We are traveling in the Boulder Denver area this weekend. Denver has wonderful houses and a lotta rain, and I got sick yesterday. I took some pills, we put Adam to bed, then I lay down to sleep and had this dream.
I was at a comic book festival. I was with three people. The only one in focus was a tall, geeky looking guy – who I began to see was Stephen Merchant, Ricky Gervais’s partner on the Extras. He gave me a computer to write things on, but whatever I wrote appeared on the screen as something different, in Greek or Cyrilac script. I got mad and, like Adam, threw the computer down. Later Stephen told me this was a test, and then he revealed that I was being inducted into the CIA. He introduced me to the man with him – Richard Nixon. Nixon was much shorter than I expected. He had a sour look on his face. He was wearing a sweater that I somehow recognized. It was cream colored with brown braiding, very thick, with a sort of ruff, or turtleneck. It was, in short, the kind of sweater one bought in the seventies.
I was given a dossier and told my job. I was very happy, because I was sure that the pay was good, and the work sounded easy. It had to do with codes and comic books. But at this point I must have begun waking up, because I began to worry about Nixon. I had shaken his hand! I had called him Mr. Nixon! Wasn’t I opposed to Nixon? At this point I did wake up.
I conclude from this dream that my subconscious has become reactionary, which is potentially embarrassing. On the other hand, it did dress Nixon in the most ridiculous costume and made him short. So the subconscious of my subconscious must know what’s what.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Monday, May 26, 2014
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
how goethe became a loser, too
"Eckermann – the best prose work of our literature, the
highest point reached by the German humanities” – Nietzsche
Eckermann’s Conversations with Goethe in the Last Years of
his Life was an instant nineteenth century classic, mined for quotes not only
in Germany, but in England and America. Margaret Fuller, with Emerson’s
encouragement, published an English translation, and Emerson incorporated a
number of Goethe’s remarks in the book into his essays.
Strangely, I have the impression that, at least in the
Anglosphere, it is now rarely read. Boswell’s Life of Johnson is still read, but
for us, Boswell is even more in focus than he was in the 18th
century, since we have his papers and letters. In the Life of Johnson, Boswell
seems plausible – he teases Johnson, he opposes him, he loves him, but he is
very separate from him. Eckermann is a more… ectoplasmic creature. He seems to
have been entirely absorbed by his sage. In Avita Ronell’s essay about
Eckermann, she makes him out to be another mad German romantic – and indeed, he
seems to have spent the last years of his life in a room filled with songbirds,
taking dictation from Goethe’s spirit – as the physical husk of the man had died
years before. Goethe was very conscious of what Eckermann was doing – as indeed,
he had to be, since in the end, Goethe drew up a contract with Eckermann,
making him the editor of his collected works. Unlike Boswell, Eckermann was not
independently wealthy – which has also made him a more painful subject to
remember. The Conversations start with Eckermann’s autobiographical sketches, giving
us an impression of him as a sort of sport, an unusual bolt from a peasant
marriage. Indeed, the lack of sophistication of the family gives Eckermann a
sort of joke to introduce himself with: one day when he was around 12, he
discovered he had a talent for drawing. Ther drawings he made eventually came
to the attention of the only wealthy man in his small town, who invited the boy
to see him and told him that he was willing to finance his training as a
painter. His parents were not overjoyed by this news. To them, a painter
slapped paint on the façade of a house, like the large houses they were
erecting in Hamburg. It was a nasty and dangerous job, and they councilled
against it, so Eckermann refused.
Such low hijincks to put beside one of the peaks of European
literature! Yet Goethe was not averse to low hijincks himself. Olympian he may
have been, but he married an unlettered factory girl, Christiane Vulpius.
Eckermann was not unlettered, but he was not credentialled – he was basically
self-taught, although he did finally go to art school. He always remained, however,
the peasant who had struggled against the enormous inertia of a society that
literally didn’t recognize the artist, and he was forever poor.
Now here’s the reason I bring this up. I consider myself a
loser and have a second sense for the tribe of losers in literature. The last
shall be first – such is the secret credo and barren hope of this crowd. Mostly,
no. The first are first and trample on our faces over and over again. But the
losers remember Melville, Pessoa, Kafka – they are pillars of the losers faith,
that there is a view of modernity, a terrible view, in which one sees the
reverse of things – and that is as close as we can come to the truth.
The uncanny thing about Goethe is that he is not only an
Olympian, but – among the multitudes he contains – he is also a loser. Or he
understands the loser’s vision on some deep level. That seems rather unfair.
This is the guy who was unkind to Lenz in his madness and tried to bar the door
to Kleist. This is Mr. Cold Marble. And yet at the end of his life, he is a
loser – at least by proxy – through Eckermann.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Tool news: NYT sponsors an op ed by Yulia Tymoshenko.
Best article about contemporary Ukraine I've read. It makes a mockery of the coverage in the Western press, which is not only propaganda, but ignorant propaganda - the propagandists really have no idea what is going on.
Saturday, May 17, 2014
assassinating the forbes 400 myth, larry summers edition
Everybody is under suspicion
But you don't wanna hear about that...
It is to two economists with the American EnterpriseInstitute, Steven Kaplan and Joshua Rauh, that we owe the meme that the Forbes 400 represents the fruits of social mobility, the rewards of an essentially meritocratic society..
But you don't wanna hear about that...
It is to two economists with the American EnterpriseInstitute, Steven Kaplan and Joshua Rauh, that we owe the meme that the Forbes 400 represents the fruits of social mobility, the rewards of an essentially meritocratic society..
Kaplan and Rauh have divided the individual who find places in
the Forbes 400 from 1982 to 2012 into three categories: that that come from
wealthy families, those that come from upper middle class families, and those
that come from working or middle class families. The claim to discern a
distinct change from 1982 to 2012 – the number of individuals coming from
wealthy families declines, while those from upper class families increases.
Thus, there is churn at the top, due to the meritocratic structure of American
capitalism.
Lets go into the ways Kaplan and Rauh are full of hooey.
A.
Granting, for the moment, that the
categorization, although a bit fuzzy, does actually represent three different
kinds of individuals, we have to trust Kaplan and Rauh on their judgments as to
which class individuals fall. They don’t include the list of all individuals on
the list – in Peter Bernstein’s book about the list, All the Money in the
World, there were 1302 people on the list from 1982 to 2006, which makes it likely
that there might have been fifty to one hundred more in the six years after
2006 – but instead give us representative names – which is how we know that
they included Bill Gates in the upper middle class group, because his father
was a well known lawyer. This tells us a lot about the laziness and bias of the
authors. Even a cursory glance at the numerous profiles of Bill Gates over the
years would tell you that he was endowed with a million dollar trust fund by
his maternal grandfather, who owned a Seattle bank. A million dollars back in
the sixties was a figure to reckon with. If one can’t trust the authors about
Gates, one of the five names they mention, how are we to trust them about the
rest?
B.
Of course, family money is a tricky subject.
Carl Icahn definitely came from a middle class family. On the other hand, when
Icahn was 32 and wanted to buy a seat on the NYSE, it was certainly convenient
that he had an uncle, Elliot Schnall, who was a Palm Beach millionaire and who
could loan him the money without questions.
C.
But even granting that there are meritocrats in
the purest sense on the 400, like Jeff Bezos, does this prove Kaplan and Rauh’s
point? By no means. Because we want to know that wealth is churning in response
to meritocratic pressure from below. One of the symptoms of a vigorous churn
would be the fact that few 400 figures remain on the list for long. If they do,
we have evidence of wealth stratifying in a hierarchical way – wealth is just
going to wealth. Go back to Jeff Bezos. He has been on the list since 1999 –
giving him a stretch of 15 years. This is not unusual – as is obvious from
Bernstein’s appendix in 2006. This fact should lead us to a deeper
contextualization about the 400. As almost all economic histories show, between
1932 and 1979, America experienced a great leveling. It wasn’t that the wealthy
went away; however, the labor and white collar wage class enjoyed incredible
gains in income and opportunity. When you look at the 1982 list, you are
looking at dynasts who made it through the leveling period plus that subgroup
that benefited ‘meritocratically’ from oil, building, manufacturing, and real
estate. In the years since, the list reflects the baby boomer years – year in
which, among other things, higher education was relatively cheap and available
for the ambitious. We have now reached the period when that group is going into
its sixties, and the wealth is definitely settling into place. Along with the
perrenial dynasts, there are the long timers – people who have been on the list 15 years or
more – who need to be broken out.
D.
As well, it is unclear from Kaplan and Rauh’s
charts if they double count these perennials. If Bezos is counted, each time,
as coming from the wage class in their compilation – rather than once, when he
entered the list – they are making an elementary error. I suspect they make it.
I suspect they know that they are making it. I suspect that they are working
for the American Enterprise institute.
E.
However, the larger criticism concerning how
well the 400 represents dynastic wealth. In fact, the very framework seems to
occlude it. In 1987, CBS news reported that, curiously, there was not a Dupont
on the list, even though the Dupont family was worth an estimated 10 billion
dollars. CBS resolved this anomoly by pointing out that if each of the 1500
Dupont relatives got a share of that money it would come to 5 million apiece.
However, this is a deeply misleading. The Dupont fortune operates as a unified
entity through family trusts. As an entity, it is as unified as the ‘Gates’
entity. In a list of individuals going from 1982, sheer mortality and
reproduction would naturally diminish the part of the inheritors, but this
would not really give us an idea of how much money is under dynastic control.
In 1937, a journalist named Lundberg published a book about America’s wealthy
dynasties, and the names in it seem foreign to us, who are used to reading
about tech barons and hedgefunders. But those families rarely lose their money.
The Pitcairns, for instance, who started PPG, have a private family investment
fund in which all the family participates. Individually, they would not be on
the list, but as an entity, it is a good bet they would be. The same is true
for the Weyhaeusers. There are many many families like this.
Forbes recognizes this in other lists – for instance,
they simply amalgamate all the Walton wealth into Walton Family on their world
billionaires list. But they are very inconsistent about it in the 400 lists.
Sometimes children and spouses appear separately, sometimes they don’t.
For all these reasons, Kaplan and Rauh’s 400 proof is a
farce. A farce that, I should say, is easily seen through. One doesn’t have to
go through some complicated mathematical proof, one simply has to apply
elementary social science reasoning. It is the kind of thing that is dogfood
for the dogs, rightwing columnists who can wave the paper about and claim to
have refuted the socialists and Stalinists once and for all. Only mooks would
fall for it.
This is, of course, why it gets an honored place in LarrySummers’ review of Thomas Piketty’s Capital. Summers, Obama’s favorite economist, the man who design the Clinton era
deregulatory architecture – or should I say, instead, wrecked regulation of the financial markets
and helped midwife the depression? -
inserts the following paragraph in gesturing towards other evidence that
American wealth is not becoming so unequal:
“A brief look at the Forbes 400
list also provides only limited support for Piketty’s ideas that fortunes are
patiently accumulated through reinvestment. When Forbes compared
its list of the wealthiest Americans in 1982 and 2012, it found that less than
one tenth of the 1982 list was still on the list in 2012, despite the fact that
a significant majority of members of the 1982 list would have qualified for the
2012 list if they had accumulated wealth at a real rate of even 4 percent a
year. They did not, given pressures to spend, donate, or misinvest their
wealth. In a similar vein, the data also indicate, contra Piketty, that the
share of the Forbes 400
who inherited their wealth is in sharp decline.”
A brief look here can be
defined as the look one gives the index card on which one has copied some “happy
facts” to share with the assembled plutocrats at one of Summers $50,000 talks. It is the index card that has the orange
sauce from the duck on the corner.
I am not shocked that
Summers would publish something this stupid. It is not that Summers is a stupid
man – he is, mainly, an “insider” – someone who knows how to “play” in DC, as
he famously told Elisabeth Warren. In
the economics profession, Summers is widely regarded as a genius. This says
less about the elevation of his intellect than the shallowness of his field – a
molehill is an Everest to a herd of aphids.
Like the overwhelming
majority of economists, Summers isn’t very good in thinking in broad terms, or
understanding the economy and what it is for. He is perpetually like a man
standing with his nose three inches from a pointillist painting – he can see
all the dots in detail, but he can’t see or imagine the picture. This is
fortunate for him – economics is the handmaiden of the plutocrats, and those
who step back and begin to see the picture are soon quietly sidelined.
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
the democracy team: how to understand American foreign policy
Philosophers have long argued about what democracy really
means. Western politicos don’t have that problem – democracy is a team name,
like the Rangers. Nobody expects the Rangers to be rangers, and nobody expects
the “democratic forces” supported by the krewe of Clinton, Bush, Obama, Blair,
Hollande etc. – whatever figurehead is in power - to be democratic. Blair, in
one of the comic highpoints of his miserable reign, toured the Gulf states and
touted the democratic alliance (of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Mubarrak’s Egypt)
against the enemies of democracy, i.e. Iran. Of course, Iran has at least the
trappings of a democracy, much like the U.S. and the U.K., while Saudi Arabia
is perhaps the most totalitarian country in the world, and showed what it
thought of civil protest by invading Bahrain when the Arab Spring threatened
the ruling prince. Not that I am defending a country that routinely condones
torture and has the highest prison population in the world – but I would still
call the U.S. a quasi-democracy. For instance, elections are held in the U.S.
so that people have a chance to make their opinions known and have them
betrayed by whoever they elected. And Americans are damn proud of this, and
call it operation enduring freedom. Or is that when we invade a country
illegally?
I get mixed up.
I’ve been thinking about the democratic team with regards to
the astonishing smoke and mirrors show being put on about the Ukraine. The NYT
has been outstanding in this respect – liberals like to criticize Fox news, but
the NYT reporting on Ukraine makes Fox News look like the successor to Edward
Morrow and Walter Cronkite. I thought the nadir had been reached in the article
that praised the pro-government paramilitaries in Odessa for their good work in
squelching the “pro-Russian” side. This, from a newspaper that is, normally,
anti-neo Nazi. However, one must remember that the paramilitaries are on the
democratic team and it all works out beautifully. Today, the NYT editorialdissed the referendums in Donetsk with language that was almost pure bungalowBill. Here’s how they started
“If there were questions
about the legitimacy of the separatist referendums in eastern Ukraine, the
farcical names of the entities on which people were asked to vote — the
self-declared People’s Republics of Donetsk or Luhansk — surely answered them. “
‘Surely’ – in the club where the editorialists chuckle about things like
those funny Chinese and Negro names – most amusing. It is a kinda nostalgic, retro opening to a
salvo full of the cliches one expects from … well, the NYT. The funnily named little countries are surely
parallel to that standard of the white mostly elite clubs, the funny names
Negros give their children. Always a hoot in the cigar room. But in spite of having lived through the Iraq
invasion and knowing how the establishment works, it still made me curiously
angry.
Angry enough that I decided to look back at how the talking heads were talking
about Russia in the nineties. In
1993, Yeltsin’s situation with the
parliament was almost a mirror image of
what was happening in Kiev in January of this year. Again, a president seemed
to oppose the unanimous opinion of the legislature. In the case of Yakunovych, the discontent stemmed from his
refusal to sign the association agreeement with the EU. In Yeltsin’s case, it occurred
because of discontent with Yeltsin’s “shock therapy.” Constitutionally, Yeltsin’s
decree power ran out in December 1992. In April, a referendum was scheduled to
sort out the deadlock between the executive and the legislature . As Martin
Malia tells the story in his article, Soft Coup, for the New Republic (April
19,1993) (all from the standpoint that Yeltsin is the “democracy team), Yeltsin
came to believe he would either lose the referendum in April or that the
anti-privatization parts of the referendum would go against him. Now, as we all
know, the democracy team cannot tolerate democracy if democracy is going to
screw up the “liberalization” of the economy. As Malia points out, the
opposition actually wanted something like worker’s collectives to take over the
major industries. Such poppycock! And then the referendum coming up which might
give the wrong, anti-democratic answer to the question, do you want oligarchs
to take over your industry and plummet your economic status for the next
fifteen years. .So in March Yeltsin sounded out foreign countries, i.e. the US,
to see what they would think if he just unconsstitutionally swept aside the
power of the legislature and ruled by decree. Amazingly, they were “understanding”.
So Yeltsin pretty much did that, and proposed his own referendum.
“While Yeltsin won majorities
expressing confidence in his leadership, supporting reform, and calling for new
parliamentary elections, opposition to reform remained high—45% voted against
it in the referendum. No less important, a majority favored early presidential
elections, meaning that Russia’s voters wanted not only a new parliament, but a
chance at a new president and a clean political slate to move beyond the
confrontation between Yeltsin and conservative legislators.
Russia’s
president was not interested in the latter message, however, and pressed ahead
in his conflict with the Supreme Soviet and government by diktat—with the full
support of the Clinton administration. (And despite private advice from Richard
Nixon, who encouraged Yeltsin to seek a compromise with the parliament in March
1993, only to be told by the Russian leader that U.S. officials were counseling
the exact opposite.) When Yeltsin eventually dissolved the parliament in
frustration in September, President Bill Clinton stated explicitly that
“President Yeltsin has made his choice, and I support him fully.”
Ambassador-at-Large for the former Soviet Union Strobe Talbott referred to
Yeltsin’s dissolution of parliament as a “noisy squabble.” With this support,
Yeltsin sent in the tanks two weeks later, on October 4, and swept the Supreme
Soviet into the dustbin of history. It was surely noisy, but rather more than a
squabble.”
I rather like the farcical intrusion
of Richard Nixon into this story – a man from the past who actually advised,
oh, democracy democracy instead of team democracy. Poor Nixon, made obsolete by
the zeitgeist that had shifted far to the right of him, with Clinton and the
neo-liberals in the lead!
The moral of the Yeltsin story is that
the curious reporting about Ukraine – for instance, a New Yorker reporter named
Jon Lee Anderson writing that the Maidan protestors swept away a “tyrant” – is not
curious once you dispense with the idea of democracy as a process and
understand it as a team label. Of course, the democracy team does have to do
one thing: it has to privatize. It has to respect “private property” – for instance,
the assets of multinational corporations. Otherwise it isn’t the democracy team
anymore, but tyranny. And it is in this neat machine that the people of East
Ukraine are supposed to be milled to death. For who could support the
non-democracy team (the one that holds elections) except devilish souls like
Putin, who are not at all democracy team like Boris Yeltsin was.
Sunday, May 11, 2014
the breaks
According to Robert Craven’s 1980 article on Pool slang in
American speech, breaks – as in good break, bad break, those are the breaks –
derives from the American lingo of pool, which is distinct from British billiard terms. The difference in
terminology emerged in the 19th century, but he dates the popular use of break (lucky
break, bad break, the breaks) to the 20s. I love the idea that this is true,
that the Jazz age, the age of American modernity and spectacle, saw the birth
of the breaks. If the word indeed evolved from the first shot in pool – when
you “break” the pyramid of balls, a usage that seems to have been coined in
America in the 19th century, as against the British term – then its evolution nicely intersects one of
the favored examples in the philosophy of causation, as presented by Hume.
Hume’s work, from the Treatise to the Enquiry, is so
punctuated by billiard balls that it might as well have been the metaphysical
dream of Minnesota Fats – excuse the anachronism – and it has been assumed, in
a rather jolly way in the philosophy literature, that this represents a piece
of Hume’s own life, a preference for billiards. However, as some have noted,
Hume might have borrowed the billiard ball example from Malebranche – whose
work he might have read while composing the Treatise at La Fleche. But even if
Hume was struck by Malebranche’s example and borrowed it, the stickiness of the
example, the way billiard balls keep
appearing in Hume’s texts, feels to the reader like tacit testimony to Hume’s
own enjoyment or interest in the game.
Unfortunately, this detail has not been taken up by his biographers. When we
trace the itinerary of Hume as he moved from Scotland to Bristol to London to
France, we have to reconstruct ourselves how this journey in the 1730s might
have intersected with billiard rooms in spas and public houses. In a schedule
of coaches from London to Bristol published in the early 1800s, we read that there
is a coach stop at the Swan in St. Clements street, London, on the line that
goes to Bristol, and from other sources we know that the Swan was famed for its
billiard room. Whether this information applies to a journey made 70 years before,
when the game was being banned in public houses by the authorities, is
uncertain. One should also remember that
in Hume’s time, billiards was not played
as we now play American pool or snooker. The table and the pockets and the
banks were different. So was the cue stick – , it wasn’t until 1807 that the cue stick
was given its felt or india rubber tip, which made it a much more accurate
instrument. And of course the balls were hand crafted, and thus not honed to a
mechanically precise roundness.
If, however, Hume was a billiard’s man, one wonders what
kind he was. His biographer Hunter speaks of the “even flight” of Hume’s prose –
he never soars too much. But is this the feint of a hustler? According to one
memoirist, Kant, too, was a billiards player – in fact the memoirist, Heilsberg, claimed it
was his “only recreation” – and he obviously thought there was something of a
hustle about Hume’s analysis of cause and effect, which is where the breaks
come in.
There’s a rather celebrated passage in the abstract of the
Treatise in which Hume even conjoins the first man, Adam, and the billiard
ball. The passage begins: “Here is a billiard ball lying
on the table, and another ball moving towards it with rapidity. They strike;
and the ball which was formerly at rest now acquires a motion.” Hume
goes on to describe the reasons we would have for speaking of one ball’s
contact causing the other ball to acquire a motion. The question is, does this
description get to something naturally inherent in the event?
“Were a man, such as Adam, created in the
full vigour of understanding, without experience, he would never be able to
infer motion in the second ball from the motion and impulse of the first. It is
not anything that reason sees in the cause which makes us infer the effect.”
This new man, striding into the billiard
room, Hume thinks, would not see as we see, even if he sees what we see. Only
when he has seen such things thousands of times will he see as we see: then, “His
understanding would anticipate his sight and form a conclusion suitable to his
past experience.”
Hume’s Adam is an overdetermined figure. On the one hand, in
his reference to Adam’s “science”, there is a hint of the Adam construed by the
humanists. Martin Luther claimed that Adam’s vision was perfect, meaning he
could see objects hundreds of miles away. Joseph Glanvill, that curiously
in-between scholar – defender of the ghost belief and founder of the Royal
Society – wrote in the seventeenth century:
“Adam needed no Spectacles. The acuteness of his natural
Opticks (if conjecture may have credit) shew'd him much of the Coelestial
magnificence and bravery without a Galilaeo's tube: And 'tis most probable that
his naked eyes could reach near as much of the upper World, as we with all the
advantages of art. It may be 'twas as absurd even in the judgement of his
senses, that the Sun and Stars should be so very much, less then this Globe, as
the contrary seems in ours; and 'tis not unlikely that he had as clear a
perception of the earths motion, as we think we have of its quiescence.”
However, this is not the line that Hume develops. His Adam
has our human all too human sensorium, and is no marvel of sensitivity. Rather,
he belongs to another line of figures beloved by the Enlightenment philosophes:
Condillac’s almost senseles statue, Locke’s Molyneaux, Diderot’s aveugle-né. Here,
the human is stripped down to the basics. Adam’s conjunction with the billiard
ball, then, gives us a situation like Diderot’s combination of the blind man
and the mirror – it’s an event of illuminating estrangement.
It is important that these figures were certainly not
invented in the eighteenth century. Rather, they come out of a longer lineage:
that of the sage and the fool. Bruno and his ass, Socrates and Diogenes the
cynic, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza – it is from this family that all these
deprived souls in the texts of the philosophes are appropriated and turned into
epistemological clockworks.
Hume’s point is to lift the breaks from off our necks, to
break the bonds of necessity – or rather to relocate those bonds. In doing so,
he and his billiard balls are reversing the older tendency of atomistic
philosophy, which was revived by Gassendi in the 17th century.
Lucretian atoms fall in necessary and pre-determined courses, the only
exception being that slight inexplicable swerve when the atoms contact the
human – hence our free will. Hume, who had a hard enough time with Christian miracles, did not, so far as I know,
discuss the Lucretian version of things even to the extent of dismissing it.
To be a little over the top, we could say that the
eighteenth century thinkers disarmed necessity, exiled Nemesis, and the
heavyweight heads of the nineteenth century brought it back with a vengeance,
locating it – in a bow to Hume, or the Humean moment – in history. Custom. From
this point of view, Hume was part of a project that saw the transfer of power
from God and Nature back to Man – although we are now all justly suspicious of such
capitalizable terms.
But the breaks survived and flourished. There is a way of
telling intellectual history – the way I’ve been doing it – that makes it go on
above our heads, instead of in them. It neglects the general populace, the
great unwashed. Book speaks to book. To my mind, intellectual history has to
embrace and understand folk belief in order to understand the book to book P.A.
system.
Which is why we can approach the breaks in another way.
In 1980, I was going to college in Shreveport, Louisiana. I
went to classes in the morning, then worked at a general remodeling store from
3 to 10. I worked in the paint department, mostly. At seven, the manager would
leave for home, and Henry, the assistant manager, would let us pipe in whatever
music we wanted to - which is how I
first heard Kurtis Blow’s These are the Breaks. I also first heard the
Sugarhill Gang’s Rappers delight this way, and I still mix them up. I heard
both, as well as La Donna and Rick James, at the Florentine, a disco/gay bar
that I went to a lot with friends – it was the best place to dance in town.
Being a gay bar, it was always receiving bomb threats and such, which made it a
bit daring to go there. We went, however, because we could be pretty sure that
the music they played would include no country or rock. It was continuously
danceable until, inevitably, The Last Dance played.
At the time, I was dabbling a bit in Marx, and thought that
I was on the left side of history. At the same time, 1980 was a confusing year
for Americans. The ‘malaise’ was everywhere, and nothing seemed to be going
right – from the price of oil to the international order. There were supposedly
communists in Central America, African countries were turning to the Soviet
Union, and of course there was the hangover from the Vietnam War – the fantasy
that we could have won that war had not yet achieved mass circulation, so it
felt like what it was, a plain defeat.
I imagined, then, that the breaks were falling against a
certain capitalist order. In actuality, the left – in its old and new varieties
– was vanishing. Or you could say transforming. The long marches were underway –
in feminism, from overthrowing patriarchy to today’s “leaning in”; in civil
rights, from the riots in Miami to the re-Jim Crowization of America through
the clever use of the drug war; and in labor organization, from the union power
to strike to the impotence and acceptance that things will really never get
better, and all battles are now rearguard.
My horizons were not vast back then – I didn’t keep up with
the news that much, but pondered a buncha books and the words of popular songs.
But I knew something was in the air. As it turned out, Kurtis Blow’s breaks were not going to be kind
to my type, the Nowhere people, stranded socially with their eccentric and
unconvincing visions. However, after decades of it, I have finally learned to
accept what Blow was telling me: these are just the breaks. That is all they
are.
You’ll live.
Sunday, May 04, 2014
Reporting on the Ukraine - the man in the devil suit did it!
I have this sick, deja vu feeling about the u.s. ukraine reporting:it shares the same vices and mindframe as the reporting on Iraq in 2002-2003.
It is important to be clear about what happened. The former president was deposed - and he was deposed, apparently, by groups that were opposed to him in the previous election. Unfortunately, none of these groups seemed to have any roots in those areas that voted overwhelmingly for Yanukovych. This kind of thing happens all the time in countries that have no democratic tradition or institutions - one party, faced with the victory of another party, kicks that party out. It certainly is not an instance of overthrowing tyranny. That both sides are corrupt is pretty much a given in oligarchy ridden Ukraine. One doesn't have to be for I think running away was probably a good way not to get killed.
Unfortunately, the reporting in the NYT, the NYorker (with its pathetic series by Jon Lee Anderson, the LRB (with its pathetic reporting by James Meek) and the NYRB on Ukraine has pitted good guy Maidan protesters against Putin. as the whole story - when it is a sideshow This is convenient to the American mindset, but it eclipses the reality of what is happening in the Ukraine. The regions that voted overwhelmingly for Yanukovych are not being hypnotized by Putin - they are understandably disgusted by a Kiev centered political operation that has negated their political will. Over and over again, you read that they neither want to be part of Russia - nor accept the Kiev government as legitimate. Why is this position - which is pretty simple - simply ignored in this "series of portraits"? Because it inconveniences what Joan Didion once called the "narrative" - the way establishment newsmakers have determined a news story should go, whether it reflects reality or not. In fact, what is being missed is the framework for what is happening. To make it good Kiev versus bad Kremlin is a disservice to American readers. It will lead to Americans not being able to understand events in the Ukraine. It is overwhelmingly reminiscent of American reporting about Iraq, which similarly so mislead readers that the insurgency was wholly unexpected, and the whole unwinding of the occupation was a big enigma. If the press had done its job, that wouldn't have been so much the case.
But the press has long substituted one job - reporting - for another - lobbying - when it comes to foreign news reporting in the U.S. Thus, Ukraine is given to us in two historical periods - it appeared in the 1930s, when a georgian born dictator, Stalin, starved to death its people, and it appears in February 2014, when the Maidan protests gathered steam. However, a less supernatural view of the Ukraine would assume that it also existed in 2013, and 2012, and 2011, and 2010. From this angle, the question is who voted for the party of the Regions and where, A look at the map would show you that the Party of the Regions was extremely popular in the East. Here's the wiki map of the presidential election (the percentages are part of the total of the 48.95 percent that Yanukovych got in the second round of voting). This map indicates pretty strongly where the overthrow of Yanukovych is going arouse unhappiness. You don't need to posit some hypnotic power by Putin. Evidently, the power in Kiev is either going to have to compromise with these areas or occupy them. Or the Ukraine will split. This isn't really that hard to see or understand. The project of not understanding it, of ignoring it, of pretending that 2010 didn't happen, is a strong indicator that what we are getting in the mainstream media and the thought journals about the Ukraine is simply propaganda. Easy to swallow, since after all, Putin is a dick and a war criminal (and also the unexpected result of the last massive U,S. intervention in Russia, when the US aided and dragged Yeltsin to victory in 1995 in Russia).
But don't believe the man in the devil suit is the main actor here.
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