Dakryn's Batshit Theory of the Week

Then how far back do we have to go to find a time where war wasn't so distant? Unless we count The Troubles, the last time any meaningful percentage of people in the UK were really exposed to war (as in knowing soldiers, casualties, etc.) was WW2. For the US I guess it would be Vietnam. But given the way everyone is hooked up to the internet now I'd have thought more people have exposure to the realities of the past two Gulf Wars than they did to Vietnam or The Falklands War.

I guess I could buy some of the argument if it focused on countries like Germany and Japan as opposed to all 'western liberal democracies'. I don't think it holds up with regards to the US or the UK though.

Potentialities of exposure doesn't make something less Other, and I see more of an exponential curve rather than a linear progression as well. From the US perspective Vietnam involved far, far more troops than Desert Storm/Desert Shield ,and this desert "conflict" potentially distinguishes the point where Western warfighting tilted towards remote viewing and "Smart" weapons. The 90s were full of "peace missions" and "humanitarian missions". The Global War on Terror saw a lot of boots on the ground, but overall is known as a "Drone War", and the drones remain even after the boots left. Much of the manpower in the GWoT was not involved in any "combat" so-to-speak anyway. As the public grew weary of even a relatively minimal amount of "boots on the ground", the "conflicts" shift to funded local fighters with both manned and unmanned air support.
 
Correct me if I'm mistaken, but I believe the crux of what Dak is attempting to get at is that though war may technically be more visually accessible to people, there's a wall of apathy in terms of the public's disposition towards it. People may see it in passing on CNN, but how much do they care? They see it, but do they see it in a manner that makes them notice, or impacts them, or makes them say, "Hey, what's going on?", "What's this?", etc. I could probably articulate this in more lucid terms, but I just want to see whether this is Dak's position or not, nothing more or less really.

Sort of. I'm not sure apathy is the right word though, unless purely on grounds of "activism" maybe. There's plenty of people with an opinion at least on warfare. Maybe this example might capture what I'm talking about. If it were suddenly thrown in people's faces that the DoD has rooms worth of planning documents for potential operations against a variety of countries and scenarios, would the reaction within the US population or by allied populations (as it pertains to NATO operations against Russia etc) be positive or negative?
 
Today we're inundated with stories, entertainment and other distractions due to advancement in media tech (which leads to the 'make a comment online and move on' phenomenon that HP alludes to), in the past warfare news was the talk of the town and because we had less media distractions it really was quite central to the common interest and conversation, go even further back and the draft deepens people's observation of warfare because it meant people had family likely serving.

Simply put, we're closer today to warfare in terms of ability to observe, but we're more distant due to scattered interests, exemption of mandatory military service and general media distraction.
 
I find most of this agreeable, especially CIG's comments on the modern media.

A lot of this has been previously illuminated by leftist critics such as Baudrillard (many of whom probably wouldn't describe themselves as democrats). In a chapter on Apocalypse Now from his book Simulacra and Simulation, Baudrillard writes that "it is necessary for us to believe in this:

the war in Vietnam "in itself" perhaps in fact never happened, it is a dream, a baroque dream of napalm and of the tropics, a psychotropic dream that had the goal neither of a victory nor of a policy at stake, but, rather, the sacrificial, excessive deployment of a power already filming itself as it unfolded, perhaps waiting for nothing but consecration by a superfilm, which completes the mass spectacle of this war.

No real distance, no critical sense, no desire for "raising consciousness" in relation to the war: and in a sense this is the brutal quality of this film - not being rotten with the moral psychology of war.

Baudrillard gets at the central premise back in 1981, at least from the perspective that CIG helpfully highlights. But he isn't suggesting that the Vietnam War (or the Gulf War, as he will write a little more than a decade later) actually didn't happen - he's suggesting that in the era of late modernity, late-20thc techno-globalism (i.e. democratic neoliberalism), mass media and the spectacle of film permit its audiences the fantasy of believing that it somehow never happened, that they can view the film, or observe it, and yet somehow isolate themselves from its visceral occurrence.

This is also a version of what Žižek gets at when he writes that the 9/11 attacks were available to most people - to a "popular audience," so to speak - as a film spectacle. We watched the towers fall down and thought: "This is like something out of a movie."

Thomas Pynchon also toys with a similar notion in Gravity's Rainbow when he imagines the entirety of World War Two as a film at the end of the novel - readers discover that they have in fact been sitting in the theater watching a movie unfold.

So, tl;dr, I agree with CIG that modern media and film play a big role in the distance we (or many of us) experience from war.
 
Bakker is a systems theorist, even if he doesn't want to admit it...

https://rsbakker.wordpress.com/2016/09/06/myth-as-meth/

A post-intentional theory of meaning focuses on the continuity of semantic practices and nature, and views any theoretical perspective entailing the discontinuity of those practices and nature as spurious artifacts of the application of heuristic modes of cognition to theoretical issues. A post-intentional theory of meaning, in other worlds,views culture as a natural phenomenon, and not some arcane artifact of something empirically inexplicable. Signification is wholly material on this account, with all the messiness that comes with it.

Cognitive systems optimize effectiveness by reaching out only as far into nature as they need to. If they can solve distal systems via proximal signals possessing reliable systematic relationships to those systems, they will do so. Humans, like all other species possessing nervous systems, are shallow information consumers in what might be calleddeep information environments.
 
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Yeah, I read this back when Aeon originally published it. Really good piece. I feel like Watts possesses an admirable mixture of scientific practicality and respect for the experience of subjectivity.
 
Here we go:

http://www.macroresilience.com/2013...iting-the-radical-left-and-the-radical-right/

Most critics of neoliberalism on the left point to the dramatic reduction in the scale of government activities since the 80s – the privatisation of state-run enterprises, the increased dependence upon private contractors for delivering public services etc. Most right-wing critics lament the increasing regulatory burden faced by businesses and individuals and the preferential treatment and bailouts doled out to the politically well-connected. Neither the left nor the right is wrong. But both of them only see one side of what is the core strategy of neoliberal crony capitalism – increase the scope and reduce the scale of government intervention.
 
That is wonderful. It makes a lot of sense and would explain a great deal about the persistence of complaints from the left and right - that liberals can complain that government doesn't do enough, while conservatives complain it does too much.
 
It really makes a lot of sense. Of course, what I will call the "Misesian" critique about the scope of government is exactly this. That by increasing the scope the scale must necessarily decline. How this appears functionally is that the connected can avoid the narrowingly capable focus of an increasingly stretched bureaucracy (although direct/indirect costs and taxes still increase). Some random person loses everything because of some obscure law but MegaCorp gets away with proverbial and/or literal murder. Of course, the anarchist solution is zero government and I've backed off of this if for no other reason the majority of people will never go for this. It's the utopia of the high-IQ aspergerish few. I think that article may offer a nice middleground.

Edit: Austrian Econs' and others have called neoliberals/(neocons) Trotskyites for a while. I don't think the replication of the Soviet system is "unwitting".
 
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Seems interesting, wasn't able to cover all of it. Long read... :D Enlightening though, if not entirely surprising. Clinton was a neoliberal president to an intense degree, the president of the "happy nineties." It makes sense that most of his policy concerns would avoid issues that trouble that whole narrative.
 
Although Bush scummery is multigenerational and therefore maybe worse on the whole as a family, I don't know that any two people occupying public office over the last x number of decades deserve more villification for a variety of reasons, both concrete and conspiratorial, than the Clintons.
 
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I just feel so ignorant on the southern US political realm, seeing that use of location + speed is just a damning argument against that policy
 
Clinton using his tough on crime speech utop that Georgia monument. In combination with the glorification of the Confederacy in symbols and leadership during the time period.

Sure there's more, just ignorant on it