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The Crash of 2008 and Historical Materialism

Why a Philosophy of the Natural Sciences is Needed

My European Vacation: Interviews with Working-class Leaders

Lessons in Coalition Politics: The Indian Left and the Indo-US Nuclear Deal

The Rosenberg Case in Historical Perspective

Yes We Can Shut Down the SOA

The Struggle for Women’s Equality in the US Today

Another Crisis of Capitalism

Reflections on the (Unplanned) Death of an Ideology

How to Reform Medicare and Create National Health Care

Reflexiones sobre la muerte (imprevista) de una ideología

Sagebrush Noir: The Western as 'Social Problem' Film

Book Review: Democracy's Prisoner

Book Review: The Politics of Immigration

CD Review: Pete Seeger: At 89

December 2008 Poetry

Table of Contents for December 2008 – January 2009 issue

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2005 – online /September – October 2005 /Sept. 26 – Oct. 2 Print | Send to friend

Book Review: Schwarzenegger Syndrome by Gary Indiana



click here for related stories: democracy matters
9-29-05, 9:02 am



COMPARING the destruction of the twin towers with the Reichstag fire is not likely to win you any accolades in US government circles, but then Gary Indiana is not out to win praise from them.

This slim volume is a rhetorical tour de force, a diatribe of barbed wit and political acumen, meticulously attacking the neocon US, its brutality, corruption, fundamentalist insanity and democratic deficit.

Indiana is a highly intelligent observer who cuts though the subterfuge and the cosmetic bloom of health to reveal the rotting flesh beneath.

A testosterone-fuelled, muscle-bound movie star is elected governor of California - the most populous US state and with the sixth largest economy in the world.

This is democracy, Hollywood-style. You couldn't satirise such a process. It is already a grotesque caricature of capitalism taken to its ludicrous extreme.

A pea-brained icon for the bodily inadequate and mentally challenged is marketed as a capable politician able to solve society's woes.

Like Conan the Barbarian or Terminator I and II, he will wipe out health-care worries, poverty and the energy crisis with his sci-fi laser guns. Welcome to a tinsel town dream world.


Schwarzenegger plays the dream for all that it's worth. He is the young immigrant, fleeing a post-nazi Austria under constant threat from Soviet tanks and "socialist" governments.

In the land of the free, no dream is unrealisable.

This one-time small-town body builder was catapulted to stardom as a pneumatically inflated screen hero in second-rate sci-fi fantasies.

And, now, he has been politically inflated too, by a supine press controlled by big business and an electorate conned by glitz rather than policies.

As has been cynically remarked, politics is showbiz for ugly people, but, now, we have the "beautiful people" taking over this stage too.

When politics becomes celebrity and spin, democracy becomes an empty concept.

Warren Beatty's film Bulworth, which had a similar scenario, was meant as a satire, but reality, as Indiana demonstrates, has left it standing.

He has done a wonderful job in peeling off the layers of packaging from US Democracy Inc and exposing the Californian gubernatorial election for what it was - a travesty of democracy.

He gives us a whole number of interesting and unsavoury facts, which the local press by and large chose to ignore, no doubt following Ronald Reagan's philosophy expressed in his memorable words. "Facts are stupid things."

Schwarzenegger Syndrome by Gary Indiana (New Press)

From Morning Star



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