Have
you noticed the right-wing follows the same pattern?
They create an imaginary story.
The story is weaved around an
historical event, sometimes real, sometimes not.
The story has a
smattering of accepted doctrine.
Inside the story is always one good
guy and one bad guy.
The good guy is a misunderstood, yet all-knowing person who scoffs at
the bigger world, and scoffs at cooperation among people, as if their offering of goods and
services is all that counts, as if everything can be produced and
traded locally, as if they need no steel tools or food made elsewhere.
Without fail, the bad guy is always our elected government, as if other
people's voices should cease for the benefit of the guy who is most
fearful.
The bad guy is never the corporation that outsourced your job or killed
a relative or poisoned a well or lied to people or foreclosed on a
deceptive loan or evaded responsibility.
It's the same old fearful story that pines for the past without
solution for the future.
II
Have you noticed the right-wing op-eds follow the same pattern?
They create an imaginary story. The story is weaved around an
historical event, sometimes real, sometimes not. The story has a
smattering of 'accepted fact' or 'wholesomeness' without elaboration.
The story contains one good guy and one bad guy.
The good guy is a misunderstood, yet all-knowing person who scoffs at
the bigger world and at cooperation among people, as if their personal
offering of goods and services counts most, as if everything can be
produced and traded locally using 'understood' rules, as if they need
no steel tools or food made elsewhere, as if roads repair themselves,
and with the firm belief that things will spiral upwards if all local
services are suspended, without a single nod to real-world economics.
Without fail, the bad guy is always our elected government, as if other
people's voices should cease for the benefit of the guy most fearful.
The bad guy is never the corporation that outsourced your job or killed
a relative or poisoned a well or lied to people or foreclosed a
deceptive loan or evaded responsibility.
It's the same old fearful story that pines for the past without
solution for the future.
Gene Haynes