COMMENTS: 2
It's the End of the World As We Know It
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MEXICO CITY -- Any serious scribe will tell you that writing is, at its heart, the maddening struggle to find exactly the right words. Should the overcast sky be called "gray" or "beige"? Is Rush Limbaugh best described as "an enraged Jabba the Hut," or "a deranged Stay Puft Marshmallow Man"? Are we living through a "recession" or a "depression"?
Recently, I've been groping for the precise word to characterize the zeitgeist of this (unfortunately) historic moment. I know it's not merely "demoralized." It's a something far more dread-laden -- a word I finally found during a visit last week to central Mexico.
Sitting atop the famed Pyramid of the Sun, I took in Teotihuacan -- the ancient metropolis outside Mexico City. Its weathered bricks and mortar look like many great archaeological wonders, except its annals include a harrowing asterisk: When the Aztecs originally discovered the site, it was abandoned, and nobody knows what happened to its inhabitants. As such, the ruins feel like monuments to apocalypse.
That's the term that popped into my mind as I baked in the Mexican sun -- "apocalypse": a phenomenon whose signs are everywhere these days.
Iraq bleeds from unending strife, while Israelis and Palestinians appear intent on annihilating each other. Pakistan just released A.Q. Khan, the scientist who delivered nuclear secrets to North Korea -- the country that's again threatening long-range missile tests. Colombia's civil war rages, and "great news" in Mexico is President Felipe Calderon announcing that drug cartels haven't totally taken over the country.
In America, our apocalyptic symbols are usually subtler -- the birth of octuplets or a restaurant chain creating a "Chicago Seven" pizza that consumerizes a renowned court case into a fast-food dish. But Wall Street and Washington exhibit a more overt Sodom and Gomorrah quality of late, to the point where even business magazines like Portfolio are invoking the A word.
It's not just the economic turbulence or the corruption that evokes this new darkness -- all that's been around for a while. It's the "I feel fine" obliviousness of R.E.M.'s cataclysmic ballad -- the aggressively defiant, adamantly proud ignorance that marks history's end times.
As wages stagnate in a nation whose median household income is $50,000 a year, one financial executive tells reporters that bankers "can't live on $150,000 to $180,000." Another bemoans efforts to restrict CEO pay by saying that "$500,000 is not a lot of money" -- and the New York Times chimes in by insisting that it's true, "Half a million a year can go very fast."
Similarly, as lawmakers hand banks trillions of taxpayer dollars, Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., complains that Congress has gotten "very little done to help the financial sector," and Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., says America should be most worried that "we're running out of rich people." Meanwhile, reporter Rick Santelli is billed as a populist hero for standing amid wealthy commodities traders and telling CNBC's viewers that people being thrown out of their homes are "losers."
Hollywood, our cultural mirror, reflects this back as a simultaneous mix of hedonism and fatalism -- an MTV beach party at the end of the world. During this economic crisis, we're given "Confessions of a Shopaholic" -- a comedy film that glorifies overborrowing and overspending. We'll soon be fed the final season of "Lost," a television show whose Benetton models stumble onto a mystery that might destroy the planet. And then it's on to a film version of "The Road" -- Cormac McCarthy's fable about cannibalism at the end of humanity.
Apocalypse ... it seems so biblical, but suddenly feels so now. And if we don't quickly wake up and turn things around, we will be left to mutter Col. Kurtz's despondent whisper: "The horror ... the horror."
David Sirota is the bestselling author of the books "Hostile Takeover" (2006) and "The Uprising" (2008). He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future. Find his blog at OpenLeft.com or e-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: Col on Mar 9, 2009 6:05 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes people talk about it as if it's taboo to face the reality because it is just so damn overwhelmingly sad. We don't want to bring one another down.I feel the worst when I think about my grandsons. I'd give up my life to have them have a happy future on the beautiful earth.
I never thought much of the idea of heaven. Like Thoreau, I believe, "Heaven is under our feet." I am a true earthling, and it breaks my heart to see that we are like cancer on the Earth. We are turning it into Mars.
So, how do we live? Not like the people mentioned in David's essay. Excesses are not the answer, although my friend told me to gather my pleasures while I may. I think he was hitting on me. What a great new line.
I spend as much time as possible with my family and friends. I'm not sure we will be able to drive to see one another in the future, so I see them while I can. I am grateful for every minute. When my mom was dying everything had a heightened quality. It's like that now with my family.
I'm in nature as much as possible, and I'm grateful for every creature, for the soil, the rivers and creeks, for the oceans, and mountains that greedy fools are blowing up,for every plant, even poison ivy. The rocks will survive.
I go to AA so that I'm not going to be useless to my family when they will need me, and so I can clearly see all the wonders around me.
I pray and meditate. I read the scriptures of all religions. I hope.
I volunteer at a hospice,and I just volunteered to work at a soup kitchen as my hero Dorothy Day did in the depression.
I create. I'm a poet. I take pleasure in the work, and it helps me to write about the sacred earth, and the people on it.
I play guitar and sing with other people, just like people did in the depression. Music helped to keep them going.
There is a saying attributed to James Dean, "Dream as if you will live forever. Live as though you will die today."
Maybe there will be some miracle, and we will all look back on this time as some of us older ones do about bomb drills. Maybe we will say, "Thank God, that was a
close one!" But it does not seem that people are willing to face this and make changes.
It sounds cliche, but I try to stay in the moments that are still good. I want my life to have meaning, and I stay deeply grateful.
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Posted by: Farasien on Mar 10, 2009 11:11 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Class was silent for a long count of 10 when I did.
It hit me back then that things were screwed up at the base of everything- not just the fringes, as one party or the other would have everyone believe. Sometime earlier than my age, something had happened to the methods by which society itself functioned. This then translated into every sector of society and began to rot. The government showed it by what I stated above. Economics showed it by making promises legal tender and the ever-increasing leveraged bets that people would never figure out how bad things actually were. Like the days of the Roman empire, we revel in corruption and treat pain as a hot commodity and look in shock at anyone who would dare to suggest we all have some measure of responsibility to each other and to the world we live in. We elected a man to our highest office who promises to change things for the better, and yet whose actions- while pretty and occasionally populist, do not truly address the underlying rot beneath the veneer of prosperity that the PR firms working furiously for the government try to convince us is the whole of our way of life. We put a man in prison for growing a cannabis plant, yet let true criminals like Maddoff literally negotiate the terms of his own punishment-if he gets any at all.
As I see it, the only way out of the whole mess is to address the base issues causing all the havoc- inequality, classism and the root of our way of life, which is, in a word, greed. If Obama really wanted to fix the problems in the USA, he faces a choice- he has to screw someone over. He has 2 choices in who gets it- he can either continue as bu$h did and screw the base people of the nation or be true to American ideals where everyone is equal- he can screw (back) the ultra-wealthy and powerful, the corrupt businesses and wall street with severe, irrevocable and ultra-tight regulations. If he screws the people as bush did, he's going to end up in the midst of a revolution, eventually. If he screws the people causing the real problems, he won't be invited to many wall street parties, he'll be demonized (more) in the press, but he'll restore america. I despair of him doing the right thing though- after all, his campaign was financed by... the drug companies, the oil companies and the banks who are currently robbing us all blind.
So much for hope. It was a nice country while it lasted.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Col on Mar 9, 2009 6:05 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes people talk about it as if it's taboo to face the reality because it is just so damn overwhelmingly sad. We don't want to bring one another down.I feel the worst when I think about my grandsons. I'd give up my life to have them have a happy future on the beautiful earth.
I never thought much of the idea of heaven. Like Thoreau, I believe, "Heaven is under our feet." I am a true earthling, and it breaks my heart to see that we are like cancer on the Earth. We are turning it into Mars.
So, how do we live? Not like the people mentioned in David's essay. Excesses are not the answer, although my friend told me to gather my pleasures while I may. I think he was hitting on me. What a great new line.
I spend as much time as possible with my family and friends. I'm not sure we will be able to drive to see one another in the future, so I see them while I can. I am grateful for every minute. When my mom was dying everything had a heightened quality. It's like that now with my family.
I'm in nature as much as possible, and I'm grateful for every creature, for the soil, the rivers and creeks, for the oceans, and mountains that greedy fools are blowing up,for every plant, even poison ivy. The rocks will survive.
I go to AA so that I'm not going to be useless to my family when they will need me, and so I can clearly see all the wonders around me.
I pray and meditate. I read the scriptures of all religions. I hope.
I volunteer at a hospice,and I just volunteered to work at a soup kitchen as my hero Dorothy Day did in the depression.
I create. I'm a poet. I take pleasure in the work, and it helps me to write about the sacred earth, and the people on it.
I play guitar and sing with other people, just like people did in the depression. Music helped to keep them going.
There is a saying attributed to James Dean, "Dream as if you will live forever. Live as though you will die today."
Maybe there will be some miracle, and we will all look back on this time as some of us older ones do about bomb drills. Maybe we will say, "Thank God, that was a
close one!" But it does not seem that people are willing to face this and make changes.
It sounds cliche, but I try to stay in the moments that are still good. I want my life to have meaning, and I stay deeply grateful.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Farasien on Mar 10, 2009 11:11 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Class was silent for a long count of 10 when I did.
It hit me back then that things were screwed up at the base of everything- not just the fringes, as one party or the other would have everyone believe. Sometime earlier than my age, something had happened to the methods by which society itself functioned. This then translated into every sector of society and began to rot. The government showed it by what I stated above. Economics showed it by making promises legal tender and the ever-increasing leveraged bets that people would never figure out how bad things actually were. Like the days of the Roman empire, we revel in corruption and treat pain as a hot commodity and look in shock at anyone who would dare to suggest we all have some measure of responsibility to each other and to the world we live in. We elected a man to our highest office who promises to change things for the better, and yet whose actions- while pretty and occasionally populist, do not truly address the underlying rot beneath the veneer of prosperity that the PR firms working furiously for the government try to convince us is the whole of our way of life. We put a man in prison for growing a cannabis plant, yet let true criminals like Maddoff literally negotiate the terms of his own punishment-if he gets any at all.
As I see it, the only way out of the whole mess is to address the base issues causing all the havoc- inequality, classism and the root of our way of life, which is, in a word, greed. If Obama really wanted to fix the problems in the USA, he faces a choice- he has to screw someone over. He has 2 choices in who gets it- he can either continue as bu$h did and screw the base people of the nation or be true to American ideals where everyone is equal- he can screw (back) the ultra-wealthy and powerful, the corrupt businesses and wall street with severe, irrevocable and ultra-tight regulations. If he screws the people as bush did, he's going to end up in the midst of a revolution, eventually. If he screws the people causing the real problems, he won't be invited to many wall street parties, he'll be demonized (more) in the press, but he'll restore america. I despair of him doing the right thing though- after all, his campaign was financed by... the drug companies, the oil companies and the banks who are currently robbing us all blind.
So much for hope. It was a nice country while it lasted.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
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