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Politics

Envy

Originally I thought I’d write about envy, another of the 7 deadly sins, in the context of being a woman artist. It had come up while reading a review of a current exhibition (NYC friends, don’t miss this one!) of works by an artist I greatly admire, Helene Schjerfbeck.

Four Uncompromising Finnish Women Artists

You can find a detailed description of her life and development as a portrait painter in the link below written by the folks who put on a fabulous retrospective at the Schirn in Frankfurt 2 years ago.

http://schirn.de/schjerfbeck/en/

I find myself often envious of women who have the courage and the discipline to go against the grain of their own time, who believe in the power of their work and don’t succumb to the familiar sense of being an impostor when doing their work outside of the traditional parameters.

 

I changed my mind about the focus of today’s musings, though, when remembering an article that one of the fellows at the American Enterprise Institute published some years back in the National Review. Not sure if reading it will make you laugh or cry or scream or hang your head in despair, but it is certainly timely food for thought. http://www.nationalreview.com/article/209555/wealth-virtue

The author, Michael Novak, tries to make the case for the superiority of capitalism in both practical and moral terms, the latter clearly linked to tenets of religious, judeo-christian philosophy, as far as I could tell. The list of ten points that he claims make capitalism the moral choice includes things like freeing the poor from indolence (!), strengthening civility to protect people’s achievements etc….. but here is the bit on envy.

“10. Finally, it is one of the main functions of a capitalist economy to defeat envy. Envy is the most destructive of social evils, more so even than hatred. Hatred is highly visible; everyone knows that hatred is destructive. But envy is invisible, like a colorless gas, and it usually masquerades under some other name, such as equality. Nonetheless, a rage for material equality is a wicked project. Human beings are each so different from every other in talent, character, desire, energy, and luck, that material equality can never be imposed on human beings except through a thorough use of force. (Even then, those who impose equality on others would be likely to live in a way “more equal than others.”) Envy is the most characteristic vice of all the long centuries of zero-sum economies, in which no one can win unless others lose. A capitalist system defeats envy, and promotes in its place the personal pursuit of happiness. It does this by generating invention, discovery, and economic growth. Its ideal is win-win, a situation in which everyone wins. In a dynamic world, with open horizons for all, life itself encourages people to attend to their own self-discovery and to pursue their own personal form of happiness, rather than to live a false life envying others.”

I will not begin to count all that is wrong in his assumptions or which phrases had me snort particularly loudly, but point to the simple fact that our undoubtedly capitalist country is riddled with envy. Read any analysis of why our current president was elected, and it partially boils down to that very sentiment. Blacks not waiting in line with the disenfranchised white working class? Welfare queens getting “free passes?” Immigrants scooping up what belongs to the nationalists? Women demanding equal pay? The personal pursuit of happiness seemingly doesn’t cut it when spontaneously engaging in social comparison. Self discovery is not up to par fighting envy when seeing your neighbor’s Porsche while you struggle to pay the rent. The claim that capitalism is not a zero-sum system in which someone’s gain does not come with someone else’s loss is simply idiotic. There, I’ve gone into text analysis after all…

Unfair distribution of riches, at all times in human history, have led to envy. Thus it was imperative to impose strong impediments to acting out on that feeling, particularly given the numbers involved: the powerless many being envious of what the powerful few hoarded. Religion was up to the task: making envy a deadly sin that endangers the immortality of your soul was a significant threat. The story of Cain and Abel, the biblical prototype for envy and its dire consequences, is not coincidentally one of the first we learn about in the Holy Books.

Photographs are Self-Portraits that have none of the freedom of creation that I envy Schjerfbeck et al. – the constraint of seeing yourself in a reflective context leaves much to be desired.

Propaganda Films

Today I will keep it short – between the tragedy in Barcelona and the insanity coming out of the White House and its congressional enablers, I have to catch my breath. Below is the link to a selection of choice propaganda films and a link to the full documentary that Leni Riefenstahl made of the ReichsPartei Tag in 1934 in Nürnberg, as a timely reminder. She was such a gifted filmmaker in the service of such an evil force.

Holocaust Memorial Berlin

13 Fascinating Propaganda Films

 

Triumph of the Will, choreographed like a Wagnerian opera, is renowned and reviled as the best propaganda film ever. Here is a short overview of her life as Nazi supporter, no matter how much she later denied it.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/sep/10/film.germany

Yesterday the Boston Holocaust Memorial was vandalized, the glass shattered with rocks. I told myself all week, that history does not repeat itself, but my skin is covered with goosebumps.

Entrance to the Jewish Cemetery in Berlin

The Partition of Hindustan

70 years ago this August the colonial powers divided what was known as Hindustan into two entities – India and Pakistan. One was supposed to hold a majority of Hindus, the other a majority of Muslims. The British could do this for all of their occupied provinces – the remaining  princely States, of which there were several, could determine their own fate. Kashmir decided on independence only to see immediate war between India and Pakistan vying for dominance.

The reality for an independent Muslim State was made possible by the pressure of Mohammed Jinnah on the British colonial administration, but the idea reaches further back: Muhammad Iqbal, an ardent admirer of Goethe, who studied law and philosophy in Germany, declared it was time for Muslim independence. He presented his 2-Nation theory first in 1930; it eventually became the MountBatten plan that divided the country.

The result was carnage, with up to 2 million people estimated having lost their lives, hundreds of thousand of women raped, with unimaginable numbers (15 million) having to seek new places to live. And Pakistan got the short end of the stick. While India settled onto a contiguous territory, Pakistan had 2 far-flung parts, was involved in conflicts with Kashmir and Belutschistan and had to see Bangladesh partition off. It is ethnically much less homogeneous than India is. Religious conflicts, with Sunni extremists attacking Shiites with increasing frequency, make life hazardous. 42% of all adults cannot read or write; conservative Islamists and Mullahs torpedo the healthcare system and build their own religious schools which house and indoctrinate large numbers of the male offspring of the poor. And three weeks ago the Pakistani High Court removed elected prime minister Nawaz Sharif from office, due to behind the scenes pressure by the military. The country is not enjoying the peace and stability that its founders had envisioned. And, according to the Financial Times, last year saw diverse means of propaganda – from balloons to pigeons….https://www.ft.com/content/048603f2-89fe-11e6-8cb7-e7ada1d123b1  

Alas, the tenor of the article show how high tensions are.

When large part of the populous can’t read, visual communication through news programs, documentaries and movies take on an increasingly important role. One way of propaganda, then, is to withhold the communication of the other side. This has been the case for endless years in the conflict between India and Pakistan. Each country censored their own political filmmakers, but also the movies from the other country, depriving their populations of something that could lead to an rapprochement in joint appreciation of Bollywood and whatever comes out of Karachi. Since so many more households now have satellite dishes rather than old fashioned antennas, the banning of TV channels had become easy. And Pakistanis have far fewer computers that allow them internet access to Indian movies than their Indian counterparts.

This year Pakistan lifted the ban on movies – and India is discussing if they should follow suit http://www.hindustantimes.com/bollywood/pakistan-lifts-ban-on-indian-films-should-india-follow/story-AByHLRPErIQVaoVtyR2IwI.html

Here is a topic-specific overview of relevant Pakistani movies for those who are interested.

Pakistani Cinema Had Its Own Way of Looking at Partition Too

Photographs were snapshots of a short performance by a lovely young member of the Anjali School of Dance in Hillsboro.

Dead Meat

No, the title is not a description of my current state – it is the pointer to today’s topic of propaganda: the divide between those of us who eat meat and those who don’t.

I have previously written about my thoughts on the divide between mass agricultural production and production on small farms. Not many happy cows found at either, is the short version.  Today I am more interested in the acrimony between those advocating for a stop to all animal husbandry, and those who cannot live without heir steak. Or their porkchops. Or their eggs.  Or their milk and cheese. Or their leather belts and shoes, for that matter.

In danger of sounding like you-know-who, there are good and bad guys on both sides. Well, really, there aren’t in white supremacist rallies, don’t get me going. But there are along the continuum of vegans to paleo-dieters. And both have amply employed propaganda. Case in point is the film Cowspiracy, which claims that those of us who eat meat cannot be counted as good environmentalists.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-XP79o8gqQ

It bases its claims on scientifically debunked statistics that agricultural animals are responsible for 51% of the greenhouse gas emissions that hurt our planet. The factual number is closer to 15 % and that’s due to emissions from livestock agriculture including the methane from animals’ digestive systems, deforestation, land use change and energy use. The remaining pollution really lies at the feet of the fuel fossil industry.

Here is a short article on why this propaganda film is self-defeating and hurtful to the cause of environmentalism.

http://climateandcapitalism.com/2016/02/13/22449/

Another film also aimed at animal cruelty, Okja, is less of a documentary and more of a movie. Heavy-handed ideological promotion, nothing else. Why did I watch it? Because I watch anything with Tilda Swinton in it, here playing the baddie, and Joon-ho Bong as director ( who I liked from Snowpiercer.) Pure propaganda.

Let me hasten to say that of course it would be terrific if those of us who like and can afford meat would eat less or none at all. It is healthier, it is better for the environment on many levels, and it would help those who live in poorer countries whose scarce national resources get destroyed by our demand for hamburgers. And I am also aware that the meat industry wins first prize when it comes to propaganda: here is a good summary in a Frontline  piece.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/meat/politics/

Photographs are of members of a vegan organization /PDX chapter who were demonstrating and informing in front of Powell’s Bookstore today. They showed movies that they made under “threat to their lives” going undercover in the agricultural industry. That was repeatedly emphasized.  Got lots of attention. And now let me think, guilt twinges and all, about Bratwurst for dinner.

Don’t be a Sucker

Propaganda and Psychological Warfare, a classic written by Terence Qualter in the 1960s, defines propaganda as the deliberate attempt by some individual or group to form, control, or alter the attitudes of other groups by the use of instruments of communication, with the intention that in any given situation the reaction of those influenced will be that desired by the propagandist.  

(The late French philosopher Jaques Ellul claimed (in Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes):“Propaganda by its very nature is an enterprise for perverting the significance of events and of insinuating false intentions… First of all, the propagandist must insist on the purity of his own intentions and at the same time, hurl accusations at the enemy. But the accusation is never made haphazardly or groundlessly. The propagandist will never accuse the enemy of just any misdeed; he will accuse him of the very intention that he himself has and of trying to commit the very crime that he himself is about to commit.”

When focussing on the manipulative aspects of that kind of communication it is easy to overlook that propaganda need not be used for nefarious purposes only. Admittedly bad intentions seem to be the regular mode. But it can be used for the greater good as well – a case in point is the link below, a propaganda film made in the late 40s in this country.  I chose it, of course, in light of the despicable events from last week, as evidence that we, as a society, are seemingly moving backwards rather than forwards. I wish Fox News or whatever other channel you-know-who watches would show this clip.

Not that I think it would make much of a difference. Charlottesville is the tip of the iceberg, and the tragedy on Saturday is not just about the violent and murderous actions of some heinous fringe element, or even the tacit support they receive from the highest places in government.

The tragedy is the underlying complicity of so many millions of voters and hundreds in Congress not regarding the violence but regarding the general goal of returning to a predominantly White, Christian and preferably male dominance in this nation. White supremacy is not just about yelling Nazi slogans in the street. It is about the belief that Blacks and their culture, deep down, are not equal to Whites. It is about the belief that voter registration laws, mass incarceration, private prisons, housing and school segregation and so on are desirable political tools to separate the races, elevating one over the other. These days I think of American racism as a field of lava bubbling over a widespread area underground, with the occasional outburst through a hole around the hotspots of the alt-right. Everyone decries the explosions, but is in fact part of that lava field that steadily increases the heat.

Here is commentary from a young woman who defines some of the complicity; I admire her insight and outspokenness.

http://www.newyorker.com/culture/jia-tolentino/charlottesville-and-the-effort-to-downplay-racism-in-america

 

Racism kills

Returning to propaganda, though, my point is that clever communication has enormous consequences, from war movies to advertisement. Governments use propaganda, movements use it, individuals use it, and being aware of our constant exposure to it matters, both to protect oneself from undue influence or to realize that one has to stretch beyond advantageous beliefs and stereotypes. I’ll stop before I sound like a propagandist myself.

The problem is called racism – to remember means to fight!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Berlin Wall

Yesterday, August 13, was the 56th anniversary of the building of the Berlin Wall. In contrast to the US where current wall- building fantasies focus on keeping people out, the Berlin Wall was built to keep people in.

The German Democratic Republic (GDR) had started out with about 19 million people after the war, occupied by Soviet forces after the partition of Germany in its entirety. Berlin was an island within East Germany that was ruled by the Western allies. The GDR was bled dry to pay war reparations to the Soviet Union, and life was difficult particularly when compared to the West German counterparts where the economy picked up at significant speed with the help of the Marshall Plan.

Soon then, young people, particularly the better educated ones, left East Germany to seek their fortune in the West. Between 1948 and 1961 when the wall was built,  2.5 million people fled East Germany. The Soviets put an end to that literally by fencing and walling the country in, separating not one country from another, but dividing basically one city regardless of how families and friends got ripped apart.

We know how it ended, some 28 years later, with the power of democratization and the lure of capitalism uniting the divided country. It has not necessarily been a happy ending for many in the East who thought salvation would come with an opening to the West, but that is a topic for a different day.

Today I am more interested in the psychology of propaganda around the wall – see the clip below masterfully painting the division between good guys and bad guys. Which ones are we, you ask? Depends which wall you are talking about…..or who you ask, I guess.

 

And I am also attaching a commentary of an important friend of the current wall-planner-in-chief, the remarks made during the 1oth anniversary of the fall of the wall. Propaganda as well.

Photographs are of contemporary Berlin.

Tuesday’s Question

My eye was caught today by numerous articles that point to the Trump administration’s decision to disenfranchise the weakest links in our society. Here is a sampling, sadly by no means the whole list:

The disabled: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2017/8/7/1687507/-Advocates-fear-the-disabled-are-next-on-Trump-s-hit-list

The old: http://thehill.com/regulation/healthcare/345411-fight-over-right-to-sue-nursing-homes-heats-up

The addicted: http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/08/02/541071209/should-the-opioid-crisis-be-declared-a-national-emergency   

The opioid crisis has led even the republican commission calling for a declaration of national emergency. Drug overdosing now costs more lives than gun homicides and car crashes combined and hits primarily the poor in minority neighborhoods and increasingly in the middle of the country. So far the administration is only talking about drug enforcement rather than treatment options. The White House is proposing to slash the budget of the Office of National Drug Control Policy from $388 million to $24 million and end programs including the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas and Drug-Free Communities, according to a draft budget document. and of course their health care bill would have no longer required insurers to cover substance abuse and mental health services and would have rolled back expanded Medicaid, a program that covers behavioral health services.

Here is a short essay on how true compassion looks like:

The blurred boundaries of mothering an addict

Today’s question then, is:

When will the hypocrisy of touting Christian values and then acting against them be obvious to all?

 

There’s Hope

There’s hope and it lies with the next generation(s.) Obama, in his farewell speech, had urged young  people to get politically involved. They’re doing it, clearly. The link below introduces the youngest city council member in Texas, in fact two of them on a Board of five.

Generally I just needed an excuse to pull up some archival photos of children who are clear eyed and serious. It makes you happy simply looking at them. Well, it makes me happy. (I did have consent to photograph them.)

For today, then, I am putting faith in the future.

This Texas City Just Elected the Youngest City Council Member in the State

Here are some thoughts why there is no reason to be pessimistic – and in any event I could no resist posting a link to an article that contains a sentence like this: Millennials value authenticity over presentation, which explains why so many of them are willing to come out for politicians who look like geography teachers.  

http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2017/05/a-generation-for-itself-millennials-and-the-new-old-left.html


 

 

Stay Brave

After last night’s outcome in the Georgia and South Carolina elections I’m challenged to stay optimistic. At least my search this week for role models that encourage optimism did not have to venture far – it found its perfect target right in Beaverton, or, more precisely, at Powell’s in Beaverton.

Naomi Klein was in town on a book tour for her new book, No is not enough, written with lightening speed during the last 5 months ( it usually takes her that number in years to complete one. ) As you know, she is a Canadian author, social activist, and filmmaker known for her political analyses and criticism of corporate globalization and of capitalism. I closely follow her writing in the Guardian and the Nation, and get regular instructions by progeny to read her books (The Shock Doctrine was the last.) 

The evening unfolded in conversation with Jo Ann Hardesty, who served in the Oregon House of Representatives from 1995 until 2001. You probably know her from her Voices from the Edge Thursday mornings on KBOO. You should, in any event, it’s a terrific program.

Moving introductory remarks and territorial acknowledgement were given by Cathy Sampson-Kruse (she was also part of the water protectors in ND.)

Closing remarks with support for local activists were offered by folks associated with The Leap. https://theleapblog.org/aboutleap/

The house was packed, mean age, due to the presence of babies, probably around 40, modal age more like 65, a sea of us gray going on white-haired folks…..

Below is a link to a short essay that basically encapsulates the discussion that unfolded yesterday. I am quoting the very last paragraph which was mirrored by Klein’s closing remarks.

“For decades, elites have been using the power of shock to impose nightmares. Donald Trump thinks he’ll be able to do it again and again—that we will have forgotten by tomorrow what he said yesterday (which he will say he never said); that we will be overwhelmed by events and will ultimately scatter, surrender, and let him grab whatever he wants.

But crises do not always cause societies to regress and give up. There is also always a second option: that, faced with a grave common threat, we can choose to come together and make an evolutionary leap. We can choose, as the Reverend William Barber puts it, “to be the moral defibrillators of our time and shock the heart of this nation and build a movement of resistance and hope and justice and love.” We can, in other words, surprise the hell out of ourselves—by being united, focused, and determined. By refusing to fall for those tired old shock tactics. By refusing to be afraid, no matter how much we are tested.

The corporate coup that Trump and his billionaire cabinet are trying to pull off is a crisis with global reverberations that could echo through geologic time. How we respond to this crisis is up to us. So let’s choose that second option. Let’s leap.”

The most interesting part of her talk focused on the fact that saying No is not enough, we have to fill it with a Yes that proposes alternatives. For me the urgent question is how to conceive of and formulate alternatives that realistically work as political programs. Not (just) to get elected but to change the dominant system of policies and political philosophy, of the economy at the base of it all.

Klein signed her book with “Stay Brave” – a fitting exhortation from a woman who inspired optimism.

 

Daring to Dream in the Age of Trump

Memorial Day

Today this country remembers its dead in war.  If we consider the fight against religious bigotry, xenophobia, anti-semitism, racism and white supremacy a form of war then we have to mourn our most recent local victims as soldiers as well. It is still difficult to wrap my mind around the fact that I live in a city where, this weekend, in the middle of the afternoon two men were killed and one wounded in a streetcar because they came to the aid of two young Muslima who were attacked by a White supremacist. A war veteran and father of four, a Reed College graduate and a young man who recently won a prize for a poem focussed on Islamophobia all came to the aid of strangers only to have their throats slashed.

The climate of violence is created, intensified and sanctioned from above – the link below from today’s NYT editorial shows the extent to which whole swaths of people have “left morality behind as a viable concept.”

Click on picture for Charles Blow NYT opinion piece.

Images today remind of the mourning for the loss incurred by war; the music is one of the most moving pieces I know commemorating friends who gave their lives in the belief it was for the greater good.