[Note for TomDispatch Readers: As I
suggest in my introduction, this is an increasingly dystopian moment in
America, which makes it the perfect moment to remind TD readers
that, for a contribution of $100 or more ($125 if you live outside the
United States), you can get a signed, personalized copy of John Feffer’s
riveting dystopian novel, Splinterlands. (Check out our donation page for the details.) And for just a few bucks, you can get
an unsigned but no less riveting copy of that book, which Barbara
Ehrenreich -- in a comment that has only become more apt by the week -- called “a startling portrait of a post-apocalyptic tomorrow that is fast becoming a reality today.” Tom]
If you happen to be a dystopian novelist, as TomDispatch regular
John Feffer is, then you’re in business these days. Back in 2015, when
Donald Trump's campaign for the presidency was just heating up and
Feffer was writing Splinterlands,
his vivid look back from the year 2050 at our shattered planet, he
named the massive storm that would devastate Washington in 2022
“Hurricane Donald” -- and you can’t be more predictively on the mark or
dystopian than that. Now, in August 2017, armed bands of neo-Nazis and
white supremacists are in our streets and we have a president whose
deepest desire seems to be to support them (because they support him).
Meanwhile, the generals from our losing wars are manning the ramparts of
an embattled administration (and being treated by the mainstream media
as the “adults in the room”) and an unpredictable man-child
is in the White House. In other words, the material is clearly going to
be there for Feffer -- in his ordinary life a thoughtful columnist at Foreign Policy in Focus -- to devote the rest of his time to dystopian fiction.
And that’s without even mentioning America’s dystopian Asian wars of
the past, present, and possibly future. They undoubtedly deserve their
own grim set of novels, starting with the bloody and brutal
American conquest of the Philippines. Included would also have to be
the Pacific War against Japan that ended when a new weapon of
unimaginable power obliterated two Japanese cities and significant parts
of their populations, leaving humanity to face the possibility of its
own future obliteration (and you can’t get more dystopian than that);
the Vietnam War that left millions of Vietnamese, Laotians, and Cambodians (and 58,000 Americans) dead; a quarter century of Afghan Wars (the second of them now the longest in American history); and last but hardly least, the Korean War, which began in June 1950 and halted in 1953, after millions of Koreans (and 36,000 Americans) had died. By the estimate
of the then-head of the U.S. Strategic Air Command, 20% of the North’s
population died in those years under a rain of 635,000 tons of bombs and
32,557 tons of napalm (more than was used against the Japanese in World
War II), while the North was burned to a crisp without atomic weapons.
In a strange sense, that conflict became America’s first permanent war since no peace treaty was ever agreed to -- though all American wars now seem to be permanent. Of course, with Donald Trump’s recent impromptu comment
that North Korean threats “will be met with fire, fury, and frankly
power the likes of which this world has never seen before,” an obvious
nuclear reference made on the eve of the 72nd anniversary of the atomic
bombing of Nagasaki,
a future Korean inferno is once again on many minds here and elsewhere,
John Feffer’s included. And yet he suggests that, if only American
officialdom could rid itself of its own dystopian turn of mind when it
comes to North Korea, there might be a perfectly peaceable and
reasonable way forward. If only indeed... Tom
Trump and the Geopolitics of Crazy
The Times They Are A-Changin’ in North Korea
By John Feffer
Read on at Tomdispatch
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Interessanter Vergleich mit dem ARD Presseclub zum gleichen Thema!
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