Episode 195: David Leonhard and the Elite Consensus Manufacturing Machine.

The quote (from Jacob Bacharach) goes: Yeah, one of the effects, it’s to transform the news from being a precursor to political action into being merely social commodity, which is to say that what strikes me about these newsletters for the majority of their consumers is that what I think they’re really designed to do is to turn current events into a kind of social currency that can be used for conversation, that can be used to position oneself as sort of being in the know, understanding what’s going on, being relatively savvy about, you know, what’s happening within politics. But by reinforcing the sense that politics is a distinct and professional domain of politicians and maybe some media people that is sort of, like, separate from life/work management, personal economy, etc. And so one of the things that it does is it takes that sort of that self-flattering, centrist self-image of a lot of the people who consume these products, and it says politics is a profession. It is a thing that exists siloed from the rest of society, and those who attempt to act politically, outside of the professionalized realm of politics, and outside of occasionally, you know, voting, I guess, are disrupting a sort of natural order of things like why can’t they just take their ration of news that they get each morning and do what normal people do with it, which is exchange it with other people over dinner at a restaurant.

I feel like this is a sort of Baader-Meinhof syndrome situation where now that I have this as a lens I can't not see it. It's like a Rosetta Stone of liberalism.

  • FlakesBongler [they/them]
    hexbear
    27
    4 months ago

    You can really see this with the whole

    The adults are back in charge thing

    They're all adults! You're an adult! Stop acting like you're a child who needs their politics daddy/mommy to take care of you! They're not better than you just because they hold office, there's no magic politics school that gives them senator vision or congress breath! They're all just various levels of ghouls sapping the light and life out of everything!matt-jokerfied

    • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
      hexbear
      19
      4 months ago

      I remember back when liberals were trying to equate Sanders and Trump by calling them both populists. There was that one cartoon too that showed some people on an airplane with one passenger standing up saying "I'm tired of those pilots saying they know best. Let's all fly the plane!" And the caption said Populism.

      that really is how liberals think. They have medieval peasant brain and swear fealty to their preferred rotting ghoul.

  • Zodiark [he/him]
    hexbear
    17
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    I recall during a Cushvlog that Matt said his need to consume history, political theory, news, etc, was to have a sense of agency in a world where agency is limited to a person's economic consumer choices rather than that of a free political agent within politically engaged communities.

    In other words, knowing theory and analyzing current events provide a sense of solace and cope for exploitation and oppression.

    Going back to quotes from communists or radicals like Malcolm X, MLK, etc, they'll point out that moderates/liberals all object to radical action and would rather have political action be done by consensus building, civility, and civil engagement even as the stakes are life or death.

    Perhaps there is a coping mechanism to it too. We were far removed from significant political, labor, and social action for decades until the advent of Occupy, BLM, and the Floyd protests, and despite those recent developments those traditions of direct action are relics of our grandparents/great grandparents era. Direct action is an alien concept they'd read from a history book. In fact, it is feared because it is alien, it is feared because there is no memory for leaders to draw upon to wield the power of the masses. So you get Jan 6th. You get police station burning. You get a lot of chaos and not a lot of articulation on how to build, sustain, and spread a movement.

    What else is there but to lament the state of the world where there is no prophetic vision on how to escape, transcend, and revolutionize society? Wielding the power of the state through ritual; through voting, through scolding on the internet. Through civil lawsuits, through the legal and political system. Through anarchic organizing and protests, and perhaps localized and sporadic direct action. All chaotic and divided efforts that do not bring forth class consciousness and revolutionary kinesis. Only revolutionary potential, and locked in a state of inertia.

    Leftists seek comfort in theory but no modern political philosophers and theorists ever expand or contribute a course of action in the way Marx said it needed to be: "Philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point, however, is to change it."

    We can only interpret and cope because there is a lack of articulation on how to proceed.

    The king is bedridden and a council of regents rule. Let us believe that the populace, the workers, the peasants, the small burghers, career-stunted professional managers of the state and of private sector, the willing traitors to the ruling class within the ruling class, are dissatisfied with the status quo. The problem is no one knows or has plans of what week 1 of a post revolutionary society would operate. There's no imagination.

  • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
    hexbear
    11
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    This is one of the reasons I believe politicians keep getting more elderly. People need to believe politicians are more professional or more knowledgeable than themselves, rather than politicians being a vector to push certain policy regardless of their age or background. And people have a hard time seeing someone younger as more professional, especially since the dominant political/economic authority in the USA is full of increasingly elderly homeowners

  • NephewAlphaBravo [he/him]
    hexbear
    9
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    now that I have this as a lens I can't not see it

    Have you seen the yellow signthe-podcast?

  • Awoo [she/her]
    hexbear
    7
    4 months ago

    A counter to this would be to create something specifically aimed at disrupting it. A new kind of media that is intent on being action-based. Call it a "political journal" instead of "newspaper" and have its articles all end with suggested political actions that people can take.

    Print this quote in an "about" section of the publication along with an explanation for the "political journal" label as opposed to just being a newspaper. Build an audience of people that want to break away from news consumption as commodity.

    If you frame it right I guarantee that you can drag some of these people away from it, even the particularly snooty ones, specifically because they get to be snooty about news consumption itself so it offers an outlet to be even snootier.

    It doesn't even stop the use of news as cultural commodity either. So it takes nothing away from them, it just augments it with potential action while also providing a way to be even snootier.

    • Melonius [he/him]
      hexbear
      7
      4 months ago

      Maybe it's out of style now but opinion pieces used to end with a direct appeal to some politician, or else the grave consequences mentioned above will occur. It gave the veneer that you were reading a letter directed to the president or some CEO.

      I think that achieved the effect of being snooty while accomplishing nothing.