Archive for August 26th, 2003


The will to ignorance

The will to ignorance


From Left Business Observer (LBO), a leftie newsletter, comes a fascinating interview with Slovenian cultural theorist Slavoj Zizek.


The common leftie viewpoint is - we just need to tell people the facts. Because once people learn the truth they will come around to our views. Zizek says no - people, for the most part, actively do NOT want to know what’s going on.



There’s a active refusal to know. If you ask an average citizen  with enough of their own worries they’d say, “Don’t even tell me this. We pay taxes so the government can do all the dirty things that I don’t want to know about”
 
The key factor is not that people are being duped - there’s an active will not to know.


I’m not saying this is an eternal fact. I’m just describing how specifically today’s ideology works, through a direct appeal to the will of ignorance.


So what do we do?



The ruling system of ideology created such high democratic expectations that it can not live up to them. Gradually it will have to violate them.


My worry is not the worry of many leftist friends, like, “Why are you dreaming about revolutions - the system will just go on.” No - I am almost tempted to say unfortunately, because unstable pre-revolutionary situations are not a holiday of history. They can be very unpleasant. But they will compel us to invent new political forms. In a couple of years we will literally be forced to reinvent new ways.


LBO concludes with



A will to ignorance suggests a troubled conscience: if our government kills and improverishes people to maintain a global hierarchy, Americans don’t want to hear about it because it hurts.


It’s not just a matter of getting the facts out there. The will to ignorance is too tenacious for that, and there’s no master key in existence that will unlock it. But the first step in devising such a key is to admit one is needed. Facts alone won’t do the trick.


LBO, which deals primarily with financial matters from a leftist perspective, is published by Doug Henwood, author of several books and host of a radio show on Pacifica outlet WBAI in NYC. You can listen to the interview online. If you want to read the interview, then you gotta subscribe! $22 a year and well worth it.

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Psst, wanna get a deal…

Psst, wanna get a deal on software?


Educational versions of software sell at greatly reduced prices. They are exactly the same as the commercial versions! You’re supposed to be a student to qualify for buying them, however gray market educational versions of software are freely available at many computer shows, no questions asked.


The savings can be major. For example, at a recent L.A. computer show the educational version of a popular high end program went for $250. The full commercial version goes for $900 and the upgrade is $450.


Educational software is available in full version only, with no upgrade version. This is because the price is already is so low it’s pointless to also have an upgrade version.

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Landslide Lyndon and hardball Texas…

Landslide Lyndon and hardball Texas politics


They do know how to play hardball politics in Texas. Always have. Their current standoff, with the Republican governor howling for the blood of Democratic legislators  (The Dems currently are holed up in New Mexico so a vote the Repubs want can’t happen)  who are cackling in laughter at the Gov - is yet another shining star in the grand Texas tradition of politics.


Witness how LBJ became a Senator…



In 1948, Texas Governor Coke Stevenson ran for a U.S. Senate seat against Texas Congressman Lyndon Baines Johnson:


Early indications were that Congressman Johnson had lost. Six days later, however, Precinct 13 in the border town of Alice, Texas, showed a very interesting result. Exactly 203 people had voted at the last minute — in the order they were listed on the tax rolls — and 202 of them had voted for Johnson. (Wow, this is almost as miraculous as Chicago, where 200 year old people voted regularly…)


While Stevenson protested, Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black upheld the result, and Johnson squeaked by with an 87-vote victory. For this feat, columnist Drew Pearson gave Johnson the sobriquet Landslide Lyndon


It was not until July 30, 1977, that Luis Salas, the election judge in Alice, admitted that he and southern Texas political boss George Parr (who had killed himself in 1975) had rigged the election.

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Arianna’s ad

Arianna’s ad


Arianna Huffington is raising $500,000 to pay for airing her new television ad, “Think Outside The Box”. You can watch the ad online.

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Quote of the Day: Arnold…

Quote of the Day: Arnold Schwarzenneger


From the wondrous WeLoveArnold.com 



Arnold On Multi-Culturalism


“It doesn’t matter if you are a Democrat or Republican, if you’re young or old, what the racial thing is, nothing matters to me.”


“After watching mulattas shake it, I can totally understand why Brazil is devoted to my favorite body part, the ass.”

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