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Living in a Culture of Cruelty: Democracy as Spectacle

by: Henry A. Giroux, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Right-wing commentator Glenn Beck. (Photo: The New York Times)

    Under the Bush administration, a seeping, sometimes galloping, authoritarianism began to reach into every vestige of the culture, giving free rein to those anti-democratic forces in which religious, market, military and political fundamentalism thrived, casting an ominous shadow over the fate of United States democracy. During the Bush-Cheney regime, power became an instrument of retribution and punishment was connected to and fueled by a repressive state. A bullying rhetoric of war, a ruthless consolidation of economic forces, and an all-embracing free-market apparatus and media driven pedagogy of fear supported and sustained a distinct culture of cruelty and inequality in the United States. In pointing to a culture of cruelty, I am not employing a form of left moralism that collapses matters of power and politics into the discourse of character. On the contrary, I think the notion of a culture of cruelty is useful in thinking through the convergence of everyday life and politics, of considering material relations of power - the disciplining of the body as an object of control - on the one hand, and the production of cultural meaning, especially the co-optation of popular culture to sanction official violence, on the other. The culture of cruelty is important for thinking through how life and death now converge in ways that fundamentally transform how we understand and imagine politics in the current historical moment - a moment when the most vital of safety nets, health care reform, is being undermined by right-wing ideologues. What is it about a culture of cruelty that provides the conditions for many Americans to believe that government is the enemy of health care reform and health care reform should be turned over to corporate and market-driven interests, further depriving millions of an essential right?

    Increasingly, many individuals and groups now find themselves living in a society that measures the worth of human life in terms of cost-benefit analyzes. The central issue of life and politics is no longer about working to get ahead, but struggling simply to survive. And many groups, who are considered marginal because they are poor, unemployed, people of color, elderly or young, have not just been excluded from "the American dream," but have become utterly redundant and disposable, waste products of a society that not longer considers them of any value. How else to explain the zealousness in which social safety nets have been dismantled, the transition from welfare to workfare (offering little job training programs and no child care), and recent acrimony over health care reform's public option? What accounts for the passage of laws that criminalize the behavior of the 1.2 million homeless in the United States, often defining sleeping, sitting, soliciting, lying down or loitering in public places as a criminal offence rather than a behavior in need of compassionate good will and public assistance? Or, for that matter, the expulsions, suspensions, segregation, class discrimination and racism in the public schools as well as the more severe beatings, broken bones and damaged lives endured by young people in the juvenile justice system? Within these politics, largely fueled by market fundamentalism - one that substitutes the power of the social state with the power of the corporate state and only values wealth, money and consumers - there is a ruthless and hidden dimension of cruelty, one in which the powers of life and death are increasingly determined by punishing apparatuses, such as the criminal justice system for poor people of color and/or market forces that increasingly decide who may live and who may die.

    The growing dominance of a right-wing media forged in a pedagogy of hate has become a crucial element providing numerous platforms for a culture of cruelty and is fundamental to how we understand the role of education in a range of sites outside of traditional forms of schooling. This educational apparatus and mode of public pedagogy is central to analyzing not just how power is exercised, rewarded and contested in a growing culture of cruelty, but also how particular identities, desires and needs are mobilized in support of an overt racism, hostility towards immigrants and utter disdain, coupled with the threat of mob violence toward any political figure supportive of the social contract and the welfare state. Citizens are increasingly constructed through a language of contempt for all noncommercial public spheres and a chilling indifference to the plight of others that is increasingly expressed in vicious tirades against big government and health care reform. There is a growing element of scorn on the part of the American public for those human beings caught in the web of misfortune, human suffering, dependency and deprivation. As Barbara Ehrenreich observes, "The pattern is to curtail financing for services that might help the poor while ramping up law enforcement: starve school and public transportation budgets, then make truancy illegal. Shut down public housing, then make it a crime to be homeless. Be sure to harass street vendors when there are few other opportunities for employment. The experience of the poor, and especially poor minorities, comes to resemble that of a rat in a cage scrambling to avoid erratically administered electric shocks." [1]

    A right-wing spin machine, influenced by haters like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Michael Savage and Ann Coulter, endlessly spews out a toxic rhetoric in which: all Muslims are defined as jihadists; the homeless are not victims of misfortune but lazy; blacks are not terrorized by a racist criminal justice system, but the main architects of a culture of criminality; the epidemic of obesity has nothing to do with corporations, big agriculture and advertisers selling junk food, but rather the result of "big" government giving people food stamps; the public sphere is largely for white people, which is being threatened by immigrants and people of color, and so it goes. Glenn Beck, the alleged voice of the common man, appearing on the "Fox & Friends" morning show, calls President Obama a "racist" and then accuses him of "having a deep-seated hatred for white people or the white culture." [2] Nationally syndicated radio host Rush Limbaugh unapologetically states that James Early Ray, the confessed killer of Martin Luther King Jr., should be given a posthumous Medal of Honor, [3] while his counterpart in right-wing hate, talk radio host Michael Savage, states on his show, "You know, when I see a woman walking around with a burqa, I see a Nazi. That's what I see - how do you like that? - a hateful Nazi who would like to cut your throat and kill your children." [4] He also claims that Obama is "surrounded by terrorists" and is "raping America." This is a variation of a crude theme established by Ann Coulter, who refers to Bill Clinton as a "very good rapist." [5] Even worse, Obama is a "neo-Marxist fascist dictator in the making," who plans to "force children into a paramilitary domestic army." [6] And this is just a small sampling of the kind of hate talk that permeates right-wing media. This could be dismissed as loony right-wing political theater if it were not for the low levels of civic literacy displayed by so many Americans who choose to believe and invest in this type of hate talk. [7] On the contrary, while it may be idiocy, it reveals a powerful set of political, economic and educational forces at work in miseducating the American public while at the same time extending the culture of cruelty. One central task of any viable form of politics is to analyze the culture of cruelty and its overt and covert dimensions of violence, often parading as entertainment.

    Underlying the culture of cruelty that reached its apogee during the Bush administration, was the legalization of state violence, such that human suffering was now sanctioned by the law, which no longer served as a summons to justice. But if a legal culture emerged that made violence and human suffering socially acceptable, popular culture rendered such violence pleasurable by commodifying, aestheticizing and spectacularizing it. Rather than being unspoken and unseen, violence in American life had become both visible in its pervasiveness and normalized as a central feature of dominant and popular culture. Americans had grown accustomed to luxuriating in a warm bath of cinematic blood, as young people and adults alike were seduced with commercial and military video games such as "Grand Theft Auto" and "America's Army," [8] the television series "24" and its ongoing Bacchanalian fΓͺte of torture, the crude violence on display in World Wrestling Entertainment and Ultimate Fighting Championship, and an endless series of vigilante films such as "The Brave One" (2007) and "Death Sentence" (2007), in which the rule of law is suspended by the viscerally satisfying images of men and women seeking revenge as laudable killing machines - a nod to the permanent state of emergency and war in the United States. Symptomatically, there is the mindless glorification and aestheticization of brutal violence in the most celebrated Hollywood films, including many of Quentin Tarantino's films, especially the recent "Death Proof" (2007), "Kill Bill" 1 & 2 (2003, 2004), and "Inglorious Basterds" (2009). With the release of Tarantino's 2009 bloody war film, in fact, the press reported that Dianne Kruger, the co-star of "Inglorious Bastards," claimed that she "loved being tortured by Brad Pitt [though] she was frustrated she didn't get an opportunity to get frisky with her co-star, but admits being beaten by Pitt was a satisfying experience." [9] This is more than the aestheticization of violence, it is the normalization and glorification of torture itself.

    If Hollywood has made gratuitous violence the main staple of its endless parade of blockbuster films, television has tapped into the culture of cruelty in a way that was unimaginable before the attack on the US on September 11. Prime-time television before the attacks had "fewer than four acts of torture" per year, but "now there are more than a hundred." [10] Moreover, the people who torture are no longer the villains, but the heroes of prime-time television. The most celebrated is, of course, Jack Bauer, the tragic-ethical hero of the wildly popular Fox TV thriller "24." Not only is torture the main thread of the plot, often presented "with gusto and no moral compunction," [11] but Bauer is portrayed as a patriot, rather than a depraved monster, who tortures in order to protect American lives and national security. Torture, in this scenario, takes society's ultimate betrayal of human dignity and legitimates the pain and fear it produces as normal, all the while making a "moral sadist" a television celebrity. [12] The show has over 15 million viewers, and its glamorization of torture has proven so successful that it appears to have not only numbed the public's reaction to the horrors of torture, but it is so overwhelmingly influential among the US military that the Pentagon sent Brig. Gen. Patrick Finnegan to California to meet with the producers of the show. "He told them that promoting illegal behavior in the series ... was having a damaging effect on young troops." [13] The pornographic glorification of gratuitous, sadistic violence is also on full display in the popular HBO television series "Dexter," which portrays a serial killer as a sympathetic, even lovable, character. Visual spectacles steeped in degradation and violence permeate the culture and can be found in various reality TV shows, professional wrestling and the infamous Jerry Springer Show. These programs all trade in fantasy, glamorized violence and escapism. And they share similar values. As Chris Hedges points out in his analysis of professional wrestling, they all mirror the worse dimensions of an unchecked and unregulated market society in which "winning is all that matters. Morality is irrelevant.... It is all about personal pain, vendettas, hedonism and fantasies of revenge, while inflicting pain on others. It is the cult of victimhood." [14]

    The celebration of hyper-violence, moral sadism and torture travels easily from fiction to real life with the emergence in the past few years of a proliferation of "bum fight" videos on the Internet, "shot by young men and boys who are seen beating the homeless or who pay transients a few dollars to fight each other." [15] The culture of cruelty mimics cinematic violence as the agents of abuse both indulge in actual forms of violence and then further celebrate the barbarity by posting it on the web, mimicking the desire for fame and recognition, while voyeuristically consuming their own violent cultural productions. The National Coalition for the Homeless claims that "On YouTube in July 2009, people have posted 85,900 videos with 'bum' in the title [and] 5,690 videos can be found with the title 'bum fight,' representing ... an increase of 1,460 videos since April 2008." [16] Rather than problematize violence, popular culture increasingly normalizes it, often in ways that border on criminal intent. For instance, a recent issue of Maxim, a popular men's magazine, included "a blurb titled 'Hunt the Homeless' [focusing on] a coming 'hobo convention' in Iowa and says 'Kill one for fun. We're 87 percent sure it's legal.'" [17] In this context, violence is not simply being transformed into an utterly distasteful form of adolescent entertainment or spectacularized to attract readers and boost profits, it becomes a powerful pedagogical force in the culture of cruelty by both aligning itself and becoming complicit with the very real surge of violence against the homeless, often committed by young men and teenage boys looking for a thrill. Spurred on by the ever reassuring presence of violence and dehumanization in the wider culture, these young "thrill offenders" now search out the homeless and "punch, kick, shoot or set afire people living on the streets, frequently killing them, simply for the sport of it, their victims all but invisible to society." [19] All of these elements of popular culture speak stylishly and sadistically to new ways in which to maximize the pleasure of violence, giving it its hip (if fascist) edginess.

    Needless to say, neither violent video games and television series nor Hollywood films and the Internet (or for that matter popular culture) cause in any direct sense real world violence and suffering, but they do not leave the real world behind either. That is too simplistic. What they do achieve is the execution of a well-funded and highly seductive public pedagogical enterprise that sexualizes and stylizes representations of violence, investing them with an intense pleasure quotient. I don't believe it is an exaggeration to claim that the violence of screen culture entertains and cleanses young people of the burden of ethical considerations when they, for instance, play video games that enabled them to "casually kill the simulated human beings whose world they control." [20] Hollywood films such as the "Saw" series offer up a form of torture porn in which the spectacle of the violence enhances not merely its attraction, but offers young viewers a space where questions of ethics and responsibility are gleefully suspended, enabling them to evade their complicity in a culture of cruelty. No warnings appear on the labels of these violent videos and films, suggesting that the line between catharsis and desensitization may become blurred, making it more difficult for them to raise questions about what it means "to live in a society that produces, markets, and supports such products." [21] But these hyper-violent cultural products also form part of a corrupt pedagogical assemblage that makes it all the more difficult to recognize the hard realities of power and material violence at work through militarism, a winner-take-all economy marked by punishing inequalities and a national security state that exhibits an utter disregard for human suffering. Even the suffering of children, we must note, as when government officials reduce the lives of babies and young children lost in Iraq and Afghanistan to collateral damage. Tragically, the crime here is much more than symbolic.

    The ideology of hardness and cruelty runs through American culture like an electric current, sapping the strength of social relations and individual character, moral compassion and collective action, offering up crimes against humanity that become fodder for video games and spectacularized media infotainment, and constructing a culture of cruelty that promotes a "symbiosis of suffering and spectacle." [22] As Chris Hedges argues,

Sadism is as much a part of popular culture as it is of corporate culture. It dominates pornography, runs ... through reality television and trash-talk programs and is at the core of the compliant, corporate collective. Corporatism is about crushing the capacity for moral choice. And it has its logical fruition in Abu Ghraib, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and our lack of compassion for the homeless, our poor, the mentally ill, the unemployed and the sick. [23]

    Bailouts are not going to address the ways in which individual desires, values and identities are endlessly produced in the service of a culture of cruelty and inequality. Power is not merely material, it is also symbolic and is distributed through a society in ways we have never seen before. No longer is education about schooling. It now functions through the educational force of the larger culture in the media, Internet, electronic media and through a wide range of technologies and sites endlessly working to undo democratic values, compassion and any viable notion of justice and its accompanying social relations. What this suggests is a redefinition of both literacy and education. We need, as a society, to educate students and others to be literate in multiple ways, to reclaim the high ground of civic courage, and to be able to name, engage and transform those forms of public pedagogy that produce hate and cruelty as part of the discourse of common sense. Otherwise, democracy will lose the supportive institutions, social relations and culture that make it not only possible but even thinkable.

--------    

    Notes:

    [1] Barbara Ehrenreich, "Is It now a Crime to Be Poor?," New York Times (August 9, 2009), p. wk9.

    [2] David Bauder, "Fox's Glenn Beck: President Obama is a Racist," Associated Press (July 28, 2009).
    Online at: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5imGTdQH8JbOAWo_yKxNHpAMTCq_gD99NO3TG0

    [3] Limbaugh cited in Casey Gane-McCalla, "Top 10 Racist Limbaugh Quotes," NewsOne (October 20, 2008).
    Online at: http://newsone.com/obama/top-10-racist-limbaugh-quotes/

    [4] Savage quoted in Thinkers and Jokers (July 2, 2007).
    Online at: http://thinkersandjokers.com/thinker.php?id=2688

    [5] Coulter quoted in Don Hazen, "The Tall Blonde Woman in the Short Skirt With the Big Mouth," AlterNet (June 6, 2006).
    Online at: http://www.alternet.org/module/printversion/37162

    [6] These quotes are taken from an excellent article by Eric Boehlert in which he criticizes the soft peddling that many in the press give to right-wing fanatics such as Michael Savage. See Eric Boehlert, "The New Yorker raises a toast to birther nut Michael Savage," Media Matters for America (August 3, 2009).
    Online at: http://mediamatters.org/print/columns/200908030038

    [7] See Chris Hedges, "America the Illiterate," CommonDreams (November 10, 2008).
    Online at: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2008/11/10-6

    Terrence McNally, "How Anti-Intellectualism Is Destroying America," AlterNet (August 15, 2008).
    Online at: http://www.alternet.org/module/printversion/95109

    [8] For an excellent collection on military video games, see Nina B. Huntemann and Matthew Thomas Payne, eds. "Joystick Soldiers: The Politics of Play in Military Video Games" (New York: Routledge, 2010).

    [9] Arts and Entertainment, "Torture Will Just Have to Do," The Hamilton Spectator (August 12, 2009), p. Go 3.

    [10] Jane Mayer, "Whatever It Takes: The Politics of the Man Behind 24," The New Yorker (February 26, 2007), p. 68.

    [11] Alessandra Stanley, "Suicide Bombers Strike, and America Is in Turmoil. Just Another Day in the Life of Jack Bauer," New York Times (January 12, 2007), p. B1.

    [12] See Judith Butler, "Frames of War." Also, Slavoj Zizek, "The Depraved Heroes of 24 are the Himmlers of Hollywood," The Guardian (January 10, 2006).
    Online at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2006/jan/10/usnews.comment

    [13] Faiz Shaker, "US Military: Television Series '24' is Promoting Torture in the Ranks," Think Progress (February 3, 2007).
    Online at: http://thinkprogress.org/2007/02/13/torture-on-24/

    [14] Chris Hedges, "Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle" (New York: Knopf Canada, 2009). p. 10.

    [15] Eric Lichtblau, "Attacks on Homeless Bring Push on Hate Crime Laws," New York Times (August 8, 2009), p. A1.

    [16] National Coalition of the Homeless, "Hate, Violence, and Death on Main Street," 2008, (Washington, DC, National Coalition of the Homeless, 2009).
    Online at: http://www.nationalhomeless.org/publications/hatecrimes/hate_report_2008.pdf, p. 34.

    [17] Ibid., Eric Lichtblau, "Attacks on Homeless Bring Push on Hate Crime Laws."

    [18] National Coalition of the Homeless, "Hate, Violence, and Death on Main Street," 2008, (Washington, D. C., National Coalition of the Homeless, 2009).
    Online at: http://www.nationalhomeless.org/publications/hatecrimes/hate_report_2008.pdf

    [19] Ibid., Eric Lichtblau, "Attacks on Homeless Bring Push on Hate Crime Laws."

    [20] Mark Slouka, "Dehumanized: When Math and Science Rule the School," Harper's Magazine (September 5, 2009), p. 40.

    [21] Ibid., Mark Slouka, "Dehumanized," p. 40.

    [22] Mark Reinhardt and Holly Edwards, "Traffic in Pain," in "Beautiful Suffering: Photography and the Traffic in Pain," ed. Mark Reinhardt, Holly Edwards, and Erina Duganne (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006), p.9.

    [23] Chris Hedges, "America Is in Need of Moral Bailout," Truthdig (March 23, 2009).
    Online at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090323_america_is_in_need_of_a_moral_bailout/

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Henry A. Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department. He has taught at Boston University, Miami University of Ohio, and Penn State University. His most recent books include: Youth in a Suspect Society (Palgrave, 2009); Politics After Hope: Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy (Paradigm, 2010); Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror (Paradigm, 2010); and he is working on two new books titled Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism and Education and the Crisis of Public Values, both of which will be published in 2011 by Peter Lang Publishers. Giroux is also a member of Truthout's Board of Directors. His website is www.henryagiroux.com.

 

 

Comments

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And this is what the rest of

And this is what the rest of the world is told to to copy. No, we must emulate this sick perverted excuse of humane governance. Am I missing something? No, just trying not to vomit on my keyboard!

This article is head-on,

This article is head-on, dead-on! - i remember the cynical mode of the "conservatives" before the JFK assassination; and, now am concerned. While, we must defend people's 1st amendment rights - i thought you could not legally advocate harm to our president like they do ........

this is possibly the best

this is possibly the best truthout article i've ever read. this is tremendously important to realize, become very aware of and understand; it is a call to wake-up to the very real 'current' of interdependencies that are the true 'educators' of a society and hence 'allow' or enable the best and worst of a people to appear via the creation of a certain type of 'character' of a culture.

Yes - could not agree more

Yes - could not agree more with this article. More and more are culture is glorifying violence and putting people into neat little "thought capsules" so that we are not conscious enough act with a compassion that ultimately is in all our interests of all of us as human beings.

The best I've read this

The best I've read this year! Thank you! If the culture of cruelty, spawned from the fascist need for everlasting fear to ensure domination and control, has so permeated our entire social fabric then this may well be among the last calls for reflection we will be able to receive before we become terminators and elect Schwarzenegger for president. There isn't much time because we have lost most of the fail-safe points to rabid right aggression but we need to try to regain and value the "silly" or "sissy" or "wuss" notions of Love, Peace and Conviviality that the hippies tried to derail this run away train full of nightmarish futures of corporate-militaristic-fundamentalist delights with. I'm not too hopeful though - I've already bought a house abroad, just in case...

You are grabbing a central

You are grabbing a central nerve of our vicious and corrupt business political system. Thank you. You do not mention the parallel trends of raw violence, sexuality and discrimination across the spectrum of prime time TV, not just Fox, accessible to ost children, not to mention so-called adults. In the second last paragraph, "neither violent video games and television series nor Hollywood films and the Internet (or for that matter popular culture) cause in any direct sense real world violence and suffering, but they do not leave the real world behind either. That is too simplistic." by being very vague, you really do let the institutions off the hook. I have read, and there must be many, studies that show strong correlations between the violence you describe and the behavior of young people especially. The Military would only commonly use similar material and games to market itself and indoctrinate its recruits if these were very effective.

Welcome to a cruel dystopia

Welcome to a cruel dystopia it seems. Welcome to modern culture. Sadly, there are very few solutions to this glorification of what would otherwise shock normal human beings. People have been indoctrinated. It took time to do this, and it will take time for people to regain a conscience (assuming that they even want to). You're a brave, but small minority in the US these days if you oppose the current cultural trends.

More liberal postmodernist

More liberal postmodernist nonsense from Giroux, who wants gentle capitalism This is not a problem of culture, dear boy. It is imperialism, capitalism, profiteering, and your vapid analysis just lends to the rot. We do not need to redefine, or create another language (you have tried so hard to deepen obscurity over the years), we need to get rid of capitalism. You will, we can be sure, be on the wrong side of the barricades, in a bmw.

That's the problem, isn't it

That's the problem, isn't it - there's no disconnect in historical continuity. The US didn't get 'better' automatically just because it got a new president. Responsibility and accountability for the Bush-Cheney years and the devastation they wreaked in the world continues. Alas, President Obama doesn't like looking back. Fine. But what lies forward then is the end of an unrepentant US. Peter Edler, member Swedish Writers Union, Stockholm

So it was bad....but is it

So it was bad....but is it better? The same corporate money which brought Bush BOUGHT Obama.

Thank you very much for a

Thank you very much for a very thoughtful article

eloquent, brilliant.

eloquent, brilliant.

This article forcefully and

This article forcefully and comprehensively slams down the truth about what the USA has become. But what bothers me is Mr. Giroux's attacks on the entertainment industry that doesn't seem to separate the depiction of violence as art from the depiction of violence as political propaganda or simply a reflection of cultural trends. For example, Tarantino's films have been disturbingly violent long before Bush was president, and that this is an important element of his film making as art. I think his other arguments are insightful and forceful enough without having to cross the blurry line between art and corporate dominated popular culture.

Several thoughts spring to

Several thoughts spring to mind like "choose your enemies with care--you end by resembling them." "as ye sow, so shall ye reap." And "he who rides a tiger must take care in dismounting." The day is coming when the monster that the wingers have nurtured and raised will turn and devour them.

It's no accident that we're

It's no accident that we're where we are: "Increasingly, many individuals and groups now find themselves living in a society that measures the worth of human life in terms of cost-benefit analy[s]es.[...] And many groups[...] have not just been excluded from "the American dream," but have become utterly redundant and disposable, waste products of a society that not longer considers them of any value." This was an inevitable concomitant of J.C. Bancroft Davis, speaking for the Supreme Court in re Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad (1886), decreeing that it's unconstitutional to deny corporations any of the rights of natural persons and equally unconstitutional to expect them to shoulder any of the responsibilities associated with natural persons' exercise of those rights.

Very well written and

Very well written and analyzed! Even worse is that the increasing cruelty in society is only a symptom of a much deeper psychological cause. People in general compare themselves with others and, unconscious, constantly justify their own existence. Someone's own suffering is justified and excused by even bigger suffering of somebody else. Or someone's own insignificance is justified or excused by the even bigger insignificance of somebody else. As the general level of suffering and depression in society increases, the bigger is the demand or desire to compensate someone's own suffering with the real or perceived understanding that there is even bigger suffering by someone else out there. Only in this way are many individuals able to deal with their own (miserable) existence. In my assessment this is the real reason why parts of the uneducated masses are drawn to right wing hate and demagoguery. This is not a good development for any society and is a sign for much worse to come!!!

America's culture of cruelty

America's culture of cruelty is a result of capitalism's law of the jungle. Capitalism rules America and it is not democratic.

Hey TruthOut-ers--every time

Hey TruthOut-ers--every time we complain that Obama is not delivering the Change we wanted, remember the utter (and often blatant) nefariousness of the Bush administration. Bushies didn't create the tendencies described here, but their callous, monetized, brutal, depersonalized attitudes fostered it. Obama is a pragmatic idealist, and as he picks his way through the minefield, he is delivering hope, openings, and a human touch. Yes, Obama has continued some bad Bush policies, and yes, he's not instituted some promised ones yet but, thanks to GWB, we are in an economic tailspin and his hands have been somewhat tied. He is making progress; he does try to deliver. I bet we'll be out of Guantanamo within a year. And then, maybe we should remind ourselves: It's not 'Remember the Alamo'--it will be 'Remember Guantanamo'.

The topic sentence pretty

The topic sentence pretty much sums it up -- the Dark Side in a Nutshell. However, the article suffers a bit from Email Syndrome, the free association that leads ever onward along a theme until no light is shed on the original problem. Whether the problem is endemic because of our human nature, our origin as a nation, or even, as one poster has it, because of capitalism, is moot. There is a problem certainly, and we should try to solve it. Despite violence in films, most people are not violent at all. Just walk down the street. You don't see it. Listen to most people. You don't hear it. America will never be Norway, but our public institutions could do a better job of representing the civilized core of our people, instead of encouraging the nihilistic element that we as Americans always carry.

I realize this is not the

I realize this is not the central point of the essay, but I find myself turning off the home theatre sound on movies and listening through the tv speakers. Otherwise, the house shakes and shudders with all the crashes and booms and screams, and I can't hear the dialog. And it scares the dickens out of my poor cat. Then I find the dialog is nothing but insipid drivel crudely squeezed into the cacophony of violence, mayhem, car chases and destruction in a pathetic parody of drama. I mean, we are one sick society.

"The price of freedom is

"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance." β€” Thomas Jefferson (perhaps) The real way to get people more engaged is to take out the middleman, as is proposed by open source governance. This would require that citizens become active members of their community. See the Metagovernment project: http://metagovernment.org

Look for articles on the web

Look for articles on the web by George Lakoff. He explains the logic of framing or the use of metaphors in the way people think. He shows how the right has developed a way of thought control and how the left has to change it's ways. Obama used proper framing when running for office, but ignored those principles when starting the health care debate. He can do proper framing, but may not understand it's significance.

HG In my own writings about

HG In my own writings about the present culture created by men of an overriding avarice, sadism, evil and hatred of the rest of Human kind, I have expressed similar feeling, but not as excellently. My ancient pith helmet is off to you. Very Well said and done, sir.

psychotic split. On the

psychotic split. On the basis of the evolutionary biological fact that cooperation has always been and remains today, just as strong an impulse as predatory behavior in all life forms... I offer this speculation... The promotion, glorification and cultural approval of predatory behavior DOES NOT erase the impulse toward altruistic behavior, but it DOES tend to drive it into a denied and compartmentalized portion of the psyche. This inner tension and intolerable suppression of a powerful natural urge is part of the explanation for why American culture has become so psychotic. The imbalance between these two forces is making us crazy.

The US is like a dog that's

The US is like a dog that's been left out in the sun--mean and ready to bite. With, of course, all sorts of help from the right-wing media and the defunding of public education. The above poster who bought a house abroad is smart and lucky. Sadly, I can't afford to do so. What are lower cost methods of emigrating? I can't take it anymore. My country is dead.

This is a brilliant synopsis

This is a brilliant synopsis of topics rarely discussed in such depth. I thank you for articulating all of the rumination that has taken up residence in my brain, since the absolute insanity of the Republican underbelly was unleashed and took over the media! I can't help but ask, where are the REAL ethical religious leaders these days?! They seem to have been rendered silent, helpless, ineffectual or largely invisible, just when this country needs moral and active role models, more than ever. The Bible-thumping and/or indoctrination that passes for worship these days, contributes mightily to our culture of greed, arrogance and cruelty in this country. In traveling around the world, I have been struck by the thoughts of people in other cultures, when they view ours. At best, they are thoroughly puzzled by the contradictions and gaps between our articulated ideals and the reality of our collective behaviors. At the worst, they are thoroughly appalled and disgusted by what they see going on in this country, primarily by the lack of compassion. In the end, it seems that the media is indeed, the massage.........and we are being lulled into a state of numbing lack of awareness. Meanwhile, the world watches. Thank you for your outcry AND your erudition! Both are refreshing and thought-provoking!

All the public education

All the public education about child sexual abuse has not reduced abuse in any way-at all. " Of all the emotions, fear weakens judgment the most." Canadians are exposed equally to American cultural violence yet don't respond violently. "Vice is a monster of so frightful mien/ As to be hated needs but to be seen./ Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face/ We first endure, then pity, then embrace." A. Pope [cardinal attributes were feminine.] Yes, are there lower costs of emigrating?

Brilliant as always, Mr.

Brilliant as always, Mr. Giroux. Your writing always gives me renewed inspiration for my work in adult literacy. A thought/question, though: how to dismantle the arguments of those who are hostile to any tax money being spent on, say, healthcare for all or social services at all, but come at it from the rhetorical claim that individuals and ngos should be the ones to get to say where their money goes? That they don't want to be coerced by taxation but, because they care so much about 'those people', want to be able to help voluntarily? The factual point that it's been proven that NGOs/nonprofits are not capable of addressing anywhere near the true scope of the problem doesn't make a dent in their logic. They will not admit to hate or indifference as the article describes (although that's clearly under their words); they hide behind the claim to care for the 'less-fortunate' so much that they don't want the government to take the money and mess up the aid. In fact, they're predictably offended by any allegations of not caring about social problems -- they just claim to have a better way to address them than by government 'interference'.

I don't think it's only the

I don't think it's only the right-wing that is the problem here. Liberals and Conservatives have agreed on the fundamental values and vocabulary that define today's America. Everyone in power agrees that the form of American capitalism, imperialism, and nationalism is righteous. Since liberals are unwilling to discuss fundamental questions about our society, like the distribution and concentration of property and power in American society, I don't see any difference between them and conservatives. For example--watch Obama abandon any form of a public option.....

Excellent article & by all

Excellent article & by all means let`s not forget our historyfolks, Bush/Cheney picked up exactly to the word where "Poppy" left off in their guide book back in 1991 with virtually all the players returning even CONVICTED FELONS were reappointed to previously held cabinet positions,(though hardly hidden this was not broadcast on billboards) & as they say out of sight out of mind...where the few crime cabal members of the Reagan/Bush years`s had the decency to die their immediate proteges were assigned and that doesn`t even touch on the issue of church and state aka Monica Goodling yet .

More people have been killed

More people have been killed in the name of God than for any other reason.

A psychological approach

A psychological approach suggests that cruelty occurs given a combination of high aggression and low empathy. Our culture has always valued aggression, as evident in our warfare, sports, business ethics, cinema, and so on. And this aggression is becoming stronger given the last eight years of excessive warmongering. But it seems that an even stronger contribution to cruelty comes from our loss of empathy. Ever since the Reagan years, our ability to feel another person's suffering has been undermined by conservative propaganda. Perhaps the worst example can be seen in the conservative claims during the Sotomajor hearings that "empathy is bad", a ludicrous argument treated as legitimate by the mainstream media. As our capacity for empathy is further undermined, cruelty is likely to become even more rampant.

BRAVA!! I've been waiting

BRAVA!! I've been waiting for this since being frighten by war and violence in films in the 1930's!!! Hey guys - your Darwinian violent 'Displays' are destroying us. Women NEED social stability - enough now -stay home and we will make love...AND we don't Need any more Stuff. love, partnership and peace

Very, very well done. I

Very, very well done. I avoid and abhor the violence in TV & movies; I prefer clean comedy and good overcomes evil. Harry Potter comes to mind. Sinclair Lewis said "When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross". The poor and poorly educated seem to dominate the conservative crowds that champion a system that has deluded them into degrading their lives further. There is a point where a person has to distance himself from organized religion to avoid the detritus.

It is justly said that one's

It is justly said that one's great strength is blind to its very weakness. Our great strength is the economics of commercialism, but commercialism spawns a coarse and crass culture far and wide in pursuit of profit, and is destroying our social fabric. A broad tax on the portrayal of violence for purely commercial purpose, high enough to make null its profit, may be the only way out. What is sure is that our mix of increasing democracy and increasing violence and willful ignorance is deadly to our future. The tone and tenor of public life today is another world from the country of my youth some 50 years ago, but where are the "conservative" voices that could constrain commercialism, as they are its most fervent boosters ?

Good work Henry. But the

Good work Henry. But the cruelty and lack of morality that we are experiencing goes even deeper. In order to survive these days, even on the most basic level, nutritionally, for instance requires that we completely deny the source of our food, most of which is supplied as a result of horrendous cruelty and hence the food that most of us eat supplies only this cruel and morally devoid energy.We can ignore the source, but the energy we receive from it is still devoid of light. And so our souls begin to wither on the vine. Still, most of us do nothing to change things. Thus, we continue to lose touch with the harmony and balance of the earth and the other life on it. It ceases to even be a concern. For many people their concern for the word ends at the end of their noses. We have become haughty, and nature is just beginning to take the first big steps to slap us back down.

If you want to see cruelty,

If you want to see cruelty, log onto PETA.org. You will see how deeply ingrained cruelty is in our culture. Cruelty, lest humane treatment get in the way of profit. Shocking, appalling...the stuff of nightmares....and it happens every day in our country. Our military are trained to shoot and dismember live animals; baby chicks are thrown live into grinding machines to be made into dogfood; beautiful creatures are skinned alive (I saw it) for their pelts. We will stop being monsters when we start treating the most helpless of all, animals, with compassion and human decency.

This article focuses on two

This article focuses on two areas - Politics and Arts. In Politics Henry is one-sided; focusing on man as a passive mindless victim of some vague undefined subjective cruelty. Henry does not provide a definition of cruelty - leaving the reader to somehow organize the many unrelated examples he provides into some cohesive goo that somehow will guide the rest of his essay. In addition, Henry does not define hate - yet uses it like an emotional stock-prod jerking the reader into some state of emotional, rather than intellectual, reaction. Then like a fish out of water, Henry's essay flounders around in the area of Arts. Henry attempts tie Politics to Arts, but fails miserably. Although Henry is correct that modern Arts do reflect a morally bankrupt culture - he fails to identify the source. This cruel Art is the result of immoral Artists whose perspective of life is based on emotional shock, realism, subjectivism, and collectivism. When giving solutions - Henry falls short. Henry loses all credibility when his solution supports the very concept he's arguing against - cruelty. This contradiction occurs when Henry begs for for a mob (society) to control (name, engage, transform) freedom of speech (pedagogy, discourse) - this is known as censorship; the most cruel form of control that a society can inflict upon the individual. As a result, Henry reveals his true identity - a bigot. And like any bigot- Henry must use the force of a mob to get his solutions in action - this is why he begs for social action, cultural change, and control over children that are apparently creatures of the society. In sum - Henry is one cruel and unusual individual - lacking in a moral understanding of political philosophy or aesthetics. Thank you Henry for helping me understand how cruel bigots like yourself think.

I would like to add the idea

I would like to add the idea that Organized Sports contributes to many of our social problems. From the six-year-old girls at the beginning cheerleading class, through the retired jocks doing commercials, we are indoctrinated in a sort of ritualized tribalism, which encourages cooperation only to the extent that it enables Us to whop the bejeezus out of Them. Instead of an actual physical education program that teaches students how to use and care for the body that they will be in for the rest of their lives, my tax dollars are used for lights and astroturf at a high school stadium. As near as I could determine, my local HS does not have a chess board or anyone who even knows how to set one up. But when the team won the state AA championship, it was six months before they were done with newspaper articles, congratulatory parades, dinners, breakfasts, appearances at the state legislature, etc. Maybe one will make it to the pros, probably not. But most of them will end up running heavy equipment or working in a muffler shop, then drinking cheap beer in a smoky bar watching someone else get the exercise. It's like the whole society hangs its hopes on a lottery ticket, instead of getting some real work done. But the masses must have their bread and circuses. It's a rabble easily roused, and they will keep believing the first thing they hear, no matter how much you disprove it later. We shouldn't be too surprised when they are willfully ignorant and vote against their own best interests.

My dabbling in history leads

My dabbling in history leads me to believe that there is a common final pathway that violent, expansionist societies take to collapse. Violent feelings expressed outwardly against "the other" in the form of "enemy" societies and social movements are inevitably turned back on the society itself and the dominators attack each other. All financially and militarily agressive societies have the same basic features. Fundamental to this picture is cruelty not just to animals but to children and anyone perceived as weak. Abusive behavior towards children, allowing them to grow up in a climate of fear where they are taught to mistrust strangers, particularly ill kept ones, generates those violent tendencies that allow militarily aggressive societies to recruit armies of ruthless murderers. Happy people to not make good grunts. Ergo, a successful aggressive society cultivates misery and fear in order to expand. Seldom do you see a frank admission of this sort of policy as a deliberate strategy. The only clear case I know of are the activities of Focus On the Family, which promotes corporeal punishment and lack of empathy for one's children as "God's way" in order to create an army of ideological soldiers committed to authoritarian and parasitical values.

Great, passionate article!

Great, passionate article! So how do we get out of this mess? How is it that Don Imus get's crucified but Rush & Ann (etc) are glorified by half the country? How is it that a "wardrobe malfunction" during half-time on TV brings a $550,000 fine from the FCC? If we can regulate Janet and Don, why can't we regulate Rush and Ann? Why is "lewdness" on the air such a crime and yet "hate" on the air is fine? If public air waves and a public postal service are used, seems to me the public needs to assert ownership. And while we're at it, how about some free air-time for political candidates? Why should they have to sell their souls to have a chance at being elected?

Tip toe around the truth?

Tip toe around the truth? Thanks for telling us what we already know. We know that there is a problem. But who is responsible for it? You state, "the culture of cruelty and its overt and covert dimensions of violence, often parading as entertainment." and "Rather than being unspoken and unseen, violence in American life had become both visible in its pervasiveness and normalized as a central feature of dominant and popular culture." We have to stop stating the obvious and be bold enough to ask meaningful questions such as, Just who are the promoters of this and perhaps more importantly who shapes popular culture?

But Bush and Cheney are

But Bush and Cheney are portrayed as patriots, rather than depraved monsters, who torture in order to protect capitalism and further the lust for revenge after 911. As with all criminal enterprise, Bush & Cheney closed up shop and left the coffers empty, heading to their taxpayer protected mansions or lairs, if you prefer. You have summed up the damage they did to the American and Iraqi populations in very clear terms. The wake of seemingly brainless zombies frothing over Limbaugh, Coulter Hannity and Beck has made our reality since the elections last November resemble Night of the Living Dead more than any other cinematic depiction.

YES! ! ! "Just who are the

YES! ! ! "Just who are the promoters of this and perhaps more importantly who shapes popular culture? A good basic question to start with, basic as well as HUGE. If any of you out there have any ideas what we as a people (We the People?) or a group can do about it . . . contact me. All I can think of is writing Obama --letter, email, after letter, after email, etc., etc., also getting groups of people-- individuals or institutions to sign many names to one letter. If we had corporation money, we could do TV ads. but we don't--unless, someone like Buffett or Soros has the courage to bite the hand that is making them rich, rich, rich. . .

Thanks for the thoughtful

Thanks for the thoughtful piece! The culture of cruelty started way before the Bush/Cheney regime, perhaps with the Puritans. Last century, remember what happened in Haiti with the US occupation from 1915 until 1934. While working on the film Haiti Bitter Cane I found a Boy Scout magazine with an article by a Marine boasting of cold blooded murder of the Haitian rebel (he was called a "bandit"-- their word for "terrorist") Charlemagne Peralte. Franklin Roosevelt was one of the architects of that Haitian repression, which Clinton so quickly reprised in the 1990s. In terms of criminalization, it was Clinton who pushed through the Crime Bill which has greatly increased the level of infrastructure for our current fascist apparatus. for images of Peralte check out Haiti:Bitter Cane http://www.deedeehalleck.org/store.html

It's a very well written

It's a very well written article! I've been waiting this for years; our country has become so blindly stupid. Pretty soon, at some point, the cause of watching so much garbage on tv, it's going to be irreparable, people are starting to show signs of a lack of compassion for others, and we have to thank the movie industry, video games, corporations, dirty politicians, etc., for such ignorance! Also, there is the media, everyday we watch as Rush Limbaugh it's been "glorify" by pundits, (although they'll try to disguise it with little common sense on the side). But gain, this is amazing, thanks for sharing!

A human being is part of the

A human being is part of the Whole... He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separated from the rest...a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. Nobody is able to achieve this completely, but the striving for such achievement is, in itself, a part of the liberation and a foundation for inner security. _Albert Einstein

As a nation we are becoming

As a nation we are becoming programmed to accept the right wing agenda of corporate America. Just like Pavlov's dogs, a large part of our population is being feed a daily diet of hate speak that is conditioning them to hate without reason. This is mind rape of the worst kind. It is deeply disturbing to see how many people have lost the capacity for original critical thought, preferring to allow themselves to be programmed to think in a particular pattern that supports a mindless ideal of power, greed, fear and hatred. Every day the Glenn Becks and Rush Limbaughs feed their victims not just the talking/thinking point of the moment, but now they are fed the action point as well, producing the storm troopers that are incited by their handlers to take to the streets to fulfill "the agenda" of the day. This is indeed disturbing. One can only wonder when they will start going house to house to remove the liberals in their midst.

Excellent thought provoking

Excellent thought provoking piece. It seems to me, though, that cruelty has always been a significant theme 0f our American culture. Pervasive violence in our media is a chicken or egg question IMHO.

As George Bernard Shaw

As George Bernard Shaw said: "Capitalism has destroyed our belief in any effective power but that of self interest backed by force."

And Americans think Mexicans

And Americans think Mexicans are violent???? Outside of the "drug war" mafia stuff, none of this would happen here. I am so glad I live in Mexico.

Elena, Thanks for the

Elena, Thanks for the Eintein quote... very relevant. As to when they'll start removing us liberals, the murderers of Drs. who perform abortions & the guy whe entered the Unitarian church in TN to rid the world of the liberals who elected the Liberals he couldn't get to tell me it has started. All I can do is demonstrate loving compassion and hope it touches someone.

We did not have these nut

We did not have these nut case hate mongers before the "government is the problem" Ronald Reagan eliminated the Fairness Doctrine, giving birth to the platforms occupied by Limbaugh, Fox News, Savage, etc. Reagan therefore becomes the spiritual father of Rush, O'Reilly, Beck, Coulter, Savage, Hannity,and the rest of those who seek the approval of the lowest mentality and lowest decency standards of our society. Who else would approve of Limbaugh's holding up a picture of the 13-year old Chelsea Clinton and referring to her as the White House dog? The "nice guy" image of Reagan is therefore compromised by his creating the environment in which all of the hate mongers could flourish, and flourish they did. He and they have done monumental damage to the American ideal of free speech and fairness. They you Mr President Reagan.

Thank you for an excellent

Thank you for an excellent article. It's been a long time since we had television regularly in our home, and time-warp-like to read about, for example, the show on torture, which we hadn't heard about. I have been particularly tuned to this culture of cruelty in the debate about health care, and the complete callous, and even sickening, insensitivity with which certain members of the right address these issues, and as they pertain to the daily goings on in other Americans' lives. In the end, someone can lust over a television show without harming anyone, but it is when we get into the nuts and bolts of living, and our attitudes towards our fellow humans there -- health care, education, food and housing -- that these "symptoms" reveal themselves in all their implications. We need to more conclusively set limits as to the boundaries of human decency and what is simply unacceptable as a form of values in a civilized society that aspires to higher quality of living. This is what, I think, Bill Moyers also addressed when he called on President Obama and the rest of the Democrats to show some backbone.

Thank you Henry A. Geroux

Thank you Henry A. Geroux for stating clearly what I was feeling, but unable to express as well as you have. Over my life I have seen this coming and never thought it would be as bad as it is today. It's probably worse than what you and I know. I never thought I would want to move to another country, but I am convinced America is caught in an inexplicable cycle of hate, revenge, and murder. I want to leave here as soon as possible. The Netherlands, maybe?

Thank you for providing such

Thank you for providing such a clear and cogent analysis of our present culture. It is a high hallmark of mine when I read an article and am constantly saying yes yes to sentences and clauses that are relevant to my life as a teacher and as an activist. I feel it is like climate change though, the damage has already been done. The shift from humanism, if it ever really existed, to corporatism has left the galleys of unpublished scifi dystopias and now seems to be forming and growing on our horizon. We recognize it, but so many don't, and so many others never even bother to look at the horizon. Militarism will continue to penetrate our culture and our lives. soon military academies will replace charter schools (just watch as Arne Duncan rolls that one out real soon), and the public will be led to believe this is good for discipline, meanwhile the training of these diminished adolescents into killers will expand exponentially. The culture of hate that created the 'race war' mantra will transform into a 'resource war' reality. Who wins, who dies, who is severely damaged, and who is allowed to survive via corporate sponsorship and graft is already here...and the critical analysis of that, will become the litmus test for a new culture. I wonder when words themselves will become treasonous. And we all watch, around the planet, as the cards fall into place.

In 1977, Native American

In 1977, Native American author Leslie Marmon Silko made the following prophetic comment: "If the white people never looked beyond the lie, to see that theirs was a nation built on stolen land, then they would never be able to understand how they had been used by the witchery; they would never know that they were still being manipulated by those who knew how to stir the ingredients together: white thievery and injustice boiling up the anger and hatred that would finally destroy the world: the starving against the fat, the colored against the white."

It seems fair to say that

It seems fair to say that there is an underlying mental illness to those that subscribe to Right-wing politics. The Left, in this country, can't and has never, been even close to holding a flame next to the sadistic cruelty and anti-intellectualism of the Right.

An insightful piece. I have

An insightful piece. I have long thought that whoever is in the White House generally dictates the prevailing attitude in the nation, from Wall Street to Main Street. Authoritarianism is exactly how I can now describe the last eight years. There is still a meanness that has carried over today; the nation is still being bullied by those who have the power of the microphone and continue to instigate the protracted temper tantrum being displayed by their followers.

Interesting article but it

Interesting article but it should be noted that "Dexter" is on Showtime NOT HBO as Mr Giroux mistakenly claims.

Never a democracy, and we

Never a democracy, and we ceased even the semblance of being a republic on December 12, 2000 when the US Supreme Court, under the leadership of Antoine Scalia and Sandra Day O'Connor, unconstitutionally interfered with the Florida vote recount and handed the presidency and control of the country to George Bush and his cronies in crime on a silver platter. Corporations rule this country. We have a collection of executives in media, health, care, military, telecommunications, pharma, transportation, banking, insurance, i.e. the military industrial complex taking this country into war, ending the rights of workers to unionize or vote or even have basic health care and a living wage. No different than what has taken place in Honduras recently, just on a much larger scale. At least Honduran President Zalaya showed the courage and backbone to fight the takeover of his country, unlike Al Gore, the Quisling of our day.

This article makes some

This article makes some great points about our society as a whole. What I find lacking is what I often find lacking from the left - an element of personal responsibility. So some laws have been passed that penalize the homeless - that does not stop me from continuing to volunteer at the local homeless shelter. So movies and TV are full of violence - I am perfectly capable of recognizing that and not watching these forms of entertainment. I can also encourage others to spend their time money on more edifying mediums. The constant self idolization I see from most of our elected and appointed officials does not make me think the government can fix things - the truly great in our society pursue their happiness elsewhere. It is up to us to change what we can.

Great piece. I printed it

Great piece. I printed it out and passed it around to anyone who will read it. I don't worry about the long term repercussions of violence and cruelty on those who are aware they are susceptible to it's chilling effect on morality; I worry about those who become frantic and outraged at the idea of being deprived of such carelessly amoral entertainment and dialogue. Will be following Mr. Giroux's work from now on.

I am a 19 year old girl

I am a 19 year old girl living in Honduras and I cannot agree more with this article. It sickens me that my friends find "punching each other till they loose breathe" entertaining. It really does.

It is strange to me how a

It is strange to me how a large body of Christians in this country, while declaring evolution as untrue, have embraced a sort of social Darwinism. The forces opposing health care reform are largely on the right and the right is associated with hardcore Christian thought. These people often say that a 'public option' is a step toward socialism and that such a move would be un-American and un-Christian. The meek must be cast aside so the strong can inherit the earth. The poor choose to be poor and are therefore unworthy of charity. I will not be my brother's keeper. Please understand that I don't associate these former statements with all American Christians today, but a large number of them seem to have embraced this mind set.

Several years ago in my

Several years ago in my State we endured a Governor's campaign were one of the candidates was an avowed racist (he was defeated). My task was to attend as many of his speeches as possible. A couple of conclusions noted was that fear and hate sells, and that some people can actually get a high off of a speaker who's only message is to attack those in society who the audience feels threatens their quote, way of life. Observation noted that there was a handful of folks who actually attended every event. I got to know some and found that prior to the speeches, they were relatively sane folks but after the presentations they were so hipped up they were like addicts with all the symptoms. When we studied this further we realized that it corresponded to the general basis that addicts comprise 10% of the general population. We concluded these folks would vote for the candidate even if he would be found in bed with a black boy. Mr. Giroux excellent analysis once again illustrates how those who know how to gain dysfunctionism can benefit. I seem to recall that one of the proponent of this approach recently had an addiction issue.

"More liberal postmodernist

"More liberal postmodernist nonsense from Giroux." True, the guy is an academic elitist as well as a cliche: "we need new languages," then things will be better, etc. Most of the article is filler, fancy school talk describing a familiar platitude: people are cruel because of (bad) culture. It's a common -and useless- practice for Canadians to feel nationally superior by negating their main 'Other' - the US and United States citizens. Giroux never mentions the deleterious effects of Hockey & the violent values the 'game' imparts, the Canadian government's violent institutional treatment of a bunch of minority groups including native Americans & the developmentally disabled, the way the Canadian government impoverishes its citizens exacerbating domestic tension & conflict. And the schools, they suck. I grew up in Canada and there was a lot of unreported physical and sexual abuse committed by government 'teachers'.

Several jabs to throw back

Several jabs to throw back at several cowards (Anonymi of 9/03 at 7:14 and 9/05 at 3:55 - if you read the other posters, you cannot fail to notice they don't just haul off and attack the author (whose writing is meticulously sourced) as you do. I think you're anonymous because you're Glen Beck's staff (trained attack dogs) and it's the only technique you know (split infinitives and all). Don't waste T/O readers' time. You have nothing of value to say.

I found this article very

I found this article very interesting and I loved reading the comments. I got a really good laugh from a few comments like: β€œIt seems fair to say that there is an underlying mental illness to those that subscribe to Right-wing politics. The Left, in this country, can't and has never, been even close to holding a flame next to the sadistic cruelty and anti-intellectualism of the Right.” Anonymous I’m pretty sure I heard the same argument from a conservative just last week but read like this: β€œIt seems fair to say that there is an underlying mental illness to those that subscribe to Left-wing politics. The Right, in this country, can't and has never, been even close to holding a flame next to the sadistic cruelty and anti-intellectualism of the Left.” What I don’t understand is the lack of give and take. Both sides just want to take, there is no give or compromise. There was one comment that I thought was truly thought provoking; β€œThis article makes some great points about our society as a whole. What I find lacking is what I often find lacking is an element of personal responsibility. So some laws have been passed that penalize the homeless - that does not stop me from continuing to volunteer at the local homeless shelter. So movies and TV are full of violence - I am perfectly capable of recognizing that and not watching these forms of entertainment. I can also encourage others to spend their time money on more edifying mediums. The constant self idolization I see from most of our elected and appointed officials does not make me think the government can fix things - the truly great in our society pursue their happiness elsewhere. It is up to us to change what we can.” Beth A great President once said, β€œAnd so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country.” So talk with your elected officials and let them know what you feel should be done, and then get to work making change!

No wonder I rejected the

No wonder I rejected the simplistic notion that kids learn bad things from TV. What's happening in our society is far from simplistic, and it's not just kids that are being seduced. How innocent when we only had to worry about subliminal messages and Tom and Jerry. Important ideas Mr. Giroux. Thank you.

Crucial subject on

Crucial subject on hate: http://americaspeaksink.com/2009/09/americas-war-on-sex/

American culture is

American culture is undergoing a "spiritual emergency" of great magnitude. We have become a pathetic sick society which perpetuates hate and ill will and seek entertainment as knowledge rather than reality with fact. We are dying away without last rites because we have lost faith in each other and the structures which define our cultural environment. So much introversion, cruelty, violence have driven the once noble American character into a full fledged collapse with no shamans to bring us back to health.

Frances, you are half-right.

Frances, you are half-right. In my opinion, Anon. II is not a Glen Beckian, but an Objectivist, a follower of Ayn Rand's philosophy and ideology. [Otherwise known to most of us as Libertarians.] He uses the standard jargon of the Objectivists. So that's where you may be wrong. Where I agree with you is in the value of their analyses: Neither offers insight or original solutions. As I wrote earlier, the article has some drawbacks, but that's okay. It doesn't have to be perfect. Speaking of name-calling, I protest the libel of Al Gore by Zee, the Nader supporter. One can always tell them because they are the angriest of all that the man they helped elect, George W. Bush, did such damage to our country in office. Irony of ironies. We'll be ok.

the one thing that is not

the one thing that is not mentioned is the outstanding population growth and limited resources ... for better or for worse ... the current mode of distribution of our limited resources is arcane and untenable ... we are all here together and we strive to find solutions or perish from lack of vision and wisdom ...

trash your TV! Don't go see

trash your TV! Don't go see movies with violence. don't worry about what others are doing. practice radical self-relience when it come to your brain. kill em with kindness... Hug it out... parent your children, siblings, parents, friends... show them the loving way. One thing about wisdom...it's a slow mover.