Sunday, July 8, 2018

Does the Center Deserve to Hold?

Does the Center Deserve to Hold? 

Turning and turning in a widening gyre 
The falcon cannot hear the falconer; 
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; 
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, 
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere 
The ceremony of innocence is drowned; 
The best lack all conviction, while the worst 
Are full of passionate intensity. 


By J.M. Hamilton (7-8-2018) 


Was watching the Ken Burn’s documentary, The Vietnam War, over the Independence Holiday.  The Vietnam War was, of course, another endless war, spanning multiple generations - and administrations of both stripes - in which the US elite killed and maimed millions, many of them innocent.  Painting with far too broad a brush, the nation’s best and brightest tarred a nationalist independence movement (originally, fighting their French colonial masters, and then the US) – very much like America’s fight for independence - with broad Cold War strokes. 

Warning: This documentary is not for the faint of heart.  Amidst the graphic bloodshed, firsthand accounts of wartime atrocities, and much hand wringing and some remorse… comes a tremendous sense of deja vu. 

History does repeat, or certainly rhymes, and for a generation – if we are lucky two generations – we learn a lesson or two.  That is, until another gang of ultra-elite-Ivy-thugs come along and turn a War – this time upon terror – into endless malaise, a tremendous waste of blood & treasure, and another humiliating experience for the world’s greatest Superpower.   

Only the dead have seen the end of war…  and as long as extraordinary profits are to be made from man’s martial endeavors, Plato offers up one of the truest statements ever written. 




Some of the parallels, between 1968 and 2018 that immediately come to mind, are as follows (I’m sure there are many more): 

As in ’68, US citizens are marching in the streets again – granted today, less so about war – but certainly about civil rights, mistreatment of minorities - including LGBTQ, poverty, and women’s rights. 

As in ’68, the US finds itself with an expansive and costly empire – that crowds out social & infrastructure spending.  The US also, not to belabor the point, finds itself in endless warfare. 

In ’68, a Republican president divided and manipulated the public to great effect, so that internal divisions tore the nation in two.  “Law and order” were the watchwords of the day.   Richard Nixon’s silent majority was pitted against the nation’s youth, minorities, and protestors (even though this nation was founded upon dissent). 

The Pentagon Papers – very much like Mr. Snowden’s revelations – made the public realize they were being lied to and manipulated, by the leaders of the nation.  

The political tactic of the day - in 1968 to keep the nation on a wartime footing -was: FEAR.  The red scare was overplayed, very much like terror has been overplayed, repeatedly, since 2001. 

As in both wars, MIC contractors made obscene profits, all on the taxpayer's dime, and social programs – like LBJ’s/Kennedy’s Great Society – were put on the chopping block and suffered setbacks. 

Interestingly, very much like today, there was some division among the US and its NATO allies, many of whom did not support the war in Vietnam. 

As with our current White House occupant, both LBJ and Nixon took issue with the mainstream news media, and resented the east coast elite. 

Then as now, there were great pockets of poverty in the world’s wealthiest nation, w/ children, per the usual, bearing the brunt. 



But history only rhymes … among some of the dissimilarities, between ’68 and ’18: 

The top income tax rate in ’68 was 75%.  And no, the world did not come to an end.   

In fact, despite GOP propaganda about the necessity of tax cuts to drive the US economy, GDP growth in ’68 came in at 4.8%.  (The top corporate tax rate was 52%) 

Nineteen sixty-eight GDP growth, at 4.8%, was likely driven by a war time economy, but also the fact that the nation was not faced w/ astounding debt.   

In ’68, the national debt to GDP ratio was roughly 40%; today, our national debt to GDP ratio hangs over the economy like a menacing force in excess of 100%.   

Unlike today, teens in ’68 faced a draft, and so their interest in foreign affairs was far greater than today’s citizens and youth.  One immediately wonders, if there was a draft today, would the US still find itself bogged down in Afghanistan and the Middle East in perennial warfare? 

Unlike ’68, Americans today have endless sources of amusement, entertainment, and news and information sources (perhaps the worst of these is Facebook).  In ’68, for the most part, three major news networks enjoyed near hegemony over televised war reporting, and reporters were given unprecedented access to the war.  Hence, the Vietnam War was dubbed the “living room war.”   

Like I said, these lists are by no means exhaustive, but interesting nonetheless. 




A little over fifty years ago, Senator Robert Kennedy wrote an op-ed in the NY Times w/ a title based upon the aforementioned Yeat’s poem, entitled:  ‘Things Fall Apart; the Center Cannot Hold…’ 

Among other things, Mr. Kennedy in his essay observed: the upheaval w/in the country; lamented the nation’s direction; noted our significant wealth & glaring poverty; and commented upon some of the external & internal divisions – and our use of tremendous power - rending the nation, indeed the world.   

He went on to state: 

We have discovered that private accomplishment or affluence affords no escape from the perils and plagues that afflict the nation – and that these questions are far too important to be entrusted to remote leaders. 

We search for answers to specific problems; but more than this, we seek to recapture our country.  We have not yet discovered how to do it.  That perhaps, is what troubles these long nights of our national spirit.  And that is what the 1968 elections must really be about. 

I’d say Mr. Kennedy was expressing some doubt and reservations about US leadership, and the men who ran this nation fifty years ago. 

My how little has changed. 

Today, the US enjoys extraordinary wealth, and turns a blind eye to its exceptional poverty.  The very foundation of our democracy is threatened by a billionaire class, who has captured government – for their exclusive benefit – from every angle.  Money flows through Washington like a river, and our Congress – abdicates all responsibility – and campaigns 24/7/365.  

Behemoth multinationals are no longer interested in earning money the old fashioned way, via hard work, and affording exceptional products & services; but rather, monopolistic profits are earned through unexceptional rent seeking behaviors: like M&A, industry consolidation, cartels & monopoly.   Gangsters roam the corner of Wall and Broadthriving upon unpayable global debt (and speculative insurance products affording coverage for that debt - derivatives & swaps).

What remains of the American middle class is stomped daily. 

In many respects, a Nixonian clone inhabits the White House, parroting some of the very same divisive rhetoric (and enacting abhorrent policies). 

America fights unwinnable wars with no end in site, while successive administrations are too afraid to announce the end of failed nation building exercises.  As a matter of political expediency then, our nation's youth are sacrificed upon the altar of war for political careers. 

The blood of innocents - and our fighting women's and men's lives - stains the nation’s hands, while the MIC reports out record profits for inferior products. 

And worst of all, our US leadership appears entirely incapable of learning from history’s mistakes.  Which seemingly, are repeated time and time again.  Instead, we - as a people - appear thrilled by technology’s totalitarian promises, big data’s magic, and are distracted by the shiniest object of gratification at any given moment.   


All of which begs the question, should the center - center right (the GOP) and center left (Democrats) political parties – maintain their duopoly over US power?  

Given the complete breakdown in leadership, and the folly & hubris – often - surrounding our experts, why should they remain in power? 


Copyright JM Hamilton Publishing 2018 


Saturday, June 23, 2018

A Special Place in Hell


A Special Place in Hell 

WASHINGTON — Peter Navarro, one of President Trump’s top trade advisers, said on Tuesday that it was a mistake to suggest that “there is a special place in hell” for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada, offering a rare apology from a White House that almost never walks back heated rhetoric. 

 

-       Navarro Apologizes for ‘Special Place in Hell’ Comments About Trudeau, New York Times


By J.M. Hamilton (6-23-2018)

Amidst the bedlam, cacophony, & chaos surrounding Trump's decision to separate immigrant children from their families, and POTUS' subsequent retreat from that decision (in the face of expressions of public outrage and rebellion from even the most faithful of Trump supporters)...  several, seemingly, random news stories flashed through my mind.

Starting with Dr. Evil himself, former VP Dick Cheney, blasting a fellow Republican, and a lawyer, in the face with a shotgun during a hunting trip; and as reported by The Hill - some ten years later - Cheney failing to apologize to the victim for that event;

The spectacle of AG Jeff Sessions grinning like a jackal - as he cited Romans 13 (a chapter in the Bible used by fanatics to legitimize everything from National Socialism to slavery) to justify his policy of incarcerating & separating immigrant children at the border;

Then popped up Peter Navarro, Trump's trade advisor, claiming "there's a special place in hell" for the likes of Canadian PM, Justin Trudeau. The Canadian PM was merely guilty of standing up for his country (as any citizen would ask their leader to do, including Trump - on the matter of trade);

And last but not least among the stories that flashed randomly by, was the recent news item where conservative icon --- and one of the last of a moral breed of Republican, who is simultaneously erudite, intelligent and principled (words one generally does not say in the same sentence, when referring to today's Republican Party, as they are oxymoronic) --- George Will told Republican voters to vote Democratic in the upcoming midterms, because the GOP has become invertebrate. 

(Note: While JMH couldn't agree with the rationale for Mr. Will's recommendation more, that GOP members of Congress are a timid band of useless lackeys... I also couldn't help but notice Mr. Will's recommendation seems to validate, my oft repeated assertion, that today's Democratic Party leadership has moved so far right that they are only more moderate servants of the ruling Oligarchy.  That is to say, the Democratic establishment are distinguishable from Republican leadership in that they are only slightly less slavishly devoted to the Billionaire class’ bag men.  It's a matter of degrees.)

What do these random news stories seem to have in common?  Well, they point to nothing less than the GOP's downward spiral, right down into Dante's ninth circle (rumor has it, Republicans may drill down into a 10th circle, in the hopes of striking oil).  The moral collapse is so complete that Republican congresspersons have been reduced to being slobbering stooges for the financial aristocracy.  So morally bankrupt and vacuous has today's Republican leadership – and many in the base - become that no few in number are willing to use children as pawns to advance their pet political projects (like building a wall on our Southern border). 

Ironically, even the most hardened felons have a moral code.  And the lowest in the pecking order w/in America's prison industrial complex are said to be the abusers of children.  A special place in hell some might say is voting into power a government that has dubious and questionable values, condones the mistreatment of children for political gain, and that said government is entirely unaccountable to the American people.



(John Moore/Getty Images)



Aside from the moral collapse of the Republic, there is a very real immigration issue.  

And as usual, many in the mainstream media have identified the issue, and even the catalyst for record setting immigration - such as gangs, Latin America violence, and climate change - but often fail to take it a step further and affix blame.

What is causing the global dysphoria?

As the UN recently reported: a record 68 million displaced and growing.

Coming out of Afghanistan, and the Middle East, and flooding into Europe are war refugees and immigrants seeking better economic opportunities.  The Middle East youth demographic, and youth unemployment are exceptionally high on both counts.  These refugees are fleeing America's, and American sponsored & supplied, wars that are waged throughout the region (many of these Middle East wars are interconnected with our alliance to the Saudis - who sponsor the very terror we send our brave armed forces to die and fight against, in an ultra-deadly Catch -22).

Globally, America's & the West's energy policies - and its support for Middle East oil monarchies & Big Oil multinationals - are leading to hellish temperatures along the equator (read: Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East).  Climate change too, is a substantial contributor to the exodus into Canada, Europe, and the United States.

And we wonder why people are fleeing at record levels?

Closer to home in Latin America, the US - and what the Monroe Doctrine as practiced - appears to mean is backing right-wing strongmen and junta generals (who are, or were, highly oppressive to their citizens). The US, in many instances, chooses dictatorships over democratically elected officeholders, globally.  Why is that?  Is it because the commercial interests, that run our country, prefer doing business w/ dictators?

These same US sponsored dictatorships, in many instances, crush their people, and exhibit little or no respect for the niceties of due process, human rights, or the rule of law. 

Here in the Americas, the US - too - wages endless war, w/ Mr. Nixon's war on drugs.  Americans have an insatiable appetite for escape and illegal intoxicants (possibly because 40% of us are paid a non-living wage, if we have a job at all), which are made readily available by our Latin American neighbors (provided via black markets, gangs, and governments - including the US - that are often co-opted & de facto dealers).

For America to gripe about immigration (when we are a Nation of Immigrants) ... sounds almost nauseating.  Especially when it is the United States' official energy & foreign policy - and our policy of endless warfare - that are direct contributors to global mass migration.  Not only are US policies (drug, energy, foreign, & martial) harmful in and of themselves, both morally & environmentally - and cause fiscal and monetary damage to the nation - but they are directly responsible for mass dysphoria & migration. 

To say we have vastly better alternatives to our perennial support for Big Oil, Latin American & Middle East dictatorships (then & now), and the Military/Intelligence Industrial Complex is an understatement.  America should adopt alternative energy, push for democracy & human rights - globally, decriminalize & legalize drugs (a la Canada, Portugal, and Uruguay), and engage in diplomacy & peace as an alternative to credit card wars. 

Humanity, the planet, the Goddess above - and yes, possibly even the oligarchy  - might appreciate the policy change.  It might even allow desperate families to stay in their home countries, instead of making dangerous trans-state treks, or oceanic journeys, w/ families and children in tow.

But whether they make the journey or not, all Americans ought to agree that children should not be separated from their families.

That the US has not already moved in a more advanced direction, because too many wealthy special interests (the MIC, private prison contractors, Big Oil, and Wall Street) are insistent upon maintaining the status quo, may attest to the possibility that the United State has already landed in a special place in hell. 

Copyright JM Hamilton Publishing 2018