Democrats and the End(s) of Politics

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Photo by Carlos Pacheco | CC BY 2.0

Capitalism Trumps Democracy

A paradox at the intersection of capitalism and representative democracy is that under capitalism every person represents their own interests. The King of Versailles (Donald Trump) illustrates this tendency most straightforwardly amongst modern political leadership. But the paradox is systemic, not personal. And the question that follows is: which is to be shedded, capitalism or democracy?

The bourgeois tendency of conflating technocracy with intelligence is itself profoundly anti-democratic. Technocracy is manufactured social complexity, capitalist bureaucracy as ethos. And bourgeois loathing is technocracy confronted by the logic that drives it. In this sense, Donald Trump is the veil ripped away, the existential predicament locked in a strip mall in suburbia with only the detritus of its own creation for companionship.


Graph: political rhetoric that poses Democrats and Republicans as ideological adversaries is challenged by shared policies to make the rich richer. Donald Trump’s regressive tax cuts serve the same constituency that benefited from Barack Obama’s bank bailouts. Source: Emmanuel Saez.

Against any preponderance of human history that might be proffered: war + fucking + art, etc., the notion of cosmic intelligence that has form as the business meeting, the spreadsheet and the PowerPoint presentation is amongst the least probable. What is so deeply frightening about Donald Trump, his predecessors and likely successors, is the form and logic of ‘how’ laboring under the illusion that it serves some higher logic.

Put differently, who precisely was ‘saved’ when the banks were bailed out in 2009? Donald Trump’s fortunes were most certainly revived. So were the Koch Brothers’. And who are these wise leaders that Barack Obama was modernizing the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal for? Speculate as you will, but Mr. Trump is the man who currently occupies this position. So which is the fool, Mr. Trump or the people who created the power he now holds?

Politicking

In late 2002 and early 2003 George W. Bush effectively sold a blunderous, murderous and ill-fated war against Iraq to the American people. He did so by presenting fake evidence using ‘useful idiots’ at the Washington Post and New York Times to give it ‘independent’ credence. Polls taken at the time reflected the effect this fake news had on garnering public enthusiasm for the War.

Contrast this with Bill Clinton’s poll-based ‘micro-democracy’ where Mr. Clinton took up Ronald Reagan’s major talking points as they were regurgitated to pollsters by the polity. In fact, the seeds of ‘Reaganism’ had been planted in the early 1970s in what has come to look like a neo-capitalist coup. If Mr. Reagan could sell Reaganism, why couldn’t Mr. Clinton sell its antidote?


Graph: in the late 1970s the manufactured crisis of ‘stagflation’ was used to discard the New Deal in favor of neoliberalism. Carter appointee Paul Volcker raised interest rates to nosebleed levels to end inflation that resulted from U.S. geopolitical maneuvers. The practical effect was to crush American labor, begin the process of moving U.S. manufacturing overseas and launch the ascendance of finance. The ‘Reagan Miracle’ began the minute Mr. Volcker lowered interest rates. Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve.

Later, when it came to Wall Street bailouts and Obamacare, Barack Obama favored closed door meetings with industry insiders where ‘deals’ that effectively guaranteed them profits were framed to convince the public that these were the best outcomes that could ‘pragmatically’ be expected. ‘Pragmatism’ here served as a rhetorical bridge between the public interest and the policies that were implemented. Technocratic competence found its true calling.

The ‘innovation’ added by Donald Trump is the explicitly anti-technocratic ‘it’s all bullshit anyway’ business-ism that once payment has been secured, it doesn’t matter if the product sold really ‘works.’ In like fashion, even after the social catastrophes of the Clinton’s programs became too evident to avoid, they were only reconsidered by candidate (Hillary) Clinton as a means of getting from here to there (elected).

A paradox of the Democrats’ ‘pragmatism’ is that there would be little by way of organized opposition to policies in the public interest if their effort to make the rich richer had not been so successful. The so-called economic debacle of ‘stagflation’ during Jimmy Carter’s presidency was a set-up. Carter appointee Paul Volcker intentionally caused the (then) worst recession since the Great Depression. The ‘Reagan miracle’ began when Mr. Volcker stopped causing recession.

In theory, any national Democrat could challenge the neoliberal orthodoxy ‘proven’ to work by Mr. Reagan and take bold political programs directly to the people. However, Democrats (Bill) Clinton and Obama both proceeded from defensive assertions that carefully selected ‘facts’ precluded them from accomplishing anything but Republican objectives. ‘Pragmatism’ linked technocracy to its embedded goals in the service capitalist (not capital) accumulation.

The canard of ‘the Federal budget deficit’ (the U.S. has a fiat money system) allowed Mr. Clinton to pass the unfinished programs of the ‘Reagan Revolution’— cutting welfare, deregulating the banks, militarizing the police, etc., while foregoing his promised increase in social spending. The economic debacle begun in 2007 allowed Barack Obama to richly reward his top campaign contributors while leaving those who lives were diminished by them to their own devices.

The current strategy of blaming Russia for Ms. Clinton’s 2016 loss has apparently been reduced to putting the ‘Steele’ dossier, commissioned and paid for by the Clinton campaign, forward as potential grounds for ‘compromising’ Donald Trump. What Democrats don’t yet appear to understand is that if there were a video of women urinating on Donald Trump in a Moscow hotel room he would be selling autographed copies of it on the internet and giving them out as holiday gifts.

More to the point, some fair number of Americans no doubt see Wall Street and the broad edifice of American capitalism as every bit the threat to democracy that bourgeois Democrats claim Russia is. How then is the Democrats’ choice to promote the neoliberal orthodoxy by working to further enrich its cloistered, kleptocratic proponents ‘pragmatic’ if winning elections is their goal? The question then is: is winning elections really their goal? And if so, why?

The Democrats’ failure of political understanding regarding Mr. Trump isn’t that voters are crass (deplorable?) but rather that conflating technocracy with intelligence and sophistication confuses style with substance. Donald Trump is the prototypical, iconic if you will, beneficiary of the national Democrats’ policies. As was said of George W. Bush, Mr. Trump was born on third base but believes he hit a home run. But if he is undeserving of the Democrats’ largesse, who precisely, are the deserving kleptocrats?

Despite the heated rhetoric, Donald Trump’s policies are nearly identical to those of the national Democrats. That Democratic Party loyalists claim great differences suggests first and foremost that they know next to nothing about the policies they claim to support. Bill Clinton and Barack Obama may not have been casual with racist blather the way that Mr. Trump is, but their policies were (so far) more effectively vicious than anything that Donald Trump has done as president.

It is in some fair measure the refusal by liberals and progressives to hold Democrats to account for their policies that renders current protestations against Mr. Trump ineffective. As one who regularly travels between classes, the poor and disenfranchised are every bit as intelligent as educated technocrats and they tend to be more resourceful because they have to be. So imagine for a moment that people with whom you may disagree politically are as smart as you are but find themselves living in radically different circumstances.

As the old and new Gilded Ages have demonstrated, the benefits of neo-capitalism accrue narrowly while the detriments are widely distributed. A few people benefit from bank bailouts, trade deals, climate crisis, the immiseration of labor and the use of public resources for private gain. But the overwhelming preponderance of humanity exists on the losing end. The ‘winners’ in this system are the donor class for both of the American capitalist Parties. The National Democrats need to answer: what sort of psycho / sociopath wants to be a ‘winner’ in such circumstances?


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 Rob Urie is an artist and political economist. His book Zen Economics is published by CounterPunch Books. 

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ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

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Parting shot—a word from the editors
The Best Definition of Donald Trump We Have Found

In his zeal to prove to his antagonists in the War Party that he is as bloodthirsty as their champion, Hillary Clinton, and more manly than Barack Obama, Trump seems to have gone “play-crazy” — acting like an unpredictable maniac in order to terrorize the Russians into forcing some kind of dramatic concessions from their Syrian allies, or risk Armageddon.However, the “play-crazy” gambit can only work when the leader is, in real life, a disciplined and intelligent actor, who knows precisely what actual boundaries must not be crossed. That ain’t Donald Trump — a pitifully shallow and ill-disciplined man, emotionally handicapped by obscene privilege and cognitively crippled by white American chauvinism. By pushing Trump into a corner and demanding that he display his most bellicose self, or be ceaselessly mocked as a “puppet” and minion of Russia, a lesser power, the War Party and its media and clandestine services have created a perfect storm of mayhem that may consume us all. Glen Ford, Editor in Chief, Black Agenda Report

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Lazy Liberals and “the Trump Effect”

HELP ENLIGHTEN YOUR FELLOWS. BE SURE TO PASS THIS ON. SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON IT.

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) represents the Russiagate infection at its worst and silliest, which is about the same, as liberalism has degenerated into a functional form of general imbecility. The liberal disease afflicting America has wiped out any traces of real progressivism liberalism ever laid a claim to, even among supposedly progressive Black congresspeople.


Liberals and other Democrats are getting dumber by the day. I keep running into them and hearing the same story over and over: things are bad because Trump is the president.

That’s it. It’s all you have to know. It’s the only thing that matters to these unstable dolts. It’s all about Trump. It’s Trump this, Trump that. All day long. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, and Trump some more.

CNN and MSNBC et al. keep up the drumbeat.  Trump tweeted this.  Trump said that. Everything is trumped by Trump, Trump, Trump (with a strong overlay of Russia, Russia, Russia, of course).

Now we have the Michael Wolff book – an orgy of revelations on the madness and dysfunction of the Insane Clown President.

There’s no social and power structures that matter. There’s no underlying class rule or longstanding capitalist ecocide, no dominant oppressive institutions, no ideologies that matter….no history that matters.

Racism? It’s cuz of Trump.

Sexism?  Trump did it.

Threat of nuclear holocaust?  Blame Trump.

Inequality and plutocracy?  The handiwork of Boss Tweet, that bastard.

Climate change?  You know the answer: big stupid Trump. Damn him!

Look, I dislike the Stable Genius as much as does anyone left of Paul Ryan.  But this is crazy.  It’s every bit as dotard-like as the Donald his own mad self.  Liberals have fallen prey to what one of my Canadian correspondents, Gabriel Alan, calls “the Trump Effect of whitewashing and absolving this rightwing system.”  (The “Trump Effect,” Alan notes, is used “being applied by corporate [neo]liberals in other countries. For example, the Liberal government in Canada is casting corporate ‘free trade’ as a progressive feature of economic governance by virtue of the fact that Trump’s NAFTA negotiators are trying to change the accord to eliminate the corporate courts thru which governments can be sued for any law or action that hinder ‘future expected profits.’”)

“Their fixation on Trump,” Vivek Jain writes me from Virginia, “allows them to ignore the wickedness of capitalism and of the US government.”

“Trump is a great distraction,” Tom Wetzel writes me – a “cover for elite interests: ‘if only there wasn’t some obviously racist clown in the white house everything would be cool.’”


Pelosi and her gang.

It’s a richly bipartisan wickedness. Droves of liberals and Democrats think that things were just great when the Neoliberal Drone King, Wall Street bailout champion, single-payer deep-sixer, Libya bomber, and offshore drilling and fracking fan Barack Obama was president. And that things would be just super if the Wall Street War Hawk and arch-elitist “Queen of Chaos” was back in the White House. You betchya!

The orange-tinted Awful One has helped turn of untold millions of liberals into sputtering morons every bit as idiotic as some FOX News “deplorable” who thinks that global warming is a Chinese conspiracy. It’s a just a different, blue brand of stupid.

Liberals have gone down a childish, presidentially and electorally obsessed black hole. It’s more extreme now because of the peculiar freakishness of the arch-narcissistic and Twitter-weaponized El Donito, but it’s nothing new, really. This went on with George W. Bush, too, to some degree. And Reagan.

The solution to everything wrong in the world for liberals is getting a corporate military Democrat in the White House. It’s all about rallying around some new shining star from the Inauthentic Opposition Party (the late Sheldon Wolin’s excellent for the dismal dollar-drenched Dems) into the Oval Office. Then it’ll be blue-zone liberals turn to feel good while red state Republicans stew.


MSNBC's lead Russiagater Rachel Maddow embodies the worst of several worlds: corrupt and degenerate liberalism, media prostitution, russophobia, and the imposture of warmongering corporatist Democrat politics behind the cloak of progressive anti-sexism and bourgeois feminism (Maddow is gay and a champ of LGBT). In that sense Maddow betrays the struggles of genuine champions of justice in the LGBT camp, people like Chelsea Manning.

[dropcap]H[/dropcap]ey, maybe Oprah Winfrey. Or Michelle Obama, who said this to the new presidential hopeful Oprah on CBS five weeks after Trump was elected: “color, wealth, these things that don’t matter…It’s our values; it’s how we live our lives.” Leaving aside the fact that U.S. domestic oppression structures of class and race generate savagely unequal life chances for hundreds of millions of Americans, just what good and progressive “values” were suggested by the following key parts of the record of the Obama administration: bailing out the parasitic elites who crashed the national and global economy but not the working-class majority and the poor; taking the U.S. drone campaign to new levels of planetary hyper-terrorism; passing a health care reform that only the big insurance and drug companies could love; doing nothing to make it easier for workers to form unions; lecturing poor Black people on their own supposed personal responsibility for their own poverty;  serving as a shield and representative of the mostly white O.1%  that owns nearly more wealth than the bottom 90 percent; advancing the corporate school privatization agenda; going after whistleblowers more viciously than any other president; advancing an “all of the above” energy policy that helped keep carbon emissions and planetary warming on the rise after undermining efforts for binding global emission limits; bombing innocent villagers in Afghanistan; decimating Libya; installing a right-wing coup regime in Honduras and generally keeping the U.S. imperial machine set on kill, maim, spy, and torture.

All of this more helped set the nation and world up for the, yes, noxious and dangerous Donald Trump presidency. Three cheers to professor Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor for this recent reflection from her recent essay in the indispensable new Haymarket Press collection U.S. Politics in an Age of Uncertainty:

The horrors and challenges presented by the Trump administration should not obscure the very important discussion of how the administration came into power…This means locating that which connects the Trump administration to the past while allowing for what sets his administration apart.

…if we assign Trump and his band of rogues, racists, and reactionaries an exceptional or unprecedented place in American history, then we cannot make sense of the most recent past. Plainly stated, if things were so great before Trump, why did Ferguson, Missouri erupt in the summer of 2014?;  why did Baltimore explode eight months later?; why, indeed, did a movement called Black Lives Matter arise during a time of the greatest concentration of Black political power in American history?

You cannot, in fact, understand the emergence of Trump without taking account of this recent history and the failure of the liberal establishment to provide a real alternative to the reactionary populism…of Trump. As wholly opposite in demeanor, aptitude, and temperament as Barack Obama and Donald Trump are, we cannot actually understand the rise of Trump without taking account of the failure of Obama to deliver on his promises of hope and change (emphasis added).

Since their opposition is inauthentic, the neoliberal Dems hand the White House to the horrid GOP once every four or eight years. The White House swings between the dismal, dollar-drenched Dems (the 4Ds) and the radically regressive and reactionary Repugs (the 4Rs). Back and forth it goes, with both sides calling their electoral victories “change” in different but inseparably linked partisan and identity-politicized dialects – two sides of the same bourgeois-electoral coin and “two wings of the same bird of prey” (Upton Sinclair, 1904). Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs, Exxon, Citigroup, and Lockheed Martin always win, racist mass incarceration persists, inequality widens (as it did under Obama), wages stagnate, and the planet tips closer to terminal geocide.

Rob Reiner: the erstwhile Jewish liberal is a now full-fledged imperialist, and idiot to boot, a prominent part of the cabal of Democrats trying to convince the public that removing Trump and warring with Russia will fix the problems of the world.

“The greatest evil,” one correspondent writes me, “is the theory of the lesser-of-the-two evils.” Not for me. The top evil I’m trying to bring attention here is the obsession with (to paraphrase Howard Zinn) who’s sitting in the White House as opposed to the more urgent politics of who’s sitting in the streets, in the factories, in the offices, in the town halls, etc.  My concern with that evil is why I check the Des Moines Register statewide election poll to make sure the presidential race is already a done deal in Iowa before I cast my third party presidential votes in that state. If it looks like the state is in play, I’ll vote for the 4D party to block the 4R party (I haven’t felt compelled to do that since 2004, the first time I ever voted in a “contested state”).

I have a different reason than standard left “less evil-ism” for preferring Democrats in the White House.  . With a Republican in the White House, liberals and progressives fall into the standard trap of thinking that the only thing wrong with the country is that “those insane evil Republicans are in charge” and that the cure to the nation’s ills is to trek off to the polls for two minutes in a voting book once every four years and try to put a Democrat back in the White House. I’ve seen it again and again. It’s happening right now, with a vengeance

It’s pathetic and it’s what the brilliant Howard Zinn tried to warn people against in an essay on the “Election Madness” he saw “engulfing the entire society including the left” in the year of Obama’s ascendancy. An “election frenzy,” Zinn wrote, “seizes the country every four years because we have all been brought up to [falsely]believe that voting is crucial in determining our destiny, that the most important act a citizen can engage in is to go to the polls. …” Zinn acknowledged that he probably would support one major-party candidate over another “for two minutes—the amount of time it takes to pull the lever down in the voting booth.” But then, he wrote:

[O]ur time, our energy, should be spent in educating, agitating, organizing our fellow citizens in the workplace, in the neighborhood, in the schools. Our objective should be to build, painstakingly, patiently but energetically, a movement that, when it reaches a certain critical mass, would shake whoever is in the White House, in Congress, into changing national policy on matters of war and social justice. … We should not expect that a victory at the ballot box in November will even begin to budge the nation from its twin fundamental illnesses: capitalist greed and militarism. … Before [elections] … and after … we should be taking direct action against the obstacles to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. … Historically, government, whether in the hands of Republicans or Democrats, conservatives or liberals, has failed its responsibilities, until forced to by direct action: sit-ins and Freedom Rides for the rights of black people, strikes and boycotts for the rights of workers, mutinies and desertions of soldiers in order to stop a war. Voting is easy and marginally useful, but it is a poor substitute for democracy, which requires direct action by concerned citizens.

This is why I resisted the temptation to be awestruck by the remarkable outpouring of U.S.-Americans who protested the inauguration of Donald Trump in January. Cable news talking heads marveled at the marches, calling them the “biggest social movement since the 1960s.” But what were those massive but polite, pink-hatted marches all about? While many of the chants and signs heard and seen at the historic marches indicated policy concerns, the clear and simple thing that had put millions in the streets was the awful man who is now sitting in the White House. It was about an election outcome. The new president hadn’t even made any policy yet. What he’s actually done as president has yet to generate protests remotely on the scale of the ones sparked by the Awful One’s entrance into the Oval Office.

Most of the millions who hit the streets to voice outrage against the election of Trump would have stayed home if it had been the dismal arch-corporatist and “lying neoliberal warmonger” Hillary Clinton being inaugurated. And that is very telling. As Chris Hedges noted in the summer of 2016:

Hedges: The last few years have seen his conversion to a clear and straightforward conversion to anti-capitalism, no more reformism for him, and no more liberal nostrums.

The predatory financial institutions on Wall Street will trash the economy and loot the U.S. Treasury on the way to another economic collapse whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president. Poor, unarmed people of color will be gunned down in the streets of our cities whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president. The system of neo-slavery in our prisons, where we keep poor men and poor women of color in cages because we have taken from them the possibility of employment, education and dignity, will be maintained whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president. Millions of undocumented people will be deported whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president. Austerity programs will cut or abolish public services, further decay the infrastructure and curtail social programs whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president. Money will replace the vote whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president. And half the country, which now lives in poverty, will remain in misery whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton becomes president. This is not speculation. We know this because there has been total continuity on every issue, from trade agreements to war to mass deportations, between the Bush administration and the administration of Barack Obama. … The problem is not Donald Trump. The problem is capitalism. And this is the beast we are called to fight and slay. Until that is done, nothing of substance will change. … To reduce the political debate, as [Bernie] Sanders and others are doing, to political personalities is political infantilism. We have undergone a corporate coup. Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton will not reverse this coup. They, like Barack Obama, know where the centers of power lie. They serve these centers of power.

The atmosphere of the planet, Hedges might have added, would be continuing its disastrous, capitalogenic march towards 500 carbon parts per million by 2050 if not sooner (please see my latest report on Truthdig) with Hillary Clinton in the White House.

Steven Colbert: as faux a progressive as they come. He sold out completely when he accepted CBS's prize, and now his cheap antics against Trump —an easy target—and tacit endorsement of Democrats, is both typical of this type of corporatist comedian and the wing of the empire he serves. Too bad untold numbers of clueless people, many young, fall for his false pearls of wisdom.

The dysfunctional over-focus on who’s sitting in the White House — yes, the horrific Boss Tweet right now, maybe Kirsten Gillibrand (or Oprah or Michelle or Andrew Cuomo or Kamala Harris) in 2021— is sustained between election spectacles by the cable news talking heads and the late-night comedians, for whom Trump is a gift that keeps on giving. It is fed by hopes for impeachment on grounds of collusion with Russia in the subversion of our supposed great democratic electoral process.

All the evils that Hedges mentions would survive the impeachment and removal of Trump. Nothing of substance would change. The removal of Richard Nixon from the U.S. presidency in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal was followed by a deepening descent into the long neoliberal era, which has culminated in the current New Gilded Age of shocking economic disparity and abject, richly bipartisan plutocracy.

Zinn and Hedges’ wise words belong in the front of the minds of all citizens and workers who want to see democracy break out and take hold at long last in the oligarchic United States. They help us keep our eyes on the real prize: changing policy in a progressive direction and radically restructuring society beneath and beyond the biennial and quadrennial big-money, major-media, candidate-centered “electoral extravaganzas” (Noam Chomsky) that are sold to us as politics, “the only politics that matters.”


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 Paul Street’s latest book is They Rule: The 1% v. Democracy (Paradigm, 2014) 

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

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Parting shot—a word from the editors
The Best Definition of Donald Trump We Have Found

In his zeal to prove to his antagonists in the War Party that he is as bloodthirsty as their champion, Hillary Clinton, and more manly than Barack Obama, Trump seems to have gone “play-crazy” — acting like an unpredictable maniac in order to terrorize the Russians into forcing some kind of dramatic concessions from their Syrian allies, or risk Armageddon.However, the “play-crazy” gambit can only work when the leader is, in real life, a disciplined and intelligent actor, who knows precisely what actual boundaries must not be crossed. That ain’t Donald Trump — a pitifully shallow and ill-disciplined man, emotionally handicapped by obscene privilege and cognitively crippled by white American chauvinism. By pushing Trump into a corner and demanding that he display his most bellicose self, or be ceaselessly mocked as a “puppet” and minion of Russia, a lesser power, the War Party and its media and clandestine services have created a perfect storm of mayhem that may consume us all. Glen Ford, Editor in Chief, Black Agenda Report

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Hawaii’s “false alarm” and the advanced preparations for war against North Korea

 By Bill Van Auken, wsws.org


The “false alarm” delivered to a population of 1.5 million in the US Pacific island state of Hawaii on Saturday morning has laid bare the clear and present danger of a nuclear war.Cell phones lit up with the text message “BALLISTIC MISSILE THREAT INBOUND TO HAWAII. SEEK IMMEDIATE SHELTER. THIS IS NOT A DRILL.” Television and radio broadcasts were interrupted with the chilling announcement that “A missile may impact on sea or land within minutes. This is not a drill.”

For 38 minutes, residents of and visitors to Hawaii were confronted face to face with nuclear Armageddon. Parents frantically sought to find and protect their children, families said last goodbyes and people desperately sought largely nonexistent shelter in anticipation of a nuclear blast.

The fact that this event is so rapidly disappearing from the front pages of major newspapers and is being reduced to a secondary story by television news is itself a disturbing indication of how much more is involved in the Hawaii ballistic missile warning than the public is being told.

The corporate media, working in tight coordination with the US government, is in full containment mode. Monday night, all three US television networks broadcast virtually identical reports based on their admission to Hawaii’s Emergency Management System bunker to support the official story that the chaos was caused by the inadvertent error of a single employee.

The official reaction to what constitutes a social crime committed against an entire population is unfolding according to a well-established pattern. The event and its implications are being minimized. No one is going to conduct an investigation and present findings to the public. There will be no televised public hearings before the US Congress.

The explanation being put out by the state and federal authorities, and parroted by the media, fobs off the nuclear war alert as a mere accident triggered by a single careless worker at Hawaii’s Emergency Management System. The unnamed individual supposedly selected the wrong computer menu option, keying in “Missile Alert” instead of “Test Missile Alert.”

There is no reason that anyone should blindly accept this official story as true. Given the record of the US government in staging provocations and launching wars based upon lies, not only severe skepticism, but outright suspicion is called for.

How could such an accident happen? Once again, a major public event is shrouded in secrecy. Why has the individual allegedly responsible for the “accident” not been named? The claim that the person is being protected against retaliation by enraged citizens is not credible. At the very least, the single individual who is being blamed for the colossal error should have the right to tell his or her side of the story. And even if the incident was triggered by a single mistaken keypunch, that does not explain why it took a full, excruciating 38 minutes for the authorities to send out a follow-up message announcing that the warning had been a “false alarm.”

Even if one were to accept the authorities’ version of events as good coin, such an “accident” constitutes a devastating indictment of the criminal indifference of the US ruling establishment toward the lives and safety of the American people. The existence of such a ramshackle system, employing absurdly primitive software and technology as the supposed first line of defense, only makes clear that the ruling class accepts that nuclear war will mean the deaths of millions and has no serious plan to protect anyone. Just as with every other disaster, natural or otherwise, the incident in Hawaii has exposed the total absence of essential infrastructure and social planning.

That these events unfolded in Hawaii, the scene of the so-called “sneak attack” of December 7, 1941, the “date which will live in infamy” of American lore, make them all the more telling. The headquarters of the US Pacific Command, Hawaii boasts 11 separate military bases comprising units from every branch of the US military.

The significance of Saturday’s nuclear war alert becomes clear only within the context of the advanced state of preparations for a US war of aggression against nuclear-armed North Korea.

A glimpse into the scope of these preparations was provided Monday in a front-page article published by the New York Times. Absurdly, the piece begins, “Across the military, officers and troops are preparing for a war they hope will not come.” Yet the substance of the article makes clear that what is being prepared is not a defense against a North Korean attack, but rather the invasion and conquest of the East Asian country.

The article describes an exercise last month involving 48 Apache gunships and Chinook cargo helicopters practicing “moving troops and equipment under live artillery fire to assault targets.” Two days later, it reports, paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division staged a jump in Nevada that “simulated a foreign invasion.”

Even more ominously, the Times reports that for the first time in years, more than 1,000 US Army reservists have been called up for active duty to man “mobilization centers” used for the rapid movement of troops overseas.

The preparations also include a plan to deploy large numbers of Special Operations troops to the Korean Peninsula under the cover of providing security for next month’s Winter Olympics.

More and more, these actions begin to resemble the run-up to the US war of aggression against Iraq in 2003, with the exception that this time around the American public is being given no warning of impending mass carnage, outside of the raving tweets of the US commander-in-chief.

That the Times article appeared at all—under the byline of Eric Schmitt, the Times’ chief “embedded” reporter and a faithful conduit for the Pentagon and CIA—makes it clear that the military preparations are of such a magnitude that they are becoming broadly known, requiring the “newspaper of record” to attempt to manage the news.

The article also points to divisions between the White House and the Pentagon and within the US military command itself over impending war with North Korea. Trump and his aides reportedly are toying with what has been termed a “bloody nose” attack targeting North Korean nuclear weapons, based on the assumption that Pyongyang would not retaliate.

Within this context, the “accidental” nuclear alert in Hawaii emerges as a necessary link in the chain of preparations for a catastrophic war. Was the “false alarm” itself one more military exercise? Were the people of Hawaii used as guinea pigs to test the public reaction should a US invasion of North Korea prompt the government of Kim Jong Un to fire off its missiles before they could be destroyed?

There is another possible explanation for the false alarm and the prolonged wait for it to be rescinded. The Times also published an article Monday referring to the 1983 KAL 007 incident as an example of how an unintended nuclear war could erupt. It fails to explain, however, that the Korean Airlines passenger jet was shot down by Soviet air defense fighters after it deliberately flew over Sakhalin, the site of numerous top secret Soviet military bases, as part of an operation coordinated with US intelligence agencies. A US spy plane was flying on a parallel course, shadowing the KAL flight, observing the responses of Soviet nuclear installations, radar stations and air bases.

There is no question that once the incoming missile alert was issued in Hawaii, the government and the military, not only in North Korea, but also in China and Russia, were compelled to make their own rapid estimates as to what it meant and how they should respond. The logical conclusion would be that Washington was staging a false pretext for all-out war.

No doubt, military units were placed on alert, weapons were readied or moved and other preparations for possible nuclear conflict were carried out, all under the watchful eyes of US spy satellites, providing intelligence that could prove vital for a planned US invasion of North Korea.

Whatever the cause of Saturday’s nuclear scare, one thing is certain. The missile alert staged in Hawaii constitutes a deadly serious warning. It has exposed before millions the very real threat of nuclear war.

Bill Van Auken


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
The author is a senior editorialist and analyst with wsws.org, a Marxist publication. 

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

 CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS

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Time, Postmodernism, Science and Capitalism

[dropcap]W[/dropcap]hile still in the shadow of the old year and the glow of the new, here are some thoughts about a commodity of infinite availability, but that we so often are short of. Time that is, that ceaseless lackey of eternity1, whose inaudible and noiseless foot2 is our unavoidable companion and silent witness of joy and sorrow.

With no attempt at precision I offer here a brief review, in (hopefully) coherent language, of the key scientific and historical steps leading to our current understanding of time considered as a physical entity. Followed by brief considerations on the influence of capitalism on the measurement of time.

I claim no scientific expertise on the subject – the review is but a brief summary of a brief history of time. A help, for me and perhaps some readers, to connect in one logical and simplified sequence the most important scientific concepts and advances, leading to the current agreed-upon view of time, and, more at large, of cosmology.

There is also another objective in striving for simplicity. As per the previous article – “The Fraud of Freud” – Freudian psychoanalysis has been largely discredited by the gross and deep dishonesty of its founder. Which included, as a tool of deception, the use of ridiculous academic language to make what is dramatically trivial appear as ‘scientific,’ thus helping to hide the morbidity, not to say the perversion (sexual and otherwise) of Freud, still considered a guru by many.

But deception never takes a long rest. Defining our current Zeitgeist is a vague and nebulous term coined by the intelligentsia as “postmodernism.” Its vagueness provides a convenient cover for such manifestations as political correctness, feminism, gender neutrality, transgenderism, furries (that is, people who dress like and pretend to be their favorite animal), miscegenation, irrelevance of sexual distinctions, racial meaninglessness (except for Jews), elimination of borders and nationalities (except Israel), unlimited immigration into the US and Europe, notably from Islamic and African countries, cultural diversity, integration and more.

And just as the film industry is a top-down imposition of official ideology, masqueraded as popular taste, postmodernism is a top-down imposition of a culture exuding from academia, and rooted in the comparatively little known socio-philosophical movement called “Cultural Marxism.” In turn, Cultural Marxism traces its roots to the 1960s and the so-called Frankfurt schools of academics.

In my view, “Cultural” and “classical” Marxism have little to do with each other. Yet, cultural Marxism at large has inspired the actual ongoing war against Western European people, nations, culture and values. A war using as weapons the tools of postmodernism, as per the list above.

We can observe a local, current, topic example and evidence of this war in the case of a class action suit, brought by a Caucasian employee against Google, who was fired after reacting with a memo objecting to the promoted and imposed-from-above company culture of “postmodernism.”

In academia, however, the postmodernists have learned to avoid the fake language of the Freudians. But the new academic postmodernist language is worse. For postmodernists attempt to blend sociology and philosophy with mathematics and physics – of which (mathematics and physics), they appear to know little other than the sound of some words.

To suggest erudition, this new brand of academics scatters and sprinkles technical terms in a context where they are totally irrelevant. And they exhibit an intoxication with words, combined with indifference to their meaning. The overall idea is to exploit the generally accepted accuracy of natural sciences, such as mathematics, to give a veneer of rigor to text that is both meaningless and incomprehensible.

In turn, the meaninglessness is intended as evidence of profound thought. Which would be almost amusing, except for the students who waste their money to acquire an “education.” Education, in the instance, based on charlatanism, hiding behind the mask of academic prestige and sustained by the students’ money that keeps up that prestige. We can only imagine the general character of graduates, shaped and forged by this new brand of academia.

There are books written on the subject. Here are some quotes, for example from Lacan, one such guru who married sociology and psychiatry with ‘science.’

As a now recurrent practice for me before quoting, I should reassure my 25 readers that I am not making these quotations up. No longer startled by unbelievable evidence, I am almost compelled to agree with Oscar Wilde’s maxim, “I believe everything, provided it is quite incredible.”

Here is Lacan,

“The diagram (Moebius strips) can be considered the basis of a sort of essential inscription at the origin, in the knot which constitutes the subject. This goes much further than you may think at first, because you can search for the sort of surface able to receive such inscriptions. You can perhaps see that the sphere, the old symbol for totality, is unsuitable. A torusb, a Klein bottlec, a cross-cut surface, are able to receive such a cut. And this diversity is very important as it explains many things about the structure of mental disease….”

And later he clarifies,

“… The intersection I am talking about is the same one I put forward earlier as being that which covers or poses an obstacle to the supposed sexual relationship.
Only supposed since I state that analytic discourse is premised solely on the statement that there is no such thing, that it is impossible to found a sexual relationship. Therein lies analytic discourse’s step forward and it is thereby that it determines the real status of the other discourses.
Named here is the point that covers the impossibility of the sexual relationship as such. Pleasure, qua sexual, is phallic – in other words, it is not related to the Other as such.
Let us follow here the complement of the hypothesis of compactness.
A formulation is given to us by the topology I qualified as the most recent that takes as its point of departure a logic constructed on the investigation of numbers and that leads to the institution of a locus, which is not of a homogeneous space. Lets us take the same bounded, closed, supposedly instituted space – the equivalent of what I earlier posited as an intersection extending to infinity….”

and,

“No doubt Claude Levi-Strauss, in his commentary on Mauss, wished to recognize in it the effect of a zero symbol. But it seems to me that what we are dealing with here is rather the signifier of the lack of this zero symbol. That is why, at the risk of incurring a certain amount of opprobrium, I have indicated to what point I have pushed the distortion of the mathematical algorithm in my use of it: the symbol √-1, which is still written as ‘i’ in the theory of complex numbers, is obviously justified only because it makes no claim to any automatism in its later use.”

And here is a quote from another guru and expert in blending humanities with science, Julia Kristeva. Before her own quote I include a statement from a highly-titled colleague of her, showing how this academic utter nonsense attracts admirers from the same milieu,

“What is most striking about Kristeva’s work is the competence with which it is presented, the intense singlemindedness with which it is pursued, and finally its intricate rigor. No resources are spared, existing theories of logic are invoked and, at one point, quantum mechanics…”

Here is an example of such competent singlemindedness,

“… Science is a logical endeavor based on the Greek (Indo-European) sentence that is constructed as subject-predicate and then proceeds by identification, determination, causality. Modern logic from Frege and Peano through Lukasiewicz, Ackerman or Church, which moves into the dimensions 0-1, and even Boole’s logic which, starting from set theory, gives formalizations that are more isomorphic to the functioning of language, but are inoperative in the sphere of poetic language where 1 is not a limit.”

The astounded reader questions whether he has lost the power to understand his own language or if he is just presented with a piece of wonderful imbecility. Yet, apparently, this new brand of thinkers clings to this nonsense with a tenacity proportioned to its grossness.

If every age has its mode of speech and its cast of thought, the natural reaction to this speech and thought is despair. It is madness transported into pseudo-language, to drive the hapless reader or student into a dreadful abyss – at the bottom of which there is Absolute Nothing, physical and metaphysical.

And now, hoping in forgiveness for the excursion, I will return to the subject I intended to begin with – a review of time for us non-postmodernists.

To start, leaving science aside, most of us consider time as something distinct from space. We accept that measurements of space involve distance, which, in turn, depends on one or more points of reference. And motion through space has meaning only in reference to something the distance from which we can measure.

Why this unquestioned acceptance of distance? Is it only because we respond implicitly to the language-less suggestion of the senses?

To answer, I think it can be interesting to trace a sentiment or an idea to its original source. In the instance, Aristotle thought that there is a universally preferred state of rest, which any body would assume when not pushed by a force.

The earth itself, in that model, was at rest. But the earth is not at rest, nor it is the center of the universe, and Newton laws demonstrated that there is no unique standard of rest.

For example, some may have experienced the phenomenon when sitting on a motionless train (A) at a railway station, while another train (B) is also motionless at the same station, but on an adjacent track. If train A begins moving slowly, the passenger is uncertain whether it is his train A moving, or train B going backwards.

The lack of an absolute standard of rest led to being unable to give an event an absolute position in space. And although his laws proved it, the lack of an absolute position or absolute space, worried Newton, because a non-absolute space seemed to contradict the idea of an absolute God.

However, leaving space aside, both Newton and Aristotle believed in absolute time. That is, the interval between two events could be measured unambiguously, anytime and anywhere. And, given good watches, the time measured would be identical anywhere.

In the meantime…. in 1676 Danish astronomer Roemer had discovered that the speed of light is very high but finite. He reached this conclusion by noticing that the light emitted from Jupiter’s moons when emerging from the shadow of Jupiter, took longer to reach us, the further away the earth (in its own orbit), was from Jupiter. His measurement was off (slower by 46,000 miles/sec versus the actual 186,000 miles/sec), but it is historically meaningful that Roemer’s measurement occurred 11 years before Newton published his “Principia Mathematica.”

The propagation of light puzzled scientists until, in 1865, Maxwell unified the theories that described the forces of electricity and magnetism. In the updated theory, radio and light waves travel at fixed speeds.

But speeds relative to what? – given that Newton eliminated the idea of absolute space. The need for a frame of reference led to the speculation that there was a substance called “ether” present everywhere in the universe, even in empty space. Light waves would travel through the ether just like sound waves travel through the air.

If so, the speed of light measured from the earth in the direction followed by the earth around the sun would be the sum of the speed of the earth plus the speed of light. But in 1887, Michelson and Morley proved experimentally that there was no change in the speed of light, in whatever direction it was measured.

Then in 1905 Einstein suggested that the idea of the “ether” was unnecessary, if men accepted that there is not an absolute time. And from the well known formula E=mc2, that established an equivalence between energy and mass, it was derived that as an object approached the speed of light its mass would increase until, at the speed of light its mass would have to be infinite. This being impossible, the consequence is that only light and waves can travel at the speed of light. And this was the core of the special theory of relativity.

Still, the special theory of relativity did not take into account gravitation. The theory of gravity said the objects influenced each other with a force that depended on the distance between them. If one moved one of the objects the force on the other one would change instantaneously. This meant that gravitational effects would travel with infinite velocity instead of at or below the speed of light as the special theory of relativity.

To solve the riddle, Einstein introduced the general theory of relativity, whose main tenets almost defy our imagination. Or rather perhaps, to “the lunatic, the lover and the poet who are of imagination all compact3 we should certainly add some if not all of the genuine modern physicists.

For time, said Einstein, is but one other dimension that must be added to the other three we are all familiar with. This 4-dimensional new construction he called space-time.

It is impossible to imagine a four dimensional space where the fourth dimension is time. Furthermore, space-time, according to the general theory of relativity is not flat, but curved or warped by the distribution of energy. As a consequence, for example, gravity does not cause the earth to move on a curved elliptical orbit as we think it does. Rather the earth follows the nearest approximately-straight line in a curved space. We can roughly visualize this by noting that the nearest distance between two cities, when flying, is calculated on the great circle of the earth – a curve called geodesic. In their motions, celestial objects follow geodesics traced in a warped space.

A more concrete and startling consequence of the theory of relativity is that identical and accurate clocks carried by different observers of the same event could measure different times. In particular time appears to run slower near a body of large mass like the earth. For example, to someone high above the earth everything happening on our planet would appear to run slower. This was proven in 1962 using two accurate clocks, one on top and the other at the base of a tower.

This difference in measured time is crucial today, given our reliance on information sent and reflected back by satellites. If the difference were not included in the calculations, our respective locations, as indicated by satellites could be off by miles. Which, among other things, would render all GPS-watches essentially useless.

Changes in the perception and description of time as a physical entity also influenced our more general and presumed understanding of the universe.

For example, at the beginning of the 19th century, the French scientist Laplace, impressed by the accuracy of Newton’s theory of gravity, argued that the universe is completely deterministic. Meaning that if we knew the state of the universe at any one time, we would be able to predict everything that would happen from that moment forward, including human behavior.

Many resisted this theory because it infringed on God’s freedom to intervene in the world. But in the early 1900, Planck suggested that light and other waves could not be emitted at an arbitrary rate but only in packets that he called quanta.

This in itself did not disprove the deterministic theory of Laplace. Until, in 1926, Heisenberg demonstrated that the position and velocity of the particles making up the quanta, emitted as waves from hot bodies, could not be precisely measured but only at best estimated. And this uncertainty in estimation could never fall below a certain quantity that he called the Planck’s constant.

The uncertainty principle shattered the idea of a deterministic universe, but gave Heisenberg, Schroedinger and Dirac the tools needed to formulate a new theory called quantum mechanics. In quantum mechanics particles could not have separate and definite position and velocity, because position and velocity could not be observed. What they had, instead, was a combination of position and velocity which they called a quantum, real, but unpredictable.

A consequence and an extension of the uncertainty principle is/was that the universe is really governed by chance, or, said it poetically, by the stuff that dreams are made on. This Einstein refused to believe – though quantum mechanics is the core theory of physics governing just about all modern science and technology.

But returning to the business of time, according to Einstein’s general theory of relativity, space-time began with a singularity, also called big bang, and the universe would end up by returning to its origins with a big crunch. This theory has some interesting consequences in areas we do not usually associate with higher physics.

It is not generally remembered that in 1981, the Jesuits organized a conference on cosmology at the Vatican. Politically, it fitted the idea of a public confession of repentance for the treatment of scientific heretics such as Galileo, confined to home detention, and Giordano Bruno, burned at the stake in the year 1600.

At the end of the conference, the pope granted an audience to the participating scientists. During which he stated that it was quite acceptable to study the evolution of the universe up to and after the big bang. But that the active vigor of the imagination, or the gradual and laborious investigations of reason should not reach into and before the big bang. For that would mean questioning the moment of creation and therefore the action of God.

Even so, since then, physicists and scientists have struggled and still struggle to find answer to questions such as why the universe is so uniform on a large scale, why the temperature of the microwave background radiation is almost the same in the different regions of the heavens. What was the origin of the density fluctuations that gave birth to the galaxies?

And if the universe were to contract after reaching a limit of expansion, would it do so following the same physical laws so arduously discovered? – for physical laws are independent of time. If so, would hypothetical human beings alive at that stage, be able to remember the future but not knowing anything about the past?

In essence, science is still on a quest for a unified theory that would account and explain everything, including the notion of the partly-scientific, partly philosophical theory of the “three arrows of time.”

Namely, the thermodynamic arrow of time, pointing towards the direction in which disorder or entropy increases. [Entropy is a coined word based on the Greek ‘trope’ meaning mutation – hence “internal mutation.”) A tea cup falling to the ground and shattered in pieces cannot be expected to return to its unbroken condition. And if it were reassembled, the energy spent in the reconstruction would contribute to the entropy of the universe.

The second is the psychological arrow of time, the direction giving us the feel for the passing of time. And finally the cosmological arrow of time, the direction of time that the universe follows as it expands.

Mathematicians have recently placed much confidence in the theory of strings, things that have a length but no other dimensions, that is infinitely thin strings, conceivable only in imagination though mathematically describable.

It is too early to know whether the string theory will lead to a unified theory of the universe. We may however say that up to now, scientists have developed new theories describing what the universe is, but omitting to ask why it is so.

At the same time philosophers – excepting the postmodernist academics mentioned above – can no longer follow or keep up with the advance of scientific theories as they used to – for example in the 18th century, when science was not considered a distinct part of human knowledge.

It is not generally known that Newton himself was also deeply interested in alchemy and occult studies. Today we remember him only for his laws of physics, because we consider alchemy and occultism cults rather than sciences. But he wrote extensively on alchemy, though he decided not to have its related works published, probably fearing criticism from his colleagues.

But in 1936, a collection of Isaac Newton’s unpublished works was auctioned by Sotheby’s on behalf of Gerard Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth, who had inherited them from Newton’s great-great-niece. They are known as the “Portsmouth Papers”, and include three hundred and twenty-nine lots of Newton’s manuscripts, over a third of which are filled with alchemic content and symbols. When Newton died this material was considered “unfit to publish” by Newton’s estate, and consequently fell into obscurity until its unexpected reemergence in 1936.

If we have to sum up the enormous progress achieved by science in the last 300 years, and the challenges of what remains unknown, we may concur with Hamlet when he said to his friend, There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in our philosophy4.”

I would like to conclude these notes with some observations on our current, practical perception of time, and how its varied measurement through the centuries has influenced our collective lives. Specifically I refer to the wedding between astronomy and mechanical engineering. It approximately coincided with the birth and explosion of modern capitalism, which, in turn, found in the accurate subdivision of the day into hours of identical duration, an instrument of success and affirmation.

Historically, the subdivision of the day into hours began with Egypt and China. 22 hours at first in Egypt, 12 in China and 16 in Rome.

In practice, since sun-dials were the time instruments, measurement of time was fairly accurate during the day, while the night was divided into 4 sections, identical in theory and approximate in practice.

Accurate hydraulic clocks were already available during the time when the Roman was the indispensable empire. But until the early Middle Ages, hours had variable length. They lasted more or less depending on the season. Hence the Roman hours lasted longer in Summer than in Winter, with equal complementary changes in the length of the night hours.

This regime of hours with variable length was compatible with hour-glasses, water clocks and burning candles. But the Middle Ages saw the development of monastic orders, and the mentioned implements could not measure accurately the rigid times and intervals between religious devotions and rituals.

Monks would wake up at specific times (called ‘canonical hours’), to recite specific prayers, and the hours were actually referred to by their ordinal rather than cardinal number.

For example 6 AM was the “First” (devotion), 9 AM was the “Third,” 12PM the “Sixth” and 3 PM the “Ninth.” Plus the “Before Dawn” devotion called “Mattutino” and the “Vesper” devotion at Sunset.

Missing a devotion was considered a mortal sin, or maybe the bell ringer did not get up and signal the time for the devotion. In fact, the lyrics of one famous French nursery rhyme go, “Brother Jack, Brother Jack, are you asleep, are you asleep? Ring the Mattutino, ring the Mattutino, ding deng dan.” Here is a rendering of the original.

Therefore churches and convents developed or commissioned rudimentary, cumbersome, communal alarm clocks that, however inaccurate, alerted users about the canonical hours. Errors in the alarm clocks could not be the sin of the friars.

But the real transformation of variable into fixed hours occurred in the 1200 and 1300, when the now wealthy city bourgeoisie needed manpower. Attributing a fixed length to hours increased significantly the working time during the Winter – until then work was confined to the light hours whose length was in harmony with the seasons.

Nevertheless a new measurement of time, with public clocks, costly and needing continual maintenance, spread quickly everywhere as a system of public signaling. Actually, a class struggle had been brewing for a long time between owners of manufacturing concerns and workers, many of whom worked at home. The bells marking the beginning and the end of working time were either inaccurate, or some bell ringers were suspected of fraud.

But a clock on the civic tower or on the palaces of the great, constituted a standard system controllable by all. And the victims of standardized hours actually felt the innovation as an improvement of their condition. For what before was considered an abuse by the employers was converted into an accepted and legitimate use.

On the other hand, even in those remote times – the master class knew how to profit from what, to the subordinate class, appears as progress rather than a new mode of usurpation.

Finally, to conclude our journey, time, by itself, makes no distinction between capitalists, workers, rich, poor, scientists, philosophers, postmodernists and the rest of us. For “The end crowns all and that old common arbitrator, Time, will one day end it5.”

a) A Moebius strip is a rectangular piece of paper, one end of which is twisted 180 degrees and glued to the other end.
b) A torus is a geometrical three-dimensional object similar to a swimming belt.
c) A Klein bottle is a one-sided surface which, if traveled upon, could be followed back to the point of origin while flipping the traveler upside down.

Reference:

** (1) Rape of Lucrece
** (2) All’s Well That Ends Well
** (3) Midsummer Night’s Dream
** (4) Hamlet
** (5) Troilus and Cressida

PS. Some material and information obtained from:
“Brief History of Time” (Hawkings)
“Fashionable Nonsense”
An Italian Journalist.

 


About the author

Moglia: A natural teacher of complex topics.Jimmie Moglia is a Renaissance man, and therefore he's impossible to summarize in a simple bioblurb. In any case, here's a rough sketch, by his own admission: Born in Turin, Italy, he now resides in Portland, Oregon. Appearance: … careful hours with time’s deformed hand, Have written strange defeatures in my face (2); Strengths. An unquenchable passion for what is utterly, totally, and incontrovertibly useless, notwithstanding occasional evidence to the contrary. Weaknesses: Take your pick. Languages: I speak Spanish to God, French to men, Italian to women and German to my horse. My German is not what it used to be but it’s not the horse’s fault. Too many Germans speak English. Education: “You taught me language and my profit on it Is, I know how to curse.” (3); More to the point – in Italy I studied Greek for five years and Latin for eight. Only to discover that prospective employers were remarkably uninterested in dead languages. Whereupon I obtained an Engineering Degree at the University of Genova. Read more here.

Source: Your Daily Shakespeare.

 



INTERVIEW WITH ANDRE VLTCHEK FOR FARHIKHTEGAN NEWSPAPER IN IRAN


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HELP ENLIGHTEN YOUR FELLOWS. BE SURE TO PASS THIS ON. SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON IT.

Andre Vltchek interviewed by Mostafa Afzalzadeh


Q – M.A.: Why do you think the western countries are trying to use people against Iran and not use military force? What is the difference?

A - A.V.: It is because Iran is ‘not alone’. If the West were to dare use military force against Iran, directly, there would be an immediate response from many countries on Earth. I believe that Iran’s allies, like Russia, several Latin American countries, but also most likely China, would not sit idle. I am not saying that they would immediately send their armies and begin fighting the U.S. and European forces, but I am certain that Iran would receive some substantial support from them: be it moral, diplomatic and yes, perhaps, even military support.

Even countries like Turkey (which for many years has been an important member of NATO), would strongly protest and most likely even leave the alliance. Turkey would not allow an attack against Iran to originate from its territory.

Iran also has other friendly governments and movements strategically positioned in the region, including Hezbollah in Lebanon.

I have no doubt that any direct attack against Iran would trigger a much greater military conflict in the Middle East and beyond. The West knows it. It actually enjoys triggering conflicts and wars, all over the world, even keeping them ‘perpetual’, but it also knows that to go to war with Iran could be counter-productive, that it would most likely backfire.

Let us also remember that Iran is not just a crying victim – Iran is strong. Iran's missile program, for instance, has sent a strong message to the West: “Any assault would be met with decisive response. Attack against Iran would lead to real war with losses on both sides.”

Using civilians, NGOs, the so-called ‘Civil Society’ and some disgruntled elements, is far much ‘safer’. This way the West can trigger the conflict and then turn everything up-side-down and say: “You see? We told you. Iran is brutal, its rulers are ruthlessly oppressing their own people.” This strategy has worked in many countries, while it has backfired in places like China. Basically, this can work if some nation is extremely divided and confused. It worked in Ukraine, at least to some extent. It worked in Zimbabwe. It almost worked but in the end failed in Venezuela. It worked in Yeltsin’s Russia. But it could never work in China, in Cuba, in 2018 Russia, or in Iran. This monstrous, Machiavellian strategy, dividing and turning people against each other, also failed, and failed miserably, in Syria.

However, using this strategy often costs nothing. The West is trying it everywhere, all over the world, wherever there is a government that is working for the good of its people, not for the good of some Western multi-national companies and for imperialist geopolitical interests. I described it in detail, in my 800-page long book of political non-fiction:Exposing Lies Of The Empire.

Q: If the US does not succeed in overthrowing Iran by the tactic of using people against the government what another tool they might have?

A: The US has many tricks up its sleeves. Remember: US ‘foreign policy’ is not some new system that has been invented in Washington D.C. It is all based on the centuries of plunder, colonialism and brutal control of the world, a ‘specialty’ of various European powers. Brits, French, Dutch, Belgians, Spaniards, Portuguese, Germans and others in the ‘old continent’, ‘invented the wheel’. The US only uses its ugly brutal force, while relying on the ‘know-how’ developed across the Atlantic Ocean.

Now the subversion in Iran has been identified, fought against, and defeated. What will come next? What could be coming next?


The US has many tricks up its sleeves. Remember: US ‘foreign policy’ is not some new system that has been invented in Washington D.C. It is all based on the centuries of plunder, colonialism and brutal control of the world, a ‘specialty’ of various European powers. Brits, French, Dutch, Belgians, Spaniards, Portuguese, Germans and others in the ‘old continent’, ‘invented the wheel’.

I think there will now be rejuvenated, growing pressure on Iran, from the West in general and the US in particular. I’m talking about economic, political and ideological pressure, meaning propaganda. The West will be ‘grooming’ opposition movements, or at least many particular individuals. Selected men and women will be getting scholarships, funding, even awards for their great ‘achievements’ as opposition ‘activists’, artists and ‘thinkers’. "Dissidents "will be glorified, while great Iranian thinkers, writers, filmmakers who are supportive of the government, will be ignored, often even ridiculed. The same strategy was applied against many dozens of independent-minded nations of the world, including the Soviet Union before its ill-fated Perestroika. I described ‘the system’ or ‘training opposition’ in my latest, brutal, short political and revolutionary novel “Aurora”.

Western mass media outlets will be, most certainly, demonizing Iran. Stories will be invented or turned on their heads, in hyperbolic fashion. The Farsi services of Western government radio stations like the BBC will get extra funding and will be working day and night to divide Iranian society.

Iran will not be struck directly, but its allies may get attacked. I’m talking particularly about Hezbollah. As a result, Lebanon could fall. The influence (even if it is just moral influence) of Iran in Yemen and Afghanistan may be confronted by the Western and pro-Western forces.

Many things may happen, but I sincerely believe that Iran is not directly in danger. Its people are strong, educated and resilient. Iran is not perfect, as nothing in this world is. But it is a good, progressive, and very solid country with an enormous and ancient culture. Iranian people know it. The entire region knows it. Now it is time to explain it to the world.

Just look around: what happened to the countries around Iran, that fell into the hands of Western ‘democracies’. Iranian citizens are not insane: they would never want to live in anything resembling today’s Afghanistan or Iraq! Let’s get real! I work in Afghanistan. It is now the poorest country in Asia, with the lowest life expectancy. In Herat, there are huge lines in front of the Iranian consulate; people have nothing and they are trying to leave, by all means, to Iran or elsewhere. Or look at Iraq! It is now only a skeleton of a country: depressing, defeated, with no clear future.

Iran is the bright star of the region, and the West hates it. Absurdly, the only way to make peace with the West would be for Iranians to wreck their own country, to become submissive, enslaved and to sacrifice their own people, putting both the economic and political interests of the West above their national interests!

Q: Do you see a relation between the recent unrest and Iran’s victories in the region?

A: Most definitely!

Were Iran to be a failed state (but one open to Western business and geopolitical interests), like Indonesia or Uganda or other “allies” worldwide, Washington and London would be fully supporting it, and Western propaganda would glorify it: as was the case with Iranian brutal regime during Shah, or Suharto’s genocidal dictatorship in Indonesia, or Kagame’s murderous despotism in Rwanda.

Iran has its own economic, social and political model. It is totally independent. On top of it, this model is very attractive to other places in the region, and Teheran is clearly helping those places that are being battered, literally liquidated by the West and its allies: I’m talking about Syria and Yemen. Even in Afghanistan, Iran is playing an increasingly positive role.

Ask in Beirut, Damascus but also in Cairo or Amman, whether Iran is a ‘dangerous country’, whether someone there feels threatened by Teheran? People will laugh at you. Of course, it is not dangerous; nobody thinks it is. People are scared of the West, or Israel, or of Saudi Arabia; but of Iran?

Logically (and here we are talking about Western imperialist logic), the more positive role Iran plays in the region and in other parts of the world (by, for instance, working closely with several progressive and revolutionary governments in Latin America), the more it gets antagonized, destabilized, even threatened.

The West cares nothing about what is good for others, or even for the entire world. It is only interested in what can serve its own, practical, neo-colonialist agenda.

It is the world in which we are living. And this world has to dramatically change, better sooner rather than later! Iran, together with a handful of other countries, is at the vanguard of this great change that could save our Planet. That is why it should never be allowed to fall!  *

Mostafa Afzalzadeh – an investigative journalist and filmmaker. He created Manufacturing Dissent: The Truth About Syria, a ​documentary film about Syria, as well as a documentary about the ‘99 percent Movement’ in the US, which was broadcasted by the Iran’s National TV and won the first prize at Amar Film Festival. He has also been present at most of the nuclear talks, covering them as both journalist and filmmaker.


About the Author
 Andre Vltchek is a philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He has covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. Three of his latest books are revolutionary novel “Aurora” and two bestselling works of political non-fiction: “Exposing Lies Of The Empire” and “Fighting Against Western Imperialism”. View his other books here. Andre is making films for teleSUR and Al-Mayadeen. Watch Rwanda Gambit, his groundbreaking documentary about Rwanda and DRCongo. After having lived in Latin America, Africa and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides in East Asia and the Middle East, and continues to work around the world. He can be reached through his website and his Twitter.  


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