• commentary
  • TUESDAY FEBRUARY 1 2011 11:04 PM

Armchair Politics: WikiLeaks, Sarah Palin, and Super Bowl XLV

by Brett Warner

It’s not easy being the only smartass, largely uninformed Social Democrat in a family of complacent, church-going conservatives – but somebody’s got to do it. In the debut installment of my new SG column Armchair Politics, I’ll be taking a half-assed gander at the week’s political news with the un-researched perspective of an underpaid know-it-all college graduate with a twenty year-old car and $160 thousand dollars in student loan debt. Why does my opinion matter? Because it’s on the internet, duh.



Topic 1:

This weekend, my new favorite James Bond villain Julian Assange appeared on 60 Minutes, speaking with Steve Kroft about WikiLeaks, his arraignment, and the U.S. Justice Department’s throbbing boner for extraditing him on espionage charges.







Mr. Kroft equates the pro-whistle blowing activities of WikiLeaks and Mr. Assange with “screwing with the forces of nature,” while Assange rightfully asserts that the leaked cables, by and large, are more embarrassing to the U.S. State Department than anything. Over publicized folks like my gal pal Sarah Palin would love to see Assange prosecuted as a terrorist and an insurgent, but I think this lengthy 60 Minutes piece should demonstrate once and for all that Julian Assange is: a) Simply the bi-product of a growing resentment against the clear disconnect between the over-blown yet largely ineffective government and the underpaid/unemployed working poor majority in this country, and b.) the lead singer of Japan.

Hillary Clinton and the majority of the “oh shit, I never should have used my birthday as my government e-mail password” Republican Party are acting like the RIAA circa 2000, freaking the fuck out because technology has rendered their old business model obsolete. Napster didn’t kill music, and the United States is not going to crumble because our citizens are a little bit more informed, despite what the anti-elite, pro-misinformation GOP derelicts would have us believe.

Though he’s possibly a perverted, misogynist sex offender, Julian Assange is not a terrorist or a political criminal. We should be spending less time wasting tax dollars on inventing some new, back door way of throwing him into prison and start spending more time listening to David Sylvian records.

Topic 2:

Oh, Sarah Palin. Where can I even start? There’s not much you can say about everyone’s favorite ex-public servant that hasn’t already been firmly established. (Namely, she’s dumb and shoots her mouth more often than she shoots wild animals.) So I’ll say something about Wasilla’s favorite hockey mom that I feel needs to be properly addressed: she’s a bad role model.

The Huffington Post reported this week that during a speech to a bunch of hunters (a.k.a. the only people who take her seriously), Palin stated that a proposed “media boycott” of her would be “good, because there’s a lot of chaos in Cairo, and [she] can’t wait to not get blamed for it.” (I’ve got it from a good source that Palin knows Cairo is the capital of Egypt because her high school boyfriend took her to see Raiders of the Lost Ark at the drive-in.) Frankly, it boggles my mind that anyone would see a social revolution from such a delusional, self-centered perspective, but of course, this is the woman that quit her job in the midst of a recession so that she could go sell more copies of her book and star in her own reality show. Nice message to send to the financially suffering proletariat, Sarah.

I grew up playing hockey, so I’ve run into my share of hockey moms. From experience, I can tell you they’re good at two things: yelling vitriolic bullshit at the top of their lungs, and… well, no, I guess it’s just that one thing.

Topic 3:



[Fanny in Marie Antoinette]

I won’t be watching the Super Bowl this weekend. Why, you ask? Well, I have to work that night. But also I find it a bit offensive that many of our superb, admirable business corporations can come together once a year to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on commercials while our government is scrambling to figure out how to fish this country out of the quicksand pit of a deficit we’ve been writhing around in for the past decade. So Nike can spend half a million on a tennis shoe commercial, but won’t pay an American $8 an hour to glue the damn thing together?

Right now, the United States is in the second act of Marie Antoinette. That’s right, all the CEOs and Wall Street traders are gallivanting around, listening to Bow Wow Wow’s “I Want Candy” and chowing down on tiny pieces of cake. It’s disgusting that we can find millions and millions of dollars to dump into a fucking single game of football, but the unemployment rate in my state is still in the double digits. It won’t always be that way, though. If Tunisia and Egypt can find a way to organize themselves and demand social justice, then it’s only a matter of time before all the bankrupt, foreclosed, spat upon have-nots in this country stop yelling at their TV sets and start yelling at their elected officials.

There’s a solution to this country’s crippling debt and shattered economy: cut out all the garish, Roman Empire bullshit that we’ve convinced ourselves we need. No more pro-athlete salaries, $100 million dollar 3D movies, overflowing prisons, or out of control defense spending. Take all that money we’d save and give every American an apartment, a library card, and a newspaper subscription. Also, John Boehner has to work at Starbucks and buy his own damn health insurance. (It’s not a bad idea, except he’d probably start crying into my completely necessary Trenta Frappuccino.)

 
Comments
issue_

issue_

HOPEFUL

I'm lost

FEB 06, 2011 12:03 PM

"But also I find it a bit offensive that many of our superb, admirable business corporations can come together once a year to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on commercials while our government is scrambling to figure out how to fish this country out of the quicksand pit of a deficit we’ve been writhing around in for the past decade." - Unrelated Statements. Plus the more money exchanging hands is more the government can tax.

"It’s disgusting that we can find millions and millions of dollars to dump into a fucking single game of football, but the unemployment rate in my state is still in the double digits." - Unrelated statements.

"There’s a solution to this country’s crippling debt and shattered economy: cut out all the garish, Roman Empire bullshit that we’ve convinced ourselves we need." -So how do you propose we raise tax revenue and incentivize new technologies? Also your Roman Empire analogy seems incorrect. I believe you're thinking of the Spartans.

P.S. There's this thing called economics. You might want to try it sometime.

--HerrCaesar

hellboy7

hellboy7

Austin, TX
July 2004

FEB 06, 2011 04:07 PM

issue_ said:
"But also I find it a bit offensive that many of our superb, admirable business corporations can come together once a year to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on commercials while our government is scrambling to figure out how to fish this country out of the quicksand pit of a deficit we’ve been writhing around in for the past decade." - Unrelated Statements. Plus the more money exchanging hands is more the government can tax.

"It’s disgusting that we can find millions and millions of dollars to dump into a fucking single game of football, but the unemployment rate in my state is still in the double digits." - Unrelated statements.

"There’s a solution to this country’s crippling debt and shattered economy: cut out all the garish, Roman Empire bullshit that we’ve convinced ourselves we need." -So how do you propose we raise tax revenue and incentivize new technologies? Also your Roman Empire analogy seems incorrect. I believe you're thinking of the Spartans.

P.S. There's this thing called economics. You might want to try it sometime.

--HerrCaesar





I’ll be taking a half-assed gander at the week’s political news with the un-researched perspective of an underpaid know-it-all college graduate with a twenty year-old car and $160 thousand dollars in student loan debt.



A.K.A. Satire. While not great satire, it is satire none the less.

Cash

Cash

USA
OLD SKOOL

FEB 06, 2011 04:08 PM

SG_Blog said:
cut out all the garish, Roman Empire bullshit that we’ve convinced ourselves we need. No more pro-athlete salaries, $100 million dollar 3D movies, overflowing prisons, or out of control defense spending. Take all that money we’d save and give every American an apartment, a library card, and a newspaper subscription. Also, John Boehner has to work at Starbucks and buy his own damn health insurance. (It’s not a bad idea, except he’d probably start crying into my completely necessary Trenta Frappuccino.)





motorfirebox

motorfirebox

Pittsburgh, PA
March 2004

FEB 06, 2011 04:43 PM

There’s a solution to this country’s crippling debt and shattered economy: cut out all the garish, Roman Empire bullshit that we’ve convinced ourselves we need. No more pro-athlete salaries, $100 million dollar 3D movies, overflowing prisons, or out of control defense spending. Take all that money we’d save and give every American an apartment, a library card, and a newspaper subscription. Also, John Boehner has to work at Starbucks and buy his own damn health insurance. (It’s not a bad idea, except he’d probably start crying into my completely necessary Trenta Frappuccino.)


That's... that's not how it works.

ReAct

ReAct

Boston, MA
October 2009

FEB 06, 2011 05:06 PM

SG_Blog said:
by Brett Warner...It’s disgusting that we can find millions and millions of dollars to dump into a fucking single game of football, but the unemployment rate in my state is still in the double digits. It won’t always be that way, though. If Tunisia and Egypt can find a way to organize themselves and demand social justice, then it’s only a matter of time before all the bankrupt, foreclosed, spat upon have-nots in this country stop yelling at their TV sets and start yelling at their elected officials...

While I absolutely agree that our priorities seem to be a long way out of whack, there's no validity to any comparison to the Middle East.

When most people in this country start frothing at the mouth and yelling about "revolution" it's because by and large, they've suffered some pretty minor troubles. As a whole, this country is still pretty damn comfortable, and it's citizens are pretty well sated. An uprising isn't going to occur because gas went up a buck. Or some guy in another state had his civil liberties infringed upon. Or because of stories of folks way down in Florida suffering foreclosure.

Egypt was suffering under oppressive rule. All we've suffered thus far is that many of us can't be just quite as spoiled as we'd prefer. It'd be nice if we were more motivated to take action, but I'm sorta afraid of the catalyst that would be necessary for that.

-ReAct
"Revolution is the festival of the oppressed ...not the inconvenienced."

xmarkax

xmarkax

I'm lost
July 2007

FEB 07, 2011 09:43 PM

issue_ said:
"It’s disgusting that we can find millions and millions of dollars to dump into a fucking single game of football, but the unemployment rate in my state is still in the double digits." - Unrelated statements.

- Not unrelated I think the author goes on to make the point that if they can afford all this advertising why can't they afford to pay people to make their products in the USA.


"There’s a solution to this country’s crippling debt and shattered economy: cut out all the garish, Roman Empire bullshit that we’ve convinced ourselves we need." -So how do you propose we raise tax revenue and incentivize new technologies? Also your Roman Empire analogy seems incorrect. I believe you're thinking of the Spartans.

Life is not the movie 300. What I think the author is referring to is the concept of Bread and Circuses popularized by the Roman Empire, except in the modern USA they have done away with the bread.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bread_and_circuses
The Spartans in fact lived a very, well for a lack of a better term, spartan existence.

P.S. There's this thing called economics. You might want to try it sometime.

--HerrCaesar

You may also want to try economics to, I would recommend starting with the works of John Maynard Keynes.

bender47

bender47

Huntsville, AL
April 2005

FEB 08, 2011 03:34 PM

This perceived comfort or state of being 'sated' is the problem. That is the bread and circus the author is talking about. Did the Reagan years not teach us anything? Fake affluence is a mind numbing paralysis. As long as I have 99 cent cheeseburgers and cable, then there really is no problem? The GINI index (measure of the disparity in a sample set) shows that the US at 46.6 is worse than Egypt. Can you say 3rd world?