Bono is a jerk!

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Bono is a jerk!

Postby American Dream » Mon Dec 27, 2010 9:59 am

http://www.ips-dc.org/blog/is_bono_dilu ... superclass

Is Bono Undermining His Activism by Hobnobbing With the Superclass?

December 25, 2010 · By Mark Engler


The impact of celebrity activists working within the system is limited.




Effective celebrity activists use their fame to bring attention and credibility to legitimate representatives of social movements.

That, in a nutshell, is my standard of celebrity activism done right. Ineffective celebrity activists...well, they do all sorts of things wrong. But, most fundamentally, they approach issues without any awareness of or connection to social movements. They might still have noble intentions, but they can end up being a net negative for social change efforts.

Coinciding with the thirtieth anniversary of John Lennon's death, Bill Easterly has published an interesting article in the Washington Post comparing the ex-Beatle's antiwar activism with the social engagement of U2's front man, Bono. Easterly writes:

For so many of my generation, growing up in the 1960s and 1970s, Lennon was a hero, not just for his music but for his fearless activism against the Vietnam War.

Is there a celebrity activist today who matches Lennon's impact and appeal? The closest counterpart to Lennon now is U2's Bono, another transcendent musical talent championing another cause: the battle against global poverty. But there is a fundamental difference between Lennon's activism and Bono's, and it underscores the sad evolution of celebrity activism in recent years. Lennon was a rebel. Bono is not.


Given our age of commodified dissent, I'm not interested in trying to determine who counts as truly rebellious and who doesn't. But I think Easterly makes some important points.

First, he notes that Lennon paid a real price for his antiwar stances. The FBI tracked his activities, and he fought for years with immigration officials in the Nixon administration who were set on deporting him from the United States. Bono, on the other hand, has turned up to dine in the White House, schmoozing with elites even while encouraging them to do more for the poor. In other words, his activism hasn't cost him much.

To me, this isn't a problem in and of itself. But it is a symptom of much larger shortcomings in Bono's approach. Rather than putting his focus on publicizing and legitimizing social movement leaders (those in the Jubilee debt relief movement, for example), Bono has put himself in a leadership role. He acts as a spokesperson, brandishes his supposed expertise, makes demands, negotiates, and accepts compromises. All these are things that should rightly be done by social movements and by representatives accountable to democratic structures within those movements. Ultimately these people should be accountable to those directly affected by the issue at hand. Absent any such structures, Bono has left himself vulnerable to cooptation.

Easterly describes Bono's model of activism as that of the "celebrity wonk":

[Lennon] was a moral crusader who challenged leaders whom he thought were doing wrong. Bono, by contrast, has become a sort of celebrity policy expert, supporting specific technical solutions to global poverty. He does not challenge power but rather embraces it; he is more likely to appear in photo ops with international political leaders—or to travel through Africa with a Treasury secretary—than he is to call them out in a meaningful way....

The singer appeared onstage with Bush at the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington in 2002 as the president pledged a $5 billion increase in foreign aid. In May of that year, Bono even toured Africa with Bush's first Treasury secretary, Paul O'Neill, fully aware that the administration was capitalizing on his celebrity.

"My job is to be used. I am here to be used," he told the Washington Post. "It's just, at what price? As I keep saying, I'm not a cheap date."

While Bono calls global poverty a moral wrong, he does not identify the wrongdoers. Instead, he buys into technocratic illusions about the issue without paying attention to who has power and who lacks it, who oppresses and who is oppressed. He runs with the crowd that believes ending poverty is a matter of technical expertise—doing things such as expanding food yields with nitrogen-fixing leguminous plants or solar-powered drip irrigation.

These are fine moves as far as they go, but why have Bono champion them? The technocratic approach puts him in the position of a wonk, not a dissident; an expert, not a crusader.


In celebrating Lennon, Easterly doesn't allow for the agency of social movements. Instead he valorizes the figure of the "dissident" who helps to shake things up and discourage "groupthink" among experts. "True dissidents claim no expertise," he writes; "they offer no 10-point plans to fix a problem. They are most effective when they simply assert that the status quo is morally wrong."

This is a pretty limited view of how activism functions, as well as of how art can contribute to the creation of critical social consciousness. But, putting that aside, Easterly correctly notes that Lennon was more successful than Bono in using his art (in this case, music) to directly support a cause. He writes, "In 1969 'Give Peace a Chance' became the anthem of the movement after half a million people sung along at a huge demonstration at the Washington Monument…[T]wo more songs released [in 1971]—'Imagine' and 'Happy Xmas (War Is Over)'—expanded his antiwar repertoire."

While I appreciate Lennon's artistic contributions, he would still not be my model for celebrity activism. That would be someone like Harry Belafonte, who was a steadfast supporter of the civil rights and anti-apartheid movements, among other causes. Even at the peak of his fame, Belafonte could be relied upon to turn out at rallies and lend his magnetism to events. In just one of many notable instances, he played an important role in bankrolling the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during 1964's Freedom Summer in Mississippi. Not only did his funding provide a lifeline for activists in the South, his ongoing presence with the civil rights movement helped make it a fashionable cause for other donors, volunteers, and public figures.

Now in his eighties and less well known than he was in the 1960s, Belafonte nevertheless remains active, advocating for the people of Haiti and speaking at the recent One Nation rally. All this has earned him a page of scorn on David Horowitz's DiscoverTheNetworks.org, a site dedicated to tracking and defaming the Left.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but looking at Horowitz's site, I notice that he didn't make a page for Bono.



Mark Engler is a senior analyst with Foreign Policy In Focus and author of How to Rule the World: The Coming Battle Over the Global Economy (Nation Books, 2008). He can be reached via the website http://www.DemocracyUprising.com
Last edited by American Dream on Mon Dec 27, 2010 10:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Bono is a Jerk!

Postby 82_28 » Mon Dec 27, 2010 10:16 am

Not to put too fine a point on it, but looking at Horowitz's site, I notice that he didn't make a page for Bono.


Touché.

I can't think of one U2 song that I don't turn off or change the channel or station from as soon as it comes on. Fuck, I hate U2.

The only thing I can bear by them is the impromptu Bloody Sunday video filmed at Red Rocks, but it has to be the video. Nature conspired to make quite the cinematic impression with that one.
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby Searcher08 » Mon Dec 27, 2010 11:07 am

I remember reading Damon Albarn from Blur talking about being a waiter at a restaurant in Notting Hill, before Blur became famous and about how Bono was an unreconstructed douche bag towards him and the other serving staff - the 'making peoples life hell because I can attitude'. Then when Blur became famous, he wanted to be all chummy.

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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby anothershamus » Mon Dec 27, 2010 1:08 pm

Didn't Bono have a charity that was rated the worst for actually giving money to the cause, it was like only 10% or something like that. I will look for the story.
)'(
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby Nordic » Mon Dec 27, 2010 1:09 pm

Just more gossip -- I've heard, from people who have worked with him, that Bono has a guy travel with him all the time who carries a briefcase just filled with different sunglasses, so that at any moment, Bono can satisfy his whim and change sunglasses.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Mon Dec 27, 2010 2:49 pm

Nordic wrote:Just more gossip -- I've heard, from people who have worked with him, that Bono has a guy travel with him all the time who carries a briefcase just filled with different sunglasses, so that at any moment, Bono can satisfy his whim and change sunglasses.


That is a flagrant and shameless abuse of a weed carrier.
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby wordspeak2 » Mon Dec 27, 2010 3:38 pm

Bono has been one of the greatest assets for global capitalism in the past twenty years. He says care about the poor- a lot of folks already do- and points us towards the solution, the orthodox capitalist institutions such as the World Bank, which exist to continue status quo poverty while pretending to alleviate it.

My only question is... I was listening to an old U2 album in the car recently (*please* don't ask me why)- "Rattle and Hum"- and with some of the lyrics and sentiment I noticed from Bono, I had to think, maybe this guy really did care vaguely about social justice, and he was co-opted. And, of course, I think that's true- but he only cared as much as a flaming egotist liberal care, versus a real progressive, and so it was incredibly easy on the part of elites to "co-opt" him into the stooge he is. Man, he's evil. What on Earth did I find appealing in that music at fourteen years old?
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby sunny » Mon Dec 27, 2010 3:41 pm

Image
Choose love
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby beeline » Mon Dec 27, 2010 3:46 pm

wordspeak2 wrote:Bono has been one of the greatest assets for global capitalism in the past twenty years. He says care about the poor- a lot of folks already do- and points us towards the solution, the orthodox capitalist institutions such as the World Bank, which exist to continue status quo poverty while pretending to alleviate it.

My only question is... I was listening to an old U2 album in the car recently (*please* don't ask me why)- "Rattle and Hum"- and with some of the lyrics and sentiment I noticed from Bono, I had to think, maybe this guy really did care vaguely about social justice, and he was co-opted. And, of course, I think that's true- but he only cared as much as a flaming egotist liberal care, versus a real progressive, and so it was incredibly easy on the part of elites to "co-opt" him into the stooge he is. Man, he's evil. What on Earth did I find appealing in that music at fourteen years old?


I think there was a point when he actually gave a shit--up to and including the Unforgettable Fire era--he was responsible for getting a lot of fans involved in Amnesty International, for instance. I think after that, with the success of the Joshua Tree album and tour, Bono got seduced by his own narcissism. I'll never forget the moment I started to dislike him, during the tour for Actung Baby, during one song he brought out a mirror and sung to himself. What a dick.
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby ninakat » Mon Dec 27, 2010 4:01 pm

I liked Boy, but that was before I grew up. And woke up.

Searcher08, loved the Bill Bailey clip. Ha!
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby Nordic » Mon Dec 27, 2010 4:19 pm

sunny wrote:Image


Looking weirdly like Robin Williams.
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby compared2what? » Mon Dec 27, 2010 5:35 pm

anothershamus wrote:Didn't Bono have a charity that was rated the worst for actually giving money to the cause, it was like only 10% or something like that. I will look for the story.


He and Bobby Shriver have a public charity (currently called the ONE Campaign) that wins my personal award for Most Horrendous Financials That Are Apparently Fully in Compliance with the Internal Revenue Code That I've Ever Seen in My Life.

But they also used to have another exempt organization (the DATA Foundation, acronym for Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa, IIRC). And IIRC, that one was a private foundation rather than a public charity. In which case, it would only have been required to pay out grants in an amount equal to or greater than five percent of its assets. Annually, in case that's not obvious.

Which makes a lot of private foundations not so very philanthropic, although they are truly awesome and excellent places for gazillionaires to plant their securities and then just sit back and watch them grow. I'm talking about the kind of capital you don't spend in any conventional sense anyway, obviously. Investment capital, basically. I mean, a board of directors can deploy that in the marketplace in ways that benefit specific private interests personally in any number of ways just as well as anyone else can. For example.

Might that have been what you were thinking of?

Though truth be told, the One Campaign's horrendousness, short version, isn't all that different: Tons of money spent on consulting, media and salaries, and very, very little directly on the needs of the needy. I'd be a little surprised if it was reported that way, though. Because the consulting, media and salaries count as program expenditures, which is the only number anyone ever looks at. And at a glance, theirs would look like they added up to a respectable number, relative to revenues and assets.

He and Shriver also have an exempt social welfare/advocacy organization (ONE Action) that shares staff and resources with the charity, which is technically okay although practically it's often what you'd pretty much have to call...Hmm. Let me think. Oh, yeah. POLITICAL LOBBYING.

That's what it looks like the charity mostly does (in effect), too. For that matter. There really oughta be a law.
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby beeline » Mon Dec 27, 2010 5:43 pm

.

C2W?'s insight is precisely why I don't give to charities unless I personally know someone involved, i.e. Project HOME, which is run by Sister Mary Scullion here in Philly. Well worth any donation.
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Mon Dec 27, 2010 6:48 pm

I still listen to U2 (ok I haven't for years but I'm gonna now.)

Seriously tho, Bono probably hasn't stopped snorting coke since 1988, does anyone think anything he says or does ever isn't the product of an ego tripping tosspot who still hasn't grown up? Even the title of this thread is wrong on that score cos the word masturbating is missing.

I blame that Live Aid bullshit myself. Sure it was one of the first times the entire was synchronised around a party but people were saying stupid stuff like "This is when Rock and Roll grew up and became a responsible citizen" and other braindead garbage.

Add a sense of self righteous entitlement to a massive ego, a supply of unlimited cash and a few million people thinking you are great, mix in a bowl and allow to set - voila you get Bono.

Tho for whatever reason there are still a whole bunch of U2 songs that send shivers down my spine, even if Bono is a bigger wanker than Morrisey.
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Re: Bono is a jerk!

Postby Mort » Mon Dec 27, 2010 9:27 pm

Do you really need a bag to visit a country that the local residents will never ever afford ?
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