ARTHUR EMAIL BULLETIN No. 0054

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

The Arthur Magazine Email Bulletin

No. 0054

September 29, 2006

Website:

http://www.arthurmag.com

Comments:

editor@arthurmag.com

The main hall in the historic Palace, founded in 1911, which will be the site of Arthur Nights.

Wata of BORIS, who will be performing Friday, October 20 at Arthur Nights.

$24/night, or $80 for a four-night pass

Buy tickets at Amoeba, Benway, Fingerprints and Sea Level, or online at

Ticketweb.com

Save your tabs,

Heads of Arthur

Philadelphia – Brooklyn – Los Angeles

~Poets can change the world~

Shivastan Publishing presents
The Woodstock Mountain Poetry Revolution!
~Poets can change the world~

Sept.30 & Oct.1 at the Colony Café
22 Rock City Rd. Woodstock NY 845 679 5342

Saturday September 30th
6 to 9 pm: Poet’s Benefit for “Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting”
Jeff Cohen (co-founder of F.A.I.R.) ~author of “Cable News Confidential”
Ed Sanders ~author of “America: a History in Verse”
Eliot Katz ~author of “Unlocking the Exits”
Vivian Demuth ~author of “Breathing Nose Mountain”
Janine Pommy Vega ~author of “The Green Piano”
Hosted by Andy Clausen ~author of “40th Century Man”
+ Music by Tom Pacheco!
Admission $10
{warning: this event may be extremely political}

9pm to midnite: Open Mic Poetry Orgy!
celebrating the new issue of
“wildflowers ~a Woodstock mountain poetry anthology”
Woodstock’s only poetry magazine ~13 great poets~ vol. 7
Printed in Kathmandu, Nepal on Handmade Paper by Shivastan
Hosted by publisher Shiv Mirabito ~author of “Transcendental Tyger”
Free admission!
{this event will highlight this very unusual local publishing company}

Sunday October 1
7 to 9 pm: Moorish Orthodox Revival & Poetry Reading
Robert Kelly ~author of new Shivastan chapbook “Sainte Terre”
{of Bard College}
Peter Lamborn Wilson ~author of “Atlantis Manifesto”
Carey Harrison ~author of “Richard’s Feet”
Hosted by Shiv Mirabito
Admission $10

Associated Press Podcast report on military recruiting and Arthur's SO MUCH FIRE TO ROAST HUMAN FLESH album.

Debate: Recruiting soldiers in schools
Preying on young people, or offering them an opportunity?

With the debate over military recruitment heating up, JAIME HOLGUIN looks at both sides.

Friday, 22 September, 2006, 22:54 EDT, US

It’s a contentious question: How much access should military recruiters have to students and their information?

The debate is not a new one, but its importance seems particularly acute today, with the unpopularity of the Iraq war — along with its death toll — continuing to grow.

Persuading young people to join the military, particularly the Army, has become a hard sell. To compensate, the Army — which is bearing the brunt of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — increased its corps of recruiters, took to the Internet to attract potential recruits and revamped its benefits package.

The strategy seems to have worked. On Friday, the Army enlisted its 80,000th soldier, reaching its recruiting goal for the year, which ends Sept. 30.

While military officials marked the occasion with a celebratory enlistment of that 80,000th soldier in New York’s Times Square, groups that accuse the military of “manipulative recruiting tactics” continued efforts around the country to keep those numbers down.

Each of these groups is doing what it can to reach young people before the military does — especially in the nation’s schools. They range from a Los Angeles educator’s coalition that distributes anti-recruitment literature at schools, to the editor of counterculture underground magazine “Arthur,” who put out a new compilation record — “So Much Fire To Roast Human Flesh” — that benefits anti-war groups.

In this podcast, asap talks to people on both sides of the fiery debate to find out where it stands today.

ARTHUR EMAIL BULLETIN No. 0053

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

The Arthur Magazine Email BulletinNo. 0053September 26, 2006Website:http://www.arthurmag.comComments:editor@arthurmag.comThank you,1. ARTHUR NO. 24 (OCT 06) IS OUT NOW…featuring…* How Comets on Fire and Howlin’ Rain singer-guitarist ETHAN MILLER got his cosmic California yawp. By Trinie Dalton, with photography by Eden Batki.* DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF ON FASCISM, AMERICAN-STYLEThe propaganda state attempted in 1930s Europe has finally reached fruition here in the US.A. Now what do we do? Read this column online now:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1451* Making clothes for fall from new BUILT BY WENDY patterns. Photography by Glynnis McDaris, modeling by Nicole Lombardi.* LET ‘EM IN: An appreciation of ALL-AGES SHOWPart 1: A chat with MC5 manager/scholar/poet John Sinclair.By Jay Babcock, with artwork by Geoff McFetridge.* Chris Ziegler meets Los Angeles’ fabulous liberation rockers SHARP EASE, with photography by Molly Frances.* DAVE REEVES: Getting into it with Iran will be twice as fun as the party in Iraq! Just ask the British.* Scenes from a 1967 LOVE-IN AT LOS ANGELES’ GRIFFITH PARKPhotographed by the late Seymour Rosen. Text by Kristine McKenna.* COMICS: “Mulberry Season” by John Hankiewicz and  “Strings” (now in full color) by Pshaw.* The Center for Tactical Magic on CELL PHONES, BLUETOOTHS AND MAGIC SPELLS.* New Herbalist Molly Frances goes cuckoo for the ultimate natural brain food: NUTS* Byron Coley & Thurston Moore on dozens of new excitements from the planetary underground, including work by Upset the Rhythm, Leopard Leg, T.I.T.S., Marcia Bassett & Matthew Bower, Michael Bowman, Hello Trudi, Garry Davis, Dinosaurs, Baseball & Hopscotch, Glen or Glenda, Kapital Ink, Dumb Angel, Dream, Genders, the Mall, Sonic Transmission: Television, Tom Verlaine, Richard Hell, Astral Blessing, Vanishing Voice, Outlaw Con Bandana, Eric Amling, Trash Ritual, Government Alpha, Genius Females, Circuit Wound, Emily Maguire, Impractical Cockpit, Fat Worm of Error, Ian Svenonius, Chris Kraus, Suicide, New York Dolls, Patter, Robert Amft, C.M. von Hasswolff, Aritoma Nishihara, Galaxie 500, Damon & Naomi, Lifespan, The Devil’s Sword, So Wrong They’re Right, Sonic Outlaws, Golden Digest and Trash Talking.* C & D think as hard as they can about records by Akron/Family, Beach House, Mick Barr & Zach Hill, The Horrors, Primal Scream, The USA Is a Monster, Wolf Eyes, The Thermals, Trainwreck Riders, The Black Keys, Buffalo Killers and Graham Coxon, as well as a new Blind Faith dvd, a new Byrds box set, the Numero Group’s “Good God!: A Gospel Funk Hymnal” compilation and of course “Ed Rosenthal’s Big Buds 2007 Calendar.”Read this column online now:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1454Can’t find a copy? Can’t afford to mail-order a copy from us?Feel free to download the complete issue in PDF format in two parts:Part 1 (8.6mb)http://www.arthurmag.com/pdfs/Arthur24part1of2.pdfPart 2 (X.X mb)http://www.arthurmag.com/pdfs/Arthur24part2of2.pdfMore info:http://www.arthurmag.com2. COR! STOP THE PRESSES AND BUY YOUR PLANE TICKETS: ARTHUR NIGHTS UPGRADES ITS LOCATION TO HISTORIC PALACE THEATRE IN DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES. **HOUDINI** PERFORMED THERE FOR CRISSAKES!All of Arthur Nights is happening October 19-22, 2006 at the Palace Theatre (630 South Broadway).“The Downtown Palace Theatre, at 630 S Broadway, was built in 1911 as the third Los Angeles home of the Orpheum Vaudeville circuit. It was originally know as the “Orpheum” and is the oldest remaining Orpheum theatre in the country. Renamed the Palace Theatre in 1926, it became a silent movie house and later added sound.  “The intimate scale of the Palace Theatre in concert with its elegant French details compares to a 17th-century European opera house. With garland-draped columns, a color scheme of pale pastels, wall murals depicting pastoral scenes, and ceiling murals of whimsical girls, the Palace offers an unusually charming and graceful setting. As an early vaudeville house, built without amplified sound, it is designed so that no seat is further than 80 feet from the stage. While the interior is French, the exterior is loosely styled after a Florentine Renaissance palazzo, with multicolored terra cotta swags, flowers, fairies and theatrical masks illustrating the spirit of entertainment. “From its beginning in the late 1800s, the Orpheum Vaudeville circuit ruled the west coast. The most popular singers, dancers and comediennes played the circuit which extended from the Midwest through the West to the Pacific. The crowning stop for the most elite was to play in Los Angeles. The first Orpheum Theatre was built in Los Angeles in the 1880s. “When the second L.A. Orpheum Theatre burned down, another larger more ornate palace was built. Opening in 1911 our theatre was originally named the Orpheum. It is the oldest of the remaining Orpheum theaters in the United States. “Every major vaudeville star on the Orpheum circuit performed in this theatre. The names in light included: the Marx Brothers, W.C. Fields, Sarah Bernhardt, Bob Hope, Al Jolson and Will Rogers. When Harry Houdini performed his stage magic and death-defying escapes, an ambulance was kept parked on the curb in case of emergency. “The principal architect was G Albert Landsburg, who later also designed the new Orpheum Theatre down the block. He was a principal theatre designer in the west between 1909 and 1930. His local work includes the Warner Bros. Theatre Building in Hollywood, and the interiors of the Wiltern and El Capitan theatres. “While the interior is French, the exterior is loosely styled after a Florentine Renaissance palazzo, with multicolored terra cotta swags, flowers, fairies and theatrical masks illustrating the spirit of entertainment. The façade includes four panels depicting the muses of Song, Dance, Music and Drama (sculpted by Domingo Mora, a Spaniard whose work also decorated New York’s old Metropolitan Opera House.) “G Albert Landsburg built the theatre with fire safety in mind. In 1906 there was a devastating fire in a Chicago theater during a children’s matinee show. Because of the poor standard of fire-safety codes such as exit doors that only opened inwards–the patrons were trapped inside and all perished. As a direct response to new fire concerns and codes, the Palace was built with 22 fire escape exits and has one of the first sprinkler systems built in the city. “This specific style of decor is indicative of G Albert Landsburg’s work. He loved to use recessed lighting that can be seen in the three mural domes in the ceiling. Reflectors were built around the bulbs to give a kind of “holy glow”. As you look at the borders of the balcony you can see bare bulbs; this was not a cheap decorative technique. It was actually very exciting for a theater to have electricity at the turn of the century, so they showed them off. “In 1911, the theater could house 2,200 people on the orchestra and two balconies, the mezzanine and the gallery. The gallery was designed for “Negroes Only,” in a rare artifact of the generally tolerant Los Angeles. There is some controversy whether it was used as a minority balcony for people who were not white or if it was a “third class” balcony for the poor with cheaper seating. Either way, the gallery had a separate entrance from the alley and separate restrooms. The gallery was closed in the forties when the theatre was renovated to be movie theatre. Today the theater utilizes 1050 seats in the orchestra and mezzanine only. “The theater was built with beautiful box seating along the sides of the auditorium. When the primary entertainment shifted to film, the box seats were removed because they had ridiculously bad sightlines for movie viewing. They were replaced with two beautiful murals done by Anthony Hiemsburgen, a famous Los Angeles muralist. Later, these murals were covered with red velvet. They were uncovered five years ago. “One interesting feature is the Women’s Lounge. It has glass doors that overlook the theatre entrance. In 1911 women were not permitted by custom to go to the theater unescorted. Women were also not permitted to travel with a young man without a chaperone. This room protects against these social pitfalls. The windows looking into the foyer were designed to help women watch for their dates. “After a long history as a first run movie theatre, the history of the theatre declined with the decline of Broadway and its once flourishing entertainment district. The theatre continued with second run films and Spanish language films until it closed in the mid nineties. The theatre has continued as a featured location for films and television. In the coming year the Palace Theatre will reopen as a live performance venue, once again serving all of Los Angeles….”Thurs. Oct. 19, 6pmDEVENDRA BANHART (special performance!), BERT JANSCH (ex-Pentangle guitarist! hero to Neil Young and Jimmy Page! new album just got 5 stars in Mojo!), ESPERS (now nearing height of their powers!), WATTS PROPHETS (legendary!), JACKIE BEAT (outrageously great!), BELONG (ambient post-My Bloody Valentine fog-throb from New Orleans), YELLOW SWANS (psychedelic agitnoise from Bay Area!), BUFFALO KILLERS (lumbering brother rock n roll a la Mountain, the Beatles and Screaming Trees!) and GROUPERFriday, October 20, 6pmTAV FALCO & THE UNAPPROACHABLE PANTHER BURNS (legendary! see Arthur No. 21 for details!), BORIS (new collabo album with Sunno))) out on Halloween!), BE YOUR OWN PET (l.a. debut of new teenage drummer!), HEARTLESS BASTARDS, THE HOWLING HEX (feat legendary Neil Hagerty [ex-Royal Trux]), CHARALAMBIDES (beyond-rare L.A. perf), AWESOME COLOR (Stooges/Spacemen 3 ancestor worship!), TALL FIRS and “Imaginational Anthem Tour” acoustic guitar superstars CHRISTINA CARTER, SHAWN DAVID MCMILLEN and SEAN SMITHSat., October 21, 3pmSUN RA ARKESTRA (featuring 11 musicians, many of whom played in the Arkestra under Sun Ra, the Arkestra is now led by Marshall Allen!), OM (metal trance/mind expanders who laid peacewaste at ArthurBall), WHITE MAGIC (new album out in November!), MONEY MARK (whoa), SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE, MICHAEL HURLEY (legendary!), JOSEPHINE FOSTER, FUTURE PIGEON, RUTHANN FRIEDMAN (legendary!), LIVING SISTERS feat. Inara George, Eleni Mandell & Becky Stark (Lavender Diamond), MIA DOI TODD, WOODEN WAND, RESIDUAL ECHOES and NVH (Comets on Fire’s Noel Von Harmonson noize proj, with special guest Ben Chasny). Plus: Closing “misplaced soul/funk hits” dance party DJed by THE NUMERO GROUPSun., Oct. 22, 3pmCOMETS ON FIRE, THE FIERY FURNACES (now featuring Jason Lowenstein on drums!), UNANNOUNCEABLE GUEST (WHO HAS RAMBLED NEAR AND FAR FOR DECADES), THE SHARP EASE (6 out of 7 songs on new EP are HITS!), ARCHIE BRONSON OUTFIT (from England), SSM (rawk n roll from Deeetroit), THE COLOSSAL YES (Comets on Fire’s Utrillo’s brilliant piano pop proj), THE NICE BOYS (glamorous rock), EFFI BRIEST and C.B. BRAND (local cosmic California country rock)* Festival will feature between-band DJ sets by Brian Turner (wfmu) and dublab DJs and many more TBA…* LOTS of surprise stuff yet to be announced.* All artists will perform full sets.* Tickets are $24/night, or $80 for a four-night pass.* ALL AGES are welcome. (Ask about our senior discount!)Buttloads of info on Arthur Nights at murdochSpace:http://www.myspace.com/arthurnights  Visit the official site at http://arthurnights.imeem.com3. A MESSAGE FROM SIR PLASTIC CRIMEWAVE, FRIEND OF ARTHUR.”greetings friendz!just wanted to offer up a subscription for my lil mix-tape club, which is about to go into it’s second year. The deal is this: You get 6 audio cassette tapes a year, delivered to your home– one every other month of all sorts of rare and psychedelical delights–past themes have been heavy rock, floaty acid folk, psych-pop, spacey jams, and super-scarce live/unreleased stuff…each features exclusive artwork, and ya get like a membership card/decree and some random shit.this time around plans for themes like biker rock, obscure shoegazer stuff, rare krautrock, communal freak-outs, satanic rock, and some more random pastiches…needless to say some personal recordings and totally unreleased stuff from my own collection makes it in there….at present the tape club has about 30 members, in 6 countries, and the feedback has been enthusiastic–everyone from midwest farmers to SF lesbians, music nerds (big surprise) from all over seem to dig it.so rates are$35 a year for USA$50 for overseasi am open to negotiation for trades or blank tape providing discounts……you can paypal me at plasticcw@hotmail.comor send a check or money order to:1061 n.western avechicago Il 60622thanks!! please reply before November 1, when the next year of tapes begins……………………”4.  A MESSAGE FROM SIR ERIK DAVIS, FRIEND OF ARTHUR AND AUTHOR OF THE ESSENTIAL NEW BOOK, “THE VISIONARY STATE: A JOURNEY THROUGH CALIFORNIA’S SPIRITUAL LANDSCAPE” WITH PHOTOGRAPHER MICHAEL RAUNER…* This Saturday, Sep 30, 2006:Visionary California in FilmIn this talk, I’ll focus on the desertscapes in the California imagination, as reflected in the book _The Visionary State_. I’ll show slides of Michael Rauner’s photos and some clips of cosmic Mojave films. Followed by Aron Ranen’s flick, “LSD in the 60s.”ATA, 992 Valencia Street, San Francisco8:30pm; $5* Monday Oct 2, 2006        Lecture: “The Visionary State”Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar Street, Berkeley7:30 pm* Thursday, Oct 5, 2006Reading: “The Visionary State”Gateways Books, 1126 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz7pm5. ARTHUR COLUMNIST DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF & FORMER ARTHUR COLUMNIST DANIEL PINCHBECK DIALOGUE IN NYC THIS THURSDAY — FREEArthur columnist Douglas Rushkoff writes:”I’ll be making a rare NYC public appearance this week (they’ve become rare because of the duties of fatherhood), engaging in a conversation with author Daniel Pinchbeck, who was recently contextualized as something of a Burning Man apocalyptic guru in a Rolling Stone.  “Emails from friends and readers (who know my bias against guruhood and fundamentalist prophecy of all kind) have been pouring in asking if I’m going to “square off” against him. All I can say is that while our views on the role and reality level of prophecy and psychedelic experiences may differ, I’m not the combative type, and see less value in dialectic or fiery rhetoric than in the honest quest for common ground and shared objectives.  “So while our methods of investigation and idea dissemination might not be compatible, many of our views on what needs to be done to fix civilization’s messes are the same. I expect nothing more and nothing less than conversation aimed at determining the appropriate application of prophecy in our times, however it may have been dislodged from the noosphere.  “Here are the details. My next scheduled NYC appearance will be at Barnes and Noble Astor Place, at the end of February, when the second collected edition of my comic book, Testament, is released.”September 28, 2006, 7 p.m.McNally Robinson Booksellers50 Prince StreetNew York City, NY10012-3325Phone 212-274-1160“Post-Modern Prophecy: Urgent Myths for Urgent Times?”A dialogue between authors Daniel Pinchbeck and Douglas RushkoffDaniel Pinchbeck is the author of “Breaking Open the Head” (Broadway Books), and “2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl” (Tarcher/Penguin). His articles and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Wired, The Village Voice, Arthur, and many other publications. His “Here and Now” column ran in Arthur magazine from No. 9 (Mar 2004) to 18 (Sept 2005).Douglas Rushkoff’s titles include Cyberia, Media Virus, Nothing Sacred: The Truth about Judaism, Coercion (winner of the Marshall Mcluhan Award), and “Get Back in the Box.” The first collection of his Bible-based comic book, “Testament,” was published this year by DC/Vertigo. He has been a columnist for Arthur since No. 15 (Mar 2005) .6. FROM SIR R.A. PLEUGER, FRIEND OF ARTHUR:”Check JA Caesar and the ecsasy of “Jashumon”.It was rewarding for me.Scroll down to the third record and you can downloadthis beautiful music for a ghostly theatre play:”http://citiesonflamewithrockandroll.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_citiesonflamewithrockandroll_archive.htmlHypereducation is our only hope,Arthur Peace VigilantesBrooklyn – Philadelphia – Los Angeles

LSD, etc.

September 25, 2006 New York Times
Connections
A Crunchy-Granola Path From Macramé and LSD to Wikipedia and Google

By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN
The pages are yellowed, the addresses and phone numbers all but useless, the products antique, the utopian expectations quaint. But the “Whole Earth Catalog” — and particularly “The Last Whole Earth Catalog,” published in 1971, which ended up selling a million copies and winning the National Book Award — has the eerie luminosity of a Sears catalog from the turn of the last century. It is a portrait of an age and its dreams.

Deerskin jackets and potter’s wheels, geodesic domes and star charts, instructions on raising bees and on repairing Volkswagens, advice on building furniture and cultivating marijuana: all this can be found here, along with celebrations of communal life and swipes at big government, big business and a technocratic society.

Can this encyclopedia of countercultural romance have anything to do with today’s technological world, a world of broadband connections, TCP/IP protocol and the Internet? The Internet, after all, began during the cold war as an attempt to create a network of computers that would be resilient in case of nuclear attack. Its instigator, the United States Department of Defense, was at the very center of the culture being countered by the “Whole Earth Catalog.” How could the romantic, utopian culture of the 1960’s, with its deep suspicions about modernity and its machinery, be closely linked to one of the most important technological revolutions of the last hundred years?

Yet as Fred Turner points out in his revealing new book, “From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism” (University of Chicago Press), there is no way to separate cyberculture from counterculture; indeed, cyberculture grew from its predecessor’s compost. Mr. Turner suggests that Stewart Brand, who created the “Whole Earth Catalog,” was the major node in a network of countercultural speculators, promoters, inventors and entrepreneurs who helped change the world in ways quite different from those they originally envisioned.

Mr. Turner, who teaches in the communication department at Stanford University, is rigorous in his argument, thorough to the point of exhaustion, and impressive in his range. The basic premise, though, is not unfamiliar. A decade ago the cultural critic Mark Dery suggested in his book “Escape Velocity” that the PC revolution could well be called “Counterculture 2.0.” Other writers have also pointed out uncanny overlaps.

And some of the anecdotal evidence is familiar. Steve Jobs created and promoted Apple as a countercultural computer company, most famously in the 1984 television ad that associated it with the demolishment of a totalitarian Big Brother. Even I.B.M., in promoting its first PC, tried to undermine the computer’s association with corporate power, marketing its machine using images of Charlie Chaplin’s tramp, who had twitted the gears of industry in “Modern Times.”

Connections were even made by the participants. Theodore Roszak, whose 1969 book, “The Making of a Counter Culture,” popularized that era’s doctrines, later asserted that computer hackers — “whose origins can be discerned in the old Whole Earth Catalog” — invented the personal computer as a means of “fostering dissent and questioning authority.” Timothy Leary, the psychedelic maestro of that period, declared that “the PC is the LSD of the 1990’s.”

Soon after publishing “The Last Whole Earth Catalog,” Mr. Brand started to write about the computer scene, helped create the “Whole Earth Software Catalog” and, in 1985, became a founder of the WELL — the Whole Earth ’Lectronic Link — a pioneering online community. “As it turned out,” Mr. Brand once explained, “psychedelic drugs, communes, and Buckminster Fuller domes were a dead end, but computers were an avenue to realms beyond our dreams.” By the 90’s, those realms were celebrated by the magazine Wired.

It might be argued that so prevalent was the counterculture, and so experimental and energetic were its most vocal proponents, that it would have been surprising had many of them not found their way to the computer revolution. But Mr. Turner demonstrates something more essential in the continuity.

First, he suggests, we are mistaken in thinking that the postwar technological world was dominated by hierarchies and rigid categories. Under the influence of the mathematician Norbert Wiener, it became increasingly common to think of humans and machines as interacting elements of “cybernetic systems” — organisms through which information flowed. This also led to a different way of thinking about living organisms and their networks of interaction.

Marshall McLuhan wrote in 1964: “Today we have extended our central nervous system itself in a global embrace, abolishing both space and time as far as our planet is concerned.” Buckminster Fuller proposed the idea of a Comprehensive Designer, a creator who would embody “an emerging synthesis of artist, inventor, mechanic, objective economist and evolutionary strategist.”

These writers were the patron saints of the “Whole Earth Catalog,” their books appearing alongside macramé and carpentry manuals, their ideas presumably brought to life in the commune, where the natural and human world would be bound together, creating a single organism from which new possibilities would unfold.

By the 1980’s, Mr. Turner argues, similar fantasies were inspired by the computer. It had freed itself from corporate control and ownership; it was also capable of connecting with other computers in communities like the WELL (which John Perry Barlow, a former lyricist for the Grateful Dead, called “the latest thing in frontier villages”). The Internet, designed to be inherently nonhierarchical, suggested even more grand possibilities, even a revolution in politics and human consciousness.

In the 90’s, Mr. Turner says, the writers and editors of Wired believed “they would tear down hierarchies, undermine the sorts of corporations and governments that had spawned them” and replace them with a “peer-to-peer, collaborative society, interlinked by invisible currents of energy and information.” Cyberculture was to be the fulfillment of counterculture.

Ultimately, of course, such fulfillment was not to be had. But the consequences of the association were profound. One reason for the heady pace of innovation during the 90’s is that the motivation was never purely abstract, but was often accompanied by utopian passions. Software development occurred not just in the private realm, but also among collaborative communities that objected to corporate ownership. Even today’s Wikipedia — the online encyclopedia continuously being written by its users — can be traced to these ideas.

But there were also limitations of vision and imagination. For a long time, cyberspace advocates were reluctant to take the problem of mischievous hacking seriously and could look askance at the very notion of copyright in the cyberworld. There was even a strain of countercultural romance in the ways in which the corporate monopolist Microsoft became widely portrayed as an Evil Empire threatening the libertarian Internet. (This is also one reason that Google, which has turned out to be Microsoft’s most potent competitor, made its motto “Don’t be evil.”)

Moreover, so messianic were expectations, that many failed to see that cyberspace was not really a different realm from the hard-wired world of ordinary experience, but would become an extension of it: a place where banking, shopping, conversation and business transactions could take place, where the bourgeois world and an imagined frontier would again have to work out their uneasy relations, and would again face an uncertain future.

C & D: Two guys reason together about some new records. (from Arthur 24/Oct 02006)

(From Arthur 24/October 02006)
 
Note: C & D is a dialogue presented as a series of record reviews, and intended to be read straight through.

 
AKRON/FAMILY
“Meek Warrior”
(Young God)

C: [Looking at publicity photo of band] I’m surprised these guys haven’t featured in Arthur yet. They appear to meet many if not all of this magazine’s apparent requirements for coverage.

D: What, they have beards?

C: Yes. I think the magazine is pretty clearly a beards-only policy. It’s pretty clearly where the underground beard was re-born. Or should I say, re-grown. Remember Alan Moore on the cover of Arthur No. 4?

D: That was a beard to be reckoned with. No razors and shaving cream in the Moore household!

C: Total ‘Lord of the Beards.’ On the other hand, Alan’s finger armor stylings haven’t caught on yet.

D: I will keep an eye out for the beard as we check out these records today. I assume there will be ladies, too?

C: Yes, of course.

D: Who presumably are not of the bearded variety.

C: One never knows, does one? [arches eyebrow meaningfully] Anyways, Akron/Family not only have some beardage, they have four-part harmonies, great cascading drumflows, sprawling late Trane skronk, and that’s all on the first track! I saw these guys once in L.A., they were like a devotional Animal Collective…

D: [smiling upon hearing the refrain “Gone, gone, gone/gone completely beyond.”] Ah yes. Beyond. One of my favorite places.

C: [ignoring, continuing] … in Oshkosh overalls, without the echo delays. Like Lubavitchers gone Sun Ra or Ya Ho Wha—

D: Say wha?

C: [snobbishly] Those who know, know. [continuing] They were awesome, in complete uni-mind synch. The audience made backward-and-forward ocean ripples and sounds at their command: ‘Shhh, shhh.’ It was beautiful.

BEACH HOUSE
“Beach House”
(Carpark)

C: Lovely—possibly perfect?—debut album from this girl-and-boy lovebird combo who sound like they’re living down by the sea on some magic moonlit beach that stretches from France to Baja to Bali.

D: [looks at biographical notes and photo] Actually they live in Baltimore. And there is no beard.

C: Waiter, get this man a beard, se vous plais.

D: [ignoring] But Victoria Legrand—

C: Is that a real name???

D: —is definitely a lady. A lady who knows how to wear an aqua dress.

C: [looking at the photo] And a big gold amulet as well.

D: I would say this is late summer music, recorded at the beach house after everybody else has gone back to the city.

C: It’s kind of minimal naturalismo—organ, drum machine, gorgeous female voice: Stereolab, minus le krautrock propulsion. Midway between Brightblack slow-to-stillness, Beach Boys “Pet Sounds” melancholism and Air and another Carpark artist, Casino vs. Japan. Also, what the heck, I’ll throw in that first Bjorn Olson record on Omplatten [“Instrumentalmusik: Instrumental Music…to Submerge in…and Disappear Through,” 1999]. Nordic beaches. As you can see, D, it’s a very particular, yet universal, mood. I see soundtracks in their near-future. [picks up phone] “Hello, Beach House? This is Sofia…”

D: Her voice reminds me a bit of Sigur Ros. Hey, whatever happened to those guys? It’s like they evaporated.

C: She can really SING, when it’s called for, which is in creamy middle of the album on the song “Auburn and Ivory.”

D: Is Auburn the new Ebony?

C: All the songs have some sophisto pop songwriting going on: bridges, key changes, et cetera. And the sounds… when the organ comes in on “House on the Hill,” it’s like Captain Nemo down in the Nautilus playing pipe organ for the octopi. Whew! Can you imagine these guys with a big budget…?

D: Ahoy! Captain Nemo: ANOTHER famous bearded musician.

 
MICK BARR & ZACH HILL
“Earthship”
(5RC)

C: New summit album by underground instrumental speed kings: guitarist Mick Barr of Ocrilim, and drummer Zach Hill of Hella. It’ll tighten yer wig!

D: Well, I won’t need coffee for the next five months.

C: They’re going in for the kill like two old ladies speed-crocheting. Mind the wheedlework.

D: They are the speed criminals who no doubt are under surveillance by the authorities of rock. There’s a NEW MOTHER IN THE TEMPLE if you know what I mean!

C: It does have that High Rise/Mainliner/Musica Transonic thing going a bit. Ah, Japan. Some people may also be put in mind of the Peter Brotzman Octet classic assault album, Machine Gun.

D: That’s a ripping title, “Earthship.” [considers] If you lived there, you’d be home by now.

C: Sometimes they’re against each other, sometimes they unify.

D: I must ask: is there a beard?

C: [looks at publicity photo] Have beard, will rock.These guys are the opposite of Sunn o))): they do as many notes and beats as possible per hour. It’s anti-void music, filling everything with sound.

D: Without the benefit of riffage.

C: There ARE riffs—you just need to adjust your attention to catch them. It’s condensed free rock. Like the instruments are too hot to handle. Except for this one song I keep coming back to… [plays “Closed Coffins and Curtains.”]

D: Whoa! What…is…THAT???

C: It’s like some super-processed symphonic tri-guitar. Like what that weird Godley & Creme instrument was supposed to sound like, remember that? The Gizmo. They made a whole triple-album with it, and Peter Cook too. Bonkers stuff.

D: [playing the 30-second track again] I am totally spooked. [musing] Perhaps if Mr. Ocrilim slowed down and contemplated like this occasionally, he’d get to somewhere really rewarding.

C: Rewarding to you.

D: [laughs] Of course, me! Who else matters?

  
THE HORRORS
“The Horrors” ep
(Stolen Transmission)

D: [Reading song titles] They have a song called “Sheena Was a Parasite”? I worship them already.

C: Frantic organ and guitar-driven psychobilly freakbeat rock’n’roll by five sharply dressed’n’coiffed Dickensian Brits from the belfry.

D: They look like they live in chimneys and spend all day drinking red wine and listening to The Cramps, Tav Falco & Panther Burns…probably the Hives too, and the Birthday Party, and Screaming Jay Hawkins (who they cover here), and Screaming Lord Sutch, and of course the right honorable Arthur Brown. I think they like bourbon and some pretty nasty stuff.

C: [listening to “Excellent Choice”] They’ve got a good look and a good sound and they seem up for a good party. They’ll come to your town and help you burn it down. And then dance in the ashes.

 
PRIMAL SCREAM
“Riot City Blues”
(Capitol)

C: They’re been around approximately forever. And this is their once-a-decade “rock n roll is dumb fun” concept record, apparently.

[C & D cringe for 15 minutes]

C: Talk about the horrors.

D: Where’s the pooper scooper?

C: Rock n roll should be fun, it can be stoopid, but it should never, ever be tedious. One hates to witness someone failing at slumming. It’s embarassing to all involved. Does [Primal Scream singer] Bobby Gillespie seriously think this band can boogie? Ha ha ha. Poor Mani…

D: [thoughtful] Every once in a while an object is mysteriously withdrawn from stores by its manufacturer shortly after its introduction. That kind of decisive action may be appropriate here.

 
THE USA IS A MONSTER
“Sunset at the End of the Industrial Age”
(Load)

C: You will recall that both members of THE USA IS A MONSTER are members of Black Elf Speaks, which is one of the great band names ever.

D: What did Black Elf have to say?

C: I don’t know, it was this kind of gibberish? But it seemed important. [sadly, as if narration] ‘And Black Elf spoke, but no one could understand what he said.’

D: [helpfully] Maybe he had something in his mouth.

C: ….

D: Or, he might have a speech impediment.

C: …

D: [looking at album cover] Naturally I am wondering, what kind of monster?

C: Probably some kind of troll. On PCP.

D: That’s pretty negative. … Um…. “Idiocracy” got you down again?

C: Yeah… Between seeing that and re-reading Chris Hedges’s “War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning” last week, I guess I’m feeling more bleh about human life than ever. The idiots don’t know when to stop. And there’s more and more of them. They want war and fast food and spectacle. They’re bad at learning. We’re outnumbered, and it’s only getting worse because the herd never gets culled, since we lack exterior predators.

D: [considers] No more trolls.

C: What are we gonna do? I don’t see a way out. Ah, hell. Maybe that’s why the industrial age is going to end, as it says here on the album cover. [reading from the press sheet] “Of course The USA Is A Monster wants to turn the tide and prepare us for the time after the lights go dim on Western Civilization’s exhaust pipe party.” Sounds good to me! Let’s engage. [starts “The Greatest Mystery”]

D: YEARGH!!! THUNDERAMA!

C: Whoa. [45 minutes later…]Whoa.

D: A shining path indeed! Was that all one song?

C: Unbelievable, just ridiculous. The Who, Bruford-era King Crimson, Oneida, minutemen, Lightning Bolt, Liars, Rush. Homeopathic progrock with a lot of heavy spiritual-political truths and theories (“We are only holograms”) and jokes and accusations (“You’re a liar! And a CROOK!”) and digs (“My favorite subject is…me!”). That last song, the three-section “The Spirit of Revenge”…

D: What a giant marching groover that one is! These guys must be super-fit. I’m guessing it’s a lentil and walnut-heavy diet.

 
WOLF EYES
“Human Animal”
(Sub Pop)

D: [listening to “A Million Years”] This makes me insanely happy but I can’t put my finger on why exactly.

C: I feel like it’s 4am at the docks and we’re hearing the soundtrack to some new-millenium industrial-environmental horror show. To update Funkadelic: Mother Earth is REALLY screaming now. [listening to “Lake of Roaches”] Especially now that these noise dudes have a horn. Yikes.

D: I see scrapheap monsters vomiting spare parts and microchips.

C: Urgh, this is uncomfortable in a really good way, like a good ol’ Khanate death-slog through the bog. It’s the feel-nothing hit of the fading summer.

D: “Rusted Mange” sounds like somebody getting run over.

C: “Leper War” is more queasy listening. I’m thinking of torture gardens and animal abuse science labs. All the atrocities going on behind the curtain. Machines playing with their prey. Angry dogs chomping on kids’ talking playtoys. Trains full of prisoners.

D: [thoughtfully] This is music to blow up Monsanto to.

C: Wolf Eyes: for when you want to detonate your day.

THE THERMALS
“The Body, The Blood, The Machine”
(Sub Pop)

C: Melodic meat-and-potatoes punk rock trio from the Pacific Northwest. Two women and a beardless man. This is a concept album about being on the run from a Christian authoritarian USA of the future.

D: [in Chuck D. voice] Fear of a Christian Planet. Fear, baby.

C: In other words, it serves as science fiction adventure, prophecy and soundtrack for real life in half of this country. It’s okay—I like the sentiment and the ambition—but I’m bored.

D: None of the hooks go in deep enough. It’s probably good to drive to, though.

C: The guy’s voice reminds me of Lee Ranaldo’s, which makes me think I’d rather be listening to “Daydream Nation.” Ha!

D: That should be the new Arthur bumper sticker: “I’d rather be listening to ‘Daydream Nation.’”

 
“Good God!: A Gospel Funk Hymnal”
(Numero Group)

C: Here’s another shining path: Christian funk-soul music from the late ‘60s, early ‘70s, which, let’s face it, that period was insane in every genre, every medium.

D: The first two minutes of this album provide everything I need from music.

C: This makes me love Jesus a lot more than when they come to my door and yell at me. Another Grade AAAA reclamation project from Numero Group, America’s most consistently great record label. No one runs a dig like they do.

D: They live in the crates.

C: They were BORN in the crates.

D: [boogieing] I’m happy as a Christian on the pipe and there’s nothing Bobby Gillespie and the Thermals can do about it! [thinking] If Christian soul is so good why is Christian rock so bad?

C: Well, you know what they say: the The Lord records in mysterious ways. And nu gospel metal is one of the most mysterious.

D: Christian rock has more preservatives and additives and pesticides and weird chemicals in it, which gives it big hair and a nasty sheen. This, on the other hand, is organic soul. Black granola Jesus.

 
THE BYRDS
“There Is A Season” boxset
(Sony Legacy)

C: Four CDs and a DVD for you, the gracious few. Their sound really sounds good right now. It must be those harmonies. In the book McGuinn talks about how none of the three of them had a distinctive enough voice for pure lead—but together the three made one beautiful voice. Then you’ve got those great jazz drums, that guy’s got interesting stuff going on all the time, and is willing to stop it all when it’s called for. And the guitar solos are completely nuts. People always think about the Byrds and the chiming 12-strings, band there is that, but the guitar solos are these wonderful jagged raga/jazz stop-start-scatter runs, if that makes any sense. I guess I just never had ears to hear it before. Music for golden hours in the forest, by the river. Pretty good for cleanly shaven gents. They were always tasteful ‘til they got shaggy in the ‘70s—played folk songs, played contemporary stuff (Dylan covers), some beautiful originals.

D: [sings along to “5D (Fifth Dimension”] “I opened my whole heart to the whole universe and I found it was loving/and I saw the great blunder my teachers had made/Scientific delirium madness…” Still one of the best descriptions of the spiritual side of an LSD trip I have ever encountered

C: David Crosby’s extremely gentle three-way plea “Why Can’t We Be Three” is pretty astonishing in its brazenness. You want to know how it will be/me and you/or her and me?’ Etc. And their version of “Wild Mountain Thyme”—“we’ll go gathering mountain thyme across the wild purple heather”—with harmonies and orchestra is as goosebumpraising as that Ravi Shankar at the Kremlin album.

D: Live cuts on disk 4? Not so happening.

 
TRAINWRECK RIDERS
“Lonely Road Revival”
(Alive)

C: Really good cosmic country-tinged Bonnaroo-ready indie rock from San Francisco by dudes who can write hooks. Shit, I bet they can jam it out too.

D: I don’t know why I’m filing it under “guilty pleasure,” but I am.

C: No need to feel guilty. But yeah I can already hear the hacky sacks being hacked, or kicked, or whatever it is they do. Still, you can’t judge a band by who you think their fans will be…

 
THE BLACK KEYS
“Magic Potion”
(Nonesuch)

C: I guess their fan Robert Plant didn’t end up joining the band on bass after all. Maybe he forgot to file for his post-beard exemption.

D: Excellent! The Black Keys. They take this stuff so seriously. There’s axle grease on their denims at all times.

C: So, after their tremendous levee-busting EP of Junior Kimbrough covers, here’s their major label debut. Are diminishing returns setting in?

D: It’s already a cult classic with me! And that’s the only one who matters.

C: You know, I hate to say it, but this is really underwhelming material from an incredibly talented band. I’m not hearing a single one of those choogling grooves that they used to mine so effortlessly. Sometimes low fidelity does not equal authenticity, it just means it sounds like crap.

D: Well it’s good enough for me to want to fire up the grill and have a cookout.

C: I’m hungry for something more.

 
“Ed Rosenthal’s Big Buds Calendar”
(Quick American Archives)

D: The best month is the Dutch still life with the other herbs and stuff:

C: It’s called “after the harvest” of course. [laughs] They totally have this calendar hanging by the desk at all the farms up in Humboldt. [Reading] Ha, “Slacker Thanksgiving” on Nov. 23, that’s a funny one. “As the bud ripens.” Heh.

D: To paraphrase AC/DC: Ed Rosenthal has the biggest buds of them all.

BUFFALO KILLERS
“Buffalo Killers”
(Alive)

C: Trio from Cincinnati—stomping ground of Bootsy Collins and Afghan Whigs—with two lumbering looking beard brothers who make a sweet racket that recalls the Black Crowes, Mountain, Hendrix, Screaming Trees. Definitely some Beatles on the first two songs.

D: From the same label that first signed the Black Keys. They must have scouts all over Ohio.

D: My main concern is why don’t they call themselves The Buffalo Lovers. [suspiciously] Were any buffalos harmed in the making of this album?

C: I love an album that builds and starts hitting its stride by the halfway point. All “River Water” needs, if it needs anything more, is P.P. Arnold singing backup. Then they destroy you with the next tune…

D: [listening to “With Love”] Now THAT is a ballad.

 
BLIND FAITH
“London Hyde Park 1969” dvd
(Sanctuary)

C: Well this is pretty cool. They’ve issued the DVD of this great film of this short-lived supergroup playing for free to 100,000 at London’s Hyde Park back in 1969.

D: It was so weird living through the decade called the ’80s and witnessing Steve Winwood wearing a leather trenchcoat and making sterile radio pop. And now to see Winwood here, looking so young. [The band kicks into “Sea of Joy”] He really was a great soul singer. Whoa check it out, they pan the crowd and there’s is Kenneth Anger himself in epaulets and sideburns and black lips waving his wand of joy.

C: Did you ever notice that every object or action is suddenly improved if you add “of joy” to the end of it?

D: Let’s see…I think I’ll grow a beard of joy. Shitbonger, you’re right!

C: Nice to see that bearded Ginger Baker brought along his handpainted drums on this occasion. Ginger in the ’60s was the equivalent of Gary Young from Pavement in the ’90s: a wild older dude who’s really good, but may not mix well with the others.

GRAHAM COXON
“Love Travels at Illegal Speeds”
(Parlophone/EMI)

C: Here comes the resolute ex-guitarist from Blur with just a corking great solo album, his best one so far.

D: Blur? I did not appreciate that bloodless dress-up party called Britpop.

C: Well between this and that Dirty Pretty Things single I’m ready to get out my Fred Perry shirts again. 

D: Yet if you hadn’t told me about the Blur connection, I would simply be feasting on this short spiky guitar nugs. He sounds like a long lost friend of Wreckless Eric, which makes him a friend of mine.

C: Listen, Graham’s even written the essential tune addressing the new beard conundrum. Dig this song, where he’s watching a guy and girl get off together, it’s kind of an thematic update of Joe Jackson’s “Is She Really Going Out With Him?” [puts on “What’s He Got?” and turns up the lyric “He’s got a lot of hair on his face and on his head/ So why I get my hair cut so short instead?”]

D: Apparently in cleancut Graham Coxon’s world, the beard gets the girl.


Acceptance (doesn't equal) Acquiescence: DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF COLUMN FROM ARTHUR 24.

Acceptance (doesn’t equal) Acquiescence
by Douglas Rushkoff
from Arthur No. 24 / Oct 02006:

I’ve been debating for a while about whether to do this. Whether to come right out and say it. On a certain level, it’s like shouting “fire” in a crowded theater. What good is it to announce a problem if I don’t have a ready solution at hand? Furthermore, what if sharing this information – this perspective on our predicament – simply exacerbates our paralysis to do anything about it. I mean, fascism breeds best in populations that have been stunned into complacency, cynicism, or despair.

(That’s called a “buried lede” – a publishing term for hiding the main idea of a story deep within a paragraph. Editors don’t like it because it makes it hard for the reader to figure out what an article is about. But I felt it necessary because, well, I’m not quite comfortable talking about it too directly, just yet. This fascism stuff.)

It all became blindingly clear to me the morning I found out Ken Lay was dead. I was listening to the radio – to a friend of mine, actually, reading the news report on NPR. He was explaining how the dishonored corporate elite criminal, the former CEO of Enron, had a fatal heart attack before he had the chance to spend the rest of his life in jail. Because of certain technicalities in the law, this also meant Lay’s family would in all likelihood be able to keep the millions of dollars that would have otherwise been paid back to Enron employees and shareholders in court fines.

The newsreader opined that Lay’s death might have been suicide, and not just for the money. Lay was in on those early secret energy industry meetings with Dick Cheney – the ones where they figured out oil prices and the Iraq War and other matters of state – and, facing prison, the fallen corporate superstar could have posed a security risk if he had leaked information about what had transpired to other prisoners or, worse, the FBI in trade for better living quarters.

But, given all that, I couldn’t bring myself to believe Lay was dead at all. If you’re that rich and powerful, why die? Why not just get a hold of some corpse, pay-off a coroner, move to an island and call it a day? This is no grassy knoll feat. It’s not even CSI, but early 90’s Law & Order. No big deal for a guy intimately connected with one of the most actively clandestine administrations in US history.

That same July morning, when news of North Korea’s failed nuclear test launches were broadcast, I didn’t feel sure I was being told what was happening, either. Not that news agencies can really know, either. Did they launch? Were they thwarted by a US counterstrike, or by their own ineptitude? Do they even know? Do we?

I’m not saying one thing or the other happened – just that I stare at the news and don’t believe anything they’re saying. I’ve got no idea. And it feels really weird.

I find I can trace this sense of uncertainty to the 2004 election. The 2000 election was crooked, but the fraud was rather out in the open. We watched hired thugs stop the Florida recount by trying to break into the room where the counting was happening – and thus delay the process long enough for the Supreme Court to choose Bush as the President. But the 2004 voter fraud in Ohio, fully documented by Robert Kennedy Jr., among others, was an entirely more hidden affair. Diebold voting machines, teams of fraud squads, and election officials too afraid that disclosure of what happened will turn people off voting forever.

Those of us who try to stay even remotely connected to what is going on in the world around us have enough hard evidence to conclude with certainty that voting in America has been systematically and effectively undermined by the party currently in power. In an increasing number of precincts, how people vote – if they are even allowed in – no longer has a direct influence on how their votes are tallied.

It’s sad and confusing not to live in a democracy, anymore. And while it’s quite plainly true, it’s a bit too unthinkable for most sane people to accept. It goes in the same mental basket as more outlandish (if not unthinkable) thoughts — such as dynamite on the WTC or no airplane crashing into the Pentagon — even though, in this case, it’s not conjecture, it’s just plain real.

So what I’m coming to grips with is accepting that I don’t live in a democratic nation, and that the propaganda state attempted in 1930’s Europe did finally reach fruition here in the U.S., just as Henry Ford and those of his ilk predicted.

Maybe I’m just old, and have a very idealistic view of democracy. When I was a kid, we were all told that this is a government of the people, and that our votes provided a check on the power of our leaders. That’s why we called them “elected.” Or maybe it’s just naïve to think that representative democracy could have worked the way it was presented to us.

The other side – the fascist side – does have an argument to make, and they’ve been making it since Woodrow Wilson was president. Having run on a “peace” campaign, Wilson later decided that America needed to get involved in World War I. So, with the help of one of the great Public Relations masters of all time, Edward Bernays, he created the Creel Commission, whose job was to change America’s mind.

Bernays, like the many political propagandists who followed, honestly believed that the masses are just too stupid to make decisions for themselves – particularly when it involved global affairs or economics. Instead, an enlightened and informed elite (corporate America) needs to make the decisions, and then “sell” them to the public in the form of faux populist media campaigns. This way, the masses feel they are coming up with these opinions, themselves.

Truly populist positions, on the other hand – such as workers’ rights or minority representation – must be recontextualized as the corruption of the public by elite “special interests” or decadent social deviants. Throughout most of history, these scapegoats were the Jews, but now it’s mostly gays and liberals. By distracting the masses with highly emotionally charged issues like flag-burning or gay marriage, those in power consolidate their base of support while developing a new mythology of state as religion.

As long as they do all this, they don’t have to worry about how people vote, or what might be happening on the ground. “Unregulating” the mediaspace turns the fourth estate (the news agencies) into just another arm of the corporate conglomerates that fascism was invented to serve. (Mussolini called it “corporatism,” don’t forget.)

The last and most crucial step in creating a truly seamless fascist order, though, is to frighten the intellectuals, students, and artists from seeing the world as it is and sharing their sensibilities with one another. Hell, calling America’s leaders “a fascist regime” can’t be good for business. The only place I’m allowed to write this way is on my blog or here in Arthur – and neither pays the bills.

Besides: why rock the boat? I may not have the right to vote, anymore, but I’m being kept comfortable enough. Like others of my class, I have a roof over my head. I’m crafty enough to get paid now and again for a book or talk or comic series. And the state is functioning well enough that I can afford a tuna sandwich and walk around my neighborhood eating it without getting whacked with a rock or a grenade. As far as history goes, that’s pretty good.

So was democracy a failed experiment? Should we just let these guys run the country as long as they let us eat? Clearly, they’re not scared of us or what we might be saying about them. In fact, their best argument that we haven’t descended into fascism is the fact that we’re allowed to distribute columns like this one. How could we be living in a totalitarian propaganda state if there are articles pronouncing the same? Because fascism looks different every time around. 1930’s fascism failed because it was too obviously repressive. Today’s fascism works because it has turned the mediaspace into a house of mirrors where nothing is true and everything is permissible. The fact that there are plenty of blogs and even major books saying what’s happening and still it doesn’t matter is proof that it has worked.

But there is hope. It’s not just the radicals and militias who are alarmed, but mainstream congresspeople and government wonks. I, myself, have been approached by two separate government intelligence agencies and three members of congress (of both parties) for help understanding what they already deem to be actionable offenses against the American people by some of our leaders. They are disturbed by the disinformation campaign leading up to the Gulf War, voter fraud, and the way Americans have been frightened into supporting the curtailment of civil rights.

Surprisingly, most of my conversations with these patriotic people involve two main concerns. First, they have been ostracized by their peers for their views. This has created some urgency, for they fear they will not get enough party support for re-election if they don’t succeed in their efforts in the next few months. Second, and more troublingly, they are afraid to disillusion America’s youth. Isn’t there a way to fix this problem, they wonder, without raising an entire generation of Americans in environment of acknowledged voter nullification? And what of our reputation in the world? Which is more damaging to democracy: voter fraud, or the public awareness of voter fraud?

To this, we simply must conclude that the reality of voter fraud is more dangerous than any associated disillusionment. To worry about the impact on public consciousness is to get mired in the logic of public relations – and that’s what got us into this mess to begin with.

It’s time to get real, and either fight (through the courts, if possible) to reinstate the rule of law as established by the Constitution, or accept that Enlightenment-era democracy simply doesn’t work and move into a new phase of government by decree or market forces or whatever it is that comes next.

In any case, it serves no one to have a “pretend democracy” that’s actually something else. I’m going to stop denying what’s going on here, and use what influence I have with lawmakers, government workers, and activists to get them to do the same. Instead of trying to feel better about all this, I’m going to allow myself and everyone around me to feel worse.

Indeed, the bad news is the good news. Total disillusionment, though momentarily painful, is utterly liberating and probably required. Acceptance isn’t acquiescence at all; it’s the first step towards reconnecting with a reality that can and must be changed. If we’re going to get back on the horse, we’ve got to acknowledge that we’ve fallen off.

WE TOLD YOU THIS WOULD HAPPEN IF YOU INVADED IRAQ, BUT YOU DIDN'T LISTEN.

Sept. 24, 02006 New York Times

Spy Agencies Say Iraq War Worsens Terrorism Threat

By MARK MAZZETTI
WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 — A stark assessment of terrorism trends by American intelligence agencies has found that the American invasion and occupation of Iraq has helped spawn a new generation of Islamic radicalism and that the overall terrorist threat has grown since the Sept. 11 attacks.

The classified National Intelligence Estimate attributes a more direct role to the Iraq war in fueling radicalism than that presented either in recent White House documents or in a report released Wednesday by the House Intelligence Committee, according to several officials in Washington involved in preparing the assessment or who have read the final document.

The intelligence estimate, completed in April, is the first formal appraisal of global terrorism by United States intelligence agencies since the Iraq war began, and represents a consensus view of the 16 disparate spy services inside government. Titled “Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States,’’ it asserts that Islamic radicalism, rather than being in retreat, has metastasized and spread across the globe.

An opening section of the report, “Indicators of the Spread of the Global Jihadist Movement,” cites the Iraq war as a reason for the diffusion of jihad ideology.

The report “says that the Iraq war has made the overall terrorism problem worse,” said one American intelligence official.

More than a dozen United States government officials and outside experts were interviewed for this article, and all spoke only on condition of anonymity because they were discussing a classified intelligence document. The officials included employees of several government agencies, and both supporters and critics of the Bush administration. All of those interviewed had either seen the final version of the document or participated in the creation of earlier drafts. These officials discussed some of the document’s general conclusions but not details, which remain highly classified.

Officials with knowledge of the intelligence estimate said it avoided specific judgments about the likelihood that terrorists would once again strike on United States soil. The relationship between the Iraq war and terrorism, and the question of whether the United States is safer, have been subjects of persistent debate since the war began in 2003.

National Intelligence Estimates are the most authoritative documents that the intelligence community produces on a specific national security issue, and are approved by John D. Negroponte, director of national intelligence. Their conclusions are based on analysis of raw intelligence collected by all of the spy agencies.

Analysts began working on the estimate in 2004, but it was not finalized until this year. Part of the reason was that some government officials were unhappy with the structure and focus of earlier versions of the document, according to officials involved in the discussion.

Previous drafts described actions by the United States government that were determined to have stoked the jihad movement, like the indefinite detention of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay and the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal, and some policy makers argued that the intelligence estimate should be more focused on specific steps to mitigate the terror threat. It is unclear whether the final draft of the intelligence estimate criticizes individual policies of the United States, but intelligence officials involved in preparing the document said that its conclusions were not softened or massaged for political purposes.

Frederick Jones, a White House spokesman, said that the White House “played no role in drafting or reviewing the judgments expressed in the National Intelligence Estimate on terrorism.” The estimate’s judgments confirm some predictions of a National Intelligence Council report completed in January 2003, two months before the Iraq invasion. That report stated that the approaching war had the potential to increase support for political Islam worldwide and could increase support for some terrorist objectives.

Documents released by the White House timed to coincide with the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks emphasized the successes that the United States had made in dismantling the top tier of Al Qaeda.

“Since the Sept. 11 attacks, America and its allies are safer, but we are not yet safe,” concludes one, a report titled “9/11 Five Years Later: Success and Challenges.” “We have done much to degrade Al Qaeda and its affiliates and to undercut the perceived legitimacy of terrorism.”

That document makes only passing mention of the impact the Iraq war has had on the global jihad movement. “The ongoing fight for freedom in Iraq has been twisted by terrorist propaganda as a rallying cry,” it states.

The report mentions the possibility that Islamic militants who fought in Iraq could return to their home countries, “exacerbating domestic conflicts or fomenting radical ideologies.”

On Wednesday, the Republican-controlled House Intelligence Committee released a more ominous report about the terrorist threat. That assessment, based entirely on unclassified documents, details a growing jihad movement and says that “Al Qaeda leaders wait patiently for the right opportunity to attack.”

The new National Intelligence Estimate was overseen by David B. Low, the national intelligence officer for transnational threats, who commissioned it in 2004 after he took up his post at the National Intelligence Council. Mr. Low declined to be interviewed for this article.

The estimate concludes that the radical Islamic movement has expanded from a core of Qaeda operatives and affiliated groups to include a new class of “self-generating” cells inspired by Al Qaeda’s leadership but without any direct connection to Osama bin Laden or his top lieutenants.

It also examines how the Internet has helped spread jihadist ideology, and how cyberspace has become a haven for terrorist operatives who no longer have geographical refuges in countries like Afghanistan.

In early 2005, the National Intelligence Council released a study concluding that Iraq had become the primary training ground for the next generation of terrorists, and that veterans of the Iraq war might ultimately overtake Al Qaeda’s current leadership in the constellation of the global jihad leadership.

But the new intelligence estimate is the first report since the war began to present a comprehensive picture about the trends in global terrorism.

In recent months, some senior American intelligence officials have offered glimpses into the estimate’s conclusions in public speeches.

“New jihadist networks and cells, sometimes united by little more than their anti-Western agendas, are increasingly likely to emerge,” said Gen. Michael V. Hayden, during a speech in San Antonio in April, the month that the new estimate was completed. “If this trend continues, threats to the U.S. at home and abroad will become more diverse and that could lead to increasing attacks worldwide,” said the general, who was then Mr. Negroponte’s top deputy and is now director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

For more than two years, there has been tension between the Bush administration and American spy agencies over the violence in Iraq and the prospects for a stable democracy in the country. Some intelligence officials have said that the White House has consistently presented a more optimistic picture of the situation in Iraq than justified by intelligence reports from the field.

The broad judgments of the new intelligence estimate are consistent with assessments of global terrorist threats by American allies and independent terrorism experts.

The panel investigating the London terrorist bombings of July 2005 reported in May that the leaders of Britain’s domestic and international intelligence services, MI5 and MI6, “emphasized to the committee the growing scale of the Islamist terrorist threat.”

More recently, the Council on Global Terrorism, an independent research group of respected terrorism experts, assigned a grade of “D+” to United States efforts over the past five years to combat Islamic extremism. The council concluded that “there is every sign that radicalization in the Muslim world is spreading rather than shrinking.”