|
|
RANT ARCHIVE 8:
_________________________________________________
Taken from www.badreligion.com/ without permission
A PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT TO DISCREDIT THE NONSENSE OF THE HOLIER-THAN-THOU-PUNKER-THAN-THOU-LOOK-AT-ME IDIOTS
A PUNK MANIFESTO by Greg Graffin I have never owned a record label, nor directed a
successful merchandise company, so I don't pretend to be an expert on
marketing. I have evolved through my craft as a songwriter, but others
have labeled it and marketed it and made it neat for consumption. Although I have made money from Punk, it is a modest
amount when one considers the bounty that has been bestowed on the
companies that promote Punk as some sort of a product to be ingested.
It has always been my way to de-value the fashionable, light-hearted,
impulsive traits that people associate with Punk, because Punk is more
than that, so much more that those elements become trivial in the
light of human experience that all punkers share. Since it has been a part of me for over half of my
life, I think the time has come to attempt a definition, and in the
process defend, this persistent social phenomenon known as Punk. It is
astounding that something with so much emotional and trans- cultural
depth has gone without definition for so long, for the roots of Punk
run deeper, and go back in history farther than imagined. Even in the last two decades, it is difficult to
find any analysis of the influential effect that Punk Rock had on Pop
Music and youth culture. And rarer still are essays detailing the
emotional and intellectual undercurrents that drive the more overt
fashion statements that most people attribute to Punk. These are some of the wants that compelled me to
write this. If my attempt offends the purists, collapses the secrecy
of a closed society, promotes confidence in skeptical inquiry,
provokes deeper thought, and decodes irony, then I have done my job
and those who feel slighted might recognize the triviality of their
position. For I have nothing to promote but my observations on a
sub-culture that has grown to global proportions, and through visiting
much of it, I have found threads of common thought everywhere. Common thought processes are what determine the
ideology that binds people together into a community. There is desire
among Punks to be a community, but there needs to be some shape
imparted on the foundations of the punk ideology, and where it comes
from. The current Punk stereotype is scarred by mass-marketing and an
unfortunate emphasis on style over substance. But these ills don't destroy the Punk sentiment,
they merely confound the education of the new generations of people
who know they are punk, but don't know what it means. It is a long
road to understand what it means. This essay is part of the process. PUNKS ARE NOT BEASTS Punk is a reflection of what it means to be human.
What separates us from other animals? Our ability to recognize
ourselves and express our own genetic uniqueness. Ironically, the
commonly held view, among the marketeers and publicity engines,
stresses the "animalistic", "primitive" nature of
punks and their music. They assume that violence is a key ingredient in
punk music, and this assumption is easily perpetuated because it is
easy to market violence and news items about violence always get
column space. This focus on violence misses a key element of what Punk
is all about: PUNK IS: the personal expression of uniqueness that
comes from the experiences of growing up in touch with our human
ability to reason and ask questions. Violence is neither common in, nor unique to punk.
When it does manifest itself it is due to things unrelated to the punk
ideal. Consider for example the common story of a fight at a high
school between a punk and a jock football player. The football player
and his cohort do not accept or value the punk as a real person.
Rather, they use him as a vitriol receptacle, daily taunting,
provoking, and embarrassing him, which of course is no more than a
reflection of their own insecurities. One day, the punk has had enough and he clobbers the
football captain in the hallway. The teachers of course expell the
punk and cite his poor hairstyle and shabby clothing as evidence that
he is a violent, uncontrollable no-good. The community newspaper reads
"Hallway Beating Re-affirms that Violence is a Way of Life Among
Punk Rockers". Spontaneous anger at not being accepted as a real
person is not unique to punkers. This reaction is due to being human,
and anybody would react in anger regardless of their sub- cultural, or
social affiliation if they felt de- valued and useless. Sadly, there
are plenty of examples of violence among punks. There are glaring
examples of misguided people who call themselves punks too. But anger
and violence are not punk traits, in fact, they have no place in the
punk ideal. Anger and violence are not the glue that holds the punk
community together. IN UNIQUENESS IS THE PRESERVATION OF MANKIND Nature bestowed on us the genetic backbone of what
punk is all about. There are roughly 80,000 genes in the human genome,
and there are roughly 6 billion people carrying that genetic
compliment. The chances of two people carrying the same genome are so
small as to be almost beyond comprehension (the odds are essentially
½ 80,000 times the number of possible people you can meet and mate
with in a lifetime! A practical impossibility) The genes we carry play a major role in determining
our behavior and outlook on life. That is why we have the gift of
uniqueness, because no one else has the same set of genes controlling
their view of the world. Of course cultural factors play the other
major role, and these can have a more homogenizing effect on behavior
and world-view. For example, an entire working-class town might have
15,000 residents who are raised with the same ideals, work at the same
factories, go to the same schools, shop at the same stores, and like
the same sports teams. As their children develop, there is a constant
interaction of opposite forces between the social imprinting their
culture imparts and the genetic expression of uniqueness. Those who lose touch with their nature become
society's robots, whereas those who denounce their social development
become vagrant animals. Punk stands for a desire to walk the line in
between these two extremes with masterful precision. Punks want to
express their own unique nature, while at the same time want to
embrace the communal aspects of their cookie-cutter upbringing. The social connection they have is based on a desire
to understand each other's unique view of the world. Punk
"scenes" are social places where those views are accepted,
sometimes adopted, sometimes discarded, but always tolerated and
respected. PUNK IS: a movement that serves to refute social
attitudes that have been perpetuated through willful ignorance of
human nature. Because it depends on tolerance and shuns denial,
Punk is open to all humans. There is an elegant parallel between
Punk's dependence on unique views and behaviors and our own natural
genetic predisposition toward uniqueness. THE BATTLE OF FEAR AND RATIONALITY The compulsion to conform is a powerful side-effect
of civilized life. We are all taught to respect the views of our
elders, and later when we realize that they are just dogmatic
opinions, we are taught not to make a commotion by asking difficult
questions. Many just go along with the prevailing notions and never
express their own views, which is analogous to a premature death of
the individual. Our species is unique in the ability to recognize
and express the self, and not exercising this biological function goes
against the natural selection gradient that created it in the first
place. This complacency combats a fear of failure. It is easy to assume that if everyone else is doing
something, then there is no way to fail if you just go along with it.
Cattle and flocks of geese can probably recognize this advantage. But
the entire human race could fail because of this mentality. Thinking and acting in a direction against the
current of popular opinion is critical to human advancement, and a
potent manifestation of Punk. If an issue or phenomenon is found to be
true only because other people say it is so, then it is a Punk's job
to look for a better solution, or at least find an independent
variable that confirms the held view (sometimes the popular view is
just a reflection of human nature, Punks don't live in denial of
this). This ability to go against the grain was a major
part of the greatest advances in human thinking throughout history.
The entire Enlightenment period was characterized by ideas that
shunned the dogma of the time, only to reveal truths in nature and
human existence that all people can observe, and that are still with
us today. Galileo fought the church, the church won the
battle, by putting him in jail for life, but ultimately lost the war;
few people today believe that the sun orbits around the earth, and
thus God didn't create the earth as the center of the universe.
Francis Bacon insisted that human destiny is equal to understanding.
If we deny this fundamental principle of what it means to be human, he
reasoned, then we descend into the depths of mere barbarism. Charles Darwin, wrote after the heyday of the
Enlightenment, he nonetheless was directly influenced by its
tradition, was trained as a theologian and yet still was driven to
understand the underlying order that connected biological species he
observed in his travels. His views threw into question many of the
Bible's tenets, yet his reasoning was sound, and through a process of
self-improvement (the struggle in his own mind to understand) he
improved mankind by establishing a new benchmark of human knowledge. The dogma of the church was further marginalized.
The fear of repercussion from the church was overshadowed by the wave
of understanding that his views created in people, and by the truth to
his observations. The modern-day Punk thought process, driven by this
desire to understand, is a carbon-copy of the Enlightenment tradition.
The fact that so many historical examples exist that reveal a will to
destroy dogma leads to a powerful tenet: It is a natural trait of
civilized humans to be original. The fact that uniqueness is so rare
reveals that our nature is stifled by an equally potent opposing
force: fear. PUNK IS: a process of questioning and commitment to
understanding that results in self-progress, and by extrapolation,
could lead to social progress. If enough people feel free, and are encouraged to
use their skills of observation and reason, grand truths will emerge.
These truths are acknowledged and accepted not because they were
force-fed by some totalitarian entity, but because everyone has a
similar experience when observing them. The fact that Punks can relate to one another on
issues of prejudice comes from a shared experience of being treated
poorly by people who don't want them around. Each has his/her own
experience of being shunned, and each can relate to another's story of
alienation without some kind of adherence to a code of behavior. The truth of prejudice is derived from the
experience they all share, not from a written formula or constitution
they have to abide by. Punks learn from this experience that prejudice
is wrong, it is a principle they live by; they didn't learn it from a
textbook. Without striving to understand, and provoking the held
beliefs, the truth remains shrouded behind custom, inactivity, and
prescriptive ideology. WHAT IS TRUTH? Philosophers distinguish between capital
"T" truth and truth with a small "t". Punks deny
the former. Truth with a capital "T" assumes that
there is an order prescribed by some transcendental being. That is to
say that truth comes ultimately from God, who had a plan for
everything when he created the universe. Little "t" truth is that which we figure
out for ourselves, and which we all can agree upon due to similar
experience and observations of the world. It is also known as
objective truth, from within ourselves, revealed here on this earth;
as opposed to big T truth, which comes from outside and is projected
down to us, specifically for us to follow. Morality need not be thought of as a product only of
big "T" truth. Objective truth lends itself just as readily
to a moralistic, spiritual culture. PUNK IS: a belief that this world is what we make of
it, truth comes from our understanding of the way things are, not from
the blind adherence to prescriptions about the way things should be. Punk's dependence on objective truth comes from the
shared experience of going against the grain. Anyone who has stood out
in a crowd feels the truth of the experience. No one had to write a
doctrine in order for the outcast to understand what it meant to be
different. The truth was plain enough, and that truth could be
understood and agreed upon by all those who shared a common
experience. WHAT IS FEAR? The fears that drive people to conform have caused
dismal periods in human history. The so-called Dark Ages, were
tranquil and without upheaval, but also dismally quiet and pestilent,
nary a contrasting view to be found. The pseudo-comfort and
tranquility that the people of the Dark Ages experienced, by
conforming to a rigidly enforced bureaucracy enforced by the king and
church, was masked entirely by the misery they had to endure in their
day to day life. Life is easy as a peasant, no direction, no purpose,
just produce more goods and offspring for the benefit of the king. But
using fear to control peasants (or modern-day blue-collar workers for
that matter) is just a short-term foul exercise, because peasants have
the same mental equipment as the royalty. The deeply ingrained biological traits of
self-recognition and the desire to express the self cannot be quashed
for long. Eventually peasants realize that life without the practice
of reason is as good as being a farm animal. Being controlled by fear
is the same as being biologically inert, unable to take part in the
human drama, merely wasting away. The fear that controls human behavior is learned. It
is different from the immediate, reflexive, run-away-from-the-
nasty-stimulus response that other creatures employ to stay alive. We
have motor reflexes like these as well, but fear of failure, and fear
of speaking out come from the limbic system. The limbic system is a network of neurons in our
brain that control our most deep-seated emotions. It connects two
parts of the brain together: the midbrain, where sensory information
is sent (i.e. sight and hearing stimuli) and the forebrain, where that
information is processed. Although the forebrain has been around for
at least 480 million years (it was present in the earliest
vertebrates), it evolved special functions with the advent of
humankind. A specialized portion of the forebrain, called the
cerebral cortex, is highly developed in humans. 95% of our cerebral
cortex is responsible for associative mental activities like
contemplation and planning. The other 5% is responsible for processing
motor and sensory information. By comparison, a mouse (also considered a higher
vertebrate), has a cerebral cortex with only 5% of its neurons devoted
to associative functions, while 95% are devoted to motor and sensory
fuctions. The highly developed limbic system is at the core of
what it means to be human. We differ from other animals in the amount
of time we spend planning, contemplating, and expressing ourselves.
Our limbic system is very powerful. It can over-ride primitive
emotions, and suppress deep desires. Anyone who has ever seen a sad movie with friends,
and willfully held back tears because they didn't want their friends
to see them crying, employed the power of their limbic system. They
contemplated the repercussions of their friends reaction to crying,
and shut off the emotional cascade that would have brought the tears. In the same way that rationality is the product of
the limbic system, fear is also centered in the same neurons of the
limbic system. Fear is usually rational behavior, based on irrational
thoughts, and it can freeze the processing power of the cerebral
cortex. Denial and fear go hand in hand, and both are examples of how
our limbic system can suppress obvious stimuli and promote behavior
that is safe and conforming. The limbic system is like any other organ in the
sense that it can operate unchecked to produce detrimental results.
Being in touch with our bodies leads to overall general health, and
the limbic system needs constant attention in order to master it. To
overcome fear, one needs to be in touch with their limbic system, and
recognize when it is suppressing the obvious. Etiquette and "being nice" are forms of
limbic-system repression, necessary at times, but ultimately demeaning
of human originality. Lying is the ultimate form of limbic-system
repression. It is a denial of the obvious. Truth-tellers, those who
are authentic and trustworthy, have learned to master their limbic
system. They recognize the desire to lie, but rationalize the futility
of advocating something that is not true. Liars, on the other hand, are slaves to their limbic
system, out of touch with their most basic mental capacities. Their
behavior is guarded and shifty because they let their flawed
reasoning, to cover up the obvious, control their entire makeup. They
eventually have to give in to the truth and concede defeat, but only
after every possible avenue of deception and twisted logic has been
advocated in the interest of hiding their fear. Politicians, Clergymen, Business leaders, and Judges
are masters of twisted logic and promotion of fear. They make good
intellectual targets for Punkers because they don't respect people who
have learned to master their limbic systems. And Punkers are not
afraid to point out that which is obvious, even if it means their
social status might be jeopardized. PUNK IS: the constant struggle against fear of
social repercussions. THE PUNK MOVEMENT I have tried to enumerate some of the factors that
make Punk a movement, in the cultural sense. The typical stereotype of
a feeble-minded ruffian vandalizing, destroying, stealing, fighting,
or arguing in the name of some empty, short-lived cause is no more
punk than the pretty-face-empty-head image of today's pop stars. Because it is so easy for record companies to sell
images of violence, sex, and self-importance, many bands have taken
the bait and portrayed themselves as Punks, without realizing that
they were actually perpetuating a stereotype of conformity that is
wholly un-punk. The "come join us" attitude that seeks to
attract followers, usually results in a rabble of weak people who
think that their power lies in the large numbers of like-minded clones
they have compiled. There is no strength in numbers however, if the
people are glued together by a short-sighted, self-serving,
fear-induced mantra that promotes factions and exclusionary
principles. Strong ideologies don't require a mob, they persist
through time, and never go away, because they are intimately connected
to our biology. They are part of what it means to exist as Homo
sapiens. Punk typifies that tradition. It is a movement of epic proportions, that
transcends the immediacy of the here-and- now, because it is, was, and
always will be there-and-forever, as long as humans walk the earth. As we enter a new era in the voracious march of
culture, Punks will have their day. The internet has allowed people to
communicate directly once again. On the web, human behavior is
interactive, like it was before the advent of mass-media. People now focus on ideological discussions and
lifestyle issues, as opposed to the classic 20th century behavior of
closing oneself off from cohorts, and adhering to a network's, or
commercial's prescriptive code of acceptable behavior. The lies, and
mysteries of elitism will erode quickly as the global conversation
that transpires daily on the web invades more people's lives. The world population will be more receptive to
alternative ideologies because they will be creating them. People will
be less receptive to ideologies of out- dated institutions because the
holes and flaws in their logic will be ever more amplified when they
are broadcast instantly around the world as they become revealed. The "Strength-In-Understanding", and
"Knowledge-Is-Power" ethics that Punks maintain will become
the norm. The rigidity, brutishness, and futility of secret agendas
will be made obvious, paving the way to an appreciation of human
uniqueness, and a new era of originality. WHO IS PUNK? Everyone has the potential to be punk. It is much
harder for someone who comes from a placid, un-challenging, ignorant
upbringing, because they don't see the value in questioning or
provoking the institutions that gave them such tranquility. But such
examples of carefree existence are rare in today's shrinking world. Eternal questions still burn in the minds of most
people. What it means to be human is becoming more clear every decade.
Sometimes, people are trained to follow the safe path to an early
grave by consuming and repeating the dogma of a fearful aristocracy. On the other hand, the human spirit is hard to kill.
Punk is a microcosm of the human spirit. Punks succeed with their
minds, not their brute force. They advance society by their diversity,
not their conformity. They motivate others by inclusion, not
domination.
|
|
_________________________________________________________________ NOFX's Fat Mike talks politics http://www.csulb.edu/~univmag/ www.csulb.edu/~univmag/archives/2003/spring/articles/v7n7-special.shtml Hello people. My name is Fat Mike and someone at this publication asked me to write a column. I told them that I'm not a writer. Evidently they didn't care cuz here I am. The time is 1:11 a.m. That's a pretty cool time. I'm not drunk, although I had five beers earlier while watching the old punk movie "Suburbia" at a friend's house. Before the movie we were drinking and talking about the war. It's what San Franciscans do on Tuesday nights. We were discussing nuclear proliferation and whether or not it's better to have mutually assured destruction with many nations having nukes, or is it better if only the major super powers have them. It was your standard pseudo-intellectual drivel that makes you feel like your college debate class really paid off. Personally, I would feel a lot safer if only a few nations had nukes, but this is not the point. The point is, that we were minding our own business, when this girl sits down (I think she had one too many espresso shots) and starts to give us her opinion on the Middle East crisis. "You know," she says, "all it takes is one cap full of chemical weapons placed in New York City, and everyone there will be dead. Saddam and Al Qaida are going to attack the U.S. again sooner or later, so we might as well get him out of there now before another attack. I'm against the war, you know, but I would just feel better if Saddam Hussein was not around any longer." I listened politely. All I could think about was, I hope the expression on my face wasn't too strange, cuz I wasn't quite sure what sort of emotions I was feeling. I think I was smiling. That's weird. Why would I be smiling? I went to this girl's graduation six years ago. This girl was a fucking college graduate, and she was speaking as if she just got off work at the dairy in Shitown, Iowa. I didn't know where to start. Suddenly, I didn't start. I decided not to start. Then it came to me. It's not her fault. This is an educated woman living in San Francisco and she's buying the shit we hear on the news like everybody else in this country. It's not her fault. She's trying to oppose the war, but she keeps hearing things on television that kind of make sense to her. Why should she doubt CNN? They're the biggest and most respected news agency in the world. They've got Wolf Blitzer. Why would any normal citizen of this country suspect the media is not telling the whole story? You don't grow up thinking that. You watch the news with your grandfather and see Nixon resign from office. You watch the news with your first girlfriend and witness Hinckley shoot Reagan. You watch the news with your dorm roommate and see Neil Bush go to jail for selling hundreds of millions of dollars worth of junk bonds. You think to yourself, it's a good thing the media is out there to report all these evil doers doing their evil deeds. It's a good thing that Woodward and Bernstein (Redford and Hoffman) were there to tell us the truth. It's a good thing. It's a good, good thing. Now when you see an AOL poll saying that 76 percent of Americans support the war, you'll understand. When you see Michael Moore get booed at the Oscars, you'll understand. When you see a war rally in Concord, you'll understand. It's not that Americans are inherently stupid, it's that they are inherently gullible. Not only that, but it's also very soothing to live in a state of denial. Life is a hell of a lot easier if you believe. Believing in God, believing in democracy, believing in the president, believing in the news, it's all so easy. You really can't blame most Americans for doing it. Lies feel great; it's truth that hurts like a bitch. It's truth that makes your stomach churn. It's truth that keeps you up all night. It's truth that makes you wanna drink that last beer. Americans don't want the truth and our government is not going to make them listen to it. The owners of this country want the renters to be happy and that's just how it goes. That's why Clear Channel (the corporation that owns over 1200 radio stations and 39 television stations since the Republican Congress deregulated the industry) is organizing war rallies. War rallies are much more pleasant than protests. That's why none of the major network news stations will air the execution of American soldiers in Iraq. It's a bit unsettling. That's why I was smiling at the girl in the bar. Who am I to ruin her good time? Why should I throw a bunch of truth poop on her new dress? I'll just keep smiling, drink another beer, and go watch my punk rock movie. Not likely. No, I had to tell her that she didn't know shit. I had to tell her that Saddam and Al Qaida fucking hate each other, and that Saddam fought Muslim fundamentalists for eight years in Iran. I had to tell her that Osama bin Laden has called Hussein an apostate, somebody who needs to be killed. I had to tell her that although Saddam is a fucking asshole maniacal murderer, destroying his country while uniting the world against us was definitely not going to make her safer. I also added that according to Scott Ritter, ex-U.N. weapons inspector, Iraq has no known chemical weapons that are still good. Every factory that could produce those kinds of weapons were shut down by the U.N. in the '90s and all the biological and chemical weapons that Iraq bought from the United States in the '80s have a shelf life of three to five years max. I told her that Iraq is not a real threat to the United States, but this war is a real threat. Oh, and I also said the only reason you say you're against the war is so you wont get kicked out of your thespian friend's ecstasy party. Nice. Am I fucking happy now? Now there's one more person who I've turned into a sleepless alcoholic with a tummy ache. Too fucking bad. Somebody's got to be the bearer of bad news, and I've got a lot of free time on my hands. If the press isn't going to do it, I will. I'll write columns for student papers. I'll tell people to check out indymedia.org. I'll start a Web site called punkvoter.com. Misery loves company, and I'm aiming on bumming out a few hundred thousand more Americans. That's what being American is all about. Bumming other people out. It's our history. It's our tradition. It's our legacy. So look out people, I've got a stoke extinguisher that's full of facts. Truth hurts and it's coming your way. You might as well accept it now, cuz sooner or later it's gonna find you and it won't be pleasant.
|