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Angry Young Men by Adam Young "Sing,
O goddess, of the anger of Achilles..." ~ Homer Are
you angry? I'm angry. Why shouldn't we all be angry? Why the hell not?
Anger is a vital emotion. It’s even the central theme of the Iliad. It
can motivate great revolutionary changes. And undoubtedly this is why
the Circus of Crime seeks to prevent its expression in any way. A
few weeks back, Brendan O'Neill, writing in the Spectator,
described the perverse lengths that the regime of New Labour in Britain
was going to stamp out the expression of rage at, what else, itself. Seems
there is, like in North America, too, an "epidemic" of anger
among "young people," as older snobs like to patronize us, and
the general public, too. Indeed,
everywhere we look, we see the signs of this epidemic of wrath. Road
rage. Air rage. Desk rage. Spam rage. Computer rage. Noise rage. Work
rage. School rage. The congressional elections of 1994 were dubbed the
results of "angry white men" acting out in a fit of
anti-Clinton hatred. This past whorefest was said to be the time of the
"Angry Democrats," enraged at the Bush administration for
reasons of style rather than of substance, apparently. It's
no coincidence that the rage over the Sept. 11th attacks was corked and
stowed by the regime for its own purposes. The anger of the public,
directed not at the absolute failure of the federal circus to do
anything other than watch it all on TV, but at the millions of Muslims
who would be served up as proxies for the 19 dead hijackers, matched
Bush's innate dry alcoholic rage, and Georgius Maximus was born, ready
to put all that anger to use to kill foreigners in the wake of 9/11. And
al'Qaeda? They're angry. The whosits and whatnots in Iraq? Better
believe they're angry, too. And
what do the ringmasters tell us is the solution to this boiling Muslim
stew of frustration and anger? The all-purpose solution to all our
problems. State-run democracy, managed and policed by the
political-industrial elites. Yay! Funny
thing is, though, why doesn't democracy reduce the rage here? Democracy
seemingly should prevent this rage, since the angry masses can
peacefully suggest changes to the system, right? Well,
maybe not. There's always that little problem of majority and
minorities. Divide and rule, and let the bureaucracies figure it out.
Whenever there is a problem, who hasn't been told by a politician or
some bureaucrat that "there's nothing they can do, it’s just 'the
system'," whether it’s some state slob, or the increasingly
bureaucratized private businesses and organizations produced by the
regulatory-managerial state? And
this omnipotent statism and legal privileges for the connected and the
existing establishment fuels the widespread sense of powerlessness in
the face of oligarchy and plutocracy, and leads many into the weeds of
socialism or some other nonsense, that only allows the establishment to
discredit them as a threat to the middle class' property and lifestyles.
Some improvement. If I was of a conspiratorial mindset, one could almost
see how the elites ally with their supposed opponents on the Left or
Right in order to maintain the status quo and loot the public. The
seemingly impregnable tyranny of the status quo certainly breeds the
widespread distrust and crisis in confidence in both private and state
institutions, but also surely encourages the belief in the more absurd
conspiracies (as opposed to the real ones to cover up the role of
self-interest in governmental decision making). I
certainly remember feeling this sense of powerless when I was younger,
but I didn't know why or couldn't articulate the source of this
frustration at a sense of not having control over one's destiny. The
rage of the youth, the anger of the Muslim world, the frustration of the
Europeans and others around the world all have in common the expression
of powerlessness at the behavior of entrenched and unaccountable foreign
and domestic elites. No
doubt, it will be the aim of Bush's mental health Gestapo and anger
management mandates in other countries, to stamp out for all time this
common sense revulsion at the regime. We will become the sheep, and the
establishment will sharpen and strengthen the tyranny of these
self-imposed sheepherders to screw us all into conformity with their
goals and aims. The
regime and its social allies in the media and psychiatric and
pharmaceutical industries want to put a lid on this boiling pot of
frustration, or when they can't to divert its target onto approved
scapegoats; Arabs today, "Leave-Us-Alone" Conservatives
yesterday, and tomorrow, who knows who the target will be. History showcases societies where pent-up rage festers and finally explodes. Colonial America. France. Russia. The Boxer Rebellion in China. Before the next explosion occurs, hopefully we can convince enough people that the source of their rage and frustration is the state, and the solution is not democracy and "political liberties," but the true freedom of laissez-faire liberty. |