The Politics of Cultural Despair

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The Politics of Cultural Despair

Chris Hedges

It is despair that is killing us. It fosters what the Roger Lancaster calls 
“poisoned solidarity,” the intoxicat...
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In the end, the election was about despair. Despair over futures that 
evaporated with deindustrialization. Despair over the loss of 30 million jobs 
in mass layoffs. Despair over austerity programs and the funneling of wealth 
upwards into the hands of rapacious oligarchs. Despair over a liberal class 
that refuses to acknowledge the suffering it orchestrated under neoliberalism 
or embrace New Deal type programs that will ameliorate this suffering. Despair 
over the futile, endless wars, as well as the genocide in Gaza, where generals 
and politicians are never held accountable. Despair over a democratic system 
that has been seized by corporate and oligarchic power. 

This despair has been played out on the bodies of the disenfranchised through 
opioid and alcoholism addictions, gambling, mass shootings, suicides — 
especially among middle-aged white males — morbid obesity and the investment of 
our emotional and intellectual life in tawdry spectacles and the allure of 
magical thinking, from the absurd promises of the Christian right to the 
Oprah-like belief that reality is never an impediment to our desires. These are 
the pathologies of a deeply diseased culture, what Friedrich Nietzsche calls an 
aggressive despiritualized nihilism.

Donald Trump is a symptom of our diseased society. He is not its cause. He is 
what is vomited up out of decay. He expresses a childish yearning to be an 
omnipotent god. This yearning resonates with Americans who feel they have been 
treated like human refuse. But the impossibility of being a god, as Ernest 
Becker writes, leads to its dark alternative -- destroying like a god. This 
self-immolation is what comes next. 

Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party, along with the establishment wing of 
the Republican Party, which allied itself with Harris, live in their own 
non-reality-based belief system. Harris, who was anointed by party elites and 
never received a single primary vote, proudly trumpeted her endorsement by Dick 
Cheney, a politician who left office with a 13 percent approval rating. The 
smug, self-righteous “moral” crusade against Trump stokes the national reality 
television show that has replaced journalism and politics. It reduces a social, 
economic and political crisis to the personality of Trump. It refuses to 
confront and name the corporate forces responsible for our failed democracy. It 
allows Democratic politicians to blithely ignore their base -  77 percent of 
Democrats and 62 percent of independents support an arms embargo against 
Israel. The open collusion with corporate oppression and refusal to heed the 
desires and needs of the electorate neuters the press and Trump  critics. These 
corporate puppets stand for nothing, other than their own advancement. The lies 
they tell to working men and women, especially with programs such as the North 
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), do far more damage than any of the lies 
uttered by Trump.

Oswald Spengler in “The Decline of the West” predicted that, as Western 
democracies calcified and died, a class of “monied thugs,” people such as 
Trump, would replace the traditional political elites. Democracy would become a 
sham. Hatred would be fostered and fed to the masses to encourage them to tear 
themselves apart.

The American dream has become an American nightmare.

The social bonds, including jobs that gave working Americans a sense of purpose 
and stability, that gave them meaning and hope, have been sundered. The 
stagnation of tens of millions of lives, the realization that it will not be 
better for their children, the predatory nature of our institutions, including 
education, health care and prisons, have engendered, along with despair, 
feelings of powerlessness and humiliation. It has bred loneliness, frustration, 
anger and a sense of worthlessness.

“When life is not worth living, everything becomes a pretext for ridding 
ourselves of it … ,” Émile Durkheim wrote. “There is a collective mood, as 
there is an individual mood, that inclines nations to sadness. … For 
individuals are too closely involved in the life of society for it to be sick 
without their being affected. Its suffering inevitably becomes theirs.”

Decayed societies, where a population is stripped of political, social and 
economic power, instinctively reach out for cult leaders. I watched this during 
the breakup of the former Yugoslavia. The cult leader promises a return to a 
mythical golden age and vows, as Trump does, to crush the forces embodied in 
demonized groups and individuals that are blamed for their misery. The more 
outrageous cult leaders become, the more cult leaders flout law and social 
conventions, the more they gain in popularity. Cult leaders are immune to the 
norms of established society. This is their appeal. Cult leaders seek total 
power. Those who follow them grant them this power in the desperate hope that 
the cult leaders will save them.

All cults are personality cults. Cult leaders are narcissists. They demand 
obsequious fawning and total obedience. They prize loyalty above competence. 
They wield absolute control. They do not tolerate criticism. They are deeply 
insecure, a trait they attempt to cover up with bombastic grandiosity. They are 
amoral and emotionally and physically abusive. They see those around them as 
objects to be manipulated for their own empowerment, enjoyment and often 
sadistic entertainment. All those outside the cult are branded as forces of 
evil, prompting an epic battle whose natural expression is violence.

We will not convince those who have surrendered their agency to a cult leader 
and embraced magical thinking through rational argument. We will not coerce 
them into submission. We will not find salvation for them or ourselves by 
supporting the Democratic Party. Whole segments of American society are now 
bent on self-immolation. They despise this world and what it has done to them. 
Their personal and political behavior is willfully suicidal. They seek to 
destroy, even if destruction leads to violence and death. They are no longer 
sustained by the comforting illusion of human progress, losing the only 
antidote to nihilism.

Pope John Paul II in 1981 issued an encyclical titled “Laborem exercens,” or 
“Through Work.” He attacked the idea, fundamental to capitalism, that work was 
merely an exchange of money for labor. Work, he wrote, should not be reduced to 
the commodification of human beings through wages. Workers were not impersonal 
instruments to be manipulated like inanimate objects to increase profit. Work 
was essential to human dignity and self-fulfillment. It gave us a sense of 
empowerment and identity. It allowed us to build a relationship with society in 
which we could feel we contributed to social harmony and social cohesion, a 
relationship in which we had purpose.


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Laborem Exercens (14 September 1981) | John Paul II

Encyclical Letter Laborem Exercens (14 September 1981)
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The pope castigated unemployment, underemployment, inadequate wages, automation 
and a lack of job security as violations of human dignity. These conditions, he 
wrote, were forces that negated self-esteem, personal satisfaction, 
responsibility and creativity. The exaltation of the machine, he warned, 
reduced human beings to the status of slaves. He called for full employment, a 
minimum wage large enough to support a family, the right of a parent to stay 
home with children, and jobs and a living wage for the disabled. He advocated, 
in order to sustain strong families, universal health insurance, pensions, 
accident insurance and work schedules that permitted free time and vacations. 
He wrote that all workers should have the right to form unions with the ability 
to strike.
We must invest our energy into organizing mass movements to overthrow the 
corporate state through sustained acts of mass civil disobedience. This 
includes the most powerful weapon we possess – the strike. By turning our ire 
on the corporate state, we name the true sources of power and abuse. We expose 
the absurdity of blaming our demise on demonized groups such as undocumented 
workers, Muslims or Blacks. We give people an alternative to a 
corporate-indentured Democratic Party that cannot be rehabilitated. We make 
possible the restoration of an open society, one that serves the common good 
rather than corporate profit. We must demand nothing less than full employment, 
guaranteed minimum incomes, universal health insurance, free education at all 
levels, robust protection of the natural world and an end to militarism and 
imperialism. We must create the possibility for a life of dignity, purpose and 
self-esteem. If we do not, it will ensure a Christianized fascism and 
ultimately, with the accelerating ecocide, our obliteration.
Chris Hedges


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