Are Flagan on Wed, 23 Apr 2003 10:23:29 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: If People is a concept: might it be populist? Re: <nettime> Mesopotamia's burning |
It is arguably hard to avoid charges of blinkered, old-fashioned anti- feelings when engaging in selective criticisms, rather than more general moral or ethical or intellectual principles, and the like. When considering what passes for analysis these days, however, it is quite obvious that much of the same universalizing tendency is alive and well while dismissing that other, defunct universalism of upholding opposing monoliths. At certain historical moments, and I believe this is one of them, the flirtations of a meta matrix may need to connect with an expression plane that is less concerned with divinity and more focused on working the limitations of its apparent curse, of never being perfect. In my view, there is something very seriously wrong with American society and it is, unfortunately, not American to address it. This is why Bowling for Columbine gets an Oscar and the actual message of the film is booed off stage after the initial accolades of right-to-free-speech-now-shut-up lip service die down. But America's fatal flaw is what most fear most; its love of violence, its thirst for war. The below essay provides a chilling introduction to this history and the spiraling numbers game of the death toll, especially on the US domestic front: between 1900 and 1971, 596,984 Americans were murdered; between 1971 and 1997, there were another 592,616 killed in similar ways. Although one can aspire to the advances of this, increasingly global, society in many areas, like Keith rightly does, I feel that this path of progress is also in dangerous hands. The wonderful GPS coordinates of "you are here" are also found in a crater with assorted limbs scattered around the edges. I understand why Louise then asks loudly WHO ARE YOU? in distressed capitals. -af ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Violence is the American Way http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=15665 <snip> The lack of a violent revolutionary tradition in America is the principal reason why Americans have never been disarmed, while in every European nation the reverse is true. So, for the most part, Americans, laymen and historians alike, have been able to practice what some historians have termed "selective" recollection or "historical amnesia" about the violence in their past and present. Since the 1960s, historians' works, cumulatively, have demonstrated a causal connection between American culture and the American predisposition to use violence. We might now be experiencing yet another by-product of this national penchant for violence a willingness to engage in a major war without asking very many hard questions. It's the American Way. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net