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View Full Version : One nation under capitalism: It’s time for a crucifixion


Neilikka
10-03-2008, 01:36 PM
By Jason Miller

Proudly surveying our kingdom from atop the capitalist pyramid, we US Americans have deluded ourselves into believing we are at the pinnacle of cultural, social, political, and economic evolution. We fancy ourselves to be so exceptional that we are entitled to a perpetual blessing from “our” Christian God.

Break out the Haldol!

We have afflicted the globe with the fatal contagions of the American Way and corporatism. And all of us, to varying degrees, are culpable. From bicycle-peddling vegans to limo riding corporados, we are each complicit in perpetuating American capitalism, a system so rotten that were it a piece of decaying meat, starving maggots would reject it.
We would have far fewer amends to make if our nation’s impact were limited by the size of our population. Were that the case, we would be a mere blemish on the face of Mother Earth. But due to our extraordinary wealth and power, insatiable avarice, hostility towards life, and obscene appetites for consumption, the United States is more akin to a cankerous fist-sized boil, oozing pus and reeking with infection.

We’re gluttonous beyond belief, greedily devouring every morsel of meat and marrow and leaving the “dogs” of the rest of the world to gnaw hungrily on the hollow bones we thoughtlessly cast aside.

Spiritually we’ve struck a perverse Faustian bargain. Like the good doctor, we crave “more than earthly meat, cheese and drink.” But knowledge is not the object of our desire. What an insult to think that we’d relinquish our souls in exchange for something so hollow and meaningless. Big Macs, the NFL, NASCAR, McMansions, Hummers, American Idol, liposuction, and Viagra—we’ll settle for no less. Gloating over our seemingly endless supply of fast foods and hard-hitting dudes, heart-pounding races and expansive living spaces, monstrous cars and aspiring stars, and hot chicks and hard dicks, we glare contemptuously at the “rats” from other nations scurrying about our feet and fighting over the crumbs we don’t manage to inhale.

For years we have satiated our desires with utter disregard for environmental cost, have ignored the abject suffering we inflict upon humans and animals, and have spilled a veritable ocean of blood to enable corporate plunder and to stomp anti-capitalist movements into the ground.

Yet when we finally reaped a bit of what we’d sown in September of 2001 and again in September of 2008, we wailed, wept, and gnashed our teeth as if we were the only people ever to have sustained staggering blows.

While both events are tragic, how can we express such righteous indignation that we’ve been wounded as a nation when we’ve been dishing out misery for years and have remained relatively unscathed?

And can we be so blinded by the shimmer of the gold and diamonds that we worship that we can’t see that these deep wounds to the very heart of capitalism (both the destruction of the World Trade Center and the current financial market crisis) are clarion calls to slay this formidable but staggering beast?

Capitalism has had its run and it has failed. Miserably.

Despite a number of ‘socialist’ measures implemented by the ruling elite to pacify the masses throughout the crisis-ridden history of American capitalism, we still have an obscene percentage of wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, poverty and homelessness, unemployment, imperial conquests, monopolies and oligopolies, and ‘recessions.’

And our collective psyche suffers from a host of maladies and malformations. We are alienated from nature, each other and ourselves. We value property over life. We buy far more than we need or could ever use. We measure success in dollars and cents. We are driven by greed and selfishness. We worship money and militarism.

As obviously dysfunctional, unjust, and destructive as our system is, many of us who oppose the $700 billion ‘bailout’ of the financial markets still soberly nod our heads in agreement when bourgeois economists insist that while the ‘bailout’ proposal is excessive, ‘something must be done to restore investor confidence and get credit flowing again.’

How about no? How about we do nothing?

Most of those who stand to benefit from a ‘bailout’ of any dollar amount are all about the ‘free market’ and ‘law of the jungle’ capitalism. It’s sad how quickly those in the moneyed class cast aside their ‘principles’ when adversity slaps them in the face.

‘Dog-eat-dog’ is their mantra when they’re fighting tooth and nail to cut spending on socially beneficial programs, rewarding mass firings by increasing stock values, pushing for increased regressive taxes and decreases on progressive taxes, and slaughtering millions of innocents in resource wars. But when these uber-predators become prey, they expect the rest of us to charge to their rescue.

So what of Paulson and the rest of the power elite who are coming to the working and middle classes on bended knee, begging for a hand-out? Let them twist in the wind and pray they start hurling themselves out of windows.

What of the financial markets, Wall Street, and the decaying socioeconomic infrastructure of American capitalism? Let them collapse.

What of the rest of us? Let us suffer as our victims have suffered for decades.
Motivated by pain and by the realization that our system is ecocidal, genocidal, and morally reprehensible, we of the working and middle classes can finally redeem ourselves by nailing our depraved god of American capitalism to the cross and starting to forge a just, egalitarian, democratic and humane socioeconomic order. Good for us and good for the rest of the planet!

Jason Miller is the associate editor of Cyrano's Journal Online, founding editor of Thomas Paine’s Corner, and a corporate wage slave. He has experienced unemployment and homelessness, looks forward to meeting interesting people at the soup kitchen once his 401K has zeroed out and his job has been eliminated, and wonders when America’s wage slaves will finally unite and revolt.

Voobrazheniye
10-03-2008, 02:05 PM
Marina, sometimes the stuff you copy and paste here is quite interesting. Other times, it's the worst, most biased and misinformed crap imaginable.

This fits the second category perfectly.

alpine-frolic
10-03-2008, 03:33 PM
In my side i like to see all things from different point of views. The truth is not more at North than at South, from the top or the bottom.

saprosky
10-03-2008, 03:44 PM
Capitalism failed as comunism. Maybe is time to develope a mix of both and adding something more learned of previous mistakes. IMHO.

alpine-frolic
10-03-2008, 03:50 PM
Capitalism failed as comunism. Maybe is time to develope a mix of both and adding something more learned of previous mistakes. IMHO.
Don't be humble in your opinion.

saprosky
10-03-2008, 04:19 PM
I am not an economy expert and my opinions are from a sufferer of this economical situation.

The "experts" are now with full pockets and living very well, laughing of those stupids that now have a big problem to survive, and looking how states spend money to restore situation.

Maybe crucifixion is not the way but search the responsibles of this chaos and take his money would be good.

Lucker
10-03-2008, 05:20 PM
, we still have an obscene percentage of wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, poverty and homelessness, unemployment, imperial conquests, monopolies and oligopolies, and ‘recessions.’

I thought this was supposed to be about the US
Why concentrate on Russia ?

RiverRock
10-04-2008, 07:00 AM
I have a lot to say about this!! I wish I had more time. The current Federal Reserve control, national government power growing out of control, too much legislation and government programs has a lot more to do with socialistic ideology then capitalism and American ideology.

Capitalism has not failed. American citizens have failed by not fighting enough and giving up a lot of our individual power to the federal government (without going into detail now). We have been selling our liberty for measly government handouts and in the name of security. Since the nation has been so prosperous we have been lazy and oblivious to it.

The more I study early American history and why the constitution was created as it was ,the more I am amazed at how much the first American government and its creators understood things. Even still we let everything they warned us against over 200 years ago happen!


"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their money, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them, will deprive the people of their property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered."

~Thomas Jefferson


"I sincerely believe that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies, and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale."

~ Thomas Jefferson


...a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, ... ~ Thomas Jefferson


“America goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own.... She well knows that by once enlisting under other banners than her own, were they even the banners of foreign independence, she would involve herself beyond the power of extrication in all the wars of interest and intrigue, of individual avarice, envy and ambition, which assume the colors and usurp the standards of freedom.”

~ John Quincy Adams


“We are bound to maintain public liberty, and, by example of our own system, to convince the world that order and law, religion and morality, the rights of conscience, the rights of persons, and the rights of property may all be preserved and secured.”

~ Daniel Webster

Mnguy2007
10-04-2008, 11:13 AM
By Jason Miller



Jason Miller is the associate editor of Cyrano's Journal Online, founding editor of Thomas Paine’s Corner, and a corporate wage slave. He has experienced unemployment and homelessness, looks forward to meeting interesting people at the soup kitchen once his 401K has zeroed out and his job has been eliminated, and wonders when America’s wage slaves will finally unite and revolt.

I was not surprised this jerk is looking forward to a soup line. His information is so far twisted from anything that could be thought of as realistic by a rational thinking human. It is one thing to sit back and dream of the fall of a nation because you don't like the politics, and yet another to write and print such false and misleading garbage as what is written in this fairy tale.
It reminds me of the old saying.

You can say nothing and look like an idiot.
Or you can open your mouth and remove all doubt.

Seems like that saying fits real well for the many that will in no doubt agree and applaud this jerk.

PS As Ramonrive makes a good point about the same could be said about Russia. Name one country where the few in power and control don't steal as much as they can while in power to line their own bank accounts? Name one country that is without it's own sins?

Voobrazheniye
10-04-2008, 05:25 PM
I have a lot to say about this!! I wish I had more time. The current Federal Reserve control, national government power growing out of control, too much legislation and government programs has a lot more to do with socialistic ideology then capitalism and American ideology.

Capitalism has not failed. American citizens have failed by not fighting enough and giving up a lot of our individual power to the federal government (without going into detail now). We have been selling our liberty for measly government handouts and in the name of security. Since the nation has been so prosperous we have been lazy and oblivious to it.


Bravo, Brandon! The demise of federalism is the single worst thing that happened to the U.S. It was SUPPOSED to be a union of states, where the states held primary power and responsibility for most things that affect our lives.

The federal government was supposed to provide for the common defense, be the administrators of interstate and international commerce, and a few other tasks. It was NOT supposed to grow to such enormous proportions and suck up so much money and power.

America is not stronger through massive centralized government. The best concepts of government are still: "The least government is the best government" and "matters should be decided at the lowest and most local level possible."

I don't think now that we can ever get true reform without some kind of major revolution, because there are too many powerful interests vested now in maintaining strong central control. They really have fooked up what should have been a wonderous thing.

"America, the dream is lost, and it's killing you and me." - Stephen Stills, 1975