Nick Gillespie | May 19, 2006
That's the question Ian Buruma asks in this piece in The Sunday Times (via Arts & Letters Daily):
One of the most vexing things for artists and intellectuals who live under the compulsion to applaud dictators is the spectacle of colleagues from more open societies applauding of their own free will. It adds a peculiarly nasty insult to injury.
Buruma runs through some well-known examples of tyrants who have felt such love, including Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, and Castro ("Last year a number of journalists, writers and showbiz figures, including Harold Pinter, Nadine Gordimer, Harry Belafonte and Tariq Ali, signed a letter claiming that in Cuba 'there has not been a single case of disappearance, torture or extra-judicial execution since 1959...'"). And now, Venezuela's Hugo Chavez ("not yet a Castro, let alone a Pol Pot"), despite his restricting speech, quashing dissent, and more.
What motivates this longstanding dynamic?
The common element of radical Third Worldism is an obsession with American power, as though the US were so intrinsically evil that any enemy of the US must be our friend...
Criticism of American policies and economic practices are necessary and often just, but why do leftists continue to discredit their critical stance by applauding strongmen who oppress and murder their own critics? Is it simply a reverse application of that famous American cold war dictum: "He may be a bastard, but he's our bastard"? Or is it the fatal attraction to power often felt by writers and artists who feel marginal and impotent in capitalist democracies? ...
When democracy is endangered, the left should be equally hard on rulers who oppose the US. Failure to do so encourages authoritarianism everywhere, including in the West itself, where the frivolous behaviour of a dogmatic left has already allowed neoconservatives to steal all the best lines.
"Thank you, my foolish friends in the West" here.
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Buruna's point is (very) well-taken, but it must be remembered
that intellectuals' fascination with arbitrary power has been
around for a long time--ever since the French Revolution. Geroge
Orwell, so often honored if not imitated, wrote endlessly of the
attraction of both fascism and communism for the writers and
artists of his time.
A society devoted to compromise, short-term goals, and bland
hedonism just isn't exciting enough for intellectuals. They want
heroics, discipline, and self-sacrifice! Above all, of course, they
want to tell other people what to do.
Alan Vanneman,
Buruna's point is (very) well-taken, but it must be remembered
that intellectuals' fascination with arbitrary power has been
around for a long time--ever since the French
Revolution.
(A) Lots of intellectuals favored arbitrary power prior to the
French Revolution; just see the work of Jean Bodin.
(B) There was no single response by intellectuals to the French
Revolution; the response was as varied as that between Edmund Burke
(in opposition), Thomas Paine (in favor), and Mary Wollstonecraft
(it did not emancipate women).
I saw that article yesterday--it's quite good. And I'm as
perplexed as the author. The interesting thing about the phenomenon
is that it seems that right-wing support of dictators is more
frequently based on the supporters' view of practical politics.
They don't try to say the guy is good, they just say he's all we've
got. I usually don't agree with that position, anyway, but I at
least understand the rationale.
Left-wing support of dictators, on the other hand, seems heavily
steeped in ignoring the abuses of the dictator. Even around here,
there's been the implication that Chavez is somehow a purely
democratically elected leader. Of course, that ignores a coup
attempt in the 90s, a sorta coup more recently, and, of course, all
of his not-so-freedom-loving activities since then. Anyway, there
seems to be some sort of emotional need to find a counterpoise to
American hegemony and to place that counterpoise on a
pedestal.
If I were a Democrat, this strange behavior is something I'd try
really hard to root out of the left, because it isn't rational, it
offends the hell out of people who lived under the oppression in
question, and it's almost insanely hypocritical. If you say of an
oppressive society that it's some sort of ideal state, what does
that say about your goals? Look at Cuba--I know people
who've traveled to Cuba regularly, and by all accounts it is not
even remotely free. Running around saying Castro is great is almost
as stupid as saying that Stalin was great. I thought human rights
and liberty were important?
Perhaps the big problem is when you get so convinced of the
rightness of your position that the idea of force being used to
make people behave the way you want them to seems less and less
offensive. In that, people of any political stripe can be guilty.
Heck, there are probably libertarians out there that think a
dictator is a good idea, so long as he legalizes drugs and protects
free speech :)
Nick Gillespie,
Do you think that the percentage of artists, etc. who support
tyrants is greater than that of the general population? Or is it
merely the fact that they have more access to airtime, etc.?
Alan Vanneman,
(C) And what exactly do you mean by the "French Revolution?" Do you
mean the period of Jacobin dominance of the Convention in
1793-1794? The tennis court oath? The adoption of the Declaration
of the Rights of Man? The post-Thermidor period? Hell, there are
lots of periods of the French Revolution that I can generally
support. Does that make me an apologist for "arbitrary power?"
Gillespie is on the money here. The artists and self-proclaimed
intelligencia, especially those of today, live in such a rarified
atmosphere that they can often NOT identify with the common man.
Those of us here on the ground in that big wasteland called
fly-over country simply CAN'T reason for ourselves, so SOMEONE has
to tell us dirty peseants what to do.
They see themselves as part of that ruling upper class, rather than
part of the greater population of brainless serfs. So it nearly
always comes as a nasty suprise to them where their favorite
bully-boy puts THEM up against the wall when the revolution
comes..
Vanneman: In some defense of Tom Paine, the French Revolution, seen from a distance, DID look initially like an American style chance at republican freedom. Even Beetoven thought the French and yes, Napoleon would sweep away the stoltifying anachronism of Monarchy. He changed his tune (so to speak) after Napolen crowned himself Emperor.
Larry Anderson,
Having met lots of everyday Americans who suport Castro's regime I
find claims of artists living in a "rarified" atmosphere to be
rather odd.
What a crappy, dishonest article. To demonstrate the Chavez is a
"tyrant in waiting," an "enemy of freedom" who "restricts free
speech," Buruma tells us that he "takes to the airwaves to denounce
the opposition."
Can you imagine such a thing? A political figure, the president,
speaking to the media? And denouncing the opposition?
And to demonstrate that "western artists" applauded Saddam Hussein,
Buruma tells us of a vist by "George Galloway, among others." You
know, noted singer/songwriter George Galloway. And, er, what
others? The author doesn't bother to say. But in wonderful circular
logic, we're supposed to JUST KNOW that there were lots of western
artists saying nice things about Saddam Hussein, because that's
what western artists do. Having swallowed that, we're then supposed
to use this "episode" of western artists supporting Saddam Hussein
as evidence that western artists say nice things about
dictators.
The sad thing is, there are so many people so emotionally invested
in this thesis that they're not even going to notice the problems
with this piece, and are going to accept is as yet more evidence
that they're right. Sigh.
Larry Anderson,
Even Beetoven thought the French and yes, Napoleon would sweep
away the stoltifying anachronism of Monarchy.
Whether it was his intention or not Napoleon and his army (who
carried the Revolution in their napsacks) changed the ideological
face of Europe forever. Indeed, over the long run the personal
ambitions of Napoleon were less important than the popularization
of Enlightenment ideals that Napoleonic Wars spread. Then there was
the influence of Kant, which didn't need any armies.
Larry,
According to most sources, after Napoleon crowned himself Emperor
in 1804, Beethoven tore up his dedication sheet to the
Eroica, which he'd written in Napoleon's honor and had
originally entitled "Bonaparte."
I'm sure you all wanted to know that.
Artists & Intellectuals Love Tyrants for they do not live under their rule. they may be creative but they lack common sense.
"And to demonstrate that "western artists" applauded Saddam
Hussein,"
I don't recall the article saying anything about artists applauded
Saddam Hussein.
"And to demonstrate that "western artists" applauded Saddam
Hussein,"
I don't recall the article saying anything about western artists
applauding Saddam Hussein.
Larry & SPD,
And let us not forget that there is a pretty clear division between
the French Revolution and the reign of Napoleon. It is fairly easy
to juxtapose the two periods.
"What a crappy, dishonest article. To demonstrate the Chavez is
a "tyrant in waiting," an "enemy of freedom" who "restricts free
speech," Buruma tells us that he "takes to the airwaves to denounce
the opposition."
I guess you forgot to read the following in the article:
Ali was lavish in his praise of Venezuela?s new constitution, which
allows people to recall the president before he has completed his
term of office. ?A triumph of the poor against the rich,? he called
it. In 2004 Venezuelans exercised their right to do just that by
circulating a petition for a referendum. Chavez survived, but soon
the names of the petitioners were made public, and anti-Chavistas
were denied passports, public welfare and government
contracts.
In 2004 a law was passed that would ban broadcasting stations on
the grounds of security and public order. Chavez, as well as his
cabinet ministers, appears on television to denounce journalists
who dare to criticise the revolution. Most ominous, though, is the
way Chavez has expanded the 20-seat supreme court by adding 12
sympathetic judges
emme,
"Worse causes have been served by western enthusiasts than the
Bolivarist revolution, and worse leaders have been applauded than
Chavez. One only needs recall the abject audiences at the court of
Saddam Hussein by George Galloway, among others, who flattered the
murderous dictator while claiming to represent �the voice of the
voiceless�."
I'm not convinced that artists, etc. are more willing to support tyrants than your average joe on the street.
Key word being enthusiasts. Not artists. The article said nothing about wetsern artists applauding Saddam.
Everyone needs useful idiots now and then. Why should totalitarians be any different?
Since when did George Gallaway become an artist or an intellectual? It seems that the author needs to deal with tidying up a units of analsysis issue before making these sorts of claims.
emme,
Your comment merely points a troubling problem with the article:
why mention Gallaway if he isn't an artist or an intellectual?
What a crappy, dishonest article. To demonstrate the Chavez
is a "tyrant in waiting," an "enemy of freedom" who "restricts free
speech," Buruma tells us that he "takes to the airwaves to denounce
the opposition."
Can you imagine such a thing? A political figure, the president,
speaking to the media? And denouncing the opposition?
Dear god joe, just google "Chavez+dictator" and get back to us.
Maybe someone else will have the urge to spell it all out for
you.
"Your comment merely points a troubling problem with the
article: why mention Gallaway if he isn't an artist or an
intellectual?"
I don't know how troubling it really is. It doesn't negate the rest
of the article. It was one sentence and was a little off the
subject. Why do you find it troubling?
Chavez is oppressive, but he's not as bad as other dictators
we've supported. Which I think is joe's point. The problem is that
Chavez certainly isn't a good guy, and he doesn't have clean hands.
Castro is much, much worse. As are other supposedly "leftish"
tyrants. Why support them at all?
I also agree that whatever the motivation--whether it be
realpolitik or puppy love--the net effect of supporting a
bad guy is that you're supporting a bad guy. That's why our support
of the shah, for instance, was so wrong. We could've exerted our
influence to force him to behave better, but we were too busy
ignoring his abuses to do so. Oops.
Still, I prefer calling a spade a spade, even if you have to wallow
with him in the muck (like we did with Stalin in WWII). Don't
rationalize his bad behavior, for the love of Zeus!
Phil/SPD:
Actually, RE: Beetoven, I think we are on the same page generally.
If I failed to make my point clear, it must be my failure as a
writer.
Phil: I was going to say that haven't met too many people who think
well of Castro on the street, but then realized I have been seeing
quite a few young'uns wearin "Che'" shirts lately.. Perhaps it is a
leftist thing in general, and the rich and famous artsy types
simply exemplify the mental disorder at its most accute? After all,
I'm STILL waiting for the "Schindler's List" type films documenting
the atrocities of Stalin and Mao. Actually, "The Gulag Archipelago"
would make a powerful film.
"Venezuela's Hugo Chavez ("not yet a Castro, let alone a Pol
Pot"
Yawn...I'll start to get excited when Chavez's track record starts
to resemble Bush's. Seriously, what is Gillespie and so many of the
rest of you smoking?
Chavez is a nasty caudillo that rose from the ashes of an
astonishingly corrupt two-party dictatorship.
You can wake me up when Chavez locks up and tortures thousands of
people without pressing charges, when he invades another country
under false pretenses, when he abrogates a number of treaties that
his country is signatory to, when he logistically supports a coup
of our democratically elected government and immediately recognizes
the usurpers (who dissolved the whole government in the first 24
hours),
or even if he just stops selling oil to us.
Wake me up then. You'll find me over here in the reality-based
tent.
What is especially strange about the article is how it treats
artists and intellectuals as if they were some sort of single,
unitary force; almost as if they are a conspiratorial cabal with a
single face, ten-point plan, etc.
emme,
Why? Because a loss of focus like that indicates less than clear
thinking.
Larry Anderson,
More likely there is simply an element of American society is
terribly pissed off at the U.S. and that translates for that
element into support of Castro's regime, etc.
Of course I support an end of the embargo and that has caused some
people to claim that I support Castro (which I don't).
Budgie:
Next time, just use the "But Bush is Worse" canard, and save the
bandwidth.
Ahh, the old "Saddam was elected" ploy. I have seen this maneuver before.
I put it down to three things:
1) The fact that intellectuals deal with 'ideas and concepts'
naturally leads them towards political ideologies and men with
moustaches who dictate, shout a lot and use the word 'revolution'
too much.
2) A petty reflex to agreeing with middle class, easy going,
underwhelming politics.
3) No sense of humour.
Phil:
I'd like to see the embargo end as well. It was mostly there to put
a thumb in the eye of the Soviets I think, and is maintained as a
sop to the South Florida Cuban voting block. I say, open Cuba up,
and let Coca-Cola, GM, and Mc Donald's do what the CIA never could:
thoroughly undermine Castro's communist underpinings. A little free
entrprise might be all that is needed to get rid of the old
coot.
I am not sure that a "real" election will produce a better a result in Iraq than the "election" administered by Saddam's regime.
Since when did George Gallaway become an artist or an
intellectual?
Phileleutherus Lipsiensus,
Did you not see Big Brother?!?
Surely Mr Galloway swooned into the hallowed halls of artistic
endeavour when he expressed 'the desperation of trying to call a
lost puppy back' clad in a frankly, reprehensibly nut-hugging red
lycra all-in-one.
Didn't Sean Penn, Bruce Springsteen, and a bunch of other
knuckle heads come out and say what a wonderfull country Iraq
was?
I may be taking crazy pills, but the article rings true. It does
seem that there is a crazy amount of artists that support
dictators, usually left wing ones.
I do get some of the stuff from some of my right wing friends,
about Israel and stuff. Not that Israel even comes close to
Cuba.
Mark,
All I know about him comes from my occassional visits to Harry's
Place (where his actions dominate the conversation - or did the
last time I visited). I gather from those visits that a lot of
people consider him to be a jackass, etc., but I never got the
impression that he was either an artist or an intellectual.
PL:
I think the point is that the artists in question spend an
inordinate amount of time promoting the idea of freedom - then
support leftist dictators.
The standout figure isn't absolute numbers of people who can sing
who also support dictators, it is the number of people who sing
about enhancing freedom who also support dictators.
I just love reading all this leftist moral equivalence, "Bush is worse than Chavez", "Chavez isn't really a dictator", etc. Maybe some of you are facing an internal conflict because The Nation runs ads from the Venezuelan Ministry of Tourism. I mean, c'mon, The Nation couldn't possibly be accepting advertising revenue from left-wing dictators. Methinks these boards are being infiltrated by Kossacks.
"But Bush is Worse" canard"
Larry Anderson,
It is tempting, but some things need explaining. It seems that
memories run pretty short around these parts.
Chavismo will probably be around for another fifty years, in the
same way that Peronismo is still a force in Argentina. The trick is
to get beyond the attitude that somehow Chavez's popularity is not
legitimate and that his autocratic tendencies make him Pol
Potesque. Neither is the case.
And there are better ways to criticize/delegitimize the guy than to
make ridiculous comparisons to Pol Pot and baseless claims about
terrorism-sponsorship. Oh, and supporting failed coups and having
the press secretary grin about it like a moron the next day...not
too smart. But then my expectations are pretty low at this
point.
And to demonstrate that "western artists" applauded Saddam
Hussein, Buruma tells us of a vist by "George Galloway, among
others." You know, noted singer/songwriter George Galloway. And,
er, what others?
Mother Sheehan was down there publicly embracing Chavez not long
ago. So were Danny Glover and Harry Belafonte. And Moby (ugh)
praised Chavez to the heavens during a recent concert in
Caracas.
Not exactly the A-list, to be sure, but it's a start. Eventually,
Chavez may get to the point where major Hollywood stars are lining
up for closed-door meetings with him, like they already do for
Castro. (Steven Spielberg and Jack Nicholson are just two who've
made the pilgrimage to Havana.)
I don't think Chavez quite deserves to be called a dictator yet,
but I'm definitely getting that Mugabe vibe from the guy. The
(allegedly) American-supported coup against him just gives him a
perennial scapegoat and excuse, kind of like the embargo against
Cuba. (Try living up here in Canada, folks, where thousands of
people visit cheap resorts in Cuba and come back saying how
wonderful it all is, and how it's a shame the Americans keep them
so poor.)
Right Lurkamania,
You would have to read The Nation to get the impression that "Bush
is worse than Chavez" and "Chavez isn't really a dictator". The
equivalency game is yours and yours only. I didn't claim
equivalence. I suggested that if there were...we would have a
genuine problem. Chavez is not even close to Bush in this respect.
Think about it for a moment. Imagine if Chavez chose to actually
carry out just one of the policies I listed above at 10:02 and tell
me who is having problems connecting the dots here.
"not yet a Castro, let alone a Pol Pot"
Wasn't that a song from the Britney Spears film "Crossroads?"
I agree with Larry -- it seems the best way to defeat communism is
with capitalism. Blue jeans and the Beatles did more to bring down
Soviet Russia than infinite numbers of tanks and missiles could
ever hope to do. Far less devastation, to boot.
"where thousands of people visit cheap resorts in Cuba and come
back saying how wonderful it all is"
Wow! Someone vacationing in the Caribbean and coming back with a
mistaken impression about the real state of affairs in the country
they visited!
Man, you Canadians are real whackjobs. I'm glad Americans don't do
that
Wow! Someone vacationing in the Caribbean and coming back
with a mistaken impression about the real state of affairs in the
country they visited!
Ahhhh, but by that logic Budgie then a magnificent trip to
Disneyland in Orlando would signal that all is well with American
politics.
Castro sucks. But I favor lifting the sanctions, too. Why not? If for no other reason than to gear up for Castro's successor and to take the opportunity to liberalize Cuba.
Christ Budgie, let's start with the most egregious charge of "tortures thousands of people." Show me that evidence, but if you reply with some bullshit link to prisonplanet or alternet then I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree, lest I wander into conspiratorial moonbat territory (from which there is no escape!).
SPD: RE: Blue jeans and the Beetles. For the record, I used to have a couple of pen-pals back in the day from Lenningrad. They truly loved blue jeans, but were mad-desperate for me to send them (of all things) Billy Joel albums. Maybe they identified with him more.. He certainly drinks like a Russian.. :)
Hmm... all my friend's pen pals in russia want my friends to
marry them and bring them to the US.
Perhaps Larry's pen pals were of a different type.
Lurkamania,
This is from the ACLU, not moonbat territory.
"According to the American Civil Liberties Union, between 3000 and
5000 mostly Arab people have been detained by the government as
"persons of interest" or "enemy combatants".
This is from Amnesty international. Note that the panel was
appointed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
In August, the Independent Panel to Review Department of Defense
Detention Operations, appointed by Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld following the publication of photographs of torture and
ill-treatment committed by US personnel in Abu Ghraib prison in
Iraq (see below), reported that since the invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq, about 50,000 people had been detained during US military
and security operations."
"A number of detainees, reported to be those considered by the US
authorities to have high intelligence value, were alleged to remain
in secret detention in undisclosed locations."
That's
5,000 in the U.S. alone.
50,000 acknowledged detainees. The word acknowledged is crucial
here because this administration is pathologically incapable of
being honest about figures until it is caught with its pants
down.
God only knows how many held in secret locations and/or rendered
with the knowledge that they are to be tortured.
A torture memo explicitly laying out the case for torture.
A Vice President lobbying for torture.
Lurkamania. You can do the math. I think that thousands is a pretty
safe estimate. And no, you can't just wave a flag over it and make
it go away. Chavez, while he might offend our sensibilities (I
don't care much for the guy), is clearly playing minor league ball
here.
My apologies for threadjacking.
Here's the thing - most "intellectuals" and artists are, like joe, simply not very intelligent. Why should we be surprised when a moron acts like a moron?
Budgie,
Do you honestly, hand on heart, think that the nation state in
Venuzala treats it's nationals with more respect than America?
"Hmm... all my friend's pen pals in russia want my friends to
marry them and bring them to the US.
Perhaps Larry's pen pals were of a different type.
Comment by: kwais at May 19, 2006 11:19 AM"
yah know, a borscht bikini is pretty hot...
Mark - keep it up, you might get promoted to military
lawyer!!!!!
(evil. naughty.)
Ok. Check this link:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1925236.stm
Case closed. Chavez is wearing a purple beret with matching shell
suit. He looks like a gay cheerleading coach.
He must be stopped!
SPD,
curse you for reminding me of "crossroads." That movie made me
laugh at a pregnant girl falling down the stairs, and now I hate
myself.
I have a theory for why artists and intellectuals tend to support
dictators - they usually work for some sort of patron who dictates
their own lives. Whether we realize it or not, most artists (some
authors excluded) can't sell their work anywhere. The New York art
scene reminds me of the Medici's Florence. To make a living as an
artist/public intellectual, one needs to please the people
bankrolling him. As a result, most modern art is produced by either
self-loathing trust-fund kids or lucky folks who have been picked
up by other self-loathing trust-fund kids. And self-loathing and
dictatorial preferences go hand in hand.
Budgie, OK, you got me, I'm now convinced we live in a fascist
police state. Where are my Dead Kennedy lyrics when I need them? I
think I've seen you around town here, don't you wear a black
bandana over your face with sunglasses? I work real close to the
White House you know.
You made the fallacy of logical induction with your torture numbers
(unless you define torture as playing Eminem songs really loudly,
and even then I doubt it runs into the thousands), so with that
gauntlet thrown I've resorted to ad hominem attacks. I know I
shouldn't, but damn, it's so fun.
Where are my Dead Kennedy lyrics when I need them?
At a time like this, surely we need to tune into Pink's 'Dear Mr
President' anthem and let the 'almost attractive' pop starlet shine
the light of political knowledge on us all.
. . . still looking for those defending Bush's civil liberty
"policies" here at Hit & Run . . .
Nope. We seem to be pretty consistent in slamming anyone who
encroaches our freedom. Chavez apologistas need to open their
eyes.
Randolph Carter,
Interesting theory. My theory on why creative people seem to
support dictators:
Artists and intellectuals have a strong streak of vanity and
self-confidence; you have to be pretty self confident to think your
scrawlings or doodles deserve the attention of others. They tend to
think they are above the common herd of humanity, smarter or more
sensitive or whatever, so, they suspect society would run better if
they, or someone like them, was in charge. The dictator, if he
seems to have similar values, is someone like them, a person of
intelligence or sensitivity who has proven himself superior to the
average man. Surely such a man has a better idea of how to run
society than the greedy middle class philistines who crowd the
voting booths on election day!
Creative people also enjoy the thrill of creating things on their
own, of realizing their individual visions. Think of how crazy a
writer gets if you try to edit his writings. "Nothing beautiful was
ever created by a committee." The dictator, fashioning a society by
himself, is like an artist; people, money, speeches, laws, they are
like his paints and brushes. Conversely, the politics of a
parliamentary democracy, and the economics of a market, are like a
huge committee, a total mess, barely under control, failing to
realize a cohesive single vision.
"Do you honestly, hand on heart, think that the nation state in
Venuzala treats it's nationals with more respect than
America?"
Two part answer:
1) Nope.
2) On balance, the nation state in Venezuela is treating it's
nationals far better than they've ever been treated in Venezuela. I
think that this is the more apt comparison to draw; that is, if
anyone wants to understand his phenomenal popularity. Chavez has
invited mass participation from those brownish folks who were
marginalized before. Peron did the same thing with the cabecitas
negras. Look it up.
budgie, you said "You can wake me up when Chavez locks up and tortures thousands of people without pressing charges" - that's right, "locks up and tortures". Now prove that thousands have been "locked up and totured".
"so with that gauntlet thrown I've resorted to ad hominem
attacks. I know I shouldn't, but damn, it's so fun."
Lurkamania,
It never got beyond ad hominem attacks with you. Get over yourself.
Pick up a book about Latin American history sometime. It's not too
late for you.
Oh, and when discussing people getting their asses thrown in jail
on bogus charges and the fascistic tendencies of the U.S.
government, only a moron would bring up the Dead Kennedies. Bad
example. I'll leave it to Dead Kennedys fans to point out why you
are total knobjockey.
Pick up a book about Latin American history sometime
Don't bother. They suck. Read the Da Vinci Code instead.
"Chavez has invited mass participation from those brownish folks
who were marginalized before. Peron did the same thing with the
cabecitas negras. Look it up."
So has Mugabe in Africa, look it up.
Todd Fletcher,
"that's right, 'locks up and tortures'. Now prove that thousands
have been 'locked up and tortured'"
Have a look at 11:28. I think I'm on the safe side given the
administration's penchant for lowballing numbers that might upset
potential voters.
Sorry about my spelling, should be "Kennedys". I got distracted by
the delicious sandwich I was eating.
"So has Mugabe in Africa, look it up."
Yes...and you can also wake me up when Venezuela is in the dire
straits that Zimbabwe is in and toilet paper costs $417 dollars a
sheet.
Is this a discussion about what is actually happening in Venezuela,
or some sort of circle jerk for Toby Keith fans?
Budgie: "Peron did the same thing with the cabecitas
negras."
Yep, then had his own people clubbed and butcherd in the streets by
the military if they DARED protest against the goverment. Seems to
be a fine day for facist apologetics. Wake ME up if Bush doesn't
step down after his term is up, seizes the N.Y. Times for being
critical of policy, or turns the 82nd Airborne loose on the next
"anti-war" protest.
Perhaps you are on the wrong board? Are you sure you didn't mean to
click on Democratic Underground this morning? Reality based
indeed.
"Yep, then had his own people clubbed and butcherd in the
streets by the military if they DARED protest against the
goverment."
We outsource that task to private security oufits and soldiers
abroad.
"Wake ME up if Bush doesn't step down after his term is up, seizes
the N.Y. Times for being critical of policy, or turns the 82nd
Airborne loose on the next "anti-war" protest."
No Larry,
Keep sleeping. They are working on it. If you wake up, you might
notice something that disturbs you.
""Wake ME up if Bush doesn't step down after his term is up,
seizes the N.Y. Times for being critical of policy, or turns the
82nd Airborne loose on the next "anti-war" protest."
budgie:
That was an easy answer you gave Larry. Do you believe that the
administration is going to do any of these things or do you want to
back off your position?
Well Budgie, I go to lunch and, as a Dead Kennedys fan, return
to face the enjoinder to call myself a knobjockey. So it's ad
hominem attacks all around!
I'll be the first to admit I'm not tirelessly engaged in a serious
debate here, but based on the absurdity of your initial premises
the reason seems self-evident. I'm certainly not surprised to see
antipathy towards the current administration on Reason comment
boards, I even harbor some myself; however your facile attempt to
equate Senor Bush- no, not equate, but debase him relative to
modern day dictators in my eyes relegates you to moonbat
territory.
Now I'm going to get back to reading the Da Vinci code, thanks for
the pick Mark, it's riveting indeed!
"Gillespie is on the money here. The artists and
self-proclaimed intelligencia, especially those of today, live in
such a rarified atmosphere that they can often NOT identify with
the common man. Those of us here on the ground in that big
wasteland called fly-over country simply CAN'T reason for
ourselves, so SOMEONE has to tell us dirty peseants what to
do."
You shall die a peasant's death!
There are also many, many examples of right-wing intellectuals throwing in with right-wing dictators - Pound's infatuation with Mussolini, the love of the American right-wing in the 1970s for Pinochet and Franco, numerous right-wing European intellectuals and artists threw in with Hitler (Heidegger, Celine, Karajan, etc.). I don't think the National Review ever met a right-wing Catholic dictator it didn't love. I think there may be a double standard at work, in that left-wing intellectuals are apparently supposed to be more virtuous and immune to the atttractions of power. I suppose the left is more open to charges of hypocrisy on this count, true. Unfortunately the idea that the right leader can make everything right seems to be very deeply engrained in human nature.
"Yes...and you can also wake me up when Venezuela is in the dire
straits that Zimbabwe is in and toilet paper costs $417 dollars a
sheet."
The fact that Venezuela is awash in oil money wouldn't have
anything to do with Venezuela not being in the dire straits
Zimbabwe is would it? Further, if you were smart enough to get the
point, which you weren't, you would know that the same people who
are now defending Chavez were five or six years ago defending
Mugabe and saying the same things then that they are now. Yes,
anyone who obects to Chaves is clearlly a circle Toby Keith fan,
whatever the hell that is.
"Yes...and you can also wake me up when Venezuela is in the dire
straits that Zimbabwe is in and toilet paper costs $417 dollars a
sheet."
The fact that Venezuela is awash in oil money wouldn't have
anything to do with Venezuela not being in the dire straits
Zimbabwe is would it? Further, if you were smart enough to get the
point, which you weren't, you would know that the same people who
are now defending Chavez were five or six years ago defending
Mugabe and saying the same things then that they are now. Yes,
anyone who obects to Chaves is clearlly a circle Toby Keith fan,
whatever the hell that is.
budgie, I did read your post. Did you?
Nothing there says the administration "locked up and tortured"
thousands. Perhaps you meant "locked up thousands and tortured
some"? But that has quite a different meaning doesn't it?
Vanya,
It think it is a bit much to call Heideger a "right wing
intellectual". He is a darling of the deconstructionist post
modernist academia. I have never read one right wing writer that
had a good thing to say about him, sans Hanna Arrendt. Also, I
guess Pound would be considered right wing in a really old outdated
sort of way. Moreover, Pound is pretty much verbotten. I don't see
anybody kicking Herold Printer out of polite society even though
for all of his faults Pound was a legitimately great writer and
scholar and Printer is a complete mediocrity and every bit as vile
as Pound.
If there is any double standard at work it is that when a right
wing intellectual like Pound embraces some nasty figure he usually
pays a price for it but when a left wing intellectual like Printer
embraces Castro or Mugabe or the Kims, he wins a Nobel Prize.
Jason: budgie can't back off his position based on any factual
information he gets in here because he didn't arrive at his
position based on factual information in the first place. It's that
old saying I'm too lazy to look up - you can't reason someone out
of a position they didn't reason themselves into in the first
place. Budgie thinks Bush is worse than Chavez because budgie
thinks Bush is worse than Chavez. And that's it. And budgie thinks
the Venezuelans should shut up and count their blessings because
hey, Chavez is not as bad as the last guy. (And hey, at least in
Zimbabwe they're being oppressed by one of their own - it's not
colonialism so it must be an improvement, right? Cos when brown
people kill brown people, or black people kill black people, it's
not our place to criticize. Sorry. Off topic for a minute
there).
I suspect that this position might not make so much sense to budgie
if budgie lived in Venezuela, but then if Speilberg et al had grown
up in Cuba they might have a different view of Fidel as well. When
I think about Oliver Stone filming his blowjob of Castro a while
back, down in Cuba, and he interviews some guys were imprisoned for
hijacking a plane to leave Cuba - he asks if they were treated
well, and they say yes, and he asks why they wanted to leave, and
they say it's strictly for economic reasons, of course, and here's
this world famous American director who's never suffered an
oppressive moment in his entire self-indulgent fucking life,
wondering why two guys want off that island so bad they tried to
hijack a plane, and he has the gall to make them lie like that for
him on camera. Yes, he and Speilberg and the rest of them are sick
and stupid.
Subby,
I saw that Oliver Stone thing with Castro. The most disgusting part
was Stone talking about what a father to them Castro is. Basically
the point was that those dumb latins need a strong figure like
Castro to keep them in line. Those poor people stuck in Castro's
prison for the rest of their lives and Stone letting Castro exhibit
them like monkeys at the zoo created about the saddest scene I have
ever seen.
Hey, the thread has made its way back to respectability without
invoking Godwin's law! In a thread about global dictators, no
less!
On a more serious note now that Budgie's gone, Robert Nozick wrote
an excellent essay a few years back on a related topic:
Why Do
Intellectuals Oppose Capitalism?
I really got distracted there, damn this ADHD.
I read that one Luke. Basically it comes down to the fact that under capitalism it is the tacky philistines who produce things and get rich who are important rather than the enlightened elite. The enlightened elite just hate the fact that people like Bill Gates and Sam Walton matter a hell of a lot more in a capitalistic society than Harold Printer or Noam Chomsky.
Paraphrasing Neal Stephenson:
The poor hate the rich because they have money, and the
intelligentsia hate them because they spend it on pink flamingo
lawn ornaments.
That's a pretty good summary John. On that subject, I also can't help thinking of liberal guilt especially with the successful Hollywood lefty types. On the one hand they're insanely rich, yet they sympathize with these populist dictators "of the people." I guess when you're suddenly catapulted into this world of fame and fortune for doing something as seemingly trivial as entertaining people (though every bit as legitimate as any other product or service), that has to have an effect on one's pysche.
Stevo,
Did you have to mention the school teacher part? Now I feel
compelled to home school with all of the religous nuts.
If it helps, she's a schoolteacher in California, so she's probably practically a dittohead by their standards.
mediageek - You're the man! I was thinking about that Neal
Stephenson bit all the way through this thread.
Ok, I was thinking about that when I wasn't thinking that whatever
parallel universe version of Earth budgie lives on, it must be very
oxygen-poor.
Either that, or in budgie's alternate reality, wars can be fought
without ever taking prisoners. I suppose that even in this world,
that COULD be done, but only if we just killed everyone who ever
surrendered... The problem with fighting under a black flag of no
quarter and no surrender is that no sane enemy would ever
surrender.
And I'm still waiting for budgie to actually cough up some evidence
of Bush being worse than Chavez, Castro, Peron, etc. I mean, as US
Presidents go, he's not the worst we've had, though that is
certainly an example of me "damning him with faint praise."
Well, this has developed into a mess. :)
Jason Ligon,
I'm just not buying into the idea that there is some general
pattern.
Well Phil Lip (GG, I assume)
Do a survey of a thousand adult American voters, or limit it to the
college educated if you wish...hell, limit it ti self-identified
Democrats
Ask 3 or 4 simple question:
Is Castro a good man?
Is Castro a good leader?
Is Cuba a good society?
Is Castro a dictator, and Cuba a dictatorship?
Then run an identical survey past 1,000 members of the screen
actors guild, or as many public university tenured faculties that
you require for a thousand.
Would you expect to see a difference, JB? In what direction?
Phileuterus:
The whole French Revolution was filled with authoritarianism and/or
totalitarianism from the very start.
There is no point in blaming the jacobins for being more competent
at it than their predecessors.
You, like many, look at the early policies, which you happen to
agree with, but overlook the authoritarian way in which they were
imposed.
For example the Le Chapelier law. Its import was not that it made
illegal for workers to organize, but that it made illegla any kind
of association, for any purpose. There could only be individuals
and the STate. Any intermediate body was branded as being "against
freedom".
Then, the confiscation of the Property of the Church **was** a
tyrannical act, as Burke described it. Add to it, that they used
that Property to start the economic experiment of the assignat,
which led to truly catastrophic results. As Burke said, it set the
precedent that when the STate ran short of money, they should
consfiscate whatever wealth was available.
The Enlightment was not a freedom loving movement. Look at the way
its members fawned on authoritarian rulers like Frederick of
Prussia, or Catherine of Russia, while despising Louis XV for not
being authoritarian enough. In the words of R. R. Palmer, "rarely
has been an age with a greater faith in social planning"
So, no matter how little you like the Ancient Regime, the French
Revolution has nothing to commend it.
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