
| THE HANDSTAND |
WINTER 2012
|
usa land of milk and
honey.....

http://www.sonicscoop.com/2012/11/08/music-spaces-hit-hard-by-sandy-heres-how-you-can-help/
Music Spaces Hit Hard By Sandy Heres
How You Can Help
November 8, 2012 by Justin Colletti
Rockrap@aol.com
Music community spaces including WFMU, The South Sound,
Norton Records, New Amsterdam Records and Tape Kitchen
were devastated by hurricane Sandy last week. Find out
what you can do to help.
When Hurricane Sandy hit the eastern seaboard last week,
it brought with it 90-mph winds, 40-foot high waves, and
in some areas, 15 inches of rain or over 2 feet of snow.
All told, Sandy caused roughly 7.5 million power outages,
at least $30 billion in damages and over 100 deaths in
North America alone.
Although charity organizations large and small, including
The Red Cross, Occupy Sandy, Rebuild Staten Island, and
Red Hook Recovery have mobilized in the hardest-hit areas,
parts of the northeast still struggle to come fully back
online.
Currently, expectations are for over $20 billion in lost
economic activity a full $12 billion of which will
be concentrated in New York City alone.
So much of this damage was caused before the hurricane
even made landfall. Perhaps most devastating of all were
the rising tides caused by the storms surge, which
exceeded all expectations and brought catastrophic
flooding to low-lying areas, far ahead of the winds and
rain.
An Overflowing Canal Destroys Dozens of Studios in
Gowanus
Andrew Schnieder, Mike Law and Jeremy Scott were among
those who were caught off guard by the early floods.
Their studios, Translator Audio and The Civil Defense,
were part of a newly-opened 7,000-square-foot music space
called The South Sound. Barely two weeks before Sandy hit,
they enjoyed a spirited grand opening along with the
inhabitants of about a dozen rehearsal spaces and small
production rooms that shared the building.
Destruction at The South Sound
The worst-case scenario in their minds was that several
inches of flooding might damage carpets and force them to
turn down business for a couple days as they cleaned the
place up. Just to be extra-safe, they stacked expensive
microphones and other hard-to-replace items high up on
shelves and the tops of furniture.
In the end, it did no good.
The last thing they imagined was for a 5-foot wall of
water to come crashing into the building with enough
force to turn over furniture, break solid-wood doors in
half, and throw a full-sized piano from one side of a
room to the other.
Toxic floodwaters from the Gowanus Canal had quickly
turned the parking lot into a freestanding body of water.
This put insurmountable pressure against the newly
renovated building, and eventually, a sturdy steel grate
buckled and gave way, letting torrents of saltwater gush
in.
Everything that mattered was picked up by the currents or
completely submerged: Consoles, tape machines, and entire
racks of gear.
But they werent the only studios to be damaged in
the area. Mark Spencers Tape Kitchen, just a few
dozen yards from the banks of the Gowanus was devastated
as well.
Although Spencer had a little luck he had access
to some storage on the second floor and could stash some
things there the majority of gear and personal
items couldnt make it up to relative safety. The
entire studio, along with Spencers car, was
essentially destroyed.
Translator Audio control room
If theres a silver lining, its that the music
community has begun to band together around these rooms,
offering them help to get back on their feet.
Joel Hamilton of Studio G brought his crew together to
try and help salvage some rarest pieces of vintage gear
from The South Sound, and studios like The Bunker have
opened their doors to sessions displaced by the damage.
If youd like to help in an even more
straightforward way, each of these studios are accepting
donations to help them stay above water, so to speak, as
they begin to re-book and rebuild.
Donations for The South Sound, Translator Audio and The
Civil Defense can be made at here, and a benefit page for
Mark Spencer and Tape Kitchen can be found here (and here
for donations).
Floods Damage Thousands of Rare Records in Red Hook
New Amsterdam Records is a non-profit label that gives 80%
of revenues directly to their artists. Just this year,
they moved into a 3,000-square-foot space in Red Hook,
and spent six months converting it into a new multi-use
record label, warehouse, office, venue and rehearsal
studio.
New Amsterdam HQ after the flood. All rights reserved by
NewAmsterdamNY.
Sandy hit this space hard as well, soaking amps, vintage
synthesizers and more than 70% of their catalog of discs.
It also destroyed essential documents and partially
submerged their donated Steinway grand piano.
This performance space and record label specializes in
jazz and new classical and has programmed shows that
featured the likes of Dan Deacon, Nico Muhly and tUnE-yArDs.
They are now accepting donations through their hurricane
relief fund and have high hopes for rebuilding.
Nearby, Norton Records old red brick warehouse was
ravaged by a full four feet of water with enough pressure
behind it to bend their thick metal doors.
Billy Miller and Miriam Linna founded Norton over 25
years ago and have been collecting and reissuing raucous
and rare mid-century garage rock and R&B ever since.
Ultimately, thousands of rare records were soaked in the
flooding. But a meaningful portion of them may be
salvageable. Norton Records has a call out for volunteers,
and so far Miller says that well over a hundred have come
to their aid.
Those who can lend a hand are encouraged to call 917-671-7185
or email nortonrec@aol.com.
And put VOLUNTEER in the subject line.
For those who want to contribute financially, an
undamaged shipment of new Norton releases is scheduled to
arrive and go on sale November 13th. Sounds like a good
time for some record shopping.
Storm Destroys Transmitters at WFMU and Leaves Station a
Quarter Million in the Hole
Music spaces dont need to flood themselves to be
put out of business temporarily.
Atlantic Sound Studios, Joe Lambert Mastering and ishlab
studio, which all occupy the same waterfront building
suffered no direct damage, but had to do without power
for several days, like so many New Yorkers.
They recovered quickly when power came back, but not
everyone was so lucky.
At WFMU one of the most eclectic and influential
community radio stations in the country both FM
transmitters and a whole bank of live-streaming servers
fried due to brownouts.
Manager Ken Freedman says that the real
problem is that the stations power
didnt go out all at once. A drop in voltage
is worse than a blackout, he says, and it left some
of their essential equipment beyond repair.
After 12 hours of complete radio silence, temporary web-streaming
stations were set up in home studios in New York and New
Jersey, and by November 5th, WFMU was on the air again,
finally broadcasting from one of its two downed
transmitters.
The damage to the hardware itself is only one-half of the
problem. Freedman expects that replacements and repairs
on that front will set the station back $100,000
This shortfall, however, is only compounded by the fact
that the stations annual Record Fair, a multi-day
fundraiser that attracts hundreds of vendors and
thousands of record collectors, was cancelled due to the
storm. The event, which is usually responsible for a
sizable chunk of revenue for the small, community-supported
non-profit went from fundraiser to $150,000 loss.
WFMU Record Fair Cancelled
Between these two challenges, WFMU finds itself nearly a
quarter million dollars in the hole, and in the midst of
what Freedman calls a financial disaster.
As bad as it sounds, the station has been through times
just as trying, and they hope to make it through again.
WFMU is now hosting the aptly named Hell and High
Water fundraising marathon and needs all the
listener support it can get.
If youre not a fan yet, start listening now. WFMU
is a true grab-bag of broadcast diversity and a welcome
respite to the homogenized Clear Channel radio empire.
Its also one of the last deeply relevant community
free-form radio stations standing, with die-hard fans
like Matt Groening, Ric Ocasek, Lee Ranaldo, Lou Reed,
Jim Jarmusch, and the late Kurt Cobain.
And if its going to survive this storm, like the
other music spaces mentioned above, its going to
need your help.
Do what you can.
Justin Colletti is a producer/engineer, professor and
journalist who lives in Brooklyn. He is a regular
contributor to SonicScoop and edits the musician magazine
Trust Me, Im a Scientist.
PULL YOUR PANTS UP

By Marvin X
Now
that President Obama has won four more years, what shall
we expect and what shall we do? Shall we sit around
moaning and groaning that he is a white man in black face
and shall therefore continue to be the chief agent of
white supremacy throughout the world?
Or
shall we be proactive with our own agenda to uplift our
community from the bottomless pit of economic misery by imagining an
economic model that transcends wage slavery and global
exploitation? We must get down to earth and attempt a
practical program that will create jobs in our community
that can give training to youth and adults that clearly
have no future in a dying capitalist economy that is
determined to push wage slavery with no job security, no
living wages, no health benefits or worthwhile retirement
program.
American
veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with post-traumatic
stress and unable to work normal
jobs are now being trained as entrepreneurs. We think the
same training must be offered the boys and girls in the
hood who suffer traumatic stress from the hostile
environment in America, victims of this nation's war
against North American Africans. Many of us suffer a
triple diagnose of mental illness, drug abuse and
criminal histories that will disqualify most of us from
ever working a
normal job, therefore we must consider alternatives such
as entrepreneurship that will allow us some modicum of
human dignity.
At
the same time, we must become socially active by using technology to
liberate our minds from the world of make believe and
conspicuous consumption, rather than asking a friend or
partner, "Where you at, where you at?" The
question is not where they are but where you are in real
time and space, in the real world or the world of make
believe?
There
is absolutely no reason any person on this earth to
remain steeped in ignorance while possessing cellphones that
can Google any
subject in the human imagination. We must use this
technology to help educateour
community rather engage in fruitless and absurd
conversation.
Yes,
your President has four more years and you have four more
years to redeem your humanity as a mighty nation of
Africans in the wilderness of North America. For sure, he
will continue carrying out the agenda of White Supremacy
world domination. You have the responsibility to jump out
of the box and claim your human dignity and divinity. We
cannot blame him for our troubles when we make little or
no real effort to address the bleeding wounds to our
psyche and physicality.
I
repeat what my friend Dr. Cornel West said during
President Obama's first term, "We must protect him,
respect him but check him!" I might add we must do
the same for ourselves. Remember that hip hop adage,
"Check yoself before you wreck yoself."
--Marvin
X
11/7/12
NYC
Marvin
X is now a member of the National Writers Union, New York
City Chapter
ACLU
congratulates Obama, says close Cuban camps, ground
drones
Subdued Guantánamo captives monitored news,
seemed please at president's election

Anthony
Romero, executive director, the American Civil Liberties
Union. RICHARD CORMAN
The
American Civil Liberties Union chief congratulated
President Barack Obama, and in the same breath early
Wednesday called on him to make good on his first-term
promise to shut down the prison camps at Guantánamo.We
urge President Obama to dismantle a national security
state where warrantless surveillance, extra-judicial
killings of American citizens by drones and other attacks
on our personal freedoms have been deemed acceptable,
ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero said in a pre-dawn
statement.
Obama
ordered his administration on his second day in office in
January 2009 to empty the detention center within a year.
Hes been able to cut the population to 166 but has
been repeatedly was thwarted by Congress in his goal of
closing the controversial camps by moving some of the
captives to U.S. soil.
Romeros
remarks came hours after the detention center disclosed
that two cellblocks of cooperative captives were
watching the elections on TV in Camp 6, the
main prison building at the U.S. Navy base in southeast
Cuba, where the Pentagon confines more than 100 of the
166 captives. Four years ago, word of Obamas
victory spread through the 240 or so prisoners on
election night and detainees taunted their guards with
chants of Obama, Obama, Obama because his
campaign promise of closure was widely known.Tuesday
night, the captives were more subdued, said Army Capt.
Jennifer Palmeri, a Guantánamo detention center
spokeswoman.
They
are watching quietly no chanting, Palmeri
reported by email.
********************************************************************************************
From
The Ramparts
Junious Ricardo Stanton
Drone Wars
Unmanned
Aerial Vehicles have proven their popularity on a global
scale, but drones are also looking to go local. UAVs
Predator drones currently serve as
surveillance units for drug trafficking
operations along the U.S.-Mexico border, and U.S. police
officials have expressed
great interest in utilizing drone technology
for law enforcement purposes on the domestic front. In
February, the Federal Aviation Administration granted
approval to Mesa County, Colo., to utilize
the Draganflyer X6, a small drone model that
comes equipped with wireless cameras and a variety of
sensors, for law enforcement purposes. The Draganflyer X6
has already been used
by police officers in Canada to gather
evidence and survey crime scenes. Another model, the Qube,
developed by military drone supplier AeroVironment Inc.,
was developed specifically
for law enforcement assistance. Five
Things You need to Know About Drones by Brianna Lee http://www.pbs.org/wnet/need-to-know/five-things/drones/12659/
The
US Empire like its make believe counterpart in the Star
Wars series has embarked upon a new way to wage war by
employing the latest technology to achieve its aim of
total global domination or what they call Full
Spectrum Dominance. The US has become an
imperialist warmonger launching wars around the world
under the guise of a bogus war on terror. We know it is
bogus because one cannot wage war on terror, terror is
not a country or a person it is a tactic. Nevertheless
the corporate mind control apparatus has conditioned us
to unthinkingly go along with the carnage and rapine
because they have on one hand crafted a narrative to make
the US the good guys while demonizing and
negating the people who live over or near vast mineral
resources the corporate psychopaths covet as the
other or worse as Islamofascists!?
Notice
how the enemies and targets of the new
killing technology are always portrayed as Muslims or
Islamic Jihadists/terrorists, never as mercenaries or
stooges working fully on behalf of Anglo-American/NATO/Israeli
governmental fronts for international bankers and
multinational corporations. This is the same exact game
the media and government played on us in the 50s
and 60s only back then it was the threat of
world wide communism that was used to keep
the US on a permanent war footing and keep our tax
dollars flowing to the military industrial complex.
What
we are seeing today is a classic example of mind control
and perception management by the psychopathic oligarchy,
their media, educational institutions and a sycophantic
political corps. Critical thinking is not encouraged in
the schools so the okey-doke and flim-flam to justify
permanent wars, rip offs and corporate welfare continues
unabated.
The
media through motion pictures like the Terminator, Star
Trek and Star Wars, television shows like The Unit,
Twenty-Four and Homeland, a plethora of video games and
Science Fiction novels have created a mindset that
prepares the American public to accept war, glorify
violence and live in so much fear weve become
desensitized, dehumanized and dispirited, to the point
many of us especially the younger generations have become
zombies. It is as if the goal was to create a
reality like in the movies where humans have become as
soulless and devoid of empathy and compassion as the
machines and robots we create. To make matters worse,
they are attempting to meld humans (through cloning,
implants and other technology) with machines to become
automatons like the Cyborgs in the Star Trek TV series.
This may sound far fetched but when you step back and
take an honest look at AmeriKKKa today, you will see this
is true.
Just
like in the Star Wars series the Empire had its Clone
army; the US empire has its advanced technological drones.
Increasingly the US CIA and military are relying on
unmanned aerial vehicles or drones to do their killing.
US service personnel sit behind monitors using keyboards
and joysticks to search out and launch attacks on targets
around the globe and very soon in the US itself.
They
have no remorse when innocent civilians are killed and
maimed. This is a continuation of the psychopathy used by
European settlers when they gleefully exterminated
indigenous populations everywhere they went on the planet
from the fifteenth century on in the name of their god,
king and church, It was the same mentality used by the US
when it dropped nuclear weapons on two Japanese civilian
cities in WWII after Germany had surrendered and Japan
was sending overtures about surrender. The wanton use of
nuclear devastation and destruction was a calculated
strategy to bolster US stature as a military power and
induce fear amongst potential rivals. The ruling elites
and media justified the carnage by saying it was done to
end the war sooner.
War
breeds death. Sane, well adjusted humans generally have
an aversion to killing. Soldiers have to be trained and
conditioned to murder which is why everyone isnt
fit to be in the military. The ruling elites must first
brainwash folks into believing standing armies, massive
stockpiles of weapons and a bloated military budget are a
necessity and the military is doing a noble job. The
elites must manufacture enemies and demonize those they
desire to attack so the masses can be duped, frightened
and manipulated into killing them and stealing their
lands, natural resources or market share on behalf of the
elites. Peace loving people and critical thinkers know
better. We know how and why the war games are played
which is why they eschew teaching critical thinking
skills and promote violence and war in their media.
In
the case of current US imperial overreach, drone killing
and devastation seem based on the notion detached
distance slaughter is less traumatic than face to face
combat. What makes drones disturbing is an unusual
combination of characteristics: the distance between
killer and killed, the asymmetry, the prospect of
automation and, most of all, the minimization of pilot
risk and political risk. It is the merging of these
characteristics that draws the attention of journalists,
military analysts, human rights researchers and Al Qaeda
propagandists, suggesting something disturbing about what
human violence may become. The unique technology allows
the mundane and regular violence of military force to be
separated further from human emotion. Drones foreshadow
the idea that brutality could become detached from
humanityand yield violence that is, as it were,
unconscious. In this sense, drones foretell a future that
is very dark indeed. A Brief History of
Drones by John Sifton http://www.thenation.com/article/166124/brief-history-drones#
Our
future is gloomy indeed. We have slipped over the edge
into an immoral abyss many warned us about. Martin Luther
King Jr. warned in 1968 A nation that continues
year after year to spend more money on military defense
than on programs of social uplift is approaching
spiritual doom. Looking at the imperialist leanings
and blood-lust of the US and its Western allies, it is
clear drone wars will escalate. We will soon see the use
of drones over US skies as the elites and their flunkies
move to impose their New World Order warfare/police state
on us under a guise of security and protection. Somewhere
George Orwell is spinning in his grave.
*******************************************************************************************
Notes on the Decline of a
Great Nation
By
SPIEGEL ONLINE Staff
REUTERS
The
United States is frittering away its role as a model for
the rest of the world. The political system is plagued by
an absurd level of hatred, the economy is stagnating and
the infrastructure is falling into a miserable state of
disrepair. On this election eve, many Americans are
losing faith in their country's future.
The monumental National
Mall in Washington, DC, 1.9 miles (3 kilometers) long and
around 1,586 feet wide at its broadest point, is a place
that showcases the United States of America is in its
full glory as a world power. A walk along the magnificent
swath of green space, between the white dome of the
Capitol to the east and the Lincoln Memorial, a temple
erected to honor former president Abraham Lincoln, at its
western end, leads past men in bronze and stone,
memorials for soldiers and conquerors, and the nearby
White House. It's a walk that still creates an imperial
impression today.
The Mall is lined with museums and landscaped gardens,
in which America is on display as the kind of civil
empire that promotes the arts and sciences. There are
historic sites, and there are the famous steps of the
Lincoln Memorial where Martin Luther King once spoke of
his dream, and of the dreams of a country to be a
historic force, one that would serve the wellbeing of all
of mankind. Put differently, the National Mall is an open-air
museum for an America that, in 2012, is mostly a pleasant
memory.
After a brilliant century
and a terrible decade, the United States, in this
important election year, has reached a point in its
history when the obvious can no longer be denied: The
reality of life in America so greatly contradicts the
claim -- albeit one that has always been exaggerated --
to be the "greatest nation on earth," that even
the most ardent patriots must be overcome with doubt.
This realization became
only too apparent during and after Hurricane Sandy, the
monster storm that ravaged America's East Coast last week,
its effects made all the more devastating by the fact
that its winds were whipping across an already weakened
country. The infrastructure in New York, New Jersey and
New England was already in trouble long before the storm
made landfall near Atlantic City. The power lines in
Brooklyn and Queens, on Long Island and in New Jersey, in
one of the world's largest metropolitan areas, are not
underground, but are still installed along a fragile and
confusing above-ground network supported by utility poles,
the way they are in developing countries.
No System to Protect
Against Storm Surges
Although parts of New York
City, especially the island of Manhattan, are only a few
meters above sea level, the city still has no extensive
system to protect itself against storm surges, despite
the fact that the sea level has been rising for years and
the number of storms is increasing. In the case of Sandy,
the weather forecasts were relatively reliable three or
four days prior to its arrival, so that the time could
have been used to at least make improvised preparations,
which did not happen. The only effective walls of
sandbags that were built in the city on a larger scale
did not appear around power plants, hospitals or tunnel
entrances, but around the skyscraper of the prescient
investment bank Goldman Sachs.
Large parts of America's
biggest city and millions of people along the East Coast
could now be forced to survive for days, possibly even
weeks, without electricity, water and heat. Many of the
backup generators intended for such emergencies didn't
work, so that large hospitals had to be evacuated. On the
one hand, these consequences of the storm point to the
uncontrollability of nature. On the other hand, they are
signs that America is no longer the great, robust global
power it once was.
Europeans who make such
claims have always been accused of anti-Americanism. But
now Americans themselves are joining the chorus of those
declaring the country's decline. "I had to catch a
train in Washington last week," New York
Timescolumnist Thomas Friedman, whose columns are
read worldwide, wrote last April. "The paved street
in the traffic circle around Union Station was in such
poor condition that I felt as though I was on a roller
coaster. I traveled on the Amtrak Acela, our sorry excuse
for a fast train, on which I had so many dropped calls on
my cellphone that you'd have thought I was on a remote
desert island, not traveling from Washington to New York
City. When I got back to Union Station, the escalator in
the parking garage was broken. Maybe you've gotten used
to all this and have stopped noticing. I haven't. Our
country needs a renewal."
Such everyday observations
are coalescing into a new, tarnished image of America.
Screenwriter Aaron Sorken, the creator of many legendary
television series, has come up with a new, brutal look at
America. The 10-part drama, "The Newsroom,"
tells the story of a cynical news anchor who reinvents
himself and vows to do everything right in the future. In
the show's brilliant premiere, he is asked at a panel
discussion to describe why America is the greatest
country in the world. After a few tired jokes, the truth
comes gushing out of him. "There's absolutely no
evidence to support the statement that we're the greatest
country in the world," he ways. "We're seventh
in literacy, 27th in math, 22nd in science, 49th in life
expectancy, 178th in infant mortality, third in median
household income, number four in labor force and number
four in exports. We lead the world in only three
categories: Number of incarcerated citizens per capita,
number of adults who believe angels are real, and defense
spending, where we spend more than the next 26 countries
combined."
A Land of Limited Opportunities
In the show, the audience
reacts with shock, just as a real-life American audience
would. But the truth is that America has transformed
itself into a land of limited opportunities. In fact,
that was the way SPIEGEL referred to the United States in
a 1979 cover story, when the US economy had been hard-hit
by the oil crisis.
But today's crisis is far
more comprehensive, extending to the social, political
and spiritual realms. The worst thing about it is that
the country still refuses to engage in any debate over
the reasons for its decline. It seems as if many
Americans today no longer want to talk about how they can
strengthen their union. Criticism is seen as a betrayal
of America's greatness.
But that notion of
greatness leaves much to be desired. Other numbers can be
readily added to those rattled off by the protagonist in
Sorkin's "The Newsroom," and the results are
sobering. For instance, the United States is no longer
among the world's top 10 countries when it comes to the
state of its infrastructure. In fact, it spends less than
Europe to maintain its roads and bridges, tunnels, train
stations and airports.
According to the US
Federal Highway Administration, one in four of the more
than 600,000 bridges in the world's richest country are
either "inadequate" or outdated. According to
some studies, the United States would have to invest some
$225 billion a year between now and 2050 to regain an
adequate, modern infrastructure. That's 60 percent more
than it invests today.
A Lack of Strength
It isn't hard to predict
that this won't happen. The hatred of big government has
reached a level in the United States that threatens the
country's very existence. Americans everywhere may vow
allegiance to the nation and its proud Stars and Stripes,
but when it comes time to pay the bills and distribute
costs, and when solidarity is needed, all sense of
community evaporates.
Then the divides open up between Washington and the
rest of the country, between the North and the South,
between the East and the West, between cities and rural
areas, and between states whose governors often sound as
if the country were still embroiled in a civil war.
The country has forgotten
the days when former President Franklin D. Roosevelt
courageously told his fellow Americans that a
collectively supported social welfare system didn't
translate into socialism but freedom, a "New Deal"
that would strengthen America in the long term. Gone are
the days when former President Dwight D. Eisenhower
launched bold government programs to cover a country 27
times the size of Germany with a network of interstate
highways. Gone are the years when former President Lyndon
B. Johnson declared war on poverty and enacted federal
laws declaring that there could be no second- or third-class
citizens, regardless of skin color. And gone is the
spirit of renewal after former President John F. Kennedy's
visionary promise to send Americans to the moon within a
decade, a program that would cost taxpayers billions.
Today America lacks the
financial strength, political courage and social will to
embark on such large-scale, government-directed programs.
The United States has long been drawing down its savings,
writes Fareed Zakaria, another American critic of his own
country and a respected columnist with Time.
"What we see today is an American economy that has
boomed because of policies and developments of the 1950s
and '60s: the interstate-highway system, massive funding
for science and technology, a public-education system
that was the envy of the world and generous immigration
policies."
Zakaria's
words resonate with the questions that have dominated
this long election year, and have long sharply divided
the country into two hostile camps, roughly equal in size:
Does America need more or less government? Are higher
taxes the right approach to fairly distributing
collective tasks, or are they infernally un-American?
For
a time President Barack Obama, 51, and his Republican
challenger Mitt Romney, 65, made this question a key
theme in their respective campaigns. The Democrat invoked
the helping hand of government while the Republican
demonized it. The fact that this old dispute has returned
with such vehemence says a lot about the declining
cohesion of a nation that runs the risk of losing its way
in a changing world.
This
rift between the two opposing views of the role of
government helps to explain America's current weakness.
The deep cultural divide that took shape 150 years ago in
the bloody battles of the American Civil War has returned,
awakened by the multiple crises of our time. It seems
that it was only buried and concealed by consistent
economic success during the 20th century, when the United
States became the dominant power in the West. For the
longest time, Americans were buoyed by the certainty that
their children would be better off than they were.
At
the beginning of the 21st century, this American dream,
which consisted mainly of confidence and optimism envied
the world over, is failing. It began to fail around the
turn of the millennium, with the crash landing of the New
Economy, and it imploded altogether in 2008, when Wall
Street became the epicenter of a global financial
meltdown, and when millions of Americans lost their homes
and jobs. In some polls, almost half of Americans today
say that the country's best days are gone.
"Americans
are tired after the war in Iraq and also after
Afghanistan," says Obama advisor and former
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. This exhaustion,
when combined with the traumatic terrorist attacks of
2001, has weakened the social glue that held America
together in the 20th century. This is only too apparent
in the absurd squabbles between Republicans and Democrats
during the Obama years.
The
president didn't keep his promise to unite the country
politically, but for that to happen, the participation of
both parties would have been required. Instead, the more
Obama sought to accommodate the Republicans, the more
extreme their positions and the more hysterical their
criticism became, eliminating any prospect of compromise.
The three most important pieces of legislation Obama
pushed through Congress since his inauguration in January
2009 were achieved with the votes of his fellow Democrats,
even though they incorporated key Republican demands.
Obama's
biggest economic stimulus package, which provided for
government investments of $787 billion, contained
substantial tax cuts that the Republicans had demanded
and to which the Democrats were in fact opposed, and yet
only three Republicans in the Senate and none in the
House of Representatives voted for the legislation. All
Republicans in both houses of Congress rejected the
healthcare reform that will be viewed as a historic
achievement one day. And the financial reform legislation,
which turned out to be far more moderate than the
Democrats had hoped, received the votes of only three
Republicans in each house of Congress.
A
Systematic Crisis
Does
this sort of stonewalling already signify the collapse of
a representative democracy? Naturally, an opposition
party's role must be to fight the government's policies.
Nevertheless, such deep-seated opposition as there has
been in the Obama years is unprecedented in the last few
decades of American politics. Many bills were never even
put to a vote in Congress, because the Republicans, more
frequently than ever before, threatened to use or did in
fact deploy the so-called filibuster, a delay tactic with
which votes on legislation can be completely obstructed.
In the last five years, Republicans in Congress have used
the filibuster a record-breaking 385 times, or as much as
it was used in the seven decades between World War I and
the end of the administration of former President Ronald
Reagan in 1989.
According
to a current study, since 2007 Republican lawmakers have
tried to torpedo more than 70 percent of all bills before
they were even put to a vote. This applied to only 27
percent of proposed legislation in the 1980s, and only 8
percent in the 1960s. "This level of obstruction is
extremely unusual," Norman Ornstein, a congressional
scholar with the American Enterprise Institute, a
conservative think tank, told Newsweek.
"And the core of the problem is the GOP."
The
claims that Republican leaders agreed, on the day of
Obama's inauguration, Jan. 20, 2009, to rigidly block his
policies, are now well-supported by credible reporting.
In the last four years, it seems as if one half of
America -- the Republicans -- has been determined to
spoil everything for the other half -- the Democrats --
regardless of the issue and whether or not these
obstructive tactics have helped or harmed the public good.
This is hardly anything less than a systemic crisis.
This
obstructionism is largely attributable to the group
within the Republican Party known as the Tea Party. As
filmmaker Sorkin claims, the coalition of
ultraconservatives has developed into the "American
Taliban." They view Darwin's Theory of Evolution as
the stuff of the devil, homosexuals as diseased and women
as subordinate to men. They oppose contraception and are
so filled with hate in their efforts to ban abortion that
they don't seem to object when violent anti-abortion
activists burn down the offices of liberal doctors.
They
claim that according to the American Constitution, the
United States is a Christian country, which isn't true,
and their platform contains demands to eliminate all
taxes or even get rid of the central government
altogether. All of this could be dismissed as some
marginal aberration if the Tea Party were not such a
driving force behind the Republicans, shaping the tone
and superficial content of the entire political discourse.
'Dropout
Factories'
And
when there is also a lack of perseverance on the part of
the government -- an accusation that does apply to the
Obama administration -- and when important proposals are
abandoned in the face of the slightest resistance, the
work to shape the future of the United States, which its
founding fathers saw as a "work in progress,"
becomes gridlocked in a very fundamental way.
This
gridlock applies to all political spheres. America's
schools, for which the country spends more than any other
nation on earth, are more like "dropout factories"
in big cities like Chicago and the capital Washington.
Some 1.3 million students drop out of high school each
year in the US before they have the chance to graduate.
Although
many American universities are still among the world's
top institutions, they have become unaffordable for many
Americans. Every year, universities are forced to raise
their already outrageously high tuition levels, partly
because of declining government support. In fact, states
like California now spend more money on prisons than
universities.
American
college and university graduates owe a total of $1
trillion in student loan debt, which exceeds total
American consumer credit card debt. The prospect of
incurring such massive debts deters prospective students,
especially those from poorer families, from attending
colleges and universities in the first place. A person's
socioeconomic background now plays a stronger role in
America in determining his of her social and educational
opportunities than it does in Europe, whose class society
the founders of the United States once set out to leave
behind.
One
Dead End after Another
In
the fall of 2012, America is a country filled with such
dead ends.
The
fight against climate change is one of them. Impending
environmental threats were a major theme in Obama's first
election campaign, but then they were dropped at the
first sign of Republican resistance and remained a non-issue
in the current campaign -- until Hurricane Sandy
inundated New York City and parts of New Jersey. Since
then, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a Republican, has
endorsed Obama for reelection, citing the dangers of
climate change and the incumbent's positions on the
environment. And as a result of the storm, New Jersey
Governor Chris Christie suddenly became the only
Republican governor to find himself working side-by-side
with the president.
Such
political reversals don't change the fact that important
projects have turned into failed undertakings, while
visions have been put on the back burner. The sad fight
for more high-speed rail in America is a case in point.
High-speed trains only travel on a few routes in the
United States at the moment, at an average speed of 70
miles per hour (112 kilometers per hour), which is much
slower than Europe's ICE and TGV trains.
Obama
recognized this as a problem and asked Vice President Joe
Biden, a railroad buff who used to commute by train to
Washington when he was a senator from Delaware, to
improve the situation. As a result, the government
announced a plan to invest $53 billion in new, modern
trains and routes.
But
Republican governors in states with routes where high-speed
rail would make sense simply refused to accept the
government funds. Once again, their refusal reflected the
desire to thwart a plan by "Socialist" Obama,
and the determination not to be accused by their
supporters of having accepted money from the agents of
"big government."
The
failing project coincides with the image, already a
worldwide cliché, of the United States as a country that
doesn't understand the signs of the times and has almost
willfully -- flying in the face of all scientific
knowledge -- chosen to be backward.
America
Falls Behind
This now seems to be
dawning on many of those who used to come to the United
States because it was the country of their dreams.
According to new studies, highly qualified immigrants
from India and China are increasingly turning their backs
on the country after finishing their studies there,
secretly hoping for better opportunities back home.
America is no longer as attractive a magnet as it once
was. And, of course, China and India, the native
countries of many potential immigrants, have become
significantly stronger.
America will feel the
effects of this trend. Immigrants made America great and
have kept it great. Immigrants, who make up about 12
percent of the current US population, founded more than
half of all Silicon Valley companies and filed one in
four patent applications between 1995 and 2005. Almost
half of all doctoral candidates in engineering and
science do not speak English as their first language.
The most talented American
students will not be filling the resulting gap, because
they'd rather work on Wall Street than in technology and
engineering fields. About a third of the students in
every graduating class at Harvard University accept jobs
in investment banking and consulting, or with hedge funds
-- that is, industries that produce one thing above all:
fast money.
In Today's America,
Long-Term Goals Stand No Chance
Obama proposed several
projects to improve the country's schools, raise
education levels and promote equal opportunity for all
children. But instead of supporting his efforts,
governors obstructed them. Some even blocked guidelines
to bring healthier food into school cafeterias, merely
because they were created by people in Washington. In
this environment, long-term goals don't stand a chance.
Obama's major economic
stimulus package, which critics claim is more of a crisis
management program than the blueprint for a new beginning,
set aside $90 billion to promote renewable energy. This
is a lot of money, but because the "green jobs"
the program promised didn't materialize right away, the
president's adversaries ridiculed the entire project and
cited it as an example of his failure. Obama's search for
a green future was nothing but a money pit, scoffed the
Republican front men, who want nothing to do with
environmental protection and ecological progress, because
they assume that electricity comes from an outlet and
gasoline from a pump.
Solyndra, a promising
startup company in the sunny town of Fremont, California,
which had a seemingly brilliant idea to make more
effective solar panels, became a symbol of the fight over
Obama's allegedly failed environmental policy. In March
2009, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, a Nobel laureate in
physics, awarded the company a $535 million loan.
"The promise of clean
energy isn't just ... some abstract possibility for
science fiction movies," Obama said. But that was
wrong, at least when it came to Solyndra. The company
went bankrupt in 2011, 1,100 employees lost their jobs,
the government's money was gone and the Republicans had
fodder for the election campaign.
Solyndra was in fact the
exception to the rule. Of 63 companies that received
government assistance under Obama's green economy
programs, 58 were successful and only five went bankrupt
-- a 92-percent success rate. But none of that mattered.
Obama's opponents, or about half of the American
population, ignored the underlying goal of the "green"
offensive, which is ultimately to make the entire country
more competitive.
Within a few years, major
competitor China has increased its share of the global
solar market from 6 to an impressive 54 percent. Less
than two decades ago, the United States was still making
more than 40 percent of solar technology sold worldwide.
Today it's just over 5 percent.
Even as America falls
behind, some of its more enlightened citizens sometimes
return from abroad to report on all the things they have
learned in other countries. For instance, while
campaigning for Obama, former President Bill Clinton
often cited the "German model" as one worth
emulating. In "a country where on average the sun
shines as much as it does in London," he told an
audience, "the Germans have netted 300,000 jobs out
of their commitment to a solar future." America, he
suggested, could create a million such jobs if it wanted
to. But in 2012, this is a goal that no more than half of
the people in the United States would support, which is
why the country is beginning to lose its edge.
Losing Ground
Nevertheless, "decline"
is a big word, especially for a nation that is still the
world's number one economic and military power, and will
remain so for at least the next decade. It's also a
country whose innovative energy seems unbroken in many
fields, and one that, unlike Europe, has balanced
population growth and enormous mineral resources. In fact,
when it comes to the demise of former world powers,
Europe's decline is much more evident than that of the
United States.
But America is losing
ground: as a model, as a driving force and as an old and
bright beacon for the West. It's been half a century
since a US president last promised to "pay any price,
bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend,
oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the
success of liberty." These were the words of John F.
Kennedy, but even his direct successors were much more
selective as to which tasks they were willing to take on
to defend liberty after US withdrawal from Vietnam.
Ronald Reagan, whose fans
credit him with having disarmed the "Evil Empire,"
sent Marines into Lebanon, and brought them home again
after 241 soldiers died in the bombing of the USS
Cole. Otherwise, Reagan only captured tiny Grenada in
the name of liberty. Bill Clinton recalled US troops from
Somalia after images of a dead US soldier's body being
dragged through the streets of Mogadishu were broadcast
on television. He chose not to intervene in the Tutsi
genocide in Rwanda. And, like the Europeans, he spent
years watching the wars of succession in Yugoslavia until
he ordered the bombing of the troops of then Serbian
dictator Slobodan Milosevic.
Even George W. Bush, who,
at least during his first term, was convinced that the
United States had to defend freedom and democracy, with
military force if necessary, did so under the delusion
that major successes were possible with a relatively
small commitment of troops and equipment. But he was
mistaken. Annual costs of between $100 billion and close
to $200 billion for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars were a
key determining factor in the US's current financial
plight.
Obama can be credited with
having finally admitted that his country's options in
foreign policy are not unlimited. "We can no longer
afford troop-heavy interventions, unless our national
survival is at stake," he said. But in the toxically
divided United States, his detractors interpreted this
realization to mean that the commander-in-chief was
personally preaching that the country should abandon its
leadership role.
Economic Crisis Forces
Foreign Policy Rethink
But it was the economic
crisis and the crisis within the political system that
forced the president to rethink his options in foreign
policy. And it would be an illusion to believe that the
outward expression of political strength has nothing to
do with the economic, domestic state of a country. But it
is precisely this adjustment to reality that raises the
anger of those who have always seen America as the
country that could tell everyone else what to do.
In fact, the more palpable
and undeniable the country's economic and political
weakening, the louder the nationalist bluster coming from
Tea Party leaders becomes. And even as it
indiscriminately demands cost cuts, especially in social
and educational budgets, the Republican Party, the Grand
Old Party, wants to make an exception for the defense
budget. In fact, if the Republicans had their way, the
defense budget would grow to historically high levels.
The Republicans paint
their agenda as a commitment to a "strong America,"
while portraying the Democrats and, most of all, Obama,
as cowards. That's why, during the campaign, there were
billboards along America's highways that showed Obama
bowing subserviently to oil sheikhs. And that's why the
Republicans have outrageously characterized Obama's trips
to the Arab world and his major speech in Cairo, offering
reconciliation to the Muslims, as an "apology tour."
But foreign policy rarely
decides elections in the United States. The legendary
words "It's the economy, stupid" were coined by
an advisor to Clinton during his successful 1992
presidential campaign. But the economy and foreign policy
have never been as closely connected as they are in today's
world, in which the United States faces serious
competition for economic dominance. When there is talk of
the Chinese challenge in the State of Ohio, whose 18
electoral votes could be critical in determining who wins
the election, it relates directly to local jobs in the
domestic automobile industry, so that no candidate can
afford not to have an opinion on Washington's China
policy.
The
Mother of all Austerity Measures
In the 2012 campaign, many
Americans have realized for the first time that the US's
role as a global power is no longer uncontested,
something the Republicans blame on their enemy Obama,
arguing that he hasn't been aggressive enough in places
like Libya, Syria and Iran. "We can neither retreat
from the world nor try to bully it into submission,"
he said before coming into office, a statement that
Republicans interpret as a sign of weakness, a conviction
they feel is only reinforced by the military withdrawals
during Obama's term.
Obama wanted to withdraw
US troops from Iraq and, by 2014, from Afghanistan, but
he also had no choice. Both cost considerations and the
dramatic failure of both operations spoke in favor of
withdrawals. Contrary to what many a global strategist at
the Pentagon may have envisioned, Iraq has not turned
into a nucleus for new democracies in the Arab world.
Instead, the country continues to stagnate today as a new
dictatorship in disguise, and it remains plagued by
terrible bombing attacks. After 10 years of war, and
despite the collaboration between NATO and the United
Nations, Afghanistan, a major global project, remains a
failure for the United States, which has already lost 2,144
soldiers and has brought home tens of thousands of troops
with physical and emotional injuries, without being able
to celebrate a tangible success.
The upheavals in the Arab
world took America's diplomats by surprise, and they
ended Obama's offensive in the Islamic world. But they
also showed how poorly connected and, ultimately,
uninfluential the United States is in the region today. A
member of the Muslim Brotherhood is now Egypt's president,
Iran apparently remains undeterred in advancing its
nuclear program and the situation in Israel is more
precarious that ever. These are all signs that America
has far less influence than many Americans still want to
believe.
This is not solely
attributable to an American decline, but also has to do
with various shifts in the global power structure. The
unique role the country enjoyed for a short period after
the collapse of the Soviet Union is gone. There was a
moment, at the time, in which the apologists for American
greatness had already declared the end of history,
because they felt that there was now proof that there
could only be one model of governmental organization: the
Western, economically liberal democracy based on freedom.
But that moment is over.
The Beginning of the
Post-American World
Romney's campaign speeches
sounded especially empty when he proclaimed the 21st
century as an "American century," once again.
In fact, there is much more to be said for the notion
that, as Time columnist Zakaria believes,
the "age of the post-American world" is
beginning. In his new book "In No One's World,"
Washington political scientist Charles Kupchan writes
that there are apparently "multiple paths to
modernity," even if this isn't what the old West
wants to hear. The world, says Kupchan, is not getting
more homogeneous and more American, but rather more
diverse and less American.
China is a case in point.
For the time being the country, with its authoritarian
government, has apparently managed to enable a
sufficiently large middle class to take part in its
economic success, so that a majority of Chinese citizens
are not as likely to challenge Communist Party control.
Some 80 percent of respondents to a survey in China said
that they were satisfied with the country's direction,
compared to less than 30 percent of respondents to a
similar survey in the United States. Many developing
countries are now looking to China instead of the US as a
role model on how to structure a country. They are no
longer seeking the light of the American beacon on the
horizon. And unless a miracle occurs after the election,
specifically by Dec. 31, 2012, that light could go out
soon, or at least be reduced to a flicker.
That's when an ultimatum
expires that is known as the "fiscal cliff,"
which Democrats and Republicans set for themselves, after
the dramatic failure of their budget negotiations in the
summer of 2011, so as not to drive the world's largest
government budget against a wall. If both sides can't
agree to a joint solution, budget cuts and tax increases
will automatically take effect on Dec. 31 that will
massively reduced the deficit by $900 billion.
So far, both sides have
shown little willingness to compromise. The Democrats
insist on tax increases for the rich, which the
Republicans reject, arguing that the budget should be
consolidated through spending cuts alone. President Obama,
who will remain in office until at least Jan. 20, 2013,
regardless of the election outcome, has announced that he
will veto any proposal that doesn't include higher taxes
for the rich.
The automatic emergency
savings package would reduce the budget deficit by $607
billion. This would translate into cuts for doctors and
hospitals, schools and day care, theaters and museums,
train stations, airports and universities. Purchasing
power would be reduced and investments would not be made,
all because, in today's America, political compromises
and the reasonable balancing of interests no longer seem
possible.
An austerity program of
this magnitude would cost the economy about 5.1 percent
of the gross domestic product. Not even the crisis-ridden
countries of the euro zone have instituted such drastic
austerity programs.
According to official
government sources, the country could face a "significant
recession" unless it finds a solution to its budget
problem. The economy, which is predicted to grow by at
least 2.5 percent next year, could shrink instead,
leading to an unemployment rate of more than 9 percent.
It's a nightmare scenario that even the International
Monetary Fund, normally a proponent of drastic austerity
programs, warns against. Behind the fiscal cliff is a
gaping abyss into which all hopes for America's future
could disappear.
Perhaps it is already
merely a question of controlling the problem and making
preparations for the post-American age.
That would require changes
to the National Mall in Washington, DC. Memorials for the
soldiers killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would
be needed, memorials that are still missing in the open-air
museum of imperial American greatness. One day, a statue
would also have to be erected for the first black
president of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama. The
plaque could very well read that he had the misfortune of
coming into office when the American empire was just
turning into a beautiful memory.
Reported By
ULLRICH FICHTNER, HANS HOYNG, MARC HUJER AND GREGOR PETER
SCHMITZ

A homeless man on the streets of Los Angeles: States
like California now spend more money on prisons than
universities.
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