Saturday, October 21, 2006

Cultural despair, the "poisoning" of Habeas Corpus -- and why Mike Sodrel should be sent home.

Recently perusing the New York Times Sunday Book Review, I came across Can It Happen Here?, by Tom Reiss (October 8, 2006).

It is a review of “Five Germanys I Have Known,” a memoir by historian Fritz Stern, and while they’re no substitute for the original piece, here are brief excerpts:

In November 2005, Fritz Stern received an award for his life’s work on Germans, Jews and the roots of National Socialism, presented to him by Joschka Fischer, then the German foreign minister. With a frankness that startled some in the audience, Stern, an emeritus professor of European history at Columbia University, peppered his acceptance speech with the similarities he saw between the path taken by Germany in the years leading up to Hitler and the path being taken by the United States today …

… Stern was of course not suggesting an equivalence between President Bush and Hitler but rather making a more subtle critique, extending his idea that contemporary American politics exhibited “something like the strident militancy and political ineptitude of the Kaiser’s pre-1914 imperial Germany.”

… the value of Stern’s work is precisely that it has refused to keep Nazism safely on the other side of a historical and geographic chasm. His first book, “The Politics of Cultural Despair” (1961), is one of the durable masterpieces of 20th-century history because it seems to locate the roots of a peculiarly modern malaise. As he explained in a later edition of the work, “I attempted to show the importance of this new type of cultural malcontent, and to show how he facilitated the intrusion into politics of essentially unpolitical grievances.”

Rather than looking for obvious parallels among contemporary dictators who ape the style of the Nazis, Stern looks for the nihilistic undercurrents in our own educated, commercial societies. Hunger and poverty have little to do with the politics of cultural despair. It thrives especially well at moments of plenty and prosperity, when people have enough social advantages to dwell on their inner alienations and resentments.

I confess to not having read Stern’s original work on cultural despair, but I hope to do so soon. It meshes with something that has nagged me for years, namely, why is it that the well-heeled denizens of the exurb seem increasingly to turn toward right-wing political radicalism and the strident advocacy of an American evangelical theocracy that mirrors that of the Muslim variety they claim to abhor?

A point worth pondering, at least.

Here is a link and another excerpt, this time to an article written by Stern (October 10, 2005):

A Fundamental History Lesson: The rise of National Socialism proved politics and religion don’t mix.

My hope is for a renewal on still firmer grounds of a trans-Atlantic community of liberal democracies. Every democracy needs a liberal fundament, a Bill of Rights enshrined in law and spirit, for this alone gives democracy the chance for self-correction and reform. Without it, the survival of democracy is at risk. Every genuine conservative knows this.

In turn, this brings me to Keith Olbermann’s recent chilling but masterful commentary, Beginning of the end of America:

For, on this first full day that the Military Commissions Act is in force, we now face what our ancestors faced, at other times of exaggerated crisis and melodramatic fear-mongering: A government more dangerous to our liberty, than is the enemy it claims to protect us from.

My congressman, Mike Sodrel, a rubber stamp for the regime, voted for this legislation.

That’s merely the most persuasive reason (of many) to vote against him on November 7.

What remains unclear is who to vote for. We’ll discuss that question on Monday.

2 comments:

John Manzo said...

Here are, to me, some of the pressing issues of the upcoming election.

Iraq is in a civil war. They are killing our soldiers and they are killing each other at a more rapid pace than ever before. George H. W. Bush did not venture in there after the first Gulf War because he knew this would happen if Saddam was removed.

Afganistan is deteriorating. The Taliban are increasing in strength and our troops are maxed out.

Our troops have been amazing and many of them have been there to way too long. Also, a considerable number of troops are National Guardsmen. Our military is doing an amazing job but they are getting maxed out and being stretched out too far.

The politicans are stating that the economy is growing and the stock market is doing well and people are growing more confident with stocks, etc. The recent unemployment figures are good. The problem is that the poverty line is increasing rapidly---not because people aren't employed, but they are employed in jobs that do not pay enough. We have a growing class of working poor. Our Soup Kitchen at church used to serve beween 30 and 40 people every week. That figure is now between 70 and 80. Projections say it will double, again, in the next year. Most of the people who come are employed...also we have an increasing number of families with children.

The recent Habeas Corpus decision is tragic.

Robyn Blumner put it well:

"t happened on Sept. 29 at 2:47 p.m. That was the seismic minute that Congress passed the Military Commissions Act and formally granted President Bush royal powers he had been unilaterally arrogating. The historic action may one day be remembered as the moment the great American experiment in liberty ended. It was a good run."

(Her entire article can be found here: http://www.sptimes.com/2006/10/08/Columns/We_Americans_really_o.shtml

In 1776 we were a British colony and England, at that time, had the best judicial system in the world. We attempted to improve it. Habeas Corpus was and is a checkpoint to assure that innocent people are not jailed unjustly.

In my mind, on the terrorists did not win on September 11th, 2001, they truly one on September 29, 2006. We are giving up what has made us a great nation.

These are huge issues.

Mike Sodrel is running on gay marriage, abortion, and flag burning.

What else can I say.

The New Albanian said...

Little else need be said. Thanks.