Monday, March 16, 2009

It's a Doocy, all right

I think we'd all feel better if we stopped fretting about things and realized that the world we live in is no more than a huge, slowly revolving madhouse with no walls. It's the notion that things and people ought to make sense that drives us crazy -- because they don't. You only have to tune in the news for all the evidence you might need. Take Fox, for instance: any one of those shows with giggling night of the living dead zombies batting fallacies, conjectures, hypertrophied hyperbole and lies back and forth like a game of three-way badminton.

CNN is a communist organization says Steve Doocy on Fox and friends. Like "Liberal" It's a term without fixed meaning, used often enough on Fox that it really means little else than that the victim doesn't have rabies and doesn't preach abject obedience to Fox approved authority and doesn't exhibit a Pavlovian rage response on cue. That certainly describes CNN, who sometimes actually does indulge in honest reportage rather than to derive stories from the Ouija board used by Fox and Friends. But anyway they are all Commies - perhaps some of the few left in the real world and they don't need to tell you why or how. All the proof you need is that a former CNN employee, Mauricio Funes, has been elected President of El Salvador. Elected, not installed by a military insurgency or people's revolution or quasi legal action by the courts. Elected by popular vote. Elected as in Democracy.

So anyway, by the law of sympathetic magic, or perhaps something even more arcane; because he isn't Augusto Pinochet or any of the other murderous, fascistic, peasant slaughtering, protester torturing, nun raping, drug money laundering anti-communist Generalissimos the US traditionally supports and supplies, he's a communist and CNN is the "Communist News Network." What's more, the liberal party he belongs to has, according to Mr. Doocy "allegedly ties to Caesar Chavez," a man that those without heads spinning from Fox Poisoning will remember is long dead. Of course Doocy's duezy was not only to confuse Hugo with Caesar, but to confuse a baseless, irresponsible, malicious and speculative accusation with fact. That's Fox. That's what Fox is about: the voices from Neptune for a mad, mad, mad world.

I happened to be perusing an auction catalog over coffee, early this afternoon; thinking about the things I might have been bidding on if George Bush's irregulars hadn't stolen everyone's money and there were a couple of lots of antique Chinese opium pipes and accessories. That's right, drug paraphernalia and legitimately so because you really can't smoke anything legal in an opium pipe.

Of course the water pipes Tommy Chong once manufactured worked quite well with tobacco, that highly addictive, highly toxic and legal drug, yet Tommy went to prison and lost nearly everything he had. What's the difference between selling legal drug paraphernalia and illegal drug paraphernalia? Nothing beyond the personality involved. We have all sorts of laws enforced only to advance the careers of law enforcement, because, just like the traditional, criminally repressive generalissimos we traditionally support in Latin America, our Justice Department Buccaneers can make an honest man into a criminal as easily as Fox News can make Thomas Jefferson into a Communist and Jesus into Attila the Hun.

If you care about this insanity, you can't expect to survive intact and so I try very hard not to. Sure, I lost almost 80% of my net worth and the people who made that possible are fighting against any attempt to restore order; screaming like demons about Commies and Liberals and Witches and welfare queens but although I can still pay my bills, I can't afford to care. I've still got my house and my boat and a big ocean to float it in and as of today, I can even blog while afloat, hiding in my escape capsule from the madness of the world.

6 comments:

  1. "I think we'd all feel better if we stopped fretting about things and realized that the world we live in is no more than a huge, slowly revolving madhouse with no walls. It's the notion that things and people ought to make sense that drives us crazy -- because they don't."

    Feeling a bit existentialist? In a Foxish sort of way?

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  2. Feeling betrayed?

    Feeling as if you played by a set of rules and beliefs that you now realize only applied to you and a few others?

    I decided to expand my business and since I came up with the plan I have watched as four suppliers have folded. In two months I have watched as companies I have relied on for years have just bit the dust.

    They just gave up and gave in.

    I cannot help but wonder if our whole economy is nothing more than a ponzi scheme where new participants enter the scheme at the bottom to enriche those at the top of the pyramid.

    Have you noticed that while channel surfing whenever you hit the fox news their volume is so much louder than the other channels?

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  3. Q. What's the best thing humans can do for the planet?

    A. Die

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  4. Existentialist, nihilist -- I don't know. I just feel like this under-evolved ape has been allowed into a position far too advanced for it's stupidity and can't sustain it. We're not even smart enough to see how dumb we are.

    Yes, I think Fox uses more audio compression to make it sound louder. Compression is a form of distortion and since everything they do involves distortion, we shouldn't be surprised.

    I think most of them use botox too. Ever notice how some of their people look like they've had a face transplant that didn't quite take? Or maybe we're looking at rubber masks glued to alien reptile faces. . .

    Yes, if we're going to improve the planet, let's start with them

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  5. I always wondered how O'Reilly always finds his "experts" and "analysts" among blond big breasted women.....

    Does he search for experts/analysts and only selects the blonds or...

    Does he search the blondes to find experts/analysts?

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  6. Fogg,

    In these times it's actually comforting to read a fine piece of antiphilosophy like Nietzsche's "On Truth and Lying in a Non-Moral Sense," no? Indeed, this whole business of insisting that things ought to make sense. The imposition of it! The human self-puffery! Professor N says it well: "Truth is a mobile army of metaphors...," the metaphoricity of which we have forgotten so that we can see the world as stable and made to suit our convenience and fulfill our desires.

    What is grimly comical about the current situation is that the right-wingers, who are always so dead-set in favor of "things making sense" (rooftop-shouted absolute moral verities, black/white oppositions so stark they hurt your eyes, the whole shebang) seem to have come completely unhinged--the kind of bunkum they're propagating nowadays is simply unbelievable. Perhaps being out of power has simply liberated them from even the most vestigial sense of responsibility to, well--"truth."

    ReplyDelete

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