Great follow up to George Carlin's jeremiad.
 
M
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Sid Shniad
Sent: Monday, August 09, 2010 12:41 PM
Subject: Breaking Points and Hungry Ghosts


http://arlenegoldbard.com/2010/08/05/breaking-points-and-hungry-ghosts/


Arlene  <http://arlenegoldbard.com/> Goldbard

culture, politics and spirituality


Oxygen-Deprivation Politics 

Breaking Points and Hungry Ghosts


Sometimes life delivers moments of irrefutable insight, shattering fragile
illusions like so many soap-bubbles. Remember that post-Katrina telethon
where Kanye West said, "George Bush doesn't care about black people"?

There was a great commotion, the President's compassionate conservatism was
vigorously asserted, West was condemned for incivility. Now, five years
later, take a look at New Orleans-at all of its grassroots creativity and
determination and all the official indifference and moral constipation that
have transpired-and tell me with a straight face that West was wrong.

David Stockman isn't Kanye West, to be sure, but it's worth giving a little
attention to what this Reagan-era Director of the Office of Management and
Budget, closely identified with "trickle-down economics," wrote in
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/01/opinion/01stockman.html> The New York
Times:

It is not surprising, then, that during the last bubble (from 2002 to 2006)
the top 1 percent of Americans - paid mainly from the Wall Street casino -
received two-thirds of the gain in national income, while the bottom 90
percent - mainly dependent on Main Street's shrinking economy - got only 12
percent. This growing wealth gap is not the market's fault. It's the
decaying fruit of bad economic policy.

The day of national reckoning has arrived.

In recent weeks, a great heap of political detritus has been accumulating:
piled atop BP's display of corporate self-regard and ineptitude are new
revelations about white-collar predators (such as the Wyly
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/30/business/30sec.html> brothers of Dallas,
lavish Swift Boat campaign donors, charged with massive security fraud and
insider trading); the unconscionably long time Congress took to pass an
extension of unemployment benefits (while so many members blithely supported
tax cuts for the rich) and the unprecedented numbers who are not helped even
by that  <http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/03/us/03unemployed.html>
legislation; the government's absolute failure to pass new job-creation
legislation, the President's refusal to even propose it..

The stench is so high, it cannot be ignored. Within the last week, for
instance, The New York Times carried these three articles:

*       David Stockman's op-ed
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/01/opinion/01stockman.html> , in which he
said "If there were such a thing as Chapter 11 for politicians, the
Republican push to extend the unaffordable Bush tax cuts would amount to a
bankruptcy filing," and blamed Republican policies for "the serial financial
bubbles and Wall Street depredations that have crippled our economy." 

*       a column by Bob Herbert
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/31/opinion/31herbert.html> , more or less
Stockman's ideological opposite, describing findings by economics professor
Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern
University. Sum explains that corporations "threw out far more workers and
hours than they lost output. Here's what happened: At the end of the fourth
quarter in 2008, you see corporate profits begin to really take off, and
they grow by the time you get to the first quarter of 2010 by $572 billion.
And over that same time period, wage and salary payments go down by $122
billion." Herbert's column is well worth reading in its entirety. It
explains that corporations' cash position is at an all-time high, and still
they are cutting jobs, salaries, and benefits. "Worker productivity has
increased dramatically," writes Herbert, "but the workers themselves have
seen no gains from their increased production. It has all gone to corporate
profits. This is unprecedented in the postwar years, and it is wrong." 

*       a column by Paul Krugman
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/02/opinion/02krugman.html> , citing "growing
evidence that our governing elite just doesn't care - that a
once-unthinkable level of economic distress is in the process of becoming
the new normal," and condemning Congress for "sitting on its hands, with
Republicans and conservative Democrats refusing to spend anything to create
jobs, and unwilling even to mitigate the suffering of the jobless." "I'd
like to imagine," Krugman concludes, "that public outrage will prevent this
outcome. But while Americans are indeed angry, their anger is unfocused. And
so I worry that our governing elite, which just isn't all that into the
unemployed, will allow the jobs slump to go on and on and on." 

When the social fabric becomes tattered from neglect, fragments and threads
begin to break off and tumble through the Zeitgeist. The appalled fury that
infuses the recent writings of Stockman, Herbert, and Krugman-hardly
wild-eyed radicals-is popping up everywhere.

Three times this past week, people I know have made reference to the
Buddhist concept of "hungry ghosts." We have an epidemic of people in high
places who fit this elegant and succinct description by Mark Epstein, from
his book Thoughts Without A Thinker:

The Hungry Ghosts are probably the most vividly drawn metaphors in the Wheel
of Life. Phantomlike creatures with withered limbs, grossly bloated bellies,
and long thin necks, the Hungry Ghosts in many ways represent a fusion of
rage and desire. Tormented by unfulfilled cravings and insatiably demanding
of impossible satisfactions, the Hungry Ghosts are searching for
gratification for old unfulfilled needs whose time has passed. They are
beings who have uncovered a terrible emptiness within themselves, who cannot
see the impossibility of correcting something that has already happened.

I think of these men who have more money than needed for a hundred
lifetimes-indeed, the scale of whose wealth attests to the fact that their
hungers cannot be satisfied by material possessions-and whose desire for
more, channeled into business aggression, has obliterated the simple human
compassion they would otherwise feel for those who've been made destitute
and miserable by their decisions.

But even more than them, I think of the elected officials who do their
bidding, promulgating the policies that allow, encourage, and underwrite
this drain on the body politic. They are hungry ghosts too, craving the
approval of those to whom they have surrendered the power of office.

Many individuals who rise to power in these systems are in possession of
formidable drive, talent, and energy. Some switch has been flipped, and the
deep desire that accompanies such abilities gets channeled into a type of
wanting marinated in surplus aggression: more money, position, the power to
dominate others. They may carry tremendous latent capacity to express and
experience other types of desire-to be seen and see truly, to be loved for
oneself, to experience the satisfactions that only come if one is willing to
stand unmasked, risking extreme vulnerability. If they accept that those
capacities cannot be expressed in the world they inhabit, everything is
channeled into acquisition and dominance until it becomes second nature. And
instead of benefiting from the remarkable gifts such individuals could bring
to public and private relationship, everyone affected by their actions
suffers the consequences of their distortions.

If wealth (or the approval of those who have it) really satisfied these men,
they would stop when they had enough to buy whatever they wanted. But
without understanding that the source of their appetite is something broken
in themselves, some past betrayal or deformity of character fed and bloated
by a corporate culture that welcomes and creates hungry ghosts, they will
not stop.

With increasing regularity, Facebook friends have been posting links to this
starkly profane and obscene (be forewarned) video clip by the late George
Carlin called "The American Dream
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5Ujn2UxTcY> ." In the 3-minute clip, Carlin
asserts with devastating simplicity that the nation is owned by oligarchs
who "want more for themselves and less for everybody else. But I'll tell you
what they don't want. They don't want a population of citizens capable of
critical thinking. They don't want well-informed, well-educated people
capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that, that doesn't
help them. That's against their interests." 

I know (I was going to write "I believe," but that is too weak to carry the
experiential basis of my conviction)-I know that every human being is
capable of conscious awareness. I know that it is never too late, never too
far, never impossible to choose redemption by turning away from bad acts and
investing the same energy in acts that heal the harm you have done. Almost
always, I write into that possibility, hoping to contribute in some small
way to the awakening that remains possible even for those gripped by
terrible distortions of character. But just this minute, I am with Carlin:
there really isn't any way around the horror, outrage, and disgust I feel at
the spectacle of insatiable wanting now being exposed daily to the American
public. 

Working on my new book has been engaging me with these questions. >From my
perch outside the halls of economic and political power, it is clear that
something is very wrong, something much more significant than the usual
dance of interests and agendas.

But I also think the brokenness is becoming clear to some people within
those worlds, who see that the short-term gains redounding to the
multinationals and oligarchs cannot go on forever, that ultimately, they
will not be immune from the consequences of their own actions. I wrote a few
weeks ago about IBM's biennial CEO study
<http://arlenegoldbard.com/2010/07/11/benefit-of-the-buzz/> , acknowledging
in executives' own words that "Most CEOs seriously doubt their ability to
cope with rapidly escalating complexity." Meanwhile, righteous anger is
bursting through here and there: I recommend a viewing of New York
Representative Andrew Weiner's obdurate anger
<http://newyorkblips.dailyradar.com/video/anthony-weiner-rips-apart-republic
ans-on-9-11health/>  at his fellow officials' prevarication on support for
9/11 responders' healthcare. 

Yet the countervailing movement to enlarge liberty and possibility advances.
The extension of full civil rights to sexual minorities still has many
hurdles to go following yesterday's ruling that California's ban on same-sex
marriage violates the Constitution, for example. But the trajectory is clear
and-where I depart from Carlin's certainty-I don't think even the people he
sees as owners of this nation can stop it. 

I will never lose sight of the possibility of redemption, never stop
pointing to it with all the energy at my disposal. But right this minute,
when things seem to be hardening into a breaking-point as crisp as a dry
twig, the most important thing to remember is that there are many, many more
people who are not benefiting from this system than those who are, and that
it is time to awaken that force for good. There are so many opportunities to
take healing action right now. But I want to speak up for baby steps that
can really help: for the power of direct human relationship to counter the
falsehoods that gush through the media.

What if every day this week, you and I parted the veil of denial and had one
entirely real conversation about this with someone new? What if we started
by expressing our shock and outrage at the gap between corporate profits and
hiring policies? Or Congressional votes on unemployment benefits versus tax
cuts?

What if we came out and said that the governing elite's utter indifference
to suffering shamed and contaminated all of us? What if we asked our friends
or neighbors how that felt to them, what that churned up in their stomachs?
What if we asked them to consider what has been broken in the hearts, heads,
bodies, and spirits of these men possessed by insatiable hungers, and how
they might be stopped from harming others with their brokenness?

What if we dropped the conventional language and inside-baseball that passes
for political discourse in the media, and spoke openly of hungry ghosts? 

"We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the vitriolic
words and actions of the bad people, but for the appalling silence of the
good people," said Martin Luther King. It feels like we are very close to a
breaking-point. Best to repent while there's still time to heal.

I don't think of myself as a patriotic person: I descend from a long line of
nomads and immigrants, never quite home. But the truth is, I love the hope
of liberty, the promise of democracy, the latent truth that may yet emerge
in this country; and when I visit other places, I learn just how American I
truly am. Otis Redding's version of this song is inarguably definitive, and
you can find it on YouTube. But somehow the exhaustion of Cat Power's
version suits the mood: "I've Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)."


!DSPAM:2676,4c6059cd177552115232846! 
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to