July 01, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - -
"Scheer
Post"
Chris Hedges gave this talk on American Sadism
at The Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy,
New York on Sunday June 27.
Sadism defines nearly every
cultural, social, and political experience in the
United States. It is expressed in the unchecked
greed of an oligarchic elite that has seen its
wealth increase during the pandemic by $1.1 trillion
while the country has suffered the sharpest rise in
its poverty rate in more than 50 years. It is
expressed in the wanton killings by police of
unarmed citizens in cities such as Minneapolis. It
is expressed in the “enhanced interrogation
techniques” used by the CIA at secret black sites,
Guantánamo Bay, and our prisons at home. It is
expressed in the separation of children from their
undocumented parents, where they are held as if they
were dogs in a kennel.
It is expressed in the pornification of American
society, where women are tortured, beaten, degraded,
and sexually violated, often by numerous men, in
porn films, and then discarded after a few weeks or
months with severe trauma, along with sexually
transmitted diseases and vaginal and anal tears that
must be repaired surgically. It is expressed in the
“incel” movement that perpetrates violent assaults
against women by men who say they have been spurned
or ignored by women.
It is expressed in the predatory health care
system where, as Steven Brill writes, a trip to the
emergency room for chest pains that turn out to be
indigestion can exceed the cost of a semester of
college, simple lab work done during a few days in a
hospital can be more expensive than a new car, and a
drug that requires $300 to make and that the
manufacturer sells to a hospital for $3,000 to 3,500
can cost the patient to whom it is prescribed
$13,702. It is legally permissible in the United
States for corporations to hold sick children
hostage while their parents bankrupt themselves to
save their sons or daughters.
This sadism is expressed in payday loans,
for-profit prisons, the privatization of public
education and public utilities and the rise of
for-profit mercenary armies. It is expressed in the
cultural glorification of violence by mass media,
the state and the entertainment and the gaming
industries. It is expressed in the nihilistic mass
shootings at schools, including elementary schools,
and workplaces. And it is expressed in the murderous
and futile wars we prosecute or support in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Yemen.
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The historian Johan Huizinga, writing about the
twilight of the Middle Ages, argued that as things
fall apart sadism is embraced to cope with the
hostility of an indifferent universe. No longer
bound to a common purpose, a ruptured society
retreats into hedonism and the cult of the self. It
celebrates, as do corporations on Wall Street or
popular reality television shows, the classic traits
of psychopaths: superficial charm, grandiosity, and
self-importance; a need for constant stimulation; a
penchant for lying, deception and manipulation; and
the incapacity for remorse or guilt. Get what you
can, as fast as you can, before someone else gets
it. This is the state of nature, the “war of all
against all,” Thomas Hobbes saw as the consequence
of social disintegration, a world in which life
becomes “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”
It is a world in which the powerful, men like
Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein, reduce the
bodies and selfhoods of their victims to nothing.
We know what this sadism looks like. It looks
like Derek Chauvin nonchalantly choking to death
George Floyd as his police colleagues watch
impassively. It looks like Andrew Brown Jr. shot
five times by police in North Carolina, including
once in the back of the head. It looks like Abner
Louima, who had a broomstick pushed up his rectum by
police in a bathroom at the 70th Precinct station
house in Brooklyn, requiring three major operations
to repair the internal injuries. It looks like Navy
Seal Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher
randomly shooting to death unarmed civilians and
using a hunting knife to repeatedly stab to death an
injured, sedated 17-year-old Iraqi prisoner and then
photographing himself with the corpse. It looks like
Iraqi civilians, few of whom had anything to do with
the insurgency, naked, bound, beaten and sexually
humiliated and raped, and at times murdered, by army
guards and private contractors in Abu Ghraib. It
looks like the prisoners in Abu Ghraib who were
routinely dragged across the prison floor by a rope
tied to their penises and were sodomized by chemical
lights or had the lights snapped open so the
phosphoric liquid could be poured over their naked
bodies. The leaked pictures from Abu Ghraib are the
true face of America, the hooded Man, a dark-caped
figure standing on a box, arms outstretched, wires
attached to his fingers or the naked leashed man
lying at the feet of the female American soldier in
camouflage pants who holds his leash, one end
wrapped around his neck, in her hand.
Why is the malaise of a dying civilization
expressed through sadism rather than a kind of
righteous anger? Here we must turn to Friedrich
Nietzsche. Nietzsche warned that those who are
humiliated and disempowered are poisoned by
ressentiment. Because they have been stripped
of agency, they lack the power to harm those who
they believe harmed them. In short, there is no
cathartic release. Ressentiment is bred
from damaged self-esteem. It festers and corrodes
the soul. The powerless, and here Nietzsche is
writing about Christianity as a slave religion, must
expresses their ressentiment obliquely and
surreptitiously, hence the coded racism,
Islamophobia and supposed yearning for a return of
the traditional family and “Christian” values.
Ressentiment is produced by feelings of
inferiority, failure, and worthlessness. And this
ressentiment, fueled by self-loathing,
expresses itself through sadism, what Nietzsche
calls “wrecking the will” of those who are weaker or
more vulnerable. Nietzsche understood that this
“wrecking the will” of others imparts a perverted,
sadistic pleasure. He writes in On the
Genealogy of Morals, that “to see others suffer
does one good, to make others suffer even more. . .
. Without cruelty there is no festival . . . and in
punishment there is so much that is festive!”
The ressentiment in American society,
the political scientist Wendy Brown writes, is born
not only from feelings of powerlessness and
worthlessness, but feelings of dethronement and lost
entitlement. It explains what she calls the
“permanent politics of revenge, of attacking those
blamed for the dethronement white
maleness—feminists, multiculturalists, globalists,
who both unseat and disdain them.” For this reason,
the rage cannot, as it could be in Christian
theology, sublimated into self-abnegation and a call
to love of thy neighbor. There is, in short, nothing
to mitigate or redirect this ressentiment.
It’s pure expression is nihilism and sadism. Trump
embodied this dark ethic. Revenge is his sole
philosophy of life. Those gripped by
ressentiment no longer able to create. They
can only destroy. They gleefully ignite their own
funeral pyre.
Laws, institutions, and bureaucratic structures
are deformed to serve the interests of a tiny cabal,
a rapacious elite, which enriches itself at the
expense of everyone else. All are made to bow
before the dictates of what Max Weber called the
“inanimate machine.” The inanimate machine forces
the vast majority into the mass, but it allows a
selected few, willing to do its dirty work, to rise
above the multitude. These privileged few are given
the license and authority to carry out the acts of
sadism that have become the primary forms of social
control. These enforcers do this work vigorously,
for their greatest fear is being pushed back into
the mass. The more these foot soldiers for the
elite insult, persecute, torture, humiliate and
kill, the more they seem to magically widen the
divide between themselves and their victims. This
is why Black police and corrections officers can be
as cruel, and sometimes crueler, than their white
counterparts.
The sadism eradicates, at least momentarily, the
sadist’s feelings of worthlessness, vulnerability
and susceptibility to pain and death. It imparts
feelings of omnipotence. It is pleasurable. I was
beaten by Saudi military police and later by Saddam
Hussein’s secret police when I was taken prisoner in
Basra shortly after the first Gulf War. Those who
beat me enjoyed their work. I could see it on their
faces. Israel’s abuse of the Palestinians, the
assaults of Muslims and girls and women in India and
the denigration of Muslims in the countries we
occupy are part of the scourge of sadism in service
to an “inanimate machine” that has become global.
Feminists have long understood that sadism runs
like an electric current through male sexual
desire. Pornography is about the fantasy of men who
are omnipotent, who have the power to torture and
physically abuse girls and women who in porn beg to
be degraded. “Sexual fun and sexual passion in the
privacy of the male imagination are inseparable from
the brutality of male history,” Andrea Dworkin
writes. “The private world of sexual dominance that
men demand as their right and their freedom is the
mirror image of the public world of sadism and
atrocity that men consistently and self-righteously
deplore. It is in the male experience of pleasure
that one finds the meaning of male history.”
Women, of course, are not immune from acts of
sadism. Ilse Koch, known as the “Bitch of
Buchenwald,” with her husband, the commandant of the
death camp, used to throw prisoners into bears’
cages to watch them get ripped apart and devoured.
The Chilean Adriana Rivas, facing extradition to
Chile from Australia, reportedly tortured prisoners
by strapping them to metal bunk beds rigged with
electrical current and sending shocks throughout
their bodies or suffocated them to death with
plastic bags during the regime of August Pinochet.
But Dworkin is right to highlight sadism as inherent
in male expressions of total and unaccountable
power, which is why sadism is the chief
characteristic of imperialism.
Jean Amery, who was in the Belgian resistance in
World War II and who was captured and tortured by
the Gestapo in 1943, defines sadism “as the radical
negation of the other, the simultaneous denial of
both the social principle and the reality principle.
In the sadist’s world, torture, destruction, and
death are triumphant: and such a world clearly has
no hope of survival. On the contrary, he desires to
transcend the world, to achieve total sovereignty by
negating fellow human beings—which he sees as
representing a particular kind of ‘hell.’”
Amery’s point is important. A sadistic society is
about collective self-destruction. It is the
apotheosis of a society deformed by overwhelming
experiences of loss, alienation and stasis. The only
way left to affirm yourself in failed societies is
to destroy. Johan Huizinga in his book “Waning of
the Middle Ages” noted that that the dissolution of
medieval society provoked “the violent tenor of
life.” Today, this “violent tenor of life” drives
people to carry out wanton police murders, evictions
of families, court-ordered bankruptcies, the denial
of medical care to the sick, suicide bombings and
mass shootings. Sadism imparts the rush and
pleasure, often with heavy sexual overtones, which
lures us towards what Sigmund Freud called the death
instinct, the instinct to destroy all forms of life,
including our own. When enveloped by a
death-saturated world death, ironically, is embraced
as the cure.
Joseph Conrad saw enough of the world as a sea
captain to know the irredeemable corruption of
humanity. The noble virtues that drove characters
like Kurtz in Heart of Darkness into the
jungle veiled the abject self-interest, unchecked
greed, and murder that defines all imperial
projects. Conrad was in the Congo in the late
nineteenth century when the Belgian monarch King
Leopold, in the name of Western civilization and
antislavery, was plundering the country. The Belgian
occupation, which turned the Congo into a rubber
plantation, resulted in the death by disease,
starvation, and murder of some ten million
Congolese.
In Conrad’s short story “An Outpost of Progress,”
he writes of two white, European traders, Carlier
and Kayerts, who are sent to a remote trading
station in the Congo. The mission is endowed with a
great moral purpose—to export European
“civilization” to Africa. But the boredom and lack
of constraints swiftly turn the two men into
savages. They trade slaves for ivory. They get into
a feud over dwindling food supplies, and Kayerts
shoots and kills his unarmed companion Carlier.
“They were two perfectly insignificant and
incapable individuals,” Conrad wrote of Kayerts and
Carlier:
whose existence is only rendered possible
through the high organization of civilized
crowds. Few men realize that their life, the
very essence of their character, their
capabilities and their audacities, are only the
expression of their belief in the safety of
their surroundings. The courage, the composure,
the confidence; the emotions and principles;
every great and every insignificant thought
belongs not to the individual but to the crowd;
to the crowd that believes blindly in the
irresistible force of its institutions and its
morals, in the power of its police and of its
opinion. But the contact with pure unmitigated
savagery, with primitive nature and primitive
man, brings sudden and profound trouble into the
heart. To the sentiment of being alone of one’s
kind, to the clear perception of the loneliness
of one’s thoughts, of one’s sensations—to the
negation of the habitual, which is safe, there
is added the affirmation of the unusual, which
is dangerous; a suggestion of things vague,
uncontrollable, and repulsive, whose
discomposing intrusion excites the imagination
and tries the civilized nerves of the foolish
and the wise alike.
The Managing Director of the Great Civilizing
Company—for, as Conrad notes, “civilization” follows
trade—arrives by steamer at the end of the story. He
is not met at the dock by his two agents. He climbs
the steep bank to the trading station with the
captain and engine driver behind him. The director
finds Kayerts, who, after the murder, committed
suicide by hanging himself by a leather strap from a
cross that marked the grave of the previous station
chief. Kayerts’s toes are a couple of inches above
the ground. His arms hang stiffly down “and,
irreverently, he was putting out a swollen tongue at
his Managing Director.”
Sadism is carried out in the name of a moral
good, to protect western civilization, “Christian”
values, democracy, the master race, liberté,
égalité, fraternité, the worker’s
paradise, the new man, or scientific rationalism.
Sadism will mend the flaws in the human species.
The jargon varies. The dark sentiment is the same.
“Honor, justice, compassion and freedom are ideas
that have no converts,” Conrad writes. “There are
only people, without knowing, understanding or
feeling, who intoxicate themselves with words, shout
them out, imaging they believe them without
believing in anything else but profit, personal
advantage and their own satisfaction.”
“Man is a cruel animal,” Conrad wrote. “His
cruelty must be organized. Society is essentially
criminal—or it wouldn’t exist. It is selfishness
that saves everything—absolutely
everything—everything that we abhor, everything that
we love.”
Bertrand Russell said of Conrad: “I felt, though
I do not know whether he would have accepted such an
image, that he thought of civilized and morally
tolerable human life as a dangerous walk on a thin
crust of barely cooled lava which at any moment
might break and let the unwary sink into fiery
depths.”
Kurtz, the self-deluded megalomaniac ivory trader
in Heart of Darkness, ends by planting the
shriveled heads of murdered Congolese on pikes
outside his remote trading station. But Kurtz is
also highly educated and refined. Conrad describes
him as an orator, writer, poet, musician, and the
respected chief agent of the ivory company’s Inner
Station. He is “an emissary of pity, and science,
and progress.” Kurtz was a “universal genius” and “a
very remarkable person.” He is a prodigy, at once
gifted and multitalented. He went to Africa fired by
noble ideals and virtues. He ended his life as a
self-deluded tyrant who thought he was a god.
“His mother was half-English, his father was
half-French,” Conrad writes of Kurtz:
All Europe contributed to the making of
Kurtz; and by-the-by I learned that, most
appropriately, the International Society for the
Suppression of Savage Customs had entrusted
him with the making of a report, for its future
guidance. . . . He began with the argument
that we whites, from the point of development we
had arrived at, “must necessarily appear to
them [savages] in the nature of supernatural
beings—we approach them with the might as of a
deity,” and so on, and so on. “By the simple
exercise of our will we can exert a power for
good practically unbounded,” etc., etc. From
that point he soared and took me with him. The
peroration was magnificent, though difficult to
remember, you know. It gave me the notion of an
exotic Immensity ruled by an august Benevolence.
It made me tingle with enthusiasm. This was the
unbounded power of eloquence—of words—of burning
noble words. There were no practical hints to
interrupt the magic current of phrases, unless a
kind of note at the foot of the last page,
scrawled evidently much later, in an unsteady
hand, may be regarded as the exposition of a
method. It was very simple, and at the end of
that moving appeal to every altruistic sentiment
it blazed at you, luminous and terrifying, like
a flash of lightning in a serene sky:
“Exterminate all the brutes!”
The violence and exploitation, which has long
defined imperial projects abroad, now defines
existence a home. Empires, in the end, cannibalize
themselves. The tyranny we long imposed on others we
now impose on ourselves. The dark pleasure derived
from exploiting others is all that is left. As
Nietzsche wrote in On the Genealogy of Morals:
Let’s clarify the logic of this whole method
of compensation—it is weird enough. The
equivalency is given in this way: Instead of an
advantage making up directly for the
harm (hence, instead of compensation in gold,
land, possessions of some sort or another), the
creditor is given a kind of pleasure as
repayment and compensation—the pleasure of being
allowed to discharge his power on a powerless
person without having to think about it, the
delight in “de fair le mal pour le plaisir
de le faire” [doing wrong for the pleasure
of doing it], the enjoyment of violation. This
enjoyment is more highly prized the lower and
baser the debtor stands in the social order, and
it can easily seem to the creditor a delicious
mouthful, even a foretaste of a higher rank. By
means of the “punishment” of the debtor, the
creditor participates in a right belonging to
the masters. Finally, he himself for once comes
to the lofty feeling of despising a being as
someone “below himself,” as someone he is
entitled to mistreat—or at least, in the event
that the real force of punishment, of inflicting
punishment, has already been transferred to the
“authorities,” the feeling of seeing the debtor
despised and mistreated. The compensation thus
consists of a permission for and right to
cruelty.
Social sadism and murder, as Friedrich Engels
noted in his 1845 book The Condition of the
Working-Class in England is built into the
capitalist system. The ruling elites, Engels writes,
those that hold “social and political control,” were
well aware that the harsh working and living
conditions during the industrial revolution doomed
workers to “an early and unnatural death.” The
formation of unions and socialism were in direct
response to these malevolent forces. As Engels
wrote:
When one individual inflicts bodily injury
upon another such that death results, we call
his deed murder. But when society places
hundreds of proletarians in such a position that
they inevitably meet a too early and an
unnatural death, one which is quite as much a
death by violence as that by the sword or
bullet; when it deprives thousands of the
necessaries of life, places them under
conditions in which they cannot live—forces
them, through the strong arm of the law, to
remain in such conditions until that death
ensues which is the inevitable consequence—knows
that these thousands of victims must perish, and
yet permits these conditions to remain, its deed
is murder just as surely as the deed of the
single individual; disguised, malicious murder,
murder against which none can defend himself,
which does not seem what it is, because no man
sees the murderer, because the death of the
victim seems a natural one, since the offence is
more one of omission than of commission. But
murder it remains.
The ruling class devotes tremendous resources to
mask this social sadism and murder. It controls the
narrative in the press. It floods our screens with
friendly, feel-good images and propaganda, perfected
by the public relations and advertising industries.
These electronic hallucinations distract us from the
limitations of our own lives. They obfuscate the
fundamental nature of corporate capitalism. They
attack our self-esteem and create an embarrassing
self-consciousness about our appearance, social
standing and bodily functions. They falsify science
and data, as the fossil fuel, animal agriculture and
tobacco industries, have for decades. They create,
as Guy DuBord writes, the “spectacular commodity
society” that is a seductive substitute to
participatory democracy. This entrepreneurial
tyranny reduces political choice to the sadistic
prescriptions provided by corporate power. It
creates a society where there is an absence of
nearly all positive social and political
constructs. Even social change, reduced to identity
politics and multiculturalism, has been effectively
emasculated by corporate propaganda. A sense of
agency, personal power and social status comes
almost exclusively from, as Nietzsche foresaw,
serving the sadistic machinery.
Enron energy traders, in a dialogue that could
have come from any large corporation, were caught on
tape in 2000 discussing “stealing” from California,
sticking it to “Grandma Millie.” Two traders,
identified as Kevin and Bob, dismissed demands by
California regulators for refunds because of the
company’s constant price-gouging.
Kevin: So the rumor’s true?
They’re fucking takin’ all the money back from you
guys? All those money you guys stole from those poor
grandmothers in California?
Bob: Yeah, Grandma Millie, man.
But she’s the one who couldn’t figure out how to
fucking vote on the butterfly ballot.
Kevin: Yeah, now she wants her
fucking money back for all the power you’ve charged
for fucking $250 a megawatt hour.
Bob: You know—you know—you know,
Grandma Millie, she’s the one that Al Gore’s
fightin’ for, you know?
Later in the same conversation, Kevin and Bob
denigrate Californians.
Kevin: Oh, best thing that could
happen is fucking an earthquake, let that thing
float out to the Pacific and put ’em fucking
candles.
Bob: I know. Those guys—just cut
’em off.
Kevin: They’re so fucked and
they’re so like totally . . .
Bob: They are so fucked.
The obscene avarice of the very rich now dwarfs
the hedonism and excesses of the world’s most
heinous despots and wealthiest capitalists of the
past. In 2015, shortly before he died, Forbes
estimated David Rockefeller’s net worth was $3
billion. The Shah of Iran looted an estimated $1
billion from his country. Ferdinand and Imelda
Marcos amassed between $5 and $10 billion. And the
former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe was worth
about a billion. Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk are each
worth $180 billion.
Yes, the decorum of the Biden presidency differs
from that of the Trump presidency. But the
underlying mercenary exploitation and sadism of
American society remains untouched. Biden’s
American Jobs Plan will never create “millions of
good paying jobs—jobs Americans can raise their
families on” any more than NAFTA, which he
supported, would, as was also promised, create
millions of good paying jobs. His mantra of “buy
American” is worthless. The vast majority of our
consumer electronics, apparel, furniture and
industrial supplies are made in China by workers who
earn an average of one or two dollars an hour and
lack unions and basic labor rights. His call to
lower deductibles and prescription drug costs in the
Affordable Care Act will never be permitted by the
corporations that profit from health care. His
promises of fair taxation, despite the world’s
richest men—Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Warren Buffett,
Carl Icahn, Michael Bloomberg and George
Soros—paying a true tax rate of 3.4 percent will not
be altered. The corporate subsidies and tax
incentives he proposes as a solution to the climate
crisis will do nothing to halt oil and gas fracking,
shut down coal-fired plants or halt the construction
of new pipelines for gas-fired power plants. His
money for infrastructure projects is destined for
large corporations and state governments.
The health system will remain privatized, meaning
the insurance and pharmaceutical corporations will
reap a windfall of tens of billions of dollars with
the American Rescue Plan, and this when they are
already making record profits. The profits the big
banks, Wall Street and the predatory global
speculators make from the massive levels of debt
peonage imposed on an underpaid working class,
including those who owe student loans, will continue
to funnel money upwards into the hands of a tiny,
oligarchic cabal. There will be no campaign finance
reform to end our system of legalized bribery. The
giant tech monopolies will remain intact. The
censorship imposed by digital media platforms, the
obliteration of our civil liberties and the
wholesale government surveillance will continue to
be enforced. Biden’s request for $715 billion for
the Defense Department in fiscal year 2022, a $11.3
billion (1.6 percent) increase over 2021, will
exacerbate the military provocations with China and
Russia, the endless wars in the Middle East and the
bloated defense industry. The industries that were
shipped overseas and the well-paying unionized jobs
will not return. The 81 million Americans that
struggle to meet basic household expenses, the 22
million that lack enough food and the 11 million
that can’t make their next house payment are about
to hit a wall as the meager benefits from the COVID
relief bills run out and the moratorium is lifted on
evictions and foreclosures. The grinding machinery
of predatory capitalism, and the sadism that defines
it, will poison the society as mercilessly under
Biden as it did when Trump was conducting his
Twitter presidency. These so-called reforms have no
more weight than those peddled by Bill Clinton and
Barack Obama, who Biden slavishly served and who
also promised social equality while betraying
working men and women.
Biden is the epitome of the empty, amoral
creature produced by our system of legalized
bribery, those who built our culture of sadism. His
long political career in Congress was defined by
representing the interests of big business,
especially the credit card companies based in
Delaware. He was nicknamed Senator Credit Card. He
has always glibly told the public what it wants to
hear and then sold them out. He was a prominent
promoter and architect of a generation of federal
“tough on crime” laws that militarized the nation’s
police and more than doubled the population of the
prison system, the world’s largest, with harsh
mandatory sentencing guidelines and laws that put
people in prison for life for nonviolent drug
crimes, even as his son struggled with addiction. He
was a principal author of the Patriot Act. And there
has never been a weapons system, or a war, he did
not support. Nothing substantial will change under
Biden, despite the hyperventilating about him being
the next FDR.
The Biden administration resembles the
ineffectual German government formed by Franz von
Papen in 1932 that sought to recreate the ancien
régime, a utopian conservatism that ensured
Germany’s drift into fascism. Biden is bereft, like
von Papen, of new ideas and programs. He will keep
the machinery of repression well oiled, a machinery
he was instrumental throughout his political career
in constructing. Those that resist will be attacked
as agents of a foreign power and censored, as many
already are being censored, through algorithms and
deplatforming on social media. The most ardent
dissidents, such as Julian Assange, will be
criminalized.
The established elites pretend that Trump was a
freakish anomaly. They naively believe they can make
Trump and his most vociferous supporters disappear
by banishing them from social media. The ancien
régime, will, they assert, return with the
decorum of its imperial presidency, respect for
procedural norms, elaborately choreographed
elections, and fealty to neoliberal and imperial
policies. But what the established ruling elites
have yet to grasp, despite the narrow electoral
victory Joe Biden had over Trump and the storming of
the capital on January 6 by an enraged mob, is that
the credibility of the old order is dead. The Trump
era, if not Trump himself, is, unless we break the
stranglehold of corporate power, the future. The
ruling elites, embodied by Biden and the Democratic
Party and the polite wing of the Republican Party
represented by Jeb Bush and Mitt Romney, is headed
for the dustbin of history.
The growing ressentiment of the
dispossessed is stoked and fed by a mass media that
has divided the public into competing demographics.
Media platforms target one demographic, feeding its
opinions and proclivities back to it, while shrilly
demonizing the demographic on the other side of the
political divide. This has proved commercially
successful. But it has also split the country into
irreconcilable warring factions that can no longer
communicate. Truth and verifiable fact have been
sacrificed. The Democratic Party, in a desperate bid
to control the media narrative, has built an
alliance with social media industry giants such as
Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, Patreon, Substack and
Spotify to curtail or censor its critics. The goal
is to herd the public back to Democratic Party
allied news organizations such as The New York
Times, The Washington Post and CNN. But these media
outlets, which service corporate advertisers, have
rendered the lives of the working class and the poor
invisible. They are as reviled as the ruling elites
themselves.
The loss of credibility has also given rise to
new, often spontaneous groups, as well as the
lunatic fringe that embraces conspiracy theories
such as QAnon. They traffic in emotional outrage,
often replacing one outrage with another. They
provide new forms of identity to replace the
identities lost by tens of millions of Americans who
have been cast aside. This emotional outrage can be
harnessed for laudable causes, such as ending police
abuse, but it is too often ephemeral. It transforms
political debate into grievance protests, at best,
and more often televised spectacle. These flash mobs
pose no threat to the elites unless they build
disciplined organization structures, which takes
years, and articulate a vision of what can come
next. This is why I support Extinction Rebellion,
which has a large grassroots network, especially in
Europe, carries out effective sustained acts of
civil disobedience and has a clearly stated goal of
overthrowing the ruling elites and building a new
governing system through people’s committees and
sortition. But this emotional outrage, which put
Trump in the White House, can also stoke the fires
of American sadism, especially among a white working
class that feels dethroned and abandoned.
The breakdown of our society is not only
political. It is ecological. Scientists have long
warned that as global temperatures rise, increasing
precipitation and heat waves in many parts of the
world, infectious diseases spread by animals will
plague populations year-round and expand into
northern regions. Zoonotic diseases—diseases that
jump from animals to humans—such as HIV/AIDS, which
has killed approximately 36 million people, Avian
flu, Swine flu, Ebola and COVID-19, which has
already killed some 4 million, will ripple across
the globe in ever more virulent strains, often
mutating beyond our control. The misuse of
antibiotics in the animal agriculture industry,
which accounts for 80 percent of all antibiotic use,
has produced strains of bacteria that are antibiotic
resistant and fatal. A modern version of the Black
Death, which in the 14th century killed
between 75 and 200 million people, wiping out
perhaps half of Europe’s population, is probably
inevitable as long as the pharmaceutical and medical
industries are configured to make money rather than
protect and save lives.
Even with vaccines, we lack the national
infrastructure to distribute them efficiently
because profit supersedes health. And those in the
global south are, as usual, abandoned, as if the
diseases that kill them will never reach
us. Israel’s decision to distribute COVID-19
vaccines to as many as 19 countries while refusing
to vaccinate the 5 million Palestinians living under
its occupation is emblematic of the ruling elite’s
stunning myopia, not to mention immorality.
What is taking place is not neglect. It is not
ineptitude. It is not policy failure. It is social
murder. It is murder because it is premeditated. It
is murder because a conscious choice was made by the
global ruling classes to extinguish life rather than
protect it. It is murder because profit, despite the
hard statistics, the growing climate disruptions,
and the scientific modeling, is deemed more
important than human survival.
The global elites thrive in this system, as long
as they serve the dictates of what Lewis Mumford
called the “megamachine,” the convergence of
science, economy, technology and political power
unified into an integrated, bureaucratic structure
whose sole goal is to perpetuate itself. This
structure, Mumford noted, is antithetical to
“life-enhancing values.” But to challenge the
megamachine, to name and condemn its death wish, is
to be expelled from its inner sanctum. There are, no
doubt, some within the megamachine who fear the
future, who are appalled by the social murder, who
worry what will happen to their children, but they
do not want to lose their jobs and their social
status to become pariahs.
The U.S. military—which accounts for 38 percent
of military spending worldwide—is, of course,
incapable of combating the grave existential crisis
before us.. The fighter jets, satellites, aircraft
carriers, fleets of warships, nuclear submarines,
missiles, tanks and vast arsenals of weaponry are
useless against pandemics and the climate crisis.
The war machine, which is spending $ 1.2 trillion to
modernize our nuclear arsenal, does nothing to
mitigate the human suffering caused by degraded
environments that sicken and poison populations or
make life unsustainable. Air pollution already
kills an estimated 200,000 Americans a year while
children in decayed cities such as Flint, Michigan
are damaged for life with lead contamination from
drinking water. And, on top of all this, the U.S.
military emitted 1.2 billion metric tons of carbon
emissions between 2001 and 2017, twice the annual
output of the nation’s passenger vehicles.
Future generations, if there are any, will look
back at the current global ruling class as the most
criminal in human history, willfully dooming
billions of people to mass death. These crimes are
being committed in front of us. And, with few
exceptions, we are being herded like sheep to the
slaughter.
The radical evil that makes this social murder
possible is perpetrated by the colorless bureaucrats
and technocrats churned out of business schools, law
schools, management programs and elite universities.
Demonic nonentities. These systems managers carry
out the incremental tasks that make vast,
complicated systems of exploitation and death work.
They collect, store, and manipulate our personal
data for digital monopolies and the security and
surveillance state. They grease the wheels for
ExxonMobil, BP and Goldman Sachs. They write the
laws passed by the bought-and-paid-for political
class. They pilot the aerial drones that terrorize
the poor in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and Pakistan.
They profit from the endless wars. They are the
corporate advertisers, public relations specialists
and television pundits that flood the airwaves with
lies. They run the banks. They oversee the prisons.
They issue the forms. They process the papers. They
deny food stamps and medical coverage to some and
unemployment benefits to others. They carry out the
evictions. They enforce the laws and the
regulations. They do not ask questions. They live in
an intellectual vacuum, a world of stultifying
minutia. They are T.S. Eliot’s “the hollow men,”
“the stuffed men.” “Shape without form, shade
without color,” the poet writes. “Paralyzed force,
gesture without motion.”
These systems managers made possible the
genocides of the past They kept the trains running.
They filled out the paperwork. They seized the
property and confiscated the bank accounts. They did
the processing. They rationed the food. They
administered the concentration camps and the gas
chambers. They enforced the law. They did their
jobs. These systems managers, uneducated in all but
their tiny technical specialty, lack the language
and moral autonomy to question the reigning
assumptions or structures.
The Russian novelist Vasily Grossman in his book
“Forever Flowing” observed that “the new state did
not require holy apostles, fanatic, inspired
builders, faithful, devout disciples. The new state
did not even require servants—just clerks.” This
metaphysical ignorance, a product of an educational
system that is primarily vocational, greases the
cogs for the culture of sadism and social murder.
We will not extract ourselves from predatory
capitalism and its culture of sadism with meager
government handouts. We will not extract ourselves
because Biden’s slick speech writers and public
relations specialists, who use polls and focus
groups to feed back to us what we want to hear, can
make us feel the administration is on our side.
There is no good will in the Biden White House, the
Congress, the courts, the media—which has become an
echo chamber of the privileged classes—or corporate
boardrooms. They are the enemy.
We will extract ourselves from this culture of
sadism the way the dispossessed extracted themselves
from the stranglehold of crony capitalism during the
Great Depression, by organizing, protesting, and
disrupting the system until the ruling elites are
forced to grant a measure of social and economic
justice. The Bonus Army, World War I veterans who
had been denied pension payments, set up huge
encampments in Washington, which were violently
dispersed by the army. Neighborhood groups, many of
them members of the Wobblies or the Communist Party,
in the 1930s physically prevented sheriff
departments from evicting families. In 1936 and
1937, the United Auto Workers union carried out a
sit-down strike inside factories that crippled
General Motors, forcing the company to recognize the
union, raise wages and meet union demands for job
protection and safe working conditions. Farmers,
forced into bankruptcy and foreclosures by the big
banks and Wall Street, founded the Farmer’s Holiday
Association to protest the seizure of family farms,
one of the reasons bank robbers such as John
Dillinger, Bonnie and Clyde and the Barker Gang were
folk heroes. The farmers blocked roads and destroyed
mountains of farm products, reducing supply, and
raising prices.
The farmers, like unionized auto workers, endured
widespread government surveillance and violent
attacks from the FBI, company goons, hired gun
thugs, militias, and sheriff’s departments. But the
militancy worked. The farmers forced the state to
accept a de facto moratorium on farm foreclosures.
Mass demonstrations outside state capitals at the
same time pressured state legislatures to block the
collection of overdue mortgage payments. Tenant
farmers and sharecroppers in the south unionized.
The Department of Labor called their collective
action a “miniature civil war.” The unemployed and
the hungry throughout the country squatted in vacant
homes and on vacant land forming shantytowns that
were known as Hoovervilles. The destitute took over
public buildings and public utilities. This constant
pressure, not the good will of FDR, created the New
Deal. He and his fellow oligarchs eventually
understood that if there was not reform there would
be revolution, something Roosevelt acknowledged in
his private correspondence.
It is not until people are reintegrated into the
society, not until corporate and oligarchic control
over our educational, political and media systems
are removed, not until we recover the ethic of the
common good, that we have any hope of rebuilding the
positive social bonds that foster a healthy society.
History has amply illustrated how this process
works. It is a game of fear. And until we make the
ruling elites afraid, until a terrified Joe Biden
and the oligarchs he serves look out on a sea of
pitchforks, we will not blunt the culture of sadism
and social murder they have engineered.
Rebellion, however, must be its own
justification. It is a moral imperative, not a
practical one. It not only erodes, however
imperceptibly, the structures of oppression, it
sustains the embers of empathy and compassion, as
well as justice, within us that defy the sadism that
colors every layer of our existence. In short, it
keeps us human. Rebellion must be embraced, finally,
not only for what it will achieve, but for what it
will allow us to become. In that becoming we find
hope.
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