This video should be required viewing for all progressives who continue to vote
for the lesser fascist. Can we just get over this already? Can we get real? Can
we come to a true understanding of the situation? Can we stop believing that the
oligarchy is going to play Santa Claus, hand us a great big present in the form
of a savior politician, and voluntarily relinquish its immense power and
privilege? Has your little lesser fascist voting game taken you where you want
to go? It is said that the essence of insanity is to perform the same action
repeatedly and expect a different result. Can you admit that your actions meet
this definition? It's time to build an alternative. Will you be part of the
problem or part of the solution?
Chris Hedges, whose column is published on
www.Truthdig.org every Monday, spent two
decades as a foreign reporter covering wars in Latin America, Africa, Europe and
the Middle East. He served for eight years as the Middle East bureau chief of
The New York Times, where he shared the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory
Journalism, for coverage of terrorism. Hedges also received the 2002 Amnesty
International Global Award for Human Rights Journalism.
In 2009 the Los Angeles Press Club honored the original columns that Hedges
writes for Truthdig by naming the author the Online Journalist of the Year and
granting him the Best Online Column award for his Truthdig essay “Party to
Murder,” about the December 2008-January 2009 Israeli assault on Gaza.
Hedges is a senior fellow at The Nation Institute and the Anschutz Distinguished
Fellow at Princeton University. He has written nine books, including “Empire of
Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle” (2009), “I Don’t
Believe in Atheists” (2008) and the best-selling “American Fascists: The
Christian Right and the War on America” (2008). His book “War Is a Force That
Gives Us Meaning” (2003) was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle
Award for Nonfiction.Hedges, who holds a B.A. in English literature from Colgate
University and a master of divinity degree from Harvard Divinity School, is
fluent in Arabic and also speaks French, Spanish, Greek and Latin.
America the Illiterate
By Chris Hedges
November 16th 2008 "Truthdig" -- - We live in two Americas. One America, now the
minority, functions in a print-based, literate world. It can cope with
complexity and has the intellectual tools to separate illusion from truth. The
other America, which constitutes the majority, exists in a non-reality-based
belief system. This America, dependent on skillfully manipulated images for
information, has severed itself from the literate, print-based culture. It
cannot differentiate between lies and truth. It is informed by simplistic,
childish narratives and clichés. It is thrown into confusion by ambiguity,
nuance and self-reflection. This divide, more than race, class or gender, more
than rural or urban, believer or nonbeliever, red state or blue state, has split
the country into radically distinct, unbridgeable and antagonistic entities.
There are over 42 million American adults, 20 percent of whom hold high school
diplomas, who cannot read, as well as the 50 million who read at a fourth- or
fifth-grade level. Nearly a third of the nation’s population is illiterate or
barely literate. And their numbers are growing by an estimated 2 million a year.
But even those who are supposedly literate retreat in huge numbers into this
image-based existence. A third of high school graduates, along with 42 percent
of college graduates, never read a book after they finish school. Eighty percent
of the families in the United States last year did not buy a book.
The illiterate rarely vote, and when they do vote they do so without the ability
to make decisions based on textual information. American political campaigns,
which have learned to speak in the comforting epistemology of images, eschew
real ideas and policy for cheap slogans and reassuring personal narratives.
Political propaganda now masquerades as ideology. Political campaigns have
become an experience. They do not require cognitive or self-critical skills.
They are designed to ignite pseudo-religious feelings of euphoria, empowerment
and collective salvation. Campaigns that succeed are carefully constructed
psychological instruments that manipulate fickle public moods, emotions and
impulses, many of which are subliminal. They create a public ecstasy that annuls
individuality and fosters a state of mindlessness. They thrust us into an
eternal present. They cater to a nation that now lives in a state of permanent
amnesia. It is style and story, not content or history or reality, which inform
our politics and our lives. We prefer happy illusions. And it works because so
much of the American electorate, including those who should know better, blindly
cast ballots for slogans, smiles, the cheerful family tableaux, narratives and
the perceived sincerity and the attractiveness of candidates. We confuse how we
feel with knowledge.
The illiterate and semi-literate, once the campaigns are over, remain powerless.
They still cannot protect their children from dysfunctional public schools. They
still cannot understand predatory loan deals, the intricacies of mortgage
papers, credit card agreements and equity lines of credit that drive them into
foreclosures and bankruptcies. They still struggle with the most basic chores of
daily life from reading instructions on medicine bottles to filling out bank
forms, car loan documents and unemployment benefit and insurance papers. They
watch helplessly and without comprehension as hundreds of thousands of jobs are
shed. They are hostages to brands. Brands come with images and slogans. Images
and slogans are all they understand. Many eat at fast food restaurants not only
because it is cheap but because they can order from pictures rather than menus.
And those who serve them, also semi-literate or illiterate, punch in orders on
cash registers whose keys are marked with symbols and pictures. This is our
brave new world.
Political leaders in our post-literate society no longer need to be competent,
sincere or honest. They only need to appear to have these qualities. Most of all
they need a story, a narrative. The reality of the narrative is irrelevant. It
can be completely at odds with the facts. The consistency and emotional appeal
of the story are paramount. The most essential skill in political theater and
the consumer culture is artifice. Those who are best at artifice succeed. Those
who have not mastered the art of artifice fail. In an age of images and
entertainment, in an age of instant emotional gratification, we do not seek or
want honesty. We ask to be indulged and entertained by clichés, stereotypes and
mythic narratives that tell us we can be whomever we want to be, that we live in
the greatest country on Earth, that we are endowed with superior moral and
physical qualities and that our glorious future is preordained, either because
of our attributes as Americans or because we are blessed by God or both.
The ability to magnify these simple and childish lies, to repeat them and have
surrogates repeat them in endless loops of news cycles, gives these lies the
aura of an uncontested truth. We are repeatedly fed words or phrases like yes we
can, maverick, change, pro-life, hope or war on terror. It feels good not to
think. All we have to do is visualize what we want, believe in ourselves and
summon those hidden inner resources, whether divine or national, that make the
world conform to our desires. Reality is never an impediment to our advancement.
The Princeton Review analyzed the transcripts of the Gore-Bush debates, the
Clinton-Bush-Perot debates of 1992, the Kennedy-Nixon debates of 1960 and the
Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858. It reviewed these transcripts using a standard
vocabulary test that indicates the minimum educational standard needed for a
reader to grasp the text. During the 2000 debates, George W. Bush spoke at a
sixth-grade level (6.7) and Al Gore at a seventh-grade level (7.6). In the 1992
debates, Bill Clinton spoke at a seventh-grade level (7.6), while George H.W.
Bush spoke at a sixth-grade level (6.8), as did H. Ross Perot (6.3). In the
debates between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon, the candidates spoke in
language used by 10th-graders. In the debates of Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A.
Douglas the scores were respectively 11.2 and 12.0. In short, today’s political
rhetoric is designed to be comprehensible to a 10-year-old child or an adult
with a sixth-grade reading level. It is fitted to this level of comprehension
because most Americans speak, think and are entertained at this level. This is
why serious film and theater and other serious artistic expression, as well as
newspapers and books, are being pushed to the margins of American society.
Voltaire was the most famous man of the 18th century. Today the most famous
“person” is Mickey Mouse.
In our post-literate world, because ideas are inaccessible, there is a need for
constant stimulus. News, political debate, theater, art and books are judged not
on the power of their ideas but on their ability to entertain. Cultural products
that force us to examine ourselves and our society are condemned as elitist and
impenetrable. Hannah Arendt warned that the marketization of culture leads to
its degradation, that this marketization creates a new celebrity class of
intellectuals who, although well read and informed themselves, see their role in
society as persuading the masses that “Hamlet” can be as entertaining as “The
Lion King” and perhaps as educational. “Culture,” she wrote, “is being destroyed
in order to yield entertainment.”
“There are many great authors of the past who have survived centuries of
oblivion and neglect,” Arendt wrote, “but it is still an open question whether
they will be able to survive an entertaining version of what they have to say.”
The change from a print-based to an image-based society has transformed our
nation. Huge segments of our population, especially those who live in the
embrace of the Christian right and the consumer culture, are completely unmoored
from reality. They lack the capacity to search for truth and cope rationally
with our mounting social and economic ills. They seek clarity, entertainment and
order. They are willing to use force to impose this clarity on others,
especially those who do not speak as they speak and think as they think. All the
traditional tools of democracies, including dispassionate scientific and
historical truth, facts, news and rational debate, are useless instruments in a
world that lacks the capacity to use them.
As we descend into a devastating economic crisis, one that Barack Obama cannot
halt, there will be tens of millions of Americans who will be ruthlessly thrust
aside. As their houses are foreclosed, as their jobs are lost, as they are
forced to declare bankruptcy and watch their communities collapse, they will
retreat even further into irrational fantasy. They will be led toward glittering
and self-destructive illusions by our modern Pied Pipers—our corporate
advertisers, our charlatan preachers, our television news celebrities, our
self-help gurus, our entertainment industry and our political demagogues—who
will offer increasingly absurd forms of escapism.
The core values of our open society, the ability to think for oneself, to draw
independent conclusions, to express dissent when judgment and common sense
indicate something is wrong, to be self-critical, to challenge authority, to
understand historical facts, to separate truth from lies, to advocate for change
and to acknowledge that there are other views, different ways of being, that are
morally and socially acceptable, are dying. Obama used hundreds of millions of
dollars in campaign funds to appeal to and manipulate this illiteracy and
irrationalism to his advantage, but these forces will prove to be his most
deadly nemesis once they collide with the awful reality that awaits us.