Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cutting The Ties That Bind: The Congressional Rip Cord

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cutting The Ties That Bind: The Congressional Rip Cord

    CUTTING THE TIES THAT BIND THE CONGRESSIONAL RIP CORD
    By Marcelle Cendrars

    CounterPunch, CA
    Oct 29 2007

    "Just as Mrs. Phelps, in Sidney Howard's 1926 The Silver Cord,
    destroys the relationship between her younger son and his fiancee,
    Congress (among other things) destroys the relationship between
    democracy and justice. And just as the older son in that play has
    to go abroad to begin a healthy relationship, we are going to have
    to cut our traditional ties which bind us to Congress, which serve
    as a diseased umbilical cord with Congress." -- The author's radical
    Theatre professor, Lester Moore of Rutgers University, in notes from
    speeches given on the campus of Teachers College, Columbia University,
    N.Y.C., 1968.

    Jay Leno, whose Late Show entertains millions five nights a week, has a
    Jay Walking segment which --after a fashion that's typical of today's
    television, highlighting humiliation-- stops people on the street to
    ask them simple grade school Qs like "Where is Washington, D.C.?" or
    "Who was President at the time of the Emancipation Proclamation?" that
    are designed to make his audience feel superior.

    As viewers bathe in their smarts relative to the Trailer Trash
    Mentality on display, Jay knowingly snickers, giving hints at times
    that help the educationally challenged ... not at all for most ("He
    had a beard and wore a stovepipe hat!"), and pumps himself up as ...

    Smarter Than Thou. Not just a collector of classic cars with a Big
    Chin, that #1 American TV Host --inheritor of Johnny Carson's mantle--
    knows how to locate Iraq on a map! Well, I took a poll of an even one
    hundred people at random recently, and each one --without exception--
    noted that the Late Show Jay Walking segment revealed how little the
    public knows about Social Studies subjects. No one --absolutely, not a
    soul-- pointed out that even when respondents answered correctly ... it
    meant very little. That the whole exercise was centered on trivia. Like
    most spot quizzes in school. In the spirit of counteracting that false
    Leno bravado, which compounds ignorance with ignorance by emphasizing
    the inconsequential, I offer up the following test for J-Bird and
    those of his species. And --to make things as easy as possible-- we'll
    limit it to a simple Yes or No below: 1A. Has any member of Congress
    recently brought up the subject of Halliburton selling materials
    used in building nuclear reactors to an Iranian oil development
    company as late as 2005? OR 1B. Has any member of Congress called
    attention to the fact that Iran's President Ahmadinejad's comment
    about destroying Israel ("Israel must be wiped off the map.") was
    actually a misinterpretation? 2. The Animal Enterprise Terrorism
    Act (AETA) of November 27, 2006 was passed by only six (out of 435)
    Congresspersons as a process bill which is non-controversial. Did more
    than one person oppose the bill which "will have a real and chilling
    effect on people's constitutionally protected rights," according to
    Dennis Kucinich? 3. Did Congress do everything it could do (or much
    at all) to prevent the S&L Scandal of the 80s (which we're still
    paying for to the tune of $32 billion per year)? 4. Did Congress
    come close to doing everything it could have to lessen the number
    of deaths in Rwanda in the 90s? 5. Is there any public talk among
    Congresspersons about the serious indiscretions concerning Senator
    Diane Feinstein's husband's war profiteering in Iraq? 6. Did Congress
    ever make a move to force Japanese acknowledgement of The Rape of
    Nanking as it did vis-a-vis the Turkish Genocide of Armenians? 7. Have
    members of Congress kept the majority of their campaign promises this
    time around ... or ever? 8. Recent temporary measures passed by the
    Congress required "a clear notification" for government video news
    releases (the dominant form of "fake news"), clearly defining what
    that means. 9. Has Congress ever --when push has come to shove--
    not supported a President's war? 10. Let's make this final question
    an easy one: Is Congress doing everything it can to impeach Bush and
    Cheney? The answers? No*, I won't provide them! No way** I'll have
    anything to do with encouraging questions about the U.S. Congress.

    *That's a hint. **That's a hint too. The author does encourage one and
    all to cut our shriveling umbilical cord with Congress, which keeps
    feeding us with that which does not nourish us. Keep the proverbial
    Apple Pie, but get rid that poor excuse of a Mom, Loyal Spouse of
    Papa Prez. The Whole Parental Unit, in fact. Do not honor thy Father
    and Mother. Run away from what they call Home.

    Marcelle Cendrars, Algerian-American freelancer residing in L.A.,
    can be reached at [email protected].

    http://www.counterpunch.org/ce ndrars10292007.html
Working...
X