Verdejost on Sun, 13 Feb 2000 15:59:26 EST |
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Re: AW: Syndicate: Re: easy labels and things |
Following up Saman and Peter: Yes, the international trend is selling off public/socialist properties, and for (at least evidenced in Italy and other places I have lived in) there is a good case to be mounted for inefficiency, modes of corruption, etc. in such publicly owned and operated systems. The former Soviet Union and its satellites provide further rather daming evidence. (There is also a very evident argument for the selling off going to chums of the new folks in power; or in the US, my country, certain businesses related to armaments, oil, agriculture, etc. being tacitly in bed with the govt. and effectively "socialist" in the strident anti-socialist US of A). OK, so that's all true, at least in my book. Canada is kind of following the historical trend, in general and in detail: the selloffs happen because the inefficiencies were there, and the selloffs go to cronies of the new right in power because, well that's the way the world works. Alas. Austria is indeed the whipping boy of the moment, making dubious governments throughout europe (and elsewhere) pleased to take easy moralistic stances, while wallowing in their own highly questionable circumstances (need we point to the tip of the Kohl iceberg in righteous Germany? To the somewhat long known corruption, but getting more and more visible of Mitterand's France? Of still eyes deep in Mani Puliti realities of Italy? Spain??? Switzerland????? and so on and on, nevermind smaller fry easy to kcik around like Belgium?). Let's face it, the whole damned place is awash in corruption of all sorts. Some of this is the byproduct of E vs W now dead politics (at least that's the excuse the culpable raise). But basically it is the product of human normalcy using institutionalised masks to hide itself. The most currently obvious one is the "corporate veil" by which most nation states bequeth a kind of innocence to those who operate corporations: a person is not the corporation and is not accountable as a person (sound familiar: I was following orders...), and when the institution the person is corporately attached to is found, oh, say poisoning others, the persons who are the corporation are mystically exempt from accountability. Sound familiar? I was following orders. The new orders come from corporatised globalized institutions which write the rules to exempt themselves from accountability. Sound familiar?? See earlier post re the real problems. These people in established political systems are not interested in, and most often not even aware (except sometimes in negative senses) of what the problems are, and most certainly they are not interested in solving them outside narrow focussed mind-sets. (I.e., if environmental pressures make costs in X prohibitive they "solve" the problem by moving to some desperate place in which toxicity is acceptable in exchange for "money" "jobs" etc.: Bophal, or I suspect the current cyanide blue Danube....). More politics along traditional lines - including simple left/right, right/wrong, polarized simplicities will merely beget more of the same. On a supposedly "radical" (it means linguistically "to go to the roots") list like this one would like to see something that addressed the more complex realities than jumping in to damn the Austrians because they elected a populist demagogue who tapped their anxieties, just like LePen does in France, Bossi does in N Italy and others do elsewhere. Austria is indeed a small provincial place, like Belgium, and while it is indeed awash in its own corruptions (see earlier post), the scale and reality is nowhere near what has happened in, oh, Italy, Germany, France (how about America?) etc. But since Haider is so crude it is easy to pile on and for others to pretend they are squeeky clean. Example: the Oscar's AMERICAN Academy of Motion Pictures (rather disproportionately composed of Jewish people as the film industry is) without bothering to do something like look at it, banned the Austrian film up for Best Foregin Film. As it happens the film is (I am told, haven't seen it) a leftish look at immigrant problems in Austria. Ah, but being super righteous, the ever so "liberal" Academy kicked it out without a glance, it obviously being the product of neo-Nazi Austrians. Now of course if anyone were to - as I just did - say something like that Hwd has a disproportionate number of X, one will promptly be accused of anti-semitism (like Brando was), and if one took another step and noted that the politics expressed, like the Academy dismissal without a look of a film from a left perspective about immigrant problems in Austia, were a bit tilted in an odd way, then one would get really creamed for saying there seemed to be a bias. Ah, but in the current climate of fashionable political correctness, very aging epithet labelling (NAZI, fascist, commie/red, etc.) there are certain things one can say and others one cannot say, at least not without a stiff price. Most of those whom I am familiar with who have a ready easy label to toss on someone else usually fit the description all too well themselves: saying someone is negative label XY or Z is a handy way to attempt to disregard what that someone might be saying (however distasteful), and constitutes a mode of would-be censorship. Recently I read a little newspaper item in which Haider, commenting on the hysteria with which he was greeted, rather succinctly and clearly articulated that he, and his popularity, were based on particularly Austrian circumstances with which it was evident the outside complainers were not exactly familiar. Like most politicians he gots some facts/figures a bit off in his favor (he said Austria had the highest percentage of immigrants in Europe, but Switzerland - another hotbed of current right wingism - and Belgium are a bit ahead, so said the paper). As written earlier, Austria is just leading the way on what will become (as if it isn't already) a leading issue in European politics - immigration: how to control it, contain it, something it. It won't likely be addressed in a rational manner, like discussing the realities of contemporary technology, economics, etc., but probably in more elemental "tribal" terms (my culture is better than your culture, skin color, etc.) That's how real humans usually act. And react. Alas. None of the above excuses the corruption and nature of Austrian "leftists" who have ruled their particular roost for some decades and deserve to be kicked out. Too bad the kicking has to come from a rightwinger like Haider. Would have been much nicer if the left had been able to clean its own nest, but people being people, it filled with greedy short-sighted people who made a mess of their own reality (and got wealthy some of them, along the way). Next door Italy with recently dead crumby two-bit crook Craxi (socialist!), or France with Mitterand (socialist!), Spain etc., all are on very thin ice to comment on Haider and Austria. They were all utterly corrupt, as is the not long ago wonderful world of Kohl's Germany.... I am philosophically an anarchist, so none of this is new news to me. Power corrupts, etc.... ciao jon roma ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress