I (Acilius) am a frequent commenter on Alison Bechdel’s Dykes to Watch Out For blog. As regular readers of Los Thunderlads are all too well aware, I can get pretty long-winded, so I try to restrain myself. I was doing pretty well on the current thread, until I broke down completely and left a multi-screen essay about The Nature of Democracy. After the jump, an explanation of how I came to display such poor manners.
All posts in category Politics
Acilius being long-winded
Posted by acilius on November 9, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/11/09/acilius-being-long-winded/
Miscellaneous Reflections on US Politics …
or: “A Comprehensive Manifesto on American Political Life”
It’s true that Democrats and Republicans are little more than two feuding factions of the same corporatist political establishment. But there could be actual differences between them, inasmuch as they aspire to inflict slightly different kinds of grievous damage on society. Both parties claim to champion “ordinary man” and accuse the other of elitism (a bit truer, obviously, in one case than in the other). The constant, endless sniping back and forth between Democrats and Republicans (or “liberals” and “conservatives,” as they are called by those with a taste for trendy euphemistic language), while it most assuredly is not about the things we are told it is about (e.g. a conflict between elitism and populism), must ultimately be about … something or other (?).
To some degree, the two parties are certainly “in cahoots” with one another — as both parties adore the image of being locked in bitter struggle with the other. (A kind of yin-yang symbiosis, as it were.) The dumb struggle furnishes robust spectacle to the public; and encourages “ordinary man” (l’homme ordinaire, so to speak) to choose a side and then squander his energy and time gushing vitriol upon the opposing side … denouncing them as “agents Goldsteiniens” or dumbasses etc. In short, the “conservative”/“liberal” duality is merely a distraction, a device to get the public involved in “straw issues” and all manner of vacuous controversy … and so prevent the really crucial issues from ever coming up. It generates the illusion of vibrant, contentious, democratic debate; whereas in reality the discourse could hardly be more boxed-in by the forces of indoctrination and mind control. But I do think there is something at stake.

As simplistic as it may sound, I think the core difference is, the Democrats want the corporatist agenda to triumph, along with some concessions to the tolerable functioning and survival of “ordinary man”; whilst the Republicans are prepared, quite simply, to steamroll the country into a fun playground of the hyper-rich, imposed atop a barren landscape of bad education, low-wage unskilled jobs, decent health care facilities that no one can fucking pay for, and flashy new Ford models – fresh off the Chinese assembly line and accruing much “gelt” in the coffers of high-level auto company executives. The Republicans’ only concern with “ordinary man” is that he remain thoroughly enough indoctrinated, so that he will never rise up in any substantive way and thereby inconvenience the Republicans’ stranglehold and their grand plan to rape America.
During my long, protracted, and horrendously-hellish engagements with political AM radio, I have developed at least one trusty, unfailing guiding principle: To wit: Whatever is being asserted about so-called “liberals” or “liberalism,” is in actuality the rightwing describing itself, i.e. projecting their own uncomfortable semi-conscious self-realizations onto “the other,” “the villains.” And when you think about some of their more hysterical declamations regarding “the left,” and translate them into a confession of their own real intent … one shivers in the chill, dank, autumnal breeze.
To give just one brief, simple, accessible example of this phenomenon: These “commentators” could hardly be presenting a more succinct capsule-description of the type of really egregious scenario they themselves are so hellbent to bring to fruition, when they claim that Obama [a] represents something *radically different* from anything we’ve ever known before, and [b] also represents something *terribly destructive* to the foundations of the republic. A fine summary of GW Bush … and, in all probability, of the next Republican president we get foisted with.
In the gigantic, neverending, and fabulously-tiresome propaganda war between the two corporatist factions, the Democrats seem to have an extraordinary knack for failing to ever say much of anything that cannot be instantaneously chopped to shreds by rightwing pundits. By contrast, rightwing propaganda, by virtue of its moronic simplicity (its tendency to repeat, over and over, three or four extremely jejune, threadbare notions), has this amazing ability to “stick” in the popular mind.
The Democrats’ problem is their particular brand of propagandization is just too closely intermeshed with an actual constraining reality of some legitimate complexity – as opposed to the far-more-accessible simpleminded fantasyland of the Republicans. This restricts the Democrats (most inconveniently!) from disseminating their message in the full gamut of mad, phantasmagoric textures-&-tones available to Republicans. Stated differently, the Democrats’ narratives are “boring;” they talk too much about “real stuff,” e.g. the gnarled complexities of health care overhaul. They err in tending toward the reflective and the reality-based. (And insofar as Democratic politicians sometimes give great speeches and promise the possibility of great things to come, they are apparently far too complicit with the corporatist agenda to actually ever deliver any of it.)
To the contrary, you are more appealing, and garner more support, if you are bombastic and in loo-loo land, e.g. haranguing vociferously about death panels, the radical socialization of society, Jeffersonian democracy in the Middle East, the vile traitors amidst us who lack sufficient spine to carry out “the mission” etc. Stated yet differently, when it comes to persuading hearts and minds, the “sound byte culture” massively favors some doofus’s verbal farting over a considered explanation that takes longer than five seconds.
That is why our society will just keep getting stupider, as more and more people slowly fall away from any point of contact with identifiable reality and jump on-board the bandwagon of collective masturbatory fantasties about “Naughty Li’l Goldstein” … until one day the whole country will finally crawl up its own asshole and wink out of existence. Obviously the fact that I would write this means I hate America. (PS The prior sentence was sarcastic, in case that might be unclear to somebody.)
Posted by lefalcon on October 14, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/10/14/miscellaneous-reflections-on-us-politics/
Neoliberalism as water balloon
Here’s a video that is intended to make a political point.
Posted by acilius on October 8, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/10/08/neoliberalism-as-water-balloon/
How to choose a college
Today I received a promotional email for a site where I read this:
Question: I am a Bucky-Badger graduate. I am considering having my high school junior son apply to UW Madison. Am I risking changing my Christian conservative son into a communist radical?
John Zmirak: The short answer is Yes.
In all fairness, I should point out that Zmirak goes on to give a longer answer, which is much more nuanced. And I should probably mention too that Zmirak has written some good stuff, like this book.
Posted by acilius on October 1, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/10/01/how-to-choose-a-college/
Liberty and Bureaucracy
The Rebecca Solnit piece linked below, together with some recent conversations I’ve had with LeFalcon and VThunderlad, have got me thinking about what we twenty-first century types mean when we use words like “freedom” and “liberty.” I’m wondering if we can’t update Isaiah Berlin’s “Two Concepts of Liberty” a bit. Perhaps when we moderns talk about freedom, we are talking about how individuals relate to bureaucracies. This sets us apart from the ancient Greeks and Romans. Bureaucracy in the modern sense scarcely existed in ancient times; nor was the individual the basic unit of society. It was the household which was the locus of rights and responsibilities. Challenges which a single household could not meet were met by groupings of households, either traditional groupings based on kinship relations or more-or-less temporary, informal relations based on physical propinquity. In the absence of bureaucracies that could define their clients and members as parts of a community, it was the ability to form cooperative groupings that made a community. The ancients, therefore, tended to see freedom as a property, not of individuals in isolation, but of independent households, of men acting as representatives of those households, and of concerted efforts made by collections of households.
If on the other hand we define freedom as the individual’s relationship to bureaucracy, what do we mean when we say that we want to be free? Sometimes we mean that we want to rebel against bureaucracy, to escape from the infantilizing effects of dependence on bureaucracy. This can lead to absurd extremes; if we do not have a concept of community apart from the bureaucratic organizations that bear the community’s name, this anti-bureaucratic idea of freedom could keep us from calling anyone free but a solitary creature like the Cyclops. And many among us do not seem to have such a concept of community; the attempt to build a communitarian movement that got so much publicity back in the early 1990s seems to have foundered on the difficulty of talking to modern people about community and eliciting a response that is about anything other than bureaucracies. Many libertarians seem to be numbered among those who lack a concept of community as something other than bureaucracy. Libertarians often make penetrating remarks about the dangers of state bureaucracy, but then go on to talk as if corporate bureaucracies were not fraught with the same dangers. Indeed, if the forces of the market make the bureaucracies that are subject to them more efficient at meeting the needs of their clients than are bureaucracis that don’t compete for clients, then we would expect market-generated bureaucracies to reduce their clients to dependence, and thus to infantilize them, more rapidly and more thoroughly than do state monopolies.
Other times we say that we want freedom, and we mean that we want some benefit that a bureaucracy can give us. So in the 1940s when Franklin Roosevelt spoke of the “Four Freedoms“- freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from fear, and freedom from want- he clearly thought of these as the products of bureaucratic efficiency. An effective anti-poverty bureaucracy would ensure freedom from want; an effective national-security bureaucracy would ensure freedom from fear; an effective judicial bureaucracy would ensure freedom of religion and of speech, freedoms which in turn would allow people to express themselves by creating denominational bureaucracies for their religious groups and partisan bureaucracies for those who shared their political views. When Americans today call for a public-sector guarantee of health care for all, they are asking for this kind of freedom. When other Americans oppose such a guarantee, some are motivated by a concept of freedom as rebellion against bureaucracy, but others are motivated by a belief that the private sector bureaucracies of insurance companies offer a more efficient way of providing freedom from the fear of illness and freedom from the want that often follows illness.
Still other times when we say that we want freedom, we mean that we want to play a particular role within a bureaucratic organization. Academic freedom is an obvious example of this concept of liberty. Professors are free to use their own judgment in teaching their courses and in delivering opinions about topics within their fields of expertise. Which courses they will teach, what field of expertise is theirs, and what topics lie within each field of expertise are all questions that are answered by continuous bureaucratic activity. The idea that freedom is a category of roles within bureaucracies can be found also at the heart of the labor movement. What rules a union sets for the workforce of its shop is a less vital concern than the fact that there are rules in the shop which came from the union. What deal emerges from collective bargaining is less important than the fact that management is obligated to sit down with the representatives of labor and come to consensus with them.
Perhaps the concept of liberty as a way of operating within a bureaucracy has been very influential in making the modern world. When there was a live controversy about whether women should go out of the household to work in bureaucratic organizations, the women’s movement put a great deal of emphasis on the freedom women would gain by participating in the workforce. This would have been unintelligible in the ancient world, where work in the household was appropriate to free people, while work for wages was proper only to slaves. In the modern world, by contrast, going out of the household and into wage labor is a sign of freedom, if that wage labor means an opportunity to have an impact on the operations of a bureaucracy.
The antislavery movement may be another case of liberty conceived as something found within bureaucracy. Abolitionism was at once a movement against slavery and a movement in support of wage labor. While the ancient Greeks and Romans might have seen that as a contradiction, it did not seem so by that time. The ancients would have understood the slogan “forty acres and a mule.” A grant of land and the means to support a household by farming it would open the way to the creation of a self-sufficient agricultural household. That would have chartered the kind of freedom they could appreciate. The freedom merely to leave the master’s household, to venture out as an isolated individual and to enter the world of bureaucracy, whether as a job-seeker or as a client needing services, would not have seemed to them to be freedom at all. We moderns, on the other hand, find the purest promise of freedom in the African American elected officials and government employees of the Reconstruction era, and the most natural support of freedom in the operations of the Freedmen’s Bureau.
Posted by acilius on September 12, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/09/12/liberty-and-bureaucracy/
An abuse of power?

He's still getting people worked up
Andreas Willi, professor of Greek at Oxford, takes issue with a letter addressed to the US president that has lately been gathering signatures from American classical scholars. Willi’s article can be seen in pdf form here.
WHOSE IS MACEDONIA, WHOSE IS ALEXANDER?
On 18 May 2009, 200 Classical scholars from around the world sent an open letter to the President of the United States of America, Barack Obama. This unusual action, and the contents of the letter, raise issues which may not have been considered by all those who have endorsed it, but which deserve consideration. In order to put the discussion that follows into context, it may be useful first to quote the body of the letter itself. [[1]]
***
Dear President Obama,
We, the undersigned scholars of Graeco-Roman antiquity, respectfully request that you intervene to clean up some of the historical debris left in southeast Europe by the previous U.S. administration.
Posted by acilius on July 15, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/07/15/an-abuse-of-power/
Red State Update
Thanks to “Kate L,” a frequent commenter on Alison Bechdel’s Dykes to Watch Out For, for pointing us to this video:
Posted by acilius on July 10, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/07/10/red-state-update/





