November 02, 2010
The Phantom Left
Chris Hedges in Dandelion Salad:
The loss of a radical left in American politics has been catastrophic. The left once harbored militant anarchist and communist labor unions, an independent, alternative press, social movements and politicians not tethered to corporate benefactors. But its disappearance, the result of long witch hunts for communists, post-industrialization and the silencing of those who did not sign on for the utopian vision of globalization, means that there is no counterforce to halt our slide into corporate neofeudalism. This harsh reality, however, is not palatable. So the corporations that control mass communications conjure up the phantom of a left. They blame the phantom for our debacle. And they get us to speak in absurdities.
The phantom left took a central role on the mall this weekend in Washington. It had performed admirably for Glenn Beck, who used it in his own rally as a lightning rod to instill anger and fear. And the phantom left proved equally useful for the comics Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, who spoke to the crowd wearing red-white-and-blue costumes. The two comics evoked the phantom left, as the liberal class always does, in defense of moderation, which might better be described as apathy. If the right wing is crazy and if the left wing is crazy, the argument goes, then we moderates will be reasonable. We will be nice. Exxon and Goldman Sachs, along with predatory banks and the arms industry, may be ripping the guts out of the country, our rights—including habeas corpus—may have been revoked, but don’t get mad. Don’t be shrill. Don’t be like the crazies on the left.
“Why would you work with Marxists actively subverting our Constitution or racists and homophobes who see no one’s humanity but their own?” Stewart asked. “We hear every damn day about how fragile our country is—on the brink of catastrophe—torn by polarizing hate, and how it’s a shame that we can’t work together to get things done. But the truth is we do. We work together to get things done every damn day. The only place we don’t is here [in Washington] or on cable TV.”
The rally delivered a political message devoid of reality or content.
More here.
Posted by S. Abbas Raza at 04:47 AM | Permalink






















Comments
Wow, I actually felt the wind from Hedges' missing the point so hard. I'll make this short and simple:
1. Stewart is not a political leader. He has never advocated any political position, and did not do so at the rally.
2. The point of the thing was to stick a sharpened finger into the eye of the media, particularly Fox. His citations of the nearly nonexistent radical left were a smokescreen; this was all about shaming the media, and
3. to show them that there is a very large market for intellectual honesty in news reporting, and that a big slice of the country knows them for the craven hypocrites they are.
4. To repeat, the rally was *not* a political event; it was about the systemic deficiencies and distortions of the industry that transmits politics to the public.
Posted by: Loxy Bagel | Nov 2, 2010 1:52:27 PM
To the "phantom left" can be added Chomsky and Bill Maher, both of whom are in denial about the government lies regarding 9/11. They are also known at gatekeepers of the left.
Posted by: J.Hawkins | Nov 2, 2010 4:29:30 PM
'Television, the drug of the Nation
Breeding ignorance...'
Posted by: overkill | Nov 3, 2010 3:48:05 AM
@Loxy claiming this event was NOT framed as a quasi-political event is absurd.
We are so hoodwinked by our fast food McMedia that we now blindly accept Colbert and Stewart as political commentators...to wit: Obama's appearance in it a few weeks ago as some way of affecting the vote on Nov 2.
Posted by: anechoic | Nov 3, 2010 11:23:04 AM
I thought Mark Ames's comments on the rally were incisive --
"It’s the final humiliating undoing of Enlightenment Idealism that made Liberalism possible–imagine if Jefferson, Diderot, Montesquieu, Madison et al reduced the entire Enlightenment’s struggle against the old feudal order to “I’m against the monarchy because the monarchy’s stupid…but then again, Rousseau makes a fool of himself with his Romanticism, and Tom Paine is so serious with his ‘Rights of Man’, the Revolutionaries are just as crazy as the Monarchists, so rather than join either side and risk opening myself to mockery, I’m just going to stand back and laugh at them all and say, ‘Really? Independence? Everyone is created equal and has the right to pursue happiness? Really, TJ? You sure you want to say that about Bluebeard? Really?” [LAUGH TRACK]…"
http://exiledonline.com/the-rally-to-restore-vanity-generation-x-celebrates-its-homeric-struggle-against-lameness/
Posted by: Will | Nov 5, 2010 8:49:55 PM
Another dictum? "Nobody has ever changed their mind because of a giant papier-mache' protest-puppet"
Posted by: Carlos | Nov 6, 2010 10:32:52 AM
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