Wednesday, December 29, 2010

How America Lost its Soul

by Len Hart, The Existentialist Cowboy

Literature is characterized by recurring themes. On a short list of archetypal stories is the 'pact' which some are said to have entered into with 'Satan'. In many variations, a protagonist agrees to exchange his soul for worldly or temporary gain. As a 'cultural motif', it is most often associated with or exemplified by the German legend of Faust or Mephistopheles.

It is significant that Faust or Faustus means 'lucky' --or 'auspicious' in the original Latin. It is, I'm sure, merely coincidental that Larry Silverstein who is the most obvious, the most notable beneficiary of 911, is called 'Lucky' Larry! In Latin --Faust!

In Goethe's retelling of this archetypal legend, Faust is unhappy, unsatisfied though he is a highly successful scholar. Mephistopheles makes him a 'bargain' that he cannot refuse. Faust agrees to exchange his soul for 'unlimited knowledge' and worldly pleasures. This motif is archetypal and not unique to Western or Christian traditions. It is found, I am told, in almost all cultures throughout history.

To be expected, the western versions of this legend are heavily influenced by traditional Christian beliefs in witchcraft. The pact is between a person and Satan or any other demon; the person offers his or her soul in exchange for diabolical favors, most often material, monetary or sexual but may include youth, knowledge, wealth, or power in various forms and proportions. It was also believed that some persons entered into such a pact in exchange for nothing; it was a sign of recognizing the devil (Satan) as master.
"I told the invited scientists who the Committee was, the Interim Committee, what it was established for, and then I switched over and told them what we wanted of them, the invited scientists; first, to congratulate and thank them for what they have done and then to get them started in talking and questioning. It was a little slow sledding at first but I think I got some wrinkles out of their heads in regard to my own attitude and that of the Army towards this new project. I told them that we did not regard it as a new weapon merely but as a revolutionary change in the relations of man to the universe and that we wanted to take advantage of this; that the project might even mean the doom of civilization or it might mean the perfection of civilization; that it might be a Frankenstein which would eat us up or it might be a project 'by which the peace of the world would be helped in becoming secure'. Well after a while the talk went pretty well. I had Marshall in and during a time when I had to be absent to go over to the White House he took a vigorous hand in the discussion and I think impressed himself very much upon them. I think we made an impression upon the scientists that we were looking at this like statesmen and not like merely soldiers anxious to win the war at any cost. On the other hand, they were a fine lot of men as can be seen from their records. Dr. Fermi, Dr. Lawrence, and Dr. Compton were all Nobel prize winners; and Dr. Oppenheimer, though not a Nobel prize winner, was really one of the best of the lot."

--HIROSHIMA: HENRY STIMSON'S DIARY AND PAPERS: Part 5, May 31, 1945 - June 6, 1945
The development of nuclear weapons is often said to be 'Faustian'. Indeed, for a few post war years, the United States, as the sole possessor of atomic power, ruled the world. Even before the bomb was dropped there were doubts about the wisdom of unleashing the atomic genie. It was Physicist Robert Oppenheimer, supervising the U.S. 'Manhattan Project' who quoted the Bhagavad-Gita:
"...now I am become Death [Shiva], the destroyer of worlds..."
Another version differs only slightly:
If the radiance of a thousand suns
Were to burst at once into the sky
That would be like the splendor of the Mighty one...
I am become Death,
The shatterer of Worlds.
Forbidden Planet of 1956 is a classic Sci-Fi tour de force staring Leslie Nielson, Walter Pidgeon, and Anne Francis. It holds up surprisingly well against Star Wars of the 1970's and even the most recent digital entries.

The story of Dr. Morbius, re-discovering the technological marvels of a lost race of Krell on the distant planet Altair, is updated Shakespeare: The Tempest. And while Forbidden Planet excels in special effects, it's enduring fascination is found in a parable: technology vs its inventor, the monster vs Dr. Frankenstein, in fact any one at war with the enemy of his/her own making.

Forbidden Planet lays bare the dark side of human kind, a forbidding gestalt of uncontrollable urges, the monster from the ID! Just as Lord of the Rings depicts the absolute corruption of absolute power, Forbidden Planet confronts us with a question we would rather not answer: what are we to do with the physical manifestations of our inmost monsters?

Is "Terrorism" the Monster From the ID?

FBI statistics published by the Brookings Institution repudiate the political exploitation of terror by the recent Bush administration, the right wing in general. The FBI's own statistics indicate that while Ronald Reagan most vociferously waged his famous "War on Terrorism", terrorist attacks against the United States actually increased. There were three times as many terrorist attacks during the Reagan years as were the case under Clinton. Yet --Clinton was criticized for not having waged such a 'war on terrorism'. Either the American right wing has not bothered to check the numbers or it has checked them and lies about them. In retrospect, only the wealthy, elite right wing constituency has ever benefited in any way by various 'wars' on terrorism. The rest of us are cannon fodder. The right wing consisting of powerful lobbies and military contractors has made a Faustian bargain. The U.S. is akin to Morbius of Forbidden Planet --too late do we recognize that the only demons that howl are of our own making.

In the United States, if not everywhere, it is the ruling elite that, like Faust, made the bargain. Scrooge was wrong and so is the contemporary right wing. Scrooge was wrong because the terms 'rich' and 'poor' are subjective and often the 'poor class' is the result of elitist greed. The 'monster' that is thus created is not merely the statistical imbalance between right and poor but the insidious economic inefficiencies that result. For example, in the U.S. just one percent of the population owns more than some 95 percent of the rest of the population combined. A inequitable society is an inefficient society. The U.S., for example, seems always to plunge into recession/depression during GOP regimes in which it is also true that the very, very rich have gotten even richer.

By way of influence, lobbies and campaign contributions, et al, the U.S. elite controls the apparatus of government. Naturally, this 'ruling elite' favors economic policies which enrich them to the detriment and/or impoverishment of everyone else. This is the reductio ad absurdum of the Scrooge (Herbert Spencer) position which maintains, wrongly and fallaciously, that the rich are rich because they are smarter and better.


Robert Oppenheimer on the Manhattan Project


7 comments:

Social Scientist said...

Sobering stuff. But I think the analogy with the Faust legend is at best imperfect. Faust after all, exchanged HIS soul for benefits that accrued directly to HIM. You are pointing to the wide distribution of income between the rich and the poor. Surely the rich are getting the benefits of the Faustian bargain while the poor are getting the rough end of it?

Unknown said...

Historyscientist said...

You are pointing to the wide distribution of income between the rich and the poor.

The name of the blog is: The Existentialist Cowboy. Existentialism is the philosophy of accepting responsibility for one's actions. Hence, however widespread a phenomenon, the individual is ultimately responsible for his/her own actions. It is the price one pays for being free! However large the GOP, EVERY individual is given the choice: denying the party of a member or accepting the bargain and, in the process, losing one's 'soul'.

I speak from experience as well as abstractly. I know the effect upon individuals who have chosen to join the party. The article is not about the collective soul but the sum total of individual choices affecting individual souls. I speak from some considerable experience consulting political campaigns.

At last, the wide distribution of income between rich and poor is the effect of numerous individual choices --many of which, as I tried to point out --are Faustian in nature.

Certainly --the rich as a class have benefited. But it is the individual sell-outs who have, as a matter of choice, bought into the paradigm.

By way of analogy, the GOP collectively is Satan, offering to its membership a bargain!

Marc McDonald said...

Great piece, Len.

re:
>>A inequitable society is an
>>inefficient society

Definitely true. Among other things, a grossly inequitable society can contribute to a big prison population. The U.S. locks up some 2.2 million people, (by far the biggest prison population on Earth). And we all wind up paying for this: to maintain the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex costs the taxpayer around $200 billion a year.

What's more, for all the millions of people we lock up, we're actually putting the wrong people behind bars. Hundreds of thousands of Americans rot in jail for minor nickel/dime drug crimes (that wouldn't even be considered crimes in much of Europe).

Meanwhile, the Wall Street crooks who looted the U.S. Treasury to the tune of $1 trillion walk around free. And Bush and Cheney are still not behind bars. Bush pocketed a cool $7 million for his new book. Both he and Cheney stand to reap millions of dollars in coming years from their books and speeches.

At least Blair had the decency to donate his book proceeds to charity groups benefiting wounded British soldiers (and even then, he still faced much anger and protests in the U.K.)

John Myste said...

"The only demons that howl are of our own making." Agreed. However, that is "us" as a group, not us as individuals.

The article was brilliant. NY Times quality. I tell people they should submit articles of this quality to NY Times Opinionator. So far as I know, no one I know has had one published.

You should submit this :).

Unknown said...

Marc McDonald sez...

The U.S. locks up some 2.2 million people, (by far the biggest prison population on Earth). And we all wind up paying for this: to maintain the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex costs the taxpayer around $200 billion a year.

Thanks for posting this. Very sobering. I have watched the state of TX under Herrs Bush and Perry become "Prison Planet"; Your post addresses the bigger picture --an entire nation, a 'super-power', in fact, DESCENDS into hell, a hell of its own creation.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street crooks who looted the U.S. Treasury to the tune of $1 trillion walk around free.

I am reminded of a line from 'Scent of a Woman': ""In this country, you gotta make the money first. And then when you get the money, you get the power. Then when you get the power, you get the woman." Of late, even women don't matter. It's just a matter of getting the money, ENSLAVING the world!

I used to write of 'revolution'. What is needed is a WORLD WIDE REVOLUTION!

John Myste said...

The article was brilliant. NY Times quality.

Thanks for the vote of confidence, John. I just might do that but will not be disappointed if not published : )

John Myste said...

oped@nytimes.com

You just paste your article in the body of an e-mail (which I think they require). They will know it is a submission and if you had not heard back from them within three business days, they did not print it. They get many thousands of submissions per day, but claim to read all of them. You odds are technically 1 in 99999999999999999 or something like that, but as this is a superior piece, your odds are probably down to 1 in 999999 or something.

Unknown said...

John Myste said...

... but as this is a superior piece, your odds are probably down to 1 in 999999 or something.

Those are not bad odds : ) Upon your urging, I am giving it a shot. Thanks and cheers.