The fundamentals of political energy

The first law of thermodynamics states that, simply put, energy cannot be created or destroyed; energy can only be transferred or change form.

Over these past decades, and even so far as throughout the past century, our political energy has come in many forms; however, some of those forms have been suppressed and ultimately converted to other forms of energy.

To start, examine Bernie Sanders. He unleashed a stored energy that existed, an energy to deal with concerns of oligarchy and the rampant precarious economic situation we are in. That energy is currently moving, buzzing around in large quantities. Currently though, Sanders is trying to transform that energy. That energy must be co-opted back into the Democratic Party; in essence, that energy must be transformed back to accepting that the Democrats are friends of the people.

This energy was pushed towards Rob Quist (who lost here in Montana and was severely outspent), that energy is trying to be pushed towards Ossof, that energy is trying to be pushed back via Perez, by Pelosi, by Schumer. All of this energy is meant to be transformed, the large quantity of energy meant to be transferred to the husk of the Democratic Party.

But this isn't just about the Democrats or Republicans. This change of energy exists in the public. Now, instead of someone capitalizing on it to move it towards an ultimate goal, it must be stifled. It must be converted to a different form of energy. The current energy is unacceptable to owners. This energy must either go back to being stored energy (a sleeping populace) or converted within the system of one of the two parties, where it can be properly managed, funneled into 100 different directions, and ultimately diluted.

The ultimate question that is slowly coalescing here is thus: What to do with this energy?

Eugene Debs fought back, trying to beat the two capitalist parties, but ultimately the energy wasn't there. The energy was stored and packed away deep within the bowels of the duopoly. The government then went after those dirty socialist and communists, transferring that tiny amount of energy back into either stored energy (fear) or back into the welcoming arms of the duopoly.

We can talk about a 3rd party, we can talk about a movement of people outside of government, we can talk about revolution, we can talk about direct democracy. Any of these, any of these are better than our current situation. All of this energy needs a funnel. It needs a direction that can propel it forward, with such velocity that it can actually strike its goal.

That goal can not be the reforming of one of the two parties. That does not exist, can not exist.

This energy exists, it must be utilized. Now, not tomorrow. Now, in all its explosive might, not incrementally.

This energy exist, it must be utilized. Otherwise, it will be siphoned off. Slowly, over time. Transformed back into a stable, controlled existence.

This energy exists for single payer.
This energy exists for dealing with catastrophic climate change.
This energy exists with dealing with the precarious economic conditions we suffer through.
This energy can be transferred to dealing with our imperialist war machine.
This energy exists. It needs a direction. It must be utilized.

Energy can not be created or destroyed, it can only be transformed or transferred.

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We say that the Democrats would rather lose than cede power to a progressive. Well, I think Americans would rather lose their shirts than give power to a Democrat.

The Democrats Need a New Message
After another demoralizing loss to a monstrous candidate, Democrats need a reboot

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/taibbi-the-democrats-need-...

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Strife Delivery's picture

@dkmich And well they deserve to lose.

I want something more.

We as a nation need more.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

And I like your way of framing the issue (as energy).

There are two problems: visibility (and who has it) and the military might of our opponents, in which I now include both their surveillance technologies and their weaponized financial system. In other words, Bernie Sanders could, because he was a US senator running for President, get people's attention and get them to give him money. Lots of it. Now we know that the people are capable of raising a pretty tidy monthly sum, considering the economic blitzkrieg that keeps raining down on them. But if I came up with an idea for an organization and put it on Kickstarter, would I get the same response? Would I get half the response?

Being famous counts for a great deal. Visibility. Very important, that's why they control it and that's why they have a shitfit when a visible person, like Susan Sarandon, doesn't obey the rules.

Further, as an activist, to me it seems discussion always falls down around the in-between steps: all the non-glamorous, small steps that are required to build an alternative political infrastructure capable of taking up energy and using it. Which we don't currently have because of 45 years of cultural destruction being waged on the Left, yes, but more importantly, on the fundamental political and social structures of the culture itself. The refusal to believe, or accept, that there was once an infrastructure people in (for instance) the 60s and 70s relied on without even thinking about it (communities, political parties that were more permeable to the average person, a press that wasn't a constant Pravda-fest of propaganda and character assassinations), and now that infrastructure's gone is a serious obstruction to any effective action on the Left. The Left keeps acting either like all that infrastructure is still there, or that it never was. The refusal to acknowledge the loss and integrate it into our strategic thinking is maddening.

Lewis Powell figured out something so obvious that few had thought of it before: in order to have a political movement, you have to have social connections and cultural institutions--or, at least, without those things, political movements are difficult to create and extremely difficult to sustain. So he, and his cronies, made a plan to take it all down.

That's why the current descendants of Lewis Powell didn't like Occupy. It was essentially creating a network of little villages throughout the country where people of all sorts came to talk. It was re-creating the culture. They didn't like that, so when ordinary means (media blackout, character assassination, police harassment) didn't work, they suppressed them with paramilitary force.

My three shitty questions about any idea are Who is going to do this work? and If you can't manage to keep up a weekly potluck, how are you going to manage a revolution? You have to answer the first two, and have a solid, persistent answer that will keep working over time, in order to get started. Then, once you get started, you have to start considering the third: how will we deal with this massive asymmetrical military force confronting us? Obviously, not by picking up the guns we bought at the local gun show and firing at it.

At this point in the discussion most people I talk to say that it sounds hopeless, and check out. Later they show up again talking about elections.

I understand why, but it is, again, maddening.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
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