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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 08:36 AM
Original message
Roasting Marshmallows on the American Reichstag Fire to Come.
Tales of Angst, Alienation and Martial Law: Roasting Marshmallows on the American Reichstag Fire to Come.
by Phil Rockstroh


In this summer of angst and grim foreboding about what further assaults against common sense and common decency the Bush Administration might inflict upon the people of the world, how many times during the day do those of us -- still possessed of mind, heart and conscience -- take pause, hoping we've seen the worst of it, then, fearing we haven't yet, attempt to push down the dread rising within us, so that we might simply make it through the day and be able to rest at night? Accordingly, those who have been paying attention are aware that the outward mechanisms of martial law are in place. We shudder knowing that Bush has issued an executive decree that grants him dictatorial power in the event of some nebulously defined national emergency. In addition, the knowledge nettles us that a vast network of internment camps bristle across the length of the U.S., standing at wait for those who might raise objections to the fascistic fury unloosed by the American empire's version of the Reichstag fire.

Moreover, a closer look would reveal that the inner processes by which an individual begins the act of acceptance of authoritarian excess -- the mixture of chronic passivity, boredom, low grade anxiety and unfocused rage inherent in the citizens/consumers of the corporate state that primes an individual for fascism -- have been in place for quite some time within the psyches of the American populace, both elites and hoi polloi alike. Although, don't look for torch-lit processions thronging the nation's streets and boulevards; rather, look for a Nuremberg Rally of couch-bound brownshirts. Instead of ogling the serried ranks of jut-jawed, SS soldiers, a contemporary Leni Riefenstahl would be forced to film chubby clusters of double-chinned consumers, saluting the new order with their TV remotes. In the contemporary United States, the elation induced by the immersion of one's individual will to the mindless intoxication of the mob might only be possible, if Bush seized dictatorial control of the state while simultaneously sending out to all citizens gift certificates to Ikea.

After the catastrophes spawned by the rise of European fascism in the 1930s, a number of brilliant, original thinkers (including Hannah Arendt, Roberto Freire, Wilhelm Reich, and R. D. Laing) set out to study the phenomenon in order to learn how future calamities might be prevented. Although the methodologies and conclusions of these thinkers varied, each noted that alienation and dehumanization festered at the core of the death urge of fascism.

Nowadays, in contrast, the elites of the corporate media have proven themselves useless in this regard, believing, as they do, they constitute the thin line between the rabble at large (me and you) and the chaos begot by freedom. At present, mega-churches attract alienated suburbanites. Right wing talk show hosts misdirect their listeners alienation towards so-called illegal "aliens" and exploit their audience's sense of powerlessness (created by the rigged system of corporate capitalism) against elitist liberals (who themselves, ironically, benefit from the present system and who only want to change it to the degree that their own privilege will not be affected. In other words, not at all).

Combine the above with the American character trait of being hostile towards introspection and it becomes evident that the present disaster has been building for quite a while now. And it can (and most likely will) get worse -- far worse.

Most Americans alive today have been trained since birth to adapt to and serve the corrupt corporate structure by means of the shunning of critical thinking and have been conditioned to be in constant (empty) motion or in the thrall of mass media distraction. We have been taught that passivity is for losers, yet we find ourselves nearly powerless before the corporate/consumer/military/police/entertainment state. In this way, we serve our corporate masters; it serves the corpocracy that the lower orders refuse meaningful self-awareness. If one were to glimpse one's own illusions, then it follows one might begin to question collective delusions -- and this would upset the social order.

Those who have studied the dangers of authoritarian rule have advised us to be wary of people who carry an inner emptiness. Of course, these unfortunates yearn for the void to be filled. But with their hearts and minds mortared closed -- what makes it through the self-constructed prison is loud, stupid, and fascistic. At present, what penetrates is: Fundamentalist Sermons on Armageddon; violent video games; the empty spectacle of steroid-induced professional sports hype; the lethal fantasies of American exceptionalism; the exercise in Rock and Roll imperialism that U.S. foreign policy has become. In short, all the banal Sturm and Drang necessary to pierce those protective walls and penetrate the pervasive inner emptiness.

When the people of a culture have been conditioned to worship power -- but feel powerless -- there's trouble ahead. The elites must displace the public's rage by a demagogic sleight-of-hand such as the demonization of marginalized groups. In the US, we've been inundated by years of state and commercial propaganda that has degraded and demonized the country's permanent underclass by the labeling of them as welfare parasites and career criminals.

It has been noted that the mindset, methods, and procedures of America's punitive, profit-driven prison-industrial complex was a prototype for the systemic cruelty of Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib; furthermore, it is a given that those institutional affronts to human decency will have served as prototypes for the methods and procedures that will be practiced upon those who are swept-up in the purges and detainment mania following the declaration of martial law in the United States.

We push this knowledge away from us, fearing we will be paralyzed by its crushing implications. Worse, what is nearly impossible to admit is, most likely, the system crushed us long ago. Apropos, R. D. Laing averred that being able to adapt and function within an insane, authoritarian system renders one for all practical purposes insane -- only insane in a manner acceptable to a power mad ruling elite.

This is the knowledge we push down, every hour of everyday. Otherwise, we would be driven to admit outright that the system has crushed our individual hopes, aspirations and yearnings. We must, at all costs, keep these feelings concealed; otherwise, we might be compelled to contemplate what we have forsaken, what passions and truths we have traded away for the false sense of security that the corporate order offered us when we tacitly agreed to surrender what was most sacred, vital and alive within us. One psychological manifestation of this phenomenon is the incessant chanting of that mantra of the American corporate workforce: "I'm not my job. I'm not what I do all day long."

For a moment, meditate on the calamity implicit in such a sentiment. Because If we cannot locate and engage our true selves during our waking hours -- then who the hell are we anyway? This is a profoundly troubling circumstance. Moreover, if we've condemned our daylight selves to a void of non-being, what then remains of us?

We experience this dislocation of the life force as a sense of nebulous dread. Everything, these days, the architecture and accouterment of our lives seems so fragile and unreal; it feels as if everything could just fly apart, at any given moment. The world and our place in it seems so flimsy: an empire built of eggshells; it could all shatter in an instant.

Living on credit, the house of cards of the real estate market, jobs evaporating, most of us languishing only a couple of paychecks away from ruin: The empire is coming undone. As it is, it seems the nation is only being held together with hydrogenated fat, wheat gluten, over-extended credit and particle board. Ergo, there is one law the lawless Bush administration and their keepers from the plundering class cannot flout: the second law of thermodynamics. They won't be able to claim executive privilege to avoid the consequences of negative entropy.

In a similar vein, we, the underlings of empire, stand helpless before the prevailing madness. Individual reason rarely acts as a countervailing force to stem a drowning tide of cultural cognitive dissonance. Because the more epic and all-compassing the mistake, the more epic and all-encompassing come the rationalizations, the scapegoating and the compulsion for do-overs. If the surge isn't working as fantasized, then we'll double-dog surge you and then bomb Iran. If police state tactics fail to alleviate a sense of anxiety, then we must construct more detainment camps, more maximum security prisons, enact more federal death penalty statutes. "Bring back the electric chair; being put to sleep, like stray pets, is too good for the traitors," the mob will rage. That's the solution, but (cognitive dissonance being what it is) we need to go bigger -- we need an electric sofa -- yet, bigger still -- an electric dining room set! "Aahh ... the smell of deep-fried dissidents in the morning."

And over the smoking corpses, let us pray. We need to pray for ... what? ... more prayer. These prayers would work, the homicidally faithful will insist -- if every single doubter was induced to drop to their knees and pray. Hence, we need prayer in the public schools. We need prayer on public transportation. We need prayer in public restrooms!

Animus, ignorance, and magical thinking are a tragic mix -- and I'm afraid that vintage of mind is the hideous wine of our times. The social criteria that gives rise to fascism is in place in the U.S. and those in positions of power have a strong interest in seeing things remain that way. All we can do is what folks (a minority) have always done ... exile or resistance.

In my opinion, both are honorable. The other options are varying degrees of "little Eichmann" -- Ward Churchill's much scorned, career purge-inducing -- but never-the-less accurate phrase. If one does the "soul work," to appropriate archetypal psychologist James Hillman's term, it is still possible to resist complicity. Training yourself to avoid lying for provisional gain is a time honored means of prevented alliances with exploitive assholes. They will avoid you, fire you, curse your name from the darkness of their inner abyss -- but this will solve the problem of dependance on them -- and you'll be forced to live by other means. Generally, one is more adaptable than one believes.

Keep yourself as healthy and as sane as possible: we're going to need you around after the inevitable collapse of the present system. Also, beware of those reductionist demons of the mind who diminish the soul-making possibilities of "mere" words. The acts of writing and reading are seen as passive; to crackpot realists, these activities seem useless, unproductive -- the feckless indulgences of a class of the thin-wristed effete.

Accordingly, Americans have all but ceased reading. Worse, they displace their feelings of self-loathing borne of their own corporately induced passivity upon writers and thinkers. If the tenets of democratic discourse are to survive, it is imperative that writers and thinkers begin to engage in a passionate defense of themselves against the kvetching armies of crackpot realists that have encircled and laid siege to our collective hearts and minds.

But don't expect to be lauded with praise for the effort. It's doubtful our adversaries will be moved by our entreaties: There cannot be a rapprochement with reality for those who have never had a relationship with it in the first place. Yet verbal imagery and depth-inducing insights are the DNA of compassionate engagement. It is not a coincidence that George W. Bush is an inarticulate oaf. Conversely, there are many things in this world that require being touched by words, for there are occasions when words alone can suffice to take us deep and lift us up and serve to ameliorate our alienation.

It is in this spirit that I offer the words above to you; I'm traveling light; they're all I'm carrying with me, at this late hour, in these dark and dangerous times.

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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sarcasmo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 08:40 AM
Response to Original message
1. Well done Phil, well done. Kick and Nom.
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dipsydoodle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 08:42 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. ditto
.
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Deja Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 08:48 AM
Response to Original message
3. What can we do to encourage reading; no magic wands, please?
Edited on Thu Jul-26-07 08:48 AM by HypnoToad
Reading or doing, and more than first person shooter video games?

Nothing wrong with entertainment, but the mindless FPS games are often played for hours on end.

If Americans saw a future for themselves, would change occur?

If people read up on certain things and decided to have faith and hope that the future would be good when the day is said and done, would they change? Along with all the negative theories, I've fathomed a couple of positive ones and those AND ONLY THOSE are the ones I'm going to adhere to because I refuse to be all doom and gloom or end up with some "rabble". There is a prosperous future and it only needs to be found. Surely that's better than looking at a lot of nasty things and then connecting them in what may (or may not) be an accurate appraisal of the situation?



On edit: Removed typo from subject line.
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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 10:40 AM
Response to Reply #3
9. get rid of "teaching to the test" -- no child left behind leaves minds behind
we love to learn through discovery -- putting our children into a crucible "to learn or else" has the opposite effect. it shuts down the discovery process. sure, our kids might be able to fill in the correct bubbles on their standardized test, but they've been robbed of the magic of discovery and they may never get it back.


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CGowen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 10:49 AM
Response to Reply #3
11. there is a game called Shatterd Union
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Igel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 11:45 AM
Response to Reply #3
14. Step 1: Make kids read.
If they don't read X, Y, and Z in 10th grade English, and work hard to understand the works, they fail. Period. Make them overpractice, in other words, so that when things not quite so hard come along they don't break their teeth trying to bite into them. My 11th grade class nearly two months on Old Man and the Sea, and the teacher finally forced us to read it out loud in class; it's worth maybe a week, two at most.

Step 2, overlapping with Step 1: Remove distractions. Primates are social animals that are motivated to like things that move. Sitting for long hours intepreting symbols is not what we evolved to do. Watching tv is more along what our brains expect, believe it or not.

Step 3: Show them how literature is relevant to them and to society. Teach them empathy. Not just to like or relate to characters of the same skin color or economic class--in fact, having them just read "relevant" literature, IMHO, is destructive. I found it highly irritating when the only writers that two black college students in my class seriously paid attention two were either (a) part black or (b) came from oppressed work-class backgrounds. If you can't empathize with others outside of your own race/class/ethnicity, you have no business calling yourself 'civilized' or 'educated'.

Step 3: Hope that overpracticing and introducing kids to good literature will help battle all the distractions and social temptations once they're no longer forced to read.

Step 4: Lower expectations. You can learn things from simple literature as from complex literature, literature that critics loathe as well as literature that critics love (and, in many cases, more from the former than from the latter).
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mirrera Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 08:59 AM
Response to Original message
4. Wow...thank you.
Very very moving. My family escaped the Holocaust and I have always had a fascination with the "good german". I now feel like one. I certainly fit the "low grade anxiety and unfocused rage" of a citizen slowly taking "dictation". I bought a green house, I live close to the border, now I just need to get my passport in order.
GREAT piece of writing. Great, really.

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info being Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 09:28 AM
Response to Original message
5. More vaguely related thoughts
We have achieved a world in which anything is possible, but nothing really happens. What is real exists only in our isolated minds...which is to say it doesn't exist at all. Because, in reality, nothing can be real if we cannot allow ourselves to forget ourselves...to be tickled by that which comes from another! Everyone is talking but nobody's listening. It is the last wall standing...the great bottleneck.

And why? Because we all want to be actively perceived. We want to receive the gift, not give it! We reach out to the world selfishly, with such a loud and obnoxious tone like "LOOK AT ME!!!!" And in so doing, we forget that we all want the same thing.

So the language of attention-seeking needs to become the language of perception. We need to reach out to others in a way that satisfies their needs...to write songs and books not about how great I am, but about what you feel...to walk down the street not hoping somebody smiles at me, but to smile at another...to say that which we all feel but have never said.

It is also important to realize that to be perceived is not only to be heard, noticed, understood. To feel perceived is also to hear a song that speaks to you, to read a novel that says what you've always felt, to see a painting which reminds you of your childhood, a beautiful woman who reminds you of your dreams, a smile which reminds you we're all the same. Perception is two-way and cannot be any other way.

So listen to people, get some new music, read a new novel or poet or philosopher, go to that obscure art exhibit, find stuff that speaks to you and soak it up in silence. But don't waste your time with the language of attention-seeking (mainstream music, TV, preachers, and ideologues). You will only remain frustrated and alone.

How can you be perceived if nobody is listening? How can you expect perception if you aren't listening?
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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 10:53 AM
Response to Reply #5
12. wow -- it's like "social narcissism"
when all relationships are one-way, no communication or growth can happen.
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info being Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 01:27 PM
Response to Reply #12
15. Good way to put it.
Thanks for reading my somewhat unrelated piece...not sure why the original most got me thinking in this direction.
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byronius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 09:56 AM
Response to Original message
6. You're crazy.
NOT. I've been feeling unsettled about this all summer. They're thinking it so clearly, you can see it in their eyes.

Gonzales' contemptuous answers to Leahy were the kicker.

Thanks for this.
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The Doctor. Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 10:22 AM
Response to Original message
7. Brilliant.
Thanks.
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OneBlueSky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 10:27 AM
Response to Original message
8. brilliant essay, Phil . . . you've tapped into my own feelings with an articulateness . . .
that I, unfortunately, could never muster . . . I think your entire piece can be summed up in just one line: "it serves the corpocracy that the lower orders refuse meaningful self-awareness" . . .

how tragically true . . . as I go through my days, I see legions of robots for whom the notion of self-awareness is as foreign as Afghanistan . . . they drive their Hummers, work their soul-less jobs, and believe that shopping at the mall is the ultimate payoff for the "good lives" they lead . . . their kids have cars, computers, iPods, cell phones, myspace pages, tutors, hundred dollar sneakers -- and they're bored . . . most people today have absolutely no hint of what it might mean to be a fully (or even minimally) aware human being in the 21st century . . . talking to them about philosophy or spirituality, or even politics, invites blank stares that say "What are YOU smoking?" . . .

meanwhile, all of us do indeed "attempt to push down the dread rising within us, so that we might simply make it through the day and be able to rest at night" . . . I've long ago given up on the notion that anything I might say or do will make any difference whatsoever . . . "it is what it is," as my brother often reminds me, and pretty much all we can do is sit back and wait for the shit storm to achieve hurricane strength -- probably sooner rather than later . . .

think I'm going to go read a good book . . . or listen to some Miles Davis . . . my head hurts . . .

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Hydra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 10:43 AM
Response to Original message
10. This is a good start
But it's written by someone still affected by the system.

Why is that bad, you ask?

Because he's seeing the symptoms, not the root problems, and in many places, he's seeing what he is TOLD to see.

* is NOT an Inarticulate Oaf. He's also not stupid, just bored and lazy. He understands what's going on, and approves of it. He simply would rather someone else do it for him.

The illegal immigration problem IS a problem, and it's one of *'s making. Like our own elections, he supported the stealing of Mexico's last election in favor of the oligarchs, to keep things the way they are.

I personally don't live in dread- I'm simply waiting for the second shoe to drop. I think it will come in the form of a second "new pearl harbor," probably in the form of a nuke or nukes, as they've been hyping that lately, and it's unlikely anything less will get most people to surrender what little they have left. Similarly, my rage is quite focused. "Qui Bono?"

While what's going on might be construed as "insanity," I would disagree. What we have here is the attempt by a a group of people to alter the entire world to fit their needs. Ambitious...and deadly to the people who disagree. "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists."

I think there are three groups of people in the US right now: The people trying to create Rome all over the world, The people whose lives are a burden to them(IE. many of the bored and jaded elite, the people in the megachurches praying for the end of the world, the people begging to be saved form the "terrorists," etc.), and the people who want their lives back. The first two are teamed up against the 3rd.

I'm a rebel by birth, and I'm happy to carry the torch to anyone who wants light. To the rest, who want the light only for themselves, or the light extinguished entirely...we're going to have to do something about that.

Don't live in fear and/or ignorance!

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corkhead Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 11:32 AM
Response to Reply #10
13. A great reply to an excellent post; Welcome to DU, great to see new blood.
:toast:
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reprobate Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-30-07 08:04 AM
Response to Reply #10
25. Welcome to DU, Hydra. And thank you for a well thought out reply to the OP.

I would, however, add another group to your divisions of Americans. In my recent experience there is a large group (though I wouldn't venture HOW large) of the population that spends their days just trying to make ends meet in low satisfaction and low paying jobs and feel disconnected from "politics" with no understanding of how such an esoteric subject can effect them as the lowly peons of society.

Let me cite just one example: the Subject is an assembly line worker in a manufacturing position; IOW see assembles subs at a branch of one of the major fast food Corporations ( toasty one might say).

Let me admit that I am constitutionally unable to keep my mouth shut in interacting with new people.

I asked: Are you going to the party?

She replied: What party?

I said: The impeachment party. Every citizen is invited.

She said, and I'm paraphrasing: I don't follow politics. I don't see how it effects me. Besides, I'm busy - when not working there's my two kids to take care off.

When I informed her of the new ways the government is helping her, IE, reading her mail, her email, and listening to her phone conversations, she suddenly became much more interested in politics and I gave her the capital switchboard number to call her congresscritters.

I keep running into people like her. Those with little time to keep up with current events (especially considering how little political truth the media offers them) but with a true interest in the true events of our nation when they get just enough to see how it effects them.

I believe that they are the large masses that may just turn the tide if and when they are energized, though I have no idea how that might be done.
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 03:19 PM
Response to Original message
16. AH HA! I found your house at Dandelionsalad!
I almost posted this until I read the name. BTW! I luv that website!
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Pooka Fey Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 04:02 PM
Response to Original message
17. Wonderful essay. K&R
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Mr_Jefferson_24 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 04:08 PM
Response to Original message
18. K & R.
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DemExpat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 05:28 PM
Response to Original message
19. Thanks for your musings here, Phil
Much appreciated.

DemEx
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puebloknot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-26-07 08:32 PM
Response to Original message
20. Just finished discussing exactly this with a friend...
... and then your article here, which just nails it!

I was in my two-year-old crib when my father was fighting in the Ardennes. He came home from that war, one of the ones that was going to end all wars, a sad and unmendable man. He and his comrades gave us a gift that America is spitting on now!

Now we have mega-churches in lieu of the Nuremburg rallies, and as mad as this sounds, Nuremburg had a little more intelligence to it that what we're seeing today! I know that's a crack-brained thing to say, but so low is the mentality of our Christofascists that, considering them, I hark back to my days as an army brat in post-war Germany and, comparing the people I met there and then to my fellow Americans now,long for the intelligence and cultural awareness of the "barbarians" who went along with Hitler.

Long live the brush, and the pen, and the camera, and the flute.

I'm sending hollyhocks and blue skies from Santa Fe. And I'm already waiting for your next!

Judy Barrett
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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-27-07 04:50 PM
Response to Original message
21. I'm going to make a big batch of Rice Crispy marshmallow squares
:yoiks:
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Pharaoh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-27-07 07:22 PM
Response to Original message
22. Brilliant Phil!
I would have K&Red this but was too busy to read it till now.

Aahh ... the smell of deep-fried dissidents in the morning." :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:
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cliss Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-29-07 02:27 PM
Response to Original message
23. Vey, very well written piece and
thank you for posting it.

The author really does speak for all of us, with anguish and fear over what's to come.
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grasswire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-30-07 12:48 AM
Response to Original message
24. outstanding, Phil
I'm passing this link around to some listservs. Thanks so much and welcome to DU.

Many people have recently reached the realization that we are in more trouble than a simple constitutional crisis between Congress and the WH. We are in the grip of tyranny.

Your piece is one of the first I have seen that gives some instructions on how to be and how to live right now.

We all know the first rule, right?

1. Don't get on the train.
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Blue_Tires Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-30-07 01:33 PM
Response to Original message
26. ttt
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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-04-07 06:53 AM
Response to Reply #26
27. for latecomers
:kick:
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fasttense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-04-07 08:48 AM
Response to Original message
28. Reminds me of the successful businessman who finally stopped to think.
I don't know where I read it. Someone explained how their successful friend was forced to stop working for a moment. I think it was due to a power outage or other major infrastructure problem. He had nothing else to do but sit and think. He pulled apart his thoughts and was astounded by what he realized.

If every waking moment is filled with drudging work, mass media entertainment or consumer driven rewards, then when do you have time to see what is really going on? When do you have time to understand the implications of a dictatorial power grab and corporate elite control? When do you have time to read?

I wonder if Canada will take political fugitives from the US?
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