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Michael Brenner Neocons And Their Lunatic World View

(2023-08-12 17:43:08) 下一個

The Origins Of The Neocons And Their Lunatic World View | A History With Professor Michael Brenner

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPecqAHgRqU&ab_channel=NeutralityStudies

2023年8月12日

Prof. Michael Brenner

https://peacefromharmony.org/?cat=en_c&key=1046

mbren@pitt.edu,

Neocons are about the most dangerous species in international relations today. They are the kind of people who would rather see a million dead than chose a cooperative framework to resolve a (perceived) problem. Let's remember the memorable words of Ultra-Neocon Madeleine Albright: When asked in 1992 at an interview if half a million dead Iraqi Children which the US sanctions on the country had caused was worth it, Albright replied: “I think that is a very hard choice, but the price, we think, the price is worth it.” (https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/20.... If Hitler came back, he'd be a neocon. In this talk, professor emeritus Michael Brenner gives a comprehensive overview of the genesis and development of US neocons and the damage they are causing in international relations.

Michael Brenner: American Dissent on Ukraine Is Dying in Darkness

https://scheerpost.com/2022/04/15/michael-brenner-american-dissent-on-ukraine-is-dying-in-darkness/

by  

When it came to the Ukraine conflict, Professor Michael J. Brenner did what he’s done his whole life: question American foreign policy. This time the backlash was vitriolic.
Professor Michael J. Brenner. [Photo courtesy of guest]

As the death toll in Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine continues to rise, there have only been a handful of Westerners publicly questioning NATO and the West’s role in the conflict. These voices are becoming fewer and further between as a wave of feverish backlash engulfs any dissent on the subject. One of these voices belongs to Professor Michael J. Brenner, a lifelong academic, Professor Emeritus of International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh and a Fellow of the Center for Transatlantic Relations at SAIS/Johns Hopkins, as well as former Director of the International Relations & Global Studies Program at the University of Texas. Brenner’s credentials also include having worked at the Foreign Service Institute, the U.S. Department of Defense and Westinghouse, and written several books on American foreign policy. From the vantage point of decades of experience and studies, the intellectual regularly shared his thoughts on topics of interest through a mailing list sent to thousands of readers—that is until the response to his Ukraine analysis made him question why he bothered in the first place. 

In an email with the subject line “Quittin’ Time,” Brenner recently declared that, aside from having already said his piece on Ukraine, one of the main reasons he sees for giving up on expressing his opinions on the subject is that “it is manifestly obvious that our society is not capable of conducting an honest, logical, reasonably informed discourse on matters of consequence. Instead, we experience fantasy, fabrication, fatuousness and fulmination.” He goes on to decry President Joe Biden’s alarming comments in Poland when he all but revealed that the U.S. is—and perhaps has always been—interested in a Russian regime change. 

On this week’s “Scheer Intelligence,” Brenner tells host Robert Scheer how the recent attacks he received—many of a personal, ad hominem nature—were some of the most vitriolic he’s ever experienced. The two discuss how many media narratives completely leave out that the eastward expansion of NATO, among other Western aggressions against Russia, played an important part in fueling the current humanitarian crisis. Corporate media’s “cartoonish” depiction of Russian president Vladimir Putin, adds Brenner, is not only misleading, but dangerous given the nuclear brinkmanship that has ensued. Listen to the full discussion between Brenner and Scheer as they continue to dissent despite living in an America that is seemingly increasingly hostile to any opinion that strays from the official line. 

Credits

Host: Robert Scheer

Producer: Joshua Scheer

Transcription: Lucy Berbeo

FULL TRANSCRIPT

RS: Hello, this is Robert Scheer with another edition of Scheer Intelligence, where the intelligence comes from my guests. In this case it’s Michael Brenner, who is a professor of international affairs emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh, a fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations at SAIS Johns Hopkins; he’s written a number of important studies, books, academic articles; he’s taught at every place from Stanford to Harvard to MIT and what have you.

But the reason I wanted to talk to Professor Brenner is that he’s been caught in the crosshairs of trying to have a debate about what’s going on in the Ukraine, and the NATO response, the Russian invasion and what have you. And to my mind, I read, I was reading his blog; I found it very interesting. And then he suddenly said, I’m giving up; you cannot have an intelligent discussion. And his description of what’s going on reminded me of the famous Lillian Hellman description of the McCarthy period as “scoundrel times,” which was the title of her book.

So, Professor Brenner, tell us what buzzsaw you ran into when you dared question, as far as I can see, you dared do what you’ve done all your academic life: you raised some serious questions about a foreign policy matter. And then, I don’t know what, you got hit on the head a whole bunch of times. So could you describe it?

MB: Yes, it came only partially as a surprise. I’ve been writing these commentaries and distributing them to a personal list of roughly 5,000 for more than a decade. Some of those persons are abroad, most are in the U.S.; they’re all educated people who’ve been involved one way or another with international affairs, including quite a number who have had experience in and around government or journalism or the world of punditry.

What happened on this occasion was that I had expressed highly skeptical views about what I believe is the fictional storyline and account of what has been happening in Ukraine, back over the past year and most pointedly in regard to the acute crisis that has arisen with the Russian invasion and attack on Ukraine. I received not only an unusually large number of critical replies, but it was the nature of them that was deeply dismaying.

One, many—most of them came from people whom I did know, whom I knew as level-headed, sober minds, engaged and well informed on foreign policy issues and international matters generally. Second, they were highly personalized, and I had rarely been the object of that sort of criticism or attack—sort of ad hominem remarks questioning my patriotism; had I been paid by, you know, by Putin; my motivations, my sanity, et cetera, et cetera.

Third was the extremity of the content of these hostile messages. And the last characteristic, which really stunned me, was that these people bought into—hook, line and sinker—every aspect of the sort of fictional story that has been propagated by the administration, accepted and swallowed whole by the media and our political-intellectual class, which includes many academics and the entire galaxy of Washington think tanks.

And that’s a reinforced impression that had been growing for some time, that this was not just—that to be a critic and a skeptic was not just to engage in a dialogue [unclear], but to place one’s views and one’s thoughts and send them into a void, in effect. A void, because the discourse as it has crystalized is not only uniform in a way, but it is in so many respects senseless, lacking any kind of inner logic, whether you agree with the premises and the formally stated objectives or not.

In effect, this was an intellectual and political nihilism. And one cannot make any contribution to endeavor to correct that simply by conventional means. So I felt for the first time that I was no part of this world, and of course this is also a reflection of trends and attitudes that have become rather pervasive in the country at large, sort of over time. And so beyond simply sort of disagreeing with what the consensus is, I had become totally alienated [unclear] and decided there was no point to it, to going on distributing these things, even though I continue to follow events, think about them, and send some shorter commentaries to close friends. That’s essentially it, Robert.

RS: OK, but let me just say, first of all, I want to thank you for what you did. Because it turned me on to a whole different way of looking at what happened to Ukraine—the history, reminding us of what had happened for the previous decade, not just the expansion of NATO but the whole question of the change in government that the U.S. was involved with previously. And the whole, you know, the relation of the two powers.

And the irony here is that actually we’re back in the worst moments of the Cold War, but at least in the Cold War we were willing to negotiate with people who were very serious, ideological at least, or enemies, and had some coherence in that respect. And you know, Nixon did have his kitchen debate with Khrushchev, and we did have arms control with the old Soviet Union; Nixon himself went to China and negotiated with Mao Zedong; there was no illusion that these were wonderful people, but they were people you had to do business with. Suddenly Putin is now put in a Hitler category even worse than Stalin or Mao, and you can’t talk.

And I do want to disagree with one thing you’ve done: your retirement from this. You’re only about, what, a mere 80 years old; you’re a kid compared to me. But I remember when Bertrand Russell, one of the great intellectuals that we’ve had in our history, or Western history, dared to criticize the U.S. on Vietnam. He and Jean Paul Sartre, and actually raised the prospect that we had committed war crimes in Vietnam.

And the New York Times denounced Bertrand Russell, and they actually said he’d become senile. I went all the way to Wales when I was editing Ramparts magazine to interview Bertrand Russell—which I did, and I spent some lovely time with him. He certainly was frail at the age of 94, but he was incredibly coherent in defense of his position; he had been a very strong anti-communist all of his life, and now he was saying, wait a minute, we’re getting this war wrong.

So I’m not going to accept that you have the right to retire; I’m going to push you now. So please tell listeners what it is that you object to in the current narrative, and on what basis?

MB: Well, I mean, it’s the fundamentals. One, it has to do with the nature of the Russian regime, the character of Putin; what Soviet objectives, foreign policy and national security concerns are. I mean, what we’re getting is not only a cartoon caricature, but a portrait of the country and its leadership—and by the way, Putin is not a dictator. He is not all-powerful. The Soviet government is far more complex in its processes of decision-making.

RS: Well, you just said the Soviet government. You mean the Russian government.

MB: Russian government. [overlapping voices] You see, I’ve picked up by osmosis this conflating of Russian and Soviet. I mean, it’s far more complex [unclear]. And he is, Putin himself, an extraordinarily sophisticated thinker. But people don’t bother to read what he writes, or to listen to what he says.

I know, in fact, of no national leader that has laid out in the detail and the precision and the sophistication his view of the world, Russia’s place in it, the character of interstate relations, with the candor and acuity that he has. It’s not a question of whether you believe that that depiction he offers is entirely correct, or the conclusion that he draws from it, with regard to policy. But you are dealing with a person and a regime which in vital respects is the antithesis of the one that is caricatured and almost universally accepted, not only in the Biden administration but in the foreign policy community and the political class, and in general.

And that raises some really basic questions about us, rather than about Russia or about Putin. As you mentioned, the question was: what is it that we’re afraid of? Why do Americans feel so threatened, so anxious? I mean, by contrast in the Cold War—I mean, there was a powerful enemy, ideological, military in some sense, with all the qualifications and nuances [unclear]. But that was the reality then; that was a reality which was, one, the focal point for national leaders who were serious people, and responsible people. Second, that could be used to justify actions highly dubious, but at least could be used to justify, such as our interventions all around the so-called Third World, and even the great, tragic folly of Vietnam.

What is there today that really threatens us? At the horizon, of course, there is China, not Russia; although they now, thanks to our unwitting encouragement, have formed together a formidable bloc. But I mean, even the Chinese challenge is to our supremacy and our hegemony, not to the country directly [unclear]. So the second question is, what is so compelling about the maintenance and the defense of a conception of the United States of America’s providential birth admission in the world that compels us to view people like Putin as being diabolical, and as constituting as grave a threat to America as Stalin and Hitler, whose names constantly crop up, as well as ridiculous phrases like genocide and so on.

So I mean, once again, I think we have to look in the mirror and say, well, we’ve seen—[unclear] the source of our disquiet, and it’s within us; it’s not out there, and it is leading to gross distortions of the way in which we see, we depict and we interpret the world, all across the board. By which I mean geographically and in terms of sort of different arenas and dimensions of international relations. And of course, continuing along this course can only have one endpoint, and that’s disaster of some form or other.

RS: Well, you know, there’s two points that have to be addressed. One is, this is not comparable to going into Afghanistan or Vietnam or Iraq or anywhere else. You are taking on the other huge nuclear-armed power. And we have forgotten in this debate the risk of nuclear war, accidental nuclear war, automatic pilot nuclear war, let alone intentional use of nuclear weapons. There’s a giddiness about that which I think adds a—you know, this is not just a surrogate thing.

The other is that, you know, to try to understand and to see if there’s room for negotiation—yes, OK, you call your opponent Hitler, you say he has to be removed. But the fact is, we negotiated with Mao. Nixon did. And the world has been a lot safer and more prosperous place because Nixon went and saw Mao Zedong, who was described as the bloodiest dictator of his time. The same thing happened with the arms control with Russia, and by the way, Ronald Reagan’s ability to talk to Mikhail Gorbachev, and actually even consider getting rid of nuclear weapons.

Now we have forgotten—you know, talk about global warming, we have forgotten what nuclear weapons would do. I happen to be one—you know, I went into Chernobyl a year after the disaster; that was a peaceful plant, and my god, the fear that was prevalent in the Ukraine, and I couldn’t tell who were the Russians and who were the Ukrainians, they were still part of the same country.

But nonetheless, there’s a giddiness now. And what surprised me about your farewell address, you were talking about intelligent people that you and I have rubbed shoulders with at arms control conferences; we’ve taken seriously their arguments. This is not just a fringe of neoconservatives who seem to have encamped now in the Democratic Party, whereas they before were in the Republican Party, the same kind of extreme Cold War hawks. We’re talking about people, you know, that denounced their former colleagues even in the peace movement for daring to question this narrative. What is going on?

MB: Well, Robert, you’re absolutely right. And that question is the one that should preoccupy us. Because it really cuts deepest into, you know, contemporary America. It’s what contemporary America is. And I think the intellectual tools to be used in trying to interpret it must come from anthropology and psychology at least as much, if not more, than political science or sociology or economics. I truly believe that we are talking about collective psychopathology. And of course, collective psychopathology is what you get in a nihilistic society in which all sort of standard, conventional sort of reference points cease to serve as markers and guideposts on how individuals behave.

And one expression of that is in the erasure of history. We live in the existential—I think in this case the word can be properly used—moment, or week, or month, or year or whatever. So we totally, almost totally forget about the reality of nuclear weapons. I mean, as you said, and you’re absolutely right, in the past, every national leader and every national government that had custody of nuclear weapons came to the conclusion and absorbed the fundamental truth that they served no utilitarian function. And that the overriding, the imperative was to avoid situations not only in which they were used as part of some calculated military strategy, but to avoid situations in which circumstances might develop where, as you said, they would use them because of accident, misjudgment, or something of the sort.

Now, we can no longer assume that. I believe, oddly, in some sense oddly enough, that the people in official positions who must remain most acutely aware of this are the Pentagon. Because they’re the ones who have direct custody of it, and because they study and read about it in the service academy as a whole Cold War sort of history, and the history of weaponry, et cetera.

I’m not suggesting that Joe Biden has sort of sublimated all of this. But he seems to be in a state, hard to describe, in which certainly [unclear] could permit the kind of encounter with the Russians that all his predecessors avoided. Which, in turn, is the kind of encounter where it is conceivable, and certainly not entirely inconceivable, in which nuclear weapons might be somehow resorted to in some uncalculating, you know, way.

And you see that, by the way, in articles published in places like Foreign Affairs and other respectable journals, by defense intellectuals, if you’ll excuse the expression. Whenever I hear the word “defense intellectual,” of course my reaction is to run and hide, but there are people of some note who are writing and talking along these lines, and some of them are neocons of note, like Robert Kagan, Victoria Nuland, sort of husband and partner in crime, and others of that ilk. And so, yes, this is pathological, and therefore really leads us into territory I don’t think we’ve ever been in or experienced before.

RS: So let’s get to the basic, what you feel is the distortion of this situation. I mean, you know, clearly Russia’s action in invading Ukraine should be condemned, at least in my point of view; that’s why I consider myself an advocate for peace. And clearly, this is one that empowered the hawks to then, you know, push for more extreme measures, and we’re in this frightening situation.

But take us through this history, and what have we missed? Because, you know, if you read it now, the New York Times, the Washington Post, everywhere, it’s all about rushing even more military stuff to the Ukraine. There seems to be almost a delight in getting this war expanded, forget about negotiations; there’s no real caution here. How did we get to this place? We’re going to run out of time, but can you give me the narrative, as you see it, that’s missed in the media?

MB: Robert, I’ll try to do it in a staccato fashion. One, this crisis, in leading to the Russian invasion, has little to do with Ukraine per se. Certainly not for Washington; for Moscow it’s otherwise. It’s had to do with Russia from the beginning. It’s been the objective of American foreign policy for at least a decade to render Russia weak and unable to assert itself in any manner of speaking in European affairs. We want it marginalized, we want to neuter it, as a power in Europe. And the ability of Putin to reconstitute a Russia that was stable, that also had its own sense of national interest, and a vision of the world different from ours, has been deeply frustrating to the political elites and the foreign policy elites of Washington.

Two, Putin and Russia are not interested in conquest or expansion. Three, Ukraine is prominent to them, not only for historical and cultural reasons, et cetera, but because it is linked to the expansion of NATO and an obvious attempt, as became tangible at the time of the Maidan coup [unclear], that they wished to turn Ukraine into a forward base for NATO. And against the background of Russian history, that is simply intolerable.

I think a point to keep in mind is that—and this relates to what I said a moment ago about policy-making in Moscow—that if one were to place the attitudes and the opinions of Russian leaders on a continuum from hawk to dove, Putin has always been well towards the dovish end of the continuum. In other words, the majority of the most powerful forces in Moscow—and it’s not just the military, it’s not just the oligarchs, it’s all types—the locust of the sentiment has been that Russia is being exploited, taken advantage of; that cooperation will become a part of a European system in which Russia is accepted as a legitimate player is illusory.

So we have to understand that, and I—OK, specifically we’ve gone to the current crisis. The Donbass, and that is not just Russian-speaking but a highly concentrated Russian region of Eastern Ukraine, which tried to separate itself after the Maidan coup—and by the way, Russian speakers in the country as a whole represent 40% of the population. You know, Russians, quite apart from intermarriage and cultural fusion—you know, Russians are not some small, marginal minority in the Ukraine.

OK, quickly down now to the present. I believe there is growing and now totally persuasive evidence that when the Biden people came to office, they made a decision to create a crisis over Donbass to provoke a Russian military reaction, and to use that as the basis for consolidating the West, unifying the West, in a program whose centerpiece was massive economic sanctions, with the aim of tanking the Russian economy and possibly and hopefully leading to a rebellion by the oligarchs that would topple Putin.

Now, no person who really knows Russia believes that it was ever at all plausible. But this was an idea which was very prominent in foreign policy circles in Washington, and certainly the Biden administration, and people like Blinken and Sullivan and Nuland believe in it. And so they set about strengthening even further the Ukrainian army, something we’ve been doing for eight years—Ukrainian army, thanks to our efforts, armaments, training advisors.

And by the way, it is now becoming evident that we might well—probable that we have physically, in the Ukraine now, American special forces, including British special forces and some French special forces. Not only people who have engaged in training missions, but are actually providing some direction, intelligence, et cetera. We’ll see if this ever comes out. And that’s why [unclear] Macron, et cetera, are so desperate about getting the brigades and other special elements trapped in Mariupol out of the city, which they’re not ceding it.

So the idea was you created—and it is now growing evident that in effect, an assault on the Donbass was planned. And that it was in November that the final decision was taken to go ahead with it, and the time set for February. And that is why Joe Biden and other members of the administration could begin to say, with complete confidence, in January that the Russians would be invading Ukraine. Because they knew and committed themselves to a major, a major military attack on the Donbass, and they knew that the Russians would respond. They didn’t know how large a response, how aggressive a response it would be, but they knew there would be a response.

You and listeners might recall Biden saying in February, second week of February that when the Russian invasion comes, if it is small, we’re still going to go ahead with sanctions, but we might have a fight within NATO as to whether to go whole hog. If it is large, there’ll be no problem, everybody will agree on killing Nord Stream II, and taking these unprecedented steps against the Russian Central Bank, et cetera. And he said that because he knew what was planned. And the Russians reached the conclusion about the same time. Well, they certainly understood what the broad game plan was.

And then they crystalized that this was going to happen soon, and the final blow came when the Ukrainians began massive artillery barrages on cities in the Donbass. Now, there had always been exchanges over the past eight years. On February 18, there was a 30-fold increase in the number of artillery shells, five from the Ukrainians into the Donbass, to which the Donbass militias did not retaliate in kind. It peaked on the 21st and continued to the 24th. And this apparently was the last confirmation that the assault would be coming soon, and forced Putin’s hand to preempt by activating plans which no doubt they’d had for some time to invade. I think that has become clear.

Now, this is of course the diametrical opposite of the fictional story that pervades all public discourse. And you can say “all” and only count on the fingers of your hands and toes the number of dissenters, right, that prevails. Now, let’s leave open the question of do you defend Putin’s actions. I, like you, find it very hard to defend, justify, any major military action that has the consequences that this does. Except in absolute, you know, self-defense.

But you know, that’s where we are. And if there had been the Ukrainian assault that was planned on the Donbass, Putin and Russia would have been in real, real trouble, if they limited themselves to resupplying the Donbass militias. Because given the way we had armed and trained the Ukrainians, they really couldn’t withstand them. So that would have been the end of [unclear] subordination of the Russian population and the suppression of Russia’s language, all of which are steps that the Ukrainian government has moved on and has in the work.

RS: You know, what’s at the heart of this really is the denial of anyone else’s nationalism. It’s kind of been the theme of the post-World War II U.S. posture. We are identified with universal values of freedom, justice, liberty—and whatever we do, sometimes it’s admitted to have been a mistake; I watched the movie last night Fog of War—with Robert McNamara, who was unknown to all my students. Nonetheless, this wonderful film that won the Academy Award, where he admits to the war crimes and says three and a half million people died in a war that you cannot defend. Actually, the number is much closer to six million or five million, somewhere up there maybe, but higher.

But that we denied the nationalism of the Vietnamese, and when McNamara went to Hanoi, the Vietnamese said to him, did you not know we are nationalist? That we had a thousand years of fighting with the Chinese and everyone else? Why did you put us into that? You denied our national feelings and what Ho Chi Minh represented.

And you know, I remember being in Moscow covering, really, Gorbachev for the L.A. Times; I was one of the people that was over there. I also gave some papers there. And at the time, Gorbachev, it seemed to many people I talked to, was being naïve about the willingness of the United States to accept any independent Russia. And Gorbachev actually became—now, Reagan for a moment looked Gorbachev in the eye and said we can do business, the same way, I guess, George W. Bush looked Putin in the eye. But these hawks outside the meeting room and everything descended on him. And Gorbachev became very unpopular, very unpopular.

And so there’s a sort of assumption, not—you know, I personally don’t like nationalism and think it’s a sort of great mischief and evil in the world. But nonetheless, you cannot cope with the world if you don’t understand nationalism. When Nixon went to China, he actually conceded that Mao was a representative of Chinese nationalism and had to be listened to. The same thing was true in the arms control with Russia. That is lost now, and the idea that there might be Russian aspirations, concerns—that’s pushed to the side.

The irony is that the United States is now—I don’t know if you agree with this, but it would be a good thing to consider in concluding this. The United States has accomplished something that communist ideology was not able to accomplish. Because the Chinese communists and the Russian communists were at war even before the Chinese communist revolution succeeded. They called themselves followers of Marxist Leninism, but they actually, the Sino-Soviet dispute could be traced back even to the 1920s, and certainly recognize when Mao went to Moscow, and is reflected in Khrushchev’s memoirs.

And so the Sino-Soviet dispute became this major force, this opposition, despite Marxist Leninism. Now, you have still communist China uniting with anti-communist Putin Russia—why? Because of a common fear of a U.S. hegemony. Isn’t that really the big story here that’s being ignored?

MB: Yeah, Robert, you’re absolutely right in everything that you say. Of course the world system is being transformed by the formation of this Sino-Russian bloc, which is increasingly incorporating other countries. You know, Iran is already part of it. And you know, we will note that there are only two countries outside the Western world—about which I’m speaking politically and socially, not geographically—who have supported the sanctions: South Korea and Japan. All of Asia, Southwest Asia, Africa and Latin America is not observing them, has not signed on to them. Some are exercising self-restraint and slowing down deliveries of certain things, out of sheer prudence and fear of American retaliation. But we’ve gotten no support from them. So, yeah, the gross underestimation of this, Bob.

Now, in what passes for grand strategy among the American foreign policy community, not just the Biden people, they still—they’ve had a dual hope: one, that they could drive a wedge between Russia and China, an idea they entertain only because they know nothing or have forgotten anything they might have known about each of those countries. Or, second, to in effect neutralize Russia by what we talked about: breaking the Russian economy, maybe getting some regime change, so that they would be a negligible contributor, if at all, to ally with the Chinese. And of course we have failed utterly, because all of those mistaken premises were mistaken.

And this utterly unprecedented hubris, of course, is peculiarly American. I mean, from day one, we’ve always had the faith that we were born in a condition of original virtue, and we were born with some kind of providential mission to lead the world to a better, more enlightened condition. That we were therefore the singular exceptional nation, and that gave us the freedom and the liberty to judge all others. Now, that’s—and we’ve done a lot of good things in part because of that [unclear] dubious things.

But now that’s become so perverted. And as you said, it encourages or justifies the United States setting it up as the judge of what’s legitimate and what isn’t, what government’s legitimate and what isn’t, what policies are legitimate and which aren’t. Which self-defined national interests by other governments we can accept, and which we won’t accept. Of course, this is absurd in its hubris; at the same time it also defies [unclear] logic—Nixon and Kissinger really operated and were able to set aside or sort of, you know, surmount this ideological, philosophical, self-congratulatory faith in American unique prowess and legitimacy, based on strictly practical grounds.

And currently, though, we don’t exercise restraint based either upon a certain political-ideological humility, nor on realism grounds. And that’s why I say we’re living in a world of fantasy—a fantasy which clearly serves some vital psychological needs of the country of America, and especially of its political elites. Because they are the people who are supposed to have taken on the custodial responsibility for the welfare of the country and its people, and that requires maintaining a certain perspective and distance on who we are, on what we can and cannot do, of reality testing even the most basic and fundamental of American premises. And now we don’t do any of that.

And in that sense, I do believe it’s fair to say that we have been betrayed by our political elites, and I use that term, you know, fairly broadly. The susceptibility to propaganda, the susceptibility to allowing the popular mindset to be set the way it’s going on now, in giving in to hysterical impulse, means that yeah, there’s something wrong with society and culture as a whole. But even saying that is up to your political leaders and elites to protect you from that, to protect the populace from that, and to protect themselves from falling prey to similar fantasies and irrationalities, and instead we see just the opposite.

RS: You know, one final point, and you’ve been very generous with your time. What is really being challenged here is a notion of globalization. Of one world based on economic productivity, trade, advantage of one region or another to provide different things. And we’re back to, I don’t know what, pre-World War I nationalism and borders and so forth.

And what is truly frightening about it is the point you made about China. After all, ironically, China was held up as this great revolutionary military threat; they were going to be, communist was inherently expansionist, the Soviet model had somehow trimmed its sails or been intimidated, but the Chinese were really radical. Then, somehow, peace was made with China; they turned out to be better capitalists, they carried us through this whole pandemic; and then because they’re an economic threat, and they can produce things and so forth, they are now the real target, I think, of the people we used to call neoconservatives. Because they talked about it when they were Republicans, before they became the Democratic establishment again. China was really the enemy.

And the irony here is that China, Chinese expansion, is not needed anymore if they have in fact an alliance and are forced into trade patterns with this huge real estate called Russia that remains, with all of its underpopulation, incredible resources, not just petroleum, which China is obviously missing. You have to really wonder whether we’re not talking about an America as a Rome in decay, of an idea that somehow you can control everything to your advantage and make it palatable to the world, and it’s going to stand.

Because that’s really what we’re talking about here, is a notion of equating U.S. hegemony with enlightenment, civilization, democracy, freedom, and anyone else who challenges it—which clearly China is doing, and Russia, certainly—that becomes the enemy of civilization. That is the frightening message here. It’s kind of the Roman empire gone nuts.

MB: You’re absolutely right, Robert. And it is China which we look at over our shoulder. And I mean, you could argue in a number of respects—if you look at Chinese history, they have never been terribly interested in conquering other societies, nor in governing alien peoples. Their expansion, such that it was, was to the west and to the north, and was an extension of their millennia-long wars with the marauding tribes of central Asia, and dealing with that constant threat. And you know, those Central Asian barbarians succeeded four times in breaking through and in bringing them central authority in Asia.

So they’ve never been in the conquering business. Two, yes—so it’s easy enough and convenient enough to conflate China’s growing military capabilities with its economic prowess, and the fact that its whole system, in every respect, whatever you want to call it—state capitalism, ideological overlay, whatever—and whatever it turns out to be, to crystalize, it is going to be different from what we’ve seen before. And that is very threatening. Because it calls into question our self-definition as being in effect the natural culmination point of human progress and development. And suddenly we’re not; and second, the guy who’s taken another path might very well—is certainly going to be in a position to challenge our dominance politically, in terms of social philosophy, economically, and secondarily, militarily.

And there is simply—you know, we won’t censor—there is simply no place in the American conception of what’s real and natural for a United States that is not number one. And I think that’s ultimately what drives this anxiety and paranoia about China, and that is why we have not seriously entertained the alternative. Which is, you develop a dialogue with the Chinese that’s going to take years, that will be continual, in which you try to work out the terms of a relationship, about a world which will be different from the one we’re in now, but will certainly satisfy our basic interests and concerns as well as China’s. To agree on rules of the road, to carve out areas of convergence as well. You know, a dialogue of civilizations.

That’s the kind of thing which Chas Freeman, one of the most distinguished diplomats, and who was the interpreter as a young man for Nixon when he went to Beijing. And he’s been writing and saying this since his retirement 10, 12 years ago, and the man is ostracized, he is shunned, he is invited almost nowhere to speak, nobody asks him to write an op-ed piece. As far as the New York Times and the Washington Post and the mainstream media, he doesn’t exist.

RS: Who is that you’re referring to?

MB: Charles Freeman. And he still writes, and incredibly intelligent, acute, sophisticated, I mean, by orders of magnitude superior to the kinds of clowns who are making our China policy today. And recently published a breathtaking long essay on the nature and character of diplomacy. So he’s the kind of person who could, you know, be involved in and help to shape the kind of dialogue I’m talking about. But these people don’t seem to exist. Those that have any potential like that are marginalized, right.

And instead we’ve taken this sort of simplistic path of saying the other guy is the enemy, he’s the bad guy, and we’re going to confront him across the board. And I think this is going to lead to, sooner or later, to confrontation and crisis, probably over Taiwan, which will be the equivalent of the Cuban missile crisis, and hope that we survive it, because we’re going to lose a conventional war if we choose to defend Taiwan. And everybody who knows China says the Chinese leadership is watching the Ukraine affair very closely, and thinking to themselves, ah, maybe Russia has given us a glimpse of what the dynamic might be if we go ahead and invade Taiwan.

RS: Yeah. Well, that’s of course the position of the hawks also: let’s show them that they can’t, and let’s get embroiled in that. But leaving that aside, we’re going to wrap this up. I want to say it’s your voice, clearly anyone listening to this, I hope you keep blogging and return to the fray, because your voice is needed. I want to thank Professor Michael Brenner for doing this. I want to thank Christopher Ho at KCRW and the rest of the staff for posting these podcasts. Joshua Scheer, our executive producer. Natasha Hakimi Zapata, who does the introductions and overview. Lucy Berbeo, who does the transcription. And I want to thank the JKW Foundation and T.M. Scruggs, separately, for giving us some financial support to be able to keep up this work. See you next week with another edition of Scheer Intelligence.

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51 COMMENTS
 
 
 
Most Voted 
JustAMaverick
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Welcome to Dystopialand where the truth is treason in the Empire of Lies.

 
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bluewombat
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  JustAMaverick

In the last sentence of the second paragraph, you say of Brenner, “He goes on to decree President Joe Biden’s alarming comments in Poland.”

You don’t mean “decree.” You mean “decry.”

 
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Admin
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  bluewombat

Fixed it, thanks!

 
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Archie1954
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  JustAMaverick

I put such vitriolic response to the truth down to gross ignorance for which Americans are well known.

 
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Sir Keef
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Archie1954

I think it may be a little more nuanced than that. Brenner himself more or less states that the detractors were people that were known to him and that their intellectual capacity was not in doubt – their ad hom attacks were clearly more of an emotional reaction than a logical rebuttal of Brenner’s arguments.

So what has this happened? What has caused these intelligent and knowledgeable people to proffer such an emotional and, we may say, irrational response?

In my view, the answer is that the same subliminal techniques have been employed in the PR onslaught that ensued after Russia went in to Ukraine, as the ones that were used to terrify an entire population into believing the Covid narrative, and accepting the dangerous and untested gene therapy treatments that we are now discovering (via Pfizer data drops) are not as ‘safe and effective’ as we were all led to believe.

The campaign was virtually hijacked. Has anyone noticed the colour scheme of blue and yellow that was also employed extensively throughout the Covid PR campaign is (somewhat conveniently) identical to the colours of the Ukrainian flag. The use of specific colours to trigger emotional responses is widely used in Neuro-Linguistic Programming, and these NLP techniques have been massively deployed in recent mass media campaigns, both to promote the Covid, and more recently, the anti-Putin/Russia narratives.

Trained NLP practitioners have come out to say that these techniques can be clearly seen by their trained eyes.

It is indeed sinister and cynical to elicit an emotional, fear based response in an unwitting populace to support what may have otherwise been a controversial policy objective, but if Brenner is correct when he says that the military intervention by Russia as provoked and therefore planned well in advance, it is not a huge stretch to consider that this tried and trusted PR technique had already been baked into the cake.

 
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Axel Rodd
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Archie1954

Americans are ignorant?! In the recent past there are four propaganda themes imposed on Americans in a coordinated manner by the corporate media, books, films, news:
Global climate change: consistently overstated in its effects (including falsifying climate data) and attributed exclusively to human activity;
White racism as the cause of all bad things in the world and this for two millenia;
Covid19: overhyping the lethalness and suggesting that all ages are equally affected (resulting in the forced imposition of dubious vaccines and the suspension of constitutionally protected civil rights);
The Ukraine War: a nationally imposed single narrative of its cause and its significance.
In each case the media and the US government has acted only to create fear and hysteria and to prevent any free inquiry based on evidence. The government has destroyed the economy and so people’s livelihoods, caused Americans to distrust, even hate each other, all the while forcing the citizen to look more and more to the government for salvation, protection. WashDC wants Americans scared and helpless.
Now take the above and see how well it applies to all the European nations as well as the other English-speaking countries. The pattern is obvious.

 
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Packard
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  JustAMaverick

Hurray for our side!

What a lovely war we are all going to have.
___________
Blighters’
By Siegfried Sassoon

The House is crammed: tier beyond tier they grin
And cackle at the Show, while prancing ranks
Of harlots shrill the chorus, drunk with din;
“We’re sure the Kaiser loves the dear old Tanks!”

I’d like to see a Tank come down the stalls,
Lurching to rag-time tunes, or “Home, sweet Home,”
And there’d be no more jokes in Music-halls
To mock the riddled corpses round Bapaume.

 
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DHFabian
 1 year ago
 
 
 

What much of the world saw was Biden’s buildup of US/NATO troops in Eastern Europe over the past year, along Ukraine’s western border, and now along a segment of Russia’s border. Threatening to invade, provoking war. Predictably, when Russia finally pushed back, Biden loyalists shouted, “Russia’s invading Ukraine!”

 
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Selina+Sweet
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  DHFabian

My heart sinks at the visceral cluelessness of the USA’s architects to the real world impacts of their arrogant tunnel vision understanding and provocations vis a vis other countries. Yet, this same denial of others’ reality functions also in its disregard of the necessities of our own people. As though the so-called leadership responsible for foreign and national affairs are of one cloth. So swallowed by their own hubris, they carry an attitude not unlike that of the master toward his slaves. An omnipotent know it all intolerant of “otherness” and its own inferiority. And so, disconnected , out of touch with instincts that were they connected would make room for a humility capable of wisdom.

 
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Tedder
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Yes. We can see a direct line from the CIA incorporation of the fascist
Banderites in western Ukraine/Poland to destabilize the Soviets to the Maidan Coup in 2014, to the attacks on the Donbas starting in 2015, to their present incorporation in all levels of Ukrainian society, military, and government. They are a useful tool for the Americans to kill Russians; unfortunately for them, this just might not work out as the Russians seem to have both a fondness and an ability to kill Nazis.

 
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Jane von Rathsach
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Jaques Baud … : Intelligence was NOT listnened … Also here  FE

 
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Bruce
 1 year ago
 
 
 

“Hook line and sinker” Just like 911!

The US has gone mad! -Seymour Hersh

 
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Schrodinger'sCat
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Bruce

The USA was founded from the madness of Native American genocide and African slavery and has only gone deeper into that abyss which will likely end with killing off most if not all life on earth.

 
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Bruce
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Correction:

“The United States of America Has Gone Mad”

-John le Carre

https://youtu.be/k5RUgmEA4R0

 
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 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Bruce

The United States has ALWAYS been mad!

 
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niko
 1 year ago
 
 
 

“(H)ostile to any opinion that strays from the official line.” That pretty much sums up Amerikkka from the get-go. Love it or leave it, preferably with extreme prejudice to the point of wholesale extermination.

But yeah, it’s gotten “increasingly” so. The fascism which really got underway in the U$, Inc. post-WWII with the rise of the MIC, of which Eisenhower belatedly warned, has morphed into the “inverted totalitarianism” (Sheldon Wolin) of today. So much so, that its tentacles of power, made global by neoliberalism, are now moving us by way of a war upon all humanity into a new abnormal that may be summed up by Orwell’s vision of a boot stamping on a human face, forever. An irreversible condition of techno-totalitarian slavery.

War in Ukraine is but part of this greater war of the Great Reset, which came into accelerated operation with the covid coup and war of bioterror. Ukraine, Russia, US, and other governing powers over people across the world are all still marching us together into a hell-on-earth biodigital security state.

Eisenhower’s farewell address also made reference to the dangers of a scientific-technological complex which one day could rule over us. Wake up to today.

 
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 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  niko

Thanks for mentioning Sheldon Wolin as his work is so important at understanding what our nation faces today. Good word.

 
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Andrew Wallace
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  niko

Spot on! Hand in hand with the nihilism and loss of moral compass Prof. Brenner describes, is the sell-out of elected politicians to the US MIC, which never shied away from a good war. We can only hope that now that this war has shown how vulnerable expensive military hardware is to a few well placed rockets and missiles fired by foot soldiers, we might start to question our obscene military budgets. Of course, so much the better for the MIC if you have to replace a few battleships every year!

 
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Tom Laney
 1 year ago
 
 
 

3/31/2022

To The Editor:
In October 1962, at age 19, I slept next to the planes with the Paratroopers of the famed 82nd Airborne Division. We were waiting to jump into Havana in what would have been WWIII, if not for President Kennedy.
Russia had placed missiles in Cuba. Kennedy had mobilized our military to remove those missiles while he was in daily contact with the Russians, negotiating a way to Peace.
I am 80 now. Still grateful for president Kennedy’s love for our troops; grateful that he loved us enough to resolve the rush to WWIII by agreeing to remove U.S. missiles aimed at Russia from Turkey if the Russians took their missiles out of Cuba. Which they did.
I voted for President Biden, thinking he might have graduated from his warmongering past to discover a bit of JFK’s heroism for peace. How wrong I was!
Russia, like the United States has a human right to be free from NATO (U.S.) missiles. Most foreign affairs experts agreed. Most foreign affairs experts predicted for decades that if NATO expanded to threaten Russia, we’d be in WWIII. Biden understood that. But Biden does not care. Biden is surrounded by warmongers and fascists from the project for A New American Century, who deliberately led us into this war.
Now the bright spot is Zelensky’s peace offer to insure Ukrainians and Russians that Ukraine will no longer threaten Russia. The U.S. needs to promote this peace.
But on Saturday, Biden’s Secretary of State Tony Blinken, was in Israel trying to drum up more arms from the Israelis and our friends in Saudi Arabia (the folks who did 9/11 and bomb Yemen every day) for the war fighters in Ukraine.
There are many reporters now writing and saying that Biden, Victoria Nuland, and PNAC do not want peace. Biden says his sanctions will damage us all. Biden says we must accept decades more war.
I wonder…..who are these people? They attack us at home by cutting our wages, pensions and close plants. They ship our jobs to slaves in this constant domestic war on workers. And then, they take the domestic war on workers abroad with bullets, bombs and lies. This is their foreign policy.
I wonder….who are these people? Most of them seem to have never had a real job. Most couldn’t care less for working stiffs and our troops. Most of them are somehow the multi-millionaire Elite who are too proud to fight. And thus, the humble do the fighting. We do not need decades of more war. We need a new Peace Movement. We need a new Solidarity Movement. We need Good Jobs for All. We need a raise. We need to get along so our kids can live happy lives in happy communities.
Everywhere.
God bless Dorothy Day, Cesar Chavez, Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy!– Tom Laney, 503 Esperanza, Mercedes, TX 763-220-3899

 
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michael888
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Tom Laney

The lying, cheated, unprincipled politicians in DC, their wins at any cost, their “ends justify the means”, should not even be tolerated in domestic politics, where most Americans are shafted in favor of the MICIMATT.
But much worse, Biden and his neocons have institutionalized NAZIs / White Supremacists as our allies against the Russians. The State Media “Russian war crimes” propaganda collapses under almost every investigation, while Ukrainian NAZIs are encouraged, particularly by politicians supposedly representing America, to engage in the most despicable war crimes with State Media cover: https://thegrayzone.com/2022/04/17/traitor-zelensky-assassination-kidnapping-arrest-political-opposition/
Most Americans had relatives who served in WWII. Most are dead today, but likely many are spinning in their graves with Biden and his commitments to NAZIs rather than Peace.

 
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Selina+Sweet
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Tom Laney

I am moved by all that you have shared. Thank you.

 
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 Reply to  Tom Laney

Que bom ler comentários tão sábios, dignos de seres humanos realmente humanizados!! Pensava que todo estadonidense fosse arrogante, se achando dono do mundo. Deus abençoes vocês!! Tão simples e fácil negociar!! Eu cedo aqui e tu cedes ali e pronto!! Mas o vil metal e a arrogância falam mais alto.

 
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Peter Sherman
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Tom Laney

Great comments! In answer to your question: “Who are these people?” These ‘people’ are a cloaked cabal of globalists who lust for total control of the planet. They truly believe that the masses are incapable of any understanding of how to solve the world’s problems. The masses do not even rate as deplorables. They are merely commodities to be used to achieve the ends of these self-ordained kings. Such psychopaths have been around throughout the history of the planet. But now the planet is a global fiefdom in their eyes. Evidence for this is highlighted in the mind-boggling redistribution of wealth. When three individuals have more wealth than 50% of the country, it is no longer a country of people. It is a business venture to be taken advantage of. This cabal owns the media, the military, and all three branches of the government. In summary, these people are psychopaths who have sufficient power to carry out their psychopathic behavior- no longer behind the curtain, but in full view because they know that no one can stop them.

 
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SH
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Tom Laney

To Tom,
Who are these people? They are the ones we put in office, the ones we have been putting in office for at least the last 30 years …
When are we going to stop doing that – before it’s too late?

What made you think Biden would be suddenly any different from what he has been?

Why are Americans so naive that we get suckered in to the duopoly time after time? Is it naivete or something else ….

 
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george simmel
 1 year ago
 
 
 

“I know of no nation where there is no independence of mind nor any real freedom of debate except America”. Tocqueville
amerikans never change

 
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Kerry Korberg
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Just amazing! My mind is becoming more and more clear. I thank the Canadian truckers for my awakening that has drawn me inexorably to such profound discussions as this one. It is inspiring and gives me a bright ray of hope for my sons and my grandson’s future. Most sincerely, Kerry Korberg

 
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Susan Leslie
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Americans don’t know how to think for themselves – they simply slurp up all of the bullshit they are fed by this ridiculous, immoral government, the MIC and the mainstream media…

 
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AReply
 1 year ago
 
 
 

I suggest Scheer needs a new angle, as does the whole culture of public opinion in which Scheer is embedded.

Op-ed screeds may suit you or rile you, but are influential in about the same way as any random youtube or tweet is influential: there’s always some flock of birds of a feather,; but so what? People with ideas and no power.

The practice of opinion must forever move beyond one well-educated, well-informed, well-spoken man espousing one principled idea.

As BBC’s Adam Curtis outlines through decades of insightful news montage and commentary, the world is no longer run through political solutions. Politicians act as required to appear to be relevant to the public while doing the bidding of concentrated financial power. To be a politician in century 21 is to carve out influence rackets as you can while managing public perceptions, all too often by means of distractions.. To be a politician no longer is to lead. It’s to coalesce public acceptance of corporate policy, where public is understood to be managers under the precepts of Southern Pacific vs Santa Clara. Statecraft is therefore a dead art. Per Bush aid to Suskind: ‘We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality—judiciously, as you will—we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors…and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do’. The predicate “we are” is the key: who are “we”? News is designed to make its audience think we is the viewer, while the we of actual power goes about its business.

The enormous structure of the US deep state must hold keys to unlocking who we really are, and as yet is largely unknown to the citizenry of the USA, but the who of “we” in deep state context is well worth considering. Like an ice berg to the ship of state, most of the hazard is underwater, with its insiders generally mute on its purpose and functions, There are few noteworthy exceptions. Old agents who have waited their whole lives to issue arm-chair regards on the limits and errors of US power from the safety of their retirement are hardly a meaningful movement. Sellouts like Kaplan and Robert Kagan are the norm, while iconoclasts like Assange and Snowden are quickly chased into exile by the same media that profits from their leaks; chased away for the crime of revealing the most banal institutional details of the mgmt of empire. The Russians can only dream of the repressive mind-control exercised in the west. As surely the most indoctrinated man is the one who believes his nation makes him free, And such provincial sentiment towards freedom is as popular as Disney or Apple among todays political screedlers.

Certainly, one more idea means nothing outside of its entertainment value. Unless it’s a very particular idea?

So let me suggest one idea: democracy works when any citizen can petition the state for redress to state power. For this power to mean anything, there must some understanding of the state. But the state is no longer understandable. This makes us crazy. The most cogent thought and articulate voice means nothing out of context. And where we are is zillions of contextless voices, all leashed to unfathomable supply chains.

Please enjoy one more voice bleating into this good night of the national soul. And good luck.

 
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michael888
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  AReply

The quote: “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality—judiciously, as you will—we’ll act again…” is usually attributed to Karl “Fart Blossom” Rove, although he denies it.
Of course when Hillary said “Can’t we just drone him?” in reference to Julian Assange, a quote anonymously validated by some near her, she claimed “I was just joking!” and when she found there was no video/audio footage, she quickly stated “I never said that”.
Even WITH video/ audio, many of Joe Biden’s insane comments are walked back; the US Government has become the most untrustworthy institution in America (and where is all that “War money” really going?)

 
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Kalen
 1 year ago
 
 
 

The American intellectuals in the past shared with world intellectual elites fundamental assumption that when one opens one’s mouth and say something it is aimed to contribute to a debate and hence people were being listened to and their ideas assessed accepted, rejected or modified based on merits.

Finding common ground and despite all even fundamental differences pledge for peaceful coexistence devoid of intimidation, hatred or violence was an intellectual imperative. Anything short of that was called. thuggery.

No more since deliberate preprogrammed top dow collapse of Soviet Union with active participation of CIA and KGB.

The class of Western intellectuals was simply culled so were Marxist economists and Sovietologs. More profoundly within State Department all Russia and Middle East experts were dumped and professionally attacked in academia or media.

All those experts were replaced by retarded “know nothing”US imperial ideologues intellectually not curious and definitely not interested in dialogue or debate but in bullying, intimidation and psychological warfare. All those people pushed US foreign policies using political intimidation tools of Nazi regime.

Any Political discourse was transformed into moral confrontation between good and evil, devoid facts, any rationale of respect and coexistence but loaded with aggression and anti intellectual emotional hysteria

Brutal imperial pontifications and dictate replaced debate. Questions and answers were replaced by assaults and responses. Any attempt of accommodation of mutual interests interpreted as sign of weakness.

Ukrainian government adopted the same strategy . They never answer any questions straight instead they spread hatred and accusations even against their own western backers. Their attitude is “give us money, weapons, die for us and.. shut up.”

 
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Mark Klement
 1 year ago
 
 
 

I think Mr. Brenner stated accurately that our society suffers a collective psycopathy. Perhaps we should call the 21st century The Age of Narcissism. These disordered personality types are running rampant at all levels of society. Most critically they are found in all the halls of power.

 
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 1 year ago
 
 
 

The monopoly capitals of big powers are inevitably in contradiction. The biggest such contradiction is between Chinese capitalist expansionism and U.S. established global capitalist interest.

For all his literate, progressive voice, Brenner in this interview bases himself on the military and political moves of the powers. He bases himself on the competence, morality, and intellect – or absence of same – of imperialist advisors. He talks about “work out the terms of a relationship [that will] satisfy our basic interests and concerns as well as China’s.”

See what’s missing?

 
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Ted+Tripp
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Charles

No, I don’t “see what’ missing.” You and many others on both Left and Right see something you call “Chinese capitalist expansionism” as a very bad thing. I have spent most of my adult life studying China and I profoundly disagree with your contention.
Scholars like Michael Hudson assess China as a ‘mixed economy’ with both state and individual activities, but an economy where the Party is firmly in charge, the banks and land are owned by the people, so vastly different than American neoliberalism that Americans cannot comprehend the Chinese way and so, “just make shit up”.
I like to think of China, needing capital development, chose to hire a capitalist. The capitalists do their business, but they do not govern.
Also, in Chinese capital development is the policy of “shared prosperity”. It is no secret that in the last 20 years, China has lifted more people out of poverty than anywhere else in the world. Shared prosperity will enhance equality and decrease the number of super-rich.
Of course, we all know that if every Chinese lived a Western lifestyle, the world will be toast. China is aware of this problem and has directed more actions to solve the global warming catastrophe than any other major power.

 
1
 
 
 
 
Calgacus
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Ted+Tripp

Quite right. Excellent comment. Most leftist commentary on China is completely clueless. Arrives at conclusions predetermined by the unsuitable categories Chinese reality is ideologically forced into.

Overall, taking the long view, Chinese development and the Chinese USA relationship of the last 80 years has developed roughly along the lines envisioned by Mao and Zhou during the period they tried to meet with FDR, along the lines of the purged China hands, of Edgar Snow. Of Mao’s friend Earl Browder, who wrote some prescient commentary in the 60s long after he had been purged as head of the US Communist Party. Chinese manpower developing China with US capital. But hired as you say with the Party and Chinese politicians firmly in charge.

Grosso modo, the New Deal order. The effects and memory of which all sides of scholarship and capitalism have striven mightily to suppress in the USA since then.

 
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 1 year ago
 
 
 

Before the War started, I started going to the OSCE web page daily as they reported Truce violations between the Ukraine government and the Russian speaking UKRAINIANS who refuse to accept the 2014 US Coup/regime change of the ELECTED Russian friendly government, changing it for a Neo-Nazi anti-Russian government headed by the man US Undersecretary of State Victoria was caught on tape saying by the man she wanted to head the changed government before it was even changed.

There was a very dramatic increase in Ukrainian government shelling into the Civilian areas in the breakaway Donetsk regions. US/NATO WAR PROPAGANDA has too many SINS of Historical OMISSION of the History that brought this World to the Precipice of Armageddon/WWIII.

It was that increase of Ukrainian government shelling of the Russian speaking Ukrainians that provoked Russia to enter and stop it.
US/NATO War Propaganda, the unexpected 5th Horseman of the Apocalypse, does not inform the Public on the Real History so they can make a True Judgment instead of the Mass Media Manipulating the Minds of the Masses to react Emotionally without careful consideration of the dangerous dilemma this Whole Material World faces together or a part.

 
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Ted+Tripp
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Ray Joseph Cormier

And, you know that this narrative of Ukrainian civil war on Ukrainian ethnic Russians in the Donbas is never mentioned in the Western media as a cause of this conflict. Rather, they dream up a world where Putin woke up one morning and decided to flex his military muscles and commit “unprovoked aggression.”

 
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Anonymot
 1 year ago
 
 
 

I have long appreciated Michael Brenner’s articles, although I regret his not diving below the first few layers. I comment , because those deeper layers are my base territory, but mailtrack advises that my comment to him are not opened. I don’t know if it is because we disagree, in part, when he opened the first few or because I am not a member of those with accepted qualifications.

The above invites a serious reply and I would like to think about it overnight – if anyone is still reading it tomorrow.

 
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Vacy
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Dear Professor Brenner,
What a pleasure and a relief to listening/reading your lucid take on Washington’s warmongering clowns and their China delusions the US choreography of the Ukraine war, about Russia’s ineluctable invasion to protect Donbass and deter NATO bases in Ukraine, and the existential “collective psychopathology” that has infected Australia too.

I am perpetually stunned on Twitter and FB by the same ‘”intellectual and political nihilism” …..
What astonishes me is people whose intelligence was sharp and clear about US fake news to justify US wars, Proxy wars and regime changes for US interests throughout 20th Century and now 21st century and these same people abdicate their intelligent commitment to FACTS and choose the fictional US narrative on Ukraine. Bizarre! And these same antiwar worshippers have hypocritically never protested against US/Western wars and intervention into Western Sahara, Kashmir, Syria, Libya, West Papua, Palestine ,Latin America, Timor Leste, Vietnam, Korea, Somalia, the Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan.
Theatre of the absurd and death”

Painful. I unfollowed a lot of people.

I applaud Scheer’s encourage that you do a Russell – we need you.

 
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 1 year ago
 
 
 

The most fateful consequence of this division, notwithstanding the possibility of Nuclear (Not Nucular) War, is the inevitable polarisation of the world: the US and its vassals vs the new alliance (Russia, Iran, China, India?). Hardly a working formula for dealing with Climate Change. I’m reminded of Gandalf’s statement at the closing of the “Roast Mutton” chapter of “The Hobbit”, which was “Dawn take you all”.
Perhaps a more classy reminiscence would be Shakespeare’s “A Pox on both your houses”. But all prose and fine words aside, wherever you might find them, there is good reason to think we’re approaching “Game Over” – unless Elon gets us all to Mars in time.

 
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Tom_Q_Collins
 1 year ago
 
 
 

The correct word for the transcription is “locus” not “locust.”

“I think a point to keep in mind is that—and this relates to what I said a moment ago about policy-making in Moscow—that if one were to place the attitudes and the opinions of Russian leaders on a continuum from hawk to dove, Putin has always been well towards the dovish end of the continuum. In other words, the majority of the most powerful forces in Moscow—and it’s not just the military, it’s not just the oligarchs, it’s all types—the locust of the sentiment has been that Russia is being exploited, taken advantage of; that cooperation will become a part of a European system in which Russia is accepted as a legitimate player is illusory.”

LOCUS
1.
TECHNICAL
a particular position, point, or place.
“it is impossible to specify the exact locus in the brain of these neural events”
the effective or perceived location of something abstract.
“the real locus of power is the informal council”
GENETICS
the position of a gene or mutation on a chromosome.
2.
MATHEMATICS
a curve or other figure formed by all the points satisfying a particular equation of the relation between coordinates, or by a point, line, or surface moving according to mathematically defined conditions.
“a parabola is the locus of a point that moves so as to be equidistant from a fixed point and a straight line”

 
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Joe Blackett
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Tom, thank you for that inside look at the Cuban Missile Crisis! People often say when discussing the sad state of US foreign affairs “US Democracy died on November 22nd, 1963 in Dallas.” Kennedy did care about the troops, having served himself and I believe was likely assassinated because of a reluctance to escalate the war in Vietnam.

I share Michael Brenner’s feeling that I’m a stranger in a strange land in the US. IMO there is zero hope for peace or truth from the US govt in its current form.

Thank you Robert Scheer and Michael Brenner for a superb meeting of two brilliant minds.

 
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jane byter
 1 year ago
 
 
 

This was wonderful. Thanks so much.
Another small transcription error: find “locust” and change to “locus”
” In other words, the majority of the most powerful forces in Moscow—and it’s not just the military, it’s not just the oligarchs, it’s all types—the locust of the sentiment has been that Russia is being exploited,…”

 
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Bernie Holland
 1 year ago
 
 
 

That the Atlanticist Cabal exercises its power through the architecture of the Military-Industrial-Congressional-Intelligence-Media-Academia-Think-Tank Complex is a fact that is evidenced by the stranglehold on discourse that is but one facet of the neo-fascist world order that the West (or more accurately “The Waste”) is hell-bent on establishing through its expansion of the Monroe Doctrine, which is also “inching eastward” blithely oblivious of the self-harm that will inevitably accrue. But as we gaze into this unfathomable abyss of despair, it might be worth considering if the Donbass could provide a model for the various and numerous ‘regions’ of Ukraine, with of course the exception of the Galetian sector which, due to its inherently fascist nature, is incapable of adopting anything other than a singular monist worldview. Bearing in mind this unfortunate exception, I believe there remain a number of regions (in respect of which, by the way, Putin has no need whatsoever to intervene) which accommodate a significant percentage of the population who wish to distance themselves from the central fascist regime of Kiev. Whilst it is the “intelligence” component of the MICIMATT which has, with characteristic cunning, installed a Jewish President to obfuscate the fact that the Ukrainian Government and its military are infected with 4th generation Banderite fascists, this is not lost on that proportion of the Ukranian populace who silently align themselves with the Russian Federation. As Putin’s operation advances, it is possible that Donetsk and Luhansk will not remain the only independent regions. Whilst the more western ‘heartlands’ of Ukrainian ultra-nationalism, such as Volyn, Lviv, Zakarpattia, Ivano-Frankisvsk, Chernivstsi, Ternopil and Rivne, may remain hidebound by the monist Euromaidan ideology, perhaps the same could not be said of regions such as Kherson, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Zaporizhia, Mykolaiv, Odessa, Kirovohrad, Cherkasy, Poltava, Sumy and Chernihiv, which, adopting a more pluralist model, could emerge in their own right as “Peoples’ Republics”. I am wondering if Putin already perceives this as a proto-Federation of Peoples Republics of Ukraine within which, once Zelensky has either fled the country, or been assassinated (either by the CIA or the Right Sektor) can open the way for a new referendum, leading to the election of a President of Ukraine who will once and for all lead a government which will be liberated from the menace of Altanticism, and establish Ukraine as a truly independent entity within which the brotherhood of Ukrainians and Russians can enjoy a future of peaceful coexistence. And perhaps then, Kennedy’s dream, of splintering both the CIA and the MICIMATT into a thousand pieces and having them scattered to the winds, can be fulfilled. And likewise, we will see the end of NATO, that irredeemably monstrous criminal organisation that dresses itself up as a benign security agency. It is purely for these reasons that I support Putin’s “criminal enterprise”, as I would imagine do those of all the other nations who, having not completely lost their minds, desist from repudiating him.

 
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Jai Seli
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Yo Bernie, r u for real?! Thanks for the concise understanding of said. Got a site? Would love to learn more! Steven @ jizazkn@protonmail.com

 
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Bernie Holland
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Jai Seli

Thanks for your appreciation Steven – I don’t have a website but I do publish my music on you tube – check this out

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JBgELDxewM4&t=31s

I will contact you by e-mail later

Take care

Bernie

 
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Democracy Gone Astray
 1 year ago
 
 
 

“When it came to the Ukraine conflict, Professor Michael J. Brenner did what he’s done his whole life: question American foreign policy.”

In a nutshell, this is precisely the problem with the left-ish Neo Progressive response to Putin’s unprovoked imperialism. His proxy war against the West, the EU, NATO and the US is Russia’s foreign policy, not the US’s.

It is a direct result of Russian failure to lure the victims of former Soviet and Tsarists imperialism into tying their economic and military fates to Russia, preferring instead to align their future with western political, economic and military alliances. In other words NATO expansion is a result of the democratic will of former soviet states rather than NATO’s, and has more, or at least as much to do with the will to be an integral part of Europe democratic capitalism rather than Russian autocratic and oligarchic dictatorship.

In other words, left-ish pundits are so invested in their anti-liberal vitriol to notice, on the one hand, the magnitude of Putin’s attempt to draw the world into a militarized conflict, possibly a nuclear one at that and, on the other hand, the strength and depth of the democratic will of former Soviet victim states.

 
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Ted+Tripp
 1 year ago
 
 
 
 Reply to  Democracy Gone Astray

I detest warmongers like you, Democracy, who take a pseudo-intellectual misinterpretation of history and use it to create a false narrative. Anyone who pays attention knows that NATO expansion is an American project proceeding independently of the will of the populace involved, or like some of the Maidan protesters, sincerely believe that Western ‘values’ (Russiaphobia among them) will lead them to some imagined prosperity.
There is also no doubt that Russia has been threatened by NATO for a number of year; there should be no doubt that the US-fomented 2014 Maidan coup threatened Russia; there is no doubt that Ukraine turned itself into a fascist regime that idolized Nazis who threatened Russia; there is no doubt that this regime launched war using US weapons against the Donbas who rejected it, this, too, threatened Russia.
Almost anyone who is poked and poked will eventually hit back.
Your contention that this narrative is anti-liberal is laughable. You thus become a warmonger yourself and flirt with facism.

 
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george simmel
 1 year ago
 
 
 

denazification by Russia entirely legal in ukraine per international law—that USA violates routinely

 
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Em
 1 year ago
 
 
 

Michael Brenner says:
“What is there today that really threatens us?”
First of all, today, in any discourse, the who/what is actually being referred to by ‘we’ ‘us’ ‘they’ or ‘it’ needs to be defined more exhaustively.
Who, specifically, for example, is being referred to in the oft cited phrase:
“America is the richest nation on the planet”?

 
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eedipus
 1 year ago
 
 
 

I was impressed with this thoughtful Brenner/ Scheer article. What we need is more intellectual hustlers for the truth of what is going on. Within the reporting media of the Western World, particularly America, the narrative is always the same. The Russians are the bad guys, they have got to be crushed.
The truth is that America does not wish to negotiate a true balance of power with Russia. In her hubris she seems to be acting out of an attitude of psychotic narcissism. Rather than attempting to conflate classified documents I’ll leave it to the American Indians to have the last words on the subject. They simply said “White man speaks with forked tongue.” It sure beats, shall we say, the “convoluted” reasons some people come up with in trying to explain they are not liars.

 
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 1 year ago
 
 
 

This rotten country…. USA needs to go the way of the dodo.

https://southfront.org/us-takes-wheat-out-of-ukraine-war-torn-country-doomed-to-famine/

Starvation Capitalism.

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