Don't you love farce?
My fault, I fear
I thought that you'd want what I want
Sorry my dear
But where are the clowns?
Quick, send in the clowns
Don't bother they're here
I haven’t posted anything for several days. I have remained stuck on a couple of topics,
one of which I will attempt to address here.
This will be a somewhat rambling post; I have several seemingly
disparate thoughts jumping on top of each other as if they belong
together. Who am I to argue?
This post represents my attempt to make some sense of this –
otherwise I will have to face the reality that the voices in my head are
winning.
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I didn’t watch any of the recent Republican primary
debate. I saw clips, read bits and
pieces. With every exposure, I was
struck by the entertainment value.
I don’t mean the level of conversation – stupidity dominates
all political conversation in the US; this is true for all candidates on that
stage just as it will be true for all candidates when the Democrats take the
stage.
I mean entertainment value.
These debates always offer something of entertainment, but this one
seemed different. No doubt, Donald Trump
on stage had much to do with this. Something
like “you’re fired” and political
theatre find that they are the last two left at the bar at 2 AM, if you get
my meaning. Perhaps we witnessed the
product of this liaise?
Cheering – it reminded me of the staged show that is the NFL
draft (apologies to my non-US readers and to those readers with better things
to do with their time than take note of another virtually meaningless exercise
meant for distracting the masses).
Entertainment of a certain type.
Just like the audience in the NFL draft, no one in the
audience for the debate knew much of anything about what was being said by
those on the stage. They cheered and
booed according to the script given to them by some guy on a talk show or on
the TV; they cheered and booed according to their gut – like an animal in the
wild driven by nothing but hunger, bordering starvation.
It really didn’t matter if they understood it anyway; those
on the stage at best (or worst) had the confidence of ignorant certainty and at
worst (or best) had the soul of an indifferent liar.
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It is virtually impossible to keep up with the mess that is
US foreign policy. It was so much
simpler when we only had to keep track of the lies told about the Soviet Union
(ah, the good old days). But now?
Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Egypt, Somalia, Syria, Iran,
Yemen, Pakistan, Ukraine. China and
Russia. Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Israel – supposedly
US allies all – are they aiding or fighting ISIS? Where did ISIS come from, anyway? Are ISIS and al-Qaeda in cahoots or are they
enemies? Iran (an enemy of the US) is
supporting Iraq (a mess created by the US) against ISIS (supposedly an enemy of
the US). The Kurds fight ISIS and are
fought by Turkey. Syria fights ISIS and
is attacked by…the US, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Israel.
The enemy of my enemy is both my friend and my enemy all at
the same time. Even with a scorecard, I can’t
keep track of the players.
Every “solution” brings on three new problems. It is easy to conclude that new problems are
the objective. Maybe. But what if no one is in charge? More precisely, what if the inmates are
running the asylum – the bureaucracy is running on auto-pilot.
Even more precisely: what if the bureaucracies are each running separately, in their own directions
and on their own autopilots? Many
different centers of capability – different warlords in charge of their own
publicly-funded private war-making machines, each hiding behind the cover of a
GS pay grade? Each supporting or
fighting against entities of their own choosing for their own reasons.
I guess it is possible that there is a strategy of “out of
chaos, order.” More often, out of chaos
comes more chaos; so far, it has occurred this way. I suppose either outcome is satisfactory to some
sub-set of the countless factions that have virtually sovereign string-pulling
power.
In the end, I don’t think the “what if” matters. There is a real mess, and it is obvious to
any thinking person – those capable of critical thinking in the general public (I
met one once) as well as those capable of critical thinking in both the US
government and (more importantly for where I am headed…I think) in various
foreign governments of US allies (and others) – that the actions of the United
States are directly contributory to the chaos.
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The chaos is easier for many to ignore when it remains over there. This problem was solved long ago in the
US. No draft and no tax increases means over there has no impact to over here.
But for Europeans, over
there is now over here. Daily, by the thousands, the over there are pouring in from North
Africa and the Middle East. It is
supposed to be hundreds of thousands sooner than later.
This is to say nothing about the chaos brought on by the
religion that is the Euro – a side note for this post, but certainly
contributory toward the desire to ease the tension brought on by the chaos. The Euro – a key component to centralization
and hegemony; maybe not such a side note for this post.
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Obama was supposed to be different. Eight years ago, they cheered him by the
hundreds of thousands in Germany. I seem
to recall he went on a return visit a year or so ago. He played to a much smaller crowd.
Call it “The Audacity to Tout the Audacity of Hope” tour. They couldn’t give tickets away for free,
apparently.
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The US finally came to the table regarding Iran (Hooray
Barack). The US, along with a handful of
other governments, came together to negotiate a treaty regarding Iran’s nuclear
program. Many in the US think it’s a bad
deal – including all of those on the aforementioned Republican stage.
John Kerry offers
his thoughts to those in the US who might consider rejecting the treaty:
…Secretary of State John F. Kerry
said U.S. allies were "going to look at us and laugh" if the United
States were to abandon the deal.
"It's not going to happen
overnight. But I'm telling you, there's a huge antipathy out there" to
U.S. leadership, Kerry said. "There's a big bloc out there, folks, that
isn't just sitting around waiting for the United States to tell them what to
do." Kerry was referring to efforts by Russia and China to join forces
with nonaligned powers in a public question-and-answer session at Reuters.
"When I hear a senator, a
congressman stand up and say 'We should get a better deal' - that is not going
to happen. If everybody thinks 'Oh, no, we're just tough. . . . we can force
people. . . . America is strong enough, our banks are tough enough, we can just
bring the hammer down and force people to do what we want to do,'" Kerry
said, according to The Washington Post.
Kerry, like a blind squirrel…well, you know the rest. Maybe instead like a stopped clock – I seem
to recall he was right once before, something about the Vietnam War.
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Patrick
L. Smith at Salon is quick to point out the self-destruction of the
(surprise, surprise) Republican Party.
The headline speaks volumes: “Donald Trump’s biggest crime is his
honesty: How he exposes the sickening rot at the core of the GOP.” We can only hope.
I won’t take seriously what he takes seriously – that there
is, or at least was, something noble about American political discourse. I also won’t cite the many points on which we
agree regarding the Republican discourse (such as it is), as I have already
said it above. Instead…
Put any one of these people in
office and Americans will forfeit their chance to participate constructively in
a self-evidently emergent world order, to escape a past that now haunts us, to
act abroad out of something other than fear.
Forfeiting the chance to participate in the emergent world
order. Yes, of course.
Being Salon, Smith points to the forfeiting of Bush II for
background while ignoring the eight-year forfeiting that Obama has done (other
than…finally…Iran). As if you needed me
to point this out.
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Not to leave the democrats untouched…Black Lives Matter offers
a very overt example of the end game for the politics of social justice. Because, brown, female, elderly, young, gay,
trans, bi, union, illegal immigrant, and government employee lives matter as
well.
When the most avowed socialist – a champion for the cause of
every one of these supposedly disadvantaged groups – can’t get a word in edgewise,
what hope is there for any kind of social-justice world?
None. But every
(non-left) libertarian knows this already.
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And so? I am not
sure. There is a thread running through
all of this. I am still not sure I can
put my finger on it.
The US government has been the focal point for world
government by what is referred to as an Anglo-American elite – of this there
can be little doubt. It has been true since
World War II and it has been envisioned since the turn of the last century.
In our current time, when all is said and done it seems to
me that the US government and those who desire to be the public face of same are
doing everything possible to ensure one outcome: further movement against US
hegemony.
Perhaps this is an unavoidable outcome: the tools required
for global hegemony will also bring on its failure. The carte blanche afforded by 911 was
over-drawn, as was certain to be the case
Every action by the US government is seen by many important international
players as reason to reduce both subservience to and partnership with said US
government. The spectacle that has
become American presidential politics – spectacularly witnessed in the recent
debate – can scarcely be dismissed.
Clowns aren’t helpful when you want to rule the world. Your desired followers are too busy laughing.
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Returning to Sondheim.
Apparently, I am slightly misapplying his reference to clowns. I want it applied to those on the debate stage. He suggests otherwise:
I get a lot of letters over the
years asking what the title means and what the song's about; I never thought it
would be in any way esoteric. I wanted to use theatrical imagery in the song,
because she's an actress, but it's not supposed to be a circus [...] [I]t's a
theater reference meaning "if the show isn't going well, let's send in the
clowns"; in other words, "let's do the jokes." I always want to
know, when I'm writing a song, what the end is going to be, so "Send in
the Clowns" didn't settle in until I got the notion, "Don't bother,
they're here", which means that "We are the fools."
I guess we can both be right.
“””””It is virtually impossible to keep up with the mess that is US foreign policy.”””
ReplyDeleteFrom the results it appears that the policy of the last few US administrations is to funnel as much wealth as possible to the international financial system, allow the most radical people to overthrow governments and create such chaos that millions of third worlders flood into Western countries.
“”””Even more precisely: what if bureaucracies are each running separately””””
This was shown in Iraq where none of the bureaucracies, State, Defense, Intelligence wanted to take responsibility for “nation building’. State finally put up Bremer, but nobody worked together and nobody had a real plan. Even if any plan was possible since the only thing holding Iraq together was a dictator and we got rid of him.
Or in Ukraine where a obscure unit of the EU who had the job of adding members to the EU managed to get an agreement with Ukraine even though such an agreement would not be good for either Ukraine or EU. Under the agreement Ukraine would have to spend billions it did not have to “reform’ all parts of its country while EU was already strained by previous additions and had no time or money for Ukraine. But the bureaucracies marched on and got an agreement which has led to the present mess.
As to the Republicans, the only time they win elections is when they manage (often by lying) to fire up their base. But the Republican leadership hates their base and can’t even consistently lie to get their support.
And then there are the Democrats who in the pursuit of minorities of all race, economics, ideology, personnel behavior that they have split themselves into a mess of competing demands only held together by their envy and hatred of the evil whites who themselves are becoming a minority in their own lands.
And both parties show how owned they are by international finance when with all the problems in the country they can only come together to push a sight unseen thousand pages ‘free trade” agreement which even they admit will not reduce trade barriers much but instead solidify the financiers rights around the world
I write as an epistemologist:
ReplyDeleteOne of my two main complaints with religion is the promotion of faith as a virtue. It is not a virtue. It is the most fundamental intellectual error. Throughout this post by Senor Mosquito, I note instance after instance of humans pretending to know far more than they could possible know.
Currently, my favorite example is the "Climate Change" debate, where both sides blab in confident detail about the entire earth and the uncountable factors adding up to its unmeasurable climatic totality.
None of these debaters has actually measured anything. They weigh the utterly emotional "convincing factor" of some article they have read and then, on faith, decide that they know something about the entire earth and its climate.
Like Christians and Jews and Muslims pretending that they actually know something about the origins of the universe, along with cosmologists pretending that they can tell you all about the 14th nanosecond after the Big Bang erupted, and archeologists pretending that from a shard, they can tell you about the mystical beliefs of humans who lived 40 thousand years ago, or some politician pretending to know what "Americans want", humans love to pretend that they know what they cannot know.
Whether it is foreign policy, the economy, what is best taught to other people's children (and how much their parents should be forced to pay for it), all of government is faith - faith in authority - in the ability of certain individuals to know far more about everything and everyone than is possible.
Government - and its victims - are submerged in a vast, slow motion, epistemological train wreck. And now, equipped with its GIGO computers, it is utterly doomed.
I think this is what Senor Mosquito is noticing, in example after example, though he may not accept my particular summation.
I think the salvation of the world will not begin until (at least) a sizable minority admit to all they do not know, and reject - entirely - the notion that they do - or even can - know what is best for others, beyond liberty and property.
Intellectually, faith is the original sin, and it is a very deadly sin. It is the sin of pretending to know what you do not. It is lying about knowledge.
John Howard
Mr. Howard
DeleteThank you for the thoughtful comment.
“I think the salvation of the world will not begin until (at least) a sizable minority admit to all they do not know, and reject - entirely - the notion that they do - or even can - know what is best for others, beyond liberty and property.”
I see no conflict between this statement and the concept of faith. It is only what one does with his faith that causes conflict. I don’t care if someone wants to believe that too many cows are causing the earth to warm catastrophically. Just don’t tell me I have to stop eating beef.
Faith can be lived fully in comport with the non-aggression principle. For example:
Matthew 10:14: If anyone will not welcome you or listen to your words, leave that home or town and shake the dust off your feet.
Easy as pie.
Another example: I see the salvation of the world coming from elsewhere. You and I need not fight over this.
I won't pretend to know the common theme here, but my first reaction is to see all these things as signs of the last graspings of a dying empire - I know, no great insight that. The bitter irony is that Osama bin Laden's goals seem to have succeeded spectacularly.
ReplyDeleteI see the endgame of all of this contrived chaos as the ultimate destruction of the west and western hegemony in order to finally usher in the much anticipated New World Order. The New World Order it's not the Old World Order of the Anglo American Empire, but a multi polar order run by the UN and brought about by the "benevolent" BRICS. Like a thief in the night, the world and even the remaining members of the western world will welcome this change, and *poof* - Jefferson's dream is dead. China is the model, if that gives you any idea of the level of freedom to be enjoyed under this UN lead New World Order. Lovers of freedom and western civilization would be well advised to resist this world order and attempt to regain control of their respective ships that have veered dangerously off course (intentionally, and through design). You see, the US and all of her bible clinging gun owning citizenry are the biggest stumbling block on the path. Stay strong Europeans, and resist. Our children are counting on it.
ReplyDeleteF U
DeleteEverbody fear the enemies of the West. Whatever. The world will finally breeze a sigh of relief when that bastard gets buried.