OP ED wrote:
Without someone to introduce a sanitized radicalism to the center right, they'd never be prepared when the real thing hits them. Colbert is better than 4 years of university in that regard. I've personally seen this, his effect on the centrists and floaters, have positive benefits. Of course, someone has to be willing to talk to them, as he does, to achieve anything.
Good point, one I don't think I gave enough consideration to.
bks wrote
The question is: why get involved at ALL with this business? I gave you the answer earlier: it's because those are American troops, and Colbert is playing to an American audience. In other words, because he IDENTIFIES in some form with THIS conflict, not some other one with other troops he could be entertaining.
OP ED responded:
nonsense. one doesn't have to identify with a conflict to identify with the TROOPS. i know i don't. and i do identify with them. having spent the first half of my life on military bases, many of them are friends of mine. I have two good friends, in particular, in Iraq right now. They both joined for college funds, in summer '01. Hell one of them said to me he had no fear of war because "who'd be crazy enough to start a war with us now?". [answer: the CIA, but how's he supposed to know that at 17?] This fella, btw, maintains he's never fired a weapon in theatre. [although his unit has taken fire] He is an engineer. He went there to build schools and try to get the power back on.
if Colbert made his day better, fantastic. After all, he wouldn't be there if it had been his choice to go or not. It wasn't.
Are you seriously saying that this engineer at age 17 literally had no agency wrt the decision to join the military? As if that's the only way for a person of his academic ability to get the money for college?
He might have gone to Iraq with the INTENTION of building schools and getting the power back on, but upon arriving he was expected to do as he's told, in service of empire. He might have thought otherwise going in, and may STILL DO otherwise, but that will be because of his own agency. So let's not deny he has any, ok? Soldiers desert. Others, horribly, demonstrate just how much agency they have and kill themselves.
In Vietnam, soldiers had another very effective way of demonstrating their own agency. It played a big part in ending the war.
Democracy IS NEVER anything but ceremonial. It cannot be, because NOTHING can ever truly represent ALL of our views. It never has been. Never will be. I disagree with your simplistic overview of the options available. Radical activism seems to be a good way to get yourself marginalised. I'd much prefer to talk to my enemies. Like those pacifists go on about all the time. If you want to represent the will of the people, being marginalised doesn't cut it. You need the people to agree with you or you're as unrepresentative as the "post-democratic state".
You're going back and forth here. You say nothing can represent all of our views (obviously), so democracy is always ceremonial (which is doesn't follow at all - it's always
representative, but that's very different from ceremonial), but then you're concerned about having the right veneer to represent the will of the people?
If your point was limited to the fact that radicals look too shaggy to 'normal' people and that it's hard to get center-right types behind them, well, no shit. But you're wrong if you think it's the
substance of 'radical politics' that gets radicals marginalized. People ALREADY agree. It's the image, or more precisely, the way progressives/radicals are presented to mass society that ensures they will be marginalized. Presented the right way, and without the corporate media's vilification, you could get people behind a very progressive/radical agenda pretty quickly.
But see, that's not going to happen within the current media system. Absolutely cannot and won't. Fix the media first, or else it goes nowhere.
Your problem is you're thinking of those who disagree with you as obstacles rather than potential allies. That is partisan nonsense. Do not fall for it.
Case by case, OP ED. I'm willing to talk to my political enemies, but only if there's an actual conversation to be had. And I'm not going to take part in a dysfunctional relationship. There is NO discussion to be had with the Hannitys, Limbaughs and other reactionary blathersphere bigots. Their language toward liberals and leftists isn't just hostile, it's violent. Attempting to have a conversation with them is pathological. For one thing, THEY certainly aren't interested in real discussion, because their minds are closed. For another, they forfeited the opportunity to discuss anything with me until basic respect is re-established.
As for those in the center-right who are still available for conversation, I take your point, and it's there where I think people like Colbert CAN help seed the ground. Have Colbert and Jon Stewart, through their form of creative dialogue with the center-right, achieved a softening of public political rhetoric? A greater openness to progressive viewpoints? What?
the polls suggested most americans were OK with the war when it started. That fault belongs to US and our passive acceptance of status quo. The soliders are our superiors in this sense, as they NEVER merely accept these things as inevitable. They go out of their way to indoctrinate and propogandize to alter the opinions of their opponents. We should be doing likewise.
Polls are often dogshit, and whatever support for the war there WAS, was aided GREATLY by a propaganda offensive here in the US. Much of which, of course, turned out to be abject bullshit lies, as many of us knew at the time.
You're also conflating soldiers with military brass here. Soldiers are TARGETS of indoctrination and propaganda, just as are their military enemies. Soldiers are deeply indoctrinated.
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