ROTATION:

Ice Cube
Rachel's
Death Cab For Cutie
Lyrics Born
Mars Volta
Space Team Electra
Rob Swift
Apples in Stereo

Jurassic 5

Sleater-Kinney
Nirvana
Sonic Youth

Amon Tobin
Dirty Three
Cat Power

Pixies
Fugazi
Frank Black
Breeders
Three Mile Pilot
Mogwai
DJ Shadow
Chuck D
Shipping News
Black Heart Procession
White Stripes

Built To Spill
Los Straitjackets
Jon Spencer Blues Explosion


AND MUCH MORE!




"It's a tried and true way of dealing with people or nations that the ruling elite finds troublesome or inconvenient -- whoever gets in our way. They're simply lumped into the enemy pile. "

" I think art and politics are directly related to each other, and people that deny the cross-influence are kidding themselves."

"Carbs are the new terrorists. Bread is the new Bin Laden. I can't wait to order a low-carb veggie Whopper. People are pathetic."

Going down the tubes. "'The Republicans at least have an excuse for their willful blindness -- they've already taken the position that the life of extreme car-dependency and everything it implies is not negotiable. They are committed to defending that position, no matter how foolish it may be.'" (Photo: AFP Marwan Ibrahim)
Willful Blindness

by Jim Kunstler

Recently, the price of oil inched above $55 dollar a barrel, which is at least $15 barrel more than it was a year ago.

Shorty after, the oil story was buried on page six of the New York Times business section. Apparently the price of of oil is not considered significant news, even when it goes up five dollars a barrel in the span of ten days.

That evening, CNN reported that the Dow shot up over one hundred points because of favorable employment numbers issued by the government and also because there were no signs of inflation in government-reported price data.

Stock markets are generally understood to behave on the basis of a consensus among traders about future prospects. Apparently stock traders in America think there is no connection between the price of oil shooting up ten percent in little more than a week, and the price of things that depend on oil for their manufacture or distribution -- which is to say, virtually everything.

Our inability to process information is reaching an impressive level.

I, for one, would be concerned about the price of oil and inflation -- that is the loss of purchasing power in the dollar. The recent price jump in oil is happening in March, you see, a couple of months shy of the so-called spring driving season. Typically, in recent years, oil prices have seen their biggest bumps around Memorial Day, when Americans resume long-distance motoring in earnest after staying close to home all winter. If oil stays in the low to mid $50 range for a while, it would not be unreasonable to expect $60 a barrel oil in May.

And that is assuming that no untoward geopolitical shock will occur, say the assassination of a Saudi prince, or an attack on an oil installation.

Recently, the New York Times ran a roundtable discussion (in the Book Review) between three prominent young "liberal" intellectuals (Katrina vanden Heuvel, Michael Tomasky, and Peter Beinhart) about what the Democratic Left can do to reclaim its place as a credible opposition. None of these hotshots mentioned the fact that the nation faces a defining crisis over our energy supplies. I don't think the word "oil" was even mentioned by this clueless trio. They have no idea what kind of convulsion we are heading into. Somebody ought to bring this to the Democrats attention.

America has a problem bigger than social security, or the price of prescription drugs, or gay marriage. America is heading into a situation in which it will no longer have an economy. The Republicans at least have an excuse for their willful blindness -- they've already taken the position that the life of extreme car-dependency and everything it implies is not negotiable. They are committed to defending that position, no matter how foolish it may be.

The Republicans will certainly be disgraced by the coming vicissitudes that they allowed the nation to sleepwalk into. But the Democrats may have less credibility in the future because they were not obligated to defend a foolish status quo, and they did anyway.

I wonder if Howard Dean ever thinks about these things.

07 March 05


James Kunstler is the sharpshooting author of The Geography of Nowhere, Home From Nowhere and the recently released novel, Maggie Darling, as well as the only guy in a bowtie Morphizm doesn't want to crush into a bloodied pulp. His doomsday predictions can be had for free at his blog, Clusterfuck Nation, as well as here. Which makes him cool.
GET MORE MORPHIZM
"Make You Uncomfortable"
For years, Nicolas Cage has taken roles that would make other actors empty their lunches into their limos. He proclaims his independence in Morphizm's In Their Own Words. . . . MORE
A World Without Bodies
We're heading for a future without flesh. And though suicide bombers use it for leverage on the evening news, it'll never be more than electronic to us. Morphizm's newest columnist Nathan Means keeps it hyperreal . . . MORE


"It's Amazing I've Survived"
Bill Plympton's latest self-drawn exercise in physiological agency and madness takes the animator back to high school in search of hormones and VW-humping mascots. Our interview elaborates . . . . MORE

"Sea of Trivia"
If you're looking to fit in during an endless War on Terror, the last thing you do is make a film about a guy who wants to kill the president. But if you're Assassination of Richard Nixon director Niels Mueller, you make the movie you want to make, and hope Sean Penn is in it . . . MORE

Body and Soul
Long before he was the auteur behind A Man Escaped and Lancelot of the Lake, French director Robert Bresson spent a year suffocating beneath Nazi occupation. How he got labeled an optimist is another story . . . MORE

You Break It, You Pay For It
Americans are notoriously tight with their money, but they see no problem in shelling out billions for a war they don't want. That's because no matter how shattered Iraq is, the American occupation will never go broke . . . MORE


You and Your Favorite Music Equals Live365

Search

CONTACT US Contributors MISSION STATEMENT
Copyright Since 2001, Morphizm.com.