Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Sunday, November 20, 2016

The 'Hamilton' Fantasy




Given my background in the Theatre this "Hamilton" Thing is kind of fun. Hah hah hah. Gotcha!

I came up during a period when it was a rule -- at least in the kind of theater I was working in -- that one didn't break the fourth wall or violate the sacred space of the stage. One did not make speeches from the stage, in other words. That was a 'sacred space' and woe betide you if you violated its sacredness to make a "statement." That's what the play was for. Or not as the case may be.

Producer, directors, actors and others could and did directly address the audience -- but not from the stage. That was the place for the Performance of the Play. which was itself a sacred act  -- but which might or might not have an important or life changing message for the audience. If something needed to be said to the audience beyond the work of the playwright and company, then it could be said from just off the stage -- either in front of it or on the side. The message would be just as strong and it wouldn't interfere with the suspension of disbelief that was a fundamental aspect of the Theatre.

Well, that concept of theatral sacredness and not violating the fourth wall or the performance space was never universally observed, and these days it seems totally forgotten. There are many plays which depend on violating the fourth wall (which is something different than speechifying to the audience apart from the play), but what happened with the cast of "Hamilton" delivering their message to Pence and the Trump and their cohort was something quite different.

Not having seen "Hamilton" I can't say how it did or didn't fit in with the play itself, but as the speech was written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, the creator of the play and its former lead actor, I can fairly confidently assume he intended it as an outgrowth of his vision for the play.

As I've been told is the case with the play, the speech given by the actor who played Aaron Burr (Brandon Victor Dixon) was generous in spirit and inclusive. It was not a condemnation or "lecture" as it has been characterized by Trump apologists and loyalists. It was an open-hearted request to be heard and listened to and to use the power of government on behalf of all Americans, not just the favored few. That's all. Message: "We're all in this together." More or less.

The Twitterverse exploded when Himself, Mr. Trump, condemned the cast for "harrassing" Mr. Pence and he ordered them to "apologize." Blah, blah, blah. Who cares what he thinks, he'll change his mind tomorrow. Or the next day.

This isn't just an example of his notoriously thin skin, it's an example of his disinterest in those he deems "disloyal" to his person. It doesn't matter to him what they say or do, what matters is that he deems them "disloyal" and therefore they have no rights which he is bound to respect, and they can say nothing he cares to listen to.

Someone posted the other day that this is a form of classic abuser behavior (not referring to the "Hamilton" flap, but referring to the body of Mr. Trump's public behavior). The abuser believes that the abused brings on their own punishment through "disloyalty" toward the abuser, and once the cycle gets going, there's no way to stop it. Literally everything the abused says or does is more proof that they deserve their punishment. The only way off the treadmill of abuse is to get off. Get away from the abuser as fully and completely as possible.

I doubt that Mr. Pence, awful in his own way as he may be, was offended by the Speech From the Stage the night he attended "Hamilton." He's been in politics a long time, and he's been pilloried and skewered by his opponents in far harsher ways. If anything, I imagine he got bored rather quickly -- assuming he listened at all -- because the speech wasn't harsh or insulting or in any way "harrassing." It was a simple and heartfelt plea, that's all.

Mr. Trump's offense-taking on Twitter over it is pure bullshit, but there you are. That's the man, and that's his style. Be warned.

On another front re: Hamilton, Tony Wikrent over at Ian's Place has written a long, scholarly piece arguing that Hamilton designed the Constitution and the early independent economy of the United States to favor labor, and apparently concludes that this can be and should be a basis for governmental reform. Uhh... I beg to disagree.

Whatever the supposed intent of the Founders, including Hamilton, the nation they founded was a slave republic dependent on the labor of black chattel who had no rights whatever, and so called "free" labor who had few rights employers were bound to respect.

They did not found a republic to favor labor in any way; they founded a republic to favor ownership and exploitation of labor by a few quasi-aristocrats -- like Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, et al, come to think of it. Whatever gains labor has been able to make over the centuries has come at a tremendous price in blood and sacrifice, and every step of the way has been bitterly fought and resisted by those who were advantaged to begin with and by their descendant and co-conspirators. They are still fighting against labor's advance. And they are winning.

So I dispute the premise.

It's belied by the facts on the ground.

But it's well written, nicely argued, very detailed and it's backed up with scholarly and original sources. Trouble is, it's wrong. It's wrong because it's a fantasy of what might have been but never was. Fantasies seem to be more important than ever these days.

It would be far stronger -- though still somewhat fantastical, maybe like the play -- if Tony acknowledged that what he believes Hamilton set out to do never happened. That would be a breakthrough, I think, because there hasn't been a lot of public acknowledgement that the nation founded in 1787 started off on the wrong foot -- as a slave and genocidal republic -- and has never quite got it right.

Instead, he seems to argue that it did happen as Hamilton intended, and it only went off the rails when the false neoliberal economic ideology became dominant in government in the latter 20th century. I say "seems" because by the end of his piece, it's not really clear what he's arguing.

The play "Hamilton" is strictly speaking a musical fantasy, and from what I've read and heard about it, it's a very effective "message" play about what the country should have been and what it might still become -- because many of the right impulses were there at the beginning, along with a lot of wrong ones. That's the kind of thing the Theater can present which doesn't necessarily work on a completely rational, academic plane. The play is wildly popular, and it's been said that its concept and execution is so vital and unique that it's changed the way Broadway producers see the future of their industry. We'll see. We've heard that many times, and as much as "change" has entered their vision, backsliding is a constant.

Some observers claim that Trump used his "Hamilton" flap to distract from the $25 million settlement he made in the Trump University fraud complaint. Maybe he did. Well, so? If one is so dependent on media -- especially the simulacrum of media on Twitter -- one is too easily manipulated, it seems to me. If one has to have media validation to know what to think, one is largely lost in fantasy but then what else is new?

Media is a tool, it isn't or shouldn't be a determinant.

That's in part why I tend to stay away from  the Twitterverse, Facebook, and websites that focus on what the media or factions of it say about this or that rather than focusing on critical thinking (not so much critical "theory" -- another of those post-modern academic masturbatory efforts that run in circles of WTF), about living in the material world, truth, and everything.

It remains to be seen whether this "Hamilton" Thing will have more than a momentary impact, but it's interesting to me because of my background.

We'll get through this somehow....

[Note regarding theatral "sacred space" : The way I learned about all this was both from academic study and direct practice. Briefly, we learned that what became Drama in Theatre started as Pageants of the Gods in Ancient Egypt, in which masked and costumed actors impersonated the gods and enacted the stories and myths by which the Divine could be understood by the masses.

These pageants were witnessed by Cretan merchants and other visitors who took the idea back to Crete where these pageants were adapted into something like variety shows that included sporting events, dance, and performances that may have been intended to honor the dead as well as the gods. It's hard to know because very little of this ephemeral art has survived in Crete. What is still there are the "theatral spaces" -- generally large rectangular plazas in the so-called Palaces where stepped seating is still visible. It is assumed that many of the activities depicted in Cretan frescos -- bull leaping, dance, wrestling, etc. and possible impersonation of the Divine -- were performed in these plazas.

Mycenaean Greeks witnessed these performance/pageants and adapted them in Athens and elsewhere, and presented them as part of the celebrations of a Levantine god, Dionysus. The early Greek theatral space was the same sort of rectangular plaza as in Crete with temporary bleacher seating on two sides. Initially there was one actor and a chorus, and the performances focused on the stories of the gods and their effects on puny humans. There may have been other elements in these early theatrical performances in Greece -- dance, sport, etc -- but in time, the performances were codified, and some of the scripts from this latter period still survive and are performed to this day. The point is that all these early performances were considered sacred acts, and the spaces where they were performed were sacred spaces. When Drama in Theater spread further from Greece, the sacred nature of the performances and the spaces where they were performed went with it  though highly attenuated. Actors, directors, designers, etc. knew and know of the sacred nature of what they are doing and the sacred spaces in which it is done. All sorts of rituals and superstitions, some of which may go back to the origins of Drama in Theatre, are still part of the process of creating the play. So there is a nearly straight line between the origins of the art form and today's productions and performances, whether or not the company observes the niceties of sacred ritual.]

Friday, January 3, 2014

Let Us Reason Together -- Things Fall Apart (4)

The heat of the Omidyar/Greenwald "partnership for a new global media" hasn't produced any light at all to date, and given Twit Trends, it may never. There is something going on that we, the Rabble, are not privy to. What it is may never be revealed, but the signs aren't looking very promising right now.

"Pierre" has never had any kind of public profile or persona to speak of. He's always been in the shadows -- at least until recently. Now that he's declared his intentions, however, he's come under a lot of scrutiny, from people already in the media (such as Mark Ames and Yasha Levine who've been plugging away on the oligarchy beat for many a long year) and many others.

Greenwald has a long and storied history of turning on, attacking and smearing individuals who are natural allies in what he says he wants, in the quest for civil rights and liberties, and in the realms of media, law, and justice.

Together, the scrutiny of "Pierre's" dealings with the world and his companies' actions (particularly eBay and PayPal -- but there is more, much more) and Greenwald's... social difficulties... seem to be combining into a perfect storm that may lead to the undoing of the "new global media" venture before it even goes live for the first time.

The difficulty of the project was inherent, of course. The idea of forming a media partnership with a somewhat shadowy billionaire to concentrate on investigative journalism exposing government secrets and wrongdoing sounds pretty straightforward and necessary... until...

When you realize that "government" is operating today essentially as a service to and adjunct of corporate interests and power, the notion of exposing its secrets and wrongdoing may not be what it initially appears to be, especially when the exposition is being underwritten by one of the oligarchs (for that is what "Pierre" truly is) who is intimately involved in the nexus of government-corporate power through his companies and apparently through his charities as well.

If you don't ask what the intent is and just blindly and mindlessly accept that any exposure of government secrets and wrongdoing is a priori a Good Thing, then you probably don't understand the nature of government operations today and the many connections between corporations and government that have almost completely blurred the lines between the two.

To set an objective of exposing "government" secrets and wrongdoing while not mentioning the level of corporate control of the governments under which we live, suggests that the real intent of this "new global media" venture is to enhance corporate power and authority and diminish (perhaps extinguish) "government" authority over certain corporations.

Ultimately, one has to ask, "Is it all that wise to sacrifice what little government power and authority remains and submit entirely to corporate authority and control?"

I always ask, when people are pontificating about 'civil liberties' -- "Liberty for whom? To do what?" They never have an answer. But in Greenwald's case, it has long been clear that he is an advocate of "liberating" corporate interest from government control or authority, and he has little or no interest in personal liberties beyond his own. His defense of the abomination of the Citizens United decision was a clear enough indication of where his sympathies lay. And it's not with the People at all.

This may be why, in some measure, he tends to alienate so many people who would otherwise be his natural allies.

On the other hand, "Pierre" and his various enterprises (including a small media venture in Hawaii) seem to be allied with the National Security State in many intricate and intimate ways. The prosecution of the PayPal 14 is one of the highest profile examples of that alliance.

And that's where things have started falling apart.

Alexa O'Brien, who is as dogged and intrepid a New Media journalist as there is, who calls them as she sees them, covered the trial of the PayPal 14 and was horrified at the case presented by PayPal -- owned by "Pierre" -- that asserted falsehoods and damages that were never done, insisted on prosecution for relatively minor online offenses, and required severe punishment for those involved. Wait, said Alexa, this is wrong. This is corporate wrongdoing on a significant scale and an abomination. "Pierre" is involved in this matter, and his companies are pursuing to the limit these individuals that did not damage him or his companies in any sensible way but who fought back against his blockade of WikiLeaks, a rival in the "new global media of wrongdoing" game...

And Greenwald is now linked with this outfit?

She called "Pierre" out on it, and she's called Greenwald out on it. How can you be against "government" secrets and wrongdoing while protecting the kind of corporate viciousness she's seen in full cry in the case of the PayPal blockade of WikiLeaks and the trial of the PayPal 14?

She gave an interview in Germany (Episode 105: Jung und Naiv) in which she reiterated her reservations (linked in a previous post) about "Pierre" and his new media venture and refusing to endorse it or Greenwald's participation in it.

Shortly, Greenwald and O'Brien met on Twitter and had at one another in a very public spat in which, apparently, Greenwald was so rattled, he outright lied about whether Alexa had ever raised the PayPal 14 issue with him when he spoke to her about joining the New Media Conglomerate.

Understandably, Alexa is pissed.

Greenwald has a tendency to double down in these sorts of situations, so I wouldn't be surprised to see him smearing Alexa in numerous full-throated denunciations. It never seems to matter to him who he alienates or what sort of wreckage he leaves behind him as long as he gets what he wants. Which -- among other things -- is power, fame, and money.

Alexa is strong. Greenwald is ruthless.

And "Pierre" wants... what?* Well, that remains to be seen, doesn't it? But from the signs he wants to make government subject and subservient to his demands.

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Oh, and any bets on how soon Snowden is offered immunity and repatriated?
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* The intimacy with which "Pierre's" companies are allied with the Security/Surveillance State is a subject of a good deal of crowd-sourced research at the moment. Every day, something new comes to light, as should be expected given the depth of penetration the Oligarchy has among those who surveil us and secure them from us. There seem to be a number of overlaps -- shall we say -- between Omidyar's empire and that of the Booz Allen investment conglomerate (IIRC, Booz is wholly partially owned by Carlyle, but I could be misremembering [Indeed].)  In other words, my speculation the other day that perhaps Snowden and "Pierre" hooked up in Hawaii well before the Revelations of the Story of the Century, LLC™ may be at least partially correct. It's hard to believe there would be "no knowledge" between them given their proximity and their co-interests. Ahem. (Did they [Snowden/Pierre] meet in a Honolulu strip club? "It would be irresponsible not to speculate..." Heh.)

But time will tell. Unraveling this thing is going to take a great deal of investigative journalism, and we can bet that none of the principals in First Look will have the slightest interest in doing it.

Clever.

This particular document may be getting close to the "smoking gun..."

 http://www.minds.com/blog/view/264199355085361152/5-unnerving-documents-showing-ties-between-greenwald-omidyar-and-booz-allen-hamilton

Friday, February 3, 2012

On De-Coupling From the Twitterverse; DeFacebooking, Also. Too.



I signed up for Twitter several years ago thinking it would be a handy and modern way for me to keep up with some of the writers I enjoyed like Jeremy Scahill, Matt Taibbi, etc. Well, that didn't work so well. First of all, they rarely Tweeted -- well, Greenwald Tweeted ALL the time, but who has the need or the patience to wade through all his many Twitter Wars? Not me -- and most of what was being Tweeted was the equivalent of bird-doo-doo. Typically of neither import nor interest. It's a home for gossip, marketing, snark and sniping. Feh. I can get plenty of that elsewhere. Then for some reason, my computer stopped loading Tweets anyway. Oh, well. Maybe it were a "sign?" So, I didn't even look at my Twitter account/Twit-feed for years. No point to it, you see.

I resumed checking Twitter with the advent of Occupy Wall Street, because it was sometimes the only alternative for action play-by-plays when the Livestreams were on the fritz -- which was frequently in the early days. But then the Twit-feeds for the Occupations I was following pretty much devolved into the same sorts of things that had happened to all the others.

I stopped bothering with Twitter altogether; I'm still signed up, and the only thing I use it for is for login at Digby's. I think I have only ever Tweeted twice myself, just not into it all that much, I guess.


For all that time I resisted even accessing Facebook, Global Evil Soul Sucker that it is. It was simply not something I was going to do, no, no, no!

But then the Occupy came along and Facebook was almost the only way to stay in contact with the various Occupations I was involved with or following. I signed up. Blergh. I hated it, and I said so -- many others felt the same way, but what choice did we have? It was either Facebook, Twitter or nothing in the early days. Social media, babaay1! The Revolution will be Facebooked and Twittified!!@###

After a while, it was clear that Facebook hell was, if anything, a worse timesink than the Twitterverse; some of the things that were being posted were just atrocious and totally useless to Occupy with. It was often one Facebook argument, dispute, or war after another, with endless denunciations and calumnies, insults and raging online anger, at one another, not the Powers That Be. I stayed away from Facebook for a week in December, and when I opened my account again, there were more than 900 messages waiting for me, almost all of them had to do with a furious dispute between one Occupier and a selection of others.

The only things I was getting from Facebook -- apart from often inaccurate scheduling information and incessant RAGE -- were sometimes interesting (though superfluous) insights into group dynamics, and sometimes good links to interesting and informative articles and videos, which, typically, I could also find elsewhere.


A few days ago, I De-Facebooked. That's it, no more, bye-bye. I understand there is a complicated protocol to actually and forever get off Facebook, and what I did, by de-activating, doesn't really get me off their lists, but I'm not going to expend any more energy on it right now.

Since this blog is posted on Blogger and I have a YouTube account, I'm still linked in (and of course tracked) on Google everywhere I go on the Internets, but I figure somebody would be doing it if it wasn't Google, so, enh.

Most of the Occupations I'm interested in now have dynamite websites of their own so Facebooking and Tweeting @Teh Revolution is not as necessary as it once was. Information sharing has many operative parts these days, most of which can avoid the behemoth social media sites. Anti-corporatism actually insists on de-coupling in any case, something that is proving more difficulty than many expected.

We do rely on the internet and the giant corporate interests that are the providers and hosts. There's not a lot we can do about it, at least not yet.

But the relief I feel from letting go of the Twitterverse and Facebook is darned nice!

Frreeeeedom! Lib-erty!
http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif
Yayyyy!
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As a kind of coda on this post, "On the Media" ran an episode titled "The Facebook Show" on Thursday, but I didn't hear it -- didn't even know of it -- until the show ran on the car radio while I was driving yesterday. Talk about "Global Evil Soul Sucker," Facebook turns out to be even worse than I thought. It's a monster, I tells ya! Yet as many of those who speak out on the show recognize, Facebook is so integrated into so many people's lives now -- not to mention Twitter -- it's going to be difficult, if not impossible, for any more than the cranky fringies (oh, like me?) to decouple. "If not impossible..." Social Media is controlling us much more than we know... Listen to the show if you haven't already. It's fascinating.