June 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Truthdig"
- Michael P. Printup, president of Watkins Glen
International, one of the country’s largest racetracks, stood with a group of
about a dozen race fans at 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Next to him were boxes of free
doughnuts and coffee. A line of men with towels, who had spent the night in
nearby RV campers, pop-up campers and tents, stood patiently outside the door to
a shower room. A light drizzle, one that would turn into a torrential downpour
and lead to the races being canceled in the afternoon, coated the group, all
middle-aged or older white men. They were discussing, amid the high-pitched
whine of cars practicing on the 3.4-mile, 11-turn circuit racetrack, the aging
demographic of race fans and the inability to lure a new generation to the
sport.“Maybe if you installed chargers for phones
around the track they would come,” suggested one gray-haired man.
But it is not just sporting events. Public lectures, church
services, labor unions, Veterans of Foreign Wars halls, Masonic halls, Rotary
clubs, the Knights of Columbus, the Lions Club, Grange Hall meetings, the League
of Women Voters, Daughters of the American Revolution, local historical
societies, town halls, bowling leagues, bridge clubs, movie theater attendance
(at a 20-year low), advocacy groups such as the NAACP and professional and
amateur theatrical and musical performances cater to a dwindling and graying
population. No one is coming through the door to take the place of the old
members. A generation has fallen down the rabbit hole of electronic
hallucinations—with images often dominated by violence and pornography. They
have become, in the words of the philosopher
Hannah
Arendt, “atomized,” sucked alone into systems of information and
entertainment that cater to America’s prurient fascination with the tawdry, the
cruel and the deadening cult of the self.
The entrapment in a world of nonstop electronic sounds and
images, begun with the phonograph and radio, advanced by cinema and television
and perfected by video games, the Internet and hand-held devices, is making it
impossible to build relationships and structures that are vital for civic
engagement and resistance to corporate power. We have been transformed into
commodities. The steady decline of the white male heaven that is NASCAR—which
has stopped publishing the falling attendance at its tracks and at some
speedways has begun to tear down bleachers—is ominous. It is the symbol of a
captive society.
“We don’t see the youth coming in,” Printup said. “The
millennial, the younger adults 18 to 35, is our target. We spend millions of
dollars a year to target that group. But it’s hard. Look around. Who’s the
youngest person here? That’s our problem. Every sport from the NFL to NHL is
struggling with the 18 to 35 demographic. They call them weird. They call them
difficult. They only want to look at their computers.”
Printup’s parent company, the International Speedway Corp. (ISC),
has invested significant sums to reach this demographic with little to show for
it.
“We have a digital firm that represents nearly all our tracks
in the ISC,” he went on, noting that Watkins Glen, which drew about 16,000 fans
this past weekend, is one of the few exceptions to the decline in numbers. “The
digital platform is about the only way you can get to them. We target them. We
buy lists. We hire an agency that tracks their Web and Internet interactions. If
they bring up racing, we want to be there. When a kid Googles
‘Ferrari—racing—sports car’ we are one of the top 10 lists. We pay for that. It
is not cheap. That’s how you have got to get these kids. But it’s not working
the way it should.”
Robert D. Putnam pointed out the
decline of independent civic engagement, or what he called our “social capital,”
in his
book “Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community.” He
noted that our severance from local communal and civic groups brought with it
not only loneliness and alienation, but also a dangerous and passive reliance on
the state.
Totalitarian societies, including our own, inundate the public
with a steady stream of propaganda accompanied by mindless entertainment. They
seek to destroy independent organizations. In Nazi Germany the state provided
millions of cheap, state-subsidized radios and then dominated the airwaves with
its propaganda. Radio receivers were mounted in public locations in Stalin’s
Soviet Union; and citizens, especially illiterate peasants, were required to
gather to listen to the state-controlled news and the dictator’s speeches. These
totalitarian states also banned civic organizations that were not under the iron
control of the party.
The corporate state is no different, although unlike past
totalitarian systems it permits dissent in the form of print and does not ban
fading civic and community groups. It has won the battle against literacy. The
seductiveness of the image lures most Americans away from the print-based world
of ideas. The fascination with the image swallows the time and energy required
to attend and maintain communal organizations. If no one reads, why censor
books? Let Noam Chomsky
publish as much as he wants. Just keep his voice off the airwaves. If no one
attends community meetings, group events or organizations, why prohibit them?
Let them be held in near-empty rooms and left uncovered by the press until they
are shuttered.
The object of a totalitarian state is to keep its citizens
locked within the parameters of official propaganda and permanently isolated.
Propaganda and isolation make it difficult for an individual to express or carry
out dissent. Official opinions, little more than digestible slogans and clichés,
are crafted and disseminated by public relations specialists on behalf of the
power elite. They are repeated endlessly over the airwaves until the public
unconsciously ingests them. And the isolated public in a totalitarian society is
unable to connect its personal experience of despair, anxiety, fear, frustration
and economic insecurity to the structures that create these conditions. The
isolated citizen is left feeling that his or her personal misfortune is an
exception. The portrayal of society by systems of state propaganda—content,
respectful of authority, just, economically secure and free—is mistaken for
reality.
Totalitarian propaganda, accompanied by isolation, or what
Arendt called “atomization,” makes it possible for a population not to “believe
in anything visible, in the reality of their own experience; they do not trust
their eyes and ears but only their imaginations, which may be caught by anything
that is at once universal and consistent in itself.” This propaganda, Arendt
went on, “gave the masses of atomized, undefinable, unstable and futile
individuals a means of self-definition and identification.”
Corporate propaganda saturates the public, especially a
generation wedded to new technology, with these lies. Its power, however, comes
from the meticulous study of the moods, prejudices, whims and desires of the
public, to manipulate the masses in their own language and emotions.
Konrad
Heiden made this point when he examined fascist propaganda in Nazi Germany,
noting that propaganda must detect the murmur of the public “and translate it
into intelligible utterance and convincing action.”
“The true aim of political propaganda is not to influence, but
to study, the masses,” Heiden wrote. “The speaker is in constant communication
with the masses; he hears an echo, and senses the inner vibration.” Heiden,
forced to flee Nazi Germany, went on: “When a resonance issues from the depths
of the substance, the masses have given him the pitch; he knows in what terms he
must finally address them. Rather than a means of directing the mass mind,
propaganda is a technique for riding with the masses. It is not a machine to
make wind but a sail to catch the wind.”
Dissent will only be possible when we break the dark spell of
corporate propaganda and the isolation that accompanies it. We must free
ourselves from corporate tyranny, which means refusing to invest our emotional
and intellectual energy in electronic images. We must build what the Russian
anarchist
Peter
Kropotkin called “voluntary associations for study and teaching, for
industry, commerce, science, art, literature, exploitation, resistance to
exploitation, amusement, serious work, gratification and self-denial.”
“We know well the means by which this association of the lord,
priest, merchant, judge, soldier, and king founded its domination,” Kropotkin
wrote. “It was by the annihilation of all free unions: of village communities,
guilds, trades unions, fraternities, and medieval cities. It was by confiscating
the land of the communes and the riches of the guilds; it was by the absolute
and ferocious prohibition of all kinds of free agreement between men; it was by
massacre, the wheel, the gibbet, the sword, and the fire that Church and State
established their domination, and that they succeeded henceforth to reign over
an incoherent agglomeration of subjects, who had no direct union more among
themselves.”
Corporate propaganda has become so potent that many Americans
are addicted. We must leave our isolated rooms. We must shut out these images.
We must connect with those around us. It is only the communal that will save us.
It is only the communal that will allow us to build a movement to resist. And it
is only the communal that will sustain us through mutual aid as climate change
and economic collapse increasingly dominate our future.
Chris Hedges spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He
has reported from more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New York
Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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