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Chris Hedges appeared last Sunday on C-SPAN's Book TV series, In Depth for a three hour interview which you can watch all of at their archives. Here's a portion from the beginning of the last hour where Hedges weighed in on Ron Paul and Libertarianism, the battle between the working class and the elites for democracy and on Oprah Winfrey and her role in the cultural and religious pursuit of personal wealth in America.

On Ron Paul and Libertarianism:

HEDGES: Ron Paul for me is sort of a funny guy. I mean, he says a lot of good stuff, but for me Libertarianism is sort of a preindustrial ideology. The idea that government should be so diminished... well, I mean, the problem is that government is anemic in the face of corporations like Exxon Mobil, City Bank and Goldman Sachs and Bank of America. And we need to find leverage by which these monopolies can be broken up and the power of these corporations can be curbed.

And so I think Ron Paul is pretty good in terms of empire, in terms of fiscal responsibility, in terms of Constitutional rights, but the core of his message, which is essentially to gut government is one that I think isn't going to do anything to diminish the power of the corporate state.

On whether elites have always run society:

HEDGES: Yes. And I think that one could argue that the battle for American democracy has been one long battle against those elites, the Native Americans, African Americans, women, men without property, none of these people were invited to the Constitutional Convention.

It became a battle to open up American society and radical movements did that. None of these radical movements achieved political power, but they were potent forces that the power elite had to reckon with. And I think the destruction of those movements has disempowered us.

I mean one could argue that in April of 1968, the most powerful political figure in the United States was Martin Luther King and Johnson was scared to death of him. A year before King had denounced the Vietnam War and that's because when King went to Memphis, 50,000 people went with him. And I think we have to rebuild those movements.

For those of us that care about democracy and care about justice, it's not our job to take power. You know Julien Benda wrote a really great book called The Treason of Intellectuals and he said that we have a choice in life. We can serve privilege and power or we can serve justice and truth. And those of us who commit to serving justice and truth, the more we make concessions to those who serve privilege and power, the more we dilute the possibilities of justice and truth.

And I think King, Malcolm X, Frederick Douglass, Randolph Bourne, Eugene Debs, Mother Jones, you know, all of these people were figures that didn't make those concessions and they never achieved formal positions of power, or frankly did they ever strive to achieve formal positions of power, but they defended the interests of the dispossessed.

On Oprah's role in the cultural and religious pursuit of personal wealth:

HEDGES: Negative. Oprah peddles this fantasy that we can have everything we want if we just focus on happiness and grasp that we are truly exceptional and dig deep enough within ourselves and this is just magical thinking. It's not just peddled by Oprah. I don't want to pick on Oprah. The Christian right does it, Hollywood does it, corporatism does it. Tony Robbins, self-help guru and it's just a myth, and frankly it's a myth that's used to beat up on the poor.

So, there are no jobs in Camden. They used to make Campbells Soup in Camden. Even that's gone. Everything's gone. The schools are dysfunctional, there's a gigantic drop out rate, the streets are unsafe and to somehow tell a poor black child who's not getting a good education, not being raised in an environment that provides safety and security and nurturing and upon that being tossed out into a city where there is no work that they have to dig deep enough within themselves is really a way for us to turn our backs on the vulnerable and the poor.

And to say you are responsible, this is what's called cultural messages, you are responsible for your fate. And that's just the way the corporate state wants it as it sheds job after job after job. As large or as larger segments of American society are reduced to subsistence levels, without any kind of job security, without any kind of adequate health insurance, that it's sort of their fault because they haven't managed to tap into their inner strength, this is not only delusional, but in the end I think callous to the weak and the poor and to the working class.

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Stupid Git's picture

This was an awesome interview. Was sick in bed the other night and watched all three hours. Chris Hedges is amazing. Not one I agree with on every issue but he is one of the rare voices of integrity, ideas and humanity.

If anyone else has three hours to waste this is better than any one of the Lord of the Rings films and Avatar combined. The SFX aren't as good though.

debaser71's picture

Chris Hedges is an angry lunatic.

http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/response-t...

ixnay's picture

you posted that very same post.


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

fiver's picture

My favorite bit in that Harris piece (assuming it's the same piece debaser71 has linked to upteen zillion times) is where he accuses Hedges of an "apparent attempt to become the most tedious person on Earth."

And they say Americans have no appreciation of irony ;)


Corruption favors the wealthy.

ixnay's picture

even though I agree with some of their positions.

I find the density of projection in Harris's piece boring.


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

But on most other issues, he's spot on.

Religion is pretty much the definition of irrationality.

Stupid Git's picture

Really? You're going to attack Chris Hedges because he doesn't share the same Theological belief as you and totally dismiss all the valuable insight he offers on just about every other topic? Way to prove his point that"New Atheists" are dogmatic and close-minded. It's embarrassing to us other atheists who appreciate intellectual challenges. As an atheist, we both may be big fans of Christopher Hitchens but that doesn't mean we agreed with him on everything (or many things) like his die-hard support of the wars. And neither he or Harris are exactly civil when debating with people of spiritual belief so just because Hedges is harsh when criticizing their atheism doesn't disqualify every word he utters.

Try giving this interview a listen and see if you don't learn a lot and at the very least help you understand where those you don't always agree with are coming from. In fact, here's what Hitchens had to say on this very topic:
http://youtu.be/X3Hg-Y7MugU?t=2m45s

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

Hedges has a different theological belief. The complaint is that he becomes so irrational as to intentionally misrepresent Harris' writing. I also take issue with Hedges' assertion that atheism is a religion and that the so-called "new atheists" are fundamentalists.

But many people have blind spots and/or topics they cannot discuss rationally. On most other topics, Hedges has a lot to offer.

derekthered's picture

capitalism however, is, complete with high priests, ritual, and sacrifice; said sacrifice being, of course, our lives.

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

I can very much apply that to myself, as I, like all thinking humans, have certain "hot-button" issues that turn me from the sweet pussycat I am to a complete asshole...

Meh... welcome to humanity. I, though I have absolutely no intention of entering a discussion as to why, do not agree with the atheist point of view, but am perfectly willing to read or listen to the spokespeople thereof... personal aesthetics tend to turn me off from any "in your face" attitude, whether or not I agree with the position of the person so 'tuded.

But, that's just me. Would rather have a point spiced with humor than salted with bile.


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

and then later go, "Jeez. I totally lost it. Sorry about that." But it's another thing entirely to keep making the same erroneous, disproven argument again and again.

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

True... and if an when an argument is disproven, the intelligent thing is to drop it... but not really the same as taking an arguably reasonable argument, or at least possibly valid points and beating one's audience upside the head repeatedly... a certain FB friend of mine, a retired Army CWO I used to work with is much the same way... I can dig he's a conservative and all that, but his first message ever to me was calling me out as a "liberal," (which is valid and accurate), and making it and the rest of the message into an insult. An example, and one I've seen exercised by various posters here is the man's criticism of the President... He's a vet, I'm a vet... we've earned the privilege of speaking our minds and having our opinions respected, as we were willing to shed our blood on foreign soil for everyone's rights to the same... no big. But the message, valid or not, gets awfully lost amongst the "African Tribal Chief," "Boy King," "Obozo," "Obomber," comments and all the rest.I might be willing to entertain some of the points, or at least give them some thought, were it not for the distraction of the rest.

Don't really give a damn who thinks it's elitist, you're going to gain at least more listeners, if not more agreement, to your arguments when you don't belittle and insult your audience and their opinions straight out of the gate.

George Carlin had the proper sequence down to a fine art, and I miss his genius.


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

FreeThought's picture

When discussing Hedges, one should consider that his upbringing was deeply steeped in Religulous nonsense. He even went so far as to obtain a masters in divinity. There can be no doubt that exposure to extreme dogma causes deleterious effects to healthy grey matter.


Their homeworld was a place called Earth, located in an uninteresting part of the galaxy. They had an expression: pride goeth before a fall. Their pride was their undoing. I know. I was there....They did not listen, of course. Arrogant men never do.

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

you'll see that he has almost completely abandoned Christianity, which makes his irrationality on the topic even more perplexing. Or maybe it doesn't. I don't know, having never indulged in religion.

FreeThought's picture

you say. He exhibits irrational behaviour when discussing certain topics. Oh, BTW... I often use the word "nonbeliever" to define my views. It eliminates the ISM syndrome.


Their homeworld was a place called Earth, located in an uninteresting part of the galaxy. They had an expression: pride goeth before a fall. Their pride was their undoing. I know. I was there....They did not listen, of course. Arrogant men never do.

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

Nonbeliever is preferable.

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

Well, I think it was Ingersoll (someone will correct me if I'm wrong) that said something to the effect of the difference between a believer's atheism and his own were only separated by one deity... and when the believer was able to understand why he, as a believer, rejected all other possible gods, then he, the believer would understand why Ingersoll believed in none of them.


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

mr. hedges religiosity gets on my nerves just that little bit, but he is good. sam harris's book is pretty strident, he should maybe take a chill pill. the problem is that religion is such a sacred cow, it does limit the debate when one gets hammered for stating how they feel about religion.

Alice X - Chomsky Nader's picture

.


statusquObama, change you can only pretend in

metman's picture

Just because someone can be amazingly and completely wrong on one subject does not mean he has nothing to say of value on any others.

jonnyj's picture
Ha

Ron Paul?

metman's picture

Well, he's amazingly and completely wrong on almost every subject he comments on... but in principle, yes.

BrendoNYC's picture

Thanks for highlighting this interview. Just a quick correction re: the transcript -- he refers to Randolph Bourne, who wrote "War and the Intellectuals" and most famously "War is the Health of the State." He was an outspoken critic of WWI and a great public intellectual. In fact, I am sure that Hedges is in many ways his intellectual heir, as "War is a force that gives us meaning" is as incisive and provocative a title as Bourne's "health of the state" was nearly 100 years ago.

However, I must say to "Stupid Git" that a 3-D remake of this interview where Chris is wearing armor and wielding a broadsword, or done up in full "Na'vi" costume would be pretty cool. Imagine -- a tail as prehensile as his mind.... (Hope you're feeling better!)

Stupid Git's picture

Thanks! I'm feeling much better though with all the cold meds I was one maybe the blue skin and 3D effect was a sign I'd taken more the the recommended daily dosage.

derekthered's picture

I will fly with you!!!! sczhake ssewliey!

me and the kids have watched that movie so many times it has become a parody of itself, we just crack up, laugh and laugh. still it's pretty bad-ass when those Titanothere charge, and the Thanator is wicked.

sczhake! aywa has heard you!

and when grace dies? i haven't cried so much since Titanic. Jack! Jack! come back, Jack!

Heather's picture

I listened to that over and over trying to make out the name and couldn't figure out who he was talking about. Corrected above.

NavSpecWarVet's picture

I've always believed that Libertarians are essentially Republicans that like to smoke pot, look at porn and selectively break laws. Nothing I've seen or read in my lifetime has made me change that opinion. The self described Libertarians that I have met have only reinforced that opinion.

bmw 528's picture
Yep

I think they are selfish anarchists that want the advantages of publically financed infrastructure and services but don't want to contribute their fair share to them. They don't believe in sharing of resources for the public good and have this John Wayne mentality that everybody's on their own.


"We will find fulfillment not in the goods that we have, but in the good we can do for each other."

Robert F. Kennedy

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

Hence my description on the other thread as "Big 'L'" Libertarianism, as in the Libertarian Party, Objectivists and the like, in their extreme conclusion are better defined by the 14 points of fascism, and a "left libertarian" philosophy could better be described as "enlightened anarchism."

The difference is the "enlightened," as to be enlightened truly denies selfishness. And, yes, enlightened self-interest is human, selfishness is evil.


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

Kathy in St. Louis's picture

Especially the porn part.

Geraldo's picture

Libertarians like STRAIGHT porn.

Kathy in St. Louis's picture

would question your generalization.

fastfeat's picture

Especially great comment regarding the Oprah/Robbins derangement syndrome.


"Parachutes are allowed in checked or carry-on baggage, but may not be worn in flight."

---Southwest Airlines

gogetem's picture

swipe at Oprah et al. I agree that self-actualization can't come about if someone can't eat or doesn't have a roof over their head, but remember what Oprah's audience is: mostly middle class soccer-moms. I don't think its fair to lump Oprah in with "corporate America".

Having said that, I think this interview was great. Hedges has a lot of important things to say.


If a drone kills a child in Kandahar, do the crying parents make a sound?

metman's picture

Oprah's pretty completely wrapped up with the softer edges of prosperity doctrine and new age woo. These things play to the interests of corporate America even while they think they don't.

Rich H's picture

I'd have to disagree on that one.

metman's picture

She started a whole network called OWN... yeah

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

Non-traditional, non-industrial corporation, to be sure, but the lady IS a corporation!


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

gogetem's picture

Though I don't think the meat processing industry is a fan.


If a drone kills a child in Kandahar, do the crying parents make a sound?

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

Probably not, but they ARE a traditional, corporate industry...
As such, they hate the competition!
/smile


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

Steve E's picture

dislike Mr. Chris Hedges. Too much reality and truth at one time. Chris has got Obama's number.

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

Wow... generalize much? Seem to have crammed at least 4 in as many short sentences.


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

Abbybwood's picture

out of all the candidates currently running, including Obama.

I have posted MANY of Chris Hedges articles here.

I think Chris Hedges would agree, based on the issues he DOES agree with Ron Paul on, that he would prefer to see a series of final debates between Ron Paul and Barack Obama where REAL issues (especially those of war and peace, civil liberties, the drug war and injustice to minorities, Constitutional issues involving The Patriot Act etc.) would be discussed before the American people and not just a series of phony media manipulating theater stunts showing us which candidate, Romney or Obama, would out Neocon the other.

I wish someone would pose that question to Chris Hedges.


"The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference and undernourishment." - Robert Hutchins

men without property, none of these people were invited to the Constitutional Convention."

it's so great to hear these facts every once in a while. if memory serves there were 7 million people in the 13 states at the first prez election, 125,000 had the right to vote, you would have to check it, it's been 30 years since i read this in a history book, published by the CPUSA, in Moscow. what? you don't think they print this type of stuff in our history books? do you?

Stupid Git's picture

That explains the sentiments of so many on the libertarian/Tea Party right - they aren't bigots, they just believe in "original intent".

Ape-Man's picture

Does show how much progress we made. And then there was reagan, and then bush...


"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-

then I have to admit he is a master of insubstantial cant and drivel.


Hasa Diga Eebowai

ixnay's picture
OMG

did you just make an argument to authority on insubstantial cant and drivel?


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

Edwin's picture

zing

rotflmao


“let’s hold our nose this one time” and hope, dear Neptune, we don't perpetuate this rancid continuum

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

's going to leave a mark...

/smile


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

Milquetoast's picture

If Ron Paul were the Global corporations or Big Banksters wet dream who wouldn't "do anything to diminish the power of the corporate state"

then they would give their money to him in big campain donations.

But they give it to Obama and Romney instead.

Romney and Obama are the ones that corporations and big banks want to get elected...(not Ron Paul)


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

metman's picture

The specific corporations that exist now benefit greatly from the current regime. Paul's world would still favor the rich and powerful, in fact more so, but they might not be the same rich and powerful we have today. Why would corporations give up the cushy gig they have now for the promise of possible cushier gigs, though also bigger losses, in the future? Not a rational choice.

Milquetoast's picture

...la la land.

did you ever hear of the follow the money game?


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

metman's picture

That comment has no bearing on the point I made whatsoever. Point is Paul's policies would exchange one privaleged elite for another, but would not help the average person in any significant way, and would probably harm them. The follow the money game shows who the currently entrenched interests are, but that doesn't make it a binary choice between the current interests and the general populace. Perhaps you should check your current location before commenting on others'.

Paul the Sax Guy's picture

I think it's more a matter of the corporations putting their money where they think they've got a chance... I, personally, believe that, while they may be evil, they are not fools, and they know that in the general election, Ron Paul stands very little chance.


In the marketplace of ideas, too many people shop in the bargain basement.
-- Thunder BlueRose

Why, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU
http://saxman.bravepages.com

angryspittle's picture

You think the MIC would donate to him?? Get real. He poses a huge threat to their continued thievery if he ever gained power.

Abbybwood's picture

Have major campaign organizations right now in any of the next several primary states, I think the Republican race is going to ultimately be between Ron Paul and Mitt Romney.

The debates this weekend, one Saturday night at 9 EST on ABC, and then early Sunday morning at 9 EST on NBC should whittle this contest down significantly.

Santorum will come out looking like a total far-right wing kook (who lost his last election in PA), Romney will come off as the Neocon corporatist shill he is, Gingrich will continue to disgust everyone just by looking at him and listening to his arrogant comments. Perry, if he hasn't officially dropped out should and Huntsman will assuredly (according to all the polls I'm seeing) end up as nothing but an asterisk in this race.

Ron Paul will come off as fiscally the most conservative by far and Constitutionally the ONLY one who cares one solitary whit about the Constitution and our civil liberties.

All of them claim to be so eager to stand up and take that oath to the Constitution in front of the whole world, yet they ALL support Obama's signing of the NDAA. Except for Ron Paul. And remember, most of those voting will be Independents who live in the state carrying the motto: LIVE FREE OR DIE.

I hope Ron Paul comes off very well in the debates and that he either wins in New Hampshire or comes in a close second. This country needs to have a real debate about real issues. We already have a pretty good idea of who would wield the biggest militaristic sticks.


"The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference and undernourishment." - Robert Hutchins

you make good comments. i so agree with you................sometimes.

to my view we have a clash between free market libertarianism and socialism. plain and simple. the donkey and pachyderm are just wholesale brands, soft like cream of wheat, we may as well cut the crap and get down to business, the only question that is pertinent is are you ready to RUMBLE !!!!!

the issues you routinely list are exactly what the two corporate shills who are likely to be the nominees wish to avoid. may as well cut out the middleman. i would like to see what you describe, but what i think we will get is romney/huntsman.

me? i'm voting for that obomney feller.

Ape-Man's picture

The MIC is the biggest corporation complex of all. that's why they won't allow paul to be president. They love his position of de-regulation.


"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-

mudshark's picture
.

Ron Paul= Idolatry= Paulbot= senseless.


What is your conceptual, continuity?

priceless. my sentiments exactly. now if more people could just see how capitalism is a death cult? and quantification it's sacrament? maybe we could get somewhere.

perhaps mr. baudrillard's theories have "been weighed in the balance", and found wanting, or maybe no one is "paying" attention.

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

"American libertarianism."

Milquetoast's picture

...and capitalism did not cause our troubles.

fascism is the problem.

Our elected representatives work for corporations. (courtesy of the corporate media)


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

derekthered's picture

master and slave, noble and serf, just like the man wrote. historical antecedents and examples abound; slavery, indentured servitude, this is fact, call it what you want it is one class exploiting the other.

Floriduh Dave's picture

I've always looked at The Pyraminds and said 'it's just a big toomstone'.

exactly?


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

Floriduh Dave's picture

using logic.

Milquetoast's picture
Duh

fascism is a controlled market. (like what we got)

fascism is by definition NOT freemarket "capitalism !


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

come on milky, deal with reality, fascism is what capitalism inevitably leads to. people like me have to deal with the failures of what supposed socialism led to, therefore we try harder, we dig deeper, we're not your daddy's socialists.

Milquetoast's picture

...agents and whores for corporations and banks and lobbyists are what the problem is.

corruption conspiracy and monopoly and bribery are what brought us the fascism that Eisenhower warned us of.

It wasn't inevitable...America just got lax and dependent is all.


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

derekthered's picture

we were already fascist in all but name. jim crow was in full force, we were overthrowing govts. around the globe.............lions, and tigers, and bears, oh my!!

derekthered's picture

started with the Santa Clara County vs. Southern Pacific case, with the granting of personhood to corps. it will not stop until that "obiter dictum" is overturned.

not to demonstrate how you have not the slightest clue as to what either of those two words actually mean.


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

Floriduh Dave's picture

model for all to see. Capitalism takes a 'resourse' and exploits it to the wealth of the exploiters,'employing' residents to poison their land,their air their society all in the end game of profit. Capitalism cannot last moving to it's logical conclusion.

Ape-Man's picture

Yes, capitalism is not all bad, but every 'ism' needs to tempered. Capitalism in its pure state is not stable. We were getting close before reagan came along, and now the neo-fascists.

Unregulated capitalism produces monopolies and mergers, which in turn concentrates wealth and sets the stage for fascism by allowing corporate wealth to buy influence in government. This is exactly what we see happening to America at this time. We now have corporate fascists dancing on the political stage.


"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-

This is exactly what we see has happened to America at this time. there. fixed it for ya, no charge.

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

“The election of Obama was one more triumph of illusion over substance. It was a skillful manipulation and betrayal of the public by a corporate power elite. We mistook style and ethnicity — an advertising tactic pioneered by Calvin Klein and Benetton — for progressive politics and genuine change.” —Chris Hedges

Floriduh Dave's picture

snow job.

Ape-Man's picture

So hedges thinks president Obama was secretly a corporate agent during his candidacy? I think that's inaccurate. I think what happened is the same thing that always happens, the newly elected president meets the real world of corporate America after he is elected, and finds it more difficult that anticipated to make the changes that all progressives want.


"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

Ken Silverstein of Harper's laid it all out way back in 2006.

Yet it is also startling to see how quickly Obama’s senatorship has been woven into the web of institutionalized influence-trading that afflicts official Washington. He quickly established a political machine funded and run by a standard Beltway group of lobbyists, P.R. consultants, and hangers-on. For the staff post of policy director he hired Karen Kornbluh, a senior aide to Robert Rubin when the latter, as head of the Treasury Department under Bill Clinton, was a chief advocate for NAFTA and other free-trade policies that decimated the nation’s manufacturing sector (and the organized labor wing of the Democratic Party). Obama’s top contributors are corporate law and lobbying firms (Kirkland & Ellis and Skadden, Arps, where four attorneys are fund-raisers for Obama as well as donors), Wall Street financial houses (Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase), and big Chicago interests (Henry Crown and Company, an investment firm that has stakes in industries ranging from telecommunications to defense). Obama immediately established a “leadership PAC,” a vehicle through which a member of Congress can contribute to other politicians’ campaigns—and one that political reform groups generally view as a slush fund through which congressional leaders can evade campaign-finance rules while raising their own political profiles.

derekthered's picture

i remember that article,

Steve E's picture

that must be the answer because Obama promised to do something about the minimum wage but has not done a thing to date. You are much like a broken record when you continually try to prop up a corporate stooge such as Barry.

Floriduh Dave's picture

Is the most honest assesment of culture/politics I have seen in many a year.

Floriduh Dave's picture

is 'it's not our job to lead' We elect leaders. And we face a total corrupt 'leadership' that collects gobs of money to continue the government owned by The Elites.

Alice X - Chomsky Nader's picture

I am an atheist, I see no evidence, which is what it would take, that there is any guiding supernatural force in the Universe.

However I do take note of the things that people say.

One saying attributed to this Jesus of Nazareth is:

'Comfort the sick and feed the poor.'

I can readily say this is a fine principle without going along with any of the supernatural stuff of Christian Theology.

From that standpoint, Jesus was a socialist.

A quote from Gandhi: 'How unlike your Christ are your Christians.'

I do not mean, necessarily, to include Chris Hedges in that assessment.

I don't know what his affinity for Theology was or is.

I am not concerned as some here are.

He is an essential voice in describing our social situation.


statusquObama, change you can only pretend in

BigDaddyMalcontent's picture

http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/ChrisHed/s...

Corporations have exploited the 14th Amendment to get more power. I was wondering if it's possible -- and this isn't facetiousness -- the 13th Amendment outlaws slavery, right? So if these legal persons are owned by private people or shareholders, wouldn't it be possible to free them -- free the corporations from this ownership through the 13th Amendment?

media critic's picture

The liberal class is here, and everywhere. It has not passed, and never will. He is conservative and loves Marx, a contradiction. I'm neither, but I love European Socialism, that would be a vast improvement over the selfish Randian crap we live here day to day due to the tyrants in the pig party and the weenies in the Dim that won't fight it. Hedges is interesting, but I must say he is over rated.


I too have one of those famous bogus broadcasting voices, I am so
very proud of it.

Jeanne's picture

Chris Hedges is a voice for the people. I will give Oprah one itty bitty little favor however. I read her magazine. it was a gift otherwise I wouldn't have touched it. There are all the glitz and the glamor. That is Oprah. The woman loves her shoes and all the crap that goes with it. But among the pages of glam are really good articles on good books and not just Southern boo hoo's. And more importantly articles that other main stream magazines wouldn't touch. Like the article on the dairy conglomerates that are destroying farming in Michigan. I got a sense from that article of the real tragedy to people dealing in the area. The magazine picks articles that get into the shoes of the ordinary man. While she mixes it up with stuff that an average woman would be attracted to she might be offering them reading that would be good for the soul and the mind.

This is an excellent article.
http://www.oprah.com/world/Health-Risks-That-...


Jeanne

g-man's picture

Chris Hedges has been speaking out with intelligence and truth to power for some time. Add Paul Craig Roberts to this list of great progressive thinking Americans. The truth is out there and not in the usual left vs. right paradigm this blog fetishes over. We do have a personal responsibility and that is to raise our conscious level and being several steps ahead of the oppressive power of the .001%.

adrielhampton's picture

Hedges is the real deal. This was a great interview and I appreciate your transcription of those highlights.