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America Has Left the Building: An Open Missive of Anger and Hope

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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 04:32 AM
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America Has Left the Building: An Open Missive of Anger and Hope
Recently, we've been plied and pummeled with the absurd proclamation that "the system worked" -- that our congressional representatives listened and took note of the collective, antiwar fulmination of the people, registered in our faux republic's latest, sham plebiscite … Yes, I suspect, the political classes of Washington did hear the people's thunder -- and then went running for cover within the comfort zones of their sheltering smugness, constructed of the brick and mortar of arrogant power and inequitable privilege. Just ask Joe Lieberman: He's the self-satisfied fellow seated comfortably upon the large, plush lounge chair, stuffed with campaign dollars, nearest the door with access to K Street.

But we must not let ourselves -- the true beneficiaries of empire -- off so easily: Our national tragedies (from all the corpses amassed, buried and forgotten in our imperial wars -- to our intransigence and denial regarding Global Warming) are a collaborative effort with our leaders: A joint and living lie of the mind -- made manifest by collective desire and remorseless pursuit.

Upon the occasion of our cultural confabulation of colonial hagiography dubbed "Thanksgiving," a tradition when we stuff our overweight bellies by devouring big, growth hormone-injected, flightless birds in order to celebrate, what in truth was, a Thanks-taking of this land by our ancestors from its original inhabitants -- (but a hearty salutation of "Happy Genocide Day" doesn't exactly stimulate the appetite, does it?) -- I will address the following missive to you -- my fellow unindicted (perhaps even unconscious) co-conspirators in the crimes of our country.

Let's begin with the things nearest to us: The structures and objects we see before us, everyday. And it's not a beautiful sight to behold.

Due to the banality, blandness, and flat-out ugliness of the stripmall/big box store/fast food outlet, prefab nowhereland of our contemporary landscape, life in the US under corporatism is as seductive as the glare of florescent tube lighting in a convenience store.

The architecture of the US looks as if Aldophe Eichmann grew bored endlessly calculating the human weigh capacity of death camp bound boxcars -- rose from Hell -- and went into the prefab structure design business.

Now, don’t get ugly, you admonish.

Tell me: What is truly ugly -- the composition and dissemination of a heartfelt, political jeremiad (or even an angry rant) – or the squandering of the passing hours of our finite lives within ugly suburban subdivisions, oversized, ugly-ass motor vehicles, soulless stripmalls and sterile office parks.

Man, have we let ourselves go: and its not only the sprawl around our middle: it’s the phony way we comport ourselves in manner and deed. Our shallowness – our hollowness – our lack of conscience, self-awareness and conviction ... all of which, the architecture and accoutrement of our commodified nowhereland merely reflects.

Worse yet, we no longer even see it. We are inseparable from our environment in the same manner e-coli bacteria are inseparable from feces ... The nowhere-scape before us exists in equal measure to the nowhere-scape within ...

It seems as though: Our landscape has become so vapid and banal, it can't even rise to the level of being tacky … Whatever the case -- even an attempt at tawdriness would show some kind of low-grade involvement. Instead, there is an overall feeling of flimsiness — a sense of a world devoid of substance. And the pervasive unsubstantiality creates an underlying aura of anxiety — the feeling that all of it can and will be leveled and scattered in some approaching cataclysm ... In this way, we hear the death rattle attendant to a closed system in entropic runaway ... The system is still replicating itself, exponentially -- yet, in equal measure, it bears and spreads the seeds of its demise.

This is why I have come to squat in your comfort zone, until you take notice.

Because the manner we're living is as salubrious as a tsunami.

And is about as sustainable, body and soul, as Elvis Presley's final binge.

Our emptiness is compensated for by the gigantism we see everywhere around us: from an epidemic of obese children to bloated McMansions. But whether its wooly mammoths or SUVs -- or Elvis, stuffed into a sequined jumpsuit -- or the fate of unwieldy armies of over-extended empires, bogged down by local insurgencies -- gigantism is a precursor to extinction. Worse, at present, this phenomenon is transpiring on a global basis.

Corporatism has rendered us analogous to the last days of Elvis ... Puffy, bloated -- we wheeze our way through our set ... Guarded gate communities are our own private Graceland where we die in excess and isolation. The electric lights sequined across the entire planet, now glow from space like one of Elvis's Las Vegas costumes. But does no one see the dying man beneath the jeweled jumpsuit? The land and The King are one.

America has left the building.

Because, like any disorder of the psyche, being the organic system a culture is -- pathology will increase, exponentially. Inevitably, a collapse will come ... Then it can and will get even uglier: Homegrown Brownshirts emerge, brandishing bibles and automatic weapons (convinced when Jesus returns the first thing he'll do is apply for membership to the NRA and then saddle-up and ride a Cruise Missile, Slim Pickens-style, aimed at the false god idolizing hordes of the Muslem world). Then will come detention camps, built by Halliburton and guarded by Blackwater rent-a-thugs ... In time, the sky will be darkened from the floating ash of the furnace-devoured flesh of those pushed into the flames lit by collective psychosis.

Hyperbolic, you say. No, it's an understatement. Remember we're speaking about the country that committed the most sustained, large-scale holocaust in human history, right here on our own soil -- the genocidal destruction of the Native American Nations. Happy Thanks-taking, America. Holocaust museums should be as prevalent as shopping malls, upon the blood-sodden soil of this land. In addition, while we're chronicling the carnage, let us not forget that we're the only nation to ever use nuclear weapons as an act of war (the most massive terrorist attack of all time) wherein we killed hundreds of thousands of Japanese civilians for no other reason than to put Stalin on notice that we were to be the lone colossus bestriding the war decimated post-war world.

As the years have passed, we Americans now stand before a contemptuous world: bloated in our subdivisions, waddling through Big Box retail stores, languishing in ignorance and anomie -- living caricatures of the grotesques of doomed empires. Therefore, we must take a long, revealing look at ourselves: Our breath stinks of carbon monoxide -- it's like we've been French kissing the tailpipe of a Humvee. Sometimes, I wish, America, you'd just wrap your lips around that tailpipe and commit suicide by internal combustion engine fellatio. (I mean it's coming to that anyway ... But must we take the rest of the world with us when we go?)

Or: the process of awakening and renewal can begin. It's our choice, collectively; It's our responsibility, personally -- to be aware of and then widely proclaim the stakes involved.
First and foremost, it's up to political activists, artists, online pamphleteers, et al to agitate against the neo-feudalist order of corporatism.
The present order is anathema to the soul-making of creative endeavor.

Art movements, from Paris in the 1920s, to the Beats and hippies, to the flannel-clad, guitar-poet wretches of the Northwest in the late 1980s and early 90's had one common factor, in all those flowerings of life-vivifying creativity -- cheap rent.

Rilke once said something along the lines of: Everybody has a letter written inside their heart and if you don't live the life your heart yearns to live, you won't be allowed to read this letter before you die ... Hence, we might infer: There exist, across the land, dead-letter offices, vast and cavernous, where our mail awaits, unopened and unread.

Ergo, one of the prevailing miseries of our era is: Most of us are to busy earning a living to live. As rents go down, levels of risk and inspiration rise. Moreover, we need the reflective power of art to end this impasse. It is imperative that we awaken to the realities of this death-dreaming empire.

Apropos, forgive me (or don't) for the angry tone of this missive -- for I am overwhelmed by the immensity of our nation's collective capacity for denial, casuistry and flat-out lying in regard to the death and destruction that has been inflicted in our names.

We must begin to grasp the unsettling knowledge that the things we, as a nation, inflict upon the world -- we will eventually inflict upon ourselves. It is imperative that we start to ask ourselves this question: When so many external and internal forces work to thwart, degrade, and destroy our essential selves -- hence the world -- what can help to restore us?

Therefore, I’m calling you out -- the hidden side of our national character -- right here, right now. Show us who you are: reveal to us your blank face, in all its banal symmetry – and finally, and at long last -- give us an accounting of yourself.

I'm not naive. I realize you feel you’re under no obligation to do so. You feel no more need to explain your actions than does Death itself.
Although you have many faces, deep down, we know who you are: You're a clean-shaven lobbyist, a sharp-elbow careerist, a public relations expert, a land-decimating real estate developer, a rent-inflating landlord, a cunning advertising executive, a weapons designing technocrat, a pentagon planner -- you're the bastard driving the SUV who is perpetually tailing my ass in traffic, you're my blank-faced, next-door neighbor, lacquering his hybrid lawn in insoluble pesticides. -- In short, you're all the quotidian and respectable -- therefore -- highly deceptive faces of Death. You're our own face, personal and private, individual and collective: yours/ours is the murder's countenance of empire.

Even though we all know the truth about you and our own complicity in your crimes, we push the knowledge from our minds, as we trudge though our days. And this is the reason: You promise us safety -- even as, you deliver us, incrementally and ineluctably, to destruction.

How do I reach you – how do I beseeched you to cease the madness?

You name the place where I can confront you: On a thronging sidewalk on Fifth Avenue, during evening rush, as we’re brushed and buffeted by the squalid grace of crowds. Perhaps, you might take the barstool next to mine and speak too loudly in my ear, jabbing my chest with your bony index finger to punctuate the pointless palaver of your self-justifying lies. How about: Let's take a cross-country drive, you and I, and see the fever dream of our sick nation unfurl before us through the dusty windshield of a grasshopper green, 1975, AMC Gremlin ... so that we might have time to talk this all through.

Because, I want you to realized this: There are hidden reservoirs of hope within us: reservoirs as boundless as the reach of your ruthlessness. These waters are as deep and potent as you are, at present, shallow and shameless. Yet, they're inaccessible to you -- as long as you insist your drink of choice will continue to be oil and blood, mixed with the runoff of melting Arctic glaciers.

What you do not know is this: From these inner reservoirs emerge rivers of renewal that run between all of those who turn away from the dry, dead landscape of your lies.

These streams of inspiration and renewal silently flow between those who have glimpsed this: That each generation must struggle against the soulless seekers of absolute power, that each era is a wasteland, that every person learns life is unfair, yet must seek to drink from the waters of hope -- so that our tongues will not wither to cynical dust.

Empires rise and fall, but hope remains, flowing through time and place, bearing all things to the sea and back again, perpetually returning, bringing new life to the dry, dead land, slaking our thirst, cleansing our wounds, delivering to us the strength to make and remake the world anew, and, at day's end, lulling us to restful sleep to the timeless cadences of its ceaseless currents.
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solara Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 04:43 AM
Response to Original message
1. Eloquently written
Edited on Wed Nov-22-06 05:07 AM by solara
Thank you for expressing so beautifully and succinctly the myriad thoughts I have not, myself, been able to articulate.

Oh, and welcome to DU! :hi:

k+r
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Mr_Jefferson_24 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 06:44 AM
Response to Original message
2. K & R. Everyone should read this. Thanks, Phil. nt.
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Dystopian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 08:54 AM
Response to Original message
3. K&R.....brilliant piece...
....and welcome to DU, you are a gifted writer.

peace~
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Morgana LaFey Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 12:37 PM
Response to Original message
4. Well, Phil, ole buddy
I couldn't read it.

Not that I think you're wrong -- I skimmed enough to get the general flavor. You're probably 100% right.

It's just that the "hope" part of your "missive" was too lacking in the early going. I just don't need it, and in fact can't handle it.

I was looking slightly forward to a holiday of thanksgiving as a positive thing in my life. I had been mulling over the collective human need for celebration, community, ritual, AND individual physical sustenance, all of which Thanksgiving satisfies. I'm grateful this year, esp. since my life is trending irrevokably in a direction that might not find me with quite so much to be thankful for next year.

So however right you may be, you'll have to do your ultra-cynical crying in your beer routine without me. I'm giving up cynicism for Thanksgiving.
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 02:05 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Regarding your comfort zone
Sorry, Morgana, that I'm squatting in your comfort zone -- but that is point of the essay ... The American public, particularly nice, well-turned out liberals, have turned their comfort zone into a tyranny of the mob.

Lorca said (paraphrasing) one must attempt to listen to the heart beating within the monster of the world.

He made this statement at a dangerous time and was killed by the fascist for such utterances.

In America, the monster's heartbeat resounds so loudly because of the mass panic at our complicity in the crimes of empire. And our response to the discomfort it evoke within us ... is to attempt to escape into our comfort zones.
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Morgana LaFey Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 06:35 PM
Response to Reply #5
7. You didh't understand a thing I said
Edited on Wed Nov-22-06 06:37 PM by Morgana LaFey
so busy were you defending your position -- which I said I didn't disagree with.

No problem. I'm not at all surprised and certainly not offended.

But neither am I amused, nor persuaded. Just disgusted.
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cassiepriam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 07:02 PM
Response to Reply #4
10. Morgana, please read the piece, one of the most elegant,
thoughtful, moving works I have read in a long time.

His writing is a gift, embrace it and enjoy.
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LZelig Donating Member (43 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 02:27 PM
Response to Original message
6. Gives me hope...
And a sense of community. You speak for many us who have taken a cold hard look in the collective national mirror, and don't like what we see. Time to end this binge. The sooner we awake from our state of denial, the sooner we can heal. This farce of a holiday for giving thanks to the indigenous people of our land is the perfect and most appropriate time to shake us to our senses - we have the whole of the year to be kind and commune with our family, friends and countrymen. I give you thanks.
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cassiepriam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 06:57 PM
Response to Original message
8. Phil, please keep squatting til you get answers!
Is there any body home?
Does any one have a moral compass?
A conscience?
A mind that still works?
Can any one tell right from wrong?
Truth from lies?

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cassiepriam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 06:59 PM
Response to Original message
9. Phil you are very gifted, very talented.
Do not let anyone dissuade you, stop you,or argue you out of your stance.

Stay true to the inner light and gift you possess.
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 07:20 PM
Response to Original message
11. here's the hope...
for a Thanksgiving where we can turn to one another and be grateful for the kind things we have done for each other over the years. A Thanksgiving where we return to the original settlers, the Indians, and thank them for keeping guard over the Earth, for preserving their culture in the face of adversity, for helping us to remember what is truly important in our connection with the land, and a A Thanks for Forgiving us for trampling upon the land and helping us to restore the vision of what this country is about. A Thanks for all the good that we have done and a Hope for more good to come.There's a lot of work to be done and we need to extend a thanks to those who have been working for change and an open invitation for all to unite.
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 08:41 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. Not ready to forgive
My father was born on a reservation in the Midwest ... He hasn't forgiven anyone: Not the reservation system, where his birth mother, being too poor to feed him, gave him up to a Christian orphanage -- from where he was adopted and ended up in the mean-ass, hate-filled, laboring class town of Birmingham, Alabama -- of which, when he speaks of the place, it's not with words brimming with forgiveness.

What this culture offered my father was a life of bigotry and back-breaking toil ... And I'm not even going to go into my wife's story ... and her birth in her grandfather's sharecropper shack on the Low Country in South Carolina.

Although if anyone wants to read about it -- I go into it a bit here.

http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Aug05/Rockstroh0806.htm

In short, within the sham narrative of Thanksgiving, so many American delusions of convenience are embodied -- it's difficult for me to regard the whole shabby affair as sanguine or even benign in any way.
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stellanoir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-22-06 10:41 PM
Response to Original message
13. Ingratious taking indeed.
Edited on Wed Nov-22-06 10:46 PM by stellanoir
This intense piece reminded me of this other one by another. . .

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eve-ensler/please-dont-go-back-to-s_b_3865.html

I love your writing and hope you continue to contribute here. You are incredibly thought provoking and that is a wondrous thing.

I'll go and fetch the most amazing line from that link ASAP.

on edit, it is this one. . ."America, those who now control our country have changed and ended law. "

She summarized in one line what we had long windedly been ranting about for years.

And that was written long before the most heinous Military Commissions Act was signed into law.

Don't ever give up the faith in what is now possible and don't ever lose your illustrious and eloquent spunk. (I'm normally not that bossy really) LOL

But do keep it up.
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baby_mouse Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-24-06 06:19 PM
Response to Original message
14. Excellent.
:applause:
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MasonJar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-25-06 09:22 PM
Response to Original message
15. Wow! Shades of T.S Eliot. I am sorry for your unfortunate life in
Birmingham. I was there last summer just for a night and went to the city's incredible Museum of Art. It was very impressive, especially the Wedgewood exhibit. I have recently read a novel or two set in the Birmingham of the 1960's, one especially heart-rending about the 4 young girls killed in the bombing of the church. We are unfortunately imbedded in times of ever-increasing abstruseness embellished by a president with no curiosity, who acknowledges leading the free world with his very own gut reaction....a president accorded the finest education available, who failed to profit from the opportunity or any opportunity subsequently purchased for him...including the presidency of the US. However, it seems to me that the time for Thanksgiving may be at hand; I for one worked very hard for John Yarmuth, a man of great possibility, who indeed has benefitted from a fine education and who will I believe be a major asset to the House of Representative. I am in the mood for thanks, since the dems now control the House and the Senate. Much good can be accomplished. If we had lost, I would have dived into your version of the times, BUT we WON. What more need I say! I would add that as much as your analogy of Elvis in his declining years might suit the text, I feel that the man himself was so superior in magnaninity and talent and charisma and just plain Southern gentility that he should not be exposed in such a demeaning manner. This is in no way an attempt to defuse your basic message. I only hope that it comes when the solution to our dilemma is already on the table. Also as an aside, do not add a past tense ending to an infinitive; please excuse the English teacher coming out in me.
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