WHAT AMERICA HAS BECOME
John Chuckman
Of course, the cozy popular myth of America’s Founding
Fathers as an earnest, civic-minded group gathered in an ornate hall, writing
with quill pens, reading from leather-bound tomes, and offering heroic speeches
in classical poses – all resembling Greek philosophers in wigs and spectacles and
frock coats - was always that, a myth. They were in more than a few cases
narrow, acquisitive men, ambitious for their personal interests which were
considerable, and even the more philosophic types among them were well-read but
largely unoriginal men who cribbed ideas and concepts and even whole phrases
from European Enlightenment writers and British parliamentary traditions.
And much of what they wrote and agreed upon involved what
would prove mistaken ideas, with a lack of foresight into what the almost
unchangeable concrete their words would shape. Americans today often are not
aware that the word “democracy” for many of the Founders was an unpleasant one,
carrying just about the same connotations that “communist” would a century and
a half later. Men of the world of privilege and comparative wealth –
Washington, Morris, and many others – were having nothing to do with ideas
which rendered unimportant men important. That is why the country was styled as
a “republic” – that most undefined term in the political lexicon, which then
meant only the absence of a king with decisions made by a tight group of
propertied elites.
False as they are, the very fact that there are such pleasant
myths does tell us something about past popular ideals informing their creation.
Now, how would any future Americans manage to weave attractive myths about a president
who sits in the Oval Office signing authorizations for teams of young buzz-cut
psychopaths in secret locked rooms to guide killing machines against mere suspects
and innocent bystanders, often adopting the tactics of America’s lunatic anti-abortion
assassins, sending a second hellish missile into the crowd of neighbors who come
to the assistance of the victims of the first?
How would they weave attractive myths around the CIA’s
International Torture Gulag, including that hellhole, Guantanamo, where
kidnapped, legally-innocent people are imprisoned and tortured and given
absolutely no rights or ethical treatment under international laws and
conventions?
During the Revolutionary War, the battles were between
armies, and captured soldiers were frequently granted their freedom upon their
paroles, pledges of not returning to the fight. Spies were thought poorly of
and often hung. Torture was uncommon and certainly not embraced as policy.
What myths can be written of two wars involving the deaths
of a million or so people, the creation of millions of refugees, and the
needless destruction of huge amounts of other peoples’ property, and all to
achieve nothing but a change of government? Or about massive armed forces and
secret security agencies which squander hundreds of billions in resources year
after year, spreading their dark influence to all corners of the globe, and
offering an insurmountable obstacle to America’s own citizens who might imagine
they ever can rise against a government grown tyrannous? After all, polls in
America show that its Congress is held in contempt by the overwhelming majority
of its people, with percentages of disapproval rivaling those held for
communism or Satanic rituals.
There are no myths about today’s Congressional figures.
Everyone understands they are often to be found bellowing in ornate halls about
points most Americans couldn’t care less about. Everyone understands that they
are ready to go anywhere and say almost anything for large enough campaign contributions.
That they take off on junkets paid for by groups hoping to influence votes and
put faces to the exercise of future influence, trips commonly involving a
foreign power trying to shape American policy. That their work is often steeped
in secrecy from the voters, secrecy not governed by genuine national security
concerns but by the often shameful nature of their work. That a good deal of
the legislation and rules they create repress their own people’s interests and
favor only special interests.
That their government regularly suppresses inconvenient
truths and labels those who raise questions as foolishly addicted to conspiracy
or even as treacherous. What are just a few of the events which have been
treated in this fashion? The assassination of a President. The accidental or deliberate
downing of at least three civilian aircraft by America’s military in recent
years – an Iranian airliner, TWA Flight 800 on the East Coast, and the fourth
plane of the 9/11 plot over Pennsylvania. The CIA’s past cooperation and
engagement with the American Mafia during its anti-Castro terror campaign. The
CIA’s use of drug trafficking to raise off-the-books income. The military’s
assassination of American prisoners of war cooperating with their Vietnamese
captors. Obfuscating Israel’s deliberate attack on an American intelligence-gathering
ship during its engineered 1967 War. The huge death toll of locals, civilian
and military, in America’s grisly imperial wars, from Vietnam to Iraq. 9/11.
I do not believe in 9/11 insider plots, but I know there has
been strenuous official effort to disguise that event’s full nature. The
motives? One suspects a great deal of embarrassment at demonstrated
incompetence has been at work. Blowback from CIA operations in the Middle East
seems more than likely. The documented involvement of Mossad in following and
recording the plotters inside the United States leaves disturbing unanswered
questions. One also knows that America’s establishment discovered in the wake of
9/11 the perfect opportunity for doing a great many nasty things it had always
wanted to do anyway. You might say the terrorists did the
military-industrial-intelligence complex a big favor. Anti-democratic measures
involving surveillance, privacy in communications, secret prisons, torture, and
effective suspension of some of the Constitution are all parts of the new American
reality.
The FBI can record what you borrow from the public library.
The NSA captures your every phone call, text message, and e-mail. The TSA can
strip search you for taking an inter-city bus. Drones are being used for
surveillance, and the TSA actually has a program of agents traveling along some
highways ready to stop those regarded as suspicious. Portable units for seeing
through clothes and baggage, similar to those used at airports, are to tour
urban streets in vans randomly. Agencies of the government, much in the style
of the former Stasi, encourage reports from citizens about suspicious behavior.
Now, you can just imagine what might be called “suspicious” in a society which
has always had a tendency towards witch-hunts and fears of such harmless things
as Harry Potter books or the charming old Procter and Gambel symbol on
soapboxes.
America has become in many ways a police state, albeit one
where a kind of decency veil is left draped over the crude government machinery.
How can a place which has elections and many of the trappings of a free society
be a police state? Well, it can because power, however conferred, can be, and
will be, abused. And the majority in any democratic government can impose
terrible burdens on the minority. That’s how the American Confederacy worked,
how apartheid South Africa worked, and that’s how Israel works today.
Prevention of those inevitable abuses is the entire reason for a Bill of
Rights, but if you suspend or weaken its protections, anything becomes
possible.
American police forces have long enjoyed a reputation for
brutal and criminal behavior – using illegal-gains seizure laws for profit, beating
up suspects, conducting unnecessary military-style raids on homes, killing
people sometimes on the flimsiest of excuses - having earned international
recognition from organizations such as Amnesty International. The reasons for
this are complex but include the military model of organization adopted by
American policing, the common practice of hiring ex-soldiers as police, the
phenomenon of uncontrolled urban sprawl creating new towns whose tiny police
forces have poor practices and training, and, in many jurisdictions, a long and
rich history of police corruption. Now, those often poor-quality American police
have unprecedented discretion and powers of abuse.
Further, according to the words of one high-ranking general
a few years back, the American military is prepared to impose martial law in
the event of another great act of terror. Certainly that is an encouraging and
uplifting thought considering all the blunders and waste and murder and rape
the American military has inflicted upon countries from Vietnam to Iraq.
Where it is possible, power prefers to know about and even
to control what is going on at the most humble level of its society, and the
greater the power, the more irresistible the drive to know and control. It is
essential to appreciate that whether you are talking about the military or huge
corporations or the security apparatus, you are not talking about institutions
which are democratic in nature. Quite the opposite, these institutions are run
along much the same lines as all traditional forms of undemocratic government,
from monarchs to dictators. Leadership and goals and methods are not subject to
a vote and orders given are only to be obeyed, and there is no reason to
believe that any of these institutions cherishes or promotes democratic values
or principles of human rights. Of course, corporations, in order to attract
talent, must publicly present a friendly face towards those principles, but
that necessary charade reflects their future behavior about as much as campaign
promises reflect future acts of an American politician.
Those at the top of all powerful and hierarchical institutions
inevitably come to believe that they know better than most people, and those
with any hope of gaining top positions must adopt the same view. For centuries
we saw the great landed gentry and church patriarchs of pre-democratic
societies regard themselves as inherently different from the population. It is
no different with the psychology of people who enjoy their wealth and influence
through positions in these great modern, un-democratic institutions. The larger
and more pervasive these institutions become in society - and they have become truly
bloated in America - the more will their narcissistic, privileged views prevail.
Also, it is axiomatic that where great power exists, it never goes unused.
Large standing armies are the proximate cause of many of history’s wars. And
just so, the power of corporations to expand through illegality of every
description, this being the source of the many controversies about failing to
pay taxes in countries where they operate or the widespread practice of bribery
in landing large contracts with national governments.
So far as security services go (the United States, at last
count, having sixteen different ones), they may well be the worst of all these modern,
massive anti-democratic institutions. Their lines of responsibility to
government are often weak, and citizens in general are often regarded as things
with which to experiment or play. Their leaders and agents are freely permitted
to perjure themselves in courts. The organizations possess vast budgets with
little need to account for the spending. They can even create their own funds
through everything from drug and weapons trading to counterfeiting currency,
all of it not accounted for and subject to no proper authority. And their
entire work is secret, whether that work involves legitimate national security
or not. The nature of their work breeds a secret-fraternity mindset of
superiority and cynicism. They start wars and coups, including against
democratic governments sometimes, they pay off rising politicians even in allied
countries, they use money and disinformation to manipulate elections even in
friendly governments, and of course they kill people and leaders they seriously
disapprove of. Now, does any thinking person believe that they simply forget these
mindsets and practices when it comes to what they regard as serious problems in
their own country?
The record of arrogance and abuse by security organizations,
such as CIA or the FBI, is long and costly, filled with errors in judgment,
abuse of power, incompetence, and immense dishonesty. Owing to the black magic
of classified secrecy, much of the record involves projects about which we will
never know, but even what we do know about is distressing enough. And I’m not
sure that it can be any other way so long as you have Big Intelligence. Apart
from Big Intelligence’s own propensity towards criminal or psychopathic behavior,
one of the great ironies of Big Intelligence is that it will always agree to
bend, to provide whatever suppressions and fabrications are requested by political
leaders working towards the aims of the other great anti-democratic
institutions, the military and the corporations. This became blindingly clear
in the invasion of Iraq and, even before that, in the first Gulf War.
America’s political system, honed and shaped over many
decades, fits comfortably with these institutions. National elections are
dominated by a two-party duopoly (being kept that way through countless institutional
barriers deliberately created to maintain the status quo) , both these parties
are dominated by huge flows of campaign contributions (contributions which form
what economists call an effective barrier to entry against any third party
seriously being able to compete), both parties embrace much the same policies
except for some social issues of little interest to the establishment, and
election campaigns are reduced to nothing more than gigantic advertising and
marketing operations no different in nature to campaigns for two national brands
of fast food or pop. It takes an extremely long time for a candidate to rise
and be tested before being trusted with the huge amounts of money invested in
an important campaign, and by that time he or she is a well-read book with no
surprising chapters.
If for any reason this political filtering system fails, and
someone slips through to an important office without having spent enough time
to make them perfectly predictable, there still remains little chance of
serious change on any important matter. The military-industrial-intelligence
complex provides a molded space into which any newcomer absolutely must fit. Just
imagine the immense pressures exerted by the mere presence of senior Pentagon
brass gathered around a long polished oak table or a table surrounded by top
corporate figures representing hundreds of billions in sales or representatives
or a major lobbying group (and multi-million dollar financing source for the
party). We see the recent example of popular hopes being crushed after the
election of Obama, a man everyone on the planet hoped to see mend some of the
ravages of George Bush and Dick Cheney. But the man who once sometimes wore
sandals and bravely avoided a superfluous and rather silly flag pin on his
lapel quickly was made to feel the crushing weight of institutional power, and
he bent to every demand made on him, becoming indistinguishable from Bush. Of
course, the last president who genuinely did challenge at least some of the great
institutional powers, even to a modest extent, died in an ambush in Dallas.