by mos6507 » Fri 22 Apr 2011, 11:51:46
If I were to characterize the dominant theme of this board in the last couple of years, it's been the blame-game, with fingers firmly pointed upward towards "TPTB". While there are certainly bad actors, of which I'd say the Koch brothers are at the top of the pyramid, I think the tendency we have to externalize distracts us from the larger issues of the cultural landscape that spawns the Koch brothers, idiots like GWB serving two terms, or the Tea Party wave.
Yet since I'm largely the only person trying to crash the feel-good party of perpetual back-seat-driving and heckling the Obama administration, I get tarred and feathered as some sort of outlier who isn't fit to wear the doomer banner. You just can't be a doomer unless your rhetoric dishes out a steady dose of cliche' phrases about how the two parties are identical and the system is rigged. Greer himself fails to see some distinctions between the parties in this post, since he seems to be a little soft on environmental concerns where there is the most difference, but overall his essay is essential reading.
Here are the key phrases that Greer uses which are exactly what I've been trying to say all this time:
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')...nearly all the people who accept the notions I have in mind are convinced that they’re rebelling against conformity by conforming to a belief system shared by nearly everybody else in the country.
The credo in question? It’s the belief that all the decisions that really matter in the United States today are made by a small elite, insulated from the democratic process, who are pursuing policies that would be rejected by the American people if the latter had the chance to make up their own minds.
Here is another great paragraph that strikes to the core of what I've been saying.
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')At any given time, there may be a couple of dozen organized groups or more trying to push some set of ideas on the public by fair means or foul. What is not often recognized is that the public is not merely a passive participant in this process. Multimillion-dollar marketing campaigns routinely flop because the American public, motivated by its habitual perversity, shrugs and walks away from the most carefully crafted marketing pitch to embrace some fad or fashion nobody on Madison Avenue saw coming. That is to say,
manipulation works in both directions; those people who try to bend public opinion to their own ends can succeed only by telling the public what it wants to hear. ')Much of the economic history of the last thirty years has been driven by the need for the political establishment to keep giving the American public what it demanded, even when those demands could only be met by a series of increasingly risky high-stakes gambles and dubiously legal expedients.
...
, long after every real basis for that prosperity has evaporated, ranks well up among them.