Recently, I received the following well-intentioned bit
of humor, via email:
The three most powerful people in the USA now are named:
Bush, Dick, and Colon.
Makes you think, doesn't it?
HmmmmmmThe three most powerful people in the USA?
ActuallyNo. They aren't "Bush, Dick,
and Colon" as some wannabe clever emailer wrote and
passed on from person to person. However, the tag-on "Makes
you think, doesn't it?" deserves an honest response,
because unlike the person who originated this, I'm among
the very few who do pause to think...
The three most powerful people are more likely:
(Dollar) Bill Gates (Majority shareholder/ex CEO of Microsoft),
Arthur B. Levitt (Chairman of the New York Stock Exchange),
and
Alan Greenspan (Chairman of the Federal Reserve)
Federal politicians in "power" are suck-up toadies
to the super rich and the really powerful who raise the
ad money campaign war chests and spin teams that put them
in office and control the lobbyists of big business (who
actually draft) the legislation that gets passed
by senators and congressmen with zero input from
"the masses". Only states have referendums for
the "patriotic, flag-waving people", but "the
people" don't write the referendum questions, the "special
interest" lobbyists do. All a sham: The business of
America is business and $$$, not government. That's
just crap the media feeds the masses until 99.9% think it's
true. Up is down, left is right and black is whiteoh,
there I go thinking/speaking the cold truth--I mean, being
negative and cynical again! Well, since I doubt you're still
reading, I'll finish my thought anyway...
"We hold these truths to be self-evident; that
all men are created equal...". Yeah. Right. Written
and signed in the mid 1700's by powerful and rich, land-granted
slave owners, each of whom lived in a palace surrounded
by thousands of acres and hundreds of horses and servants
more than 100 years before the issue arose of "the
oppressed" (whose plight was served up as a divisive
issue; they were in fact, used as political pawns, to fuel
the fires of conflict) in what became a civil war--whose
real roots had to do with: money, railroads and industrial
development. Were money and power to flow into the family
hands of Northerners or Southerners? As if it weren't proof
enough, another 100 years later, in our very lifetime came
the 1967 and '68's riots, setting every major U.S. city
ablaze (as if that was all just anti-Vietnam war sentiment).
Today (as has always been the case), it is economic oppression,
just more covert and subtle. Still, the average slob and
high school history teacher tells children that the U.S.
Civil War was fought for the emancipation of "the Negro
slave". Zero reality. As if anyone but them, the disenfranchised
(no vote) poverty-stricken menial labor force of the day,
really caredor still do, based upon the current
dismantling of Lyndon B. Johnson's well-intentioned "Great
Society" programs. The collective American memory is
non-existent, kept perpetually ignorant and in a stupor
by TV sitcoms, infotainment news, piss-poor, misinformed
public education, booze, junk fast food, drugs and cigarettes.
That's what feeds the minds/bodies and creates a military
fighting force. Well-to-do intelligent people would have
nothing to with it (the military). In times of war, they
have almost always evaded military service if they could,
although certainly not as non-officers. WW2 was different--an
economic depression made war look glorious in contrast to
rotting away unemployed.
In terms of proportionate population, the media and government
trot out token anchor people and politicos to pacify
the masses, which create the perception of equal opportunity.
The brutal fact people love to deny is that all poor people
are created in equally opportunity-deficient circumstances
and all rich people are created in semi-equally opportunity-open
circumstances. Even among them there are huge variances
in brains, looks, talent, etc. In between the rich and poor
is squeezed the shrinking middle class and nothing is or
ever has been/will be "equal" for them from ass-slap
one. It's all been a vicious, cynical lie from the dawn
of "civilization". No wonder people become alcoholics,
turn into religious zombies and go otherwise phony/delusional
through every waking hour.
In closing, and to say it all, this rare bit of news never
saw the light of more media coverage:
(Wall Street Journal (7/29/99); front page, "World
Wide" column, 10 stories down, sixth from the bottom)
...Not a single TV, radio network or magazine touched on
this one, and I was searching and watching for it. The last
sentence, which was laid out in plain daylight as a stark
factoid, is breathtaking. Think about it. When there is
a murder to cover, the media is all over the place and you
get it from every angle in every color, even the f***ing
trials. Yet suicide, (some 61% of the total) a social pathology
symptomatic of a cultural challenge as serious as murder,
gets ignored. Constitutional amendments such as "The
Right to Bare Arms" could use a swift kick in the census,
given these terrible, daily realities. When you take a good
hard look at all this murder and suicide, it's not about
having money, it's about not having the opportunity to honestly
acquire it and the further opportunities that attracts:
Life and death in Capitalism/America is about money and
money's power, not government's "Bush, Dick,
and Colon".
Copyright © 2001 March Mulay. All Rights
Reserved.
Marc Mulay is an accomplished musician
and a regular contributor to *spark-online.