Please.....
Aug. 15th, 2007 09:59 amAll through the 90s I was an optimist. And a bit of a New Ager. I thought we were on the brink of something- of some big leap forward in human consciousness. I wasn't sure if it was going to happen because of scientific advance or because lots of advanced souls were reincarnating to push things along or because the aliens were about to intervene but- whatever- I had great expectations of the 21st century.
And then along came Karl Rove and people like him and stomped all over the tender young shoots.
And I went from being a starchild to a grouchy misanthrope.
A pity really.
These first seven years of the century have been pretty damn awful.
But Rove's gone and he's gone because the mix of cynical machiavellianism and crass materialism and brain-dead religious hoodoo which he stood for has been tested and found wanting.
Is it foolish to hope for change?
If I'm lucky (?) I could have another 30 years on this planet. That's a long time. Please let it be about something other than stupid wars for stupid oil and the icecaps melting.
And then along came Karl Rove and people like him and stomped all over the tender young shoots.
And I went from being a starchild to a grouchy misanthrope.
A pity really.
These first seven years of the century have been pretty damn awful.
But Rove's gone and he's gone because the mix of cynical machiavellianism and crass materialism and brain-dead religious hoodoo which he stood for has been tested and found wanting.
Is it foolish to hope for change?
If I'm lucky (?) I could have another 30 years on this planet. That's a long time. Please let it be about something other than stupid wars for stupid oil and the icecaps melting.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 12:07 pm (UTC)Amen. I feel like that about so much.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 02:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 02:34 pm (UTC)I think Rove is excellent at what he does--he's very smart, and he understands the value of sincerity. I think those are good qualities.
Bush is his master? I don't think so. But I also think that his resignation has everything to do with loyalty.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 02:37 pm (UTC)But there was something I just read recently that suggested the younger Rove had an attitude towards George W. that was little short of hero-worship.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 03:00 pm (UTC)Wow! I find that astonishing. Partly because I don't think Rove is capable of worship, but also because of the object of worship. I do think that Rove saw an opportunity in the young Shrublet, but I can't believe that it is more than that.
I always sound so cynical when I talk to you!:)
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 04:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 01:50 pm (UTC)We can blame Rove - and probably should - taking some heart in the fact that the junta governing Washington for the past few years is on its way out. The bad news is, the candidates shaping up to win the next presidential election are likely to be crusading interventionists as well, only promising to be more effective at maintaining world hegemony and protecting Israeli interests than Bush. The public forgets that Clinton had his own little war of choice years before Little Boots took up residence in the White House. The precedent for preemptive military strikes and deceiving Congress for the sake of remaining in power was already in place.
The good news, if one can call it that, is that the US's present role in the world is unsustainable:
Learn from the fall of Rome, US warned
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 02:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 06:59 pm (UTC)What concerns me is that too many US politicians pay lipservice to the idea of global hegemony and the illusory benefits of projecting military force around the world. Too many on the right believe we should pick up some crappy little country every so often and throw it against the wall, just to show everyone who's boss. A core element on the left believes we really should go tear-assing around the globe fomenting law and order and prosecuting the greater good. To my mind, whichever wing of the war party wins, the result will be the same: expenditures of blood and treasure abroad and restriction of personal freedom at home.
The pro-war lobbies in this country are more powerful than President Little Boots himself. Dick Cheney is living proof. I sometimes think that if Europe, the UK, and other interested parties, really wanted to help both themselves and the US, they would fund politically independent anti-war lobbies of their own.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 09:02 am (UTC)If the USA had used its superpower status wisely- and in accordance with the ideals of the founding fathers- what a happy world this would be!
no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 01:12 pm (UTC)So, with all due respect, I disagree. Corruption and ignorance have always been with us, bundled along with the rest of the human condition. These are problems that face every attempt at good government anywhere in the world and in any epoch. I honestly believe that once we accept the idea that the US could or should be a "superpower" and that this status could or should be used wisely, we are already well on the road to empire, whether intentionally or not. Our founding fathers for the most part would have thought such ideas anathema to the principles of a healthy and free republic. Once the US went abroad in search of monsters to slay, as Madison put it, I think we sealed our doom.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 02:35 pm (UTC)I like the passage from Jefferson. Some things never change.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 07:17 pm (UTC)The Nazis were an extraordinary circumstance that the nascent American imperium helped create. From that perspective, I don't see how you owe the US anything.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 08:00 pm (UTC)I'll have to think about it.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 09:21 pm (UTC)I have been thinking on what you said about corruption among the political class here. Since Twain had his laugh at the expense of Congress, the wily critters have embraced their criminal lifestyle, sometimes without a hint of shame. That it's as bad or worse now than in any period of our history wouldn't surprise me at all.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 05:26 pm (UTC)But like poliphilo I still have hope that something better will come along.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-15 07:12 pm (UTC)There's still time for a soft landing. It's never too late to return to our roots, the humanism that informed this government at its birth.
Is it foolish to hope for change?
Date: 2007-08-15 02:39 pm (UTC)Re: Is it foolish to hope for change?
Date: 2007-08-15 04:40 pm (UTC)Re: Is it foolish to hope for change?
Date: 2007-08-16 07:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-16 02:59 am (UTC)