Friday, November 9, 2012

The Speech Obama Should Give After We Walk Off the Fiscal Cliff

"Good evening my fellow Americans,

I regret to inform you tonight that, despite my best efforts to lead Congress in the right direction, the Republicans have resisted all of my efforts to reach an agreement on the debt ceiling. They have remained obstinate, and true to their pledge to Grover Norquist not to agree to any deal that raises taxes on those in the highest income brackets, even when doing so imperils our great nation and its ability to recover from our current economic crisis. Once again, my opponents in Congress have abused serious issues for political gain, and have been indifferent to the responsibility of governance and to the needs of the people they serve.

As a consequence of our continued failure to reach an acceptable agreement, the government will cut the budget by $110 billion, split evenly between social programs and defense spending. The sequestration would take effect every year for the next 9 years, and it affects Medicare benefits, as well as payroll taxes and unemployment benefits.

Let it be known that I have done everything I could have to try to reach an agreement on the debt ceiling short of conceding more ground by agreeing to a deal that would once again pass the responsibility of actually solving this problem to future generations. I have been reelected because I believe in what I was sent here to do, both by the people and for the people, and so long as I hold this esteemed office, I will be held responsible for and to the people. I will not allow the federal budget to be balanced on the backs of middle- and lower-income Americans just because those at the top don't want to pay a little more.

The Republicans chose to play dangerous games for the sake of ideological purity, and the end result serves no one, not even those to whom they are responsible. Their own supporters urged them to concede and accept my deal, but they pressed on, as a matter of blind principle, and are thus ultimately responsible for the budget cuts that will take effect immediately, and begin to affect you later this year.

They will try to tell you that I should have accepted their deal to avoid this calamity, but the truth is that you have invested in me to exercise your will, by virtue of both the popular vote and electoral vote. I have continued to stress a fairer tax code, and you showed that agreed with me, and thus I have exercised the leverage bestowed upon me. I vowed to do what I believed is right for this country, and I believe I have.

The real culprit is an ultimately callous political attitude exemplified by a certain member of the Senate who vowed to ensure that I had only a single term. During the past four years, despite many attempts by myself and my allies in Congress to alleviate the effects of the recession, very little progress was made because of this callous political nihilism which was only concerned with my defeat, and not with doing anything to help ordinary Americans. This is the attitude that you so roundly rejected on November 6th, 2012, and this is why I chose to hold fast against such intractable opposition.

In the coming months, we will continue to face major challenges, some perhaps even greater than this one, and I promise to continue to reach out to Republicans in Congress to help solve these issues. As your President, as the person duly elected by popular mandate to the highest office, I merely ask that you remember what I have said today; that you remember how the people you elected to office have thought of you as we navigated through this crisis, and by doing so, may you hope to one day see what Good Governance should mean.

Good night, and God Bless America."

--President Barack Obama*

Friday, October 26, 2012

Atheism & Sexism

There has been an issue in the atheism community, and it is becoming a greater and greater problem. I had heard about it before, but another blog post by a famous female personality who frequents atheist conventions that I read today framed the issue starkly. Rebecca Watson, writing in Slate Magazine, presented her experiences at these conventions, in which fellow atheists are sexually harassing female convention-goers and presenters. She writes,

I felt we were doing important work: making a better, more rational world and protecting people from being taken advantage of. At conventions, skeptic speakers and the audience were mostly male, but I figured that was something we could balance out with a bit of hard work and good PR.
Then women started telling me stories about sexism at skeptic events, experiences that made them uncomfortable enough to never return. At first, I wasn’t able to fully understand their feelings as I had never had a problem existing in male-dominated spaces. But after a few years of blogging, podcasting, and speaking at skeptics’ conferences, I began to get emails from strangers who detailed their sexual fantasies about me. I was occasionally grabbed and groped without consent at events. And then I made the grave mistake of responding to a fellow skeptic’s YouTube video in which he stated that male circumcision was just as harmful as female genital mutilation (FGM). I replied to say that while I personally am opposed to any non-medical genital mutilation, FGM is often much, much more damaging than male circumcision.
The response from male atheists was overwhelming. This is one example:
“honestly, and i mean HONESTLY.. you deserve to be raped and tortured and killed. swear id laugh if i could”
I started checking out the social media profiles of the people sending me these messages, and learned that they were often adults who were active in the skeptic and atheist communities. They were reading the same blogs as I was and attending the same events. These were “my people,” and they were the worst1.


Richard Dawkins mockingly complained in a sarcastic letter that "Muslima's" situation wasn't nearly as bad as what women were going through in the skeptic/atheist community, making light of the fact that women in Muslim countries have it far worse and women in the US and elsewhere who go to these conventions shouldn't complain about sexual harassment or assault2.

This stops now. The atheists, I would like to think (though now I might be dead wrong), present a much better alternative to the iron heel of religious dogma. To this end, the mistreatment of women in various religions is a frequent and extremely effective point of attack. However, we may lose the right to use this argument because if this misogynist strain is allowed to fester--there is little to currently combat it in the movement--we cannot say that we treat women any better than the dirty old men in fancy robes, above and beyond the fact that this treatment of women is objectively wrong.

If we are not feminists, if the plight of women even at our own conventions fails to move us, then what right do we have to even attempt to contest the prevailing religious power structure? We are essentially hypocrites: We say that we want a better future, we believe that what we stand for will improve the lives of all mankind, and this has to include the historically most oppressed demographic in all cultures--women.

Tell me, please: If we cannot say that we are able to provide a tangible improvement in the lives of women, then what, I ask you, have we accomplished? What makes us immediately different from the Catholic Church, or the Southern Baptist Convention, if women are still denied a voice and sexualized without their consent; are victimized without recourse?

We would have to admit, then, that it would be possible for Todd Akin to be an atheist. We would have to admit that everything we hate about the religious power structure, and everything contained within it is still possible under our ideology. We would have to admit that we are devoid of positive content, that we have no real reason to exist.

This is where atheism dies as a movement, as an asymmetrical ideology capable of offering a meaningful alternative to religious control; this is where atheism becomes that which it hates.

1) http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2012/10/sexism_in_the_skeptic_community_i_spoke_out_then_came_the_rape_threats.html

2) Ibid

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Rape in American Society

Before I begin, I should state that I am a man. This fact may, at first glance, bring upon questions of why a man should feel so compelled to write about a topic that belongs primarily--if not solely--to women.

I feel compelled to write this precisely because I stand in solidarity with the women so affected by our cultural obsession and manipulation of rape; because I believe that the topic of rape belongs to women, and political decisions about what constitutes rape and how it should be handled both subjectively by the victim and under the law should be made only by women.

The very real problem of Todd Akin is not necessarily that used the term "legitimate rape", but that he even admitted through his apology that he is absolutely alienated from what rape actually means. He will never be able to either understand nor empathize with a rape victim. Todd Akin is merely a symptom of a systemic, fundamentally ideological problem.

Todd Akin merely said more than he should have. The reason the GOP is so eager to kick him out of the race is because his choice of words is an expression of their ideology bereft of all its usual flowery language, language employed to disguise what is at bottom an ultimately misogynistic worldview that mirrors that which they currently combat overseas; the only contrast lies in their subtlety and the banner under which they march. This language, in most contexts, speaks to fundamentally nebulous values held only by the most desperate, and, when properly examined, tramples upon more concrete, individualistic values which we rely upon every day.

This is why Todd Akin's comments--and the GOP ideology as a whole--is so terrifying: Squeezing legal definitions of rape absolutely violates any possible notion of personal autonomy, and there is absolutely no way for anyone whose right to personal autonomy is guaranteed both culturally and legally to ever empathize with someone who is not guaranteed the same protections. It would be nothing short of a sexual apartheid, similar to Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, or Iran, in which women are treated as third-class citizens, and are violated with impunity.

The whole enterprise, given what they say to anyone who is fortunate enough to have white skin, a penis, and an annual income of over $300,000 dollars is sickeningly ironic: They parade around as if the individual is a Randian god, while telling everyone else to lick the soles of their shoes. More rights for them, and the rest of us can wallow in abject poverty, constantly terrified of being violated at a whim.

But there is a reason why an entire political party has centered its platform around The Handmaid's Tale: Our culture is obsessed with it because, while women in all other areas of life are making enormous progress, they are still viewed as exploitable sexual objects. Effort is being exerted on a constant basis to disenfranchise them and remove their ability to seek legal reprisal, while at the same time punishing them for what happens to them (removing reproductive health options such as abortion and thus replacing sterilized medical instruments and hospital rooms for coat hangers on the kitchen floor).

Reddit is an incredibly popular site on which users can submit, comment, and vote on content, either generated by other users or pulled from elsewhere on the Internet. I must here disclose that I am a Redditor, a Reddit user. Reddit has a rape problem. No, that's wrong. It has a problem interacting with anyone who is not a white male, often objectifying them for ridicule. However, nowhere is this problem so bad than on the subjects of rape, feminism, and/or women generally. There are always cases of women in r/AskReddit--where users solicit questions or advice from other users--describing what might be called possible rape scenarios (in which the Original Poster is not quite sure if she/someone s/he knows had been raped under ambiguous circumstances) and being ridiculed for posting, justifying the actions of, or sympathizing with the offending male(s), or even going so far as to harass the OP directly. A psychologist actually had to post a topic warning against an extremely popular "Ask a Rapist" thread, in which he theorized that rapists would be triggered to commit rape by reading the experiences of other rapists1.

Reddit is one of the most popular sites on the entire Internet. These people are real. Granted, who they are in real life may differ from who they are under an alias behind a computer screen, but these behaviors and attitudes seep into the real world, and are continually reinforced by a society and legal structure which places so little value upon the autonomy of an entire class of people. Rapists know that they will probably get away with it, and the fact that so few rapes are reported--much less successfully reported (in that legal action is taken on behalf of the victim which leads to conviction)--all but subjectively justifies their actions. There is nothing I can possibly say that would do justice to how incredibly dangerous this attitude is.

On a personal level, no one who exists under this system can ever authentically say they are happy with who they have, because they have no idea what it means to earn the consent of another. The power relations underlying this not-so-subtle sexual apartheid mars any claim to love because the real freedom to choose does not exist: There is only the oppressed and the oppressor. Anywhere sexual inequality exists, whether culturally and/or legally, love cannot exist. Anyone who seeks to truly love must eradicate any notion of sexual inequality, of the supposed right to violate, and respect his or her partner as an equal, as a human being worthy of the same rights s/he enjoys.

1) http://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/xf5c2/reddit_are_you_aware_how_dangerous_the_askarapist/

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Personal Experiences of Unemployment

I've gone quiet for the past few months, for a variety of reasons. I've placed a lot of focus on my job search, and I am feeling a little apathetic about the current political situation, but apathetic isn't quite the right word--I still care, but the arguments never change. We are watching a soap opera in which I could stop watching for a given length of time, and come back only to find that the same things are still happening. We only get ever more mired into these stupid debates (Issa's hearing on contraception, for example) with every single half-step toward progress. If something good happens, we fight endlessly over it and break something else. It's World War 1 all over again: we are gassing each other over a couple hundred feet at a time and we have constructed vast networks of ideological trenches in which we encapsulate our inconsistencies. Nobody wins.

Mitt Romney is not even on my radar: He is irrelevant. Even Republicans admit the focus is negative: They are voting against Obama, rather than for Romney; he in himself doesn't mean much to them, either.

Last week, the Affordable Care Act was upheld by the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision, with Justice Roberts carrying the swing vote for the majority. I haven't had time to read up on his reasoning (something about the government's power to tax), but this only galvanized John Boehner to commit once again to the act's repeal. Conservatives are trying to figure out if it was Roberts' epilepsy medication, his respect for the New York Times, his trying to keep up his rapport with Obama, or the possibility of Obama delegitimizing the Supreme Court itself that caused him to experience this supposed extreme lapse in judgment1. This is almost  worse for them than Justice John Jones III ruling for the "evolutionists" in Kitzmiller v Dover Area School District (2005). That's twice now that supposed conservative stalwarts have jumped ship in critical cases. Must be something in the water they serve at these courthouses, eh?

I want here to break and talk about something I have never talked about before: The job search. My philosophical self-education is immediately relevant to my own life. I don't like my situation, beyond not having access to the resources required to be a full-fledged member of society. Despite 10-16% unemployment and the still very real recession (only 30% of teens have summer jobs, according to CNN), unemployed people are still looked upon as aliens, primarily because in America, a person's worth as a human being, as a subject, is based solely upon how much money s/he possesses; how productive s/he is; any judge of character, of moral worth, is irrelevant if the person who asks the question, "What do you do [for a living]?" is not satisfied by the answer you give. For example, in my own situation, it doesn't matter at all that I am a youth mentor (something that fills my life with meaning and from which I derive personal satisfaction) because it does not result in making money.

A few weeks ago, I attended a networking meeting, and the presenter spoke about doing something for others "because it feels good," but underneath all of the altruistic language many of these career coaches use is a much darker, and much more selfish truth: The flowery language is merely intended to mask the fact that we are only helping each other so that the other person will in turn be obligated to help us. I may be naive, but I am not comfortable knowingly using another person as a means to an end. I find it incredibly deceptive and disingenuous, and I am not willing to compromise my ethical standard; human beings are not objects for my amusement; nor am I an object for the amusement of others. The coach(es) speak of an ideal relationship between networkers, but such an ideal built upon mutual deception and corruption (on which I will speak of in a minute) is only possible if both parties understand and are willing to accept that they are being used as objects and only feign to care about one another on a substantial level.

Finally, at this same networking meeting, the presenter spoke of the efficiency of his system by writing people off. I brought up an experience in which I was at another networking meeting, and a woman made a sardonic comment about how the piles of resumes were killing the rainforest. The magnanimous presenter suggested that my newfound acquaintance "didn't get it" and should be avoided. I expressed disappointment, and put up weak resistance to his suggestion she be ostracized, but now it really bothers me. I appreciate people who take social risks, and considered her remark as an indication that she would be an interesting person to talk to at a meeting at which I feared everyone would be exactly the same. On a deeper level, I find the presenter's willingness to quickly write people off for the sake of the efficiency of his system not only a complete reversal of his "altruistic" intent, but also extremely Foucauldian: The use of micro-power to enforce social mores in the endless struggle of Us vs Them. This is doubly problematic because we are all unemployed, and it distracts us from the necessity of collective action. Unemployed people, particularly those who have been in the system before but were callously spit out of it largely ignore the greater reality of their situation, and view themselves as individuals with entirely separate experiences, when the fact is that there are millions of us who, if (in an ideal circumstance) gathered together, would be capable of political action to help solve the problem for the greater group. But by willing to so quickly and easily decide not to talk to someone who shares your experiences, especially because they talk funny, you are actually hurting everyone in the long run.

Some people on Facebook might notice that I use the term "Corporate Bogeyman" whenever someone mentions a "professional FB page" with their real name and few (if any) pictures, friends, or posts. I may have even used the term here. In Eastern European folklore, the Bogeyman (popularly known as the Boogieman) is a monster mentioned often by desperate parents that takes away children who misbehave. My "Corporate Bogeyman" describes the people (or phantoms) that supposedly comb job seekers' Internet footprints looking for incriminating material. It is worse than censorship, because it indirectly, through scare tactics, self-imposes silence and limits creative expression; its impact extending far beyond the intoxicated Facebook pictures from that party at your friend's house two years ago. "Careful what you put on the Internet" is an adage I have heard far more than I would like, extends to pages like this that, were my identity ever found out, I would probably be damned to perpetual unemployment for the next decade. It scares me, despite my strong belief that what I have to say needs to be said. What makes it so terrifying is that it isn't the government that is censoring us, but the corporations, which have no accountability and whose impulses are entirely subjective, can discriminate against more or less anyone they please with little consequence. Have you ever called up a company regarding a position you applied for and tried to ask them why you weren't interviewed, (or, if you were interviewed, why you weren't chosen)?

I promised I would discuss the corrupt part of it, and it has been, I believe, more than a few minutes. On the one hand, there exists the job boards, the email addresses, and the myriad accounts created to access them. On the other hand, we have our networks of people who might know other people who might know other people, ad infinitum. You can submit your application to stand among 30 other applications, or you can call your friend who knows another friend who knows another friend who knows another friend who happens to work at the company you're trying to get into and might be able to put in a good word for you. You have skipped the "proper channels" and moved right in. They might have spoken to some of those applicants, but they picked you because you're a friend of a friend of a friend..., perhaps even independent of your qualifications. I am not saying that this isn't something I will have to do, because I know it is. But I also know that it is extremely manipulative and wrong. With the scarcity of full-time--and even part-time--positions, this rotten system is liable to endure because it is easy for the employer: It allows them to quickly select an applicant from the cesspool of unwashed heathens with a minimal guarantee of his or her ability to fit into the company culture and/or fulfill the requirements of the position. It is the law of supply and demand at work. But its existence in actual reality does not preclude me from calling it what it is.

Another unpleasant result of the current economic situation for the unemployed is the mistreatment of applicants by recruiters and actual employers. When you are unemployed, "professionalism" is a one-way street: The burden of professional behavior rests upon the applicant only, and the power ascribed upon employers by virtue of their position grants license to behave as they please toward the filthy masses of lumpenproletariats. This, in my experience, involves behaving relatively callously (such as not returning your phone calls after establishing some mutual interest and suggesting a possible interview, and then making it worse by calling back a week later (you had called several times without answer by this point) and saying that he was busy at a conference and the company is not interested in you), having the interviewer walk out of an interview in order to push a sale upon a prospective customer (and then telling you they hired someone else when you call them back), and blatantly lying about not being interested in speaking to the applicant ("Your application is blocked by Corporate"). I am sure many unemployed people have endured worse than this, but these instances are bad on their own.

1) http://gawker.com/5922416/john-roberts-medication-made-him-stupid-and-other-right+wing-explanations-for-the-obamacare-ruling

Monday, February 20, 2012

How Badly We Need Campaign Finance Reform

I know I haven't written in a while, and with (at least, I think) good reason: I am terrified of repeating myself. I realize that my writing has been, more or less, single-minded, which isn't bad in itself, but I find myself writing about the same exact topics over and over: Atheism, the evils of the conservative Christians, etc. But surely, there is much material in the current Republican primary!

There is a lot of material, certainly. But even still, I don't even want to. I have been of voting age for six years, and have paid attention to politics since the campaign to impeach Bill Clinton. I have seen the Christian Right dematerialize and materialize again, after assured annihilation: Homosexuality, infidelity, and other juicy tales of sexual escapades from deep within their ranks. And they keep coming back: They don't even need Jesus anymore; they are miraculous enough.

I am torn: I know what they are doing is awful, the full-scale assault on women's rights (not a single woman was able to testify on behalf of a pharmaceutical product so ubiquitous and so integral to women's autonomy as the birth control pill), but I know that these dirty old men so intent upon turning attention away from themselves, so wrapped up in their own arrogance, are not ever going away. The problem isn't, finally, with our politicians: Our politicians are greedy, stupid, and bigoted, sure, but why are we electing them?

Why do we need nothing less than a SuperPAC, an engine devised to raise incredible amounts of money, only half separated from the political process and wholly unaccountable, to get elected? Something is wrong with our system, not necessarily with our government, but our election process, when the only way that a candidate can compete is to amass millions (not yet billions, but we'll be there soon) in private funds to even be considered not just by the people, but by the conglomerates that are our two parties.

And once in office, what is it that they care about? How do we get access? Lobbyists [read, companies] get access by enabling the politician to continue his or her political career: By giving money or gifts to his or her campaign fund. We voted them in, and now they have to be guaranteed to stay before they will listen, but they only listen to those who bring them money. The votes, therefore, are secondary, a given.

What ends up happening is that the ads get them elected: They tell us what a candidate may or may not think about a given issue, make generally short arguments for or against candidates, and our participation is taken as granted. The campaigns are largely not funded through public money, and the candidates must more or less buy the support of the wealthy, which is precisely why the work that a candidate originally wanted to do is never done.

Would I be crazy to begin seeing Jack Abramoff as a sympathetic figure? What if, leaving the question of his authenticity aside for a minute, Abramoff is providing an invaluable service to our political process by telling us what is actually going on in our government. "The problem," Abramoff said to Lawrence Lessig, whose book greatly influenced this essay, "isn't what's illegal; the problem is what's legal"1.

I have painted a picture of blatant corruption in this essay, but the truth, as Abramoff and Lessig pointed out, isn't so simple: It starts small, sometimes a return on the "investment" isn't immediately expected: The candidate, grateful for the gift, might feel compelled to return the favor as a gesture of gratitude, perhaps hoping that, pending success, a second gift may be received. Eventually, the candidate begins to depend on these gifts, and is no longer even considering the needs of those who cast the votes.

What I think, as I am writing this, is that we have several factors working against us: Beyond the election cycle, we have almost no say in what goes on in Washington (unless we are willing to start a massive movement, and endure police brutality). Our collective memories are exceedingly short, meaning that many of us cannot keep track of the actions of our representatives, and the political ads are intoxicating to us in the worst possible way. The blazing speed of our political process, combined with its extremely long duration (the presidential primaries drag on at 1,000 mph for about six to eight months, and then the general election goes on for another six at the same speed), makes it exceedingly difficult for most people to make any kind of educated decision, especially when it comes to choosing between candidates of the same party.

We have about as much control over Washington's business as we would have in a nondemocratic political system because candidates and incumbents only listen to us between terms (ironically, when there is very little business being done). What happens beyond the election cycle is entirely out of our control, save, again, if we undertake massive movements, but even then, results are mixed.

Why, for example, was SOPA [Stop Online Piracy Act] put up for vote? Chris Dodd, ex-Senator who vowed not to become a lobbyist at the end of his time in Congress, became a lobbyist for the MPAA, and was interviewed on CNN. The founder of Reddit.com, remarked that Congress was paid $94 million by the MPAA to pass SOPA(2). The kicker is that when SOPA did not pass (due to massive protests by Wikipedia and Reddit, among other popular websites), Chris Dodd issued this threat:

"Those who count on quote 'Hollywood' for support need to understand that this industry is watching very carefully who's going to stand up for them when their job is at stake. Don't ask me to write a check for you when you think your job is at risk and then don't pay any attention to me when my job is at stake"3
If that isn't corruption, I don't know what is.

Again, I return to the question of why progressives have such a hard time getting what they want in government. Perhaps it isn't the message, or the agenda, or depressed resignation. It is the money. The people's business doesn't get done because the people don't pay. The people are a given: Run enough ads, and we will vote for you. The progressive platform gets people excited, but it doesn't fill party coffers. Union contributions only account for less than 20% of total contributions by major players. 80% is private interest, interests whose interests, therefore, are not your or my interests.

Ron Paul is the only plausible GOP presidential candidate. He gets people excited, but the party and the media only pay scant attention to him. Why? Because, again, his ideas don't fill party coffers because they scare the interests on whose behalf the GOP operates. The concept of a free market in which a given firm cannot legislate its own hegemony is as terrifying to those who own our representatives as a popular socialist system (socialism for the people, not for corporations).

The Culture War, therefore, is a deliberate distraction. It doesn't matter if Rick Santorum really believes all of the terrible things he says, nor does it matter that his candidacy is extremely expensive in terms of the future of our political landscape in the future. The only thing that matters is that he gets the people who are hurting most to stop talking about the fact that they are hurting. This has been going on for forever, and it works. Every. Single. Time. It turns out that I am wrong: The pool from which the GOP draws support is actually an infinite resource, one that, while it changes shape, the content remains the same and the people who comprise that resource cannot ever see how badly they are being screwed, nor, if they ask, will they ever figure out that they are being lied to. Just today, I read that Americans For Prosperity in Florida are paying $2 per signature to Tea Party organizers4. As China had the Fifty-Cent Party, we have the $2 Party. Just how authentic is our political system?

Lessig, Lawrence. Republic, Lost. Twelve Books. Copyright 2011. New York, NY.

1) Lessig interviews Abramoff (1h 20 mins)

2) http://www.mediaite.com/tv/reddits-alexis-ohanian-calls-internet-blackout-geekiest-protests-ever/

3) http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2012/01/chris-dodd-needs-work-messaging/47697/

4) http://www.sunshinestatenews.com/story/americans-prosperity-taps-tea-party-volunteers-tuesday

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

The Political Philosophy of Ferris Bueller

I just saw Ferris Bueller's Day Off for the first time today (shocking!), and I noticed some things that got me thinking about the film from a philosophical standpoint.

Primarily, Ferris Bueller is about power and the subversion of it. A lot of movies are about power (Office Space comes to mind), but Bueller stands out, for a few reasons.

Ferris himself is a de facto revolutionary: He overtly usurps the power of the Dean of Students and the school system at large, this is obvious enough. But his sister, Jeanne, is the key.

For the whole movie, Jeanne is jealous of Ferris and his ability to do what he wants and get away with it (as she reveals to Charlie Sheen in the police station), but in her jealousy, she attempts to support the power structure precisely because she knows that Ferris himself is in fact not sick at all. The point is that when she tries to notify the Dean, she herself is dubbed an "asshole" and told to get back to class. No one will believe her, and all attempts to foil her brother blow up in her face.

In the final scene in the movie, Jeanne is confronted with two choices, when the Dean accosts Ferris by the back door: Which does she hate more, her brother's ability to subvert the machine, or the machine itself? Ultimately, Jeanne chooses to save her brother because of the way the machine abused her when she tried to aid the power structure in stopping her brother.

This was the correct thing to do, from Jeanne's point of view, and her story demonstrates succinctly why people become revolutionaries in the first place: They play by the rules as best they can, but their good deeds only get them in more trouble, and they see that there is no way to succeed in the labyrinth in which they find themselves. They conclude that the only chance for happiness and/or success (or whatever it is that they are after) is the complete destruction of the system of power under which they exist.

No real reason is given as to exactly why Ferris is a revolutionary; he is more or less taken for granted, but if we follow the lietmotif of his sister's complaint, he does because he can (or, from the point of view of Kant, he must, because he can).

The "Save Ferris"campaign, while just a humorous subplot, actually plays an important role in the subversion of authority, in that people truly believe that he is sick, which makes it much more difficult for the machine to exercise its power. It is through this campaign that we have a complete picture: We have the primary Revolutionary (Ferris), his allies in school who have joined the cause and launched the larger campaign, and we have the counterrevolutionary who eventually joins his cause.

Power itself is portrayed in the figure of the Dean of Students, Mr. Rooney, who makes it his personal crusade to stop Ferris Bueller. Mr. Rooney himself is an absurd, comical figure who, in his almost blind pursuit of Bueller, is the cause of his own undoing. The thoughtless overreaction of power only makes it less trustworthy, and eventually it will collapse (the Dean of Students breaking and entering a student's home!?). It could be argued that Ferris Bueller did nothing: that if Mr. Rooney had simply allowed Ferris his ninth day off (ten days is failing; anything below that is acceptable, which makes the situation of Mr. Rooney that much more absurd), everything would have gone on as normal.

Cameron remains an anomaly in this context, but his story is much more reminiscent of The Stranger by Albert Camus: He just so happened to be friends with Ferris, and more or less did whatever he was told to do for most of the film. Yet, his experience with Ferris led him to a new-found greatness, and through it he was able to assert his own agency. Much like Mersault asserts his agency when he is sentenced to die, Cameron only asserts himself when he is totally liberated from responsibility, when there is absolutely nothing he can do to hide the fact that he used his father's beloved Ferrari. Was there any kind of choice open to Cameron? Recall when he is desperately trying to decide whether or not to pick up Ferris and join in his revolutionary shenanigans: "If I don't go, he's going to keep calling me. If I do go, we're going to get into trouble." Why was he sick (Cameron was truly sick, whereas Ferris was just faking it)? Because he could not choose: he was "afraid of everything." Being with Ferris, however, opened him up to real possibility, despite his weak protests, and ultimately, through the inevitability of punishment by his father, he was able to assert himself as a free agent.

Some people boast of being able to "play the game" (cooperate with the system and get what I want), and, frequently notify me of my abject failure to "play the game". But, obviously, that isn't what is going on here: This is pure revolution, a full-scale dismantlement of the power structure (what do you think happened to Mr. Rooney after the credits rolled? How could he possibly remain at his job?). Even more than that is the ability of our protagonists to undertake their project without arousing the suspicion of lesser agents of the power structure, namely, Ferris's parents. They were preoccupied by Jeanne, whose erratic behavior was consistently misinterpreted, leading to her defection to her brother.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Let's Not Have A Christian Left, and Say We Did

A few of my friends have on more than one occasion, in response to the current Republican vitriol, have advocated the concept of a "Christian Left," believing that this would represent Jesus more authentically. I would agree on this point, but also posit that the concept of a Christian Left would also be vulnerable to the same traps that befall the Christian Right, and this essay is intended to make these traps clear.

The concept of a Christian Left is actually in a very privileged position, something that cannot be said about the Christian Right: The policies that would be advocated under the CL platform can be endorsed by a much more diverse range of people, many of whom may not be Christian. One would, conversely, have to not only be Christian, but a certain kind of Christian, in order to find the policies advanced by the CR the least bit palatable.

What this chiefly means is that in order to sell the platform to a wider audience, it would be inadvisable to use the "Christian" part of it as justification, as it makes people who would otherwise be in support of the platform unnecessarily uncomfortable (something that the conservatives learn again and again, and attempt to compensate for by way of short-term exploitable political resources). One can certainly privately use religion to justify social good--in fact, if that were its only function, few people would have much of a problem with it--but the translation from private planning of the programs to building support should be one where the programs are justified by their own objective merits.

Because the policies are justifiable on their own merits, the "Christian" part of the label in fact may be rendered unnecessary, at least in the greater political arena. There is a step beyond "God said X was good"--Why? For example, why should we take care of the planet? Because we live here, we are responsible for it, and if we want to continue to exist, we need to take care of it. Each of these positions are similarly objectively justifiable: justifiable in a way that transcends religious, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds.

On the other side, the militant atheists are equally squeamish about allying with religious groups that happen to share their views on science and education (or the two combined), despite the fact that having religious groups join them puts a limit within the framework of the conflict with Creationism/ID: It allows religious people who value science (and many of them do) a medium through which to tell their conservative counterparts that evolution (and science generally) is totally acceptable within their worldview. It is worth noting that one of the premier organizations for science education, the National Center for Science Education [NCSE], has constant contact with religious organizations that share their views.

This is the political reality--the ideological framework--within which the growing secular caucus will have to operate. They want the whole package: They demand that people renounce their traditions and adopt Naturalism (the philosophical position that empirical science is the best and only way of understanding the world. I for one am not a Naturalist). This is obviously not going to happen, and is only going to get them in trouble, because not only is it unnecessary in order to build support for science (and) education, but it is also as egregious and impossible as the Christian Right's demand that America become a Falwellian theocracy.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

How Atheists View Religion

A lot of people--on the Internet especially--encounter nothing but a mob of angry atheists, and they cannot exactly understand just why they are angry; they simply want them to go away, or liken them to their fundamentalist counterparts in order to try to simply dismiss or belittle them.

But this isn't exactly the case. Atheists view religion completely differently than religious people view it, and the experiences most atheists claim to have about coming out as an atheist to family and friends has an enormous impact upon what they think of religion, above and beyond whatever philosophy they turn to in its place.

To be an atheist--again it depends upon where one lives and goes to school, etc--is more or less the same as being a homosexual, insofar as homosexuality is actively reviled by the dominant group. When one typically comes out as an atheist, especially if one grows up in a very religious household, or attends a religious school, or lives in a small town in the south or midwest, it is not surprising if the open-atheist is ostracized or even exiled from his or her community. Jessica Ahlquist recently won a lawsuit requiring her public school to remove a sectarian banner, and is now being attacked by angry Christians1.

Religion, to the atheist, is nothing more and nothing less than a power structure, a requirement and condition for tribal membership, to the point where whatever meaning may be derived from religious belief for the believers cannot be considered authentic because,as they see it, it is imposed upon the individual by greater society. To the atheist, religion is not unlike the Matrix, the simulation built by the robots in order to pacify their human resources (literally), and as such, religion must be annihilated in order for individuals to be liberated and given the agency they need for intellectual and emotional fulfillment.

The atheist does not commonly recognize that religion may indeed bring authentic meaning to people's lives by way of its transmission from parent to child (the master-slave relationship in which the child does not have any rights or agency under the parent; s/he is not typically given the agency or the knowledge required to make an informed choice about what it is he or she believes).

The atheist is typically right on these points, however: Most Americans have not actually read The Bible, and children--as well as adults--living in a community dominated by a given religion do not have the recourse to forfeit their faith without serious social consequences. If one looked at religious beliefs in society, one may certainly find that it serves as a social control first, and a source of meaning for individuals second.

But the people who know their religion, who know and are comfortable in what they believe, are much less likely to oppress others; the much smaller number of the religious who fit into this category--who have truly studied and care about what it is they personally believe--lends itself to the view that for most Americans, religion is more of a social control than an authentic source of meaning for individuals. They do not have any access to other philosophical or theological frameworks unless they are willing to forfeit membership to their tribes, and this says nothing about the traps built into the religions in order to keep the numbers of the faithful--namely, Hell.

On the other hand, independent of all of what I have said so far, what can be said about the atheist is that s/he has as much allegiance to his or her new group--the drive to belong is the same for all people, no matter what race/religion/sexual orientation/ethnicity/etc, etc--as the Christians do to one another, and this in itself precludes any meaningful dialogue between sides, especially for new (de)converts. This point is the same for every single belief system ever: The new initiate in any system of belief is on shaky ground, and among people in which he can confide--fellow (non)believers--s/he may be more open to exploring new philosophical/ideological ground, but to outsiders, s/he must appear sure of himself or herself, to the point of making claims s/he does not yet know how how to justify.

The Big Bang of the atheist community is leading more people to truly figure out what it is they should identify as according to what they believe: "Am I agnostic? What does that mean? Am I a 'gnostic atheist', or an 'agnostic atheist'?" (Do I know that there are no (G)od(s), or am I only to varying degrees certain that gods do not exist? Conversely, it is possible to be a gnostic theist--to know that (G)od(s) exist--or an agnostic theist--to only be certain by varying degrees that (G)od(s) exist.) This conversation is healthy and productive, to broaden the range of possibilities for belief (or non-belief).

It would, in my view, be very difficult to deny that religion does serve the purpose of social control, but at the same time, I'm not quite certain that it is specifically the fault of religion itself. The truth is that I think people would generally be quick to find some or other political or philosophical difference to fight to the death about after extinguishing all others. It is true that most human conflicts are defined in religious or ethnic terms, but the language used is often just dressing for realities that are much more banal. It is just tragic that, in our time, as globalization continues to become an ever-present reality, the only justifications available to the last bastions of isolationism are religious and nationalistic, to the point where a grotesque hybrid of the two has emerged, a phenomenon with which most of the politically-informed is already familiar.

1) http://freethoughtblogs.com/blaghag/2012/01/that-christian-compassion/