[KB] "Trivial Repetition," "Dull, Daily Reenforcement"
Carrol Cox
cbcox at ilstu.edu
Wed Sep 17 16:13:46 EDT 2014
At 84 I've given up out-living the Age of Neoliberalism. One of my reasons for this glum conclusion is the preponderance among men and women of good will of the views expressed by Ed Appel below, which he nicely summarizes in the following words: ". . . what’s happen, by DELIBERATE policy on one side of the aisle, and culpable acquiescence on the other, to USAmerican jobs, USAmerican taxation, and USAmerican debt. . . ."
This is, I fear, the standard liberal understanding of the Democratic Party: They see that party as "opportunist," "cowardly," even "stupid." They fail to see that the DP is, as Glen Ford of Black Agenda puts it, "The More Effective Evil." It is the DP, primarily, that has determined U.S. policy over the last half century. (Consider the analogy to "Good Cop / Bad Cop." It is the Good Cop (the DP) who does the real damage. Three acts by the Carter Administration marked the all-out assault on the working people of the U.S.:
1) Carter's virtual signing of of Bishop Romero's Death Sentence
2) The Deregulation of Air lines and trucking
3) The appointment of Volcker as Fed Chairman
Subsequent administrations have but filled in the dots. Some of the high poits:
Reagan's crushing of PATCO
Clinton's pushing through of NAFTA
Clinton's Effective Death Penalty and Anti-Terrorism Act
Unanimous Congressional Approval of Afghanistan and Iraq aggressions
Senator Warren's aggressive support of Israel War Crimes
As to Obama, he richly exemplifies Noam Chomsky's observation that "War Criminal" is part of the job description of U.S. presidents.
Ed is certainly correct that no Left exists in the U.S. Earmarks of a hypothetical Left:
1. Liquidate the Prison System
2. Withdraw all U.S. troops from the world
3. No U.S. Foreign Aid (it is all open or disguised military aid to tyrannies)
4. Open Borders. No human is Illegal.
Carrol
-----Original Message-----
From: kb-bounces at kbjournal.org [mailto:kb-bounces at kbjournal.org] On Behalf Of Edward C Appel
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 1:58 PM
To: wessr at onid.orst.edu
Cc: kb at kbjournal.org
Subject: Re: [KB] "Trivial Repetition," "Dull, Daily Reenforcement"
Bob and All,
Your list for “trivial repetition and dull, daily reinforcement” by the left would be as good as mine. Maybe we could start by taking a cue from Teddy Roosevelt, much on the agenda at PBS the last three nights. TR comes across as a ridiculous, I’m-altogether-right-and-you’re-altogether-wrong, heroism-obsessed blowhard in some ways, but as also a great man, great leader, and great egalitarian spirit, as well. (Not perfectly egalitarian, for sure, but wondrously so for his time.)
Roosevelt’s mantra about the Constitution being for the good of the people as a whole, rather than vice versa, a strait jacket into whose supposedly tight 18th-century constraints all contemporary common sense has to be bound, should be our guiding principle, too (see Burke on the “Dialectic of Constitutions,” GM).
The first question I’d ask, though, is, where do we find the USAmerican political “left? I know one place I can find the left-wing US commentariat. See the amalgam of voices gathered together on CommonDreams.org, for instance. But among our political leaders? Maybe Warren and Sanders, but even Sanders echoes Obama on the taxation question: The wealthy ought to be paying “a little bit more.” A LITTLE bit more? When their contribution to the commonweal has gone from 51 percent of earnings 60 years ago to about 16 percent today, less than the average middle-class earner? When average CEO pay has burgeoned from 40 to 1 to 400 to 1 in respect to average salaries in a given industry in the past three to four decades? When a candidate for the presidency can get away with disclosing one, and only one, tax return, at 13 percent (!), and still run for that highest and supposedly exemplary office, and get away with it?
I don’t see much of a “political left” in our nation, or much of a sense of what a “political left” should look like, among our citizenry. (See Donald Barlett and James Steele, The Betrayal of the American Dream, for requisite numbers; see Thomas Frank, What’s the Matter with Kansas, on how Democrats have become only “marginally better” than Republicans; see a study by Martin Gilens [Princeton] and Benjamin Page [Northwestern] on how “’the preferences of the average American appear to have only a miniscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy,’” [“Disease of American Democracy,” Robert Reich, 8/21/14], as the result of the takeover of political outcomes by Congress’s and the executive’s corporate paymasters.)
But, if we had a “political left” of some dimensions (let’s fantasize!), what would be the three most salient issue-positions I’d recommend a strong, repetitive, dull, daily emphasis upon? It would be the two I recommended in “Democratic Narrative” and in my post on the nefarious Iraq War, to wit:
Drum home “agaaaiiinnn and aggaaaiiinnn and agaaaiiinnn” (I can hear FDR exclaiming it!) what’s happen, by DELIBERATE policy on one side of the aisle, and culpable acquiescence on the other, to USAmerican jobs, USAmerican taxation, and USAmerican debt, over the last three and a half decades. American jobs have been exported to low-wage sweat shops in Asia, Indonesia, Mexico, and beyond, to the economic benefit of the entrepreneurial class, who can then sell their products to consumers worldwide. They don’t need Americans to make their goods, nor do they need them as much to buy their goods. Manufacture cheap and sell across the globe. You lose your high-paying factory job as a result? Go work for McDonalds!
And while we’re at it, let’s cut taxes to the bone. “Starve the beast!” As Reagan insiders Donald Stockman and Bruce Bartlett have revealed, the idea was to cut taxes to such an extent, and run up deficits so onerous, Congress and some future administration would be forced to dismantle the “welfare state.” George W. Bush admirably followed suit, at the outset of his dubious war, no less!---and there’s reported evidence on things that Bush privately said that indicate he was just as deliberate. (See Venomous Speech: Problems with American Political Discourse on the Right and Left, pp. 109-116, for ample documentation.)
Democrats left fingerprints over all of this chicanery, as well.
Who’s got clean-enough hands to pound home this narrative, repeatedly, in our day, and the political courage to boot?
More, later, on the other two mantras, and how Heath and Heath might simplify the tale---and on the "identification" angle.
Ed
--------------------------------------------
On Mon, 9/15/14, wessr at onid.orst.edu <wessr at onid.orst.edu> wrote:
Subject: Re: [KB] "Trivial Repetition," "Dull, Daily Reenforcement"
To: "Edward C Appel" <edwardcappel at frontier.com>
Cc: kb at kbjournal.org
Date: Monday, September 15, 2014, 9:58 PM
Ed, Burke is surely right
about the power of repetition. The
advertising industry leaves no room for doubt about that.
What
identifications might the left try to repeat ad nauseam?
What might Burke advise?
Bob
Quoting Edward C Appel <edwardcappel at frontier.com>:
> Burkophiles,
>
> I asked in a
chapter in Praeger’s Venomous Speech last year, “Where
> Is the Democratic Narrative, FDR
Style?” That piece had mainly to
>
do with the polemical malfeasance of the Dems in dealing with, > rhetorically pretty much ignoring, what globalization has done to > aggravate the income gap in USAmerica the past three and a half > decades. (Tax policies are culpable, too, we know, in multiple > ways.) Senator Warren appeared on Moyers on PBS last Sunday. She > listed four Democratic proposals she thinks are winning issues going > into the Fall elections. Moyers asked her why, then, aren’t we > hearing more about them from Democratic candidates and their > spokespersons? Warren really had no good answer.
>
> Burke says in
the Rhetoric (p. 26), “Often we must think of > rhetoric not in terms of one particular address, but as a general > BODY OF IDENTIFICATIONS that owe their convincingness much more to
> trivial repetition and dull daily
reenforcement than to exceptional
>
rhetorical skill” (emphasis in original).
>
> I monitor Fox
News daily. That propaganda network masquerading as > a news channel (I know, we can say the same thing about MSNBC) is > near-fanatically repetitive in promoting its conservative,
> anti-Obama agenda. Fox is
relentless. Case in point: Bill O’Reilly > has invidiously targeted the President in his opening “memo” for as > many nights as I can remember. Another: Wish I had even one dollar > for every time I’ve watched our consulate in Benghazi burn on my > Channel 48. They don’t let up.
>
> Add this mantra to the list: Bush 2 “won” our righteous “War on > Terror” with the surge in Iraq. Obama came into office, took our > troops out of that country, and now has “lost” a war that Bush, > Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Wolfowitz had brought a U.S. victory and peace > to!
>
> The
rhetorically inept, more accurately altogether missing,
> response by Obama in his “leading
from behind” speech on Wednesday,
>
and in his fumbling precursors to that address, are dispiriting.
>
>
First and foremost, Obama was and is uniquely situated to > characterize the Iraq War for what it plainly was: A mendacious > military adventure, foisted on USAmerica by subterfuge and > deception, a cynical exploitation of the shock of 9/11, not merely a
> “dumb war.” Fifteen Saudis and
four Egyptians, under the leadership
>
of a wealthy Saudi, trained in Afghanistan, highjacked four > commercial jetliners and perpetrated the mayhem of that frightful > day. Saddam, we knew even then, had nothing to do with it. Nor did > his chemical weapons, if they even had existed and they didn’t, nor > did his so-called “mushroom cloud” potential, pose any real threat > to this nation. Again, we knew even then that Iraq’s nuclear > ambitions, even if real, were as yet no more than hope, if not > fantasy. And, for anyone paying attention, the Bush-Cheney > fear-mongering had already been shot down in an op-ed in the NYTimes > by Ambassador Wilson, and by clear-headed reporting > by the McClatchy News Service.
>
> So, what happened after waste of a trillion dollars (it will be > three trillion or more after medical expenditures are exhausted a > half-century from now), loss of thousands of American lives, tens of > thousands of maimings and woundings, and destruction and shattering > of this jerry-built nation of warring sects that only a tyrant like > Saddam could hold together—what happened after the candidate who > promised to end the Iraq War came to power? He stopped calling the
> war what it really was and started
treating it pretty much like a
>
somewhat legitimate enterprise we had to bring to an end
> “responsibly.” Obama was even
planning to keep fifty thousand (or
>
was it eighty thousand?) troops in Iraq in perpetuity, before > al-Maliki said “no way”
to our insistence on military immunity. > (And Obama doesn’t even defend himself on that issue.) > >
You may object that Obama had to metamorphose into a “war > president,” since he was then Commander-in-Chief. Can’t in any way > imply that our soldiers died in vain in a conflict subversively > motivated by oil, Israel, Bush family score-settling, or plans for > victorious re-election in 2004 by a flight-jacketed president after > “Mission Accomplished.”
>
> Upshot: There exists a corrupt
context to what Obama and USAmerica
>
face in the current chaos of the Middle East. It is a context that > requires repetition and more repetition still by leadership that has > some semblance of the near-self -destructive insanity of America’s > vaunted “War on Terror.” As he takes us into yet another phase of > this resource-draining, quick-sand tugging, tar-baby of a conflict, > someone with a megaphone has to stand up and shout down the McCains > and Foxies who current occupy the rhetorical terrain uncontestred.
>
> I have no hope that Obama’s the
one.
>
>
> Ed
>
>
>
>
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