Dé Máirt 22 Eanáir 2008

Democracy_29273

Or,

Historians Say The Verdict Is In On Haiti: “It Was Partly Our Fault!” (and that’s mighty white of them…)


Back in December of 2005, Joe Bageant, that rare example of a man who transcends the narrow confines of the culture in which he was raised (Eastern Appalachia, Cracker-Land, USA) wrote an essay called The Simulacran Republic in which he put forth the notion that our concept of ourselves as citizens of a democratic society is really an illusion. Now, we all know that politics—especially at election time—is a surreal landscape of meaningless sound-bytes, polarizingly provocative "issues" and empty promises, but Joe (whose essays are an exercise in the opposite: stark descriptions of what’s real and what dreams should be) takes our quiet cynicism and extrapolates a world as processed as the cheese-whiz in our collective refrigerator.

Intrigued by Joe’s premise, I began to wonder how the simulacran was constructed. I mean, how deep do its roots grow: what about history? Can the facts of the past be altered to fit the present illusion? Wouldn’t anyone notice? What about those Guardians of the Past, the historians who, like some priest class of a forgotten empire, preserve and protect the bones of our ancestors?

Since there’s a lot of attention being paid to one of our illustrious forefathers in particular—Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence, arguably the best known statement on the guiding principles of American democracy, you know, equality & freedom & justice for all men—I thought I might poke around in this founding father’s bones a little myself, just to make sure the priests were still doing their job.

Turns out I was in luck. One, no two, of those priestly historians have recently released "official" verdicts on old Tom’s actions—not just the pretty words for which he’s so revered today. In each case they even went so far as to connect what happened 200 years ago with what’s going on in the world today.

Mr. Bageant’s theory of a Simulacran Republic would be put to the test, the test of time itself.

In addition to all those wonderful words about egalitarianism that Jefferson wrote in that most famous Declaration which have withstood the ravages of time by being carved into the stone arches of our courthouses, memorable mention was also made of “the pursuit of happiness.” How amazing then that both of our historians chose to discuss the connection between America and Haiti—the richest and the poorest, the most happy and the most miserable…at least according to today’s most widely accepted standard, the dollar (how many you have, that is).

But what do the actions of Thomas Jefferson have to do with Haitian unhappiness today? Let’s start with the harsher of the two realities I found existing side by side. In America's Historic Debt to Haiti which first appeared on February 10, 2006 at consortiumnews.com, Robert Parry writes:




As Haiti intrudes again on the U.S. consciousness with a new round of troubled elections, Americans see a violent, backward, poverty-stricken country run by descendants of African slaves. There are feelings of condescension mixed with a touch of racism.

But what few Americans know is that they owe this Caribbean nation a profound historical debt. Indeed, perhaps no nation has done more for the United States than Haiti and been treated as badly in return.

If not for Haiti – which in the 1700s rivaled the American colonies as the most valuable European possession in the Western Hemisphere – the course of U.S. history would have been very different. It is possible that the United States might never have expanded much beyond the Appalachian Mountains.

What altered this early American history was the Haitian slave uprising against France near the end of the 18th Century. This second great anti-colonial revolution in the New World both alarmed and ultimately benefited the leaders of the newly born United States.

At the time, Haiti – then known as St. Domingue and covering the western third of the island of Hispaniola – ranked as perhaps the richest colony in the world. Its carefully cultivated plantations produced nearly one-half the world’s coffee and sugar, and its profits helped build many of the grandest cities of France.

But the human price was unspeakably high. The French had devised a fiendishly cruel slave system that imported enslaved Africans for work in the fields with accounting procedures for their amortization. They were literally worked to death.

The American colonists may have rebelled against Great Britain over issues such as representation in Parliament and arbitrary actions by King George III. But the Haitians took up arms against a brutal system of slavery. One French method for executing troublesome slaves was to insert explosives into their rectums and detonate the bomb.

So, when revolution swept France in 1789, the Jacobins’ cry of “liberty, equality and fraternity” resonated with special force in St. Domingue. African slaves demanded that the concepts of freedom be applied universally, but the plantation system continued, leading to violent slave uprisings.

Hundreds of white plantation owners were slain as the rebels overran the colony. A self-educated slave named Toussaint L’Ouverture emerged as the revolution’s leader, demonstrating skills on the battlefield and in the complexities of politics.
Despite the brutality on both sides, the rebels – known as the “Black Jacobins” – gained the sympathy of the American Federalist Party and particularly Alexander Hamilton, a native of the Caribbean himself. Hamilton, the first U.S. Treasury Secretary, helped L’Ouverture draft a constitution for the new nation.

Conspiracies

But events in Paris and Washington conspired to undo the promise of Haiti’s new freedom

Parry goes on to tell us that Jefferson, who “feared that the example of African slaves fighting for their liberties might spread northward,” made a secret deal with Napolean to help crush the slave rebellion. Jefferson furnished US Navy ships to bring a French army to Haiti in return for Napolean’s help in preventing any example of a successful slave uprising from reaching the ears of America’s slaves (including his own).

When you make a deal with the Devil, however (or any deal done in secret), your “partners” have a way of making other plans that you might not like so much. Turns out that Napolean had another phase to his plan:



Once a French army had subdued L’Ouverture and his slave army, Napoleon intended to move his forces to the North American mainland, basing a new French empire in New Orleans and settling the vast territory west of the Mississippi River.

In May 1801, Jefferson picked up the first inklings of Napoleon’s other agenda. Alarmed at the prospect of a major European power controlling New Orleans and thus the mouth of the strategic Mississippi River, Jefferson backpedaled on his commitment to Napoleon, retreating to a posture of neutrality.
Still – terrified at the prospect of a successful republic organized by freed African slaves – Jefferson took no action to block Napoleon’s thrust into the New World.

In 1802, a French expeditionary force achieved initial success against the slave army in St. Domingue, driving L’Ouverture’s forces back into the mountains. But, as they retreated, the ex-slaves torched the cities and the plantations, destroying the colony’s once-thriving economic infrastructure.

L’Ouverture, hoping to bring the war to an end, accepted Napoleon’s promise of a negotiated settlement that would ban future slavery in the country. As part of the agreement, L’Ouverture turned himself in.

Napoleon, however, broke his word. Jealous of L’Ouverture, who was regarded by some admirers as a general with skills rivaling Napoleon’s, the French dictator had L’Ouverture shipped in chains back to Europe where he died in prison.

beardfp

Foiled Plans

Infuriated by the betrayal, L’Ouverture’s young generals resumed the war with a vengeance. In the months that followed, the French army – already decimated by disease – was overwhelmed by a fierce enemy fighting in familiar terrain and determined not to be put back into slavery.

Napoleon sent a second French army, but it too was destroyed. Though the famed general had conquered much of Europe, he lost 24,000 men, including some of his best troops, in St. Domingue before abandoning his campaign…

Parry concludes with an outline of the modern day consequences of Jefferson’s covert actions in Haiti:




By 1803, a frustrated Napoleon – denied his foothold in the
New World – agreed to sell New Orleans and the Louisiana territories to Jefferson. Ironically, the Louisiana Purchase, which opened the heart of the present United States to American settlement, had been made possible despite
Jefferson’s misguided collaboration with Napoleon.

“By their long and bitter struggle for independence, St. Domingue’s blacks were instrumental in allowing the United States to more than double the size of its territory,” wrote
Stanford University professor John Chester Miller in his book, The Wolf by the Ears: Thomas Jefferson and Slavery.

But, Miller observed, “the decisive contribution made by the black freedom fighters … went almost unnoticed by the
Jeffersonian administration.”

The loss of L’Ouverture’s leadership dealt another blow to Haiti’s prospects, according to Jefferson scholar Paul Finkelman of Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

“Had Toussaint lived, it’s very likely that he would have remained in power long enough to put the nation on a
firm footing, to establish an order of succession,” Finkelman told me in an interview. “The entire subsequent history of Haiti might have been different.”

Jefferson’s Blemish

For some scholars, Jefferson’s vengeful policy toward Haiti – like his personal ownership of slaves – represented an ugly blemish on his legacy as a historic advocate of freedom.

Even in his final years, Jefferson remained obsessed with Haiti and its link to the issue of American slavery.

In the 1820s, the former President proposed a scheme for taking away the children born to black slaves in the United States and shipping them to Haiti. In that way, Jefferson posited that both slavery and America’s black population would be "phased out."

Eventually, Haiti would be all black and the United States white.

Jefferson’s deportation scheme never was taken very seriously and American slavery would continue for another four decades until it was ended by the Civil War. The official hostility of the United States toward Haiti extended almost as long, ending in 1862 when President Abraham Lincoln finally granted diplomatic recognition.

By then, however, Haiti’s destructive patterns of political violence and economic chaos had been long established – continuing up to the present time. Personal and political connections between Haiti’s light-skinned elite and power centers of Washington also have lasted through today.

Recent Republican administrations have been particularly hostile to the popular will of the impoverished Haitian masses. When leftist priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide was twice elected by overwhelming margins, he was ousted both times – first during the presidency of George H.W. Bush and again under
President George W. Bush.

Washington’s conventional wisdom on Haiti holds that the country is a hopeless basket case that would best be governed by business-oriented technocrats who would take their marching orders from the United States.

However, the Haitian people have other ideas, much as
they did two centuries ago. Their continued support for the twice-ousted Aristide reflects a recognition that the Big Powers often don’t have the interests of Third World countries at heart.

Also, unlike most Americans who have no idea about their historic debt to Haiti, many Haitians know this history quite well. The bitter memories of Jefferson and Napoleon still feed the distrust that Haitians of all classes feel toward the outside world.

Amazing stuff. Haitians feeling distrust toward America? “The decisive contribution made by the black freedom fighters” going “almost unnoticed’ by an American administration?

Really?

I was listening to Colin Powell a few weeks ago explaining to a very trusting NPR reporter how it was that George Bush’s Freedom Plan works—that it’s not really a political or moral contradiction that our allies in spreading democracy through defeating terrorism do not themselves practice Jeffersonian democracy (Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Pakistan, etc)—because those countries “aren’t ready for it and have the right to choose their own form of government.”

I think Powell may have misspoken here: it seems to me that this is Jeffersonian democracy at its finest. Maybe not the variety that our schools teach, but the real thing. You know, secret deals with anti-democratic forces, crushing indigenous attempts at self determination…what’s changed?

Of course, not everyone sees it this way. According to the Official Story (Joe Bageant’s Simulacran Reality), Thomas Jefferson was the physical embodiment of the Liberal Democrat. Our second historian/high priest of historical circumcision, Thomas Fleming, very much belongs to that school of thought and his account of the very same events 200 years ago in Haiti is documented proof that Joe is, sadly, exactly right about where we live.

In Why We Are Partly Responsible for the Mess that is Haiti, which appeared in George Mason University’s popular History News Network (History News Network Because the Past is the Present, and the Future too!) blog on Februaury 26, 2004, Fleming has a very different set of facts.

Fleming doesn’t just spin those facts—he’s got his eraser out and his PhotoShop FactWare. When you read Fleming’s version of events, you can see the air-brushing, the pruning shears and the all the other tools of the Truth redactors. Despite the appearance of the admission of American guilt in the title of Fleming’s Haitian historical face-lift, he spends the entire article white-washing the truth which, like a stubborn spot, refuses to be entirely erased, if only the reader retains some minimal skepticism. There’s even a clue in the opening line, a road sign telling us that we’re not dealing with the facts so much as the artist’s memory of them:




As Haiti reels toward civil war, my mind is gripped by an historical memory.
The first phantasm we meet is Fleming’s attempt to make Jefferson’s actions open & honest, when in fact these were secret negotiations:




A smiling President Thomas Jefferson, barely ensconced in the White House, invited Louis Andre Pichon, the French charge d'affaires, for a visit and cheerfully informed him that if the French wanted to regain the island of St. Domingue, the Americans were ready and eager to cooperate.
Which Americans? Congress? The man on the street…why doesn’t Fleming come right out and say those interests in whose interests it lay to protect the institution of slavery? Further, regain from what? To whom had the French lost control of this richest colony in the world? The only explanation we get is this ‘background’ information:




…sugar, coffee and indigo plantations made it France's most valuable overseas possession until the 1789 revolution triggered a civil war that wrecked the island's economy.
Civil war? It was a slave rebellion—that rarest and hardest won struggle for freedom, where men living as beasts, in chains and subject to whippings, beatings and summary execution at the whim of their “owners” rise up, against all odds and throw off the most vicious yoke in mankind’s cruel inventory. No, the only concern here is that this violence “wrecked the island's economy.”

And what was that economy? Where is the explanation that Haiti’s wealth was the result of a French system that was cruel even by the abomniable standards of American slavery, that the kidnapped Africans had a lifespan of 2 to 3 years and that this “amortization” was part of this fiendish system? What about the French method for executing troublesome slaves that Robert Parry told us about? (That the French would insert explosives into their rectums and detonate the bomb.)

That violence doesn’t enter into Fleming’s “historical memory” for the same reason that it didn’t enter the calculus of Jefferson and the other slaveholders: slaves (which is to say Africans, although there is a much longer list…), weren’t really human. That’s why it’s always an “economic argument,” that’s why Jefferson’s secret, or, in a democratic society, illegal dealings aren’t considered with any sort of moral compass. We’re told that we have to remember that these men were the result of their times, that we can’t judge them by our moral standards, etc, etc.

Two problems with such excuses. First, how is then that we say that Jefferson and the other Founding Fathers were such brilliant, visionary geniuses that they were able to transcended the narrowness of their times by conceiving of such a perfect political union, such wonderful institutions that they endure to this day, and yet, when they see former slaves who’ve learned their language & culture (a feat which none of the superior white men seemed capable of), they (and we) are supposed to believe that our illustrious Founding Fathers couldn’t recognize them as human?

This brings us to the second problem: when old Egalitarian Tom was fucking Sally Hemmings, was he engaging in bestiality? Since this was a very widespread behavior among slave “owners,” are we to assume that all these fine, leading lights of their day were having sex with animals, in their own and the general public’s eyes, or was there something else going on there?

Luckily, Fleming gives us a clue when he tells us Jefferson’s philosophical reasons for this dirty, dirty deal:




The president wanted to show his undying enthusiasm for the French Revolution, in spite of the way it had turned into an orgy of mob violence and then morphed into a military dictatorship under Napoleon Bonaparte.
Now that is one hell of an acrobatic feat with words! Jefferson is going to show his support for libertie, equalitie & fraternitie by helping a military dictatorship to crush a revolt by a people seeking… libertie, equalitie & fraternitie?! Of course it makes sense. So, Roosevelt could have shown his support for the democratic institutions of the Weimar Republic by giving aid to the Third Reich it “morphed into”?

Brilliant.

Makes perfect sense.

I’m thinking that Fleming probably wishes he hadn’t written such an asinine piece of double-speak, but I’m glad that he did because it illustrates the whole point of this incredibly stupid, openly racist con job (he goes on to denigrate the heroism & intelligence and the humanity of Toussaint L’Ouverture and those who fought with him, saying that it was the mosquitoes that killed Napolean’s best troops, not the Haitian economic units which had no right to give American economic units “dangerous dreams of glory.”

No, it’s not really about what happened then, it’s about the illusion we’re gorging ourselves on right now. This is precisely how we can continue to do what Martin Luther King scolded & warned us about in his truly far-sighted Beyond Vietnam speech.
Thomas Fleming will be forgotten, or possibly remembered as the boot-licking apologist for slavery & empire who tried to “morph” wrong into right, but Martin Luther King’s words are already haunting us. In
Beyond Vietnam MLK warned us that if we continued to support “the wrong side” in every conflict around the globe—whenever any nation tries to win its independence, to determine its own course, and worst of all, to make the lives of its people better through equality and freedom, Mr. Jefferson’s magic memes—then we would suffer a fate worse than death. We would experience a spiritual death.

As long as we continue to keep our eyes so tightly shut, to accept our share at the winner’s table while our
brothers overseas(and in our backyards) unnecessarily starve, we are dying, inside. As long as we continue to accept compromises which are morally indefensible, we are snuffing out the light within us.

This isn’t just about white folks, either: the Illusion is served by all races, creeds and “constituents:” Obama (our best hope in the current pretend election[?!]) kissing mainstream ass by praising Ronald Reagan and the
“direction he took the country in”!!...Colin Powell for all that he has done to help the empire...(God go easy on that tattered soul!...) but, obviously, the biggest losers are those who appear now to be the biggest winners.

So maybe on this Martin Luther King day we can all drop out of all pretense for a while, put our masks down and listen to some unprocessed Truth.




Part II



Maybe it's an impossible quest to try to imagine how things might have been if certain events had not taken place; even attempting to re-create the web of events which did occur assumes a sort of after-the-fact omniscience--can we truly say that we know all the threads which tie together life right now, as we're experiencing it? Obviously not. We no more "understand" history than we do the trajectories, accidents & synchronicities of our own lives.

That said, however, the deeper, tectonic shifts of history can be discerned, if only we can focus on what happened (and could have happened), but in order to do this for ourselves, we have to throw off the blanket that the caretakers of history have woven over its still living body.

Prof. Fleming is hardly alone, nor even especially to blame for the role he plays in "managing" history. It's an extremely large undertaking that involves not only historians and reporters and speechwriters and other such professional "propagandists" but also everyone of us, in that we all translate our experience into the narrative of our existence.

We humans make sense of existence by making stories. We have convenient, if inaccurate labels for these stories (fable, myth, fairy tale, fantasy, science fiction, speculative fiction, contemporary fiction...self-help, how-to, biography, non-fiction, history, etc), but the very categories of narrative we've created are themselves flimsy things which only serve to convince us that the world as it is really is as it is.

That, for example, the world (and, most subtly and importantly Nature itself) is a dangerous place where survival is something we have to work, indeed fight for and that as a result, the problems we face--war, poverty, disease, etc--are somehow inevitable, even inherent in our life on earth. Resources are scarce and "the poor will always be with us"...right?

As long as we accept this foundation of our worldview, we will be subject to the manipulation that I lay at the door of the illusion makers. If one were to merely consider the following two points, however, the seams in the fabric of "history" suddenly become visible:
  • we have the means to give every person on earth a comfortable, even meaningful existence
and

  • someone or some group, ideology, organizational framework and/or hierarchical system profits from both the "inevitable evils"--war, poverty, disease, etc--and from our belief in their inevitability


So, armed with the willingness to consider these tectonic historical shifts in the light of these new and very much alternative assumptions, we can look at these pivotal points in a very different light.

Thomas Jefferson gave voice and eloquence to an ancient dream: that all men might enjoy the fruits of the earth and of their labors, free from the dominion of the overseer, the boss, the warlord/duke/king/repressive regime. Further, that this dream is nothing more than their birthright, by virtue of being human.

And yet, do we imagine that equality and freedom rang in the new nation that so loudly proclaimed this dream? Is it really possible that liberty existed side by side with extreme poverty, prejudice, indentured servitude and slavery-for these were the economic and political realities for the great mass of "Americans" in Jefferson's day.


(More, in what's become my daily webblog, as soon as I can sit here again. This whole thing has been prematurely and inadvertantly launched--many thanks for your interest, patience and contributions.

IC
January 24)

20 comments:

ericswan said...

Hey IC..The post is too long, there are too many distracting links and the subject is ponderous. You are way more interesting to me then Jefferson, King or Napoleon and you know you better. I don't get a sense of what you want to accomplish. Open up that Pandora's Box and let yourself out.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this history lesson. This helps me to better grip the illusions that liberty, freedom, and equality also has to offer. Illusions with the best words help better to distract us beasts arrogant. Jefferson himself was a mammalian creature that was buried in the ground. Thanks again for the work that you have done here.

surrender said...

IC:

I strongly disagree with eric. I have lived in Haiti for 18 years, and to clarify, I was born in the US.

Many Haitians are "stuck in the past" and see that the plight of their country today is the result of what happened 200 years ago.

Haitians have contributed so much to the history of the US but are never recognized or given any credit for that contribution.

There is so much I would like to comment on but have not the time now. But I would like to say that Haitians today are suffering more than ever. The US stronghold here contributes daily to disease, starvation and death. In the past month imported rice from the US that has very little nutrition value has tripled in price. And as I reported before chemtrails are almost a daily event.

I understand the failed political system here and it is not the fault of Haitian citizens. When you introduce a system of "democracy" to a country with almost 90% illiteracy, the concept of democracy is too illusive and misunderstood. In the beginning many Hatians believed "deomcracy" meant doing whatever you felt like doing and corruption exploded and undermined hope for the population to recieve more education or social programs that the international NGO's offered to the nation. It is understood, and I am witness to this, that a whopping 90% of NGO's in Haiti are grossly and visibly corrupt.

I met recently with a US Army general who told me that Haiti has been declared a "failed state".

I know some may not appreciate this long comment and how you relate the historical relationship that the US has to Haiti. I for one and many, many people should have the opportunity to understand that the US is STILL imposing the paranoiac idealology that was the legacy of the US and France.

The majority of Haitians are peaceful and not reactionary. Most are focused on how they are going to feed their families everyday. the portrayal of Haiti as a poor and VIOLENT nation is simply not so. But you might want to research where all the arms that arrived in Haiti came from in the last few years and why it must be protected as a major drug port.

There is so much more that the general public in the US are simply unaware of and frankly do not care in relationship to Haiti. Poor BLACK people are not high on the list of people that we would wish to offer our help or assistance.

There is an amazing 32 page article you can find at The Sun-Sentinal Fort-Lauderdale news online written in 2003 called "Haiti:An Erroding Nation"

One point made in this article is that if it weren't for the estimated 800 million dollars sent by families outside of Haiti to their relatives, there would be mass starvation and death.....

I thank you for this post and I will pass it on to others who I know would appreciate the well thought out points and I agree that the US truly owes this nation more than the systematic influencial breakdown of its society, economy and most of all it is the source of the incredible envronmental crisis that is viewed by many as "slow genocide".

There is NO evidence today that even remotely resembles a democratic system or society and most of the recent violence and kidnappings from my obsevation and others, is that it was "imported"; ie. financed and supported by the very country who brought us "democarcy" in a handbasket....

surrender said...

"The Haitian Plaything" (#75064)
by Tim Matthewson on January 29, 2006 at 9:29 AM.

"The notes/references above illustrate the point that nobody much cares about Haiti, except for Haitian themselves and other West Indians. Most Americans would prefer to ignore Haiti and are repelled by the appalling conditions of life in Port-au-Prince and much of the remainder of Haiti. These conditions are appalling, far worse than most imagine.
The U.S. has intervened and occupied Saint Domingue-Haiti on several occasions and throughout the past two centuries has following a policy of isolating Haiti, expressing fears of Haitian subversion during the days of slavery in the U.S. and serving as an example during most of American history of the evils of black rule, projecting said fears onto the southern states of the US. Powerful southern congressmen and southerners over the course of said centuries have at every opportunity to attack Haiti as an example of the evils of black domination.
No country has suffered so much as Haiti owing to the export of American racial prejudice abroad. Southerners have had an interest in seeing Haiti and Haitian fails at everything they have attempted and American efforts to subvert the Haitian experiment at interracial social democracy is partially documented in the Flemin essay. But there is much more to be said on the subject of American subversion of the Haitian experiement."

Anonymous said...

Hey Surrender,

A couple of points. All of your points are quite valid, of course, and well taken, but what's interesting is when those poor people are given a chance at a better life, a better life in America, let's say, and a portion of the proceeds of that better life goes back to Haiti to keep their relatives barely alive, these individuals become part of the Beast that's genociding their relatives, and other people across the globe. I know, because I witness immigrants from all nations come to Atlanta for their part of the dream...the dream that is the poor people of Haiti's nightmare. What a twisted irony that is, wouldn't you say?

As an anecdotal example, and quite representative, IMHO, our next door neighbors are Filipino...well, the wife is Filipino and the husband is....ummm, White, for lack of a better description. The wife's mother and father live with them. The father is a nice older guy and we talk every now and then out on the lawn. He and I share very similar views politically...well, not exactly. I can't act as radically IRL as I do here on the Net or they would put me in jail, so I have to tone it down, but he is quite divergent in his views from the rest of his family who are devout Republicans and rabid Bush supporters. His wife chastises him when he's talking to me because she thinks he's up to no good. Imagine that....Bush is good, but her husband critically questioning the almighty is no good, and this coming from a woman who was a poor Filipino her entire life. Her daughter has just swallowed it wholesale and is an obvious fascist. Amazing!! How the father must feel. To hold such views and be admonished and chastised for wanting justice and equality.

Also, I find the General's comments quite revealing. I'm surprised he didn't say Mission Accomplished. Did you happen to tell him Shrub doesn't support the troops? First, they create a destabilized environment, then they send in the troops to maintain some semblance of security so the local population is offered a dilemma; let the troops protect you, or become a criminal, or resist both and perish. To keep your integrity, you must choose to perish.....that is the human dilemma of which you speak. To side with the criminals or the troops is really the same choice, afterall. Failed State is the goal. Controlled Chaos trumps Uncontrolled Order.

Finally, take a gander at this. This takes the cake....really, it does, especially when you consider it in the context of this discussion. Talk about a contradiction....holding in reverence your contribution to the fashioning of your own shackles and torment. Unbelievable!! They fought for the Oligarchs who have been screwing their country of origin up the ass since, yet they want to commemorate their actions rather than saying "won't be fooled again."

IC is slick, I'll give him that...and more. He knew he'd attract you with his Haiti post. You forgot to tell him you love him....he's waiting, I'm sure.

Love,

Shrubageddon

ericswan said...

Shrub..I don't recall seeing any reference to "Haiti" and you didn't finish your "Home Improvements" comment. Stock market got your goat?

Surrender..You're right. I am a bad man. But...but...Part 2 is more to my taste. My university training is in Journalism. TPTB were right when they rejected my overtures to join their rank and filez. I think my training must have jumped my better judgement.

IC..The link you seek is www.johndee.org

Modern history is forever bemoaning the fire of Alexandria but according to Dee, our symbols, our alphabet, place names could not be expunged in the pyre of empire. The truth is out there.

Anonymous said...

Ericspook,

It's "than," not "then." Also, it's fluoridate, not flouridate. Some Journalism major you turned out to be. Jeesh!!

iridescent cuttlefish said...

Wow! What a strange thing that has happened here--every other blogger I know wants readers (& their comments), while I feel as if my guests had begun arriving for a party before I had the house cleaned. Really, I wasn't even thinking of launching this thing for at least another couple of weeks, and here all you folks are streaming in...

Well, well-met and welcome anyway. And thanks!


Eric,

I know I've got to cut out large tracts of text here--I just wanted to get it all out before I started hacking. I'll try to refine those links, too, although I've also got many more clamoring for insertion. And, yeah, it's only in that second part that I really start to put down the train of thought that's been occupying me for the past few months.

It's like this. I have to take a lot of walks in order not to have to use my fookin' cane. When I'm out walking, especially late at night, these pictures, fully formed, come flooding into my head--a sort of sudden understanding of things that aren't so clear during 'normal' situations. The problem is that, like dreams, they tend to dissolve when I go back the next day and try to write them down.

This idea of illusions wearing thin at the seams and yet still enjoying the power of the belief of "the masses" is a fascinating concept, a kind of self- and societal delusion that is just teetering on the edge of falling apart altogether.

I still hadn't really planned to do anything with it (other than a book that a certain writer friend has been urging me to write) until I kept running into the same weird response to the 2008 election everywhere I turned. I'm still puzzled as to why Jeff is so despairing of the essential fraudulence of the candidates when he knows that it's the system itself--the plastic duopoly masquerading as a democracy--that's to blame, not this year's crop of phonies.

So, when I ran into Fleming's article (while looking for something else altogether), I thought, "This is just what my theory of tattered illusions is all about!" When I found that awesome picture of the boy getting caught sweeping the oddments under the plastic sea, I found a hack that allowed me to place it in the header the way I did, and the next thing I knew the blog had started.

Honestly. I really had only intended this as a place where I could put these late-night pictures in a form that I could see in the light of day, in an attempt to follow them to some logical conclusion, some "bigger" picture.

Not that I'm not glad that you've all started coming.


Surrender,

You and Haiti are quite often in my thoughts, for many different reasons. I've often felt guilty about not doing more, well, physically to right the Balance in the world. Sure, my body is pretty well broken, but that begins to sound like an excuse in my own ears.

I hope that you're keeping some journals of your life there--if you don't publish something, I'd like very much to put your experiences into my writing.

You brought up an excellent point about the continuation of "Jeffersonian democracy" in Haiti--the never-ending intrigue & sabotage, the convenient racist propaganda (I'd love to see something on how those Southern senators were demonizing black rule, for example). Many, many thanks.

I'd also like to talk to you about water projects in Haiti. I have a new friend from India--a physicist working outside his field--who is just gobbling up all the Schauberger I keep feeding him and he's very keen to start something back home, as it's getting very bad there. I don't make prophecy a habit, but I have a strong feeling that water is going to overshadow everything else very soon. (This is a "new" Schaubergian/Taoist link I just posted back at RI that you might like.)


Shrub,

Long time, old sod--how goes it? I did read your blog, at surrender's invitation, mind you, but I didn't have a clear opinion on those chemtrails, so I didn't stop and say anything. Seems to me that Eric and his friends at FSHOD have written a great deal about it, though. I did come across something very weird on it that the boys on the discussion board were having a good yuck over, so I saved it for you and then promptly forgot to send it—another shortcoming I can blame on MS, although, speaking of ironies, and yes, I did appreciate the irony you pointed out at that bizarre Haitian-American historical site, btw, check this one out: contrary to all the propaganda about marijuana & memory, my mind works far, far better when I smoke a little than when I stick to the medicine cabinet full of officially sanctioned very expensive crap I take everyday.

So there!

Oh, yeah, I forgot again: here’s that weird chemtrail thing. (I’ve obviously not been medicating myself correctly this evening.)



Well, thanks again, all (I know I forgot about you, Belliosto—no excuses!—but I’ll get back to you next time, promise). Kids & health permitting, I’m going to make a concerted effort to tease this thing out of my Pandora’s box, as my good cryptic friend calls it.

ericswan said...

One of our anony buddies brought up the Zeolite thing over at RI and just for posterity, I will pound out a few thoughts on the subject.

Zeolite is and has been suppressed from the common. It can't be patented and is found in abundance worldwide. Some of the best outcrops are in Cuba. Most islands are formed and grow from volcanoes including Haiti and the genesis of zeolite is volcanos. ergo...volcanic ash that falls into a fresh water lake and metamorphoses into zeolite is fire to air to water to earth. Zeolite might just be our mineral equivalent but that's a concept for others to consider.

The ash is mostly aluminum silicate or sand. It is sorted by mass when it is ejected by the volcano. The heavy stuff comes down and builds mountains. The lighter aluminum silica floats down depending on which way the wind blows. When the ash falls into fresh water, it forms layers of sludge that chokes all the life out of the lake. Zeolite is layered and the layers I have mined are chock full of leaves, fish, birds, ferns, feathers, insects, and needles. The volcano and it's local environs all end up in the water. The sludge eventually forms dry land and this drying out process takes millions of years. Metamorphic pressure drives out the water, leaving hollowed out and electrically charged voids.

Zeolite breathes. A box of zeolite in the house or litter box, adsorbs odours, ammonia and dessicates the waste. The only molecule that can plug up a zeolite portal is salt. You can't make salt water into fresh water using zeolite.

You can, however, decontaminate flouride, radioactive isotopes, animal waste, or any of the heavy metals that are toxic to man.

http://www.zeolite-products.com/documents/Using%20Zeolites%20in%20Agriculture.pdf

Anonymous said...

Seems to me that Eric and his friends at FSHOD have written a great deal about it, though.

Really? I checked it out and didn't see anything about Chemtrails. I saw a lot of other weird shit, but no Chemtrails.

Either way, if you're smoking cigarettes, you've got no business complaining about the possibility that the Gubmint is possibly poisoning the skies above us. That's the height of irony.

surrender said...

IC:

I wish I could write more here but I am working in the provinces most of time for a month. I will write and post later.

Shrub:

Same reason I haven't posted on your site, but I do miss you and I DO love you.....I could never be pissed at you...

Everyone: keep it going......

iridescent cuttlefish said...

Eric,

I've been talking to a friend of mine--very unusual cat, a "mainstream" (well, employed, anyway) who's a physicist doing research into nanomaterials with directed crystallization using magnetic fields and who is a firm believer in Order arising out of chaos in Nature, as a manifestation of some sort of Cosmic Mind--and I told him about zeolite.

He was already familiar, to some extent, with its unusual properties, and now he's agreed to try using coherent light as a directing agent, kind of like what Jaap Bax was doing.

I'll tell you more as he tells me...


Shrub,

Don't know where that chemtrail stuff is now--sorry. What's with the smoking thing, though? Very strange notion, if I'm understanding you correctly: we give up our right not to be subjected to unhealthy things without our knowledge if we choose to do something that's not healthy?

Drinking, too?

How about waterskiing?

Seems to me that we should always be the ones to decide when & how our health is to be compromised...the idea of surrendering rights for any reason sounds, well, very dangerous.

Anonymous said...

You are correct, IC, that was the wrong use of words. I should have said it is absurdly ironic for someone who smokes cigarettes (talk about a conspiracy to kill the masses and make them pay for their death) to give a hoot about something like Chemtrails that is far from a proven conspiracy. Let's assume for the moment that Chemtrails are the Gubmint trying to poison us. If you chain smoke cigarettes you're poisoning yourself anyway....you are literally killing yourself, so really you should be happy that the Gubmint shares the same goal.

Chain smoking cigarettes is not the same as modest consumption of alcohol (a couple of drinks per week) and I know very few chain water skiers or companies making billions of dollars off of getting people addicted to waterskiing.

Come on, IC, surely you grasped my point the first time around with all of that. If I didn't know better I'd say you purposely misrepresented me in order to erect a strawman you could blow down. I will have to be more careful with my wording next time. Surely you couldn't believe I would advocate taking someone's rights away, could you? I'm a damn Anarchist for Christ's Sake.

I do have to wonder, though, what your utopia would look like....I can see it now...a bunch of strung out, chain smokin, hungover deadheads gathered around a non-existent campfire talking about the artificial scarcity that used to be and experiencing (no wood for the fire...everybody was too busy enjoying their rights)the real scarcity that took its place once everybody got their rights.

iridescent cuttlefish said...

Now, now, Shrub; I intended no such straw burning. The notion of someone surrendering their right not to be poisoned or in some way adversely affected without their knowledge to the Gub'mit because they chose to do something that was bad for them just struck me as wrong on so many levels.

As you say, it might seem ironic, or even hypocritical for someone to complain about inhaling unknown agents when they knowingly inhale nasty stuff, but even then I'd say that old Kropotkin would argue that there's never a good pretext for a government to do anything "to us."

Speaking of which, and serendipitously bringing us back to the Illusion of democracy, your anarchist sentiment caused me to go back to the Anarchist Archive, where I rediscovered Kropotkin's theory of Mutual Aid in Nature and in the social organization of man...wow! Not only does he refute Darwin & the imperialist imperative with observations drawn from his experiences as a biologist, but he even makes old Tommy "I'm having sex with an animal but I'm still an upstanding founding father" Jefferson's promise of liberty seem a cheap trick indeed.

If you haven't already had the pleasure, head there soon.

Excerpt from Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (Peter Kropotkin, 1902):

...As to Büchner's work, suggestive though it is and rich in facts, I could not agree with its leading idea. The book begins with a hymn to Love, and nearly all its illustrations are intended to prove the existence of love and sympathy among animals. However, to reduce animal sociability to love and sympathy means to reduce its generality and its importance, just as human ethics based upon love and personal sympathy only have contributed to narrow the comprehension of the moral feeling as a whole.

It is not love to my neighbour -- whom I often do not know at all -- which induces me to seize a pail of water and to rush towards his house when I see it on fire; it is a far wider, even though more vague feeling or instinct of human solidarity and sociability which moves me. So it is also with animals.

It is not love, and not even sympathy (understood in its proper sense) which induces a herd of ruminants or of horses to form a ring in order to resist an attack of wolves; not love which induces wolves to form a pack for hunting; not love which induces kittens or lambs to play, or a dozen of species of young birds to spend their days together in the autumn; and it is neither love nor personal sympathy which induces many thousand fallow-deer scattered over a territory as large as France to form into a score of separate herds, all marching towards a given spot, in order to cross there a river.

It is a feeling infinitely wider than love or personal sympathy -- an instinct that has been slowly developed among animals and men in the course of an extremely long evolution, and which has taught animals and men alike the force they can borrow from the practice of mutual aid and support, and the joys they can find in social life...

(Not social life as we've come to know it alright, but as it really is, beneath the thin and chipped veneer of civilization and democracy...)

Anonymous said...

I've had the same thoughts, IC, and appreciate your article. It certainly seems that the history we thought we knew is a lie. I have struggled with how these predators came to dominate our species, because I do not believe this is our nature. Really, I suppose I wouldn't care how that came about if we could only arrive at a solution for ridding ourselves of them.

ericswan said...

Hey IC..Is it scarcity or is it memorex? http://www.alternatives.com/cob-building/whatiscob.html

One more link with hundreds more buried on this page. I refer you to the Maxwell section and the subsequent suppression of the above for my understanding of this ancient understanding of quaternarion..

http://www.commutefaster.com/EnergySuppressionGV.html

Needless to say, this page is worth your close attention in oh so many ways.

Anonymous said...

Hey Swan,

Have you made your daily donation to the Cancer Society today? Your support of Big Tobacco is greatly appreciated. Keep up the good work you faithful soldier. A pack a day is a noble cause in the perpetual fight for Liberty. You will soon be free.....free from the sack of flesh, blood and bone that holds you in bondage.

I've done my part. I had gas this morning.....and it was Brown. In that respect, fighting for Liberty really stinks...but hey, somebody's got to do it.

surrender said...

Hi IC:

I just came across an article that I would like you to please take the time to read.

This will add to your research as to how "democracy" is being "spread", "enforced" by imported violence and the massacre of innocent people by the UN troops in Haiti.

I know you will be shocked and moved to expose this on your blog.

And please read the two linked articles at the top from the Haiti Press which displays graphic photos of young men, teenagers and a pregnant women shot by UN helicopter fire that, of course, has been denied by UN troops.

The article is #12 on the list of the top 25 censored articles on Nexus Magazine site.

Two close friends of mine have witnessed two attacks into the slums which killed innocent people and blew up homes with heavy mortar fire.

Three months ago 100 UN troops were removed from Haiti after being accused of raping young girls and boys in the remote areas in Haiti. None were brought to justice. Just sent out of Haiti and the story suppressed.

I belive these kind of atrocities happen here because the internetional press refuses to report these happenings and the drums of the illusion of
"democracy" keeps on beating......



http://www.projectcensored.org/censored_2008/index.htm

surrender said...

Shrub,

Two things:

The time I met this general in Haiti was not planned. I met him while with a friend of mine who does some translation work for him and it was 1:00 am and he was loosed-tounged from all the alcohol he drank.
He knows only that I plant trees
and I hope I never meet him again.
He also tried to bet me that the US would be bombing Iran within the next 18 months ( this was in November) He also tried to insult me by calling me a "socialist" while he was even more full of alcohol. I don't even know what a "socialist" is....maybe, it was a compliment.

Your point about immigrants from
Haiti and other countries coming to the US to work for the Beast bring to mind the time I was flying to Miami with mostly Haitians and I helped a Haitin women find her way thru customs.
When we got outside of the airport waiting for our rides she started crying and telling me how she didn't want to leave her country but her daughter had sent for her since she was too old to take care of herself.

The Miami airport is full of Haitian employees who clean toilets
so they can send a few dollars home.

Such is life......

ericswan said...

Hey IC..check out this link when you have the inclination to be uplifted

http://hakkor.blogspot.com/