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The Politics of Lying and the Culture of Deceit in Obama's America: The Rule of Damaged Politics

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

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(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; adapted from saschapohflepp / flickr)

    Lies are often much more plausible, more appealing to reason, than reality, since the liar has the great advantage of knowing beforehand what the audience wishes or expects to hear.

    Hannah Arendt[1]

    In the current American political landscape, truth is not merely misrepresented or falsified; it is overtly mocked. As is well known, the Bush administration repeatedly lied to the American public, furthering a legacy of government mistrust while carrying the practice of distortion to new and almost unimaginable heights. Even now, almost a year after Bush left office, it is difficult to forget the lies and government-sponsored deceits in which it was claimed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, Iraq was making deals with al-Qaeda and, perhaps the most infamous of all, the United States did not engage in torture. Unlike many former administrations, the Bush administration was engaged in pure political theater,[2] giving new meaning to Hannah Arendt's claim that "Truthfulness has never been counted among the political virtues, and lies have always been regarded as justifiable tools in political dealings."[3] For instance, when the government wasn't lying to promote dangerous policies, it willfully produced and circulated fake news reports in order to provide the illusion that the lies and the policies that flowed from them were supported by selective members of the media and the larger public. The Bush deceits and lies were almost never challenged by right-wing media "patriots," who were too busy denouncing as un-American anyone who questioned Bush's official stream of deception and deceit. Ironically, some of these pundits were actually on the government payroll for spreading the intellectual equivalent of junk food. And some of them were actually being paid by the Bush government to make such claims.

    In such circumstances, language loses any viable sense of referentiality, while lying, misrepresentation and the deliberate denial of truth become acceptable practices firmly entrenched in the wild West of talk radio, cable television and the dominant media. Fact finding, arguments bolstered by evidence and informed analysis have always been fragile entities, but they risk annihilation in a culture in which it becomes difficult to distinguish between an opinion and an argument. Knowledge is increasingly controlled by a handful of corporations and public relations firms and is systemically cleansed of any complexity. Lying and deceitfulness are all too often viewed as just another acceptable tactic in what has become most visibly the pathology of politics and a theater of cruelty dominated by a growing chorus of media hatemongers inflaming an authoritarian populist rage laced with a not too subtle bigotry.[4] Truth increasingly becomes the enemy of democracy because it does not support the spectacle and the reduction of citizens either to mere dupes of power or commodities. Ignorance is no longer a liability in a culture in which lying, deceit and misinformation blur the boundaries between informed judgments and the histrionics of a shouting individual or mob. Talk radio and television talk show screamers, in particular, seem to delight in repeating claims that have been discredited in the public arena, demonstrating a barely disguised contempt for both the truth and any viable vestige of journalism. These lies and deceits go beyond the classic political gambit, beyond the Watergate-style cover up, beyond the comic "I did not have sex with that woman." The lies and deceptions that are spewed out everyday from the right-wing teaching machines - from newspapers and radio shows to broadcast media and the Internet - capitalize on both the mobilizing power of the spectacle, the increasing impatience with reason and an obsession with what Susan J. Douglas describes as the use of the "provocative sound bites over investigative reporting, misinformation over fact."[5] Lying and deception have become so commonplace in the dominant press that such practices appear to have no moral significance and provoke few misgivings, even when they have important political consequences. In the age of public relations managers and talk show experts, we are witnessing the demise of public life. At a time when education is reduced to training workers and is stripped of any civic ideals and critical practices, it becomes unfashionable for the public to think critically. Rather than intelligence uniting us, a collective ignorance of politics, culture, the arts, history and important social issues, as Mark Slouka points out, "gives us a sense of community, it confers citizenship."[6] Our political passivity is underscored by a paucity of intellectual engagement, just as the need for discrete judgment and informed analysis fall prey to a culture of watching, a culture of illusion and circus tricks. Shame over the lying and ignorance that now shape our cultural politics has become a source of national pride - witness the pathetic response to Joe Wilson's outburst against President Obama. Or, for that matter, the celebrated and populist response to Sarah Palin's lies about death panels, which are seized upon not because they distort the truth and reveal the dishonesty and vileness of political opportunism - while also undermining a viable health care bill - but because they tap into a sea of growing anger and hyped-up ignorance and ratchet up poll ratings. Lying and deceit have become the stuff of spectacle and are on full display in a society where gossip and celebrity culture rule. In this instance, the consequences of lying are reduced to a matter of prurience rather than public concern, becoming a source of private injury on the part of a Hollywood star or producing the individual humiliation of public figure such as John Edwards.

    The widespread acceptance of lying and deceit is not merely suggestive of a commodified and ubiquitous corporate-driven electronic culture that displays an utter contempt for morality and social needs: It is also registers the existence of a troubling form of infantilization and depoliticization. Lying as common sense and deceit as politics-as-usual joins the embrace of provocation in a coupling that empties politics and agency of any substance and feeds into a corporate state and militarized culture in which matters of judgment, thoughtfulness, morality and compassion seem to disappear from public view. What is the social cost of such flight from reality, if not the death of democratic politics, critical thought and civic agency? When a society loses sight of the distinction between fact and fiction, truth-telling and lying, what happens is that truth, critical thought and fact finding as conditions of democracy are rendered trivial and reduced to a collection of mere platitudes, which in turn reinforces moral indifference and political impotence. Under such circumstances, language actually becomes the mechanism for promoting political powerlessness. Lying and deceit are no longer limited to merely substituting falsehoods for the truth; they now performatively constitute their own truth, promoting celebrity culture, right-wing paranoia and modes of government and corporate power freed from any sense of accountability.

    While all governments resort to misrepresentations and lies, we appear to have entered a brave new world in which lies, distortions and exaggerations have become so commonplace that when something is said by a politician, it is often meant to suggest its opposite, and without either irony or apology. As lies and deceit become a matter of policy, language loses its grip on reality, and the resulting indeterminacy of meaning is often used by politicians and others to embrace positions that change from one moment to the next. Witness Dick Cheney, who once referred to torture as "enhanced interrogation" so as to sugarcoat its brutality, and then appeared on national television in 2009 only to defend torture by arguing that if such practices work, they are perfectly justified, even if they violate the law. This is the same Cheney who, appearing on the May 31, 2005, "Larry King Live" show, attempted to repudiate charges of government torture by claiming, without irony, that the detainees "have been well treated, treated humanely and decently." This type of discourse recalls George Orwell's dystopian world of "1984" in which the Ministry of Truth produces lies and the Ministry of Love tortures people. Remember when the Bush administration used the "Healthy Forest Initiative" to give loggers access to protected wilderness areas or the "Clear Skies Initiative" to enable greater industrial air pollution? President Obama also indulges in this kind of semantic dishonesty when he substitutes "prolonged detention" for the much maligned "preventive detention" policies he inherited from the Bush-Cheney regime. While Obama is not Bush, the use of this type of duplicitous language calls to mind the Orwellian nightmare in which "war is peace, freedom is slavery, and ignorance is strength."

    When lying and deceit become normalized in a culture, they not only serve as an index of how low we have fallen as a literate society, but also demonstrate the degree to which language and education have become corrupted, tied to corporate and political power and sabotaged by rigid ideologies as part of a growing authoritarianism that uses the educational force of the culture, the means of communication and the sites in which information circulate to mobilize ignorance among a misinformed citizenry, all the while supporting reactionary policies. Especially since the horrible events of 9/11, Americans have been encouraged to identify with a militaristic way of life, to suspend their ability to read the word and world critically, to treat corporate and government power in almost religious terms and to view a culture of questioning as something alien and poisonous to American society. Shared fears rather than shared responsibilities now mobilize angry mobs and gun-toting imbeciles, who are praised as "real" Americans. Fear bolstered by lies and manufactured deceptions makes us immune to even the most obvious moral indecencies, such as the use of taser guns on kids in schools. Nobody notices or cares - and one cause and casualty of all of this moral indifference is that language has been emptied of its critical content just as the public spaces that make it possible are disappearing into the arms of corporations, advertisers and other powerful institutions that show nothing but contempt for either the public sphere or the kind of critical literacy that gives it meaning.

    Obama's presence on the national political scene gave literacy, language and critical thought a newfound sense of dignity, interlaced as they were with a vision of hope, justice and possibility - and reasonable arguments about the varied crises America faced and civilized. Such practices as Obama compromised, if not surrendered, some of his principles to those individuals and groups that live in the vocabulary of duplicity, the idealism that shaped his language began to look like just another falsehood when measured against his continuation of a number of Bush-like policies. In this case, the politics of distortions and misrepresentations that Obama's lack of integrity has produced may prove to be even more dangerous than what we got under Bush because it wraps itself in a moralism that seems uplifting and hopeful while it supports policies that reward the rich, reduce schools to testing centers and continue to waste lives and money on wars that should have ended when Obama assumed his presidency. Obama claims he is for peace, and yet the United States is the largest arms dealer in the world. He claims he wants to reduce the deficit, but spends billions on the defense industry and wars abroad. He says he wants everyone to have access to decent health care, but makes backroom deals with powerful pharmaceutical companies. Orwell's ghost haunts this new president and the country at large. Reducing the critical power of language has been crucial to this effort. Under such circumstances, democracy as either a moral referent or a political ideal appears to have lost any vestige of credibility. The politics of lying and the culture of deceit are inextricably related to a theater of cruelty and modes of corrupt power in which politics is reduced to a ritualized incantation, just as matters of governance are removed from real struggles over meaning and power.

    Beyond disinformation and disguise, the politics of lying and the culture of deceit trade in and abet the rhetoric of fear in order to manipulate the public into a state of servile political dependency and unquestioning ideological support. Fear and its attendant use of moral panic not only create a rhetorical umbrella to promote right-wing ideological agendas (increased military spending, tax relief for the financial and corporate elite, privatization, market-driven reforms and religious intolerance), but also contribute to a sense of helplessness and cynicism throughout the body politic. The collapse of any vestige of critical literacy, reason and sustained debate gives way to falsehoods and forms of ignorance that find expression in the often racist discourse of what Bob Herbert calls "the moronic maestros of right wing radio and TV,"[7] endlessly haranguing the public to resist any vestige of reason. How else to explain the actions of parents who refuse to let their children listen to a speech on education by - Should I say it? - an African-American President? How else to fathom the dominant media repeating uncritically the views of right-wing groups that portray Obama as Hitler or Lenin, or consistently making references that compare him to a gorilla or indulge in other crude racist references - in recent days, these groups have been given ample media attention, as if their opinions are not simply ventriloquizing the worst species of ignorance and racism.

    The politics of lying and the culture of deceit are wrapped in the logic of absolute certainty, an ominous harbinger of a kind of illiteracy in which one no longer has to be accountable for justifying opinions, claims or alleged arguments. Stripped of accountability, language finds its final resting place in a culture of deceit in which lying either is accepted as a political strategy or is viewed as simply another normalized aspect of everyday life. The lack of criticism surrounding both government practices and corporations that now exercise unparalleled forms of power is more than shameful; it is an utter capitulation to an Orwellian rhetoric that only thinly veils an egregious form of authoritarianism and racism. In the face of such events, we must develop a critical discourse to address the gap between rhetoric and deeds of those who hold economic, political and social power. As Hannah Arendt has argued, debate is central to a democratic politics, along with the public space in which individuals can argue, exercise critical judgment and clarify their relationship to democratic values and public commitments. Critical consciousness and autonomy are, after all, not merely the stuff of political awareness, but what makes democratic accountability possible in the first place. They are also the foundation and precondition for individuals, parents, community groups and social movements to mobilize against such political and moral corruptions. Democracy is fragile, and its fate is always uncertain, but during the last decade we have witnessed those in commanding political and corporate positions exhibit an utter disregard for the truth, morality and critical debate. The Enron template of lying and deception has turned an ethos of dialogue and persuasion into its opposite: dogmatism and propaganda. In doing so, the American public has been bombarded by a discourse of fear, hate and racism, coupled with a politics of lying that undermines any viable vestige of a democratic ethos. We now find ourselves living in a society in which right-wing extremists not only wage a war against the truth, but also seek to render human beings less than fully human by taking away their desire for justice, spiritual meaning, freedom and individuality.

    Politics must become more attentive to those everyday conditions that have allowed the American public to remain complicitous with such barbaric policies and practices. Exposing the underlying conditions and symptoms of a culture of lying and deceit is both a political and a pedagogical task that demands that people speak out and break through the haze of official discourse, media-induced amnesia and the fear-producing lies of corrupt politicians and the swelling ranks of hatemongers. The politics of lying and deceit at the current historical moment offers up the specter of not just government abuse, mob hysteria and potential violence, but also an incipient authoritarianism, one that avidly seeks to eliminate intelligent deliberation, informed public discussion, engaged criticism and the very possibility of freedom and a vital democratic politics. The spirit of critique is meaningless without literacy and an informed public. For such a public to flourish, it must be supported with public debate and informed agents capable of becoming both a witness to injustice and a force for transforming those political, economic and institutional conditions that impose silence and perpetuate human suffering. The distortions, misrepresentations and lies that have become an integral part of American culture present a serious threat to an aspiring democracy because they further what John Dewey called the "eclipse of the public," just as they empty politics of its democratic values, meanings and possibilities. The hate, extremism and pathology that have come to define our national political and popular landscapes - heard repeatedly in the prattle of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, to name only two of the most popular examples - are legitimated by an appeal to absolute certainty, which becomes the backdrop against which a politics of lying and a culture of deceit, fear, cruelty and repression flourish. We are witnessing in the politics of lying and the culture of deceit a disconnection between language and social responsibility, politics and critical education, market interests and democratic values, and privately felt pain and joys and larger public considerations. And this undermining of the value of human dignity, truth, dialogue and critical thought is the offspring of a debate over much more than simply meaning and language, or even the widespread legitimacy of individual and institutional ignorance and corruption. At its core, it is a debate about power and those corporate and political interests that create the conditions in which lying becomes acceptable and deceit commonplace - those forces that have the power to frame in increasingly narrow ways the conventions, norms, language and relations through which we relate to ourselves and others. How we define ourselves as a nation cannot be separated from the language we value, inhabit and use to shape our understanding of others and the world in which we want to live. As the language of critique, civic responsibility, political courage and democracy disappears along with sustained investments in schools, media, and other elements of a formative culture that keeps an aspiring democracy alive, we lose the spaces and capacities to imagine a future in which language, literacy and hope are on the side of justice, rather than on the side of hate, willful ignorance and widespread injustice.

    NOTES

    1. Hannah Arendt, "Lying in Politics," in "Crisis of the Republic" (New York: Harvest/HBJ Books, 1969), p. 6

    2. Frank Rich, "The Greatest Story Ever Told" (New York: Penguin, 2007).

    3. Ibid., Hannah Arendt, "Lying in Politics," p. 4.

    4. See Bob Herbert's courageous article, "The Scourge Persists," New York Times (September 19, 2009), p. A17.

    5. Susan J. Douglas, "Killing Granny with the Laziness Bias," In These Times (September 17, 2009). Online at: www.inthesetimes.com/main/article/4897.

    6. Mark Slouka, "A Quibble," Harper's Magazine (February 2009), p. 9.

    7. Ibid., Herbert, "The Scourge Persists," p. 17.

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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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Genius!

Genius!

The American culture of

The American culture of distortions, misrepresentations and lies have now become an integral part of American business culture. Few, if any, business executives in Europe believe anything that the US business community has to offer. This is based upon experience in that the Americans will say and do anything regardless of the facts. In short, American business cannot be trusted. They talk the talk..but they do not walk the walk.

Since we know that we are

Since we know that we are being lied to-- that means we are living the lie(s).

Neil Postman warned of all

Neil Postman warned of all of this 20-plus years ago, first in "Crazy Talk, Stupid Talk" and then in "Amusing Ourselves to Death" - and few people paid attention. Also, as Postman argued in the latter book, it's not really Orwell's nightmare vision that we see coming to life (and are complicit in); it's Huxley's.

A wonderfully erudite

A wonderfully erudite discussion of an utterly appalling situation. Thank you, Truthout.

This should be required

This should be required reading for every American! An honest critique of what passes for news and discussion in this wonderful country of ours. It does seem almost impossible to listen to the news on TV and hear intelligent discussions - with one exception being the Sunday program "GPS with Fareed Zakaria" on CNN. An hour of intelligent discussion on pertinent topics with experts instead of "opinionators".

Straight from Pres RReagan

Straight from Pres RReagan "10 worst words of the English language: we are from the us government & here to help". So my question is to Republicans, from Senator Boehner--to all--you need to leave the US government because your agenda is so that it does not work & your policies are to prove this out. As we now see.

In any sizable business, the

In any sizable business, the "advertising department" is totally separate and unrelated to the products or services of the business. That's what I see as I observe this phenomenon. Pick a TV ad and check it out, and see what you think.

This is the best thing I've

This is the best thing I've read in long, long while. I hope all the progressive sites pick this up. We desperately need to focus on these ideas before it is too late. Progressives need to focus on the bigger picture rather than the cable circus that goes on day after day. We need to look at what it's doing to all of us. EXCELLENT!

Keen observation by another

Keen observation by another reviewer that out present world resembles more that of Huxley's Brave New World than Orwell's "1984." Indeed we have the different categories of persons described by Huxley, with the vast majority of us, reduced to be ignorant followers and believers of whatever lies we are told. The "unlawful combatants" wouldn't agree probably. Could it be that if some significant segment of the population rebelled in spite of all, our world would become a lot closer to Orwell"s?

Outstanding, Mr.

Outstanding, Mr. Giroux!!! Shout it from the rooftops!

The tragedy is that the very

The tragedy is that the very people who piously asked "What message are we sending our children?" have been sending the message that any lie is OK as long as it accomplishes the pious and patriotic goals the liars set. So, lie by saying you respect life, and then send Americans to slaughter Iraqis. Lie about respecting life and then kill or threaten to kill doctors or politicians whose views you don't like. Lie about respecting life and then applaud the NRA, capital punishment, and inadequate health care to all but the very rich. Yes, indeed, "What messages. . .?"

All this crap about Obama

All this crap about Obama and death panels is merely an extension of what the right did to Clinton and Kerry. And we had a media that went along with the nonsense, giving it a credibility it did not deserve. The basic problem is that we no longer get any real news. All we get is speculation.

Lying is more ingrained in

Lying is more ingrained in this society that the author even begins to imagine.

One of the best articles

One of the best articles ever to appear on Truthout or anywhere else. Deception has always been one of the techniques of life: virus do it, insects do it, mammals do, human beings do it. Like sex, like fight or flight, and like symbiotic cooperation, it is hard wired in. We can see how thoroughly the culture of deception promoted by corporate interests has been absorbed in society by noting how acceptable lying in our personal lives has become. No one would suggest that deception be outlawed in football plays. No one (well not many) would suggest that deception should be allowed in medicine. Deception itself is not the problem. The problem is our failure to consciously examine both our capacity for deception and the appropriateness or inappropriateness of allowing it in any particular instance. We are being asked by current world events to become more than animals. We are being asked and urged to become thoughtful, self-reflective human beings. I believe it was Pogo who said, "We has met the enemy and they is us."

White America has always

White America has always lived in a world of fantasy, illusion and a conceited sense of a pseudo-superiority complex. Because of this illusionist perception of life, any sinister plan to misguide such a feeble nature of conscious existence will find it readily accessible for exploitation. The cancerous exploitative global practices, that have engulfed other nations of the world in the disguise of democracy yet driven by imperialism, capitalism and simple corporate greed, have now turned upon itself.

Another truthist speaks.

Another truthist speaks. How can you write this while supporting a President who, in his first 6 months in office, has repeatedly been caught in lie after lie? Obama has already exceeded Bush in the quantity of lies he has told. What a bunch of tripe.

If there ever was a battle

If there ever was a battle worth winning,it is this one.The foundation of our democratic republic is at risk.It has become so easy to "catapult the propaganda" so effectively and deny the truth so successfully. Maybe we risk sounding stiff and artificial for proclaiming the loss of civility and critical judgment , but these things need to be said. Someone will be listening.This will not be lost.

lies

lies

Visionary psychoanalyst:

Visionary psychoanalyst: Dr.John Weir Perry wrote: " The problems we are facing today in our new style of urban life grow out of an individuality that has become a mere self seeking, and a democracy that has lost the heart of its meaning. In America, especially, individuals live as if in separateness or even isolation. In a competitive system one is out for oneself. The parts once more seem to be functioning without regard for the interests of the whole." Giroux is so correct in this writing which frames the big lie and what it has done to spread ruin and a worsening of the premise of Perry - for until we learn to " Live in the Truth" our nation and its misguided sheep will continue to "Live in the Lie" which gives every individual more latitude for not living in reality and forcing the rest of us to share a demented way of life and accepting anything but the truth.

The notion of ideological

The notion of ideological hegemony seems pertinent here. The Italian philosopher, Antonio Gramsci, defined this as "the permeation throughout society of an entire system of values, attitudes, beliefs and morality that has the effect of supporting the status quo in power relations." (Boggs, C. 1976) The battle to maintain this system of values is what we are witnessing in the U.S. this year. Glen Beck and Rush Limbaugh are merely the current mouthpieces, although they are undoubtedly laughing all the way to the bank.

truthout is one of the few

truthout is one of the few places where intelligent, cogent material, journalism, considered opinion are consistently produced. For that, I am truly grateful. Professor Giroux's articles and books are among the more stimulating and thoughtful, and are much appreciated.

I totally agree that there

I totally agree that there is no connection to truth held up any more. Here in the UK I have felt increasingly over the last decade or so that we are completely surrounded by lies. As I though about this I began to realise that the very system we have actually promotes lies, or at least misinformation, distraction and deceit. It probably always did to a certain extent, but it's utterly beyond the pale now. You see we have a system in the west whereby the only people that ever really tell the truth are those that cannot effect anything. You get a job, and you get two or three promotions, your freedom to actually tell the truth is somewhat diminished. Two more promotions, you really have to be careful about what you say. In Government it's even worse, your freedom to tell the truth has gone before you get through the door. The corporate world, the security world they are all the same, the higher you get the less truth you can speak. They are not necessarily all liars as such, but we have a system that makes them all default liars. Now for some time this system actually worked because most people were actually honest, and were careful only to lie when absolutely necessary. Of course, when you set up an environment that needs people to lie, you are likely to find that real liars are apt to be attracted to this environment. That is exactly what has happened, in every top position of authority we are ruled by liars. Some would still rather not be. Moree don't care. Some are pathological. Asking for truth from this lot is a waste of time, they wouldn't recognise it.

The lack of critical

The lack of critical thinking, advocated by Professor Giroux, is obvious in the health reform debate. How is Obama to succeed in any area, including the war, if the general public cannot reason, cannot see the lies? Isn’t the real question, “How do we raise the level of critical thinking?”

Bush lied about everything,

Bush lied about everything, but told the truth about 9/11? Preposterous! How can anyone possibly believe the official story about the events that led to congress writing a "blank check" for every military adventure and trashing of the constitution that the administration asked for?

In this erudite piece Giroux

In this erudite piece Giroux dares to reference, albeit obliquely, the greatest lie of our times: the "official" story of the 9/11 incident that has given birth to the monstrous usurpation of American government by the cabal of militarists and corporate fascists. "Especially since the horrible events of 9/11, Americans have been encouraged to identify with a militaristic way of life, to suspend their ability to read the word and world critically, to treat corporate and government power in almost religious terms and to view a culture of questioning as something alien and poisonous to American society." As the factual data of 9/11 slowly but inexorably surfaces, Americans have a chance to confront the truth and bring to justice the true perpetrators of this treasonous event. Fear of the truth still holds sway, and time is running out for the American experiment in democracy. Do we have the will, the boldness of spirit, to check the Empire's disastrous course of war in the world? The odds are surely against truth and reason, but then they have always been thus.

THE CHANGING FACE OF

THE CHANGING FACE OF DEMOCRATS and the loss of our Libertarian Roots is the subject of a new book by Clay Barham on the history of the Democratic Party. America’s first major political Party evolved drastically over the past 200 years—from a libertarian party to a Rousseau to Marx-leaning liberal, left-wing party. The Democratic Party’s original ideals encouraged a free market, individual freedom, business interests, opposing overseas expansion, and supporting state’s rights and personal sovereignty. What happened? When and how did their policies begin to change? Why did a strongly patriotic party morph into one that blends communism, mercantilism and socialism? Whether you are Democrat or Republican, this narration is a study of history, fact, and the leadership that altered the Democratic Party. It shows that present day Democratic values do not reflect the true principles on which American society rests. www.claysamerica.com.

This article, right on point

This article, right on point as it is, is, as they say,"preaching to the already converted". Tragically, it will not go much past Truthout's following. The main source of lies - ably pointed out in the article - won't read it, the general (i.e, voting) public will not read it (nor could most realize how pertinent it is even if they did read it), and the saddest part is that the majority would not read through it because it isn't at all like their usual source of information - sound bites! As much as I would like to see this starting a real, effective 'grass roots' movement I have little hope. I will send this article to as many people as I can though. "Hope springs eternal..." but I feel that, as disheartening as it is, the spring is getting very weak.

Bravo! That was the best

Bravo! That was the best thing I've read in a while. Now, how do we tame the beast and bring basic honesty back into both sides of the public discourse? Maybe we can start by resurrecting the Fairness Doctrine.

This essay is true, I see it

This essay is true, I see it all the time, even at the most fundamental level of business. What a sad commentary. They say the truth will set you free, but this kind of truth will not do that, when those who lie instinctively, also own the legislative process in Washington. It seriously makes me wonder if the prophecy of 2012 will come true.

'Man is born free, yet he is

'Man is born free, yet he is everywhere in chains.' – Jean Jacques Rosseau What, still? Why should that be? 'The Truth Shall Make You Free' – John 8:31-36 A society controlled by congenital liars cannot grow and prosper; it remains to be seen whether it can survive.

There will be no rescuing

There will be no rescuing this terminally ill patient. Sad to say, America is DNR. Out of the ashes the Phoenix will rise! Baldwin's "fire next time" is come. After, the new dawn. Even the goodly Giroux's urgent preachifying cannot forestall the coming of the chickens home to roost.

At the next protest rally of

At the next protest rally of any kind that I attend, I will carry a sign with only this URL on it: http://www.truthout.org/092109R?n

I quite liked this

I quite liked this article. It is, unfortunatly, minerva's owl. Marcuse, Horkheimer and Adorno were all criticizing the emptying of concepts ... 60+ years ago. If you want to understand why this is taking place, I encourage all to read these authors (pre-50s). Truth, the indivdual, freedom and all that were bourgeois concepts, liquidated with the advance of capitalism into a giant technocratic apparatus. This is not to say truth can't be rescued, but the social order has to change in step.

Straight, honest,

Straight, honest, insightful, critical....and certainly not confined only to American state of reality. It's a global situation. Democracies have now turned in to huge power tombs of lies, violence and amorous monstrous anti-human machines... It's a most holly and provocative piece. It perturbs and motivates us all to think about all...

One of the worst indictments

One of the worst indictments of our so called democracy is that whichever candidate spends the most on an election wins. Apparently the US public can't be bothered to delve for facts or think for themselves, thus it doesn't matter what is said, only how often and in how many places. Conservatives in particular and in their ideological purity have no respect for facts that get in the way of their glib ideas. To paraphrase Shakespeare, "First thing, let's get rid of all the TVs!"

This might be interesting

This might be interesting were it not so ridiculously partisan. Yes, we know, right-wing is Satan, left-wing is God. Please, try to be a bit objective about the lieing and murderous left-wingers. Does everything have to be partisan? You are as much contributing to what you are complaining about, as the people about whom you complain. Grow up! Stop pretending the left-wing is rational and smart whereas right wing is evil and corrupt. The entire government is evil and corrupt, both left- and right-wing, and so long as you pretend pulling some stupid lever in a controlled election will make a difference, you are living with your sand firmly planted in a hole between your cheeks.

Thank you for such an

Thank you for such an enlightening and well-written essay. This helps me understand how and why people believe "fair and balanced" journalism can come from the same news organization who, in 2003, convinced a state court that "the First Amendment gives broadcasters a right to lie or deliberately distort the news on the public airwaves". Almost everything about that case troubles me, but in the context of your article, I realize the court's decision isn't really the issue - it's one more sign of a deeper, more insidious problem.

The Truth was almost always

The Truth was almost always the exact opposite of the Mr. Bush's public statements. He demonstrated an uncanny ability to make earnest claims of fact which remain diametrically opposed to Truth.

Mandates that enrich global

Mandates that enrich global corporations by subsidizing harm are protected by congresspersons with ferocious bullying that will be difficult to undo. Labeling is immaterial to the harm and impoverishment they cause in districts least able to defend themselves. They hire out-of-state or out-of-country Piled Higher and Deepers to get date they order. Some of these burrowed-in double-speakers were planted during the Clinton administration. Congressional protectors grant waivers and variances from projects that would burden taxpayers in their own districts. Beware the words infrastructure and safety. Consolidators cover their spores with words like these to clobber local business and to take their property. Look at the debt service for water in your locality if you need to mobilize to protect yourself from global conglomerates. Testing near point of use is a good way to protect water. That is not the direction the EPA wants to force, and it is downright scary. The Portland media seems only to care about beer. What physicians say must seem boring to them. D.C. reps are afraid of congressional leadership, and seem largely unwilling to cross them no matter what it means for the well being of the people they are supposed to represent. I can get more information on a specific case if there is interest.

Thank you for your insights

Thank you for your insights and charges. You are right to call out Mr.Potter and his public minions who promote through lies and the sport of it all while the George Baileys of this world, who still exist, are trying to engage in helping others. But it can't be distilled as all "over there", and I thank you for pointing out a few instances across the board. We must squarely face our own complicity and pundit propensity, day by day, so that we are free to articulate and confront in such a fashion. Still this has left me begging for relief and redemption amid feelings of impotence in such a climate as we are living. How shall love that is truth seeking and restorative triumph over the dogmatic pride that fabricates and distorts, in veiled but increasingly transparent calls to harm if need be, to preserve its own power and security? What will happen to us as a nation? It always leads me back to the heart and demands of faith and gentle otherness. Still, calling all angels -- Clarence, we need you!

Those interested might care

Those interested might care to read Justice Learned Hand's 'The Spirit of Liberty". Congratulations Prof. Giroux!

Another truthist is living

Another truthist is living in anything-but-Obama land. More lies that George and the big Dick? I don't think so. If the (FINALLY - DULY ELECTED ) President has not fulfilled the promises he made after six monoths in office, maybe Another Truthist should examine the lies and interferences with the democratic process being used by the Repugnicans. They want to make Obama fail because they don't like being out of POWER. They are sick and evil.

This is not a party issue.

This is not a party issue. You have to have two parties for that. In order for there to be two parties you have to have two different policies. You must realize that there is only one party. It is all made up to look like a two party system so you think you have a choice, that 'change' will happen, man lives on hope and this gives it to them. The fact is there is only one policy. If you only went back as far as Regan and looked at policies you will see that the dots are connected and continue so only by the change of the guards. Don't look at parties when you look, you'll be able to see it then. They always tout CHANGE and blame the other party as they know the working man needs to think there will be change and believe that justice will prevail. It keeps it all going. Orwell didn't dream up the picture for '1984' when he wrote it in 1948. He was informed that 'change' was being manuvered in four areas, education, religion, science, and politics. Education has been dumbed down, religion is being used to pit man against man, science is distorted to meet whose ever needs, and politics has become a way to carry out all the lies and put man in bondage. We are living in a matrix....make no bones of that.

"America’s first major

"America’s first major political Party evolved drastically over the past 200 years—from a libertarian party to a Rousseau to Marx-leaning liberal, left-wing party." The Dems are a Marx-leaning liberal, left-wing party? What a bunch of bullcrap! Only a complete wingnut can come up with a claim this ridiculous ...