, with ideology-tinged blitherings leading the site for two consecutive days this week (one about Obama's "overreach" when dealing with corporations, the other stupidly wondering just how big is the Gulf oil disaster...smaller than it seems, they would have it)...with all this idiocy, there's always Frank Rich. He came up with this gem today: While the greatest environmental disaster in our history is a trying juncture for Obama, it also provides him with a nearly unparalleled opening to make his and government’s case. The spill’s sole positive benefit has been to unambiguously expose the hard right, for all its populist pandering to the Tea Partiers, as a stalking horse for its most rapacious corporate patrons. If this president can speak lucidly of race to America, he can certainly explain how the antigovernment crusaders are often the paid toadies of bad actors like BP. Such big corporations are only too glad to replace big government with governance of their own, by their own, and for their own profit — while the “small people” are left to eat cake at their tea parties.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Friday, May 14, 2010
Textbook Case
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Demonstrably false

Today's NY Times ran a front-page (or rather home-page) piece, the headline for which is demonstrably false. The headline claims that the "U.N. Climate Panel and Chief Face Credibility Siege".
Friday, February 05, 2010
shit

I’m not keen on ascribing grand inevitabilities to the human condition, nor all but the most basic fixed qualities to human “nature”. After all, our most outstanding quality is that which places us in contrast to nature. “Man-made” tends to signify as an antonym to “natural”.
Why then, do I feel compelled to note the maxim that shit always rises to the top when thinking about the good folks acting as executives at Goldman Sachs or AIG, etc. Or about those smooth talkers and quick thinkers working as lobbyists for some amoral power group or another.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Shame
Sunday, December 13, 2009
History outdoes parody

So in the end, it would appear that the Honduran "business class" (the euphemism most commonly used in the corporate press) has succeeded in simply removing an inconvenient president - inconvenient because he had an attack of scruples and social solidarity. Granted, it wasn't like the good old days, when such a leader would simply be killed, but effective in the long run. Send the military to carry the man out of the country in his pajamas, refuse to seriously negotiate with him or his representatives, a bit of the old "mano duro" applied to his supporters, and then a sham election that supposedly "brings back democracy". Impressive.
Friday, December 04, 2009
Friday, July 31, 2009

Krugman begins his column in the NYT today as such: "At a recent town hall meeting, a man stood up and told Representative Bob Inglis to “keep your government hands off my Medicare.” The congressman, a Republican from South Carolina, tried to explain that Medicare is already a government program — but the voter, Mr. Inglis said, “wasn’t having any of it.”
Sunday, April 19, 2009

It would seem logical and quite in keeping with "nature" that the wealthy and the elite would find myriad ways of justifying greed and the lack of solidarity. It makes little sense for the powerful to feel guilt over their position (indeed, such guilt or shame is what keeps a multitude of capable people from accumulating such wealth). It also seems fitting that greed-justifying writers, intellectuals and politicians (who may or may not directly belong to the economic elite itself) would be handsomely rewarded, lavishly praised and supported in many ways by that elite. John Kenneth Galbraith famously wrote in this regard that the modern conservative was engaged in the pursuit of finding a superior moral justification for greed.
Friday, April 17, 2009
looking foward cross-eyed

Watching the television news at lunchtime…hmmm…a case of willing suspension of disbelief?...a cynical exercise in ironic distance?...well, here the satellite company offers quite a full menu, from Spanish public TV news to the Spanish version of CNN (much higher quality than the international version), to BBC international (better still)…down to the weirdly hallucinogenic, futuristically frightening, empirical-proof-of-the-existence-of-evil Fox News (apart from the twisted, perverted, hateful politics, it’s just so damn ugly!), to the international French news channel (quite good), to Al Jazeera (in general, journalistically outstanding)…
In any case, we come upon the news that the Obama administration, after fully admitting to the prisoner treatment atrocities and war crimes committed by the CIA, has also fully absolved all those involved in said crimes. No point in dwelling over the past, they say. Better to look to the future. I’ll bet those folks who sat on the hot seat at Nuremberg before swinging on the noose wish the world would have been so “forward looking” back then.
This was followed, almost in sequence, by another piece concerning the Administration’s approach to Cuba…loosening up a bit…ah, but of course no thought about lifting the embargo. Hell no. As mentioned by an Administration spokesperson, the Cuban government must make some human rights progress first. Now, while the (CNN) newscaster was reading this news, I watched her face. I may have been imagining this, but she seemed to go just ever so slightly cross-eyed. Talk about cognitive dissonance! Or, ahem…was there? Is the world so utterly stunned, dazed, atontado, ajillipollado…so as not to be knocked on the head by this painful piece of hypocrisy? And this not from the Bush Administration any more…but from the sainted Obama Administration. ¡Hay que joderse!
By the way, has anyone noticed that the project (best illustrated by the Republican Party in general, Fox News and other corporate media giants, etc., and many others) which involves trying to convince the lower-to-middle classes (the massive majority) that their interests are the same as the ultra-rich - just keeps going on and on? I’ve always been amazed by this process. The elite have always done this - how else is less than 10 percent of the population going to lord over the other 90 percent?. But since the age of Reagan and Thatcher, I can’t help but marvel at how absurd and preposterous this project has been and continues to be. The latest example are these anti-taxation “Tea Parties”, organized, it would seem, by Fox News itself, but with substantial support from a good number of blithering idiots. I don’t know…my bafflement and rage are quite beyond words for today…better to take up the subject in another entry.
Monday, January 19, 2009
ontological rant in the court of the imagination

The defendant stood before the judge in the hushed courtroom. He began speaking.
I would like to submit to the court that the same lack of individual will, or free choice, applies also to the most cold-headed, thoroughly deliberated murder. I challenge the court to identify, in a pertinent and rationally acceptable manner, the element that distinguishes murder in the first degree from accidental homicide. The court will no doubt bring up the autonomous self, the “free will”. But can the court really show physical evidence of such phenomena? I claim that it cannot. Contemporary brain science is revealing the physiological functioning of the brain, and of its relation to bodily movement – or behavior. What we can clearly demonstrate is a highly complex system of neurological, electro-chemical activity, a universe of causes and effects. Yet there is nothing in science that has clearly identified the active, individual, “morally autonomous agent” within all this.
If I could claim that I was clinically insane at the time of the killing, you would lower my sentence. If I could claim that another person literally forced me to shove that chop stick up the nose of my wife, you would lower my sentence, or even declare me innocent.
If believe that I need no such countervailing claims. The body that is identified as “me” did indeed commit the act in question. However, you are unable to reasonably show that there is a “moral agent” within this body to assume guilt. The court has only shown a series of causes and effects.”
The judge looked on in increasing annoyance, as did the jury. “Sir,” said the judge, “do you really expect us to take that argument seriously?”
“I’m sorry, your honor”, replied the accused. “I was unable to argue in any other way. I am thoroughly determined to argue against free-will…I am thoroughly determined…it…I…the force…oneness…”
The eyes of the accused began to dart back and forth across the courtroom, as he quickly lost composure.
He continued, his voice growing louder and louder. “There is no I!...and all of you!!...there is no “you”…you fools!!...” A bit of spittle began to form on his lips. “Everything you do is determined…everything!!...it is all laid out…it is all there…!....IT IS WRITTEN!!!!
He was wrestled to the floor by several guards as the last words echoed throughout the chamber.
“We hold the defendant guilty as charged.”
Saturday, January 17, 2009
I scream, you scream, we all scream for torture

So upcoming Attorney General Eric Holder becomes the first “official” (i.e., law-relevant) voice to admit that water-boarding is torture. A nice breath of fresh air, one would think. As the Times reporter puts it, “In the view of many historians and legal authorities, Mr. Holder was merely admitting the obvious.”
Right. Making people undergo atrocious physical and psychological suffering is torture. What do you know. After 8 years of reality-denial and the weird kind of reality-derangement of the ruling party in the U.S., finally, it would appear, we have people who tilt ever so slightly more towards respect for the empirical.
Ah, but let us remember, Times reporter Scott Shane writes, all the problems such an admission of reality entails…Ah yes, the stickiness…the problems. As in, employees of the United States government, with orders directly from the White House, committed empirically verifiable war crimes. War crimes – according to the treaties and laws to which the U.S is itself a signatory.
All this, of course, making people squirm…one could feel the reporter squirming for them…
Now, in any decent world, criminal investigations would immediately be initiated, very possibly involving most of the highest members of the Bush administration, and very possibly resulting in war crime prosecution, and prison for these people.
The establishment squirms…
Why do they squirm, one might wonder? Apart from the practical political inconveniences of seeing establishment figures treated as war criminals, I think the squirming results from a certain ambiguity about the acceptability of torture itself. In general, many if not most people believe that torture is an acceptable tool for getting information. Apart from the fact that most professional interrogators deny this, I think that most laymen intuitively believe that anything is justifiable if it may possibly uncover information leading to the avoidance of other violent acts against innocents. Ah, yes, when directly questioned, most will not admit this…especially anyone in positions of legal responsibility… Thus the absurd rhetorical twists and turns by officials when testifying about water boarding…thus the many statements by Bush and others in his administration that “we do not torture”. Of course they were fucking torturing!...as Cheney, to his minimal credit, now openly admits.
Frankly, I think that many in the power structure in Washington either openly or secretly believe in the acceptability, indeed necessity, of torture. And thus, the squirming…even on the part of the “liberal” NY Times…
This rather barbaric stance spurts out openly when the perpetrators of war crimes are not Americans – witness the almost universal Congressional support for Israel’s latest clampdown in Gaza – a sentiment that runs against the almost universal condemnation Israel is receiving around the world. Unqualified support for absolute barbarism is easy when others are engaged in it…no realty-rearrangement or violence against logic/semantics necessary. This is what the pride- and religion-drunk idiots of Hamas don’t seem to get. Neither the rulers in Israel, nor their North American patrons, could give a flying fuck about war atrocities if they can in any way be justified by “protecting the country from enemies”. And those idiotic missiles Hamas seems intent on shooting at Israelis are just the ticket.
One wonders why the world bothers with such concepts as “international law”, “human rights”, etc. Obviously, when push comes to shove, or when it is in the interest of some powerful elite, rights and law are quickly forgotten.
Oh that the new political power structure in Washington were able to investigate, prosecute and punish those who spent the better part of 8 years defecating on US and international law, on the US Constitution…the same power structure that gave carte blanche to those whose fevered greed and cynicism led to such wreckage in the US and world economy…ah, sweet dreams…
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Alter-xmas

Well, it’s that time of year again…the time to celebrate something other than miracle, mystery and authority, guilt and submission (ie., xmas)…
This year I hereby proclaim the 1st of February as “Celebration of Reality” day, wherein we celebrate the plenitude of life as we and those around us actually experience it. Wherein we celebrate all the joys and sorrows, all the triumphs and defeats, all the love and loathing that life offers us. Wherein we celebrate ourselves as decent beings, based on our acts, based on wanting to fulfill our desires without doing harm to anyone – at least as far as we are able. Wherein we realize that we are all worthy and good people deserving of love and respect – as long as we do not lose that worthiness through our own selfishness. That we start out neither better or worse, superior or inferior to anyone else. And wherein we realize that we do not have to invent whole other stories and explanations based on metaphysical fantasy and impossible-to-understand gods who tower above us and make us feel small, afraid, and bad about ourselves – not to mention hateful and distrustful towards others with other kinds of “god-stories”.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Dustbins and Weathermen

Ah, history will be the final judge...but who will judge history? Which ideas are in the "dustbin of history", preserved only by those guttersnipe thinkers who find truth in officially discarded concepts... and which ideas sit upon the mantle, nobly looking down upon those intellectual guardians of what the comfortable classes call "reality"?
The Times recently ran two illuminating pieces in this regard. The first was a yet another look at Milton Friedman’s work – a kind of half-hearted attempt by the “paper of record” to recognize the general world-wide rejection of free-market absolutism…although in the end, the article leaves us with the feeling that Friedman’s beautiful truth – that the “market”, on its own (read: those with economic power) will always function more effectively than an economy subject to government oversight and regulation - will in the end prevail. Poor Milton, the article suggests, would be filled with sorrow to see, after a few little economic storms, how quickly the world resorts to government interference.
Well, to hell with that. From the beginning, free-market doctrine was no more than a throwback to an earlier stage of capitalism, when crafty and unscrupulous elites erected massive fortunes on the backs of millions, and finally drove their own economic system into the ground…to a time before capitalism itself was saved by more intelligent and far-seeing leaders. The application of this “neo-liberalism” from the 70’s onward has caused untold suffering around the world, while leading to greater accumulations of wealth (and, importantly, media power) in the US, Europe, and among the tiny elites of developing countries. And finally it has come home to roost in Friedman’s home country, as first seen in the savings and loan scandal of the 80’s, driven clearly home by the atrocity of New Orleans during and after Katrina, and finally convincing even the Wall Street Journal types that uh, ok, government intervention was needed, now, to stave off a complete financial collapse. Free-market discipline for the mass of citizens, indeed, but instant government bail-out when the financial elite fuck up, which they inevitably do…
In short, it is quite difficult to understand how anyone at this point can still accept Friedman’s basic view. It simply goes against logic, common sense and repeated experience throughout history. Economic power, when left to itself, serves its own interests. And why not? That is indeed its purpose and goal – to increase itself, as fast as possible and to the greatest possible extent. Good arguments can be made that a corporation is not acting properly when it makes decisions based on any other criteria than that of the maximization of its profit, of the value of its shares (and of course of the pornographic remuneration amounts to its chief executives). Corporate social responsibility, corporate spending on “culture”, corporate charity, etc., corporate self-policing in terms of the social impact of its operations (fair pay to employees, workplace safety, local investment, environmental responsibility, financial prudence, etc.) – all of this makes sense only if these activities somehow reflect on the bottom line. And thus, we see what we see – a world in which humanity holds the key to universal well-being through reason, technology and cooperation, yet a world that plays host to massive unnecessary suffering, poverty, exploitation and injustice. The unfettered (or less-than-effectively-regulated) “free market” is driving us directly over the edge at breakneck speed. And one has to have those ideological blinders firmly locked in place to not see this…
What could possibly account for the willful wearing of such blinders?...one quite useful explanation can be found, if we are willing to go back to that “dustbin of history”…or as that haughty imbecile who also appears in the Times, William Kristol, put it the other day, to a book “that now must lie, unopened and un-remarked upon, on an awful lot of rec-room bookshelves.” He is, of course, referring to Marx, the memory of whom he hilariously resurrects when addressing Obama’s supposed elitism (old cold-warriors never die, they just get more and more absurd). Quickly taking the cue and acting on ideological reflex, Kristol equates Obama’s comment on how economically oppressed citizens “cling to guns or religion” with Marx’s famous “religion is the opiate of the people” line. Fantastic. Tacking Obama to the (albeit quite accurate) words of the preacher of his church (what the fuck?), and linking Obama with an ex-member of the Weatherman…hmmm, you don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind is blowing here…when all else fails, might as well red-bait the guy…even 20 years after the end of the cold war. For Christ sakes, have they no shame? Well, uh, no. They don’t. And the egregious Hillary is as bad or worse than the Republicans on the matter.
One looks upon all of this, at the state of political discourse in the U.S., and is simply dumbfounded. Why has the “official line”, or those parameters within which mass media discourse can occur, become so utterly incapable of seeing, hearing…feeling? Well, the Marxist would not find this at all difficult to understand. Elite power views things in its own interest. And elite power also has the ability to greatly influence, if not completely form, mass opinion. From this perspective, of course free-market doctrine makes so much sense – what elite wouldn’t want complete freedom to do what he or she wants with their power? What elite doesn’t trust his or her own judgment in doing things right? Governmental interference in the economic activities of the elite, by definition, goes against those interests.
In the end, it doesn’t matter how utterly idiotic it is to remove all kinds of objective (public) power from economic activity. It sounds and feels good to those whom that kind of freedom serves. And they are the very people who have the power of influencing mass opinion.
Yeah, Marxism can be pretty useful in understanding things. Unlike the irrational drivel that passes for admirable economic theory under the name of Friedman-inspired free-market doctrine.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Hyprocrisy and the Horror
Monday, October 22, 2007
People of faith appear to accept certain propositions (existence of God, in certain manifestations, with a certain cosmological, ethical, etc. system) with little to no evidence. Indeed, it seems that precisely the lack of clear empirical evidence and logical presentation/argument is what makes this particular acceptance something called "faith".
We are living within a macro-system (speaking especially in terms of economics) that would seem to be "reality", not "faith" based. Yet, upon an even cursory overview of the current situation, one can easily wonder...what the fuck are these people in suits all over the world thinking? Great gushes of wealth are spreading throughout the world (while still filling the bank accounts of those crafty slithering amoral freaks on top), enough to create ever-new markets of masses ravenous for the latest manifestations of "wealth"...based almost entirely on financial structures without a solid material base. The international financial system reaches a point of deep crisis, thanks to the need to fill the market with a glut of baseless credit...and the central banks simply shrug it all off, saying no problem, here's another 30 billion here, another 35 billion there. Huh? Do they have secret warehouses of this shit?
"A faith based economy". God help us.
Thursday, October 11, 2007
an old letter to a friend
Here goes:
As I read over your last musings, I wonder if Viagra, or rather one of those anti-depressants might be the drug of the zeitgeist. (And not just for horrified progressives). I think what we have here is a case of confusion fatigue. Contemporary American life just does not leave most people the time to ingest all that is going on - the complexities of a buzzing and rapid-fire plurality in a sped-up digital world. Not while they have to work 60 plus hours a week to pay for those snazzy cars, health care, and other modern amenities. Most people want things just "simpled down" to coin a phrase. Bizarre re-workings of ancient metaphysical fairy tales, boiled down to appeal to fear/hate/need for belonging to something bigger/self-worth, etc, are just the trick. Rationality is naught but a nagging stimulous to anxiety. Who wants that? That's what fascists of every stripe have always known. That's what cynical power players have always known. That's what Dostoyevsky was writing about when the Grand Inquisitor tells a silent JC that what most people need is Miracle, Mystery and Authority.
Well, that's what so many millions of Americans voted for the other day. And they'll vote for it again.
It makes me wonder how, at certain times, certain leaders are able to gain popular support by appealing to people's sense of decency, hope, compassion, fairness, justice, sincerity, humility...and even their own self-interest. I think that such a thing can only be done with Reason, rationality, neatly and cleanly separated from metaphysical magic. Clearly, Christianity and other religions like to claim the above mentioned elements for their own. Indeed, there are many Christians whose behaviour reflects such "values" (what a dangerous and meaningless word that has suddenly become!). But until the great majority of citizens can connect with these elements through simple experience and common sense (ie., these guys are totally fucking up the economy, and that is going to fuck me, and/or, these guys are clearly leading us into a more violent and unsafe world, or, I cannot afford health care and must think twice before bringing my child to the doctor, etc.)... until people can face up to simple reality without comforting fairy tales inviting them to abandon any form of critical thinking, then religion in general will only serve for what it has generally served for up until now - to cause millions to confuse their own interests with those of their cynical rulers...
Hmmm...three years have passed. I see that things are getting more interesting in the country of my birth. That bizarre right wing coalition of wealthy creeps and deluded fundamentalists just might be breaking apart...ah, hope springs eternal from the human breast...