June 17, 2008

Izzy Stone, Patron Saint of Bloggers




All governments are run by liars and nothing they say should be believed.

-I.F. Stone

Given the last several days of having to run the electronic gauntlet of slavering testimonials over the premature death of Tim Russert of the crown propaganda jewel of the G.E. branch of the military industrial media complex Meet The Press I have found the perfect antidote to the gag reflex. Via Common Dreams comes this nice little article by Jeff Cohen on a REAL journalist who spoke the truth to power in an era before the well-fed, finely coiffed millionaires and big titted, big haired vacuous bimbos whose only attribute (other than their obvious physical ones) is their ability to recite government/corporate talking points off of a teleprompter. Izzy Stone (better known as I.F. Stone came from an era when journalists were not celebrities first and understood their responsibility in holding state and corporate power accountable per the mandate enshrined in the Constitution about a free press being necessary for a free people to enjoy liberty. Today voices such as Stone's are alive and raising cain in the blogosphere, to the extent that the corrupt establishment is even now scrambling to find some palatable way to lockdown the internet as it has become a serious threat to their big con game. We here at the Station are proud to present:

by Jeff Cohen

It was nineteen years ago this week that I.F. (Izzy) Stone died. The legendary blogger was 81.

Confused? You say he died years before web blogs were invented?

Well, yeah, but when I think of today’s blunt, fact-based online hell-raisers, my mind quickly flashes on Izzy Stone. You may think of Josh Marshall or Glenn Greenwald or Arianna Huffington. I think of Izzy.

Before there was an Internet, Izzy Stone was doing the work we associate with today’s best bloggers. Like them, he was obsessed with citing original documents and texts. But before search engines, Izzy had to consume ten newspapers per day — and physically visit government archives and press offices, and personally pore over thousands of words in the Congressional Record. That’s how he repeatedly scooped the gullible, faux-objective MSM of his day in exposing government deceit, like that propelling the Vietnam War.

Izzy was the ultimate un-embedded reporter. His journalism was motivated by a simple maxim that resonates loudly in our era of Cheneys and Rumsfelds and WMD hoaxes: “All governments lie, but disaster lies in wait for countries whose officials smoke the same hashish they give out.”

Month after month from 1953 to 1969 I.F. Stone’s Weekly (biweekly through 1971) exposed deceptions as fast as governments could spin them. His timely and timeless dispatches are gathered in an exceptional paperback, The Best of I.F. Stone.

In real time in August 1964, Izzy was virtually alone in challenging the Gulf of Tonkin hoax, an imaginary “unprovoked attack” on U.S. warships used by the Johnson administration to send several hundred thousand American troops into Vietnam. How did Izzy do it? By citing international law texts and finding nuggets of truth in the Congressional Record of the Senate debate (no C-SPAN then) and in contradictory reporting in mainstream publications.

Izzy’s expose began boldly: “The American government and the American press have kept the full truth about the Tonkin Bay incidents from the American public.” He fumed at the credulous MSM: “The process of brain-washing the public starts with off-the-record briefings for newspapermen.” Only two senators, Oregon’s Wayne Morse and Alaska’s Ernest Gruening, had voted against the Tonkin Resolution; Izzy noted that the press had “dropped an Iron Curtain weeks ago on the antiwar speeches of Morse and Gruening.”

Like today’s online journalistic entrepreneurs, being his own editor and boss allowed Izzy the freedom and space to parse out the distortions of government in detail. A year before the Tonkin hoax, he wrote: “In this age of corporation men, I am an independent capitalist, the owner of my own enterprise.” While most journalists “find their niche in some huge newspaper of magazine combine, I am a wholly independent newspaperman, standing alone.”

Bloggers battle today’s McCarthyites who smear Iraq War opponents as un-American abettors of our country’s enemies. Izzy battled the original Joe McCarthy, in issue after issue of his weekly. Indeed, he launched his publication the same month — January 1953 — McCarthy became chair of the Senate Operations Committee, enhancing his powers of intimidation. Izzy warned prophetically: “McCarthy is in a position to smear any government official who fails to do his bidding. With such daring and few scruples, McCarthy can make himself the most powerful single figure in Congress.”

Three months later, he wrote: “The most subversive force in America today is Joe McCarthy. No one is so effectively importing alien conceptions into American government. No one is doing so much to damage the country’s prestige abroad. . . .If ‘subversion’ is to be met by deportation, then it is time to deport McCarthy back to Wisconsin.”

Not until 11 months later did Edward R. Murrow air his first report on McCarthy.

Today, online media critics and bloggers expose the bigotry and fallacy gushing forth from Fox News and talk radio and the Rev. Moon-owned Washington Times, long-edited by Wes Pruden Jr. They blog about MSM being stenographers to rightwing extremists. When racists in Little Rock were obstructing court-ordered school desegregation in 1958, Izzy was on the scene reporting: “A staff correspondent in Little Rock quoted the Reverend Wesley Pruden the segregationist leader, as saying, ‘The South will not accept this outrage, which a Communist-dominated government is trying to lay on us.’ This was my introduction to a regional journalism which prints such statements matter-of-factly.”

The Communist-dominated regime referred to by Pruden Sr. was headed by Eisenhower.

Izzy loved to tell the story of how he found — hiding in plain view in different editions of the New York Times — one-paragraph “shirrtail” wire stories indicating that our country’s first underground nuclear test in Nevada in 1957 was detected in Toronto, Rome and Tokyo. Months later, just as hawks in Washington were preparing to attack a test ban treaty with the Soviets on the basis that nuclear tests could not be detected more than 200 miles away, Izzy found a seismologist in the Commerce Department who told him the test had also been detected as far away as Alaska and Arkansas. Izzy’s reporting obstructed the government’s lie before it could get its shoes on.

Starting out in his teens, Izzy was a daily reporter, editor and columnist. After moving to D.C. in 1940 to become Washington editor of The Nation, he exposed U.S. corporations still doing business with Hitler’s Germany. He was one of the first to sound the alarm about the Nazi holocaust, referring in 1942 to “a murder of a people.” An anti-racist, he battled the all-white National Press Club over exclusion of black journalists.

Izzy’s cantankerousness and “hound-dog tenacity” — in the words of his biographer — would make even the most stubborn blogger blush. Although he was a lifelong progressive, his journalistic hallmark was independence: “I felt that party affiliation was incompatible with independent journalism.” His writings show deep admiration for Franklin Roosevelt, yet his article on FDR’s death criticized his “deplorable disrespect for the constitutional amenities” in resisting a reactionary Supreme Court that knocked down one New Deal bill after another.

He wrote books passionately supporting the birth of Israel, but strongly criticized it for mistreatment of Palestinians. He advocated peace and negotiations with the Soviet Union, while increasingly vocal in denouncing its rulers: “The worker [in Russia] is more exploited than in Western welfare states.”

He despised racists, but fought for their free speech rights, and everyone’s: “Once you put ifs and buts in the Bill of Rights, nobody’s civil liberties will be secure.” That he marched to his own drummer can be seen in his dispatch from the 1963 March on Washington for civil rights, in which he criticized “respectables” for muting “Negro militancy” into support of JFK’s inadequate program, and referred to Martin Luther King as “a little too saccharine for my taste.”

Born of immigrant parents, Izzy was an American patriot who worshipped the Bill of Rights: “You may think I am a red Jew son-of-a-bitch, but I’m keeping Thomas Jefferson alive.”

And he worshipped our country’s tradition of press freedom: “There are few countries in which you can spit in the eye of the government and get away with it. It’s not possible in Moscow.” But Izzy was never naïve about American traditions that threatened freedom, and he had a 5,000-page FBI spy file to prove it.

Today’s muckraking bloggers are often belittled for working from their homes, far removed from the corridors of power. Izzy worked out of his home. If he were alive, he’d be applauding the Josh Marshalls and other independents, urging: Keep your distance from power.

I made no claim to inside stuff. . . I tried to dig the truth out of hearings, official transcripts and government documents, and to be as accurate as possible. . . I felt like a guerilla warrior, swooping down in surprise attack on a stuffy bureaucracy where it least expected independent inquiry. The reporter assigned to specific beats like the State Department or the Pentagon for a wire service or a big daily newspaper soon finds himself a captive. State and Pentagon have large press relations forces whose job it is to herd the press and shape the news. There are many ways to punish a reporter who gets out of line. . . But a reporter covering the whole capitol on his own - particularly if he is his own employer — is immune from these pressures.


Imagine the obstacles Izzy faced — did I mention his impaired eyesight and hearing? — launching a weekly and finding an audience at the height of McCarthy’s witch hunts (even at $5 for an annual subscription).

Far fewer obstacles face today’s bloggers who seek to follow in Izzy’s footsteps — blessed as they are with relative freedom and this awesome research and outreach tool known as the Internet.

As these upstarts speak truth to power, I see Izzy Stone watching over them, from the heavens.

June 08, 2008

Gathering Storms and Changing Guards



Friday’s near 400 point drop in the Dow despite an unprecedented (and borderline legal) series of efforts by the Federal Reserve and other central banks to keep the house of cards financial markets propped up should serve as a crack of thunder to those who had been deceived into believing that the economic storm had passed. The accompanying skyrocketing of oil prices (largely due to a dollar in freefall) and an unemployment rate that no longer can be concealed by statistical chicanery confirms the obvious – that the United States and the world itself is on the precipice of a cataclysm of historical proportions. The cowardly and utterly shameful complete abrogation of their duties and the accompanying complete moral failure of the leadership in America to hold the criminal Bush-Cheney regime to anything even resembling an illusion of accountability, Israel’s proclamation that they will soon attack Iran (knowing full well that the might of the Zionist fifth column as most visibly represented by AIPAC will provide cover in Der Homeland) and the foregone conclusion that the neocons will use that as an excuse to join the fray that in all likelihood will trigger World War III and the political instability created by the starvation of millions who are victims of a cruel globalist capitalism gone cancerous are more ominous signs that life as we all have known it is over.

That old Chinese curse goes something along the lines of may you live in interesting times but one can not truly appreciate the precient and sardonic wisdom of the contents of that particular fortune cookie unless history has clicked into position and you actually find yourself in exactly such times.

A great unraveling of American society is now occurring and very soon even the illusion of normalcy that the state so depends upon will no longer be maintainable. It was all of course inevitable given our dubious history of being so easily being suckered by the false promises of a national restoration in the aftermath of Vietnam, Watergate and the economic problems of the Seventies by a huckster named Ronald Reagan. In 1979 Americans still had a legitimate chance to come up with a rational energy policy and were capable of the sort of introspection, the critical analysis of all that had gone bad to perhaps implement policies leading anyplace reasonable but NOT where we currently are in mid 2008. Reagan, the ultimate pitchman for friendly fascism and his right-wing machine backers quashed that when secretive deals were cut with the ayatollah to delay the release of the Iranian hostages and therefore damage Jimmy Carter too badly for him to be reelected. I have long maintained that 1980 and the rise of Reaganism (from which so many of our current problems had their genesis in) was the demarcation point from reality, the wrong fork in the road chosen for all the wrong reasons. Americans could have prevented all of this but chose instead to be nothing but a pack of propagandized Pollyannas skipping blissfully down their primrose paths to perdition along white picket fence lined streets paved with gold. It was as Hannah Arendt spoke of with totalitarian movements needing to construct that parallel reality, slowly building it until the opportune time came when it could easily be swapped out and very few would even notice.

That Americans allowed themselves to be so easily duped, brainwashed and lulled into a false sense of security, phony exceptionalism, complacency and denial in which history no longer mattered is something that will be analyzed and written about in volumes upon volumes by future historians. Ours will be the greatest example of a failed society, a warning sign to all who come afterwards, the Romans will no longer be looked upon as the classic portrayal of how a mighty empire collapses due to internal rot it will be the late 20th Century and early 21st Century Homeland. America, or at least what it currently exists as and barring a renewal that while not averting the inevitable catastrophe will allow for something resembling the ideals of the past and the vision of the founders to rise from the ashes will eventually face the same sort of scrutiny as an era of mass madness, cultism and a failure to recognize the darkness that slowly enveloped a once educated society that Nazi Germany has – we will be debated, analyzed, written about and immortalized in film or whatever technological advance replaces it as a medium for far longer than anybody who reads this in the year 2008 will live. Exceptional we are indeed.

The very foundation of our modern American society, a society that is based on cheap and plentiful oil and a post-industrial economy that largely does nothing than engage in the moving around of money and financial instruments and the service industries that support it is now being exposed as the grand scale fraud and catastrophe that it was bound to be given the raw hubris and arrogant greed that allowed ideology to supercede any sort of honest analysis of historic trends. In 2008 the impossibility of being able to sustain such a house of cards style of a social and financial system is becoming more apparent with each passing day and with each piece of terrible economic news. The financial cartel looters will assuredly be once again bailed out by their bought and paid for servants who have turned the nation’s political system into nothing more than a stinking whorehouse being bled to death by piggish and unscrupulous managers and it is the common man (and woman) who will once again be forced to bear the brunt of the and to be collectively crucified for the sins of those who are politically protected and financially untouchable.

Rest assured that there will always be the bread and circuses of the ongoing theatre of the absurd that is the national corporate media with their oligarchy friendly opiate to the masses message that ensures the frogs slowly cooking in their incrementally warming pots of water that all will be ok, the ending will be happy and our God kissed nation of great destiny will be once again saved by the man riding in on the white steed at precisely the right moment but it is all an illusion concocted by highly paid control freaks and social scientists well versed at selling dreams. The television is necessary to keep the bewildered herd of lemmings in a narcotized state of denial just long enough for the fascist police state that is necessary to protect the elite or as the house shill for the oligarchy David Rothkopf fondly calls them: The Superclass so that they may be secure within their heavily guarded, gated mini-utopias and biospheres in time for the coming upheaval.

The coming upheaval of which I speak is predicted in the outstanding book by William Strauss and Neil Howe entitled The Fourth Turning which examines cycles of history which while never repeating itself in exactly the same way repeats itself nonetheless. Strauss and Howe examine history by looking at generational transformation and by breaking time down into a series of four turnings that represent each generation and the archetypes that are associated with them. The authors make the point that America is stuck on a linear view of history that always must proceed with little disregard to the cyclical view of recurring epochs and look at the saeculum (which is a length of time that is about the equal of a long human life) as the equivalent of seasons. Roughly about every 80 or so years there comes a time of cataclysm and change due to the deterioration of society and the failure of each subsequent generation to learn the lessons of the previous crisis. Think of society altering American historical events as follows and the time frames between them: The Revolutionary War period (1770s-1790s), The Civil War period (1860-1865), The Great Depression/World War II period (1929-1945) and today’s period of post 9/11 (2001 – 2020s) and you can see the progression along with the similar lengths of their saeculums. In following this our current period of existence is one in which there is going to be a massive cataclysm and a shift into a new era. I excerpt the following:

"The next Fourth Turning is due to begin shortly after the new millennium. Around the year 2005, a sudden spark will catalyze a Crisis mood. Remnants of the old social order will disintegrate. Political and economic trust will implode. Real hardship will beset the land, with severe distress that could involve questions of class, race, nation, and empire. Yet this time of trouble will bring seeds of social rebirth. Americans will share a regret about recent mistakes -- and a resolute new consensus about what to do. The very survival of the nation will feel at stake. Sometime before the year 2025, America will pass through a great gate in history, commensurate with the American Revolution, Civil War, and twin emergencies of the Great Depression and World War II.

"The risk of catastrophe will be very high. The nation could erupt into insurrection or civil violence, crack up geographically, or succumb to authoritarian rule. If there is a war, it is likely to be one of maximum risk and efforts -- in other words, a total war.


If there is any hope to be derived while we sit on the cusp of some very troubled times it is that now is a great period to be alive in, we are fortunate to live in an era of very great change as Dickens once wrote "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times" and when the Fourth Turning occurs we will be able to rise above the mundane, the rote, the trivial and the meaninglessness of ordinary existence to have an opportunity to participate in the making of history. Those of us who understand this should consider ourselves fortunate for we shall have the unique chance to dispense with a failed system and to replace it with a new and rejuvenated one that not only appeals to the highest of traditional American ideals but to the highest of human ideals as well. The stunning rejection of the Clinton restoration is a signal hat there is a longing for change, a renunciation of past failures and a growing recognition that the failures are not limited to a particular political party but rather the fault of the entire current failed system itself in its entirety. The rise of a new wave of activism and political participation as manifested in the Barack Obama and Ron Paul movements is an indication that the traditional phony left-right paradigm is not only under assault but is rapidly losing it’s legitimacy (of course it never had any to begin with) and giving way to the inevitable coming demand for serious social and institutional changes.

The existing establishment fears the rise of a new generation of educated and change oriented participants to a political sham system that no longer can rely on the standard tactics of divide and conquer along racial, sexual, religious and gender based lines as it has done so successfully for so long. The inevitable dying off of previous generations is a natural process and throughout history those who have held and abused power are loathe to give it away to societal changes or without coercion. Generally speaking those who hold power seek to pass it down through generations to their own offspring, America has a long and sordid history of this as is evident by those who still hold disproportionate power within the banking and energy cartels. The names Rockefeller, Mellon, Carnegie and others are descendants of the Robber Barons of the 18th century and they have spent the past hundred odd years consolidating their power and using their vast financial resources to purchase the necessary influence to ensure that they can lock in their gains.

The coalescing of the elites around John McCain and Hillary Rodham-Clinton during this current election cycle only shows that both will change nothing meaningful, choosing to instead scapegoat the loathsome Bush-Cheney junta for all of their crude and botched bloody global gallivanting and then carry on business as usual. It will however be akin to changing management in the brothel, perfuming the whores and then hanging out a new shingle but rest assured that the ownership and their interests will continue to be the same. The American political system is designed to present a false choice between two corrupt parties, one of which has only become far more overtly fascist than the other but make no mistake that both of these monolithic parties are thoroughly corrupted by money, borderline criminal interests and only the outward masks that are presented by the true power structure, what author Peter Dale Scott calls “the deep state” or “parapolitics”. The influence of the overworld and underworld on today’s political system is pervasive and the corruption has metastasized throughout the entire system. There is no intention of providing Americans with anything even remotely resembling real choices in their political system, ‘leaders’ and government and this was stated by Professor Carroll Quigley in his outstanding and largely obscure book Tragedy and Hope which revealed the way that the system really worked in regards to the financial elite and the secretive round table groups who represent the puppeteers for the easily blackmailed, controlled and greedheaded arrogant buffoons who are the political actors who are trotted out for public consumption. Quigley states:

"The argument that the two parties should represent opposed ideals and policies, one, perhaps, of the Right and the other of the Left, is a foolish idea acceptable only to the doctrinaire and academic thinkers. Instead, the two parties should be almost identical, so that the American people can "throw the rascals out" at any election without leading to any profound or extreme shifts in policy."


Professor Quigley by the way was a mentor of one William Jefferson Clinton who would make the necessary compromises in morality necessary to eventually become selected as President of the United States. Clinton and his wife Hillary Rodham-Clinton have been approved by the establishment to become the next dynastic family to succeed the Bushes as the caretakers of the system of American oligarchy but like all others who are allowed to rise to such a level there are skeletons in the family closet and a trail of mysteriously dead bodies that only when compared with the similarities of the Bush family (longtime servants to the elite and fourth generation scoundrels) can be placed in the proper context that the government is not what it presents itself as but is rather a secretive network that is in existence to protect the interests of the wealthy elite, the economic royalists and the huge now transnational financial and energy corporations.

With such deception and secrecy you also have the inevitable factional warfare which is addressed by Quigley and also by Carl Oglesby in the The Yankee and Cowboy War which chronicles the secretive machinations of rogue elements of the establishment that fractured along the lines of Eastern establishment wealth and influence and the rise of the Sunbelt power structure that was largely a manifestation of oil and other energy interests, a massive defense industry and the requisite militarism and extreme right-wing American exceptionalist imagery (to use the term of author Kevin Phillips “an apple pie authoritarianism") which produced the John Wayne archetype that gave us Barry Goldwater, Richard M. Nixon, Ronald Reagan and eventually George W. Bush and was largely controlled power through the clever manipulation of fire and brimstone radical Christianity and the infiltration of various governmental agencies by agents of foreign governments and anti-Constitutional covert domestic elements working in concert with them in order to perpetuate a creeping militarist influence bent on controlling all elements of the state in order to feed itself and the quest for world domination that eventually is to include the conquest of space itself. But this is a long and extremely complex storyline that I will examine at another time so I digress….

The establishment sees their massively botched society of greed, shallowness and slyly enforced conformity collapsing right before them right now and they are more interested in ensuring that all of their ill gotten gains remain securely locked away in the coffers and that no serious attempt at purging the scoundrels from the nation’s courts so as to give the common man (woman) a chance for equal representation under the law. The law in this land has long ceased to be a shield and has instead been turned into a weapon by a decades long court packing scheme in which only stooges and protectors of the rigged game were allowed to ascend to positions of judicial influence – usually under the guise of 'social conservatism' which was easily bottled and sold as snake oil to the gullible who often were well intentioned but were cynically manipulated against the economic self-interest of themselves and their families to support corrupt political means.

The corruption of the system through the manipulation of the credulous rubes, bumpkins and simpletons taken along with the cyclical nature of history as put forth in The Fourth Turning is only hastening the inevitable cataclysm that will have been assured by the hubris and arrogance of the Reagan generation that set the course for the disastrous neoconservative foreign policy of the Bush-Cheney regime.

The looming catastrophe and the subsequent change that is coming will be largely the result of the generational changing of the guard with a newly politically active and highly motivated for the discarding of a failed system now becoming a force to be reckoned with. It is as natural as the changing of seasons that a youth saddled with the burden of the failures of their elders will inevitably rise to reject the past in favor of a new future and the near religious fervor with which Barack Obama is embraced by new participants as well as the more methodical and subtle rise of the Ron Paul movement will very soon shake this society to it’s very foundations. As President Franklin Delano Roosevelt once famously proclaimed:

“There is a mysterious cycle in human events. To some generations much is given. Of other generations much is expected. This generation of Americans has a rendezvous with destiny”

And the cycle is now at our doorstep, it is the Fourth Turning and with much dedication, work, tenacity, perseverance, courage, honor and a new morality it shall similarly usher in a new era in America. The existing establishment knows this and is terrified, the new generation (labeled as the millennial generation) is generally more tolerant, more open to new ideas, more concerned with the environment and sustainability and less warlike than those that preceded it and through indolence, greed and a sense of entitlement have squandered their legacy. This new generation is not easily manipulated by the same bogeymen that have so successfully been invoked so as to allow for the establishment to retain and abuse power and those of us who are older must do everything in our power to give support to the new generation who will have to sacrifice much in order to gain everything that was tossed away by the previous ones, we owe it to them for it is the world and our legacy that they will inherit. We must act as mentors, set the record straight on what it means to aspire to real American ideals and reclaim our real history that has been stolen away by the looters and the blood barters, the false prophets, the charlatans and the warmongers so that it can be used as a lifeline to the past and the last generation of destiny.

As the famous poet and novelist Victor Hugo once so eloquently put it “Nothing is as powerful as an idea whose time has come” and no matter what happens in the coming months with the rise of presumptive Democratic party nominee Barack Obama as an avatar of change and renewal. Whether he is destroyed by a propaganda machine which will be loosed on him with the fury of the hounds of hell themselves or conveniently assassinated as Senator Clinton’s little Freudian slip alluded to, the spark will not be put out – the process of change has begun and nothing can stop it. As labor activist August Spies said as he was awaiting his murder by the authorities on trumped up charges “Here you will tread upon a spark, but there and there, behind you and in frontof you, and everywhere, flames blaze up. It is a subterranean fire. You cannot put it out.” And assuredly, if one thing that the coming together of youth behind Obama and Paul means it is this one very salient truth: There is now a resistance movement in this country!

Times are changing, the levels of engagement and outrage towards a system long ago gone to seed is at a high not seen in decades and the big boys are scared. David Sirota, the excellent and hugely insightful conservative writer has a new book out entitled The Uprising - with a subtitle of “An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington” pegs it dead on again. Sirota stated in a recent Democracy Now interview that:

"Well, you look at the major social indices right now, and people are really, really angry, and you can see it in the polling, you can see it in market research. And I think what’s really interesting right now is that we’re seeing a level of anger and a level of disaffection not just with the government, but with major other institutions in society. Gallup’s poll shows that the anger in the country rivals, in terms of anti-government anger, or dissatisfaction with the government rivals that of the late 1970s. What’s different is that there is an increase in anger at corporate America, at big business, at banks, at the financial system. And I think that that means that gives us a real opportunity—progressives—a real opportunity to take this momentary uprising and explode it into a full-fledged political and social movement.

The danger is, of course, is that the anger could go into a right-wing direction. In the late 1970s, you had a moment where you had, after Watergate, Jimmy Carter came in, was elected, didn’t—his administration didn’t really go anywhere, and the uprising of that post-Watergate era really didn’t end. Instead, it intensified, and Ronald Reagan and the conservative movement came along and took advantage of it and exploded it into the conservative movement that we’re living under. And so, we’re really at a moment here where it could go in a progressive direction or it could go in a conservative direction.


Now this is a very interesting comment precisely because of his statement about the opportunity of a real movement and the concern that it could be as in the past hijacked by the right whose fueling of animosity and ability to provide scapegoats is unrivaled in our recent history, in fact you could say that it has largely been one of the primary factors in creating the looming catastrophe that we all now are facing. What is not addressed is that there is also a battle going on for the soul of the right and the meaning of conservative in which the best intellectuals are libertarians. Ron Paul’s ascension and ability to raise money and support via the internet has an appeal to the young and the libertarian message of liberty and a defense against tyranny resonates greatly. It would be extremely foolish to underestimate to the power of this growing force which already has an organized infrastructure and a manifesto (The Revolution) that against all odds made the New York Times and Amazon best seller lists and is working at the grass roots level to infiltrate the Republican party. This is a very positive thing and in some way will serve to neutralize the more extremist neocon elements of the right so barring another false flag terrorist attack, an economic catastrophe and the emergence of a charismatic demagogue waving the flag and carrying a cross it would be difficult for the fascist elements of the right to enjoy success as they have in the past. The Ron Paul movement could be the best thing to ever happen on the right as they will return to a more benign and traditional strain of conservatism along a non-interventionist, intellectual and anti-big government line that would coincide in many ways with progressives if certain differences can be worked out and the coalition of bickering identity based groups can be marginalized to where they belong.

The sheer ugliness of the recently ended Obama vs. Clinton campaign has exposed these elements as the pathetic, self-absorbed, self-defeating and unwilling to compromise relics that they are and once the left is able to shed itself once and for all of these elements they will no longer exist as vulnerabilities to the crackerjack propaganda and political machine of the modern fascist Republican party. Not being forced to defend abortion, militant feminism, gay rights and other issues that are largely unpopular with huge chunks of the country who could otherwise be allies on economic and civil liberties issues will be the greatest benefit of out of strategic necessity and pragmatism ‘throwing these elements under the bus’. Not that I am advocating discrimination, in fact I detest it and it is antithetical to true American ideals but to enslave an entire political party (despite the falsehood that it truly is an independent party of the system) to the defense of a minority only serves to fail the country as a whole. Without the current time warp of both major parties that continues to wail away like two dinosaurs in a tar pit using the same tired stereotypes we could actually see social progress and return to American ideals.

The rise of Obama represents hope but the presence of John McCain as the old guard who will invoke Vietnam as an immunity talisman (despite his admitted war criminal conduct in bombing civilians) and continue to rage against Hanoi Jane, the ‘dirty hippies’, the ‘militant Negroes’ and all of the other negative baggage that went with the New Left of that era. Perhaps a resounding landslide defeat of McCain and all that he represents along with his repudiation by independent and libertarian elements will slay that dragon once and for all, we will see. As Strauss and Howe state in The Fourth Turning: “Many despair that values that were new in the 1960’s are today so entwined with social dysfunction and cultural decay that they no longer lead anywhere positive”. The fascist American right has been able for too long been able to exploit these divisions of the Sixties and the wounds are ripped open for political benefit just as they are appearing to be healing. They must be abandoned at this point for they are a detriment and only impede change as only fuel the right and divide the left against themselves and as the axiom goes: A house divided against itself cannot stand.

Legendary organizer and activist Saul Alinsky made similar comments that predicted the rise of the extremist right as a backlash against Sixties excesses in a wonderful 1972 interview for Playboy Magazine:

In all the ways I've been talking about, from taxation to pollution. The middle class actually feels more defeated and lost today on a wide range of issues than the poor do. And this creates a situation that's supercharged with both opportunity and danger. There's a second revolution seething beneath the surface of middle-class America -- the revolution of a bewildered, frightened and as-yet-inarticulate group of desperate people groping for alternatives -- for hope. Their fears and their frustrations over their impotence can turn into political paranoia and demonize them, driving them to the right, making them ripe for the plucking by some guy on horseback promising a return to the vanished verities of yesterday. The right would give them scapegoats for their misery -- blacks, hippies, Communists -- and if it wins, this country will become the first totalitarian state with a national anthem celebrating "the land of the free and the home of the brave." But we're not going to abandon the field to them without a long, hard fight -- a fight I think we're going to win. Because we'll show the middle class their real enemies: the corporate power elite that runs and ruins the country -- the true beneficiaries of Nixon's so-called economic reforms. And when they swing their sights on that target, the shit will really hit the fan.


The left would do well to return to the radical values of Alinsky and his generation of labor activists rather than the traveling freak show of the sixties for all of the damage that it has done and all that the country has had to endure as a result of the right’s ongoing manipulation of the language and imagery of that tumultuous period. It was a botched era, a failed movement and too many of those ‘radicals’ and ‘revolutionaries’ have either failed to adapt or have long ago sold their souls to the company store. As Alinsky notes in the interview “Shit, Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin couldn't organize a successful luncheon, much less a revolution. I can sympathize with the impatience and pessimism of a lot of kids, but they've got to remember that real revolution is a long, hard process.” The fascist right got this and they built an infrastructure of advocacy groups, think tanks, anti-labor activists as laid out in the Powell Memorandum (or as I refer to it, The Looter Capitalist Manifesto) and financed by elite backed foundations who were scared shitless by the social unrest of The Sixties and had to take coordinated action in order to preserve the status quo. .

The American fascist right had an organized game plan to build their rotten system and they used the Republican party to do it by routinely relying on race-baiting, religious divisiveness, propagandizing, fear-mongering, intimidation, libel, slander and censorship. I have no illusions whatsoever that this will not continue if the Democrats themselves corrupt and compromised fail to capitalize on harnessing the generational forces for change. A return to full out Republican iron fisted fascism could quite easily rise from the ashes of a self immolating Democratic party. I do however believe that the followers of Dr. Paul and a reinvigorated more traditional conservative movement will slow it enough and with a lot of hard work and no small amount of luck may be able to deprive if of the ability to consolidate power as it has been unable to do since the fall of Tom DeLay and others of the most reactionary elements who were able to successfully marshal the religious zealots into a lockstep army of unflinching shock troops. The Republican party post World War II and especially since the rollout of the hugely successful product Ronald Reagan has become dangerously ideological, anti-American and relentless in the pursuit of state power for the sake of wielding it as a bludgeon and it needs to be stopped once and for all and that particular cancerous element cut out as though it were an abscessed tooth. The destruction of the Republican party in its current incarnation is essential before the bulwarks of the police state, the desecration of the Constitution and the pollution of the judicial system is allowed to metastasize any further. The diehard activists of the Ron Paul movement are just the ones to do it – or at least deprive it of momentum until the left can get its act together.

The immediate problem is that both of the current change movements that are growing in opposition to this diseased system are going to eventually find some way to agree to disagree and to focus on the larger tasks at hand of dismantling the authoritarian police state that protects the oligarchy. There must be some unifying set of principles in order for there to be a merger into a much larger social movement that will be formidable enough to undertake the monumental task at hand which is replacing the tyrannical, corrupt, increasingly despotic and entrenched establishment. I would think that a shared desire for an end to war, the restoration of civil liberties and the return of some semblance of economic fairness could transcend all other philosophical differences which could be put aside until later. The menace of the power of the state of which has now been weaponized and turned against the people who in theory are supposed to enjoy liberty and democracy in return for the consent to be governed is the primary, existential crisis that must be dealt with before any other issues that are trivial by comparison. The numbers are on the side of the people despite the disengaged and dumbed-down majority for revolutions are always mounted by the passionate minority who hold the moral high ground and have the courage of their convictions to do what is necessary no matter what the sacrifice may be. True patriots and defenders of liberty are aware of the price but the rewards of restoring justice and honor outweigh the perils of losing, it is only because of the sacrifice of those who came before us what we were ever able to enjoy anything approaching freedom no matter how fleeting that it now appears to have been.

In order for there to be a change in the existing order it is going to be necessary to completely jettison the poison dynamics that have led to the ‘culture wars’ for these divisions are permanent, ruinous and easily exploited by the controllers of the corrupt establishment and these dynamics have been largely responsible for the deterioration that has led us to our current state of deterioration. The differences of race and religion are irreconcilable and any honest examination of history and human nature should make this crystal clear to even the most utopian minded. They need to be abandoned as political causes as soon as possible. Therefore in order for the existing paradigms to be shattered and therefore removed as obstacles the political left must no longer openly embrace the widespread practice of abortion, militant feminism, engage in cultural demagoguery that fuels religious divisiveness and animosity and must embrace as a necessary philosophy the full right to bear arms unconditionally and must become more acceptable and tolerant to less extreme expressions of Christianity (excluding the zealots of course) and cease the thin-skinned hectoring of those who are not politically correct. Conversely, the political right or at least the rational elements of conservatism must be more tolerant to the rights of women, gays and minorities, in the old days political correctness was known as good manners and respect for others. The right also must accept the necessity for government regulations in regards to essential services (resources, medical care) but especially the banking and energy cartels which must be broken up as the damage that they have caused is now apparent to all but the blindest among us. The concept of privatization or more appropriately corporatism must be renounced as it has nothing to do with the utopian version of a free market that fails to take into account human nature. There also must not be an embracing of advancing the practices and icons of the most extreme sects of fundamentalist religion into public life.

I know very well that the people who really get it that the mutation of the state into a tool of repression by the oligarchy will be able to set aside those things that are not imperative for the reclamation of America in order to work together against the primary threat. There will always be those on both sides of the existing bogus left-right paradigm who will vehemently resist any changes that intrude upon and threaten the rights of their own little particular identity based groups and they need to be pushed to the fringes as they long ago should have been, it is where they belong in any functional society rather than in exerting inordinate influence that corrupts the legitimate political process. It is the ability of these easily manipulated groups to empower those moneyed interests who then are able to game the system that are largely to blame for the current crisis and the looming catastrophes of war, domestic repression and financial collapse and are only nuisances that serve as impediments to the necessary changes. I am not going to single out any specific group or demographic but there is plenty of blame to be laid at the feet of all of those who aid and abet the rise of tyranny while they continue to place their own little dogmas at such a level that they supercede the rights of all other citizens of the American republic.

It is of the utmost importance to somehow unify the disparate elements coming together and to allow for the generation that will inherit the future to gain their rightful place of influence within the political system in this shell of a once great nation. I do take the prophesy of The Fourth Turning very seriously and so should all of those who need to now rise together in order to meet our historical challenge, to inherit our destiny and to force those who have sowed the seeds of discontent to reap their whirlwind. If you use a big enough hammer you can smash anything.

Fascism, tyranny and despotism must be defeated at all costs or nothing else is ultimately going to matter. I am often being accused of being a "pessimist" (a ridiculous term which I despise), a "doomsayer" and am often stigmatized as one who dares to tell the unspoken truths in a land of willfully ignorant, fearful lemmings and sheep and the rest of the disinterested doomed. This though is inaccurate. While I have little regard for American life as it exists today and may God damn us all for what has become of this place, I do believe in two things which should be among the highest aspirations of human beings: redemption and atonement. The first will be achieved by the next generation which will be successors to the ones long ago who as FDR spoke of as having a "rendevous with destiny". The second will be obtained in our support of them as they sift through the ashes of what they are being left with in search of a better future.

I will end with these words of wisdom from Saul Alinsky

All life is warfare, and it's the continuing fight against the status quo that revitalizes society, stimulates new values and gives man renewed hope of eventual progress. The struggle itself is the victory. History is like a relay race of revolutions; the torch of idealism is carried by one group of revolutionaries until it too becomes an establishment, and then the torch is snatched up and carried on the next leg of the race by a new generation of revolutionaries. The cycle goes on and on, and along the way the values of humanism and social justice the rebels champion take shape and change and are slowly implanted in the minds of all men even as their advocates falter and succumb to the materialistic decadence of the prevailing status quo.


By Ed Encho

June 04, 2008

Continuity Of Government: Lynchpin For A Police State



I have blogged a bit lately on the Continuity Of Government (C.O.G.) programs that in my personal belief were intrumental in executing the coup d'etat by a secret/shadow government using the 9/11 'terrorist' attacks as justification. These programs have been existence since the Cold War era and were ostensibly for protection of the U.S. government in the event of a Soviet nuclear attack/decapitation strike. They are highly secretive and very real despite the sort of paranoid, X Files connotations that will be made by those who dare not research them on their own lest they find their core beliefs of government and American society shaken to the very roots. I would like to take this opportunity to share with readers an article that I only ran across this morning on these extremely dangerous programs and the threat to the Constitution and life as we have known it that are only a signature from the pen of George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (who are becoming increasingly desperate) from being put into motion.

The article that I refer to is in Radar Magazine by Christopher Ketcham and is very apropriately entitled The Last Roundup. There is also an interview with Mr. Ketcham by Antiwar Radio's Scott Horton that I provide the link to here for download. It is imperative for Americans to begin to understand the Continuity Of Government programs for it is the mechanisms that will be used if and when the time comes for the cornered rats of the Bush administration to avoid prosecution and accountability for their myriad of crimes against the republic by implementing martial law using NSPD-51 which is a descendent of Colonel Oliver North's REX 84.

What should be most disconcerting in an America renamed HOMELAND where Habeas Corpus and Posse Comitatus have been rendered null and void through legal trickery enamating from the office of the Vice President (a hotbed for neocon traitors) and elements of the Pentagon which have also been infiltrated by neocons with questionable loyalty is that none other than Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld were involved with C.O.G. during the Reagan era (see James Mann's The Armageddon Plan as well as Miami Herald journalist Alfonso Chardy's Reagan Aides and the 'Secret Government' and author Peter Dale Scott's recent Counterpunch article). I personally speculated on how the C.O.G. infrastructure was used to execute an Edward Luttwak style textbook coup d'etat on 9/11 in my recent posting: 9/11: Cover for a Coup d’Etat? which while nowhere in the league of Christopher Ketcham (or anybody else for that matter) may be a useful guide for those seeking to do some of their own research.

What is a very important detail in Ketcham's piece is the mention of PROMIS software as a tool to track and surveil potential dissidents and 'terrorists' (Homeland newspeak for dissidents) and has been likely been highly adapted from its already advanced 1980's form:

Wired magazine turned up additional damaging information, revealing in 1993 that North, operating from a secure White House site, allegedly employed a software database program called PROMIS (ostensibly as part of the REX 84 plan). PROMIS, which has a strange and controversial history, was designed to track individuals—prisoners, for example—by pulling together information from disparate databases into a single record. According to Wired, "Using the computers in his command center, North tracked dissidents and potential troublemakers within the United States. Compared to PROMIS, Richard Nixon's enemies list or Senator Joe McCarthy's blacklist look downright crude." Sources have suggested to Radar that government databases tracking Americans today, including Main Core, could still have PROMIS-based legacy code from the days when North was running his programs.


PROMIS software is the stuff of mystery and legend and apparently close scrutiny has resulted in mysterious suicides and deaths such as that of investigative journalist Danny Casolaro who was onto a global criminal syndicate that had merged with rogue elements of the government and is an important piece of the puzzle in any examination of today's rising fascist police state. Casolaro called it The Octopus and his death should be reexamined in light of recent developments as well as the rise of the internet as a research tool.

All of the pieces begin to fit together once C.O.G. and those who have been involved are placed alongside other developments that have dramatically and tragically altered the course of America over the past several decades. It is time to shed some light on this rogue operation and to expose it to the scrutiny and oversight that is necessary in order to preserve a Constitution that has been under relentless siege from America hating fifth columnists.


By Ed Encho

May 31, 2008

Post-Soviet Lessons for a Post-American Century (Part 2)

As previously mentioned, I stumbled across this great although very long essay one day while listening to a segment of that wonderfully informative although largely unheard of radio program Unwelcome Guests (which has a tremendous archive of past shows available for downloads). The segment which I will link to here is a reading of this essay by Dmitry Orlov that was posted on investigative reporter Michael Ruppert's website From The Wilderness. Mr. Ruppert is the author of the very interesting book Crossing The Rubicon and while he has left the journalistic scene due to various problems his site still is up and there is a plethora of great information still available. While I am not particularly a believer in the Peak Oil theory that Orlov bases this essay on I found the parts about surviving after the collapse of the Soviet Union to be riveting and horrifying.

We would be wise to pay heed to the material here as the oligarchy has put the United States on a similar path to economic collapse that none of the fraudulent candidates participating in the dog and pony show 'debates' will dare to bring up - choosing instead to stick to the sideshow issues like abortion, gay marriage, pandering to the dumbest of the dumb who are the overtly religious knuckledraggers and the left behinders and invoking fear at every opportunity.There is something to fear but it is not the ridiculous terrorist of the week - it is a Soviet style total economic collapse.

Post-Soviet Lessons for a Post-American Century

(PART TWO OF THREE)

By Dmitry Orlov

Differences between the Superpowers: Ethnicity


Our thumbnail sketch of the two superpowers would not be complete without a comparison of some of the differences, which are no less glaring than the similarities.

The United States has traditionally been a very racist country, with numerous categories of people one wouldn't want one's daughter or sister to marry, no matter who one happens to be. It was founded on the exploitation of African slaves and the extermination of the natives. Over its formative years, there was no formal intermarriage between the Europeans and the Africans, or the Europeans and the Indians. This stands in stark contrast to other American continent nations such as Brazil. To this day in the U.S. there remains a disdainful attitude toward any tribe other than the Anglo-Saxon. Glazed over with a layer of political correctness, at least in polite society, it comes out again when observing whom most such Anglo-Saxon people actually choose to marry, or date.

Russia is a country whose ethnic profile shifts slowly from mainly European in the West to Asian in the East. Russia's settlement of its vast territory was accompanied by intermarriage with every tribe the Russians met on their drive east. One of the formative episodes of Russian history was the Mongol invasion, which resulted in a large infusion of Asian blood into Russian genealogy. On the other side, Russia received quite a few immigrants from Western Europe. Currently, Russia's ethnic problems are limited to combating ethnic mafias, and to the many small but humiliating episodes of anti-Semitism, which has been a feature Russian society for centuries, and, in spite of which, Jews, my family included, have done quite well there. Jews were barred from some of the more prestigious universities and institutes, and were held back in other ways (for instance, lynching).

The United States remains a powder keg of ethnic tension, where urban blacks feel oppressed by suburban whites, who in turn fear to venture into major sections of the cities. In a time of permanent crisis, urban blacks might well riot and loot the cities, because they don't own them, and the suburban whites are likely to get foreclosed out of their "little cabins in the woods," as James Kunstler charmingly calls them, and decamp to a nearby trailer park. Add to this already volatile mixture the fact that firearms are widely available, and the fact that violence permeates American society, particularly in the South, the West, and the dead industrial cities like Detroit.

In short, the social atmosphere of post-collapse America is unlikely to be as placid and amicable as that of post-collapse Russia. At least in parts, it is more likely to resemble other, more ethnically mixed, and therefore less fortunate parts of the Former Soviet Union, such as the Fergana valley and, of course, that "beacon of freedom" in the Caucasus, Georgia (or so says the U.S. President).

No part of the United States is an obvious choice for the survival-minded, but some are obviously riskier than others. Any place with a history of racial or ethnic tension is probably unsafe. This rules out the South, the Southwest, and many large cities elsewhere. Some people might find a safe harbor in an ethnically homogeneous enclave of their own kind, while the rest would be well-advised to look for the few communities where inter-ethnic relations have been cemented through integrated living and intermarriage, and where the strange and fragile entity that is multi-ethnic society might have a chance of holding together.

Differences between the Superpowers: Ownership

Another key difference: in the Soviet Union, nobody owned their place of residence. What this meant is that the economy could collapse without causing homelessness: just about everyone went on living in the same place as before. There were no evictions or foreclosures. Everyone stayed put, and this prevented society from disintegrating.

One more difference: the place where they stayed put was generally accessible by public transportation, which continued to run during the worst of times. Most of the Soviet-era developments were centrally planned, and central planners do not like sprawl: it is too difficult and expensive to service. Few people owned cars, and even fewer depended on cars for getting around. Even the worst gasoline shortages resulted in only minor inconveniences for most people: in the springtime, they made it difficult to transport seedlings from the city to the dacha for planting; in the fall, they made it difficult to haul the harvest back to the city.

Differences between the Superpowers: Labor Profile

The Soviet Union was entirely self-sufficient when it came to labor. Both before and after the collapse, skilled labor was one of its main exports, along with oil, weapons, and industrial machinery. Not so with the United States, where not only is most of the manufacturing being carried out abroad, but a lot of service back home is being provided by immigrants as well. This runs the gamut from farm labor, landscaping, and office cleaning to the professions, such as engineering and medicine, without which society and its infrastructure would unravel. Most of these people came to the United States to enjoy the superior standard of living — for as long as it remains superior. Many of them will eventually head home, leaving a gaping hole in the social fabric.

I have had a chance to observe quite a few companies in the U.S. from the inside, and have spotted a certain constancy in the staffing profile. At the top, there is a group of highly compensated senior lunch-eaters. They tend to spend all of their time pleasing each other in various ways, big and small. They often hold advanced degrees in disciplines such as Technical Schmoozing and Relativistic Bean-counting. They are obsessive on the subject of money, and cultivate a posh country set atmosphere, even if they are just one generation out of the coal mines. Ask them to solve a technical problem — and they will politely demur, often taking the opportunity to flash their wit with a self-deprecating joke or two.

Somewhat further down the hierarchy are the people who actually do the work. They tend to have fewer social graces and communication skills, but they do know how to get the work done. Among them are found the technical innovators, who are often the company's raison d'être.

More often than not, the senior lunch-eaters at the top are native-born Americans, and, more often than not, the ones lower down are either visiting foreigners or immigrants. These find themselves in a variety of situations, from the working visa holders who are often forced to choose between keeping their job and going home, to those who are waiting for a green card and must play their other cards just right, to those who have one, to citizens.

The natives at the top always try to standardize the job descriptions and lower the pay scale of the immigrants at the bottom, playing them against each other, while trying to portray themselves as super-achieving entrepreneurial mavericks who can't be pinned down to a mere set of marketable skills. The opposite is often the case: the natives are often the commodity items, and would perform similar functions whether their business were biotechnology or salted fish, while those who work for them may be unique specialists, doing what has never been done before.

It is no surprise that this situation should have come about. For the last few generations, native-born Americans have preferred disciplines such as law, communications, and business administration, while immigrants and foreigners tended to choose the sciences and engineering. All their lives the natives were told to expect prosperity without end, and so they felt safe in joining professions that are mere embroidery on the fabric of an affluent society.

This process became known as "brain drain" — America's extraction of talent from foreign lands, to its advantage, and to their detriment. This flow of brain power is likely to reverse direction, leaving the U.S. even less capable of finding ways to cope with its economic predicament. This may mean that, even in areas where there will be ample scope for innovation and development, such as restoration of rail service, or renewable energy, America may find itself without the necessary talent to make it happen.

Differences between the Superpowers: Religion

The last dimension worth mentioning along which the Soviet Union and the United States are in stark contrast is that of religion.

Pre-revolutionary Russia's two-headed eagle symbolized the monarchy and the church, with a crown on one head and a miter on the other. Along with its somewhat holier manifestations, such as its iconography and its monastic tradition, the Russian church was as bloated with wealth and ostentation, and as oppressive, as the monarchy whose power it helped legitimize. But over the course of the 20th century Russia managed to evolve in a distinctly secular way, oppressing religious people with compulsory atheism.

The United States, uncharacteristically for a Western nation, remains a fairly religious place, where most people look for and find God in a church, or a synagogue, or a mosque. The colonies' precocious move to leave the fold of the British Empire has made the U.S. something of a living fossil in terms of cultural evolution. This is manifested in some trivial ways, such as the inability to grasp the metric system (a problem considered mostly solved in England itself) or its distinctly 18th century tendency to make a fetish of its national flag, as well as in some major ones, such as its rather half-hearted embrace of secularism.

What this difference means in the context of economic collapse is, surprisingly, next to nothing. Perhaps the American is more likely than not to start quoting the Bible and going on about the Apocalypse, the end of times, and the Rapture. These thoughts, need I say, are not conducive to survival. But the supposedly atheist Russian turned out to be just as likely to go on about The End of the World, and flocked to the newly opened churches in search of certainty and solace.

Perhaps the more significant difference is not between the prevalence and the lack of religion, but the differences between the dominant religions. In spite of the architectural ostentation of the Russian Orthodox Church, and the pomp and circumstance of its rituals, its message has always been one of asceticism as the road to salvation. Salvation is for the poor and the humble, because one's rewards are either in this world or the next, not both.

This is rather different from Protestantism, the dominant religion in America, which made the dramatic shift to considering wealth as one of God's blessings, ignoring some inconvenient points rather emphatically made by Jesus to the effect that rich people are extremely unlikely to be saved. Conversely, poverty became associated with laziness and vice, robbing poor people of their dignity.

Thus, a Russian is less likely to consider sudden descent into poverty as a fall from God's grace, and economic collapse as God's punishment upon the people, while the religions that dominate America — Protestantism, Judaism, and Islam — all feature temporal success of their followers as a key piece of evidence that God is well-disposed toward them. What will happen once God's good will toward them is no longer manifest? Chances are, they will become angry and try to find someone other than their own selves to blame, that being one of the central mechanisms of human psychology. We should look forward to unexpectedly wrathful congregations eager to do the work of an unexpectedly wrathful God.

The United States is by no means homogeneous when it comes to intensity of religious sentiment. When looking for a survivable place to settle, it is probably a good idea to look for a place where religious fervor does not run to extremes.

The Loss of Technological Comforts

Warning: what I am about to say may be somewhat unpleasant, but I'd like to get the issue out of the way. Most of the technological progress of the 20th century resulted in a higher level of physical comfort. Yes, that's why we caused global warming, a hole in the ozone layer, and a mass extinction of plants, fish, birds, and mammals: to be somewhat more comfortable for a little while.

We all expect heating and air-conditioning, hot and cold water, reliable electricity, personal transportation, paved roads, illuminated streets and parking lots, maybe even high-speed Internet. Well, what if you had to give up all that? Or, rather, what will you do when you have to give up all that?

Most of our ancestors put up with a level of physical discomfort we would find appalling: no running hot water, an outhouse instead of a flush toilet, no central heat, and one's own two feet, or a horse, as the main means for getting around. And still they managed to produce a civilization and a culture that we can just barely manage to emulate and preserve.

It doesn't take a crisis to make public utilities go on the blink, but a crisis certainly helps. Any crisis will do: economic, financial, or even political. Consider the governor of Primorye, a region on the far side of Siberia, who simply stole all the money that was supposed to buy coal for the winter. Primorye froze. With winter temperatures around 40 below, it's a wonder there's anyone still living there. It's a testament to human perseverance. As the economic situation degenerates, events seem to unfold in a certain sequence, regardless of locale. They always seem to lead to the same result: unsanitary conditions. But an energy crisis seems to me by far the most efficacious way of depriving one of one's treasured utility services.

First, electricity begins to wink in and out. Eventually, this settles into a rhythm. Countries such as Georgia, Bulgaria and Romania, as well as some peripheral regions of Russia, have had to put up with a few hours of electricity a day, sometimes for several years. North Korea is perhaps the best Soviet pupil we have, surviving without much electricity for years. Lights flicker on as the sun begins to set. The generators struggle on for a few hours, powering light bulbs, television sets, and radios. When it's time for bed, the lights wink out once again.

Second in line is heat. Every year, it comes on later and goes off sooner. People watch television or listen to the radio, when there's electricity, or just sit, under piles of blankets. Sharing bodily warmth has been a favored survival technique among humans through the ice ages. People get used to having less heat, and eventually stop complaining. Even in these relatively prosperous times, there are apartment blocks in St. Petersburg that are heated every other day, even during the coldest parts of winter. Thick sweaters and down comforters are used in place of the missing buckets of coal.

Third in line is hot water: the shower runs cold. Unless you've been deprived of a cold shower, you won't be able to appreciate it for the luxury that it affords. In case you are curious, it's a quick shower. Get wet, lather up, rinse off, towel off, dress, and shiver, under several layers of blankets, and let's not forget shared bodily warmth. A less radical approach is to wash standing in a bucket of warm water — heated up on the stove. Get wet, lather, rinse. And don't forget to shiver.

Next, water pressure drops off altogether. People learn to wash with even less water. There is a lot of running around with buckets and plastic jugs. The worst part of this is not the lack of running water; it is that the toilets won't flush. If the population is enlightened and disciplined, it will realize what it must do: collect their excretions in buckets and hand-carry them to a sewer inlet. The super-enlightened build outhouses and put together composting toilets, and use the proceeds to fertilize their kitchen gardens.

Under this combined set of circumstances, there are three causes of mortality to avoid. The first is simply avoiding freezing to death. It takes some preparation to be able to go camping in wintertime. But this is by far the easiest problem. The next is avoiding humans' worst companions through the ages: bedbugs, fleas, and lice. These never fail to make their appearance wherever unwashed people huddle together, and spread diseases such as typhoid, which have claimed millions of lives. A hot bath and a complete change of clothes can be a lifesaver. The hair-free look becomes fashionable. Baking the clothes in an oven kills the lice and their eggs. The last is avoiding cholera and other diseases spread through feces by boiling all drinking water.

It seems safe to assume that the creature comforts to which we are accustomed are going to be few and far between. But if we are willing to withstand the little indignities of reading by candlelight, bundling up throughout the cold months, running around with buckets of water, shivering while standing in a bucket of tepid water, and carrying our poop out in a bucket, then none of this is enough to stop us from maintaining a level of civilization worthy of our ancestors, who probably had it worse than we ever will. They were either depressed or cheerful about it, in keeping with their personal disposition and national character, but apparently they survived, or you wouldn't be reading this.

Economic Comparison

It can be said that the U.S. economy is run either very well or very badly. On the plus side, companies are lean, and downsized as needed to stay profitable, or at least in business. There are bankruptcy laws that weed out the unfit and competition to keep productivity going up. Businesses use just-in-time delivery to cut down on inventory and make heavy use of information technology to work out the logistics of operating in a global economy.

On the minus side, the U.S. economy runs ever larger structural deficits. It fails to provide the majority of the population with the sort of economic security that people in other developed nations take for granted. It spends more on medicine and education than many other countries, and gets less for it. Instead of a single government-owned airline, it has several permanently bankrupt government-supported ones. It spends heavily on law enforcement, and has a high crime rate. It continues to export high-wage manufacturing jobs and replace them with low-wage service jobs. As I mentioned before, it is, technically, bankrupt.

Both in the former Soviet Union and in North America, the landscape has fallen victim to a massive, centrally managed uglification program. Moscow's central planners put up identical drab and soulless buildings throughout its territory, disregarding regional architectural traditions and erasing local culture. America's land developers have played a largely similar role, with a similarly ghastly result: the United States of Generica, where many places can be told apart only by reading their highway signs.

In North America, there is also a pervasive childish idiocy that has spread desolation across the entire continent: the idiocy of the traffic engineer. As Jane Jacobs cleverly illustrates, these are not engineers of the sort that solve problems and draw conclusions based on evidence, but "little boys with toy cars happily murmuring 'Zoom, Zooom, Zooooom!'" [Dark Age Ahead, p. 79] The landscape that makes them happy is designed to waste as much fuel as possible by trapping people in their cars and making them drive around in circles.

***

It can also be said that the Soviet economy was run either very well or very badly. On the plus side, that system, for all its many failings, managed to eradicate the more extreme forms of poverty, malnutrition, many diseases, and illiteracy. It provided economic security of an extreme sort: everyone knew exactly how much they would earn, and the prices of everyday objects remained fixed. Housing, health care, education, and pensions were all guaranteed. Quality varied; education was generally excellent, housing much less so, and Soviet medicine was often called "the freest medicine in the world" — with reasonable service achievable only through private arrangements.

On the minus side, the centrally planned behemoth was extremely inefficient, with high levels of loss and outright waste at every level. The distribution system was so inflexible that enterprises hoarded inventory. It excelled at producing capital goods, but when it came to manufacturing consumer goods, which require much more flexibility than a centrally planned system can provide, it failed. It also failed miserably at producing food, and was forced to resort to importing many basic foodstuffs. It operated a huge military and political empire, but, paradoxically, failed to derive any economic benefit from it, running the entire enterprise at a net loss.

Also paradoxically, these very failings and inefficiencies made for a soft landing. Because there was no mechanism by which state enterprises could go bankrupt, they often continued to operate for a time at some low level, holding back salaries or scaling back production. This lessened the number of instant mass layoffs or outright closings, but where these did occur, they were accompanied by very high mortality rates among men between the ages of 45 and 55, who turn out to be psychologically the most vulnerable to sudden loss of career, and who either drank themselves to death or committed suicide.

People could sometimes use their old, semi-defunct place of employment as a base of operations of sorts, from which to run the kind of black market business that allowed many of them to gradually transition to private enterprise. The inefficient distribution system, and the hoarding to which it gave rise, resulted in very high levels of inventory, which could be bartered. Some enterprises continued to operate in this manner, bartering their leftover inventory with other enterprises, in order to supply their employees with something they could use or sell.

What parallels can we draw from this to employment in the post-collapse United States? Public sector employment may provide somewhat better chances for keeping one's job. For instance, it is unlikely that all schools, colleges, and universities will dismiss all of their faculty and staff at the same time. It is somewhat more likely that their salaries will not be enough to live on, but they may, for a time, be able to maintain their social niche. Properties and facilities management is probably a safe bet: as long as there are properties that are considered valuable, they will need to be looked after. When the time comes to dismantle them and barter off the pieces, it will help if they are still intact, and one has the keys to them.

Economic Collapse in the U.S.

A spontaneous soft landing is unlikely in the U.S., where a large company can decide to shut its doors by executive decision, laying off personnel and auctioning off capital equipment and inventory. Since in many cases the equipment is leased and the inventory is just-in-time and therefore very thin, a business can be made to evaporate virtually overnight. Since many executives may decide to cut their losses all at once, seeing the same economic projections and interpreting them similarly, the effect on communities can be utterly devastating.

Most people in the U.S. cannot survive very long without an income. This may sound curious to some people — how can anyone, anywhere survive without an income? Well, in post-collapse Russia, if you didn't pay rent or utilities — because no-one else was paying them either — and if you grew or gathered a bit of your own food, and you had some friends and relatives to help you out, then an income was not a prerequisite for survival. Most people got by, somehow.

But most people in the U.S., once their savings are depleted, would in due course be forced to live in their car, or in some secluded stretch of woods, in a tent, or under a tarp. There is currently no mechanism by which landlords can be made not to evict deadbeat tenants, or banks be prevailed upon not to foreclose on nonperforming loans. A wholesale reintroduction of rent control seems politically unlikely. Once enough residential and commercial real estate becomes vacant, and law enforcement becomes lax or nonexistent, squatting becomes a real possibility. Squatters usually find it hard to get mail and other services, but this is a very minor issue. More importantly, they can be easily dislodged again and again.

Homelessness

The term "loitering" does not translate into Russian. The closest equivalent one can find is something along the lines of "hanging around" or "wasting time," in public. This is important, because once nobody has a job to go to, the two choices they are presented with are sitting at home, and, as it were, loitering. If loitering is illegal, then sitting at home becomes the only choice.

The U.S. and the Soviet Union were at two extremes of a continuum between the public and the private. In the Soviet Union, most land was open to the public. Even apartments were often communal, meaning that the bedrooms were private, but the kitchen, bathroom, and hallway were common areas. In the U.S., most of the land is privately owned, some by people who put up signs threatening to shoot trespassers. Most public places are in fact private, marked "Customers Only" and "No Loitering." Where there are public parks, these are often "closed" at night, and anyone trying to spend a night there is likely to be told to "move along" by the police.

After the collapse, Russia experienced a swelling of the ranks of people described by the acronym "BOMZh," which is actually short for "BOMZh i Z," and stands for "persons without a definite place of residence or employment." The bomzhies, as they came to be called, often inhabited unused bits of the urban or rural landscape, where, with nobody to tell them to "move along," they were left largely in peace. Such an indefinite place of residence was often referred to as bomzhatnik. English badly needs a term for that. Perhaps we could call it a "bum garden" — it is as much a garden as an "office park" is a park.

When the U.S. economy collapses, one would expect employment rates, and, with them, residency rates, to plummet. It is hard to estimate what percentage of the U.S. population would, as a result, become homeless, but it could be quite high, perhaps becoming so commonplace as to remove the stigma. A country where most of the neighborhoods are structured so as to exclude people of inadequate means, in order to preserve property values, is not a pleasant place to be a bum. Then again, when property values start dropping to zero, we may find that some of the properties spontaneously re-zone themselves into "bum gardens," with no political will or power anywhere to do anything about it.

I do not mean to imply that Russian bums have a good time of it. But because most of the Russian population was able to keep their place of residence in spite of a collapsing economy, the percentage of bomzhies in the general population never made it into the double digits. These most unfortunate cases led short, brutal lives, often in an alcoholic haze, and accounted for quite a lot of Russia's spike in post-collapse mortality. Some of them were refugees — Russians ethnically cleansed from the newly independent, suddenly nationalistic republics — who could not be easily reabsorbed into the Russian population due to Russia's chronic housing shortage.

Communal Survival

Russia's chronic housing shortage was partly caused by the spectacular decline of Russian agriculture, which caused people to migrate to the cities, and partly due simply to the inability of the government to put up buildings quickly enough. What the government wanted to put up was invariably an apartment building: 5 floors, 9 floors, and even some 14-floor towers. The buildings went up on vacant, or vacated, land, and were usually surrounded by a generous portion of wasteland, which, in the smaller cities and towns, and in places where the soil is not frozen year-round, or covered with sulfur or soot from a nearby factory, was quickly converted into kitchen gardens.

The quality of construction always looked a bit shabby, but has turned out to be surprisingly sound structurally and quite practical. Mostly it was reinforced concrete slab construction, with ceramic tile on the outside and hard plaster for insulation on the inside. It was cheap to heat, and usually had heat, at least enough of it so that the pipes wouldn't freeze, with the steam supplied by a gigantic central boiler that served an entire neighborhood.

One often hears that the shabbiest of these Soviet-era apartment blocks, termed "Khrushcheby" — a melding of Khrushchev, who ordered them built, and "trushcheby" (Russian for "slums") — are about to start collapsing, but they haven't done so yet. Yes, they are dank and dreary, and the apartments are cramped, and the walls are cracked, and the roof often leaks, and the hallways and stairwells are dark and smell of urine, but it's housing.

Because apartments were so hard to come by, with waiting lists stretched out for decades, several generations generally lived together. This was often an unpleasant, stressful, and even traumatic way to live, but also very cheap. Grandparents often did a lot of the work of raising children, while the parents worked. When the economy collapsed, it was often the grandparents who took to serious gardening and raised food during the summer months. Working-age people took to experimenting in the black market, with mixed results: some would get lucky and strike it rich, while for others it was lean times. With enough people living together, these accidental disparities tended to even out at least to some extent.

A curious reversal took place. Whereas before the collapse, parents were often in a position to provide some financial help to their adult children, now the opposite is true. Older people who do not have children are much more likely to live in poverty than those who have children to support them. Once financial capital is wiped out, human capital becomes essential.

A key difference between Russia and the U.S. is that Russians, like most people around the world, generally spend their entire lives living in one place, whereas Americans move around constantly. Russians generally know, or at least recognize, most of the people who surround them. When the economy collapses, everyone has to confront an unfamiliar situation. The Russians, at least, did not have to confront it in the company of complete strangers. On the other hand, Americans are far more likely than Russians to help out strangers, at least when they have something to spare.

Another element that was helpful to Russians was a particular feature of Russian culture: since money was not particularly useful in the Soviet era economy, and did not convey status or success, it was not particularly prized either, and shared rather freely. Friends thought nothing of helping each other out in times of need. It was important that everyone had some, not that one had more than the others. With the arrival of market economics, this cultural trait disappeared, but it persisted long enough to help people to survive the transition.

Smelling the Roses

Another note on culture: once the economy collapses, there is generally less to do, making it a good time for the naturally idle and a bad time for those predisposed to keeping busy.

Soviet-era culture had room for two types of activity: normal, which generally meant avoiding breaking a sweat, and heroic. Normal activity was expected, and there was never any reason to do it harder than expected. In fact, that sort of thing tended to be frowned upon by "the collective," or the rank and file. Heroic activity was celebrated, but not necessarily rewarded financially.

Russians tend to look in bemused puzzlement on the American compulsion to "work hard and play hard." The term "career" was in the Soviet days a pejorative term — the attribute of a "careerist" — someone greedy, unscrupulous, and overly "ambitious" (also a pejorative term). Terms like "success" and "achievement" were very rarely applied on a personal level, because they sounded overweening and pompous. They were reserved for bombastic public pronouncements about the great successes of the Soviet people. Not that positive personal characteristics did not exist: on a personal level, there was respect given to talent, professionalism, decency, sometimes even creativity. But "hard worker," to a Russian, sounded a lot like "fool."

A collapsing economy is especially hard on those who are accustomed to prompt, courteous service. In the Soviet Union, most official service was rude and slow, and involved standing in long lines. Many of the products that were in short supply could not be obtained even in this manner, and required something called blat: special, unofficial access or favor. The exchange of personal favors was far more important to the actual functioning of the economy than the exchange of money. To Russians, blat is almost a sacred thing: a vital part of culture that holds society together. It is also the only part of the economy that is collapse-proof, and, as such, a valuable cultural adaptation.

Most Americans have heard of Communism, and automatically believe that it is an apt description of the Soviet system, even though there was nothing particularly communal about a welfare state and a vast industrial empire run by an elitist central planning bureaucracy. But very few of them have ever heard of the real operative "ism" that dominated Soviet life: Dofenism, which can be loosely translated as "not giving a rat's ass." A lot of people, more and more during the "stagnation" period of the 1980's, felt nothing but contempt for the system, did what little they had to do to get by (night watchman and furnace stoker were favorite jobs among the highly educated) and got all their pleasure from their friends, from their reading, or from nature.

This sort of disposition may seem like a cop-out, but when there is a collapse on the horizon, it works as psychological insurance: instead of going through the agonizing process of losing and rediscovering one's identity in a post-collapse environment, one could simply sit back and watch events unfold. If you are currently "a mover and a shaker," of things or people or whatever, then collapse will surely come as a shock to you, and it will take you a long time, perhaps forever, to find more things to move and to shake to your satisfaction. However, if your current occupation is as a keen observer of grass and trees, then, post-collapse, you could take on something else that's useful, such as dismantling useless things.

The ability to stop and smell the roses — to let it all go, to refuse to harbor regrets or nurture grievances, to confine one's serious attention only to that which is immediately necessary, and not to worry too much about the rest — is perhaps the one most critical to post-collapse survival. The most psychologically devastated are usually the middle-aged breadwinners, who, once they are no longer gainfully employed, feel completely lost. Detachment and indifference can be most healing, provided they do not become morbid. It is good to take your sentimental nostalgia for what once was, is, and will soon no longer be, up front, and get it over with.

Asset Stripping

Russia's post-collapse economy was for a time dominated by one type of wholesale business: asset stripping. To put it in an American setting: suppose you have title, or otherwise unhindered access, to an entire suburban subdivision, which is no longer accessible by transportation, either public or private, too far to reach by bicycle, and is generally no longer suitable for its intended purpose of housing and accumulating equity for fully employed commuters who shop at the now defunct nearby mall. After the mortgages are foreclosed and the properties repossessed, what more is there to do, except board it all up and let it rot? Well, what has been developed can be just as easily undeveloped.

What you do is strip it of anything valuable or reusable, and either sell or stockpile the materials. Pull the copper out of the streets and the walls. Haul away the curbstones and the utility poles. Take down the vinyl siding. Yank out the fiberglass insulation. The sinks and windows can surely find a new use somewhere else, especially if no new ones are being made.

Having bits of the landscape disappear can be a rude surprise. One summer I arrived in St. Petersburg and found that a new scourge had descended on the land while I was gone: a lot of manhole covers were mysteriously missing. Nobody knew where they went or who profited from their removal. One guess was that the municipal workers, who hadn't been paid in months, took them home with them, to be returned once they got paid. They did eventually reappear, so there may be some merit to this theory. With the gaping manholes positioned throughout the city like so many anteater traps for cars, you had the choice of driving either very slowly and carefully, or very fast, and betting your life on the proper functioning of the shock absorbers.

Post-collapse Russia's housing stock stayed largely intact, but an orgy of asset stripping of a different kind took place: not just left-over inventory, but entire factories were stripped down and exported. What went on in Russia under the guise of privatization, is a subject for a different article, but whether it's called "privatization" or "liquidation" or "theft" doesn't matter: those with title to something worthless will find a way to extract value from it, making it even more worthless. An abandoned suburban subdivision might be worthless as housing, but valuable as a dump site for toxic waste.

Just because the economy is going to collapse in the most oil-addicted country on earth doesn't necessarily mean that things will be just as bad everywhere else. As the Soviet example shows, if the entire country is for sale, buyers will materialize out of nowhere, crate it up, and haul it away. They will export everything: furnishings, equipment, works of art, antiques. The last remnant of industrial activity is usually the scrap iron business. There seems to be no limit to the amount of iron that can be extracted from a mature post-industrial site.

Food

The dismal state of Soviet agriculture turned out to be paradoxically beneficial in fostering a kitchen garden economy, which helped Russians to survive the collapse. At one point it became informally known that 10% of the farmland — the part allocated to private plots — was being used to produce 90% of the food. Beyond underscoring the gross inadequacies of Soviet-style command and control industrial agriculture, it is indicative of a general fact: agriculture is far more efficient when it is carried out on a small scale, using manual labor.

Russians always grew some of their own food, and scarcity of high-quality produce in the government stores kept the kitchen garden tradition going during even the more prosperous times of the 60s and the 70s. After the collapse, these kitchen gardens turned out to be lifesavers. What many Russians practiced, either through tradition or by trial and error, or sheer laziness, was in some ways akin to the new organic farming and permaculture techniques. Many productive plots in Russia look like a riot of herbs, vegetables, and flowers growing in wild profusion.

Forests in Russia have always been used as an important additional source of food. Russians recognize, and eat, just about every edible mushroom variety, and all of the edible berries. During the peak mushroom season, which is generally in the fall, forests are overrun with mushroom-pickers. The mushrooms are either pickled or dried and stored, and often last throughout the winter.

Recreational Drug Use

A rather striking similarity between Russians and Americans is their propensity to self-medicate. While the Russian has traditionally been single-heartedly dedicated to the pursuit of vodka, the American is more likely than not to have also tried cannabis. Cocaine has also had a big effect on American culture, as have opiates. There are differences as well: the Russian is somewhat less likely to drink alone, or to be apprehended for drinking, or being drunk, in public. To a Russian, being drunk is almost a sacred right; to an American, it is a guilty pleasure. Many of the unhappier Americans are forced by their circumstances to drink and drive; this does not make them, nor the other drivers, nor the pedestrians (should any still exist) any happier.

The Russian can get furiously drunk in public, stagger about singing patriotic songs, fall into a snow bank, and either freeze to death or be carted off to a drunk tank. All this produces little or no remorse in him. Based on my reading of H. L. Mencken, America was also once upon a time a land of happy drunks, where a whiskey bottle would be passed around the courtroom at the start of the proceedings, and where a drunken jury would later render a drunken verdict, but Prohibition ruined all that. Russia's prohibition lasted only a few short years, when Gorbachev tried to save the nation from itself, and failed miserably.

When the economy collapses, hard-drinking people everywhere find all the more reason to get drunk, but much less wherewithal with which to procure drink. In Russia, innovative market-based solutions were quickly improvised, which it was my privilege to observe. It was summer, and I was on a local electric train heading out of St. Petersburg. It was packed, so I stood in the vestibule of the car, and observed rainbows (it had just rained) through the missing windowpane. Soon, activity within the vestibule caught my attention: at each stop, grannies with jugs of moonshine would approach the car door and offer a sniff to the eager customers waiting inside. Price and quality were quickly discussed, an agreed-upon quantity was dispensed in exchange for a fistful of notes, jug to mug, and the train moved on. It was a tense atmosphere, because along with the paying customers there came many others, who were simply along for the ride, but expected their fair share nevertheless. I was forced to make a hasty exit and jam myself into the salon, because the freeloaders thought I was taking up valuable freeloading space.

There might be a few moonshine-makers left in rural parts of the United States, but most of the country seems to be addicted to cans and bottles of beer, or jugs, plastic or glass, of liquor. When this source dries up due to problems with interstate trucking, local breweries will no doubt continue to operate, and even expand production, to cope with both old and new demand, but there will still be plenty of room for improvisation. I would also expect cannabis to become even more widespread; it makes people less prone to violence than liquor, which is good, but it also stimulates their appetite, which is bad if there isn't a lot of food. Still, it is much cheaper to produce than alcohol, which requires either grain or natural gas and complicated chemistry.

In all, I expect drugs and alcohol to become one of the largest short-term post-collapse entrepreneurial opportunities in the United States, along with asset stripping, and security.

The conclusion to this excellent essay is forthcoming.