Carlin
and Dogma
by
George Giles
by George Giles
DIGG THIS
The death of
comedian George Carlin came as a shock. Not because I knew him personally,
but as a visceral reaction to the end of an era, the era of my childhood.
I am a baby boomer, born in the 50's and coming of age in the 60's
and 70's. Sex, Drugs, Rock and Roll: that great cultural leap
off of the cliff like a horde of burnt out lemmings. This was
the age in which dogma was criticized and overthrown: mass protest
brought the Vietnam War to an end, women's liberation, and civil
rights stepped to the forefront of public consciousness. A vigilant
media, tired of the lies of Richard Nixon, effectively brought his Presidency
to an end. The state was staggered with body blows and sent reeling
against the ropes.
George Carlin
owed his livelihood to his unique ability in skewering the dogma
of conventional wisdom on prime time in front of millions. We all
knew what he was against, and as such he was one of us, a David
throwing rocks at Goliath. As a man of little formal education,
which is to say he did not have a PhD from an important school in
an important discipline, Carlin was able for more than 40 years
to identify the big lie and how it masquerades behind the mask of
scientistic and legalistic façade. Dogma to Carlin was a dragon
to be slain whenever and wherever it reared its noxious head.
The first step
to solution of a problem is identification, and George Carlin was
a master at identifying many of them. Carlin used humor as his primary
tool in ironic perception, and with that lever he pried open many
a mask over the façade of conventional wisdom. His cultural role
was not to solve problems, but to identify them. No matter how bad
things were he could always bring a smile and a laugh as one of
the benighted speaking his mind regardless. He kicked political
correctness right in the teeth while Bill Maher was still wearing
diapers.
My favorite
Carlin quote came from a monologue I watched in the 70's one night
at a friend’s house after a multi-hour skull-cracking study session
in Angell Hall.
"I love
people, I hate groups.
People are smart, groups are stupid."
~ George Carlin
These simple
words embodied Carlin's philosophy of opposition to the status quo,
the conventional wisdom. He rarely articulated who the enemy
was, since his audiences knew it a priori. For
baby boomers it was clear who it was, the man, the establishment. His
philosophy embodied all that economic freedom and individual
liberty enshrine. For Carlin individuals were sacrosanct and groups
to be despised.
Individuals
provide mankind faith, science, culture, music and philosophy.
Groups take it away with lies, deception, theft and murder. While
an avowed atheist he was, paradoxically, a man of deep
faith. Faith in the ability of the individual to create meaning
in life, despite one's brief duration of life, despite the opposition
of the privileged and the powerful. He stood on their stage and
spat right in their eye.
Carlin knew
that groups exist to imprison the individual, to place them in castes,
to assign them limited possibilities, to dull their senses into
acceptance of the inevitable, to use rape as the powerful
desire. He recognized that in groups we find the bestiality of primitive
man ascendant to run roughshod over the benighted masses. The cowardly
hide behind groups as protection against being held accountable
for their deviant behavior. During his professional career he saw
Richard Nixon pervert the mantle of the leader of the free world
for cynical personal ends. In the last decade of his career he saw
the draft-dodging duo of Bush II and Evil Dick Cheney reincarnated
as Nixon gone wild with an unlimited budget (4 trillion dollars
in fresh debt for the unborn) and a façade of legitimacy to
maim, crush or kill anyone desired.
Carlin railed
against war, poverty, racism, sexism, how the privileged dupe the
commoner in order to fleece them. He had no answers for these problems;
only a firm conviction that group dynamics keep these perversions
alive across the generations. The answer lies, where it has always
lain, in the politics of Eighteenth Century Jeffersonian Democracy,
that is to say, in the individual.
The world is
a grayer place without George Carlin in it. Still I take comfort
in the image of George Carlin standing with St. Peter in front of
the pearly gates keeping the assholes out.
June
26, 2008
George
Giles [send him mail] is
an Independent writer in Nashville, TN.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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