Ozzie and the Submissiveness Syndrome

by Paul Buchheit 
Ozzie Guillen may not fit any psychological profile. His 
outrageous comments coupled with his lofty status in the sports world 
seem to place him in his own standard deviation. But he's bowing down 
now, in a moment of adversity, to the impassioned opponents of socialism and 
the freedom to say something positive about it. He's acting like 
millions of other Americans conditioned to equate criticism of free 
market capitalism with a lack of patriotism.Ozzie Guillen, who yesterday came 
to apologize for comments he made about Castro.
"Benign envy," according to Princeton researcher Susan T. Fiske, is 
the act of longing for the status of another without wishing ill on that 
person. It is a feeling nurtured in the public by the 1%, through their 
self-promotion as American success stories, and by constant reminders 
of the superiority of individual initiative over government involvement. Much 
of America buys into it. Including Ozzie, who except for his 
position and salary would seem like a member of the 99%.
As a lifelong Chicagoan and White Sox fan, I love Ozzie Guillen. But 
it's disappointing to see him kneel like a penitent sinner at the 
capitalist altar. Understandably, it's getting scary for the people at 
the top. They need a submissive America. They need the masses to believe that 
anyone can make it with a little hard work, even though the facts 
and public sentiment are going against them. The U.S. now has one of the lowest 
levels of income mobility in the developed world. And a recent 
Pew Survey revealed that "conflicts between rich and poor now rank ahead of 
three other potential sources of group tension - between immigrants 
and the native born; between blacks and whites; and between young and 
old." As a result, Mitt Romney has to spin the debate to "the bitter 
politics of envy" to shame us all for questioning the job creators.
So if you're benignly envious of America's top "achievers," don't 
provoke the spirit of Milton Friedman with the suggestion that 
nationalized and social-oriented countries, like Venezuela and Cuba, 
might teach the unregulated capitalists a thing or two. Try to forget 
about the economic embargo imposed for 50 years against a destitute 
nation. Disregard a leader who, as Ozzie first noted, has survived a 
half-century of attempts to overthrow or sabotage or starve his country. And 
never mind that everyone from the European Union to the 
Organization of American States to the Pope has condemned the inhumane 
continuation of the economic sanctions.
It's a credit to the salesmanship of the 1% that to this day a 
majority of U.S. citizens support the Cuban embargo. Millions of 
Americans still buy into the blind allegiance of "freedom" embellished 
with an Ozzieish "everyone hates Castro." They reject political systems 
that support the needs of the 99%. They worship a system that gives 
almost all the money to the 1%.
A Texas academic study found that people "whose memories were 
triggered by the high-envy targets" suffered diminished cognitive 
abilities. That, assuredly, is the way our political and business 
leaders want to keep it. Paul Buchheit is a college teacher, an active member 
of US Uncut 
Chicago, founder and developer of social justice and educational 
websites (UsAgainstGreed.org, PayUpNow.org, RappingHistory.org), and the editor 
and main author of "American Wars: Illusions and Realities" (Clarity Press). He

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/04/11-0


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