MIAMI
AND THE SIEGE OF CHICAGO - NORMAN MAILER
First published in 1968, Miami And The Siege Of Chicago sees
Norman Mailer reporting back from the American political front line
of that same year where he regrets to inform us that not all is well
in the land of the free and the home of the brave.
For the first part of the book he's at the Republican Convention in
Miami where it's a three-pronged contest between Rockefeller, Nixon
and Reagan over who will be the candidate to lead the Republicans in
the upcoming Presidential election. Even in those early days, Mailer
is able to sound out the appeal of Reagan and he nails him pretty
accurately. Nixon, however, is a whole other kettle of fish.
They didn't call Nixon 'Tricky Dick' for nothing and Mailer spends a
fair amount of thought trying to get behind the public persona.
Mailer's no fan of Nixon (and indeed, is no fan of any of them
particularly) but he soon comes to realise that the smart money
should be laid on him to win. When it comes to Nixon finally
delivering his speech to the Republican faithful, Mailer quotes it
extensively and it's a no brainer. It's a brilliant speech and how
could anyone fail to vote for the person delivering it?
We all now know, of course, that Nixon was selling snake oil and it
was all smoke and mirrors. At least Reagan was being upfront about
his intentions even if delivered in that good ol' boy
gee-whizz-ain't-it-grand-down-on-the-farm manner that years later
would appeal to so many. And Nixon was a war criminal also, some say.
Well, we know that Kissinger was but did Nixon actually do anything
worse than any other President that preceded him? In the cold light
of day, aren't all American Presidents war criminals to some degree?
What is apparent from Mailer's report, however, is that the Miami
Republican Convention of that year is weirdness unbound, unfettered
and on the rampage. It's a sure sign that things are getting strange
when baby elephants dressed in tutus start to get flown in from
California. A Salvador Dali garden party has nothing on it.
The significance of all this and the significance of Mailer's book to
this day and age is in the way that the seeds from which today's
America has grown are on full display here. They've all been planted
and the packets from which they've been taken have been tied onto
little sticks showing exactly what has been sown and where. As Obama
pointed out, Trump didn't just come out of nowhere. He's been a long
time coming. Indeed, every American President since Nixon has enabled
the triumph of someone like Trump - even Obama himself.
For the second part of the book it's over to Chicago for the
Democratic Convention of that same year where all kinds of
back-handers and double dealings are taking place as the Democrats
decide on who's going to replace Lyndon Johnson. According to Mailer,
however, that decision has already been made in private back rooms
and now it's just for the charade to be played out among the
delegates.
Outside on the streets an altogether different election is taking
place involving a pig by the name of Pigasus being nominated for the
role of leader by thousands of demonstrators. It's out on the streets
where the real story is though Mailer smells trouble - serious
trouble - and on looking at the hippy hordes descending upon Chicago
to protest the Vietnam war he wonders to himself: 'Were these odd
unkempt children the sort of troops with whom one wished to enter
battle?'
On the instruction of the Mayor of Chicago the police come down
heavy, exhibiting a very liberal use of tear gas and baton upon
protesters, the press, and celebrity spokespersons including Allen
Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Jean Genet alike. The police simply
don't care whom they assault because as Mailer points out, if the
protesters are the voice of the revolution then the batons of the
police are the voice of the counter-revolution.
The violence meted out by the police is harsh and merciless, and even
at times inexplicable. Mailer relays one such incident of many that
underlines this: A phalanx of police charge into a group of elderly
bystanders, women, children and reporters who are standing behind
police lines in front of the restaurant window of a Hilton Hotel,
doing nothing more than just watching the demonstrators across the
street. Terrified by the sudden, unprovoked and violent assault upon
them, they fall back against the window causing it to shatter and
they all tumble backwards through the broken shards of glass. The
police then climb through the broken window and begin beating them
further before arresting them all.
In the face of such violence, Allen Ginsberg's advice to the
demonstrators to chant "Om" seems oddly insufficient.
Others of a more militant bent such as Jerry Rubin and the Yippies,
however, are willing to fight back and their ranks are swelled by
many who having had their pacifism beaten out of them by the police
see no other option but to take up bottles and bricks and start
building barricades.
Of course, up against the military might of the police and the
National Guard the odds are stacked against them but rather than
conceding defeat and melting away into the shadows, the demonstrators
return again and again day after day in their bid to march upon the
Amphitheatre where the Democrats are holding their Convention. Mailer
comes to recognise the bravery of the demonstrators and concedes that
they are indeed fine troops, the sort that any general would be proud
to have. Even braver, possibly, than the troops out in Vietnam.
Mailer also concludes that come the Presidential election he'll not
be voting for anyone at all - neither Democrat or Republican -
because he's ended up throwing his lot in with the demonstrators and
those of the New Left. 'We may win, the others are so stupid.'
Mailer writes 'Heaven help us when we do.'
What goes around comes around. Swings and roundabouts. The world has
changed since 1968, for sure, but on reading Mailer's book it's
apparent how the battles remain the same. In a way it's almost a
valuable lesson in that we're stuck in a vicious circle that some
might even say is becoming ever more vicious. There's no obvious way
out, it would seem. Not through the ballot box, not through mass
actions and street protests and not through individual 'terrorist'
action. After decades of peaceful protest and innumerable violent
actions the same power structures remain, the same wars are waged,
and the same lives crushed before they even start. What to do is the
million dollar question and the answer (or at least today's answer -
tomorrow's might be different) is to do what you can, if you're so
inclined. It's really as very simple as that. Probably.
John
Serpico
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