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99th_Monkey

(19,326 posts)
Mon Oct 20, 2014, 07:39 PM Oct 2014

Hedges: The Imperative of Revolt

Last edited Mon Oct 20, 2014, 08:35 PM - Edit history (1)

Sometimes on DU -- when things seem so hopelessly amiss with our corporate oligarchy in the USA -- there is a collective "sigh" and the question gets asked: "WTF can we DO?". The specter of mass surveillance (much of it by PRIVATE corporations), M$M merely regurgitating what corporations and the shadow government tells them, private prisons filled with minorities, Citizens United wholesale buying of elections by big-money, etc. and it all seems so irreversible, so hopeless.

This article deals head-on with this reality. It is 3 pages long, so you may want to bookmark for later.
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The Imperative of Revolt

Posted on Oct 19, 2014 * Chris Hedges * Truthdig

TORONTO—I met with Sheldon S. Wolin in Salem, Ore., and John Ralston Saul in Toronto and asked the two political philosophers the same question. If, as Saul has written, we have undergone a corporate coup d’état and now live under a species of corporate dictatorship that Wolin calls “inverted totalitarianism,” if the internal mechanisms that once made piecemeal and incremental reform possible remain ineffective, if corporate power retains its chokehold on our economy and governance, including our legislative bodies, judiciary and systems of information, and if these corporate forces are able to use the security and surveillance apparatus and militarized police forces to criminalize dissent, how will change occur and what will it look like?

Wolin, who wrote the books “Politics and Vision” and “Democracy Incorporated,” and Saul, who wrote “Voltaire’s Bastards” and “The Unconscious Civilization,” see democratic rituals and institutions, especially in the United States, as largely a facade for unchecked global corporate power. Wolin and Saul excoriate academics, intellectuals and journalists, charging they have abrogated their calling to expose abuses of power and give voice to social criticism; they instead function as echo chambers for elites, courtiers and corporate systems managers. Neither believes the current economic system is sustainable. And each calls for mass movements willing to carry out repeated acts of civil disobedience to disrupt and delegitimize corporate power.

“If you continue to go down the wrong road, at a certain point something happens,” Saul said during our meeting Wednesday in Toronto, where he lives. “At a certain point when the financial system is wrong it falls apart. And it did. And it will fall apart again.”

“The collapse started in 1973,” Saul continued. “There were a series of sequential collapses afterwards. The fascinating thing is that between 1850 and 1970 we put in place all sorts of mechanisms to stop collapses which we can call liberalism, social democracy or Red Toryism. It was an understanding that we can’t have boom-and-bust cycles. We can’t have poverty-stricken people. We can’t have starvation. The reason today’s collapses are not leading to what happened in the 18th century and the 19th century is because all these safety nets, although under attack, are still in place. But each time we have a collapse we come out of it stripping more of the protection away. At a certain point we will find ourselves back in the pre-protection period. At that point we will get a collapse that will be incredibly dramatic. I have no idea what it will look like. A revolution from the left? A revolution from the right? Is it violence followed by state violence? Is it the collapse of the last meaningful edges of democracy? Is it a sudden decision by a critical mass of people that they are not going to take it anymore?”

~snip~

“You need a professional or elite class devoted to profound change,” Saul said. “If you want to get power you have to be able to hold it. And you have to be able to hold it long enough to change the direction. The neoconservatives understood this. They have always been Bolsheviks. They are the Bolsheviks of the right. Their methodology is the methodology of the Bolsheviks. They took over political parties by internal coups d’état. They worked out, scientifically, what things they needed to do and in what order to change the structures of power. They have done it stage by stage. And we are living the result of that. The liberals sat around writing incomprehensible laws and boring policy papers. They were unwilling to engage in the real fight that was won by a minute group of extremists.”

MORE: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_imperative_of_revolt_20141019

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Hedges: The Imperative of Revolt (Original Post) 99th_Monkey Oct 2014 OP
Kidnap their soldiers. Kidnap their mercenaries. As many as possible, right from the get-go. valerief Oct 2014 #1

valerief

(53,235 posts)
1. Kidnap their soldiers. Kidnap their mercenaries. As many as possible, right from the get-go.
Mon Oct 20, 2014, 08:17 PM
Oct 2014

Strip the oligarchs of their protection.

Just some daydreaming.

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