Panama Red, who has been traveling the world and making music for more
than 40 years, somehow got the idea that his life would be more
complete if he visited his friend Joe Bageant in Hopkins Village,
Belize. The plan was to spend a week with Joe in Hopkins and learn
something about the music of the Garifuna poeple -- and it was a good
plan, with some bumps and detours along the way. Panama Red has written
several great articles on his visit to Belize, posted on his web site,
that are well worth reading.
Continue reading "Panama Red visits Joe Bageant in Belize" »
Joe,
Like a lot of people seem to be doing, I have been spending more and
more time on your site. I'm trying not to get fixated about it. I've
looked at the pictures you've posted of your home town, your vacation
to the French Riviera, you trip to Belize. I've read the recent letters
of people who tell you that they question their own sanity because of
the pain they feel as a result of their wanting to do something to stop
the evil that our country has become. They think they might be crazy
for feeling this way about America. I feel this same way they do. But I
know I'm not crazy. Famous last words. Maybe it's not about whether or
not you're crazy. Maybe it's about whether or not you are socialized
enough to look at the minute by minute insanity that streams across the
TV and Internet without running screaming out of the house and into the
street.
Continue reading "A swan dive off the highboard of democracy" »
By Joe Bageant
There is a dark side to any state induced oblivion -- in this case, our
national and international sociopathy, our unacknowledged inner and
outer violence. By now it should be clear that our national and
personal sociopathy stems more from our environment and culture than
anything our mamas and daddies did to us in childhood, lousy as those
things may have been for some. This ain't Kansas anymore and besides,
our parents were products of the same culture, only less so.
Continue reading "Our National Sociopathy" »
Dear Joe,
Your exchange with Robert regarding marriage ("The tension between love
and awareness") hit a nerve. Since I discovered your site a month or so
ago ("Somewhere a banker smiles") I keep saying, "If only Brian were
here to read this . . ." He would have dug it. Or maybe not. (He hated
practically everybody.) Anyway, like Robert and his wife, like you and
your wife, he and I agreed on the basic stuff about the decline and
fall of any idealistic notions we ever had about the U.S., the
accelerating corruption of our politics and our psyches, the horror of
the Bush administration, late capitalism, the World Bank, etc., etc.,
etc. He was the SCREAMINGMAN. I screamed only on occasion but mostly
tried to be the voice of sweet reason saying, "Honey, you can't live
there all the time." And indeed he couldn't. He died in August 2005, of
an apparent heart attack, at the age of 46.
Continue reading "His anger was part of what killed him" »
Joe:
I love you!!! I read your essays and suddenly do not feel so totally
alone anymore. My friends all believe in the Democrats and think I am
insane for being a socialist. I read the news about what we have done
in Iraq and how we condone torture and I double over in anguish. I want
to build a house on the Mexican border and harbor "illegal aliens"
there. There are days when I just do not understand how people can
carry on their lives and go "shopping", have parties, etc., and not
care about the trauma this country has perpetrated on the world.
Continue reading "People just don't care what's happening" »
By Joe Bageant
Working class whites were happy with their town squares, Christmas
season parades down Main Street, crooked councilmen, yokel sex
scandals, free libraries and free water and gossip about niggers raping
white girls. The Frontier spirit. "Freedom to kill rabbits." Then one
day they looked up and, as Internet writer Andrea Black puts it,
They were being squeezed economically and the developed Western World
and the US Govmint no longer approves of Betty Joe doin' abortions
wearing her tennis shoes. The price of gas ... farms going bust. Mary
Jo and so many others -- in prison. Turn on the tee-vee and see
teen-age whores dumping on Christianity on Jerry Springer. Unnatural
couples gettin' married, with rice and flowers. The Pres f*** in the
White House. No, No, and No! G-damm libruls!
There is some truth to it though.
The hubris of the money-making townees who cared nothing about public
education, or the cohesion of America, the pay packets of workers,
farmer's plight. Sneering and sniping and sipping Starbucks koffee and
eating sushi. Who just want to be fed and fed and fed -- salad and corn
and squash and beef -- well, we all know who will have the last laugh.
The Kristians. Fanciful?
Continue reading "Happy with Christ on Main Street" »
Hello Joe,
Until the 2000 elections, I didn't even vote, and certainly was not
"radicalized" yet. But, that election was stolen and the implications
of that fact are -- well, too massive to go into here. What I couldn't
understand is why nobody seemed that upset! The only riot I saw was a
manufactured riot from the RNC. Then there was a little event titled
9/11. I was in Washington, DC when that plane hit the Pentagon. I could hear and
smell it. These two events had a different effect on me than they did a
lot of my friends. I was disgusted, hurt and intellectually, spiritually
curious about what was unfolding. I wanted to get to the root causes
quickly. So I started reading. And I am still reading.
Continue reading "The tension between love and awareness" »
By Joe Bageant
As most of the world has noticed by now, very few Americans are
critical thinkers. Most suffer from a collective learning disability
based on the complete commodification of our consciousness by
consumerism and electronic media. In this case, learning disability is
a nice way of saying that we have become collectively stupid, muchless
capable of insight.
Insight is scary to Americans so conditioned to rote consumption and
substituting entertainment and illusion for actual involvement. When
they realize something, and I mean genuine higher understanding of what
the sum of the parts mean, not simply what they appear to be, their
consciousness is altered and they become different inside. Suddenly the
world is no longer the solid consumer state sonambulation they are
accustomed to. They have no tools to deal with it. Beyond that least
half of us are so conditioned we are incapable of human insight at all.
We have the past two elections as proof.
Continue reading "Neurological Biocaste Blues" »
Joe,
I often find myself wondering if there is some underlying purpose,
maybe unacknowledged, but it's there as a bonus nonetheless for people
who can see and use it. I keep hearing from business, school, and
others the rather testy mantra: "We are a competitive society." So, we
have "things" as trophies, counters in the game to show who's on top
and who's on the bottom. Are you the first to own the Super Duper
Fartbox Five model, or must you make do with last year's mere Super
model as you are lower on the social food chain? Is it the fact that
you actually need the item or is it a badge to show who and what you
are? Does this "competitiveness" actually increase quality or merely
keep the workers busy, ensure that they never link up for any common
cause? Keep them scratching gravel with all the yard birds and out of
the way?
Continue reading "Happy without money or social position" »
Dear Joe,
You really have become dear to me as I have visited your site and read
your essays and correspondence. To me, you are one of the best that we
call "human." I really hope that moving to Belize will be the
satisfying experience that you seek. I take it that you will not be
keeping up your website? I don't see how you could, although maybe I am
just not up to the wireless tech possibilities. I sure hope that there
is a way that you can keep us apprised of your thoughts.
Continue reading "JoeBageant.com will keep on humming " »