The
Anybody But Bush (ABB) movement has a new recruiter. Rapper Eminem has
released a new video “Mosh” that urges America’s disaffected youth
to do their civic duty to remove Bush by engaging in the revolutionary
act of voting.
Directed by Ian Inaba of the Guerrilla
News Network website, the anti-Bush video has all the accoutrements
of rebel chic and revolutionary images that are appropriated and safely
channeled into the government-approved outlet of obediently voting for
the State-sanctioned candidates in a rigged game. Eminem wants you to
fall in line and play their game on their terms. This sort of
inside-the-ballot-box thinking is as daring and revolutionary as a
Britney Spears Pepsi commercial. I’m sure it will complement MTV’s
superficial “choose or lose” campaign quite nicely.
As Inaba recently explained,
"The goal was to make a video that inspired young people to vote
because they too often disregard it as a powerless exercise." He
further added that, “voting is the most powerful act we all have to
voice our opinion and effect change.”
This sort of thinking mirrors the naïve and self-delusional rhetoric
emanating from the Punkvoter.com
crowd who traded in their do-it-yourself ethic to play a subservient
role within the fold of the Democratic Party. The very punk culture that
often attacked the decadent institutions of American Empire and the
bankrupt political system is now engaged in a campaign to prop up and
support those very institutions. They are urging pissed off youth to
channel their rage and hatred into the very system that generated it.
They’ve gone from declaring the system is rotten and deserves to
crumble to the system is legitimate and deserves to be rescued – we
just need to get rid of a few bad apples. Not to mention taking
advantage of the opportunity to sell lots of CDs and anti-Bush
paraphernalia in the process.
With a rebel yell Eminem has joined the ABB parade and vowed to remove
George Bush. He has registered to vote for the first time in his life
and is encouraging others to participate and validate this rotten system
by voting. Although Eminem hasn’t decided who he is voting for, he
recently told Rolling Stone magazine he likes some of the things
Kerry has said. The same Kerry that columnist William Safire declared as
the “newest neoconservative” whose positions on foreign policy were
“more hawkish than President Bush.” The same Kerry that not only
supported the Patriot Act, he actually wrote parts of it!
The culture industry is in the business of recuperating and co-opting
efforts that might directly confront the system. It is more than happy
to dish out a generous supply of rhetoric and images of resistance and
revolution to the masses so long as it is safely channeled into
activities that do not aggressively question the prevailing orthodoxies
and do not openly challenge the legitimacy of the system itself. Order
must be maintained and subservience to authority must be upheld. Despite
all the radical imagery, Eminem's video fits this role quite well.
In the “Mosh” video, Citizen Eminem sees himself as the vanguard
leader of a youth rebellion and he is determined to mobilize these
disaffected citizens for action. He leads an army of angry, disenchanted
youth in black bloc-style hooded sweatshirts through rain-swept streets.
The dangerous-looking crowd continues to grow larger as Eminem’s army
marches towards the White House. The video eventually builds to a climax
where his massive army of threatening radicals storms the White House.
But what do they do? Do they try to tear down and remove the oppressive
institutions responsible for much of the misery and alienation in their
lives and communities? No. The mob quietly gets in line in an orderly
fashion to vote. The video ends with “"Vote Tuesday, November
2."
Regardless of who wins, we lose. Ever get the feeling you’ve been
cheated?