human being on Wed, 23 Apr 2003 10:07:37 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> The Second Superpower (FWD) |
the parts of this essay which made a lot of sense were the need to organize and the need to 'inform' the electorate, the latter which is exploited in the total control and ownership of media, protecting it from outside views. (TV screen replacing walls of a guarded city). the part that does not make any sense is trying to beat professional politicians at their own game, then the Neoconservatives at that, in that it is refined for a very particular environment (it seems) which is to the benefit of those who play by those rules, and agree to them. power may not be the way to truth, and that is both politics as they are, and mass organizing around ideological, sometimes vague and utopic policy positions demonstrates the break-down of the checks and balances, both for public governance and for proposed rule by NGO guardians, who have the pedigree much like those who are already running the ship into the rocks, without (again) any checks and balances on the policies. an environmental policy could easily become fascist if it did not take into account opposing views, and it could also destroy an economy (if one is able to exist in the future) by ignoring things outside the purview of the ideology. there is no indication that the writer acknowledges these as basic issues, and instead goes towards a falsely-radical stance of mass orchestrated demonstrations that will accomplish chaos and crackdown but will not have cohesion, organizationally, for people, with this approach. it is oppositional, great for card-carrying members for culture-credits, but it is naive as hell. military superpower? open or any subversion at the level of siding with the EU while inside the USA (treason and sedition, anyone?) and having this as a platform position on any issue here and there, whatever the US does needs to be worked against, at its own game-- rather than switching the hopeless logic of competition that is easily outclassed (military crackdown, anyone?) and hard to even comment on. that many people may buy into this viewpoint is also troublesome, as other actions are needed that are not insulated by mass groups of self-satisfying symbolic gestures. such as: say there is an election in the USA in 2004, which there is. and, the game plan is opened up, the president, an avid runner, is going to use a similar strategy to win a second term by being short on content, defining the policy stage (war, terrorism, defense, and patriotism, at ground-zero no less, in NYC). it may be in the last months of the campaign when it is ramped up. and the democrats (a party who should dissolve themselves and go independent, or, like Joseph Lieberman should, just call themselves Republicans finally and get it over with.) the democrats or anyone else could use this time to create a different policy agenda, one that is not an oppositional strategy (defeat the opposition) as much as it is to set the stage for better informed electorates and shaping issues. if it is that tax-cuts and medicare are the only issues on the table in 2004 it is because of apathy and misguided political strategies. and it is not party-based, democrats are as pathetic as republicans. it is that it is a losing battle to fight for 9 months for an incumbent and popular president, using their platform (Gore lost, for instance, not playing the cards that still await showing). it may get bad enough or a scandal may erupt (Energy Task Force anyone?) which shows things are not as they seem to the televised and newspapered mass mindset, but until public opinion sways, the issues stay the same unless there is a substantially different platform- not ants with global military power, but education, the environment, safety, health services, jobs, improvements that many are in their various constituencies fully prepared to better educate the public, and defend against the lame stonewallling over every and any issue other than tax-cuts and the improvement of the suburban lot, 'heart and soul'-mind for the bodies. though without 'checks and balances' and some organization it is easy to pick off issues, one by one, as irrelevant and ideological. yet if it is a common platform, it is no longer the same game. and this is where those planning on 2004 re-elections with false- advertising of the state of affairs would be challenged to adjust the far-right ideology, weaning moderates to issues that cannot simply remain to be ignored in a democracy (even if the President and his entourage believe their private world view encompasses the world itself, which then is a psychopathic condition and the person is not fit for holding public office- interpreting religious ideology or any- other, even progressive causes, can have the same inbred effect). for instance, with tax cuts. to be in opposition, and to weight the risks of winning versus the damage in losing, it seems that there is little chance to stop much. yet if 'tax cuts' were redefined, and a strategy co-opted the co-option, this could go to WPA-type of public programs and services, with some creative strategic thinking, and a change in the win-at-any-cost mindset, which is a losing strategy it should be apparent by now. yet, 'no tax-cuts' may be fought against as a strategy by politicians, and they will go through, it seems at some point likely, and in all the time preceding their passage or routing in the system, the populace could become better informed- not about tax-cuts, but about all the issues needing to be addressed by the citizenry, and to put any tax-cuts towards these needs. it nullifies the oppositional stance, co-opts it, and shapes it, and there is not a conservative ideologue who could win a public debate defending the estate tax to 300 million people in the USA versus health care. if 'tax cuts' and similar political verbiage remains under tight political control (and buy-in by the 'opposition' party, the pathetic democrats) then the issue will, in the end, be tax-cuts, and whatever gets through will be the winner's (more private) definition of tax-cuts, which screws everyone as there is no open-dealing, no checks and balances, and it is a numbers game until someone recodes the rules of engaging. it is psychological, it is not firstly about power, that is what the current policy approaches are, they are private, and why they consistently fail to change or challenge the course, and instead lead to a state of deadlock (shutting down of congress, say, or blocking this and that). until truth is the most important aspect, not absolute truth or some great reflective question answered on a hand-out flier, but the truth of the situation, the psychology of the situation needing to be dealt with, and how best to do this-- it is to be aggressive in cooperating, intra-group and person, a general identity which can be shared among the group (not a non-profit brand), and it is also scalable to issues large and small, while keeping a sense of the balance, that the ideas are as good as they are understood and renewed and questioned and being vague may be better than being too specific, to reach a wider constituency. pooling large resources for a simple policy platform may be better than trying to educate one issue at a time. it is at the level of policy platform that things are askew, on just about every issue, but it is also multifaceted, and it is never simply for or against, as that is not the condition of the problems. maybe things are dysfunctional, and this need to be conceded in education, in certain areas that are identifiable and improvable. by not ignoring the issues but dealing with what either are, or are perceive as being, problems one can take that and turn it towards a different path. to be all or nothing, when absolute power wields itself, nothing can stand in the way of the conquering of issues and the wrong strategy is as idiotic pursuing as are the destructive new laws themselves. if the global people, most people can be identified in a common class known as human beings, which, is more public at times than either 'people' or national identity, or religious definition (of even God, for instance, try Venn diagramming God as a super- set of human beings, and it does not work, it is the smaller set in that it is private and restricts the universal set of human beings). democrats or republicans, progressives or whatnot. being human is a global constituency, and by using the term one has to use a public logic or it is apparent that their words do not include the person reading, or hearing, the secular message, while directly challenging the privatized agenda. it is self-correcting and it is also undeniably the state of awareness in matters of policy now being ignored: global warming is not a political party or non- profit issue - it is an issue of mankind. (no). it is an issue for all of humanity. (closer, but can be localized, rhetorically). there is baggage with the word humans, as it is imperfect, but what is not, and so far there is no secular prophet nor thing to pin it down to, unless someone wants to dig up all the hidden humans roaming the vineyards in the dark of the night in northern california, that renamed themselves 'human being' or 'human' in the commune. the word, as a word, has been attempted to be portrayed as a private word and definition and it is disingenuous to portray it as such in relation to the rise of God and Man, etc, in this day, and compete for ideological perfect, and lose- hello dark ages. also, it is not the greatest desire of many people who may dedicate their lives to be compared to ants. it makes a problematic foodchain issue (and also, the secret occult knowledge: beware the anteaters! and just about everything else). a platform for defining oneself as a public citizenry living within nation-states in a global reordering, is capable of having both similarities and differences, and being able to co-process issues large and small from the vast inter-nets between various organizations - if they have checks and balances, and can deal with ambiguity diplomatically in cooperation, else it may be a win-lose competition and the system will defeat itself, as with language, as with psychological identity, as with politics, until a new order emerges to base commonality upon, and actions. issues such as: -- energy -- environment -- human rights for instance, if 'human rights' were an issue, and defined publicly in terms of human beings, there probably would not be an issue between types of governance, if human rights were observed in a dictatorship versus a democratic capitalistic society. each system would have to address the same core issues, while having variance in politics and economics, and possibly enhancing possibilities by having difference in the current monocultural system. versus an issue like 'education' which is somewhat different (even energy) as it is site-specific, per country, per state, per locality. it may be public, it may be private, it may be both, or has been both. this is like most every issue in many countries, there is difference. to ignore on a policy level the difference between the needs of one country versus another is part of the problem in private reasoning. on a political level, to be apolitical but still deal with policy it is possible to pursue a platform that any parties can adopt, and if it happens that currently those who are opposed embrace aspects it is still a victory for everyone, as change is towards the better of the directions. in cooperation this can happen, in competition it cannot. in saying this is what we (the public, the citizens) require addressing in matters of public policy, and to keep it on the scale of government, it is at least a chance of getting the message and the buzz going, instead of 'the movement' it is 'the platform', and it may give the political establishment the informed electorates needed to address changes on the mass scale. if one scoffs at this, consider the chances that a democratic president would be able to significantly change anything using the rhetoric and same private political dealings of the past, -- it will shut things down not open them up. unless it is just a new caeser that is to be desired. also, forms of government like 'democracy' have become a brand, and as such controllable by existing market forces. by having an open ream of ideas from which to give and take, a rough sketch of a better future which most all can see themselves living in (of 300 million people in the USA, say, young to old) then narrowing down the constituency into controllable demographic sectors will no longer work, organizing politics around non-profits and think- tanks, and not around people and ideas. that open-discussion is rare but was not in history (it seems) with long public dialogues on issues of platforms and policies, now they are sound-bites on stage-handled studio sets. while it was great to once see Naomi Kline on the PBS Newshour debating someone from the economist and single-handedly smashing the rhetorical flotsam usually pushed about without any serious friction, there need to be people on every show, in newspapers, all the time to get the message and ideas across, and if these are common issues and not overly specified or politicized (privatized, in essence) then it can become a platform, a series of policies, and not a meteorite of dying one-off's, or the salmon who die by the side of the stream as a dam has been put up and their efforts to get upstream end in their exhaustion without a chance of even making it available. if working together, not as a brand, not as a finite or even defined-by-an-issue constituency, then it may be easier to leverage the vast talents and skills that are available, by letting people use their own skills and innovate, which the article seemed to be going after, entrepreneurial in a sense of making things happen. there just needs to be some common start. and it is proposed it exists in language, ideas, psychology, and the recognition and action base upon these. consider the idea of a human union versus a specific union in the trades, and the scale. that is what is necessary for global identity and issues, it is proposed, based in common sense. not perfect sense, but the ability for checks and balances, based on public discourse, thinking, knowledge, experience, anomalous events, evenness, equal rights, on and on. it is sad to think that the elections will be haunting ground-zero, and probably the fire-and-brimstone preacher-man Graham will be there, inciting the public ghosts of 9/11 for the cause of the Neocon policy agenda, based on the manipulation of private emotions, fear, hatred, superiority, and demonization of the other for the gain of a very small few people at the cost of the world. it is not Bush that needs to be defeated, but the entire ideology needs to be put in its place as a relic of fringe and dangerous pursuit of power through all means possible. truth can defeat this. ask the preacher man who controls it. preacher men can be defeated when outclassed. ask humans. there is a public world that is serving a small privatized mind. and the world is held back by this, and the inability to deal with it, to self-correct, unless people are capable of changing, or if the decisions made are so catastrophic that this change occurs by default, after horrors so great that people have to change the basis for their basic assumptions and thus their beliefs. the logic of peace-through-war is illogical. it's not super-power with super-men and super-heroes, it's an internetworked truth between different peoples, peer-reviewed and self-correcting. at least this is one guess. together we decide. and indecision or inaction based on incompatible ideas results in big fish-kills. openness, transparency, checks and balances, policy platform. specific policy debates with a wide range of constituents, using a shared general approach (language, rhetoric, logic). win-win as is banned-speech from hipnet sector, describes it rather well. that is, not reinventing the world, but co-opting the co-optation. [this is written as a sketch, not an absolutist position of the idea.] -- On Saturday, April 19, 2003, at 04:45 PM, Elnor Buhard wrote: > one possible solution to the power imbalance.... question remains how > such an international nation could actually manifest its power > militarily, which seems to be the bottom line sadly enough..... eb > > > The Second Superpower Rears its Beautiful Head > > James F. Moore > > Berkman Center for Internet & Society > > Monday, March 31, 2003 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net