Of Victims and Vampires

by moonwolf | August 31, 2007 at 09:40 am | 863 views | 16 comments | 10 recommendations

A fascinating essay by Jason Miller on what he considers to be the inevitable fate of the Capitalism experiment, and those who have turned it into an exercise in depravity, slavery and global destruction.

WARNING: This essay contains some expletives and may not be suitable for all readers. 

“It is impossible for capitalism to survive, primarily because the system of capitalism needs some blood to suck. Capitalism used to be like an eagle, but now it’s more like a vulture. It used to be strong enough to go and suck anybody’s blood whether they were strong or not. But now it has become more cowardly, like the vulture, and it can only suck the blood of the helpless. As the nations of the world free themselves, the capitalism has less victims, less to suck, and it becomes weaker and weaker. It’s only a matter of time in my opinion before it will collapse completely.”

–Malcolm X

Striving with the unwavering dedication of true believers and slaves to the grind, those of us who exist within the geographic, social, cultural, economic, and political boundaries of the United States are collectively destroying the Earth.

With dutiful efforts, heavily sedated consciences, and sweet obliviousness to the depth of our depravity, we toil away at our chosen or assigned tasks. After all, predatory plutocrats like “Mitt” Romney would be impotent without his minions—the hundreds of millions of wage slaves exercising their “right to work” (for as small a wage as they desire) while obediently manning the bulwarks of a system so putrid that were it possible to feed it to a pig, our porcine friend would wretch his guts out.

Capitalism, as Malcolm X suggested, is in its twilight. Under this egregiously malevolent and brutal system of economic organization, we have “evolved” to a point where corruption is so pervasive, the divide between the “haves” and the “have nots” is so vast, and the imperial wars for resources are so frequent and destructive that as it is imploding, capitalism may take most of us with it.

Despite the fact that he mixed his metaphors a bit, Malcolm drew an astute conclusion. With the United States as its nexus, the complex array of components and dynamics known as capitalism sustains itself in much the same way as did Bram Stoker’s Dracula and the vampires of Slavic folklore.

Like the bloodthirsty undead of Transylvania, capitalism is essentially parasitic. Contrary to the inane mythology that anyone who dreams, comes up with a novel idea, follows Oprah “wisdom,” and works hard will eventually sport a net worth north of seven figures, there is very little true upward mobility in the United States. High regressive taxes, low progressive taxes, de facto monopolies, nepotism, cronyism, bribery, a legal system blind to economic crimes of the highest order, and a host of other factors ensure that the rich stay rich and that those in the working class have just enough to ensure their continued existence as hosts for their parasitic masters.

Most capitalists -those who rest comfortably at the apex of humanity’s pyramid of wealth and power AND reside in the penthouses of the Park Avenues of the world–do not engage in the activity which is the staple of existence for most of us. Capitalists do not work. They may engage in taxing activities for long hours, but even then they are not working as most of us understand the concept. Capitalists are not compelled to expend their labor to provide for a family or to survive. They simply administer their vast fiduciary empires. They have “fuck all of you” money and have the choice of hiring armies of highly competent individuals to manage their affairs. Don’t look for Richard Mellon Scaife, John Franklyn Mars, Henry Kravis or the rest of their nauseating ilk to start punching a time clock anytime soon. While us “house negroes” in the United States and the “field hands” in the horribly exploited developing nations on the periphery of the Empire scratch and claw in quiet desperation, our lords and masters feast upon the blood, sweat and tears of our labor.

Yet the US moneyed elite’s malignity doesn’t end there. In fact, their direct actions are merely the tip of the proverbial iceberg. The greatest testament to their indefatigable efforts to maintain their immense wealth and power is the ridiculously effective hologram their media assets relentlessly project. Ponder for a moment the inanity of the holographic illusion burnished into our consciousness that portrays our wealthy elites as “mere citizens” of a constitutional republic that acts on the will of its people and characterizes our nation as mankind’s benefactor, selflessly and thanklessly spreading freedom and democracy. Three million slaughtered Vietnamese, millions butchered in South and Central America, over a million liquidated Iraqis, and countless others around the globe are thanking us from heaven as you read these words.

Culturally programmed from birth to reflexively participate in such idiocies as CNN’s Nancy Grace’s recent “call to arms” against those evil “ravers,” we become our own worst enemies and the principal allies of the privileged scum who hubristically strut about the corridors of power in DC and on Wall Street. Persecuting and prosecuting “ravers” is simply one of many examples of our grossly distorted value system. To ensure the perpetuation of a “just” and “safe’ society, we criminalize “dangerous” behaviors like drug abuse, thus increasing our world leading prison population of 2 million plus—many of whom are non-violent offenders. Meanwhile, members of our ruling elite get away with the same infinitely reprehensible acts for which the Nazi architects swung from the gallows. Electrocution for stealing a loaf of bread, victor’s justice, and the criminalization of poverty are the foundations of our legal system.

Yet the media’s inculcated working stiffs (some of whom apparently still think they report “news”) and cynical opportunistic careerists like Lou Dobbs, Bill O’Reilly, and Glenn Beck don’t get all the “credit” for crafting and maintaining the false consciousness that keeps a majority of us aiding and abetting our filthy capitalist “betters” in their abject crimes against humanity.

Intellectually nursed at the teat of lying whores, most of us spend our lives truly believing the asinine mythology about our nation. Awash in a perpetual stream of endorphins triggered by the constant mind fuck that we are exceptional, blessed, and saintly, we pursue “life, liberty and happiness” (Jefferson meant property when he penned the word happiness) with a child-like abandon as our capitalistic endeavors savagely rape the planet.

Despite their nearly endless glorification as the gold standard to which all humanity should aspire, our national heritage, government, society, and culture are rife with deep imperfections, meaning that the “frightening” reality is that the United States has no monopoly on virtue. In fact, intellectually tethered by manufactured ignorance, imbued with a pathological sense of hubris, exhibiting knee-jerk denial in the face of our flaws and wrong-doings, and, in exchange for our service the Empire, insulated from much of the misery our nation inflicts upon the world, we stand with both feet firmly planted on the bottom rung of humanity.

Yet before we dismiss ourselves as miscreant aberrations who inherited a proud tradition and besmirched it, consider a brief perusal of a few strands of our cultural DNA that coalesced to make us the collectively despicable lot we are today:

The “New World” was settled by significant numbers of religious fanatics who subscribed to the principles of Calvinism, which included the exultation of the wealthy, a belief in humanity’s inherent wickedness, and a sadistic desire to severely punish those who had “transgressed.” Hence our worship of monetary success and our maleficent Prison Industrial Complex.

Once the Ulster-Scotts arrived in the “New World”, they ensured that our culture would be infused with heavy doses of mean-spiritedness, belligerence, and locust mentality. Following their lead, we did a “hell of a job” of eradicating most of the Native American population and stealing as much of Turtle Island as we could. To this day we continue to ravage the Earth like a swarm of locusts unleashed by a wrathful Jehovah.

Royalists settling in Virginia established the aristocracy that allegedly doesn’t exist in our “classless” society. As an added bonus, they “graced” us with the plantation system that proliferated like noxious weeds throughout southern states. Chattel slavery, the backbone of the economy fostered by Virginia’s “Cavaliers,” represents one of the most shameful elements of our history and obliterates the notion that America is an exceptional nation.

Sadly, we didn’t even live up to our hype coming out of the starting gate. While many of our deeply revered Founding Fathers were rather enlightened individuals for the times in which they lived, the government they forged was ultimately of the rich, by the rich and for the rich. While the monstrosity of industrial capitalism had yet to be birthed, remember that most of those who drafted our Constitution were affluent individuals primarily interested in grabbing the power the American Revolution had wrested from England. This white land-owning patriarchy only represented about 13% of the population. If anything, that percentage has declined precipitously throughout our history. How else does one explain a president who is hated by the vast majority of Americans yet remains immune from impeachment or a “do-nothing” Democratic Congress which is ignoring our mandate for them to end the brutal war crimes in Iraq?

Certainly we have compelling reasons for blindly supporting and participating in the depravities of consumerism, militarism, neocolonialism, speciesism, Zionism, and a host of other diseased “isms” we inflict upon the world. However, the fact that we have been severely hobbled by our ancestral roots, by capitalism’s exploitation of our tendencies to act on our greed and selfishness, and by deeply insidious psychological conditioning does not alleviate us of our share of the responsibility.

Revisiting the vampire metaphor, like the immortal undead of lore, we US Americans are spiritually vacuous. Ignoring our spiritual needs to invest nearly all of our time in the narcissistic, hollow pursuits our inculcation demands, at the collective level we contribute to capitalism’s vampiric feast on the Earth and its sentient inhabitants, and at the individual level we drain the life force from nearly all with whom we come in contact in a desperate attempt to fill our inner void.

Yet there is hope.

Despite the nearly overwhelming odds against it, increasing numbers of US Americans are seeking and finding the truth, refusing the system’s myriad tantalizing bribes, engaging in introspection, feeling a sense of moral outrage, acting with a sense of justice and compassion, abandoning what passes for thinking in the mainstream, and rejecting the notion that the disease of capitalism is incurable because it is natural (and even admirable) to consistently act on our greed and selfishness.

It is only a matter of time before decent human beings who are no longer willing to silence their consciences drive a stake through the heart of the vampiric moral abomination known as capitalism.

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jordan

Imperial Rome used capitalism as a control tool to subjugate Queen Boudica's crew of rebels... a friend of mine did a dissertation ont he subject, the abstract being: "The Romans brought their accountants, and that was the real victory".

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crissy333

Moonwolf weren't you once a capitalist. what system do you think is better? Because many failed capitalists sometimes become jealous of those who are successful at it.

This sounds like some Marxist manifesto. Is that your ideology. just asking don't bite my nose off like last time. 

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SthPacific

Funny that you still believe that Crissy333 with 35 million people living in poverty in the USA with no health care it is amazing to think that the lack of empathy for your fellow Americans and the unshakable belief that "Some Day I'll Be Rich Too" is still all pervasive in your mind.

Some would say you are a Social Darwinist.  

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moonwolf

Thanks for the question crissy and I apologize for masticating your proboscus in the past. :))   I have committed myself to focusing my emotions and commitments into erudite verbiage rather than truculent outbursts.

This article does not suggest an alternative to Capitalism.  It points very strongly to the demise of the experiment due to the inevitable greed, and lack of humane social principles at its foundations.

I have to say at this point that Communism and state socialism have already proved their dismal inability to fulfill the needs of human beings.  Each had some good aspects but failed miserably to deliver on their promises to the proletariat.

Laissez-faire capitalism is also failing and that is the point made by this angry but eloquent piece of writing.  It does not deliver on the promises made to the people who live under its control.

These three "isms" are all systems created by the human mind and thus are completely replaceable.  Many speak of capitalism as if it was here before human beings, is the natural God given way of things, and that we have no alternative.  From a religious viewpoint one may remember how Jesus dealt with money changers in the temple and what he thought of mindless greed, domination and repression.  From a pragmatic perspective this "inevitability" dogma is intellectually bankrupt and totally false.

So if you can accept this analysis so far, what other system is possible which will foster the human need to be able to struggle and achieve, and yet supports equity of opportunity within the human population regardless of colour, race, religion, origin, intellect or economic background?  What possible system would also acknowledge that there are many in a population of almost seven billions who are not equipped to "bootstrap" themselves onto center stage, and would honour, respect and support them anyway regardless of their limited capabilities?

I do not have any pat answers to these momentous questions but I do have some idea of where to begin looking, and I believe very strongly that global citizens, people of conscience, must co-operate to look at what is possible as a replacement.  I will also point out that this process has been underway for some time but people who benefit from any of these "isms" have always kept a lid on the discussion.

Since all three systems have some strengths and some weaknesses, aspects which are clearly observeable after engaging with each over time, why not look to some form of synthesis of principles and structures which possibly might fulfill on the needs and aspirations of all humans, and could unite us rather than cause separation, finally opening a path to a future where humanity can live up to its awesome potential?

I will also point out that time is running short, due to the very real possibility of environmental catastrophe, the misdirection of vital and limited resources to wars, excessive consumption , accumulation of wealth and personal power, and the continuation of all pursuits that only speed up our lemming like rush to calamity.  Looking hard at what drives us as individuals, races, groups, nations, political parties, and religions is no longer a luxury that we as a species can put off for the future, but a glaringly obvious survival conversation.  In short, if we don't alter ourselves and our institutions radically and quickly all the posturing about which system is right or wrong will be moot.

That being said I would call myself a socio-capitalist.  I believe in the lofty ideals sold to us as justification by those who have corrupted capitalism, but cannot accept the results.  Capitalism in its current form is inhumane and will ultimately consume itself and all of us with it.

The one step I can see for a start would be reigning in corporations.  We as individuals have responsibilities to be good citizens and those responsibilities are codified, and we are held to account should we fail to live up to our mutual obligations within our societies.  Without justice and the rule of law the thin veil of "civilization" would be stripped away, and we as a species and our fragile societies would be scant moments away from devolving back to our feral past and the barbarism that prevailed through most of human history, and this would occur on a massive and unimaginable scale.  It would be a catastrophe beyond description. 

Since corporations benefit from the same freedoms as individuals then they must be forced to abide by similar laws and structures to those which define personal responsibilities within our civilization, and those laws must be enforced.  Any expectation that transnational corporations will behave in a socially responsible way voluntarily is naive.

So that's where I would start.  Don't throw out the baby with the bathwater but make the structural changes necessary to make capitalism sustainable and corporations and those who run them morally, socially, and legally responsible.

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SthPacific

As long as their are Capitalists, there will be Communists. They are not mutually exclusive. Capitalism is a Marxist philosophy, That is Capital=Power=Capital. Both Capitalism and Communism were experiments to see which was the best course to take towards socialism. They are not ends in themselves, but means. Sadly because Communism finnished first, the Communist countries have a head start. It was never a competition with a winner at the end. They were both experiments. They are both temporary. To continue along this Laz'a'fare Capitalist path will be the Ruin of all we have worked for in the Democratic Countries of the West.

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crissy333

pacific you sound like a failure too the only reason there is a democracy is because of the capitalists system the french are learning their lesson right now moving away from the socialists.

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SthPacific

If only you spoke French and your Media was not so censored you would know that this is about Taxation not Socialist politics. They voted to have the right to work overtime not to end there socialist system. They still have a 35 hr week Universal health care and unemployment benifits. The Germans are talking about a Basic wage. That is everyone will get about 1200 € per month no matter how much they earn. This is so you can quit your job and persue things like, Having a Life, Raising a family, and persuing your own special talents like Art or sciences.. Italy has a Communist lead Co-alition Government. Spain still has Anarchist syndicates in various parts and is committed to socialist policies as is Portugal. Sounds more like Europe is moving toward Socialism not away from it

I see the US economy is going great at the moment. 

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moonwolf

For your information crissy I do not consider the acquisition of obscene amounts of money, and hording and using said money for nothing other than having more toys to be a demonstration of the pinnacle of human success.  Quite the opposite.  I consider it a mark of the abject failure of a person's morality and humanity.

You imply that I am a "failure" by your undefined standards.  I have a wonderful life that includes being semi-retired, a loving family and a truly global community of friends.  I live very well my dear, far better than the billions of the marginalized but I work hard to live well standing on my own two feet, with the support of my friends and peers, not on the backs of those less fortunate than myself. 

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gmony714

pacific the US economy is great your right I don't see an exodus out of the US I see people who can't wait to get in here some from your little paradise maybe even you would like a chance at the Americam dream and since you can't, you hate the US for it. We are not afraid to try and fail at least here we have a chance to live that dream in your paradise maybe you don't.  all you can do is throw things at your TV everytime you see the US and how we live here.here is how our poor live.

The following are facts about persons defined as "poor" by the Census Bureau, taken from various gov­ernment reports:

  • Forty-three
    percent of all poor households actu­ally own their own homes. The
    average home owned by persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau
    is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage, and a
    porch or patio.


  • Eighty percent of poor households
    have air conditioning. By contrast, in 1970, only 36 percent of the
    entire U.S. population enjoyed air conditioning.


  • Only 6 percent of poor households are over­crowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.


  • The
    average poor American has more living space than the average individual
    living in Paris, London, Vienna, Athens, and other cities throughout
    Europe. (These comparisons are to the average citizens in foreign countries, not to those classified as poor.)


  • Nearly three-quarters of poor households own a car; 31 percent own two or more cars.


  • Ninety-seven percent of poor households have a color television; over half own two or more color televisions.


  • Seventy-eight percent have a VCR or DVD player; 62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception.


  • Eighty-nine percent own microwave ovens, more than half have a stereo, and more than a third have an automatic dishwasher.

so poor to us is not what you think. 

 

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moonwolf

You made my point nicely.  Thank you gmony.

You describe the situation for USA'ns, not for the bulk of humanity.  This is the result of the vampirism.

As you sit and write, the vultures in your own country are eroding your economic standing so that they can have still more.

They couldn't care less about you or your needs.

Now please go back and actually read the essay, not just the title, intro and comments. 

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gmony714

moonwolf it's good to hear from you I agree that there are those at the top in the USA that abuse capitalism and only think of profit. We are a model for the rest of the world we need adjustment without too much regulation I believe if those in the US who make more than 3 to 5 million a year pay a health tax of 5% for those who truly need to have health care i'm all for it. There is a balance that can be met capitalism works on winners and losers sometimes but the US has a pretty good middle. To put the blame all on America for the worlds problems is not being too fair there is much wealth in the world being stolen from its people and then those same crooks point the finger at the USA. But utopia in this world may be a long time away.

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moonwolf

Thanks gmony,

I never once referred to the USA in my addition to this conversation.  Rapacious capitalism is alive and well around the globe.  

The author of the essay was speaking as a USA'n about capitalism in the USA, and in fairness corprate USA in collusion with the US government is the center and creator of this modern form of capitalism.

That fact does not reflect on the principles and behavior of all people in the USA, and to me there are many victims of this system that live and struggle as USA'ns. 

As to Utopia I do believe that it is possible.  Humans have the potential for grace and amazing accomplishments.

Utopia is currently a pipe dream, but a dream humans have dreamed since our language created the concept.

More significant is the immediacy of the survival of the species such that we have the time to create such a concept as reality in a bold future full of promise. 

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gmony714

you have a good heart Moonwolf. that pic looks like me on sunday mornings.

generaldecay
generaldecay
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 02:08 on September 1st, 2007

Good stuff, moonwolf.

And thank you for upping the intellectual ante here on NP by posting articles such as this - it was very interestng. 

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gmony714

pls lets not loose our minds either, the ante?

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moonwolf

Gmony,

If we do not want to lose our minds we must loose our minds! :))

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August 31, 2007 at 09:40 am by moonwolf, 863 views, 16 comments

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