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America's Dying: Artists and Philosphers Hold the Cure

john stanton | 26.05.2003 19:54

Murti Bing Pills in America

America’s Dying
Arts and Philosophy Hold the Cure

By John Stanton

The wonderfully bizarre and philosophically fertile novel Insatiability, written in 1927 by Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz, describes a society in rancid decay faced with the external threat of a “Sino-Mongolian” army with some very distinct Soviet and Nazi characteristics. The armies of conformity are on the border waiting to attack.

Meanwhile in Witkiewicz’s society, religion, philosophy, politics, art, literature and sex have become devoid of transcendent qualities. They serve only to further the utilitarian interests of racism, nationalism and patriotism. Sex is no longer surrounded by love; instead, it is merely a means to produce more workers, more soldiers, more taxpayers. Witkiewicz’s nation is frenetically engaged in an orgy of motion for motion’s sake which means that it is has extraordinarily high rates of productivity. The people’s days are full of activity whether it be producing or manufacturing, reading the newspapers, visiting an art museum, listening to music, or propagating the human species. The masses, as Witkiewicz describes them, “all those dukes, counts, farmers, peasants, workers, craftsmen, army…” are vacuous automatons who had long ago lost the ability to look beyond the given image or word; that is, to think with depth.

The dying society that Witkiewicz portrays can only be saved by the artists and the unblemished spiritualism of religion freed from corporate structure. The writer, the philosopher, the poet, the painter, the musician, and the religious leader collectively hold the cure for a culture on its death bed. Why? As they have throughout recording history, this merry band of refuseniks are constantly exposing the brutality of reality and are continually challenging institutions and the propaganda they spew forth. It is their lot in life and their duty to ask the tough questions. No open society can prosper for long without them. In Witkiewicz’s world, those with the cure have relinquished their responsibilities. They no longer refuse-- they join, they are indoctrinated and they conform. Indeed, it is far easier and more lucrative to praise and promote the established order than it is to challenge it. Such has been the choice of the Christopher Hitchens’ of the world. For others though, having taken that road, the sense of guilt that going-along-to-get-along breeds haunts them. They suffer no matter what they do.

But wait!

Murti-Bing Pills to the Rescue

“A man who used these Murti-Bing pills changed completely. The problems he had struggled with until then suddenly appeared to be superficial and unimportant. Those once tormented by philosophical insatiety now entered the service of the new society [the new faith]. Instead of writing the dissonant music of former days, they composed marches and odes. Instead of painting abstractions as before, they turned out socially useful pictures,” according to Czeslaw Milosz, in his forward to Insatiability. In the end, hooked on Murti-Bing, Witkiewicz’s characters have been, in essence, lobotomized. “Sturfan wrote abominable things—novels without any ‘heroes,’ whose role was now assumed by groups…Lilian continued to perform in theater…He operated exclusively with the collective psyche, dispensing entirely with dialogue. Art and literary criticism were at last completely abolished.”

Insatiability has many lessons in it for Americans. As Milosz points out, Witkiewicz was describing a Western society. One in which the quantity of material produced—be it philosophy, art, literature, or even politicians—had no relation to quality. The critics, whether literary or general culture, knew very little about the subject matter they were assessing. The critics were either employed by organizations who circumscribed their views to preserve the bottom line, or they held a particularly snobbish view of the changing world around them. “Because of a spurious sense of social duty and a desire to instruct petty people in petty virtues…whatever appears uncomfortable is either glossed over in silence or else deliberately misconstrued and misinterpreted…What can be expected of the public if the critics themselves are below the average reader?”

Here in 21st Century America, Witkiewicz’s novel world has become a tragicomic reality. Critics take the form homophobic Michael Savage, a savage intellect whose tirades appeal to millions of predominantly white males who believe that American history began with George Bush II. Another critic and hustler like Rush Limbaugh, whose website urges boycotting France and Germany--and encourages visitors to join The Presidential Prayer Team--speaks volumes to the depth-free nature of the American intellect. One wonders if the Savage and Limbaugh audiences know that Baron de Montesquieu was the inspiration for the “checks and balances” of the US government. Or that the French have greatly influenced US military doctrine since at least 1776 (not to mention salvaging the American revolution).The vaunted shock and awe tactics used recently during the War in Iraq were set in place long ago by Napoleon Bonaparte who revamped the French army with doctrines that ensured speed, maintaining the offensive, maneuverability and joint training. That revolution in military affairs took place over 200 years ago. Immediately after World War I, the US Army solicited German gun designers recognizing the inferiority of US designs. Of course, without former Nazi Werner Von Braun, the USA would have had far greater difficulty getting its machines and warheads into space.

Bush Not the Problem but the Symptom

The US is populated with thousands of Savage’s and Limbaugh’s in corporate board rooms, the government and military, universities, media outlets, sports and entertainment, and the world of arts. These are the petty people to whom Witkiewicz refers. The very ones whose “spurious sense of social duty and petty virtue” has somehow landed them in positions of power that allows them to comment, or critique, an entire society and its culture and government. Yet their commentary is as staged and hollow as George Bush’s comedic Top Gun stunt on the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln. And it’s killing America. But that false imagery and the language that goes with it finds a paying and voting audience in the tens of millions—Witkiewicz’s masses--who either truly believe in the simplistic and erroneous notions of American mythology, or who have auctioned off their transcendent souls for the safe havens of profitability and conformity.

These vacuous people—senators and congressmen, CEO’s and generals, preachers and rockers, white collar and blue collar alike--when confronted with the factual record of George Bush II’s record of being AWOL from the Texas National Guard and his many business failings, or informed that every political rally held by this president is a lesson in Hollywood production 101, simply deny that reality and opt for the fantasy. But Bush is not the problem. It is what he has come to represent. And that is the antithesis of what US citizens are taught to believe it means to be American. It takes years of labor to purchase and maintain a home, to stay on the payroll, to get an education, to believe there is more than crass profit and loss, to tolerate tax cuts for the rich, to raise a family, to worship ones god’s, to be honest and trusting.

That quaint American philosophy of life has been beheaded. Now the “leaders” aren’t even coy about parsing the truth with the country. It’s in-your-face lying on a global scale. Full spectrum perception management via the US government, incorporated, ensures that what was false remains false, but you’ll believe it to be true, just like you still believe the New York Times. Where else are you to turn? You are too busy being productive to believe otherwise and, besides, you don’t have the time to fight the system.

The modern day Murti-Bing pills--Paxil, Zoloft, Xanax and prime time media—let you tolerate the madness that is fed to you on a daily basis: Trillions in tax cuts for the rich are good. $700 billion for defense and intelligence is good. Outsourcing 850,000 government jobs is good. Cutting highway funding to the states is good. Cutting social programs is good. Eliminating pension plans and social security is good. Don’t criticize, we are at war. America: love it or leave it. “Mission Accomplished”. Ditching the United Nations and international treaties is good. It’s not about oil. We don’t need a commission on 911—trust us. Hussein was a threat to the United States. Your safer now with Tom Ridge in charge. There is an opposition party. The president’s speeches and rally’s are spontaneous. Without the US military there would be no freedom. Freedom means the ability to buy and sell. Media deregulation is good. Guantanamo Bay is not a death camp. The War on Drugs and the War on Terrorism are successful. The US Department of Homeland Security does not have former KGB officers as consultants. Missile defense works.

In this national psycho ward, you want to do “something” to contribute because there’s an emptiness you just can’t seem to shake. You want to be a refuseniks. One day, you say to yourself, I’ll do “something” about it.

There’s More to Life

“Perhaps sunlight, the smell of the earth, little everyday pleasures and the forgetfulness that work brings can ease somewhat the tensions created by this process…But beneath the activity and bustle of daily life is the constant awareness of an irrevocable choice to be made. One must either die--physically or spiritually--or else one must be reborn according to the prescribed method, namely, the taking of Murti-Bing pills. People in the [USA] are often inclined to consider the lot of converted countries in terms of might and coercion. That is wrong. There is an internal longing for harmony and happiness that lies deeper than the ordinary fear of the desire to escape misery or physical destruction.”

The people of America have difficult decisions ahead. Their economy is awash in a sea of debt and the unemployed. It’s military adventures in Afghanistan and Iraq are far from complete. It’s corporate board rooms and halls of government are indistinguishable. The invisible hand of censorship is everywhere. Million’s are afraid to speak in fear of the state’s security apparatus. The state has become god-like in its ability to inculcate fear through constant “terrorist” alerts.

American’s can easily choose to be “reborn” and conform to a system which delivers the goods, as Herbert Marcuse once said. Do they have any art, philosophy or spirituality in them? What will they do? Stand and fight, or stand and help deliver the goods. Mr. Witkiewicz’s choice, however, is not recommended. In 1939, recognizing that the Soviet’s and Nazi’s were on the way into Poland, he committed suicide.

John Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in national security matters. He the author (along with Wayne Madsen) of America’s Nightmare: The Presidency of George Bush II available at www.booksurge.com. Reach him at  cioran123@yahoo.com






john stanton
- e-mail: cioran123@yahoo.com

Comments

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Art and Philosophy have no monopoly on 'cure'

28.05.2003 20:51


Dear John,

While a 1927 Polish novel may be one of many works of art to represent the rise of 'la mentalité étatsunienne' or 'US-think', there are many more that have appeared within the US that give accounts of the early developing contention between those who saw the management of the social dynamic in terms of 'changing-whats-wrong-out-there', the CWWOTs, and those who saw it in the more ecosystemic terms (non-judgemental, resilient systems terms) of a continuous 'becoming the ones we have been waiting for', the BOWWFs. Of course, both of these management capacities are simultaneously present in each of us.

In the year 2003, the CWWOT side of many of us seems to have overpowered our atrophied BOWWF side due to the former's self-righteous aggressiveness and its empowerment by current social trends or even by rising drugged indifference as you suggest. This has happened before, as nathaniel hawthorne (1804 - 1864) recounts in 'The Maypole of Merry Mount' (  http://www.online-literature.com/hawthorne/145/ ) a dramatized account of conflict between an early American CWWOT settlement and BOWWF settlement.

nathaniel hawthorne was the one who said;

"happiness is like a butterfly, which, when pursued is always beyond our grasp, but, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you".

In 'The Pagan pilgrim: Thomas Morton of Merrymount --- Intellectual "heathen" remains an inspiration', by Steve Rasmussen (  http://members.aol.com/srasmus/oldentext/merrymount.html ), ... Steve gives an account of the BOWWFy Thomas Morton, opening the story;

"Those dour Puritans who kneeled in thanksgiving at Plymouth Rock before marching forth to conquer the wilderness and its native inhabitants with Bibles and guns weren't the only Pilgrims to seek spiritual freedom on the New World's shores. Just a few leagues up the Massachusetts coast from Plymouth's fortress of fundamentalist conformity, a poet and lawyer named Thomas Morton founded a colony that, had it survived Puritan persecution, might have spawned a far more Earth-friendly and egalitarian history of America than the one that's come down to us."

And in speaking of the history of the CWWOT-BOWWF conflict, we can't leave out that in George Washington's presidency, 75% of the budget was allocated to the 'Indian Wars'. An era wherein 'good Americans' toasted to "Civilization or death to all American savages".

As Wolfgang Mieder says in an article on 'stereotyping', ... or should that be 'scapegoating', ...

"While much is known about proverbial stereotypes among different nationalities and regions, and while numerous studies have been undertaken to study verbal slurs against Jews and African Americans especially in the United States,3 there is a definite dearth of interest in the proverbial invectives that have been hurled against the Native Americans ever since Christopher Columbus and later explorers, settlers, and immigrants set foot on the American continent. As people look back at these slurs in the year when the world commemorates the quincentenary of Columbus' discovery of America, it is becoming ever more obvious that the native population suffered terribly in the name of expansion and progress. Native Americans were deprived of their homeland, killed mercilessly or placed on reservations, where many continue their marginalized existence to the present day. The early concepts of the "good Indian" or "noble savage" quickly were replaced by reducing the native inhabitants to "wild savages" who were standing in the way of expansionism under the motto of "manifest destiny".4 Little wonder that Roy Pearce in his valuable book with the telling title Savagism and Civilization: A Study of the Indian and the American Mind (1967) can quote a thrasonical toast recorded in the journal of Major James Norris in 1779 as having expressed the early frontier truth: "Civilization or death to all American savages."5 That means, bluntly put, change your ways and assimilate the rules and life-style of the white conquerors and settlers or die. Anybody resisting this policy was "bad", and once the popular white attitude was geared towards the demonization of the Native Americans, the stage was set for killing thousands of them or driving the survivors onto inhuman reservations. The unpublished and little-known dissertation by Priscilla Shames with the title The Long Hope: A Study of American Indian Stereotypes in American Popular Fiction (1969) shows how this cruel treatment of the native population is described in literature,6 while Dee Brown's best selling book Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West (1970) gives a more factual account. This latter book contains a telling chapter with the gruesome proverbial title "The Only Good Indian Is a Dead Indian",7 the word "dead" meaning both literal death, and for those who survived the mass killings, a figurative death, i.e., a restricted life on the reservation with little freedom to continue the traditional life-style."
 http://www.utas.edu.au/docs/flonta/DP,1,1,95/INDIAN.html

So it's unclear what philosophy you are referring to when you say;

"That quaint American philosophy of life has been beheaded."

... as if the American psyche (or rather 'Western psyche') were monophrenous rather than polyphrenous and that its monophrenicity were evolving along a linear time axis, ... rather than its polyphrenicity brewing up continuously to give different and cyclically reemergent outwellings.

As for your (a writer's) choice of cultural saviours;

"The writer, the philosopher, the poet, the painter, the musician, and the religious leader collectively hold the cure for a culture on its death bed".

... all of these were contributors to the successful rise of Hitler's 'Dritten Reich',... working energetically together in CWWOT mode.

This is not to demean the power of these crafts in re-vitalizing the spirit in community, but to suggest that everyone is a co-creative participant in BOWWFing, ... 'becoming the ones we have been waiting for'

The friendly drivers on the freeway of life, as a group, let their own asserting personas become what they need to be in a non-judgemental fault-tolerant manner (rather than insisting on changing what's going wrong out there) in the service of co-creatively sustaining a fluid and harmonious collective dynamic.

The CWWOT side of us 'comes from' the certain knowledge that 'we are right' and it is 'those others' who must change. Writer's, philosophers, poets, painters, musicians and religious leaders anywhere are capable of raising their glasses and toasting to;

"Civilization or death to all who 'are against us rather than with us'"

That's what la mentalité étatsunienne or 'US-think', as it is being called, seems all about (though citizens of any nation are liable to be infected by this western colonizing mindset, just as they are by the 'Asian flu').

mitakuye oyasin,

emile

emile
mail e-mail: emiliano@goodshare.org


The Death of Spirituality

28.05.2003 23:49

In general, the connections between material life and spiritual life are little understood today because spiritual life is frequently seen as nothing more than the sum of abstract philosophical, abstract scientific, and abstract religious ideas. Religious ideas are almost universally afflicted by abstraction, by ideas and feelings which can quite well be developed without any direct, real spiritual life.

This can be seen whenever membership in an organisation, advocacy of a belief or observance of a particular ritual or lifestyle constitutes the essence of a religious "path". The total rejection of spirit is no more inimical to spirituality than this typically modern belief, lifestyle, membership or ritualistic approach to religion.

If man's future evolution is to avoid being swept into total degeneracy, a true spiritual culture will have to enter ever more strongly into external life. Very few people realize this today because very few have any feeling for what spiritual life is.

Joe 1