"Approved Narratives"
I just found this written by Matt Taibi in our local online expat newspaper.
America's Political Left Has Abandoned Its Roots
It isn't that long but touches on numerous really important issues in America today. I'd argue that there are at least four even more issues he brings up. One is what I chose as the title for my essay. Like confirmation bias, I see this popular trend and tool of both parties as really dangerous.
The following teaser comes at the end of his article about the media and it's culpability in aiding the creation of the American Flustercluck:
The traditional view of the press was never based on some contrived, mathematical notion of “balance,” i.e. five paragraphs of Republicans for every five paragraphs of Democrats. The ideal instead was that we showed you everything we could see, good and bad, ugly and not, trusting that a better-informed public would make better decisions. This vision of media stressed accuracy, truth, and trust in the reader’s judgment as the routes to positive social change.
For all our infamous failings, journalists once had some toughness to them. We were supposed to be willing to go to jail for sources we might not even like, and fly off to war zones or disaster areas without question when editors asked. It was also once considered a virtue to flout the disapproval of colleagues to fight for stories we believed in (Watergate, for instance).
Today no one with a salary will stand up for colleagues like Lee Fang. Our brave truth-tellers make great shows of shaking fists at our parody president, but not one of them will talk honestly about the fear running through their own newsrooms. People depend on us to tell them what we see, not what we think. What good are we if we’re afraid to do it?
I have to run outside to do a few things now that we have a break in the rain. It's been warm and dry so the rain is welcome but I can't miss the opportunity offered. I'll look in later.
Before I go here is a bonus round question for you. Who is it from?
All the legislation in the world can’t fix what’s wrong with America. So, I want to speak to you first tonight about a subject even more serious than energy or inflation. I want to talk to you right now about a fundamental threat to American democracy.
In a nation that was proud of hard work, strong families, close-knit communities, and our faith in God, too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption. Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one owns.
We’ve discovered that owning things and consuming things does not satisfy our longing for meaning. We’ve learned that piling up material goods cannot fill the emptiness of lives which have no confidence or purpose.
The symptoms of this crisis of the American spirit are all around us. The willingness of Americans to save for the future has fallen below that of all other people in the Western world. There is a growing disrespect for government and for churches and for schools, the news media, and other institutions.
These changes did not happen overnight. They’ve come upon us gradually over the last generation, years that were filled with shocks and tragedy. These wounds are still very deep. They have never been healed.
We are at a turning point in our history. There are two paths to choose. One is a path I’ve warned about tonight, the path that leads to fragmentation and self-interest. Down that road lies a mistaken idea of freedom, the right to grasp for ourselves some advantage over others.
That path would be one of constant conflict between narrow interests ending in chaos and immobility. It is a certain route to failure.
All the traditions of our past, all the lessons of our heritage, all the promises of our future point to another path -- the path of common purpose and the restoration of American values.
I will do my best, but I will not do it alone. Let your voice be heard. Whenever you have a chance, say something good about our country. With God’s help and for the sake of our nation, it is time for us to join hands in America. Working together with our common faith we cannot fail.
Comments
State of the Union speech 1980
by Jimmy Carter, U.S. President
Well played
"Ah, but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now..."
@vtcc73 It was a bonus on one
Its a shame, and a sham (due to Reagun's treasonous dealings with Iran) that he wasn't re-elected.
Carter isn't entirely innocent though, the great wave of "de-regulation" "started" on his watch... I'm sure many other members are far far more versed on the particulars than I....
Fascinating that Democratic Pols
Important to note
But if you want to trace back the origins of the Dem tendency to wimp out on calling out the Rs for election theft, it starts with LBJ.
In the 1980 "October Surprise" case, iirc while people suspected something might have happened given the curious precise timing of the hostage release and the Reagan inauguration, enough facts about that election skullduggery didn't come out until later in the 80s and then the Gary Sick book a little later. Recall though that a congressional subcommittee was set up to investigate (hehe) led by Rep Lee Hamilton (D-IN) who arranged to ignore and bury any inculpating information. Hamilton was always good at covering for Repub crimes. New president Bill Clinton didn't press the matter, even when presented with further info from reliable Russian intel, iirc.
Dems have gotten very good at ignoring these R crimes against democracy. They just want to be nice and build bridges with the opposition. Which is probably why these crimes keep happening.
LBJ didn't publicly disclose Nixon's treason
Dunno, seems like there
He did refer to Nixon's actions as "treason". Then proceeded to sit on the information, let it all happen, and enabled Nixon's election. And by his silence, he undoubtedly gave the Reagan/Poppy ticket encouragement in 1980 and the October Surprise affair. I understand Nixon himself was in contact with that campaign about the Iran situation. If true, I doubt if Tricky was advising them to be careful not to tread on any negotiations Carter might be undertaking because That Would Be Wrong and you might get caught.
I sense that LBJ wanted to avoid a direct confrontation and major controversy. Perhaps he was worried that the other side had info on his own, uh, prior misdeeds. Apart from that, I don't have a good read on his odd thinking. After all, this is the master manipulator who excelled at playing political hardball. And suddenly he goes weak and lets Nixon manipulate him. Very curious.
Nah, that was Jimmy's
"Malaise" speech from July 15, 1979. Given at a time when his popularity was well down and in the midst of an OPEC oil shutdown that caused massive lines at the gas pumps in the US.
famousIt was his most famous speech and was very well received..
Fomally
Yes, afterwards it became
Interesting that it was well received, given that he was really telling Americans they were too focused on the Self and material goodies and were neglecting the more important things, like religious faith, spiritual well being and national unity.
It was well received by the public but
Not sure on the sequence,
Carter was a bit of a victim of the then new conservative trend in the media, where Rs had greater influence and as the regular media post-Watergate wanted to show they weren't really the "liberal" media that conservatives had long complained about.
I recall Carter beginning to get semi-consistently bad or highly skeptical media coverage starting with the wildly overblown barely scandal of Bert Lance, Carter's OMB director, who was accused of mismanagement of a small GA bank. Oh dear. The Lance Scandal was headline news for weeks in 1977.
I don't think the Carter admin knew exactly what they were up against in this aggressive media atmosphere, and they didn't respond well usually. Jimmy had decided to bring mostly his loyal guys from parochial GA politics into the WH, and so didn't have a clear grasp of how nasty things could get in the Beltway press, Walter Cronkite and Barbara Walters excepted.
He missed the year but close enough.
There is plenty of reason to fault Jimmy's presidency. I doubt anyone following Nixon, Watergate, Vietnam, and the social upheaval of the '60s could have been successful. He's more than made up for those failures in the time since with tremendous work that has improved peoples' lives all over the world. More important, he's the only one who didn't use their time since leaving office to line their pockets.
"Ah, but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now..."
Jimmy had plenty of goodwill
Carter often made such clumsy own goals. Like immediately squandering the public goodwill from his Malaise speech and promptly firing his cabinet, which made him look unstable, erratic. Or allowing himself to be persuaded that he should allow the Shah of Iran into this country for medical treatment, knowing that such a move might incite forces inside Iran and lead to an attack on our embassy in Tehran. It's said that Carter was a very decent guy who also had a vindictive, mean streak. And it could also be said that he was politically astute except for the times when he was politically stupid.
The FRightwingnut Powell Memo/Blueprint
Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.
Carter --not quite
Yeah right, American Native genocide, slaveholding, aggressive wars of choice, racism, xenophobia, exceptionalism - American values. If you believe that America was great and all we need to do is make her great again, then I have a tower in Manhattan to sell you. WTF, we have never gotten it right and never will until we come to the terms with who we are. The Oligarchs and the Neocons are laughing in their limos as we fetish on Political Correctness. My god, the problems are immense and we can't see the big picture, only a tiny part of it. Racism will never be solved if we don't focus on economic justice, social justice and peace. MLK understood this well. He was dangerous to the establishment, and we all should be too.
Capitalism has always been the rule of the people by the oligarchs. You only have two choices, eliminate them or restrict their power.
No doubt, but
At the very least, he would have been pronounced a lame duck president, and 2/3 of embarrassed and outraged Dems would have called for him to step aside for the party's nomination in 1980. Presidents still aren't allowed to go all Howard Zinn on all the nation's deep sins, esp so 40 yrs ago. On this matter, Bill Clinton had it right in taking a piecemeal approach and selecting out certain past horrors for attention and public apology, but never all at once. That would have been too much for the political market to bear.
This trend goes right along with the left now
accepting people like Robert Mueller and making them modern day heroes just because they oppose Trump. For gawd’s sake they have even rehabilitated George F Bush!
This is high praise.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
Dementia nation?
Bush got high kudos for saying something about
George Floyd. He’s being celebrated for having more empathy than Trump. The centrists elevate anyone that they used to despise as long as they aren’t Trump.
Have you heard about Ramp Gate? Trump walked down a ramp at the graduation ceremony and ran down the last few feet. You can see he was afraid of slipping and falling so he said he just got the last few feet done quickly. But now everyone is making fun of him. Just saw a clip of Obama walking up it and people on Twitter are building ramps and showing how to walk down them.
This is childish in my opinion as was the bunker gate story. Do people not know that decision was up to the secret service not Trump?They would have done that same thing with any president.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
Give Democratic pols a dozen years after he
Yes, bunker and ramp gate are childish, but they're also tasty snacks because Trump predictably responds childishly and defensively to any suggestion that he's not a "he-man." IOW, trolling Trump is child's play.
That's the point of Trump.
He's a credibility generator for anyone who chooses to oppose him. He has traits that make him useful for this purpose, but only really becomes such when the media, social and legacy, constantly uses and defines him this way. Which they do, constantly. Inundating people with such discursive habits 24/7 encourages them to adopt the same. Pretty soon they won't even know they're adopting any habits at all. It will just be the way things are. Then it won't even register as that.
Where would the Democrats be without him? They need a monster to stand next to. Without one, they'd be revealed as the vacuous career-driven nihilists that they are. And he's also profoundly useful in their quest to create one gigantic political mega-machine that combines neoliberals and neoconservatives into one big late capitalist blitzkrieg on the human race. And everything else.
You can't unite Clinton "liberals" and Bush "conservatives" into one political faction without repairing their reputations first.
What sickens me and leads me to despair is how quickly intelligent, loving people jumped on this bandwagon. It was very early in the game when a dear friend of mine, for whom I have the utmost respect, said "I never thought Dick Cheney would look good."
And yes, as Marie says, they could easily be doing the same thing for Donald Trump in 10 years that they are doing for Bush and Cheney now.
At this point, it's all about destroying people's moral standards, and, more importantly, their ability to even form such.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
DINOs/Centrists are
Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.
Well, you see,
Eastasia was always our ally.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
The awful and mediocre
I started seeing shelves of hagiographies about Reagan not long after he left office. Undoubtedly these boosters would argue he deserves a place on Mt Rushmore, trying to take him from middling mediocrity of little substance to Jeffersonian All Time Greatness.
Something similar with Truman, attempts to elevate him to greatness, mostly successful so far. This started either in the 60s or 70s with that wildly successful one-man play Give 'Em Hell by James Whitmore. Then the wildly successful best-selling valentine book from that PBS historian host guy.
The LBJ reclamation project has been underway for some time. He left behind a number of loyalists, among them the ex head of MPAA, a major newspaper publisher, and at least one famous author-liberal pundit, the young pious religious guy he brought from TX to be his house liberal.
The GWB rehab is quietly underway. Dems are assisting.
Even Bill Clinton was a player in the Nixon rehabilitation movement. Like a lot of things he did, that one too hasn't aged so well.
I can't think of a thing that others have done to rehab Jimmy Carter, and few read the insider memoirs from his aides Ham Jordan and Jody Powell. Their efforts, and another minor offering from historian Douglas Brinkley, didn't seem to move the needle. To some extent he's rehabbing himself with good deeds, but that only gets him points in the Best Ex-President category.
Back to the main topic,
Taibbi's op-ed that's worthy of discussion.
Can any other writer today construct this level of apt imagery?
Or this:
More seriously:
Wow -- I'm so old that "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" was in my freshman English reader textbook.
Here I think Taibbi is somewhat off base:
May never have been a time when that didn't exist. Or the bounds for acceptable facts and alternative views were only somewhat wider than what is becoming singular today on certain topics. Can anything be more shameful than journalists conspiring to discredit and destroy Gary Webb and his solid reporting on CIA cocaine trafficking? That was long before Trump.
I didn't catch the story
As for this
I thought immediately of one recent story he doesn't cite there which seems pertinent, namely the way his podcast co-host seemed to act as advocate on the allegations of that now-discredited woman against Biden, charges not adequately vetted before airing. It was ok not to be too skeptical bc she was going after a disliked pol. Dunno if either he or his co-host have discussed it since the story was suddenly disappeared.
WOW. Matt Taibbi saying this....
Here's what I've never understood: Why does it seem we must choose between simpering ineffectual cowardice and brutal alt-fascist idiocy? Either way, Evil prevails.
Where is today's Napoleon, Lincoln, or FDR??? Who is willing to stand up for - not against - truth, reason, and Enlightenment values with force of arms?
Maybe I should take a step back. Let me see if I understand what I'm reading here: Am I right to be reminded of this?: https://areomagazine.com/2017/03/27/how-french-intellectuals-ruined-the-...
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Strong conclusions:
Not that I ever viewed post-modernists as any more on the left than Libertarians. Narcissism and authoritarianism are strong in both. The slow progress of modernism isn't due to undervaluing the individual lived experience but overvaluing it. Lived experiences are necessarily small, narrow, and limited. Education -- in the modern liberal tradition -- expands all those boundaries.
What do we do about them?
Where the hell did they come from, and why now??? They pretty much didn't exist in the '000s. It's like Rush Limbaugh's strawmen have, apropos of nothing, suddenly become real, just when it'd looked like we'd managed to shake them off. It's like they're the new Religious Right.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Do? Perhaps nothing.
Liberalism is difficult for humans. Except in rare times, change is really slow, but most people don't want change for the benefit of all, only for themselves. Plus a driver in liberalism - the morality, ethics, egalitarian components - was religion that had shifted away from fundamentalism. Even science often found a acceptance in religion. Fundamentalists rail against liberalism, intellectualism, and science, and yet, are only too quick and happy to embrace the fruits of those efforts. They want their Social Security, Medicare, TVs, internet, etc. The form of religion, belief in a sky spook and heaven (the most irrational aspects of religion) have been retained while the substance, morality, etc., has withered.
There have been US leaders that didn't exhibit of show of the form but retained the substance. They didn't dare call themselves atheists because godless doesn't sell in this country. They just kept mum on this point and let what they did speak for themselves. So, how do we get to a godless society that's moral, ethical, etc?
There's only one place in the world today that is exhibiting that paradigm. Vietnam. It's a poor country but the people don't appear to be vulnerable to the god proselytizers and the sense of community appears strong. The coronavirus hit early in Vietnam and somehow with limited resources (they are very smart people) in a population of 97 million, the confirmed cases are only 334 and there have been zero deaths. (Overall, S. Korea has done much better than the west in controlling the virus, but has 12,000 cases and 277 deaths and continues to struggle with outbreaks/hotspots in christian religious communities.) This seems to say what I've been trying to get at:
I'm not sure I can afford to do nothing
These shitstains have taken the things I pay attention to because I WANT to, and the things I pay attention to because I HAVE to, and they've made conditions in BOTH realms an order of magnitude worse than they already were. All this time I've been struggling like Sisyphus just to overcome the damage done to me during the Bush years, then they swoop in like dirty hockey players to break my back anew; someone once said never to attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity, but stupidity is starting to become an inadequate explanation.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Artists -- or I should say more artists --
Government policy actually isn't the issue, here
I don't entirely understand it, myself, and I wish I didn't feel like I had to. People on DailyKos brought it up out of nowhere a few times to bully me, and struggling to understand WTH just happened sent me down the rabbit-hole.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Won't be any comfort, but
Bizarrely, that worked less well for Republicans in 2016 than it did for Democrats. Yet, from all the post-election wailing, one would never know that a twice as many Republicans declined to vote for Trump than liberal declined to vote for Clinton.
Jimmy Carter.
I see I'm not the only one who remembers it. Always a good feeling, especially in these days.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
Of course, I don't entirely agree with Carter's prescription
for fixing America, and I think he and I might disagree a bit on what were the signs and causes of the greed and selfishness--the cultural illness--he's talking about.
But I mostly agree with him in his diagnosis, and entirely agree with his prognosis.
Too bad most people chose "It's morning in America!" over what Carter was saying.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
"Morning in America" was Reagan's 1984 reelection
campaign. In what was, to my knowledge, Bruce Springsteen's first foray into explicit political commentary, he said, in a Rolling Stone interview:
The ad I remember from the 1980 campaign was the "Bear in the Woods" nonsense.
The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.
Dog whistling
Well, you have to give it them on creativity. I mean how many different ways can you say the same thing? Apparently a lot.
Love the Springsteen quote. Although I have actually have seen his house down by the Jersey Shore and it’s definitely not suffering from a bad moon rising there.
There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier
I had a well-educated
Otherwise she seemed entirely reasonable.
Sometimes all you need to do is offer something basic for people to hang their hats on or ponder. That was an effective R ad. So was the Morning in America one. In fact, most of the memorable ads of recent times have been from the R side. D ads have tended to be heavily detailed and issue-oriented, appealing to the intellect rather than a simple, pithy, catchy offering hitting voters at the emotional level, which good ads do.
Btw, I'm not an ad man. I did however watch Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House.
The majority of Hillary Clinton's ads . . .
showed clips of Donald Trump on a TV making sexist and vulgar comments with children sitting in a living room. The adds concluded "They're watching."
Springsteen also raised his hackles over the
Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.
Thanks for a good catch.
That's true about the slogan. But it's inescapable that Reagan ran--both times--on the idea that he and the right wing were the upbeat ones, not like the Negative Nancies on the left. The right was where visionary optimism and winning lived. If you want to be cheerful vote for us!
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
Lo! and behold!
"Ah, but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now..."
If by "those who lived in the 80s" you mean my generation
(GenX), we absolutely haven't gotten off scot free. In fact, the only reason the smack in the economic face we got is constantly ignored is that things are so much worse now, and apparently people have a really hard time grokking the nature of process.
In other words, everything is seen as discrete, with no historical (or any other) connection with anything else other than the comparative. Such a load of crap--and really handy for authoritarians. Martin Niemoller was right, and everybody quotes him, but nobody seems to be able to get that an acorn has a relationship to an oak. (Well, some people do; you do and I do, but a hell of a lot of people don't.)
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
I agree.
Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.
Related: other media censors
Narrative Control ... from Caitlyn Johnstone
Despite the frequency of those "reliable sources" posting corrections for the most egregiously unreliable reports.