Avatars and Horses…

Computer generated 3D illustration with the Trojan Horse at Troy

The Greek Myth of Odysseus and the Trojan Horse, Greek Boston

Topics: Civics, Civil Rights, Civilization, Democracy, Existentialism, Fascism

Avatar (n) – an electronic image (as in a video game) that represents and may be manipulated by a computer user; the incarnation of a Hindu deity (such as Vishnu); an incarnation in human form; an embodiment (as of a concept or philosophy) often in a person, See: Merriam-Webster/avatar

Stalking Horse (n) – a horse or a figure like a horse behind which a hunter stalks game; something used to mask a purpose; a candidate put forward to divide the opposition or to conceal someone’s real candidacy, See: Merriam-Webster/stalking horse

Trojan Horse (n) – a seemingly useful computer program that contains concealed instructions which when activated perform an illicit or malicious action (such as destroying data files); someone or something intended to defeat or subvert from within usually by deceptive means, See: Merriam-Webster/trojan horse

So far, every republican president post-Eisenhower has been an avatar for agendas crafted for them.

My observation: Post-Eisenhower, they had no real vision of how they wanted to govern. Conservative “think tanks” and corporate interests have performed a political version of “Cliff Notes” so that thinking is irrelevant, and from the candidates themselves, discouraged. Talking points, propaganda, and sloganeering are manufactured, and repeated in an established echo chamber, where repetition replaces reality. What we get aren’t politicians, but actors on a stage who know the buttons to push in their audience.

Governor Ronald Reagan lost the Republican Primary to Vice President Gerald Ford in 1976. Ford injured his chances of a second term by pardoning his former boss, Richard Nixon after the unforced error of Watergate: on paper, he was going to win against his Democratic opponent, George McGovern, after LBJ chose not to run for re-election due to the unpopularity of the Indo China/Vietnam conflict. McGovern only won his state of Minnesota, as Nixon won a landslide frightening the country with “law and order.” However, it may have been that Nixon, neurotically fearful, and abusing alcohol, feared the DNC Headquarters may have had intelligence on his collusion with a foreign power:

“Keep Anna Chennault working on SVN (South Vietnam),” Haldeman wrote, as Nixon barked orders into the phone. They were out to “monkey wrench” Johnson’s election eve initiative, Nixon said. And it worked.

The Nixon campaign’s sabotage of Johnson’s peace process was successful. Nine days later, Thieu’s decision to boycott the talks headlined The New York Times and other U.S. newspapers, reminding American voters of their long-harbored mistrust of the wheeler-dealer LBJ and his “credibility gap” on Vietnam. Humphrey’s momentum faded.

LBJ was furious. His national security adviser, Walt Rostow, urged him to unmask Nixon’s treachery. Humphrey’s aides told their boss to expose the episode and disgrace their Republican foes. But Johnson and Humphrey balked. They didn’t have proof that Nixon had personally directed her actions.

When a Candidate Conspired With a Foreign Power to Win An Election
It took decades to unravel Nixon’s sabotage of Vietnam peace talks. Now, the full story can be told. John A. Farrell, Politico Magazine, August 6, 2017.

Reagan latched onto a letter: the Lewis Powell memo, head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, appointed by Nixon. This letter was the basis of “Reaganism,” the attacks on education, labor rights, and the “long game” by Corporate America to deregulate the administrative state, and give themselves and the owner class tax cuts, sold by a B-Movie actor that could hit all his lines as “trickledown.” His Vice President, and former primary adversary, George Herbert Walker Bush, aptly described it as “voodoo economics,” that is more like a zombie that won’t die. Similar to his predecessor, both men had been governors of California, the “October Surprise” put the Reagan campaign square in the camp of collusion with a foreign power for political gain. He exploited the brief recession in 1980, no fault of his Democratic incumbent opponent, using the often repeated phrase “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?” Any brief recessions under Reagan, and increases in unemployment were blamed on the Democrats by the B-Movie flimflam artist.

The “Gipper” was the perfect avatar for the Powell Memo.

The scion of the 41st president would go on to win a controversial election in 2000, some say installed by a 5 – 4 vote on the Supreme Court. George W. Bush as the 43rd president glad handed, was, between him and his wooden Democratic opponent, he was the candidate “most Americans would like to have a beer with” (W was a self-described recovering alcoholic, and teetotaler). He prayed in the open like a Pharisee and ran on “compassionate conservatism” from his Christian bona fides, calculated and preying on the premise the country was appalled that his predecessor had consensual sex with an adult intern, a woman other than his wife, and lied about it under oath. W talked down the economy that his predecessor handed him a surplus with, then promptly tax-cut it into oblivion and blamed the Democrats for his incompetence. 2008 was the last year of his administration, and that’s when his “chickens came home to roost” w aith the housing crisis, having to bailout Wall Street for essentially gambling with subprime loans, and the costs of wars in Afghanistan, where he did not get Osama Bin Laden, and Iraq, where he executed Saddam Hussein because of a grudge he felt about Hussein trying to kill his dad, and his need to goose his numbers for the upcoming 2004 elections. He would be the only Republican presidential candidate to win the popular vote, now for nine election cycles.

W’s reign of error was preceded by a 1997 statement of principles from Elliott Abrams, Gary Bauer, William J. Bennett, Jeb Bush, Dick Cheney, Eliot A. Cohen, Midge Decter, Paula Dobriansky, Steve Forbes, Aaron Friedberg, Francis Fukuyama, Frank Gaffney, Fred C. Ikle, Donald Kagan, Zalmay Khalilzad, I. Lewis Libby, Norman Podhoretz, Dan Quayle, Peter W. Rodman, Stephen P. Rosen, Henry S. Rowen, Donald Rumsfeld, Vin Weber, George Weigel, and Paul Wolfowitz for the Project for a New American Century:

American foreign and defense policy is adrift. Conservatives have criticized the incoherent policies of the Clinton Administration. They have also resisted isolationist impulses from within their own ranks. But conservatives have not confidently advanced a strategic vision of America’s role in the world. They have not set forth guiding principles for American foreign policy. They have allowed differences over tactics to obscure potential agreement on strategic objectives. And they have not fought for a defense budget that would maintain American security and advance American interests in the new century. We aim to change this. We aim to make the case and rally support for American global leadership. As the 20th century draws to a close, the United States stands as the world’s preeminent power. Having led the West to victory in the Cold War, America faces an opportunity and a challenge: Does the United States have the vision to build upon the achievements of past decades? Does the United States have the resolve to shape a new century favorable to American principles and interests? We are in danger of squandering the opportunity and failing the challenge. We are living off the capital — both the military investments and the foreign policy achievements — built up by past administrations. Cuts in foreign affairs and defense spending, inattention to the tools of statecraft, and inconstant leadership are making it increasingly difficult to sustain American influence around the world. And the promise of short term commercial benefits threatens to override strategic considerations. As a consequence, we are jeopardizing the nation’s ability to meet present threats and to deal with potentially greater challenges that lie ahead.

The strong military and Pax Americana PNAC advocated didn’t hinder the attacks on the Twin Towers, the Pentagon, and almost the Capitol on 9/11/2001. The New American Century brought us civil liberties violating shoes and laptops in plastic tubs to x-ray, hands-above-head body scans, and pat downs if “something suspicious” was seen in the body scan (they ask you if they can check your groin area). I remember a world more laid back at the airport, and better, real food than chips and biscotti.

Rebuilding America’s Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources For a New Century

He, who everyone wanted to have beers with, was the perfect avatar for PNAC.

The dizzying years between 2017 – 2021 seems like a century, and not an administration. I was in graduate school, keeping my head down, and my mind filled with nanomaterials. The administration at that time was slapstick, stumblebum, the source of memes, late night comedian standups, tweets that drove the news cycle (we were trying to decipher “COVFEFE”). There was a Muslim ban, white nationalists in Charlottesville, Virginia who were “very fine people” (in a bizarre application of “both-sides-ism”), the death of Heather Heyer. There were camouflaged agents harassing protestors after the livestreamed George Floyd lynching. Teargas was used to clear demonstrators in Washington, DC June 1, 2020, to hold a Bible upside down for a prescient photo op. Fun observation: the currently branded $59.99 Holy Writ, if you turn the numbers upside down, the 5 looks like an “S.” Add a few vowels and consonants, you get “66.6Suckers!”

Despite his resemblance to the “Lord of the Flies,” he is the frontrunner of a party he’s only been ostensibly attached to after the first black president was elected, re-elected, and clowned him at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. He is the frontrunner after having affairs on his first, second, and third pregnant, immigrant wife, then with an adult film star, and a Playboy centerfold, and bragging about sexual assault on video. He is the frontrunner because he is the id of a number of Americans disturbed that a black man won the presidency not once, but twice, so he is their anger, their rage, their “retribution.” He is “chosen by God,” despite the fact that he was a Democrat most of his life until he latched onto the birther conspiracy theory. He is the frontrunner despite four years ago, we had refrigerated 18 wheelers as morgues for a death toll of 1.13 million Americans during the pandemic, the stock market a quarter of its trading now, and told to inject ourselves with bleach, hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin (horse wormer), and politicizing masks. He’s the frontrunner encouraging an attack on the Capitol after a “call-and-response” sermon to keep himself in power after the votes were counted not in his favor. He’s the frontrunner using stochastic terrorism to attack his “enemies” by proxy that can result in actual deaths.

As strange as he is, he is the perfect avatar for Project 2025.

“Think tanks” are populated by eggheads that are funded by grants, corporate interests, or billionaires. Dystopian nightmares like “The Hunger Games” and “The Handmaid’s Tale” have behind them a wealthy elite that funds the chaos, because in chaos, they can seize and hoard resources to themselves, and since they’re self-isolated from the rest of humanity, what would it matter to them if society cratered?

The conservative project since the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education Decision, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act, the 1968 Fair Housing Act, and the 1973 Roe vs. Wade Decision is to repeal the gains of the 20th Century. They are working on contraception and same sex marriage. “Great again” doesn’t take us back to the Ozzie and Harriet 1950s: I’m seeing a return to the 1850s.

In a paraphrase of a text message with a good friend, my wife and I plan to vote early, order groceries online to pick up early in the morning, and make sure we have ammo for our guns. We’ve discussed siege scenarios, where she should shelter, as I engage, most likely, our neighbors dedicated to a pathological liar.

In the second season of “The Handmaid’s Tale” on Hulu, the “Sons of Jacob” storm the Capitol (familiar?), assassinating the Congress, setting up the “Republic of Gilead,” an act that can only appeal to sociopaths. As we watched the well-acted, horrific scene, I looked at my wife and said spontaneously, “They look like they LOST an election.”

Win, or lose, my fear is they will do violence because they WANT to do violence. The party promoting this violence is nihilistic: they are the dogs who if they “caught the car,” they wouldn’t care about it because dogs normally don’t drive cars.

Major General Smedley Butler, WWI two-times recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor, revealed the conspiracy to overthrow the first administration of FDR because wealthy corporate interests thought fascism was easier to make money and manage than democracy. Butler, a Republican, revealed the plot, despite he wasn’t a Democrat. It wasn’t a matter of tribal affiliation, or nihilistic tendencies.

Smedley Butler was a patriot, and patriots swear oaths to The Constitution, not to parties, not to men, not to demagogues.

Published by reginaldgoodwin

Engineering Physics, Bachelors of Science, December 1984 Microelectronics & Photonics, Graduate Certificate, February 2016 Nanoengineering, Masters, December 2019 Nanoengineering, Ph.D., Summer 2022

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