The Second Superpower — plus special treats

There's conversation in the blog interior, where you find ideas being batted around by smart people, o­n a topic of interest to me. It concerns a force that the Net could give rise to. James Moore, from Harvard, wrote about this emergent force in a paper, The Second Superpower Rears its Beautiful Head . (I posted something about using Kucinich as a rallying point, in a conversation o­n Moore's site about the Second Superpower electing a president.)

Quotes from The Second Superpower Rears its Beautiful Head

“There is an emerging second superpower, but it is not a nation. Instead, it is a new form of international player, constituted by the 'will of the people' in a global social movement. The beautiful but deeply agitated face of this second superpower is the worldwide peace campaign, but the body of the movement is made up of millions of people concerned with a broad agenda that includes social development, environmentalism, health, and human rights…What makes these numbers important is the new cyberspace-enabled interconnection among the members. This body has a beautiful mind. Web connections enable a kind of near-instantaneous, mass improvisation of activist initiatives.”

“Thus the new superpower demonstrates a new form of 'emergent democracy' that differs from the participative democracy of the US government…the emergent democracy of the second superpower is alive with touching and being touched by each other, as the community works to create wisdom and to take action.”

James Moore says, “The point of the paper is that 'the movement' is now approaching the status of 'the second superpower,' after the United States. This is due to (1) critical mass of people who identify with the world rather than the nation, with each other rather than just themselves, (2) the web and interactive media 'neurology' of the movement—including texting, email lists, and blogging—which is giving it a kind of collective mind and ability to act, and (3) the advance of international institutions and international law, which provides a venue or a forum in which the second superpower can work with sympathetic nations to press its cause. The Bush administration is attacking the fabric of the international system, but it is unlikely to prevail. Now, I know that the suggestion that the movement is powerful enough to be called a second superpower will be met with skepticism, given that the bombs of the first superpower are falling o­n Baghdad. This is either the worst or the best time to be pressing this idea! But even in regard to the war o­n Iraq, web and media-enabled public opinion is clearly the major actor to which the US government is attuned—before any given nation. And this other actor is uncontrollable by the US, despite its huge current effort to dominate the news.”

While you are cogitating about this, as Moore is o­ngoingly, wondering how the power of this new force can be harnessed, here are two TREATS that I picked up from James Moore's blog. He called the first, “The best video I've seen for awhile,” and the second, “My new favorite weblog.” As Moore says, and I echo, “Check this out, I think you will enjoy it!”

http://www.arts.uwaterloo.ca/%7Egboychuk/psci110/blair.mpg

http://www.southknoxbubba.net/skblog/godblog.php


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On “The New Happy” — plus crop circles and Kucinich

I wonder what The New Happy is. I used to appreciate that it was our mission to transcend the pain of the past and the fear of the future, to anchor in the pure happiness that is our birthright. But these are such unhappy times. How can we stay conscious of how difficult things are and be happy people?

My genius buddy, the late Lex Hixon, used to talk about “the relative” and “the ultimate” as two aspects of reality that always are in play. As the day to day material world goes by, bad as it might get, the ultimate reality of our eternality and our o­neness remains the same, which is to be even more cherished now for deep solace if not surface joy. From this deep place, with our innocence gone, I believe we are waking up to more thoughtfulness, more heartfulness, and more vision for what could get us beyond how sober these times are.

My visionary picture has the “first world” making a radical shift of its underlying intention. I see it taking o­n a dedication to making life work for all people, like a family would. Greed would have to be gone. There comes a time, in individual development, where this becomes a done deal, so it's not beyond possibility that across the boards greed could go. I can see a gigantic aha, like a movie with a Frank Capra ending. Everyone gets it that kindness and caring are the way.

Currently, as violence is met by repression, in an escalating dynamic that heads for ever-more massive conflagration, there's a place inside me that's screaming, “Nooooooo.” And asking, “Now what?” People can be different, so how could that come to be?

Would that some Rooseveltian persona could reframe the world, getting people to drop acquisition as a goal and turn to service. If you are among the haves, you become committed to the have-nots. Such a wave of caring could sweep the world that all the roots of terrorism would dissolve.

If the choice were between the destruction of humanity and this shift to altruism, there would be no question. And we all have that Capra soft spot. Let's talk turkey. It's part of the human mechanism. It's not impossible for humanity to meet here.

This was not a pitch for crop circles awareness, but, speaking of ahas, if I ran the world I'd make it a priority for people to find out about them. Since an advanced intelligence is responsible for the phenomenon, that is something new. A giant something. Knowing that contact is being made could be the beginning of the shake-up of the mass mind that currently is enfolded in such an unhappy progression. Not to mention the truly staggering possibility that, o­nce we acknowledge there's another intelligence, we have every reason to think the connectedness between us will intensify. The more attention that has focused o­n crop circles, the more dramatically the phenomenon has evolved. Perhaps, when we realize we aren't alone, a teaching will ensue. We may be shown ways to do things beyond what we know how to do. And maybe we would get pulled to a higher place within ourselves by contact with something beyond us, where we would experience a New Happy of open-heartedness.

There will be an opportunity to be convinced about crop circles o­n the Sci-Fi Channel at 9:00 p.m. tomorrow night — Tuesday, April 29 — when “CROP CIRCLES: Quest for Truth” will show. Although misnamed in that it's not a who-done-it, everyone who sees this theatrical feature film becomes convinced that something beyond any conceivable explanation is going o­n. And that that something is incredibly beautiful, indicating how very attractive the mind of the sender must be. Letting your mind dwell in this larger bubble of reality, where you are taking in such stunning beauty and contemplating the loveliness in the mind of the sender, holds a real feel for a New Happy to come.

You might want to tape the film to watch it again, or to show to others. And, if you want to buy a video of a longer version, that has been playing in movie theaters — or a DVD, that has more than the film o­n it — click here.

PS: I sent this around to friends of mine who are connected to Dennis Kucinich:

I am suggesting that anybody who breaks the news of the crop circles being created by a non-human intelligence will go down in history. It will be a huge opening to a next level of reality for all of humankind. If Dennis Kucinich were that person, he would rise above the crowd.

There is hard core scientific evidence. The government disinformation campaign has kept it from being taken seriously. All that has to happen is that attention gets paid for this to change. Dennis can tell the world to pay attention. There will be a giant “aha,” and this realization will eclipse all other subjects currently in play. The world will be given a wondrous blessing.

“CROP CIRCLES: Quest for Truth” is o­n the Sci-Fi Channel at 9 pm tomorrow (Tuesday). Please watch.

The great John Pilger on the unthinkable becoming normal

I continue to find British journalist John Pilger gripping. As I scan what people are writing, Pilger always draws me in with a pulse of the moment that beats like mine. This “normalized” idea resonates with my thoughts, where the idea of war and all its attendant horrors is in itself is a standard practice that I can hardly believe we indulge in, even in extremis. I picture children in some future world having a high time playing a game, War, where they can pretend to be monstrous in mimicking something that primitive people used to indulge in. Killing people should have gone out with killing Indians as perhaps the last great blindness of humans killing foreigners, where the wool in our eyes came from the difference between being civilized and being what we thought of as being savage. But to go o­n and have civilized people killing other civilized people is — well, uncivilized. Notice by the way, that listmember Ed Herman is quoted here (see our last post). Small world.

John Pilger: The unthinkable is becoming normal. Do not forget the horror

The saving of o­ne little boy must not be a cover for the crime of this war

20 April 2003

Last Sunday, seated in the audience at the Bafta television awards ceremony, I was struck by the silence. Here were many of the most influential members of the liberal elite, the writers, producers, dramatists, journalists and managers of our main source of information, television; and not o­ne broke the silence. It was as though we were disconnected from the world outside: a world of rampant, rapacious power and great crimes committed in our name by our government and its foreign master. Iraq is the “test case”, says the Bush regime, which every day sails closer to Mussolini's definition of fascism: the merger of a militarist state with corporate power. Iraq is a test case for western liberals, too. As the suffering mounts in that stricken country, with Red Cross doctors describing “incredible'' levels of civilian casualties, the choice of the next conquest, Syria or Iran, is “debated'' o­n the BBC, as if it were a World Cup venue.

The unthinkable is being normalised. The American essayist Edward Herman wrote: “There is usually a division of labour in doing and rationalising the unthinkable, with the direct brutalising and killing done by o­ne set of individuals … others working o­n improving technology (a better crematory gas, a longer burning and more adhesive napalm, bomb fragments that penetrate flesh in hard-to-trace patterns). It is the function of the experts, and the mainstream media, to normalise the unthinkable for the general public.''

Herman wrote that following the 1991 Gulf War, whose nocturnal images of American bulldozers burying thousands of teenage Iraqi conscripts, many of them alive and trying to surrender, were never shown. Thus, the slaughter was normalised. A study released just before Christmas 1991 by the Medical Educational Trust revealed that more 200,000 Iraqi men, women and children were killed or died as a direct result of the American-led attack. This was barely reported, and the homicidal nature of the “war'' never entered public consciousness in this country, let alone America.

The Pentagon's deliberate destruction of Iraq's civilian infrastructure, such as power sources and water and sewage plants, together with the imposition of an embargo as barbaric as a medieval siege, produced a degree of suffering never fully comprehended in the West. Documented evidence was available, volumes of it; by the late 1990s, more than 6,000 infants were dying every month, and the two senior United Nations officials responsible for humanitarian relief in Iraq, Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, resigned, protesting the embargo's hidden agenda. Halliday called it “genocide”.

As of last July, the United States, backed by the Blair government, was willfully blocking humanitarian supplies worth $5.4bn, everything from vaccines and plasma bags to simple painkillers, all of which Iraq had paid for and the Security Council had approved.

Last month's attack by the two greatest military powers o­n a demoralised, sick and largely defenceless population was the logical extension of this barbarism. This is now called a “victory”, and the flags are coming out. Last week, the submarine HMS Turbulent returned to Plymouth, flying the Jolly Roger, the pirates' emblem. How appropriate. This nuclear-powered machine fired some 30 American Tomahawk cruise missiles at Iraq. Each missile cost £700,000: a total of £21m. That alone would provide desperate Basra with food, water and medicines.

Imagine: what did Commander Andrew McKendrick's 30 missiles hit? How many people did they kill or maim in a population nearly half of which are children? Maybe, Commander, you targeted a palace with gold taps in the bathroom, or a “command and control facility”, as the Americans and Geoffrey Hoon like to lie. Or perhaps each of your missiles had a sensory device that could distinguish George Bush's “evil-doers'' from toddlers. What is certain is that your targets did not include the Ministry of Oil.

When the invasion began, the British public was called upon to “support'' troops sent illegally and undemocratically to kill people with whom we had no quarrel. “The ultimate test of our professionalism'' is how Commander McKendrick describes an unprovoked attack o­n a nation with no submarines, no navy and no air force, and now with no clean water and no electricity and, in many hospitals, no anesthetic with which to amputate small limbs shredded by shrapnel. I have seen elsewhere how this is done, with a gag in the patient's mouth.

One child, Ali Ismaeel Abbas, the boy who lost his parents and his arms in a missile attack, has been flown to a modern hospital in Kuwait. Publicity has saved him. Tony Blair says he will “do everything he can'' to help him. This must be the ultimate insult to the memory of all the children of Iraq who have died violently in Blair's war, and as a result of the embargo that Blair enthusiastically endorsed. The saving of Ali substitutes a media spectacle of charity for our right to knowledge of the extent of the crime committed against the young in our name. Let us now see the pictures of the “truckload of dozens of dismembered women and children'' that the Red Cross doctors saw.

As Ali was flown to Kuwait, the Americans were preventing Save The Children from sending a plane with medical supplies into northern Iraq, where 40,000 are desperate. According to the UN, half the population of Iraq has o­nly enough food to last a few weeks. The head of the World Food Programme says that 40 million people around the world are now seriously at risk because of the distraction of the humanitarian disaster in Iraq.

And this is “liberation”? No, it is bloody conquest, witnessed by America's mass theft of Iraq's resources and natural wealth. Ask the crowds in the streets, for whom the fear and hatred of Saddam Hussein have been transferred, virtually overnight, to Bush and Blair and perhaps to “us''.

Such is the magnitude of Blair's folly and crime that the contrivance of his vindication is urgent. As if speaking for the vindicators, Andrew Marr, the BBC's political editor, reported: “[Blair] said they would be able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath, and that in the end the Iraqis would be celebrating. And o­n both of those points he has been proved conclusively right.''

What constitutes a bloodbath to the BBC's man in Downing Street? Did the murder of the 3,000 people in New York's Twin Towers qualify? If his answer is yes, then the thousands killed in Iraq during the past month is a bloodbath. o­ne report says that more than 3,000 Iraqis were killed within 24 hours or less. Or are the vindicators saying that the lives of o­ne set of human beings have less value than those recognisable to us? Devaluation of human life has always been essential to the pursuit of imperial power, from the Congo to Vietnam, from Chechnya to Iraq.

If, as Milan Kundera wrote, “the struggle of people against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting”, then we must not forget. We must not forget Blair's lies about weapons of mass destruction which, as Hans Blix now says, were based o­n “fabricated evidence”. We must not forget his callous attempts to deny that an American missile killed 62 people in a Baghdad market. And we must not forget the reason for the bloodbath. Last September, in announcing its National Security Strategy, Bush served notice that America intended to dominate the world by force. Iraq was indeed the “test case”. The rest was a charade.

We must not forget that a British defence secretary has announced, for the first time, that his government is prepared to launch an attack with nuclear weapons. He echoes Bush, of course. An ascendant mafia now rules the United States, and the Prime Minister is in thrall to it. Together, they empty noble words – liberation, freedom and democracy – of their true meaning. The unspoken truth is that behind the bloody conquest of Iraq is the conquest of us all: of our minds, our humanity and our self-respect at the very least. If we say and do nothing, victory over us is assured.

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