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Within the Architecture of Denial and Duplicity: The Democratic Party and the Infantile Omnipotence

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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 08:00 AM
Original message
Within the Architecture of Denial and Duplicity: The Democratic Party and the Infantile Omnipotence

Within the Architecture of Denial and Duplicity: The Democratic Party and the Infantile Omnipotence of The Ruling Class.

by Phil Rockstroh


Why did the Democratic Congress betray the voting public?

Betrayal is often a consequence of wishful thinking. It's the world's way of delivering the life lesson that it's time to shed the vanity of one's innocence and grow-the-hell-up. Apropos, here's lesson number one for political innocents: Power serves the perpetuation of power. In an era of runaway corporate capitalism, the political elite exist to serve the corporate elite. It's that simple.

Why do the elites lie so brazenly? Ironically, because they believe they're entitled to, by virtue of their superior sense of morality. How did they come to this arrogant conclusion? Because they think they're better than us. If they believe in anything at all, it is this: They view us as a reeking collection of wretched, baseborn rabble, who are, on an individual level, a few billion neurons short of being governable by honest means.

Yes, you read that correctly: They believe they're better than you. When they lie and flout the rules and assert that the rule of law doesn't apply to them or refuse to impeach fellow members of their political and social class who break the law -- it is because they have convinced themselves it is best for society as a whole.

How did they come by such self-serving convictions? The massive extent of their privilege has convinced them that they're the quintessence of human virtue, that they're the most gifted of all golden children ever kissed by the radiant light of the sun. In other words, they're the worst sort of emotionally arrested brats -- spoiled children inhabiting adult bodies who mistake their feelings of infantile omnipotence for the benediction of superior ability: "I'm so special that what's good for me is good for the world," amounts to the sum total of their childish creed. In the case of narcissists such as these, over time, self-interest and systems of belief grow intertwined. Hence, within their warped, self-justifying belief systems, their actions, however mercenary, become acts of altruism.

The elites don't exactly believe their own lies; rather, they proceed from the neo-con guru, Leo Strauss' dictum (the modus operandi of the ruling classes) that it is necessary to promulgate "noble lies" to society's lower orders. This sort of virtuous mendacity must be practiced, because those varieties of upright apes (you and I) must be spared the complexities of the truth; otherwise, it will cause us to grow dangerously agitated -- will cause us to rattle the bars of our cages and fling poop at our betters. They believe it's better to ply us with lies because it's less trouble then having to hose us down in our filthy cages. In this way, they believe, all naked apes will have a more agreeable existence within the hierarchy-bound monkeyhouse of capitalism.

This may help to better understand the Washington establishment and its courtesan punditry who serve to reinforce their ceaseless narrative of exceptionalism. This is why they've disingenuously covered up the infantilism of George W. Bush for so long: Little Dubya is the id of the ruling class made manifest -- he's their troubled child, who, by his destructive actions, cracks the deceptively normal veneer of a miserable family and reveals the rot within. At a certain level, it's damn entertaining: his instability so shakes the foundation of the house that it causes the skeletons in its closets to dance.

By engaging in a mode of being so careless it amounts to public immolation, these corrupt elitists are bringing the empire down. There is nothing new in this: Such recklessness is the method by which cunning strivers commit suicide.

Those who take the trouble to look will apprehend the disastrous results of the ruling elites' pathology: wars of choice sold to a credulous citizenry by public relations confidence artists; a predatory economy that benefits one percent of the population; a demoralized, deeply ignorant populace who are either unaware of or indifferent to the difference between the virtues and vicissitudes of the electoral processes of a democratic republic, in contrast to the schlock circus, financed by big money corporatist, being inflicted upon us, at present.

Moreover, the elitist's barriers of isolation and exclusion play out among the classes below as an idiot's mimicry of soulless gated "communities" and the pernicious craving for a vast border wall -- all an imitation of the ruling classes' paranoia-driven compulsion for isolation and their narcissistic obsession with exclusivity.

Perhaps, we should cover the country in an enormous sheet of cellophane and place a zip-lock seal at its southern border, or, better yet -- in the interest of being more metaphorically accurate -- let's simply zip the entire land mass of the U.S. into a body bag and be done with it.

What will be at the root of the empire's demise? It seems the elite of the nation will succumb to "Small World Syndrome" -- that malady borne of incurable careerism, a form of self-induced cretinism that reduces the vast and intricate world to only those things that advance the goals of its egoist sufferers. It is an degenerative disease that winnows down the consciousness of those afflicted to a banal nub of awareness, engendering the shallowness of character on display in the corporate media and the arrogance and cluelessness of the empire's business and political classes. It possesses a love of little but mammon; it is the myth of Midas, manifested in the hoarding of hedge funds; it is the tale of an idiot gibbering over his collection of used string.

What can be done? In these dangerous times, credulousness to party dogma is as dangerous as a fundamentalist Christian's literal interpretation of The Bible: There is no need to squander the hours searching for an "intelligent design" within the architecture of denial and duplicity built into this claptrap system -- a system that we have collaborated in constructing by our loyalty to political parties that are, in return, neither loyal to us nor any idea, policy nor principle that doesn't maintain the corporate status quo.

Accordingly, we must make the elites of the Democratic Party accountable for their betrayal -- or we ourselves will become complicit. The faith of Democratic partisans in their degraded party is analogous to Bush and his loyalist still believing they can achieve victory in Iraq and the delusion-based wing of the Republican Party who, a few years ago, clung to the belief, regardless of facts, that Terri Schiavo’s brain was not irreparably damaged and she would someday rise from her hospital bed and bless the heavens for them and their unwavering devotion to her cause.

Faith-based Democrats are equally as delusional. Only their fantasies don't flow from the belief in a mythical father figure, existing somewhere in the boundless sky, who scripture proclaims has a deep concern for the fate of all things, from fallen sparrows to medically manipulated stem cells; rather, their beliefs are based on the bughouse crazy notion that the elites of the Democratic Party could give a fallen sparrow's ass about the circumstances of their lives.

In the same manner, I could never reconcile myself with the Judea/Christian/Islamic conception of god -- some strange, invisible, "who's-your-daddy-in-the-sky," sadist -- who wants me on my knees (as if I'm a performer in some kind of cosmic porno movie) to show my belief in and devotion to him -- I can't delude myself into feeling any sense of devotion to the present day Democratic Party.

Long ago, reason and common sense caused me to renounce the toxic tenets of organized religion. At present, I feel compelled to apply the same principles to the Democratic Party, leading me to conclude, as did Voltaire regarding the unchecked power of The Church in his day, that we must, "crush the infamous thing."

Freedom begins when we free ourselves from as many illusions as possible -- including dogma, clichés, cant, magical thinking, as well as blind devotion to a corrupt political class.

I wrote the following, before the 2006 mid-term election: "<...> I believe, at this late hour, the second best thing that could come to pass in our crumbling republic is for the total destruction of the Democratic Party -- and then from its ashes to rise a party of true progressives.

"<...> I believe the best thing that could happen for our country would be for the leaders of The Republican Party -- out of a deep sense of shame (as if they even possessed the capacity for such a thing) regarding the manner they have disgrace their country and themselves -- to commit seppuku (the act of ritual suicide practiced by disgraced leaders in feudalist Japan) on national television.

"Because there's no chance of that event coming to pass, I believe the dismantling of the Democratic Party, as we know it, is in order. It is our moribund republic’s last, best hope -- if any is still possible."

I received quite a bit of flack from party loyalist and netroots activists that my pronouncement was premature and we should wait and see.

We've waited and we've seen. Consequently, since the Republican leadership have not taken ceremonial swords in hand and disemboweled themselves on nationwide TV, it's time we pulled the plug on the Democratic Party, an entity that has only been kept alive by a corporately inserted food-tube. In my opinion, this remains the last, best hope for the living ideals of progressive governance to become part of the body politic.

Phil Rockstroh, a self-described, auto-didactic, gasbag monologist, is a poet, lyricist and philosopher bard living in New York City. He may be contacted at: philangie2000@yahoo.com
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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 08:07 AM
Response to Original message
1. Could you please be more specific as to who "they" are? How about
...naming the people who you believe fit the political elite and the corporate elite you are describing in this piece? Thanks.
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 08:32 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Let's start with:
All the congressional Democrats who voted to continue funding the continued occupation of Iraq.

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iamahaingttta Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 08:50 AM
Response to Original message
3. Wow...thanks Phil!
Good stuff...
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 08:56 AM
Response to Original message
4. Good stuff, but I disagree about the Democratic Party.
We don't need to destroy it, we need to take it over, to OWN it.
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 09:10 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. I'm with you.
Let's take our billions, like the corporate K-Streets boys and girls -- and take over the town.

Don't have that kind of money, huh? Well, I guess then you can always vote for them again -- and then get betrayed again -- when they, oddly enough, take big monies side over yours.

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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 09:18 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. Well, if you start with the assumption that politics is all about money,
that's where you wind up. It is possible to own the Democratic Party with votes, but you have to start at the bottom. But, if we are not able to organize a mass-movement in the first place, than your approach isn't going to get anywhere either. You can't have a democracy with no engaged citizens. That's how we got these weasels thinking they had a right to lord it over us in the first place.
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 10:28 AM
Response to Reply #6
9. I agree with you
I don't think a mass movement can begin with a faux opposition party like the present day Democratic Party, whose attention can only by brought with money, in the way. They run interference against any true progressive debate. It's time for them to go.

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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 10:47 AM
Response to Reply #9
12. Always a pleasure Sir.
I did like your writing.
:hi:
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hippiechick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 09:18 AM
Response to Reply #5
7. Bingo!
:applause: Thanks for this essay, Phil ... let's hope it helps lift the scales from the eyes on this side of the aisle.
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formercia Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 11:27 AM
Response to Reply #4
13. Come Primary time
Just make sure the replacement candidate isn't a stealth one.
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 12:09 PM
Response to Reply #13
15. Exactly. The power is free for the taking there.
It's the big secret of Democratic politics.
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stellanoir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 10:14 AM
Response to Original message
8. So pleased to see you posting again. Love your "gasbag monologistic"
eloquence and style.

We are nearly totally bereft of anything remotely resembling representative leadership at this point.

"Taxation without representation" and "a government of, by, and for the corporations" is utterly nauseating.

You want ta have a tea party or somethin'. . .?

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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 10:34 AM
Response to Reply #8
10. Thanks Stellanoir
Yes, let's have a tea party -- and then a progressive blow-out where we toast -- that the present day Democratic Party goes the way of the Whigs ... if not, the Democratic faithful should take to the wearing of powered wigs; they wouldn't look anymore ridiculous than they do now, supporting the party.
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stellanoir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 11:40 AM
Response to Reply #10
14. Okay . . .your harbor or mine. . .?
Edited on Thu Jun-21-07 11:45 AM by stellanoir
I'll be the one wearing the ever stylish purple powdered wig. Okay . . .?

No seriously . . .

I've always known most governments were inherently corrupt but I've been awestruck in recent years that ours is now so overtly so.

Have you re read the Declaration of Independence over the last 6 years by any chance. . .?

For some strange reason, I did so on July 4th, '03 and even then, I was astounded how similarly the complaints of the colonists against King George paralleled so closely the current day complaints of progressives against the most incurious george dubious.

Beyond that. . .don't you think there is an problem embedded in a two party system when in actuality there are certainly more than two possible points of view?

The label of "conservatism" is totally bogus given the extremism of those in charge. The demonization of "liberalism" is also disingenuous. The accusation of "tax and spend" Dems is absurd when that is what most governments do and in light of the fact that our treasury has been summarily looted and wasted.

Having watched this land once lauded as the "land of the lively discussion" digress into the yawn fest of intractable dualism, wherein some of the greatest intellectuals in all fields repeatedly come up with all sort of sophisticated analysis only to be derided for being "reality based" and diminished with utterly blatant falsehoods. It's as though the brainiacs are knocking their glorious crania against a impenetrable and thick brick wall of deceit.

However as a spiritualist, I've been saying for a long time that progressives need to harness both hemispheres of their brains to achieve greater focus.

With the incessant barrage of repetitive punditry pushing their talking points regardless of whether they are even remotely credible, it truly qualifies as low level mind control. I've called it "oligarchical hypnogoguery" for years.

So in response I've been crafting politically oriented prayers for progressives for the last 8 months or so. Silly me.

Alas. . .encouraging progressives to focus for a whole minute a day is certainly a challenge to which the analogy of "herding cats" totally applies.

I was addressing this issue on another thread the other day and someone posted this response. . .

"Einstein is reputed to have said something to the effect of. . .
our problems cannot be solved by the same consciousness that created them, thus a quantum leap in consciousness is required or we are all screwed. There is an upcoming event of mass meditation upcoming on 7-17-07, check it out at www.firethegrid.com it could be a tipping point ;o)"

I was thrilled to learn of that event. Consider it to be a tea party of consciousness.

Just don't feel as though the mess we are in will be remedied by traditional or linear means exclusively is all. That doesn't preclude that a more traditional tea party isn't in essence a very fine idea though.


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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 12:40 PM
Response to Reply #14
16. I agree
a paradigm shift is the key.

True, meditation is helpful: it increases Theta waves throughout the whole of the brain. I've often stated that neural plasticity is my higher power; it's a microcosm of evolution in action.

In other words, evolution is apprehending reality -- a mode of being that allows one to apprehend a larger reality, hence be moved the beauty, sorrow, and wit of the world.
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stellanoir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 02:32 PM
Response to Reply #16
20. Cool
Edited on Thu Jun-21-07 02:36 PM by stellanoir
I'm deeply relieved that you are in agreement. Felt as though I was taking an obtuse cyber risk here.

Beyond meditation being helpful for the self, I like your "microcosm of evolution" analogy a whole lot.

"As above so (within). . ."

Dunno about "neural plasticity" as it doesn't exactly sound sensually organic but your writing exudes an intense degree of neural agility and openness.

Silly story-A few years ago there were some construction guys working nearby and I was gardening a lot so we would sometimes casually shoot the breeze. They finished the external work on the new house and the guys got all melodramatic about how the exterior guys weren't gonna be back since they had finished their work and now it would just be the interior guys from now on. Sobb sobb. So then a couple weeks later, one of the exterior guys was back on the site. I said "but I thought you were an exterior guy?" He said, "Honey I'm more versatile than a fiddler's wrist." Never heard that one before.

Decades ago I read somewhere that some astrophysicists speculated that the primary chemical component at the center of the galaxy is NO2 (aka laughing gas.) Ever since then, I've said, "humor is my religion." Nobody ever killed each other over a good joke after all. Though warfare may be the ultimate worst joke of all throughout recorded history.

Humor and basic human kindness and love are the attributes shared by the vast majority of human beings.

Those who've usurped control and profited immensely from inciting conflict where it didn't exist ain't exactly "livin' off love." Quite to the contrary in fact. Yet I yank off my powdered purple wig when I see the recurrently incessant spewing of vitriol and hatred in forums such as these. That sort of energetic may just keep them in power even longer.

I was told decades ago by a wise one that we would experience a second flood. . .it would be a flood of ideas.

Chief Seattle referred to this phenomenon 150 or so years ago. He said, "When the talking wires come, that's when life ends, and survival begins."

This fog is finally lifting at long last. Aaand Phew. . . almost.

Please don't assume that I am suggesting that prayer and affirmation and meditation will solve everything and therefore I might be encouraging inaction or complacency. There have been many times that I've been stymied in my life and felt as though I couldn't think my way out of a paper bag. Those like I, who employ the methodology of prayer and affirmations have often recognized practical solutions to possible resolutions and rectifications of problems that we had not been aware of prior to employing these techniques. So they help some to overcome blocks and motivate redemptive action.

Loved this line as well, "a mode of being that allows one to apprehend a larger reality, hence be moved the beauty, sorrow, and wit of the world."

Thanks for being receptive to this approach and hope you marked your calendar for July 17 at 7:11 am EDT. Hope many others do as well. Maybe let's make it so.

Peace over time.


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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 03:12 PM
Response to Reply #20
22. stellanoir, As synchronicity would have it:
I received this email today containing this quote from Rilke:


"The future enters into us, in order to transform itself in us, long before it happens."
Rainer Maria Rilke
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HooptieWagon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 10:45 AM
Response to Original message
11. K, and R #4!
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Psyop Samurai Donating Member (873 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 01:32 PM
Response to Original message
17. *bookmarking*...
While the proposed cure falls short of practical advice (just how do we "pull the plug", for example), this is perhaps the most brutally incisive diagnosis of the illness that I've come across.

You've summed up much of what I've reached in my own agonizing way, though I might rephrase things a bit to read, "*disappointment* is often a consequence of wishful thinking", because, though I've been guilty of that same "wishful thinking" and needed to "grow-the-hell-up" myself, I would say that the betrayal is nonetheless an objective reality, and exists independent of any wishful thinking.

But the betrayal of which I speak is not limited to a deviant elite, whom you've eloquently described. To the contrary, I witness the betrayal of reason and conscience all around me, everyday, by those who MUST fit comfortably within consensus reality. They continue this even after knowing that the "consensus" is a manufactured sham. They simply WILL NOT unplug from the perception management matrix of the corporate media. They simply WILL NOT stand up in any substantive way and call a halt. In short, we're looking at a moral abyss.

So, while a deviant elite certainly exists, and while it intersects and overlaps with the Democratic party (as it now does with ALL of our institutions, perhaps fatally so), I think it more accurate to view the bulk of our Democratic "representatives" not so much as being the criminal elite itself, but as a fairly faithful reflection of what I see around me every day. From that perspective, one might say that they represent us rather well. It all depends who "us" is.

Our predicament certainly transcends political parties; those who ceaselessly attempt to corral dissent along those lines simply add insult to injury. And they even know it (see above paragraph), but that'll never stop them. So, what to do? Damned if I know. However, given the moral cowardice at the bottom of it all, it seems that nothing short of an authentic "spiritual revolution" of sorts will do. Unfortunately, I'm not qualified to lead it.

:toast:
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 01:49 PM
Response to Reply #17
18. That was (one of) the theme(s) of my last
essay: our complicity with the crimes of empire.

If you want to read it, it can be found here:

http://journals.democraticunderground.com/Phil%20Rockstroh/11


I appreciate your comments and cogent insights.
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pokercat999 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 02:09 PM
Response to Original message
19. Blowback........a great description of the coming
explosion.
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acmavm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-21-07 02:50 PM
Response to Original message
21. This is a hell of a lot closer to reality than the pathetic 'don't pick on the
poor dems' shit that's been plastered on here lately.

Thank you.
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