In the ranks of the exploiter class, the fat salaries of CEOs separate
them further from the general population of the consumer state (that
they take every opportunity to bamboozle) as the American public itself
grows fatter and fatter in body mass, vainly attempting to sate an
inner emptiness borne of their perceived helplessness before the
predation of corporate culture.
Concurrently, in Baghdad, the U.S. embassy, which, when completed, will
be the largest "diplomatic" compound on the planet is, in fact, an
inadvertent monument to the mindless colossus the U.S.A. has become.
The structure is as accurate as the art of architecture can be in its
depiction of the spirit of a nation's people. As big and bloated as our
national sense of exceptionalism, it stands in the so-called Green Zone
of Baghdad, shielding those who will be bunkered down within it not
only from the murderous madness unfolding outside its highly fortified
walls but from reality itself. A massive emblem of the arrogance of
power, the embassy is a testament to how the noxious vapors of cultural
self-deception can be made manifest in reinforced concrete, armed
watchtowers and razor wire.
Through it all, like some eternally slumbering Hindu deity, we
Americans dream these things into existence. Far from blameless, we
continue to allow the elites to exploit us; therefore, we enable and
sustain their titanic sense of entitlement. In turn, we accept their
paltry bribes and, as a result, our banal, selfish dreams have conjured
forth George Bush from the Zeitgeist. Ergo, Bush is a man whose
impenetrable narcissism is so grotesque and ringed with fortifications,
that all on his own he constitutes a walking analog of the American
embassy in Baghdad.
In addition, we Americans continue to believe our fables of righteous
power: Big is good, goes our John Wayne jack-off fantasy. Our leaders
must be large: Only Macmansion-like men, such as Mitt Romney, are
acceptable. We believe: Dennis Kucinich is too diminutive in physical
stature to be president with the length of his body being roughly the
size of Romney's head.
In turn, our national landscape is stretched to the breaking point:
Cluttered upon it, gigantic islands of garish light torment the night,
scouring away the stars, estranging us from imagination, empathy, and
eros, and leaving us only with the insatiable appetites of consumerism.
Thus, around the clock, inside enormous, under-inspected, industrial
slaughterhouses and meat processing plants, underpaid, benefit-bereft
workers ply their gruesome, monstrously cruel trade, then the butchered
wares are transported by way of brutal, double and triple-axle trailer,
diesel trucks over Stygian interstate highways to sepulchral
supermarkets and charnel house restaurant chains. Insuring, we
flesh-eating zombies are provided with all the water-bloated,
steroid-ridden meat and industrially farmed, pesticide-laquered
vegetables and starches The Cuisines Of The Living Dead we could
ever crave ... uum, uum, it's the Thanatotic yumminess of empire's end.
Try our convenient drive through window. Would you like us to
super-size your order of commodified death?
Hyperbolic ravings, you say. America is not a culture in love with death.
Let's see. Drawing upon just one example: The corpses of well over half
a million dead Iraqis testify otherwise. Moreover, the continuing Iraqi
resistance to our occupation speaks volumes as well. Yet still, most of
us cannot hear their elegy of outrage over the din created by the
parade of killer clowns that we have mistaken for the pageantry of
nationhood.
How does one slow this juggernaut of psychosis and curb these acts of
murder/suicide being perpetrated on a global scale? Truth is, we might
not be able to stop it, because this is what lies beneath our unlimited
sense of entitlement and self-defeating arrogance: a death-wish that
manifests itself as exceptionalism and may well destroy the nation by
means of imperial overreach which is, of course, the time-established
method by which empires dispose of themselves.
Further, this state of affairs is exacerbated by the narcissistic
insularity of our media elite. At the end of the day, it's their
tumescent egos that are distorting our societal discourse; their
vanities and attendant self-serving pronouncements are little more than
steaming cargos of horseshit, carried and delivered by
one-trick-jackasses jackasses endowed with the singular skill of
being able to read a teleprompter ... Fred Thompson, your agent is
calling: You have an important call from Washington, DC.
Notice this: The more permeating the rot becomes within the system's
structure the more huge and pervasive the edifice of media imagery will
grow β and the more trivial its content will become. The closer we
come to systemic collapse the more we will hear about celebrity
contretemps. Cretinous heiresses and shit-wit starlets, with shoddy
mechanisms of self-restraint, people the public imagination, because
they carry our infantilism, embody our collective carelessness, and, in
turn, suffer public humiliation, as we desperately attempt to displace,
upon them, the humiliation of our own daily existence within the
oppressive authoritarianism of the corporate state.
Correspondingly, there is a well-known (by those who care to look) link
between fascism and corporatism. To Mussolini, the two terms were
interchangeable. According to rumor, we defeated fascism, during the
first half of the 20th century. Yet, at present, we spend our days
sustaining a liberty-loathing, soul-enervating corpocracy. To live
under corporatism is, in ways large and small, to be a
fascist-in-training. Everyday, hour by hour, the exploitive,
neo-liberal concept of work devours more and more of our lives. As a
consequence, the true self within is crushed to dust and what remains
rises as cultural squalls of low-level fear, with its concomitant need
for constant distraction. As all the while, the psyches of the well-off
(financially, that is) become inflated, gaudy and ugly; in short,
internally, they become human versions of mcmansions.
Freedom is a microcosm of the forces of evolution engendered by living
in the midst of life a mode of being that apprehends and is
transformed by the beauty, sorrow, and wit of the world. Conversely,
authoritarian societies are collectives of accomplished liars and
lickspittle ciphers, where one must conceal one's essential self at all
costs and the soul falls into atrophy.
To what extent does authoritarian rule diminish both the individual and
a nation? Simply, take a look around you and witness the keening
wasteland our nation has become. Furthermore, our emptiness cannot be
filled by any amount of wealth or power. This is the reason the obscene
amounts of mammon acquired by the privileged classes is never can
never be enough to satisfy them, for their inner abyss is boundless.
In a similar vein, no amount of killing can sate a psychopath's
emptiness. Dick Cheney will scowl all the way to the boneyard, hoping
he can ascend to heaven by scaling the mountainous pile of corpses he's
responsible for placing there.
In folk stories, when giants are about, drought and famine withers the
land and starvation stalks its people. Accordingly, the ruthless
giantism inherent to the Corporate/Military/Mass Media state has
withered our inner lives, blighted our landscape, and left us powerless
before a huge, demeaning system that devours our time, health and
humanity.
The bone-grinding giants of the American corporate and political
classes have shot the Golden Goose full of growth hormones, enclosed
her in an industrial coop, and hoarded her voluminous output of eggs.
Yet, nothing satisfies them.
Meanwhile, online, we struggle in a Jack in the Beanstalk Insurgency,
hoping that from things as tiny and seemingly trivial as mere beans
our postings, exchanges and periodic meet-ups the fall of tyrannical
giants might begin.
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