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Dave Hartley
http://www.asheville-computer.com/dave


"We are living in the twilight of the American dream. The epidemic of
mental illness, the pervasiveness of sexual misery - these both show that
the rift between the happy surface of society and the despair underneath
is becoming too great to sustain. Millions of people are losing any hope
that life will ever get better. But the fading away of a false dream can
also be the beginning of a revival of hope. "
======================
WSWS : News & Analysis : North America

Mental illness and the American Dream: Part 2
        URL: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/mar2000/ment-m25.shtml
A comment by Frank Brenner
25 March 2000


This is the conclusion of a two-part series. The first part appeared
on March 24.

The American dream

Let's say what the Surgeon-General's report could not: the underlying
cause of mental illness is desperate unhappiness. This is so obvious (at
least to the ideologically unblinkered) that it almost seems to cry out
from the report's findings. Add to this the fact that the epidemic of
mental illness is global (with the statistics for other industrialized
countries much the same as US levels or else quickly catching up to them)
and something else becomes clear - that the underlying cause of the
unhappiness is capitalism.

But probably nowhere else in the world is unhappiness a more unpopular
subject than in the land of the American dream. Everywhere you are
surrounded by images of happiness and success - TV sitcoms and Hollywood
happy endings and Calvin Klein billboards and celebrity faces staring at
you from virtually every magazine cover and tabloid front page. Of course
bad news gets lots of attention, but only after it's been sensationalized
(or demonized or trivialized) by the mass media - that is, after it's been
stripped of its relevance to most people's lives; sensibilities get so
deadened in this way that a basketball game can be more involving than
watching a city get blown up. This kind of unhappiness does little to
disrupt the veneer of happiness that envelops American society.

In official ideology, social classes don't exist in America, only
"winners" and "losers" do, and the promise of the American dream is that
everybody can be a "winner." That dream was always a mirage; 150 years
ago, Thoreau already saw the unhappy truth: " The mass of men lead lives
of quiet desperation." [1] Since that time, the mirage has become much
more sophisticated and alluring: the cult of success and celebrity lets
everyone be a "winner" vicariously. But the desperation has also
intensified. Consider, for instance, the misery contained in these facts:
America now has the longest work year of any industrialized country in the
world. The average American married couple now works 6 weeks more each
year than it did in 1989 (and 15 weeks more than it did in 1979).[2]
What's left of life after a 50- or 55-hour workweek and another 25 to 30
hours of unpaid work at home? People are worked like machines and run into
the ground - until their hearts stop or their minds snap. And, for all
that sacrifice, they have less and less to show for it, as living
standards fall and the class divide broadens into a chasm. It almost goes
without saying that most people are condemned to mind-numbing (and
eventually soul-destroying) jobs, which nevertheless they're terrified of
losing. And family life, which used to be, at least to some extent, a
haven from the misery of the outside world is now more likely to be itself
a source of pain and distress that is often emotionally devastating.

For many people it keeps getting harder to bear their desperation quietly.
But what can they do? Who can they turn to? The traditional channels for
social discontent - the Democratic Party, the trade unions, protest
movements - are all dead ends, and widely perceived as such. Besides, in a
world that just seems to stare back at you with a blank smile, it's
difficult even to see what connection your desperation has with reality.
And then there is the immense pressure to conform that makes itself felt
in every corner of American life, so that it isn't just those with
diagnosable mental illnesses who are "stigmatized" but all too often
anyone who "acts weird" or who simply doesn't "fit in." Under these
conditions, it isn't any wonder that millions of people break down,
dealing with an unbearable reality by what Freud called a "flight into
illness." Millions more are almost as miserable, but because they go on
functioning, their condition passes for "normal." And finally there are
those who, instead of internalizing their despair, lash out in explosive
rage, most often at their loved ones but increasingly in horrifying spasms
of indiscriminate carnage which the media persists in characterizing as
"meaningless" violence.

People and things

So we confront a stark contradiction - so much unhappiness in a country
that was founded on the principle of "the pursuit of happiness." True,
this principle is deceptive since what it promises isn't happiness but
just the chance to pursue it, and what most people get is endless pursuit
and precious little joy. Still, the identification of American society
with happiness played an enormous role in the political and ideological
struggles of the twentieth century: in contrast to the grim repressiveness
of Soviet society, America seemed a "free" country where individuals could
live any way they wanted. And with the postwar boom and the rise of
consumerism, happiness was on sale everywhere. Never have the pleasures of
the marketplace been more mesmerizing - the glitter of the shopping mall,
the seductiveness of advertising, the magical aura that seems to surround
every new commodity; companies like Nike don't sell mere products anymore,
they sell embodiments of dreams. But for all the hype and flashiness, the
basic message is as old as capitalism: possessions are what make you
happy. Here we have the "common sense" of the marketplace in all its
crudeness: everything (and everyone) is dealt with in terms of buying and
selling, every relationship is reduced to what Marx once called a " cash
nexus."  This idea is so commonplace under capitalism that we rarely
notice how perverse it is, because what it really amounts to saying is
that happiness derives not from people but from things. In other words,
this is a kind of happiness that has been dehumanized.

The question is - is it still happiness? Obviously, the great majority
believe it is: consumerism is incredibly popular. But the epidemic of
mental illness shows that there is a terrible gulf between what people
think they feel and what they really do. Assaulted by the non-stop
propaganda machine of advertising, people can convince themselves for a
while that they are happy. But eventually happiness has to bear some
relation to the satisfaction of real needs and desires or else it is an
illusion, a kind of euphoria not so different from what one can get out of
a bottle or in a church. A dehumanized happiness is a contradiction in
terms: genuine happiness can only come from people, not from things. This
isn't to deny that happiness requires a certain level of material comfort:
nobody can be happy if, say, they are starving or homeless. But things can
only provide the preconditions for happiness, they aren't a substitute for
it. A full belly and a roof over one's head isn't happiness but
subsistence, and if that is all there is to life, then life is a misery.

In capitalism, the forms of happiness are constantly passed off as its
content. Food is a good example: the attention lavished these days on
cooking and going out to restaurants is extraordinary, and yet very little
of this has to do with the pleasure of eating. Mostly it has to do with
the social cachet to be gained from cultivating a refined taste in food
and wine - or to put it more indelicately, snob appeal. Instead of a
celebration of eating, we get the fetishizing of food. If happiness were
the main concern, then it would quickly become apparent that there are two
conditions that make for a good meal - good food and good company. But no
attention is paid to the second of these conditions because capitalist
society is organically incapable of doing anything about it.
Pretentiousness and arrogance are the rule in fancy restaurants, which
almost always leaves a bad taste in your mouth no matter how good the food
is; meanwhile, in the fast food chains across the social divide, people
mechanically eat denatured, assembly-line food in a cheerless environment
where the only sign of happiness is the plastic smile on the Ronald
McDonald dummy.

Why is the pleasure of good company such a rare experience? Because
friendship, camaraderie and community are all marginalized within
capitalism: to the extent that they exist, they do so in spite of the
society, not because of it. In a system that only recognizes individuals
as buyers and sellers, what common ground can there be between them?
People live in "communities" but without any shared bonds or common
interests between them, and this void expresses itself in the "heart" of
these communities which is typically the shopping mall, a place where
nothing communal goes on. Each person is reduced to a self-enclosed,
atomized existence. You go to work every day on a crowded bus or subway
and you never speak to anyone or even look them in the eye. You live for
years on a street or in an apartment without so much as saying a word to
your neighbors. You attend a movie or a concert with other people, and
when it's over everyone walks away without any discussion or interaction.
Millions of people go for days or even weeks at a time without any human
contact whatsoever, sitting at home alone at night in the blue glare of a
TV set. (This is especially true of the elderly whose suicidal thoughts
the Surgeon-General's report claims are " a natural facet of old age." )
All of this is such an ingrained part of our lives that we rarely even
give it a second thought.

Sexual misery

But an atomized existence is an inhuman one: to be estranged from other
people is to be estranged from one's own humanity. This kind of
individualism isn't freedom but a prison in which the individual is walled
up within himself. And the toll this takes, the wounds it inflicts, are
most painfully felt in the most intimate relationships between people. If
happiness comes from things, if every relationship is determined by its
cash value, then what becomes of love? It too becomes a thing to be
possessed. As with food, so with love: the forms of happiness are
separated from their human content and then fetishized. In the case of
love, it is sex that becomes the fetish, once it has been divorced from
tenderness. Outwardly we live in a sexual cornucopia: everywhere (ads, TV,
movies, the Internet, magazines) there are images of bodies - young,
seductive female ones - shoved in our faces. No image is too graphic to be
portrayed, and the more taboo the behavior, the trendier it is. Since the
sixties, a major shift in attitudes has taken place, a pendulum swing from
puritanism to a much more "liberated" sexuality. And what could be a more
palpable manifestation of the happiness of the American dream than this
easy access to the pleasures of the flesh?

But the change is much more superficial than it looks: underneath, there
is still the same sexual misery that prevailed in earlier, more
puritanical times. That becomes evident from a study published a year ago
in the Journal of the American Medical Association that found that 43
percent of women and 31 percent of men in America suffer from sexual
dysfunction.[3] Again we confront some staggering numbers, as disturbing
as the ones on mental illness. For all the apparent freedom and openness
about sexuality, nearly half of all women and a third of all men aren't
having any sex at all. Some of this is due to physiological problems, but
a major factor is emotional distress, and the main causes for that, the
study found, are stress due to deterioration in economic position and
sexual trauma, i.e., rape or abuse suffered in childhood. Or, to put this
another way, the cause of this distress is violence - both economic and
sexual - that leaves its victims so badly mauled that they are left
sexually numb. In general, the study finds a " strong association between
sexual dysfunction and impaired quality of life,"  which is an important
point because it underscores that, contrary to all the fetishism, sex
doesn't exist in a vacuum: either it flourishes as part of a fulfilling
life or else it is mangled (or repressed entirely) as part of an "
impaired"  one. And this in turn suggests that as bad as the figures in
this study are, the reality is probably worse because there are a lot of
people who, while they aren't sexually dysfunctional in a clinical sense,
are still deeply unhappy in most aspects of their lives including their
sexuality.

Sex without tenderness is as dehumanizing - and as unsatisfying - as
sexual repression. One sign of this dehumanization is in everyday
language, in the use of terms like "hormones" instead of desire and
"chemistry" instead of falling in love. Human relationships are reduced to
a biological mechanism, and what gets lost, for one thing, is the element
of protest in love, the insistence on the primacy of feelings over all the
social and family pressures to conform and in effect accommodate oneself
to a life without love. To give in on that is the start of giving in on
many other things. In this biochemical landscape, sexual relationships
look like the chance encounters of molecules: two people collide, go to
bed because of some kind of "chemistry," and then "split" when the
chemistry is "gone," veering off in different directions until they each
collide with someone else. People can go through dozens of relationships
in this way, blind to their own feelings and oblivious to the feelings of
their lovers. Nothing changes in these relationships - and nothing changes
from one relationship to the next - because nothing is revealed.

The art critic John Berger once made a useful distinction between
nakedness and nudity: he saw the first as being oneself " without
disguise,"  while the second was being " on display,"  where one is " seen
naked by others and yet not recognized for oneself." [4] In the matings
based on "chemistry", as opposed to romantic love, people are never naked,
only nude: they never open themselves up emotionally and so they can never
break down the wall that separates them from the other "body" in bed. Even
the sex is often only "intercourse" in a technical sense because there
isn't any real commingling of pleasure, only an exercise in mutual
masturbation. (Freud once described every sexual act " as a process in
which four persons are involved," [5] by which he meant, among other
things, the fantasy that each person takes to bed along with his or her
lover. In sex without tenderness, you never escape that fantasy because
you never have any contact emotionally with the other person: you are
making love, not to them, but to an image in your head. You are locked up
inside yourself, as is your partner, and so it helps if you don't have to
look at his or her face, which accounts to some extent for the growing
popularity of oral sex.)

It isn't surprising that people come away from such "relationships" more
lonely - and more unhappy - than they were before. It also isn't
surprising that women are more hurt by the lack of tenderness than men:
one of the findings in the JAMA study was that sexual dysfunction was
especially common among young women. This doesn't make any sense from the
standpoint of "hormones" and "chemistry," which would assume that women in
the prime of life would also be in the prime of their sexual activity. But
that activity is actually one of the key causes of sexual dysfunction,
according to the study: " Since young women are more likely to be single,
their sexual activities involve higher rates of partner turnover as well
as periodic spells of sexual inactivity. This instability, coupled with
inexperience, generates stressful sexual encounters, providing the basis
for sexual pain and anxiety." Things improve markedly as women get older,
largely because they tend to enter into long-term, stable relationships,
where there is more of a chance of having a measure of tenderness.

Men, or at least young men, don't seem to have the same problem with the
lack of tenderness in sexual relationships. This isn't because "men are
from Mars and women are from Venus" (as pop psychology currently has it),
but rather because they are raised differently from childhood, and bond
with their parents in different ways. This is territory first charted by
Freud, and it would take us too far afield to follow him there. But the
inhuman coldness of contemporary sexuality still leaves its mark on men,
if not in the quantity of their sexual activity, then certainly in the
quality. You see that particularly in the tremendous growth of
pornography. The Sunday Times of London ran an article 18 months ago
headlined " US is addicted to porn"  which reported that during the
Clinton era " adult entertainment has grown into a business worth $10
billion annually. As much as $4.2 billion is generated by hard-core videos
alone, up from just $10 million 25 years ago. Americans spend more on
hard-core pornography, telephone sex and strip clubs than they do at
cinemas. Porn videos account for a quarter of all those rented or sold in
America, while strip clubs generate more money than all other live
entertainment in the country, including rock concerts and Broadway
theaters, put together." [6]

Again, it's hard not to do a double-take when reading this. (That we can
be shocked so often is itself shocking: it shows that the mass media
blacks out virtually anything to do with the real lives of most people,
especially their unhappiness.) The picture it paints is of a deeply sick
society, but we need to be clear about the nature of the sickness
involved. Inevitably, right-wing moralists (and anti-pornography
feminists) seize on facts like this to bolster their arguments for a
return to puritanical repression. But it isn't sex as such, but a
dehumanized sex, that is the sickness here. In Victorian London, world
capital of prudishness, the streets were crowded with thousands of
prostitutes: an inhuman morality and an inhuman sexuality complemented
each other. Today, for all the changes in sexual attitudes and social
life, things are not so very different: pornography is the sordid side of
the prevailing loveless sexuality. What is the appeal of pornography? It
is sex made-to-order: the clothes are off, the beautiful (or, more
commonly, beautified) body is lying there, ready, willing, available. You
don't have to do anything, you certainly don't have to get to know her or
even try to seduce her, because she already comes pre-seduced, as it were.
And that of course is the whole point: pornography is a running away from
real sexuality to a passive voyeurism, and it has more to do with fear
than with sexual desire. (It's also a running back - a retreat - to an
adolescent attitude to sexuality, the gist of which is that sexual
fulfillment is having as many orgasms as often as possible. This retreat
is evident, as a psychoanalyst astutely observed recently, in the very
name of that quintessential sex magazine Playboy, " composed as it is of
"play" and "boy" as opposed to Eros and man." )[7]

Pornography is essentially just another kind of sexual "dysfunction",
another kind of sexual misery. Love isn't a thing and there isn't anywhere
it can be bought - not in a porn store or a strip club and not even in a
marriage license office. Love can only be exchanged for love, as Marx once
noted, and to be loved you yourself have to be lovable, i.e., capable of
inspiring love in someone else.[8] This would be taken for granted in a
truly human society, but in capitalism what prevails are inhuman
relationships in which people treat other people like things, and so the
connection between loving and being loved falls apart. Sex becomes a
commodity for sale, and in a way pornography, even more than prostitution,
epitomizes the alienation inherent in that exchange because what's being
sold isn't a body but merely an image or a voice, sex reduced to an
abstract "value". What a measure of despair those billions spent on
pornography are! Think of how threadbare the illusion is and how hard the
"customer' has to work to make it convincing, to "buy into it' long enough
so that he'll get his "money's worth" - a few seconds of relief. This
isn't happiness but a wretched counterfeit.

We are living in the twilight of the American dream. The epidemic of
mental illness, the pervasiveness of sexual misery - these both show that
the rift between the happy surface of society and the despair underneath
is becoming too great to sustain. Millions of people are losing any hope
that life will ever get better. But the fading away of a false dream can
also be the beginning of a revival of hope. Society needs to find a new
road forward so that the mass of humanity isn't condemned to misery, and
the desire for happiness needs to find a new dream, one that isn't a
mirage. Happiness can become a reality only if its human content is
restored to it, and that means that the happiness of one is inseparable
from the happiness of all. This is a dream that only socialism can
realize. With the dawning of the twenty-first century, happiness is once
again becoming a revolutionary longing.

Notes:
 1. Henry David Thoreau, Walden (1854) in Walden and Other Writings (New
York: 1981), p. 111
 2. Economic Policy Institute, The State of Working America 1998-99. This
report is available on line at www.epinet.org
 3. Edward O. Laumann, Anthony Paik, Raymond C. Rosen, " Sexual
Dysfunction in the United States,"  Journal of the American Medical
Association, Feb. 10, 1999, v. 281, pp. 537-544
 4. John Berger, Ways of Seeing (London: 1972), p. 54
 5. Sigmund Freud, The Origins of Psychoanalysis: Letters to Wilhelm
Fliess (New York: 1977), p. 289
 6. Toronto Star, Sept. 6, 1998 (reprinted from The Sunday Times, London)
 7. Norman Doidge, " Hugh Hefner got it all wrong" , Toronto National
Post, Dec. 1, 1999
 8. Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (Moscow:
1977), p. 132

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