29 August 2011

Unyielding Reflections of Purposeful Defiance: a Locked-Out Blog, a Fire-Damaged Photograph



W. EUGENE SMITH in Seattle, 1976. Details in text; click on image to view full size. Photograph by Loren Bliss copyright 1976, 2011.

*****

What, exactly, am I trying to do here? What is the real purpose of Outside Agitator's Notebook?

The short answer is OAN serves the two Muses to whom I am wed – photography and journalism – and thereby (or so I hope) serves you the reader with reflective pictures and thought-provoking commentary on the week's news.

In a major sense OAN is thus a continuation of the award-winning op-ed column I wrote c. 1978-1981 for a mainstream newspaper that served a big suburb of Seattle. The paper, which died in the late '80s, was an almost-daily, published every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday. But our editorial pages never included photos, which were generally taboo in the era's op-ed sections, and while it was ok to imply socialist leanings, I had to keep my Marxist tendencies carefully closeted.   

The main inspiration for the OAN mix – an eclectic blend of pictures and text whether political or personal – probably came from Jill Johnston of The Village Voice, who during the 1960s and through most of the '70s wrote a regular feature entitled “Dance Journal.” Ms. Johnston (1929-2010) was originally the paper's dance critic but defied the capitalist taboo against mixing art and politics, often (correctly) approaching one as the symbiosis of the other. Though her favorite medium was unquestionably text alone, I see in retrospect it was especially her influence that shaped my view of photography – indeed of visual art in general – as tragically weakened (if not reduced to meaninglessness) when divorced from its socioeconomic and political contexts.

Even now in the radically diminished never-again-a-Leica circumstances of inescapable geriatric poverty, photography remains my passion, and that so intense it surely deserves summation of its pedigree. Ergo: as I have noted before, I'm told the first word I ever spoke was “light.” But the real mother of my interest in visual art was my dear Aunt Alecia – Alecia DuRand (1909-1993), a Columbia University MFA and the first woman to chair a U.S. collegiate art department. My first cameras were gifts from my father:  a Kodak Brownie Reflex on my 12th birthday, an Agfa Press Miniature on my 14th and a Polaroid a year later when I turned 15.

Writing is a skill I learned on my own, though the process was much more haphazard, profoundly discouraged by mediocre grades in the exercises-in-tedium that characterize high-school English.

Nevertheless, probably by the time I was 16 (when I began keeping a journal), certainly by the time I was 19, writing had become a consuming intellectual exercise, though it never offered the always-seductive visually orgasmic Zen of photography. In fact my discovery of the difficult pleasures of text probably started as a quest for psychological compensation, a response to the trauma inflicted when my burgeoning interest in science – biology (specifically forestry) – was torpedoed by the dyslexia that so often reduced me to apparent idiocy. “Science is mathematics,” my father always said, “and you can't be a scientist because you can't do math.” My haughty peers in the youth group of the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Church painfully echoed his judgement: “Some people say ignorance is bliss; I say Bliss is ignorant.” (The religious schizophrenia of my boyhood years in Knoxville – Monday thru Friday the academically superb Roman Catholic Holy Ghost School, on Sundays the implacably hostile Unitarian youth group – is another story for another time.)

In any case, midway in my 15th year (and probably for all the wrong reasons), I decided I would be a journalist – a “newspaperman” as we said then. The very few occasions I wavered from that path were moments of overwhelming hopelessness, invariably relieved by circumstance at the last possible moment – or so it seemed until clinical depression drove me onto welfare. At that point the ruinous notifications mercilessly sent out by the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services c. 1987 (in essence “Bliss has applied for nut money and we need confirmation he used to be employable”) destroyed my reputation (and therefore my career) beyond any possibility of repair.

Which – an oblique explanation of why I'm on Blogger and excluded from major media – brings me back to OAN and what obtains here.

Normally I spend the week collecting and evaluating what goes into this blog, then write the text and choose the featured photograph on Saturday for posting early Sunday morning. But the huge technical problems imposed by my ouster from TypePad – the necessity to learn the radically different software employed by Blogger (and to do so without any technical support) – literally stole the last seven days from my life.

Obviously, much of the OAN material is based on news reports. These news items always exceed the space available – this week for example I bookmarked 27 separate stories for consideration. But the struggles of the past seven days denied me the time to do the requisite reading, and after spending all day yesterday trying to catch up, I realized the task was hopeless. There was too much to absorb and not nearly enough time for the absorption. Maybe later this week I'll manage to post what should have been uploaded last night; maybe not, as the forthcoming days will undoubtedly produce more that demands comment.

Meanwhile – and surely to the detriment of my always troublesome blood pressure – I can't seem to stop boiling with rage over the obstructions themselves. Despite the tremendous help given me by a Blogger discussion-board veteran whose screen-name is Katley – to whom again my most profound gratitude – I cannot remember ever in my life having endured a week of such relentlessly bitter frustration.

Part of the problem is I genuinely despise computers: I recognize them as perhaps the ultimate expression of the capitalist Big Lie, and I therefore regard them with undiluted repugnance. Beyond the disinformation and denial that facilitates their imposition into all our lives, computers are not labor-saving devices – not at all – but are instead the ultimate Ruling Class power-source, alien machines perfected for job-theft and subjugation, the core vehicles of outsourcing, downsizing and the most brazenly cruel profiteering in human history.

Utterly appalled by this – appalled too by how computers originated as the essence of cruelty itself (that is, as war machines born to solve the riddles of making atomic explosives in furtherance of capitalist imperialism) – I'm also blocked by my dyslexic inability at the rote learning essential to computer operation. But whether we are dyslexic or not, computers convert our lives to a uniquely vicious game of Simon Says – a contest that in childhood I always lost and therefore hated. And now – through a twist of karma or the malice of some divine sadist – I am damned to endure it again, this time for the highest stakes of all. My struggles during the past seven days are final proof that no matter how long I am around computers, I will always regard them as expressions of malevolence, invasive technology that compels us to learn a mode of thinking so radically anti-intuitive it cannot but threaten our survival as a species.

It is a game that is always an ordeal, a game I cannot ever view as “play” because any sense of playfulness – or any vestige of the delight and the good humor with which I normally approach learning – is forcibly excluded by the process itself. A final twist of anxiety is added by the fact computer operation is conducted not in English but in Nurdish, a post-modern language for which there are no reliable dictionaries – no doubt because the core tenet of post-modernism is the absurd and morally imbecilic notion meaning itself has no meaning whatsoever.

What then – besides ranting like some unreconstructed Luddite – am I trying to accomplish with Outside Agitator's Notebook?

My main intent here is to illustrate and/or verbalize those socioeconomic and political suspicions we are too often afraid to say aloud, thereby showing dear friends and other dissidents they are not alone. Part is to leave a message for the future – assuming there will be any future – that even amidst the deepening darkness beneath the Obama Bush, not everyone in Moron Nation had been subjugated to zomboid ignorance and/or pathological denial.

Another objective is purely egotistical: to showcase what little remains of my work as a photographer, thereby perhaps regaining just a trace of the potential that was stolen from me by fire and the odium of its psychological aftermath.

This is problematical for two reasons.

One is the fact my photographic best is social-documentary photography, a medium prohibited by Washington state's vindictively broad definition of invasion of privacy. A late-1970s judicial ruling – as far as I know never successfully challenged – specifically bans publication of any photograph, even news photos made in public places, should the subject later find the image objectionable. Thus my clinically-depressed decision to return to Washington state in 1986 now forever forbids me from documentation of the savage material and spiritual poverty that characterizes the human condition under capitalism – and it was this purpose I am now denied that always shaped my photographic aesthetics and intentions.

The second and far more insurmountable barrier is that of the fire itself, the mysterious blaze that in 1983 destroyed at least 90 percent of my photographs, all my research files and nearly all my writing – including the book project to which, up till then, I had devoted nearly every otherwise-unobligated moment of my adult life. Eventually entitled “Glimpses of a Pale Dancer,” it was a 24-year project in investigative journalism, an analysis – profusely illustrated with photographs – of the sociological, anthropological and semiotic evidence that defined the 1960s Counterculture as the spontaneous first wave of a revolutionary transformation (back) to matriarchy.

Despite its final form, “Dancer” began with a single question. During my college freshman year, 1959, I wrote a proposal for a dual-purpose English and sociology paper focused on what seemed to me the glaringly obvious anomaly of the folk-music renaissance: why, if the United States was bound for an era of scientific glory, were its young people resurrecting the Western World's oldest folk music? Though the paper was never written, its central concern remained profoundly compelling, leading me on a pathway of research, discovery and learning oddly akin to the widening ripples that result when a stone is tossed into a pond, a process far more spiral than linear and – or so I've been told – curiously feminine as well. Eight years later I recognized the results as what I still think of as the untold news story of the century – “the resurrection of the goddess” (that conclusion not just emerging from my notes but implicit in my photography too) – and I thus started shaping “Dancer” into a book of pictures and text.

Other writers, among them Robert Graves (The White Goddess, 1948); Gary Snyder (Earth House Hold, 1969); Edward Whitmont (The Return of the Goddess, 1983) and the aforementioned Ms. Johnston (Lesbian Nation, 1973), had voiced similar arguments. But none connected the resurrection of the goddess-ethos to what the late Walter Bowart labeled “revolution in consciousness” – his breathtakingly apt description of the Counterculture's psychological wellspring.

“Dancer” was therefore, from the perspective of the Ruling Class, undeniably dangerous. It identified, combined, photographically illustrated and thereby potentially united the revolution's diverse currents – feminism (including the re-emergence of deliberate single motherhood); environmentalism (especially the Gaia Hypothesis); the Back-to-the-Land Movement (including the instinctively matriarchal structure of many communes); the anti-Vietnam War protests; the re-emergence of the poet as cultural leader; the revolution in aesthetics typified by rock poetry; the folk renaissance (which resurrected many lingering remnants of pre-Christian liturgy); and finally goddess-worship itself – shaping all these (and much more) into a hitherto-unnamed solidarity that might indeed have eventually spawned a Countercultural tsunami strong enough to sweep away patriarchy and thereby cleanse us of the psychological mandate for  capitalism.

Inspired by the findings that produced “Dancer” but still profoundly unwilling to publicly name the goddess (whether as symbol or reality it mattered not), I used the one-time pen-name Aengus L. Forsythe to write a 1970 Northwest Passage piece describing a fictional “crypto-radical seismology faction” far to the Left of the then-notorious Weathermen. The Weathermen, I wrote, were merely out to change the political climate, while the Seismologists sought to “fault the very bedrock of civilization.”

Though there was no immediate response, 13 years later the Ruling Class seems to have answered my challenge with customary violence. The message of the 1983 fire is unmistakable. It occurred on the same day I met with an influential editor to begin a process we reasonably believed would lead to major-media publication of “Dancer.” More pointedly, a half-melted electric clock found at the fire's origin was stopped at the exact moment we began our meeting. Though fire investigators soon backed away from their initial verdict of probable arson, such malignant synchronicity as was implicit in that silently screaming clock can hardly be coincidental. It is indeed a defining characteristic of psychological warfare. Thus I cannot escape the loathsome probability my work was destroyed by government inflicted (or at least government-sponsored) arson.

All of which turns my subsequent encounters with censorship – the newest is yet another anti-OAN embargo imposed by Comcast (the fourth to-date) – into fuel for my determination not to be silenced.

The photograph above also expresses that stance – and it does so in every sense possible. The negative was part of a batch of work salvaged in the spring of 1974 from the post-fire ashes. The image is one of a series of photos I made of the late Gene Smith – W. Eugene Smith to the photographically uninitiated – on 8 March 1976, the night he was shouted down and jeered during a reception in Seattle, the most maliciously xenophobic city in the United States. Mr. Smith's alleged sin? He tried to answer a question the small-minded Ansel Adams cultists loudly damned as “mixing politics with art.”

Mr. Smith is undoubtedly the best American photojournalist never to be known in the United States. His name is a household word everywhere else on this sad planet, but here in his homeland, his persistently anti-capitalist images got him fired by Life magazine and subsequently banished to an obscurity that – tragically – extends even unto the photographic community, which damn well should know better.

Another frame of that night's take was published to illustrate my review of Smith's superb book Let Truth Be the Prejudice; I wrote the book report as editor-in-chief of Art Direction magazine. But this image shows both Smith's contemplative warmth and the relentlessly cold damage done by the flames and subsequent exposure to several months of rain. The cameras were of course M Leicas with Summicron lenses of 35mm and 50mm; this was probably with the 50. The film was Tri-X at 400 developed in D-76 diluted 1:1.

LB/28 August 2011

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21 August 2011

New Censorship; Black Caucus Joins Obama Critics; Pacific Northwest Python; Urban Weeds and Wildflowers

MODES OF RESISTANCE -- see "Thinking Visually," (below). Click on the image to view it full size. Photograph by Loren Bliss copyright 2011.

*****
(Please Note Outside Agitator's Notebook Remains Under Construction,  Hence May Be Subject to Temporary Disruptions in Text and Design) 

*****
Censorship: 3 Ways the Ruling Class Nullifies the 1st Amendment

As I implied last week (“San Francisco's BART Turns Off Cell Phones to Suppress Protest”), Bay Area Rapid Transit's newest tactics illustrate yet another dimension of the Bush-Obama economic agenda – actually a slow-motion coup – and the radically intensified capitalist tyranny it is imposing on all of us.

Once again the pattern should be obvious: as the capitalists outsource the U.S. economy and increasingly force working families into Third World poverty, they likewise impose Third World authoritarianism, an important aspect of which is limited access to information.

Hence not just the cell-phone shut-down – a defining trademark of dictatorships everywhere – but also the methodical destruction of more traditional media, for example the closure or downsizing of newspapers and magazines, the dumbing-down of public education and the redirection of broadcast news from substance to sensationalism.

In every instance these acts of oppression are signature manifestations of capitalist governance: absolute power and unlimited profit for the Ruling Class, total subjugation and genocidal poverty for all the rest of us. Though such governance is a New Paradigm here in the United States – especially for those of us who are Caucasians -- it's business as usual in U.S. minority communities and elsewhere in Wall Street's global empire.

Many of the coup's component parts have been in place for years; some – for example the union-busting Taft-Hartley Act – date as far back as the 1940s. That's why – especially when it's camouflaged by the trauma of deliberate economic shocks (for which see Naomi Klein's Shock Doctrine) – the transformation from liberty to tyranny seems so deceptively un-couplike.

And sometimes even those of us who pay attention are fooled. Note how I got the tense wrong on the anti-cell-phone tactic. I suggested widespread cell-phone shut-downs were “soon to be used” in the U.S. (as for example they've long employed in Iran), but it turns out they're already the norm here too.

As MediaCitizen's Timothy Karr reports in a disturbing piece given broader circulation by Reader Supported News:

The San Francisco incident is not unique. Earlier this summer Cleveland's City Council passed an ordinance outlawing the use of Facebook and other social media to assemble unruly crowds. While a mayoral veto struck down the Cleveland ruling, the overreaction is part of a spreading official backlash against political organizing on new media.”

“Other governments have responded the same - see China, Burma, Iran, Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain and beyond. In many instances they simply direct the state-run service provider and cellphone carriers to shut down their networks.

“In the US, though, companies often flip the kill switch on their own. Verizon Wireless blocked text messages in 2007 that a reproductive rights group sought to send to its members. The carrier decided that the texts were 'controversial and unsavory' and implemented a rule buried deep within the company's terms of service that gives Verizon the power to cut off mobile communications 'without prior notice and for any reason or no reason.'”


Footnote: let us not overlook my own recent encounters with censorship, described last week in “Death and Resurrection of a Blog.”

***

Another dimension of censorship is disinformation, and the aristocracy is using that too, not just the obvious techniques – for example the Big Lies about Iraq or “change we can believe in” (the latter possibly the biggest Big Lie in U.S. history) – but even the creation of bogus Facebook sites.

Lee Fang of ThinkProgress exposed the Facebook scam in a report circulated by CommonDreams:

ThinkProgress obtained 75,000 private emails from the defense contractor HBGary Federal via the hacktivist group called Anonymous. The emails led to two shocking revelations. First, that an assortment of private military firms collectively called “Team Themis” had been tapped by Bank of America to conduct a cyber war against reporters sympathetically covering the Wikileaks revelations. And second, that late in 2010, the same set of firms began work separately for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a Republican-aligned corporate lobbying group, to develop a similar campaign of sabotage against progressive organizations, including the SEIU and ThinkProgress.”


Footnote: alas, Common Dreams has been offline since yesterday – apparently again hacked to silence by the fascists – so I cannot guarantee the functionality of its links.

***

While censorship by prior restraint (BART) and disinformation (Facebook) are gravely damaging, the most ruinous form of censorship is misconception – truths deliberately or ignorantly manipulated into a false conclusion – which is all the more insidious given it is often self-sustained.

Hence Dave Poklinkoski's analysis, “Let's Learn the Right Lessons from Wisconsin,” in Labor Notes via Truthout:

The uprising here was the awakening that labor movement activists had long hoped for—disproving the modern notion that those who work will not stand up for themselves: Last winter several hundred thousand people rallied in communities across the state.”

“Saying 'Brother' and 'Sister' and expressions of solidarity had real meaning. People were exhausted but energized. Community/labor coalitions emerged to build for the future.

“But the recall elections turned out to be an education opportunity lost...the 'message people' saw the union question as a divisive issue...The millions of dollars in commercials in support of the Democrats did not talk about unions, the history of the labor movement, what we have done to create our modern society, or why it is important for our collective future that unions thrive.”


Footnote: Unfortunately Mr. Poklinkoski doesn't specify who the “message people” were, but he strongly implies they were Democrat operatives. Which, if true, is one more proof of the extent to which we workers are being betrayed by the people we elected to represent us – not just by Barack the Betrayer himself but by like-minded politicians and campaign professionals throughout the Democratic Party.

Such is the bitter legacy of class warfare – conflict begun with Taft-Hartley, fueled by Cold War conscription and radically intensified by the Vietnam War.

Atop the pyramid of power (Google IWW capitalist pyramid) are those who were the Vietnam Era's sneeringly privileged draft-exempt elite – the people whose malicious collaboration has since turned the Republican and Democrat parties into a single Ruling Class party.

On the bottom are all the rest of us, especially those of us who served in the Vietnam Era military.

When O when will organize our own Working Families Party?

*****

Obama's Ongoing Betrayals Heighten Black, Democrat Anger

Vexed with Obama's ongoing betrayals, the Congressional Black Caucus says it can no longer depend on the president to represent the African-American community.

The group's anger, expressed during an Atlanta town-hall meeting that is part of a five-city jobs fair, underscores a growing disaffection with Obama that began when he sandbagged the Employee Free Choice Act and manipulated health-care reform into a huge bonus for the insurance industry.

Since then, an increasing number of African-Americans have been privately scorning the president as an “Uncle Tom,” but only recently, with the blistering denunciation of Obama by Cornel West, has the controversy become public. Those who want to review Mr. West's remarks can find them here:


And here's Patricia Murphy of The Daily Beast (thanks to Reader Supported News) with additional details about what CBC members said Thursday in Atlanta:


***

Meanwhile someone with far more readership than I has finally picked up on what for several months now I've been calling “the growing darkness under the Obama Bush.”

That someone is David Bromwitch of TomDispatch, linked here courtesy of a new website called Nation of Change:

“Is it too soon to speak of the Bush-Obama presidency?”

“The usual turn from unsatisfying wars abroad to happier domestic conditions, however, no longer seems tenable. In these August days, Americans are rubbing their eyes, still wondering what has befallen us with the president’s “debt deal” -- a shifting of tectonic plates beneath the economy of a sort Dick Cheney might have dreamed of, but which Barack Obama and the House Republicans together brought to fruition. A redistribution of wealth and power more than three decades in the making has now been carved into the system and given the stamp of permanence.

Only a Democratic president, and only one associated in the public mind (however wrongly) with the fortunes of the poor, could have accomplished such a reversal with such sickening completeness.”


Footnote: Like most self-proclaimed “progressives,” Mr. Bromwitch reveals his socioeconomic caste-bias by focusing his opening paragraphs entirely on foreign policy – issues of little interest to those of us who are homeless or facing eviction or living in terror of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid reductions.

But his report is nevertheless worth reading because it confirms what we've long sensed: that Obama is not just the political reincarnation of George Bush but is George Bush on tyrannical steroids – that the man we elected as the embodiment of “change we can believe in” is in fact Barack the Betrayer.

***

Two prominent public figures who were once among Obama's more emphatic supporters are increasingly skeptical not just of the president's true intentions but of his ability to win re-election in 2012.

Former Clinton Administration Secretary of Labor Robert Reich says he fears the jobs bill the president promises to unveil in September will be nothing more than another example of empty eloquence: uplifting words followed, as per the Obama norm, by downpressing betrayals.

And Oregon Rep. Peter DeFazio says he now doubts the president can win re-election – especially if the Republicans manage to lock down their JesuNazis, Christofascists, fundamentalist theocrats, anti-sex misogynists and Teabagger storm troops long enough to field an (apparent) moderate.

Mr. Reich – whose economic savvy is equal to Paul Krugman's – has been having second thoughts about Obama's policies for some time, but as far as I know this is the first time he has publicly questioned the truthfulness of the president's statements:


The story on Rep. DeFazio's concerns, which include the possibility Obama's betrayals have already irreparably alienated Oregon's definitively Leftist electorate, is here:


***

Finally there is my own most recent commentary on the subject, written originally as a response to another of John Nichols' increasingly obnoxious if-only defenses of Barack the Betrayer as a Working Class hero who need only “call for economic justice” so “voters would know, finally, which side their president is on.”

Mr. Nichols' piece first appeared in The Nation, was then recirculated by Common Dreams, which as noted above remains offline. Nevertheless – since access to the former is by subscription only – here is the CD link, offered in hope it's soon operational:


Here too is the full text of my response:

I am appalled by these dishonest efforts to rationalize President Obama's indefensible duplicity.

The reality is painfully hard to admit: those of us who voted for him were scammed – deceived as U.S. voters have never been deceived in my lifetime.

Obama won the presidency by disguising himself in the Big Lie of "change we can believe in."

But ever since his inauguration, he has been showing us his true identity.

He has proven himself to be Barack the Betrayer, the nation's first Trojan Horse president, a Wall Street mercenary disguised as an African-American Democrat.

How could such an outrage happen?

Obama's candidacy was the most cunningly Machiavellian deception ever fostered by the U.S. Ruling Class.

(The damning proof is in the 2008 campaign-finance data revealed by OpenSecrets.org.)

Obama's election may be the most politically ruinous choice in our national history, not the least because he has disillusioned and embittered the electorate to an extent probably without precedent.

Not only has he damaged the credibility of the Democratic Party beyond any possibility of repair; his ever-more-blatant submission to the capitalist aristocracy facilitated the explosion of racism and demagoguery that reduced the Republican Party to a nation-destroying cult of Ayn Rand anarchists.

To those of us who see Obama clearly – especially those of us who now because of his betrayals must live our final years beneath the sword of death-dealing reductions in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid – his Judas-like behavior is the defining characteristic of his presidency.

Indeed the last two years are naught but a chronicle of the deceptions for which Wall Street paid him so generously in 2008.

How does Obama do it?

He speaks eloquently of hope but hides behind the Democrat name while imposing hopelessness – the slave-state economy all capitalists secretly desire but no Republican dared make real until now.

And now too it's a Republican – Speaker of the House John Boehner – who applauds the damage inflicted by Obama's treachery.

Obama, says Boehner, gave me “98 percent of what I wanted."

Wake up, people. How many times are we to be fooled?

Obama is the seductively smiling mortician inviting us to participate in the burial of the American Dream, the glibly persuasive coroner at the inquest for the American experiment in constitutional democracy.

The fix is in; our coffin lids are being nailed shut.

Obama is imposing on us the same zero-tolerance capitalist governance we witness with such horror in the banana republics.

Absolute power and unlimited profit for the Ruling Class, total subjugation and genocidal poverty for all the rest of us – that will be Barack Obama's legacy.

Unless of course we are bold enough to acknowledge the magnitude of our defeat – and courageous enough to organize for resistance.

*****

Miscellany: Is Climate Change Fostering Pacific Northwest Pythons?

The strange story of the 16-foot python discovered near Sedro-Woolley, Washington, a small town in the western foothills of the North Cascade wilderness, was transmitted by the Associated Press nearly three weeks ago. 

But I put off writing about it because all my spare moments were consumed by trying to find my way around Blogger. 

That's because learning the technological protocols of a new blog server is an anxiety-producing nightmare, especially for those of us who are intimidated by the alien technology implicit in the term “computer.” No matter I've been computerized for a dozen years now, it's obvious the associated fear and frustration will never vanish.

There's also the fact I wanted to know a lot more about the big snake than the three-sentence AP  dispatch provided. Though all the techno-hassles brought on by my ouster from TypePad took precedence, I was particularly interested in whether pythons could survive in the notably temperate climate of the coastal rain forests. 

Not to worry, I told myself; I assumed one of our local journalists would eventually find a herpetologist to answer the question.

Dream on. What would have been a routine newsroom response to this story in my day is obviously too much to ask in this age of ever-more-restricted information. So I still have no idea if local temperatures, which were never very cold, might have been warmed enough by terminal climate change to allow pythons to become the self-sustaining invasive threat they already are in the Southeast.

But I did find, on an Internet forum for hunters in Washington state, an interesting albeit less-than-literate discussion of the snake. Scroll down a bit and you'll discover a poster who says the snake was not “road kill” as AP reported but was found dead in the Skagit River:


*****

Thinking Visually: on the Relevance of Urban Weeds and Wildflowers

At first glance the image above is one of my graffiti pictures – whatever the meaning of the letter “C” on the board fence, it is surely a graceful work of art – but after I studied the photo a bit, I realized it is also about the astonishing persistence of life even amidst the concrete-and-asphalt barrens of a city.

The weeds and wildflowers growing from the edge of the parking lot where the pavement abuts the fence are re-staking Mother Nature's claim to a realm from which she was presumably banished.

Such determination – or so it seems to me – could easily be a metaphor for the tactics by which we might resist the forces of capitalism that, having conquered us so easily, are now methodically reducing us to slavery.

Hence, though I'll add the photo to my graffiti file, thereby continuing my effort to resurrect another of the projects terminated by the 1983 fire, I'll also give some thought to maybe beginning a new project about urban weeds and wildflowers as symbols of resistance. (I'll post an expanded graffiti portfolio just as soon as I figure out how to do it.)

Meanwhile here's the tech data for the above: Pentax MX, 100mm F/2.8 Pentax SMCP, Kodak 400 negative film (the last of the long-refrigerated batch that was months past its drop-dead date).

LB/21 August 2011

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16 August 2011

Outside Agitator's Notebook Reborn; BART vs C-Phones; A Farewell to Leicas; Our Nation as We Knew It Is Dead

POTLUCK ON THE PATIO -- Click on image to view it full size; for details see "Visual Thinking" (below). Photograph by Loren Bliss copyright 2011.  


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The Death and Resurrection of a Blog

Welcome to the evicted, forcibly redesigned and avowedly more defiant Outside Agitator's Notebook.

When I tried to post “Our Nation as We Knew It Is Dead: A Requiem in Seven Parts” on the original OAN, I discovered I had been locked out of my own blog.

The server, TypePad, is under new owners, a megabucks international advertising agency that calls itself Say Media, and Say Media was obviously saying “no” to my objections to capitalism.

TypePad inflicted the lockout, which slapped me in the face two Sundays ago (7 August), without advance warning.

Though it pushes my opening entry to the Blogger variant of OAN well past my customary 2500-3000 words per week, I have published the locked-out essay as a separate post below. Despite the fact its news items are as much as two weeks old, its linked dispatches are clearly those of an obvious turning point in our national history.

Besides which, I feel it needs to be archived on the Internet, for it to be seen in what newspapers used to call “the light of day.”

As to the timing of the lockout itself, I don't doubt I crossed some invisible line when I pointed out that knowingly murderous cutbacks to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are in fact genocide, with the odium of deathcamps replaced by the less obvious Final Solution of abandonment and neglect.

TypePad's underlying malice is reflected in the nasty bit of Nurdly manipulation that made it impossible for me to discuss the blockage with the server's new gatekeepers. I changed email addresses three months ago, and TypePad obviously had my new address, as its staffers had contacted me a few times since then on unrelated routine matters. But they re-animated the dead e-mail address for responses to the lockout notice that (finally) answered my repeated attempts to log onto my blog.

Hence I was silenced in every sense of the word. Not only was I banished from my own web site; TypePad had also made sure I could not debate my banishment.

Probably I should not have been surprised. The advertising industry – from which Josef Goebbels learned the technique of the Big Lie he later perfected on Adolf Hitler's behalf – is (and always has been) the quintessential expression of tyrannocapitalism.

Nevertheless a TypePad representative had assured me the program under which I was blogging would run until mid-October. Here is the relevant correspondence, dated 1 November 2010:

Thanks for contacting TypePad One customer support! We've reviewed your request and have responded to your ticket 'When does my Journalist Bail-out expire?'.

Hi Loren,
Thanks for the note.
It looks like you have 356 days left for free access. We can look into perhaps extending you some additional credit at that time.
I hope this helps. Please let us know if there is anything else we can do for you.

Thanks,
Kymberlie

I don't doubt Kymberlie wrote what she thought was the truth. But – given the morally imbecilic nature of the advertising world (in which I too have worked) and the predatory nature of capitalism in general – I should undoubtedly have dismissed Kymberlie's response as meaningless and thus expected the worst.

In any case that makes four virtual realms from which I'm banished.

I was booted from Democratic Underground in 2006, retaliation for pointing out that KGB analysts had (correctly) viewed the “1960s Revolution” as nothing more than bourgeois delusion – the revolutionary potential of certain non-Caucasian communities specifically exempted.

My earlier blog Wolfgang von Skeptic was trashed to death by porn-spammers in 2007 – their attack escalating to ruinous intensity after I broke through the euphemistic fog to correctly describe “global warming” as “terminal climate change.” In the same piece, “Now the End Has Truly Begun: Notes on the First Death Tremors of the Petroleum Age,” I warned of the impending “double apocalypse” of climate change combined with the technological collapse implicit in petroleum exhaustion. Our suicidal non-response, I wrote, amounts to “terminal species failure.”

In 2010 Facebook broke the automatic link between itself and OAN – this literally minutes after I posted my 27 April essay suggesting the ongoing economic collapse was not an accident but instead a deliberate (and deliberately deadly) socioeconomic restructuring (see “Economic Collapse: Capitalist Death-Stroke to Hated Public Services?”).

Then, by leaking confidential information to phishers, Facebook forced me to close my account entirely.

Now there's this outrage byTypePad aka SixApart. (The OAN posts on TypePad were still available on line as of this writing – just Google Loren Bliss – but it would hardly astonish me were they to be disappeared.)

Such is life under capitalism – precisely as the people of San Francisco are learning via the deliberate tyranny of oppression-serving cell-phone blackouts (next item). Once again we experience the imposition of classically predatory capitalism: absolute power and unlimited profit for the Ruling Class, total subjugation and genocidal profit for all the rest of us.

Now let's see how long it takes somebody amongst the great paranoid Them to figure out some way to shove me off Blogger.

*****

San Francisco's BART Turns Off Cell Phones to Suppress Protests

Hackers enraged by blocked cell phone service at some San Francisco transit stations broke into a Bay Area Rapid Transit website and revealed confidential contact information belonging to more than 2,000 customers.

The cyber attack came in response to BART's decision to turn off wireless service in several of its San Francisco stations as the agency tries to thwart protests over the fatal shooting of an allegedly disruptive homeless man by a transit cop.

Which begs the question: is BART's cell-phone shut-down a trial-run of tactics soon to be used everywhere in the United States?

The full text of a detailed but obviously pro-BART Associated Press report on the episode (with thanks to Common Dreams) is here:


*****

Visual Thinking: on the Abandonment of My Beloved Leicas

I made the above picture with a battered but fully functional Pentax MX, the 100mm f/2.8 Pentax SMCP lens and Kodak 400 negative film, a roll with a drop-dead date of January 2011.

Though I bought the film three years ago, it had been stored in my refrigerator until week before last, and it thus performed flawlessly, capturing a telling moment as a few of my neighbors and I enjoyed a potluck dinner on the patio of the lower-income senior apartment complex where we live.

Normally I wouldn't have attempted this sort of social-documentary photograph unless I had a Leica.

But my Leicas are gone forever, victims of old age – theirs and mine – and my own inescapable poverty.

The M4 was 43 years old, the M2 almost 50, and the last Leica mechanic on the West Coast had traded his workbench for retirement. Hence when these legendarily durable machines needed repair – as eventually they surely would – I would have had to send them far across the country, not to mention going without them for as long as three months.

And then I would have had to find some way to raise the sum of $225 plus parts and shipping – an utterly impossible amount on my budget, which now can only be expected to shrink even more ruinously: Barack the Betrayer and the treacherous DemocRats are proving themselves as hostile as any Republican to lower income people, especially to elderly and disabled persons like myself.

Besides, Leicas are thug magnets, and the older and more crippled I became, the more afraid I was to carry them in public, not just here in Washington state, where street photography is effectively forbidden by judicial edict, but anywhere in this nation where capitalism's maliciously disinherited young increasingly prey upon capitalism's malevolently ever-more impoverished elders.

Hence I sent my Leicas to the photographic equivalent of the glue factory to which aged horses were once consigned.

Nevertheless – despite the obviously karmic disasters that have always plagued my photographic efforts – I find I cannot give up the medium after all, that I remain a compulsive photographer.

Such is the quest implicit in the first word I ever spoke, “light,” almost – or so I was told – as much desperate plea as exclamation of joy.

Perhaps that is why a Shawn Phillips song, “The Ballad of Casey Deiss,” spoke so hauntingly to me even the first time I heard it, as I awoke one morning in 1971 Bellingham with my clock radio tuned to Vancouver's now-legendary CKLG-FM and my lover whispering to me “this is a song about you” as she handed me my coffee, as my mind seized wisps of lyrics like ephemera of fading dreams: “Twas a boy of sorrowful eyes...in his mind he cried for light...looking for and finding a goddess...he took Diana to be his wife.” Even in the half-consciousness of newly interrupted sleep I recognized Phillips' poetry as a perfect description of the artistic quest and its eternal dialogue, Robert Graves' assertion there is “one story and one story only.” Perhaps that is why even now it puts a lump in my throat and more often than not brings tears.

It is a damn fine piece of work, vividly representative of the lost ethos Walter Bowart so aptly named “Revolution in Consciousness”:


But I digress; the point I am backing into is Pentaxes are now the only 35mm machines I own, and the act of photographing during the potluck with a single-lens reflex – actually intended as nothing more than camera test – set me on a path to a rather jangling suspicion.

Note the utterly un-posed smiles, a blessed moment in which – yes – our strong senses of community and companionship let us escape the omnipresent and utterly rational fear we will all soon be savaged by intentionally deadly Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid cutbacks.

How, I asked myself, could I have gotten such a relaxed image with such an intrusive machine as an SLR – even the notably small, relatively quiet MX?

Always before I had assumed such visual intimacy was possible only with M Leicas or other comparably quiet, comparably unobtrusive rangefinder cameras, for example the VT Canons I used before I was able to afford M Leicas.

Now though I wonder: what if the intimacy seemingly produced by rangefinder cameras is not at least sometimes a pseudo-intimacy.

Yes the subject is reliably soothed to relative relaxation by the fact the rangefinder camera masks only one of the photographer's eyes, thus sparing the subject the implicitly intimidating Cyclops visage of the SLR photographer. But yes too the photographer is often thereby spared the task of actually getting to know the person being photographed – precisely the reason rangefinder cameras are so facile at seeming to bridge, for example, the ultimately unbridgeable socioeconomic and psychological chasm between say an employee of Ruling Class Media and a family just evicted into inescapable homelessness.

Which line of thinking brought me to consider just what makes the above picture work: I know these people; they are my neighbors here in the senior projects where I have dwelt since 2004. I am one of them. Because I know them – because they know me – a Cyclops-faced and noisy SLR is no longer an intrusion.

And it seems there's a lesson here somewhere.

Perhaps I am even better off with these Pentaxes. After all, if a body breaks, I can replace it for far less than it would cost to repair a Leica – and I no longer have to worry so much about being the prey of some robber.

LB/15 August 2011

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Our Nation as We Knew It Is Dead: a Requiem in Seven Parts

The journalist Jakob Augstein, a German who no doubt speaks for all of Europe (and probably the entire civilized world), says the the debt-ceiling crisis proves the United States “has more in common with a failed state than a democracy.”

Indeed, he adds, the U.S. is no longer part of Western Civilization – or for that matter civilization in general.

Writing for der Spiegel, Mr. Augstein describes the U.S. as “a country where the system of government has fallen firmly into the hands of the elite. An unruly and aggressive militarism set in motion two costly wars in the past 10 years. Society is not only divided socially and politically -- in its ideological blindness the nation is moving even farther away from the core of democracy. It is losing its ability to compromise.”

“The country's social disintegration,” he adds, “is breathtaking...The social cynicism and societal indifference once associated primarily with the Third World has now become an American hallmark.”

“This accelerates social decay because the greater the disparity grows, the less likely the rich will be willing to contribute to the common good...The name 'United States' seems increasingly less appropriate.”

“Hate,” Mr. Augstein writes, “has become routine in American political culture...reason has been replaced by delusion...The fact that Barack Obama is the country's first African-American president may have played a role there, too.”

Mr. Augstein's complete and infinitely damning text is here:


Though free registration may be required for access, I urge everyone to read it. Unlike our own Ruling Class media, der Spiegel dares show us what we have become.

***

As if elaborating on Mr. Augstein's indictment, Robert Reich reveals why President Obama's debt ceiling “deal” is as big a Big Lie as “change we can believe in”:

“The deal he just signed,” Mr. Reich notes, “makes it impossible for the President and Democrats to launch any major jobs program – no WPA or Civilian Conservation Corps, no major lending program to cash-starved states and locales, no new help for distressed homeowners, and so on. Nada.”

Noting how the President proclaimed "we've got to do everything in our power to grow this economy and put America back to work,” Mr. Reich says “the sad truth is (the President) and the nation remain hostage to the ideology of right-wing Republicans who won't let the government spend more money. Yet if the government can't spend more – at least this year and next, until the pump is primed and the economy is growing again – we won't see job growth. And without job growth, the economy will remain anemic.”

“That's why,” Mr. Reich concludes, “even the stock market is reacting badly to the end of the hostage crisis.”

***

Writing for the website Truthout, the University of Massachusetts economist Richard D. Wolff continues the threnody, describing our national transformation from constitutional democracy to capitalist tyranny.

Entitled “A Tale of Two Lootings,” it is the most clearly written, easy-to-understand economic reporting I've yet encountered, this in a worklife spanning more than half a century.

“The political posturing around the debt ceiling "crisis" was mostly a distraction from the hard issues,” Mr. Wolff explains. “The hardest of those – underlying US economic decline – keeps resurfacing to display costs, pains and injustices that threaten to dissolve society. Its causes – two long-term trends over the last 30 years – help also to explain the political failures that now compound the social costs of economic decline.”

He then defines the two trends:

“The first...is the attack on jobs, wages and benefits, and the second is the attack on the federal government's budget. The first trend enables the second...The first trend amounts to looting the US working class (the media softens that to 'disappearing middle class'). Since the 1970s, real wages have been flat to declining, while productivity per worker has risen steadily...The second trend was looting the government. This happened because exhausted and stressed workers turned away from participation or even political interests after the 1970s...”


***

John Atcheson, a freelance journalist with publication credits that include The New York Times and The Washington Post, says much the same thing in a Common Dreams piece, “The Beast Is Starved: Welcome to the Next Great Depression.”

Mr. Atcheson's essay, which will surely get him blacklisted by the Ruling Class Media, concludes in dark sarcasm:

“With private industry sitting on top of some $2 trillion in profits, exporting jobs, and shutting down plants, only government spending stood between us and an economic Armageddon.” 

“Now, nothing does.

“So, congratulations, America.  You’ve finally gotten big bad gubmint off your back.

“Enjoy the coming Great Depression.”


In response, at 4:36 p.m. on 4 August (the date/time data is essential if you are to quickly find the comment itself), I wrote and posted what I have since realized is my own requiem for the United States:

Yes the capitalist aristocracy is the most diabolically manipulative Ruling Class in human history.

But the fact remains the United States willfully turned itself into Moron Nation and skipped gleefully into the capitalists' slave pens.

Identifying with its oppressor – "I too can become a millionaire and root like a pig through the ruins of my victims' lives" – Moron Nation then adopted as its own the morally imbecilic credo of the Ruling Class. Not just infinite greed, but infinite greed as ultimate virtue – Ayn Rand's reversal of every ethical precept humanity ever uttered.

Relishing its single-minded maliciousness, Moron Nation next traded off our freedom for a nutrition-less diet of trinket materialism and pornographic celebrity-worship. It fattened itself on the toxins of anti-intellectuality, racism, misogyny and xenophobia.

And when its moronic binge proved cancerous, when its gorging acquisitiveness murdered the American experiment in constitutional governance and slew the American Dream, Moron Nation took final refuge in virulently pathological denial.

Its culpability is no different from the culpability of the Germans who voted Hitler into power, no different from the Nazi electorate that unleashed the modern agenda of world conquest Moron Nation has since ironically fulfilled.

O yes: warfare based on lies is warfare based on lies, no matter the language.

And extermination is extermination, whether imposed in death camps or inflicted by abandonment and neglect.

Verily, as was Nazi Germany in 1944, so is Moron Nation today.

It's end is certain. All that remains to be decided is the means and timing.

Until then there is naught but deepening darkness, die Götterdämmerung, the pre-Armageddon twilight.

That and the rage and grief and terror of those of us who struggled to avert the apocalypse but now – because we stayed here too long fighting for a realm no longer our own – cannot escape the deadly undertow of its self-inflicted demise.

***

Later, in response to someone who implicitly questioned my choice of years, I added the following explanation:

I used 1944 rather than 1930 for three reasons. In 1930 Germany had not yet started World War II. Nor in 1930 were the Nazis yet in power. By contrast, in early 1944 -- despite the Red Army's epic victory at Stalingrad (2 February 1943) and the lifting of the siege of Leningrad (27 January 1944) -- the Germans (and for that matter nearly everyone save the people of the Soviet Union) still believed Germany would win the war.

But the rest of it is indeed familiar, terrifyingly so -- the same ends reached by different processes.

The U.S. effectively outlawed socialism during the post-World War II purge, of which the McCarthy Era was only a portion. The purge began literally the moment the war was ended, targeting not just Communists but all other socialists and progressives. It made "intellectual" a synonym for "subversive" and so destroyed the U.S. intellectual community forever. This was the critical first step toward Moron Nation.

Labor has been under constant attack since the passage of the Taft-Hartley Act in 1948. This was the first major postwar example of Republicans and Democrats openly collaborating in service to the capitalists. It effectively nullified the union-enabling Wagner Act. And Taft-Hartley is -- precisely as labor activists predicted at the time -- the death knell for U.S. unions.

Now, like Nazi Germany in 1944, we have no effective unions, no socialist parties, in fact no real opposition to the Ruling Class at all. Nor will the Ruling Class ever allow such opposition to arise again.

Which means the United States has indeed become the de facto Fourth Reich.

What will happen? My guess is a new more democratic Soviet Union will arise from an increasingly rebellious Russian Federation even as its more democratically structured Latin American counterpart is already arising south of the border.

The wild card is China: is its embrace of capitalism a classic Sun Tzu ploy -- turning an enemy's greatest strength into its greatest weakness -- or is it an actual transformation? If the former, the world will eventually unite against the United States much as it did against the Axis. If the latter, a new Axis -- the Washington-Beijing Axis -- will replace the old Berlin-Rome-Tokyo Axis.

I suspect World War III -- in which the United States becomes the ultimate nuclear suicide bomber and tries to end all life above the insectoid level ("we had to destroy the planet to save it") -- will begin about 2035 or so. Its outcome will depend largely on the ability of the American people to neutralize U.S. nuclear capabilities by rebellion, much as the Russian people neutralized the Tsar's war-making capabilities in 1917.

The postwar world will either be a bug planet -- uninhabitable by any other lifeforms -- or a gravely damaged but nevertheless healing planet in which the inhabitants recognize socialism -- actually eco-socialism- - as the only sane alternative.

Most of us -- certainly myself as I am 71 -- will be long in graves or ashes.

Vexing, in a sense: like dropping dead in the middle of a great epic and thus never learning the outcome.

***

Next there was Michael Moore's “30 Years Ago Today: The Middle Class Died,” an entirely legitimate denunciation of the Reaganoid war against the Working Class that nevertheless proves Mr. Moore suffers from the same induced ignorance of history that so afflicts his entire generation.


Not the least because an accurate knowledge of history is essential to effective political action, I responded accordingly:

In this instance Mr. Moore is dead wrong: the declaration of war against the Working Class – the attack on all of us who are not part of the capitalist aristocracy – was begun by Nixon in an interview with William Randolph Hearst Jr. in early 1973.

Nixon, who had just started his second term, surprised Mr. Hearst by complaining that the rebelliousness of the era proved American workers had it too good.

But the decades of pampering were over, said Nixon. Beginning with his second term, the purpose and policy of governance in the United States would be the imposition of ever-greater hardships on students, workers and lower-income peoples.

Though Mr. Hearst did not point this out in his report, Nixon was responding to the complaints of Ruling Class insiders (including Nixon Secretary of State Henry Kissinger) that the nation suffered from "an excess of democracy."

Significantly – though Mr. Hearst's report was carried on Page One by every Hearst newspaper – it has since been disappeared down the Orwell Hole.

Thus Mr. Moore's youth, and not his research skills, is the source of his error.

Thus too the Ruling Class despises my generation as potentially subversive. We remember when the United States was a very different country. We also remember the turning points in its march toward what it is today: a betrayer state, a realm that has failed its people by becoming a slave-powered goldmine for its rulers.

Which is yet another reason the Ruling Class wants us seniors dead. Not only are we unprofitable – that is, no longer exploitable for capitalist profit. We also experienced better times – the reality of the now-forever-lost American Dream, when our heads were not always on the capitalists' chopping-block.

***

Later still, when a historical revisionist claimed Nixon sustained and even expanded the socioeconomic-equality programs of the New Deal, the New Frontier and the Great Society, I wrote the following rebuttal:

Not true. That's one of the Big Lie talking points of revisionist pro-Nixon propaganda.

What actually happened was the legislative impetus of the Great Society continued into the first years of the Nixon Regime.

But as soon as he could, Nixon began dismantling all LBJ's socioeconomic programs.

I know this because (A), I was there; because (B), I was a working journalist (photographer/writer/editor) intimately involved with covering or working in various Great Society programs; and because (C), I was a Vietnam-era military veteran booted out of college by Tricky Dick's malicious manipulations of GI Bill financial regulations. (These, by which hundreds of thousands of vets were victimized, delayed my BA by four years and screwed me out of grad school forever.)

So please let's not – on this site of all places – start parroting the clandestine Right's rehabilitate-Nixon falsehoods.

Nixon was an arch-criminal, a wanna-be Hitler who commissioned the Rand Corporation to study how to suspend the U.S. Constitution and – among his other crimes – engineered the murderous Pinochet coup in Chile.

***

Finally a New York Times report, “A Rush to Assess Standard & Poor's Downgrade of United States Credit Rating,” enabled me to write not of the past or of a future I will never see, but of the horrors that are bound to afflict us within the next few months. NYT's text, for which free registration may be required, is linked here: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/07/business/a-rush-to-assess-standard-and-poors-downgrade-of-united-states-credit-rating.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1312696955-LrozwNpUiicNxfq5vwszDw My comment is nr. 193:

Given Standard & Poor's role as co-conspirator in the financial debacle of 2008, the political function of the downgrade is obvious: it is to provide the Republicans and their Democrat enablers with a veto-proof rationale for destroying Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and any other remnants of the New Deal/Great Society socioeconomic safety net.

The savage result of this newly resurrected paradigm of capitalist governance – death by abandonment and neglect inflicted on innumerable elderly, disabled and chronically unemployed people – will be genocide of a scale unknown on this continent since the Indian Wars. Capitalism will thus rid itself of those of us it deems unprofitable even as its government and politicians are cleverly spared the odium and embarrassment of death camps.

And were not credit downgrades among the historical precursors to various military coups in the second half of the 20th Century?

Ite, missa est.

LB/7 August 2011

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