Sun Sets Early on the American Century
Even hard-headed realists in the U.S. power elite fear the Iraq war has crippled America's ability to lead
The disastrous outcome of the invasion and occupation of Iraq has caused a crisis in the power elite of the United States deeper than that resulting from defeat in Vietnam 30 years ago. Ironically, it is the very coalition of ultranationalists and neo-conservatives that coalesced in the 1970s, seeking to reverse the Vietnam syndrome, restore U.S. power and revive "the will to victory" that has caused the present crisis.
There has been no sustained popular mass protest as there was during the Vietnam War, probably because of the underclass sociology of the volunteer U.S. military and the fact that the war is being funded by foreign financial flows. However, at the elite level the war has fractured the national security establishment that has run the United States for six decades. The unprecedented public critique in 2006 by several retired senior officers over the conduct of the war, plus recurrent signs of dissent in the intelligence agencies and the state department, reflects a much wider trend in elite opinion.
Not all critics are as forthright as retired general William Odom, who tirelessly repeats that the invasion of Iraq was the "greatest strategic disaster in U.S. history"; or Col. Larry Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former chief of staff, who denounced a "blunder of historic proportions" and has recently suggested impeaching the president; or former National Security Council head Zbigniew Brzezinski, who called the war and occupation a "historic, strategic and moral calamity."
Most public critiques from within the institutions of state focus on the way the war and occupation have been mismanaged rather than the more fundamental issue of the invasion itself. Yet discord is wide and deep: Government departments are trading blame, accusing each other of the "loss of Iraq." In private, former senior officials express incandescent anger, denounce shadowy cabals and have deep contempt for the White House. A former official of the National Security Council compared the president and his staff to the Corleone mafia family in The Godfather. A senior foreign policy expert said: "Due to an incompetent, arrogant and corrupt clique we are about to lose our hegemonic position in the Middle East and Gulf."
"The White House has broken the army and trampled its honour," added a Republican senator and former Vietnam veteran.
None of these, nor any of the other institutional critics, could be considered doves: Whatever their political affiliations (mostly Republican) or personal beliefs, they were - and some are still - guardians of U.S. power, managers of the national security state, and sometimes central actors in covert and overt imperial interventions in the Third World during the Cold War and post-Cold War.
As a social group, these realists cannot be distinguished from the object of their criticism in terms of their willingness to use force or their historically demonstrated ruthlessness in achieving state aims. Nor can the cause of their dissent be attributed to conflicting convictions over ethics, norms and values (though this may be a motivating factor for some). It lies rather in the rational realization that the war in Iraq has nearly "broken the U.S. Army," weakened the national security state, and severely, if not irreparably, undermined "America's global legitimacy" - its ability to shape world preferences and set the global agenda. The most sophisticated expressions of dissent, such as Brzezinski's, reflect the understanding that power is not reducible to the ability to coerce, and that, once lost, hegemonic legitimacy is hard to restore.
The signs of slippage are apparent everywhere: in Latin America, where U.S. influence is at its lowest in decades; in East Asia, where the United States has been obliged, reluctantly, to negotiate with North Korea and recognize China as an indispensable actor in regional security; in Europe, where U.S. plans to install missile defence capabilities in Poland are being contested by Germany and other European Union states; in the Gulf, where old allies such as Saudi Arabia are pursuing autonomous agendas that coincide only in part with U.S. aims; and in the international institutions, the UN and the World Bank, where the United States is no longer in a position to drive the agenda unaided.
Transnational opinion surveys show a consistent and nearly global pattern of defiance of U.S. foreign policy as well as a more fundamental erosion in the attractiveness of the United States: The narrative of the American dream has been submerged by images of a military leviathan disregarding world opinion and breaking the rules. World public opinion may not stop wars but it does count in subtler ways. Some of this slippage may be repairable under new leaders and with new and less aggressive policies. Yet it is hard to see how internal unity of purpose will be restored: It took decades to rebuild the U.S. military after Vietnam and to define an elite and popular consensus on the uses of power.
The invasion and occupation of Iraq is not the sole cause of the trends sketched. Rather, the war significantly accentuated all of them at a moment when larger centrifugal forces were already at work: the erosion and collapse of the Washington Consensus and the gradual rise of new gravitational centres, notably in Asia, were established trends when President George Bush went to war. Now, as the shift in the world economy towards Asia matures, the United States is stuck in a conflict that is absorbing its total energies. History is moving on and the world is slipping, slowly but inexorably, out of U.S. hands.
For the U.S. power elite this is deeply unsettling. Since the mid-20th century U.S. leaders have thought of themselves as having a unique historic responsibility to lead and govern the globe. Sitting on top of the world since the 1940s, they have assumed that, like Great Britain in the 19th century, they were destined to act as hegemon - a dominant state having the will and the means to establish and maintain international order: peace and an open and expanding liberal world economy. In their reading of history it was Britain's inability to sustain such a role and America's simultaneous unwillingness to take responsibility that created the conditions for the cycle of world wars and depression during the first half of the 20th century.
The corollary of this assumption is the circular argument that since order requires a dominant centre, the maintenance of order (or avoidance of chaos) requires the perpetuation of hegemony. This belief system, theorized in U.S. academia in the 1970s as "hegemonic stability," has underpinned U.S. foreign policy since World War II, when the United States emerged as the core state of the world capitalist system. As early as 1940 U.S. economic and political elites forecast a vast revolution in the balance of power: The United States would become heir to the economic and political assets of the British Empire.
A year later, Time magazine publisher Henry Luce announced the coming American Century: "America's first century as a dominant power in the world" meant that its people would have "to accept wholeheartedly our duty and our opportunity as the most powerful and vital nation and exert upon the world the full impact of our influence as we see fit and by such means as we see fit." By the mid-1940s the contours of the American Century had already emerged: U.S. economic predominance and strategic supremacy upheld by a planetary network of military bases.
The postwar U.S. leaders who presided over the construction of the national security state were filled, in William Appleman Williams's words, with "visions of omnipotence": The United States enjoyed enormous economic advantages, a significant technological edge and briefly held an atomic monopoly. Though the Korean stalemate (1953) and the Soviet Union's nuclear weapons and missile programs dented U.S. self-confidence, it took defeat in Vietnam and the domestic social upheavals that accompanied the war to reveal the limits of power. Henry Kissinger's and Richard Nixon's "realism in an era of decline" was a reluctant acknowledgment that the overarching hegemony of the previous 20 years could not and would not last forever.
But Vietnam and the Nixon era were a turning point in another more paradoxical way: Domestically they ushered in the conservative revolution and the concerted effort of the mid-1980s to restore and renew the national security state and U.S. world power. When the Soviet Union collapsed a few years later, misguided visions of omnipotence resurfaced. Conservative triumphalists dreamed of primacy and sought to lock in long-term unipolarity. Iraq was a strategic experiment designed to begin the Second American Century. That experiment and U.S. foreign policy now lie in ruins.
Historical analogies are never perfect but Great Britain's long exit from empire may shed some light on the present moment. At the end of the 19th century few British leaders could even begin to imagine an end to empire. When Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee was celebrated in 1897, Britain possessed a formal transoceanic empire that encompassed a quarter of the world's territory and 300 million people - twice that if China, a near colony of 430 million people, was included. The city of London was the centre of an even more far-flung trading and financial empire that bound the world. It is unsurprising that, despite apprehensions over U.S. and German industrial competitiveness, significant parts of the British elite believed that they had been given "a gift from the Almighty of a lease of the universe forever."
The Jubilee turned out to be "final sunburst of an unalloyed belief in British fitness to rule." The Second Boer War (1899-1902) fought to preserve the routes to India and secure the weakest link in the imperial chain, wasted British wealth and blood and revealed the atrocities of scorched-earth policies to a restive British public. The world war that broke out in 1914 bankrupted and exhausted all of its European protagonists. The long end of the British era had started. However, the empire not only survived the immediate crisis but hobbled on for decades, through World War II, until its inglorious end at Suez in 1956. Still, a nostalgia for lost grandeur persists. As Tony Blair's Mesopotamian adventures show, the imperial afterglow has faded but is not entirely extinguished.
For the U.S. power elite, being on top of the world has been a habit for 60 years. Hegemony has been a way of life; empire, a state of being and of mind. The institutional realist critics of the Bush administration have no alternative conceptual framework for international relations, based on something other than force, the balance of power or strategic predominance.
The present crisis and the deepening impact of global concerns will perhaps generate new impulses for co-operation and interdependence in future. Yet it is just as likely that U.S. policy will be unpredictable: As all post-colonial experiences show, de-imperialization is likely to be a long and possibly traumatic process.
Philip S. Golub is a journalist and lecturer at the University of Paris VIII.
© Toronto Star 1996-2007
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
54 Comments so far
Show AllJ Conrad said:
"It might be good time to start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit rather than aggression and exploitation designed to serve only the economic elite."
No "might be" about it, excellent idea. However, it will not be an American initiative. That opportunity is lost and destroyed.
Helix said: "To use a Donald Rumsfeld phrase, these are known unknowns. Taken together, what I know and what I know that I don't know about the backrooms of Washington define the boundaries of a very sick, evil, and implacable element in the Federal apparatus that has now gained the upper hand and has shown a willingness to eliminate all opposition by any means necessary. This cannot portend well for our future.
We have met the enemy, and they are us."
Spot on.
I believe the power is going to shift even further away from America, and that the USA will decline and become a Third or Fifth World Economy.
It is not just the military and economic strategies that America has undertaken over the last half a century, it is the cultural warfare that has also occurred that undermines civilized values, and continues to feed American Mythology to the world. That stuff pretends to represent American ideals, but what we see in the world is the truth. American words are meaningless. From your sports stars to your celebrities to your priests and presidents the American culture is demonstrated to be utterly corrupt, rotten and contemptible to the core. The stench that arises wherever Americans have left their footprint is ripe with the smell of decay, darkness, deceit and the resultant despair.
The Global Resource Wars are upon us. America has already fired the first shots to commandeer the most necessary resource for the maintenance of a military machine that, to borrow Cindy Sheehan's paraphrased words is "shocking and awful." Devoid of honor, your military has trashed and squandered the goodwill of the world, that lead to the American rise to power and created an abiding respect in the mid and late 1940s. Unless America arrests and impeaches and then tries and punishes the War Criminals and Enemies of Freedom, Liberty and Justice, Peace and Prosperity, then America will be left without any respect whatsoever. The recovery from that pit, will take forever. The worst thing America can do is leave these criminals free to enjoy their ill-gotten gain. But that's what will happen, because you are a beaten people.
It is not a matter of "When will you become a fascist state?" America already IS a fascist state.
The Resource Wars are going to change things and they are going to test the strength of agreements and treaties immeasurably. The only thing I can see working here is developing the perspective of global resource management for the benefit of all humanity and not a small cadre of the most powerful. A care-taking perspective is what we need to adopt. Emphasis on the 'care'. The idea of nationhood needs to disappear for it does not serve humanity. It is too easily turned into a political weapon, that is used to ideologically manipulate and fire up the passions that lead to violent conflagration between one people and another, who otherwise treat each other with respect and dignity in a process of fair trade.
I could say more about these ideas, and likely attract all kinds of labels. But there is one idea that needs to be embraced if human civilization is to move forward beyond where it is at now and actually survive, and that is this: The point we as the human race are at now is a point we created because we followed certain ideas that in the long-term had no merit, therefore these ideas need to be examined, evaluated and tested with far more precision than ever before. It is the ideas that got us to this situation that must be identified, and set aside in favor of the ideas that we cast aside as unimportant, irrelevant or seemingly impossible to attain to. This is an exercise that requires intellect and imagination, a constructive rather than a destructive viewpoint. Lennon's song "Imagine" said it all. That's what people who want to get along with each other and not at the expense of each other, want.
We need to expose the ideas we have used to propel western 'civilization' forward for the lies that they are. If we do not do this, then any action we take to improve the condition of humanity and the quality of life for all human beings is doomed. It's time to mature as a human race now. Time to balance the books that are an account of our folly over the last millennium. We don't want an American Century, we want a Human Millennium. Climate change offers us an opportunity to truly step up and be all that we can be together. Let's pull together around that and get it right.
We do have technology to help us do this.
The initiatives are already shifting to more compassionate considerations, to those who actually mean what they say and demonstrate it with real meaningful action.
Personally, while I remain optimistic, I know that until we get a better handle on human nature, then we, as the human race, have a lot to do to bring about a world that is truly at peace, constructing a future for and with humanity rather than destroying it. Where social, moral and cultural capital is more important than material wealth.
The ideas that brought humanity to this situation today, are the ideas that need to be re-examined, re-evaluated, and dismissed when found wanting. A Museum of Human Folly should be where such ideas are enshrined for the benefit of all to review and remember.
rebelnow Helix and etc.
Thanks to all as well. Fine threads so to speak.
I am relatively new to online discussion forums but find the combination of articles and intertwined comments to be a growth process opening up topics in a way that one could not experience alone.
And Helix, your last post was a very heavy vision and terribly true. Wow !
" While once I could not fathom how a phenomenon such as Hitler could have gained first a foothold and then rose to prominence and finally domination, it is now only too clear how that happened.
The darkness that emanates from inside the Washington Beltway is systemic and entrenched. "
And about some of those huge questions, many of us watched good people literally be gunned down during the 60's and still wonder why. I think it is safe to say that energized progressive people are a threat to ignorance and the status quo of power.
No doubt, we are living in very strange and volatile times, perhaps more twisted than in the last 30 years.
But, as the saying goes, truth is beauty.
To see, experience, and actually internalize the darkness and horror becomes a strength rather than a burden. The result of acquiring information and knowledge is liberation rather than desperation. Denial is a cancer.
Perhaps the key too all of this is to view an obstacle as an opportunity and convert the negative into something positive.
Until it all turns around we simply learn to enjoy singing the "songs of the doomed."
JConrad and Helix, a fascinating read. I'm glad I returned to this thread. It seems that after the initial flurry of outbursts and rantings under some of these articles, and after most move on, the sober and insightful thinkers occasionally emerge and have enlightening and entertaining discussions. Thank you.
JConrad,
Thanks for your thoughtful reply. Like you, I remain personally optimistic. Sadly, I cannot extend that personal optimism to the political climate prevailing in our country today, a climate that is being exported to the world at large.
Contrary to the impression that I may have left in my last post, I do not forsee WWIII on the horizon. What I do see is a society that is treading the same path as the "good Germans" of the last century. While once I could not fathom how a phenomenon such as Hitler could have gained first a foothold and then rose to prominence and finally domination, it is now only too clear how that happened.
Will this ruin my day? No. I simply do what I can and enjoy my life as I am able. Am I concerned? You bet. I veiw what we are seeing now as the culmination of a determined and concerted effort that began many decades ago and which I now see approaching a climactic episode. Between you and me, I will be shocked if there is an election in 2008. Even if there is, the performance of the Democrat-controlled congress has made it quite plain that we can expect nothing from those who gain office thereby. The darkness that emanates from inside the Washington Beltway is systemic and entrenched, and has no intention of allowing quaint and now irrelevant customs like some biannual election charade thwart its agenda. This is a fight to the death, and as far as I can tell, neither the congress nor the public has the stomach for such a fight.
My mother has a saying: "When there's something you don't understand, there's something you don't know."
* I don't understand why the Kennedy assassination was whitewashed. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand why RFK was assassinated and why that assassination was whitewashed. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand why the present congress has taken absolutely no action whatsoever on any issue that led to their victory in the last congressional election. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand why a hedge fund manager bringing home $1,700,000,000 per year is taxed at a 15% tax rate while his $35,000 per year secretary pays 25% on her December earnings, plus social security and medicare on all of it. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand why we can throw $10 billion a month down the Iraq rathole but can't earmark $10 billion over two years to look after the health of children whose parents cannot otherwise afford to do so. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand why a telephone network operator would comply with a clearly illegal request to allow the federal government to monitor any citizen's telephone correspondence at will. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand why our diplomatic initiatives to reach agreements with our adversaries are always predicated on conditions that make it impossible for negoiations to begin. What is it that I don't know?
* I don't understand how a traitor and merchant of death like Oliver North cannot only escape prosecution but can become the host of a TV show that purveys... death.
To use a Donald Rumsfeld phrase, these are known unknowns. Taken together, what I know and what I know that I don't know about the backrooms of Washington define the boundaries of a very sick, evil, and implacable element in the Federal apparatus that has now gained the upper hand and has shown a willingness to eliminate all opposition by any means necessary. This cannot portend well for our future.
We have met the enemy, and they are us.
Helix:
Thanks for your thoughts. But, as I mentioned, at some level I agree with you. Things like elections come and go, and I have always been disappointed by the people I have voted for. That is to be expected.
When I entertain the idea of positive change I am thinking in terms of periods of time that are not easily determined.
The American empire is much too pervasive throughout the world in forms to disappear overnight. The Roman empire fell over a period of centuries. The American dream or nightmare is very young.
It took the Tibetans centuries to change from a warrior culture to a peace culture.
When the real momentum of the essential movements of the 60's more or less ended many assumed the era was over. But, many aspects of that time are still alive and well and evolving. This is a continual cultural process that could be called, two steps forward and one step back.
As a generalization, I choose to agree with the author of this essay. The non-American world is waking up to the schemes of empire and beginning a new strategy of their own.
I suggest reading the books I posted as an exercise in defining the problems and exploring the options. A real life example is that a peace-oriented friend of mine started reading, Sorrows Of Empire, and because it is so factually unpleasant, he simply stopped reading. But as they say, "the truth shall set you free".
Once you get to the end of the book it seems fairly obvious that the present situation cannot be sustained and the American empire will see a period adjustment. Simply on a financial level, the American empire as related to government operations and war is being paid for with a bad credit card so to speak. There must be an adjustment at some point in time. A $Trillion a year for the war machine can't go on forever, especially if they are not returning a genuine profit to the economy.
What is going on now with the oil wars is a case of special interests diverting the republic and looting the treasury and then borrowing even more to sustain the adventure.They have actually lost the imperial adventure, but they are dragging it out while making war profits and thinking they might eventually be able to steal the oil. It might eventually turn out to be a "good" lesson.
The scary possibility is that when times get tougher, the rich will maintain their extreme advantage and the majority will absorb the hard times.
The life and times and writing of Camus is a another good read as many of his ideas were formed within the French Algerian experience and influence by the insanity of WWI. France eventually gave up on colonialism in both Vietnam and Algeria. Imagine that, a million soldiers in Algeria and the situation was still out of control and counterproductive. Sounds like America in Iraq.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Camus
Life is absurd and meaningless so why not be happy ?
Another thought is that if you have ever experienced a knock down drag out period of deep depression or extended chronic intractable pain, you will learn that all points of view change over time, unless you give up. What may seem a suicidal situation and infinitely hopeless can turn into a state of mind that might be called optimistic. I call the resulting viewpoint cynical optimism. We know there are terrible problems, but we choose to "visualize" a different future. This is also a bit like training the mind to be internally kind and peaceful rather then mean and angry. Mental gymnastics.
We do have a choice, and who knows, the rest of the world just might come around. Above all don't let the mean people spoil your day.
As they say, time will tell.
JConrad,
Re: ... the crisis of empire may in fact translate into an opportunity for liberating change not only for marginalized nations but for the people of the United States as well.
In a former age, I may have agreed with this sentiment.
Sadly, these days I cannot. The phenomenal destructive capability of modern weapons confers upon those who seek to control through violence the means wreak destruction on an unimaginable scale. This is not the same as a Hitler invading Poland. This is the case of a single madman or a dedicated group of operatives unleashing a chain of events that claims the lives of billions and destroys entire civilizations whether they are involved in the conflict or not -- indeed, could adversely impact every single living organism on earth.
The American people in general, and in particular their elected officials in Congress, seem to have no idea of the precariousness of the situation that these madmen have led the world to. While I don't know what the future holds for us, I can tell you that right now things are not heading in a positive direction. I can further tell you that there is absolutely no hope of repairing our severely damaged relations with the community of nations and working for a better, freer, and safer world while the present administration holds office. The longer these people have to pursue their agenda, the deeper the hole we will find ourselves in and the more difficult it will be to remove them. And the more likely the possibility that they precipate an incident that brings catastrophe to the world as we know it.
My last hope to right our country was the 2006 election. I realize now that I was living in a fool's paradise. The Democrat-controlled congress has caved to the administration on every single issue of substance that it has considered. In future elections, I expect I will find little joy in choosing between chicken hawks and chicken hearts.
The hour is late. Maybe later than we think...
Sorry about the typos in the post yesterday.
"I am with you on your comments. I have been trying to invent optimistic thoughts as an alternative to the absolute cynicism I adopted decades ago. I read Jean Genet and Camus about 40 years ago. Ginsberg also had the vision down poetically. And then there is Dr. King and Malcolm X. ETC."
And what I failed to link in that rant on racism yesterday is how imperial racism over time destroys the legitimacy of the imperial power.
There is perhaps no greater insult to another human than racism. This offense translates into resentment and the desire to resist the racist.
Every empire relies on a complicit support system to survive, but if other nations and the nation being exploited turn against the imperialists and resist indefinitely, it is only a matter of time before the empire weakens.
Presently, America has no real allies and has become a rogue nation temporarily propped up by self-generated lies and propaganda. No other nation on earth believes the spin. And the legitimacy of the American government is also losing ground with the American people.
International opinion eventually affected South Africa. Economic boycotts of complicit parts of the American imperial economy might be seen in the future both at home and abroad.
In a sense, what people think and believe to be true and valid forms the future. And the American militaristic capitalist form of exploitive empire has failed during other historic periods. America's arrogant, racist, unjust and violent unilateral imperial approach cannot be sustained over time.
And rather than look at the present situation as something completely negative, it is possible this could be seen as a very painful process of learning and growth.
As Walden Bellow suggests, "In the conclusion, I explore how the crisis of empire may in fact translate into an opportunity for liberating change not only for marginalized nations but for the people of the United States as well.
Oil hit $89 per barrel today!!! Looks like we'll have to invade Venezuela, right???
Helix:
I am with you on your comments. I have been trying to invent optimist thoughts as an alternative to the absolute cyncism that I adopted decades ago. I read Gene Genet and Camus about 40 years ago. Ginsberg also hand the vision down poetically. And then there is Dr. King and Malcom X. ETC.
But, it is possible that after the empire falls they will be forced to interact in a more cooperative way when it is no longer possible to exploit via blunt force.
Many animal and social models indicate that cooperation has a higher survival rate than conflict and extreme competition. What we are seeing now is competetion generate by the elite for thie own profit. And you are right, there is no need to "win" the Iraq "war" in order for the warmongers to get rich along with their oil corporate complex associates who are enjoying higher oil revenues on thier reserves due to Iraq's lowered production.
But we are all paying including creeping war-related inflation.
However, another aspect of the ugly empire I have been pondering lately is the inherent RACISM. The invasion and occupation of Iraq is classic racist imperialism. Iraqis (and Afghans) are assumed to be not equal to or the same as us.
As I mentioned to a friend:
Part of the sick psychology of imperial nations is that they must, in their criminal minds, create excuses for their crimes against humanity. If you are going to do terrible amoral things to your fellow human beings, it can be a useful device to invent reasons for turning those you are exploiting into objects of derision. This is not only the domain of the American and British, but other nations as well. The Japanese were and perhaps still are so ethnocentric that they still think the sun rises and sits over their little happy little over-crowded island as if they are the only true humans and viable culture on earth. ETC.
The one strange thing I noticed when world traveling is that moving from country to country you found that neighboring countries and people rarely liked each other based on flimsy cultural prejudices. This is a nearly global problem or condition.
However, after taking the time to understand and accept the cultural variations of different "countries", I soon noticed they wanted very similar things as part of a decent life.
I actually see tightly defined ethnic and cultural identities as an impediment to the world becoming a better place. All cultures are conditional and impermanent illusions. And when people put such identities and ideas ahead of their common humanity, you have conflict and suffering, in most cases.
Although a diverse ethnic and cultural world is colorful, but we must begin with the assumption that we are all collectively human and in this fine mess together.
I also see the prejudices linked to differences in external human appearance to be a source of great suffering and essentially a nasty illusion. At the DNA level we are all nearly identical. At the heart level we are identical minus cultural distortions. Funny, the "dark" people want to be lighter and the "white" people want to expose themselves to the harmful rays of the sun so their skin has some color.
On the other hand, as a person who understands Indian imperial history, one of the more popular tricks that the British played was divide and conquer. By various means they pitted different ethinic groups against each other for their benefit and to weaken the collective nation. I do realize that old India was a varied collection of ethnic groups and languages, but as a geographic and economic "nation" one can say that India was or could have been a cooperative political body capable of working together against the common enemy. ETC.
And back to economic hierarchies, those in "power" are always playing this game so that they can end up sitting on top of the dung-heap at the end of the day including their obscene and criminal wealth acquired by making other people go without or suffer. As a bloody Brit I once knew said, "That's where the good living comes in, at the expense of other people". And in my experience, the average Brit is so delusional that they actually believe (like the Japanese and others) that they are a unique and superior culture with the inherent moral authority to exploit other people based mainly on imperial arrogance and self-absorption. English speaking Nazis so to speak. The upper-class Brits even assume this to be true within their own class system although many of the old money Brits are inbred raving mental defectives living useless lives sustained by old imperial money. ETC.
Walden Bellow (Dilemmas of Domination) is a very interesting thinker. He ideas resemble, Chomsky (Hegemony or Survival) Chalmers Johnson (Blowback, Sorrows of Empire, Nemesis) Todd (After the Empire) and others who are looking into the crystal ball of America's current foreign policy blunders. However, Bello does add some original thinking or combinations of ideas. Personally, I felt that America was culturally bankrupt decades ago and the general economyhas been falling apart in terms of the average American. The statistics indicate money is going to the top. This economic back-sliding has been accompanied with a cultural decay or universal dumbing-down that is indicating a very shallow cultural future. ETC.
If you like tragic comedy, check out the new Richard Gere film, Hoax. In a microcosm, I see the deceptions presented in that movie as a reflection of how unsubstantial the American "reality" has become. America IS a hoax, although the materialism does tend to be addictive.
It all boils down to the egregious incompetence of the Bush Administration who changed generals like sox until they found one whose political aspirations allowed him to leave his ethics in the dirt and become a Bush acolyte.
The Move On ad was right on the money.
The only fix for the loss of respect for the American government both by foreigners the world wide and Americans is for the criminal Bush conspiracy to be impeached from the top down. Without that our Constitution will be subject to contempt by future administrations as well as the American public which expected the Constitution to prevent the corrupt administration we now have from ignoring the system of checks and balances and flaunting their contempt as they went,
The thing about the gang that is running the USA is that they really are stupid people who do not have the required intellectual capacity to manage their "new world order" as the first Bush moron called it. Certainly they are planning for mass revolt in their own territory and those concentration camps which they are thinking will hold all the revoltees may end up temporarily housing them. The big mistake in their calculations is that the people of the USA who would revolt are already well armed and could get off to a fast start without having to resort to begging and borrowing in order to get the needed firepower to mount a revolution. And if a revolution ever did get started in the USA it would be amazing how much assistance the revolutionaries would receive from the international community.
OIL JUST HIT $88 PER BARREL...AND THEY THOUGHT THAT ALL THAT KILLING IN IRAQ WOULD HAVE AT LEAST KEPT OIL CHEAP.
JConrad,
Re Apart from the criminality and suffering, this imperial system is not generating any wealth other than short term profits for war industries.
Well, yeah. So what? That's what it's all about. Which is why BushCo and the authoritarian right see Iraq as a glowing success. In their eyes, it is!
Re: It might be good time to start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit rather than aggression and exploitation designed to serve only the economic elite.
Ahahahaha! It's nice to see someone who still thinks these guys give a flying ____ about the health of American society. I myself tend to think of them as an organized criminal element who understand that it's a lot easier -- not to mention more profitable! -- to buy their way into city hall than it is to fight it.
The problem, of course, is that criminals couldn't care less about their victims, or even about the society in which they operate. The world, for them, consists of three groups: family, enemies, and victims. A new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit? Oh, man! That's rich!
Take a look at the record, starting with, say, the assassination of JFK. That ugly episode has all the earmarks of an inside job, which the Warren Commission and then the House Committee on Assassinations whitewashed. Committee members who had problems with the "findings" found themselves dead. Within days, Vietnam heated up, to the glee of General Dynamics and the dismay of the rest of us. Then more assassinations, tragic plane crashes, more foreign interventions, and finally, patently rigged "elections". Resulting in what we have now: a governement that lies with impunity to its citizens, not to mention its own congress, tortures its enemies, spies on its citizens, and is presently building massive detention centers for some as-yet undefined population. Its procurement process is marked by naked corruption, its tax code shamelessly biased toward the already rich beyond reckoning, and its public treasury essentially reduced to a slush fund for the well-connected. And in the end, it unleashes a malestrom that kills hundreds of thousands and turns millions into refugees.
Somehow, I don't think that blood of millions on their hands causes these guys to lose much sleep. Are these the guys who are supposed to start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit? Or is it the congress, which seems to be busying itself with a formal condemnation of Turkey for its persecution of Armenians in 1915, conveniently ignoring the fact that its own country did exactly the same thing to its native population scarcely 30 years before that. Are those the people who should start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit?
Or is it you and me, who have funded this insanity since the day Kennedy was shot, obediently working and shopping to the further enrichment of the already rich and powerful. Are we the ones who should start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit?
Let's face it. We're living on borrowed time. The rot that started at the top 44 years ago now permeates every level of our society and consciousness. We can think all we want about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit, but where the rubber mets the road is where talk spurs action. And I don't see a whole lot of burned rubber at the intersection these days.
Which is probably just as well. The lesson of the last four decades seems to be that you can talk all you want, but if you start to rock the boat, you'll likely end up dead.
The late Edward Abbey wrote something to the effect, "when the American and Russian empires finally die, I will welcome it, but what damage will they wreak upon their surrounding as they thrash about like wounded tyrannosaurus rexs?" What will happen is unpredictable and the fear of uncertainy is very real at this unprecedented time of destructive potential. And Putin's recent behavior should give no cause for encouragement from the Russian side.
The decline of the British Empire started in 1914. We live with that catastrope today. But the USA is going in the same direction, down.
We can salvage a measure of respect and power in the world, only if we, the people, demand representatives who desire to "get along" with the rest of the world.
Otherwise, I fear, we will go out by destroying this planet. Distruction is the natural reaction of a declining power.
As Dr. Zimmerman, Robert, points out above, GWB may be the unassailable leader of 'unintentional consequences'.
I know he's done a lot for mountaun bikes.
If he can also defeat our army and break our banks, many people all over the globe would be highly pleased.
I would love to see all those unedible plants, like crabgrass, just disappear too.
People should wake-up to fields of substainable but unmodified corn.
Corny is better than crabby in the morning.
Instead of galloping around the world belching out our few remaining hydrocarbons and depleted uranium, like there was no tomorrow, we could bring all black-faced coal miners out of the ground, to tend sheep.
And we shouldn't forget the rich.
They will have to be dealt with directly, just like everybody else.
No body in, no body out.
Just local walkers, striders, runners, or sitters, please.
And we could only go as far as our very own legs would allow.
All food would be fresh, locally grown.
Just imagine the pheasants at Gross Pointe.
Even a Victory Garden, like a small crofters plot, without Scotch Broom, is imaginable.
What a legacy.
No wonder Ms Hillary seems so invigorated.
Bush isn't a real Texan.
And all this process was hastened when we put a gun-touting, trigger-happy cowboy at the helm. In the mind of the Bush regime, superpower was reduced to only military power, completely ignoring the subtle and effective power of diplomacy. Hence, when the superpower is fought to a standstill at the hands of a ragtag Iraqi resistance, we lose confidence in ourselves as the world comes to realize that the military power of the sole superpower is only mighty and effective when it's in reserve and not on active duty. It is also hard now to regain our lost moral standing.
Oil just hit $85 a barrel. The Canadian and Australian dollars are well above par with the American dollar. And staying there. The US is hemoraging jobs.
It's over boys and girls. Other posters here have posited that a decline will humble the US. It will not humble the US. It will shatter it.
And whither goes the US, so goes the world economy. Without this mass of blindly greedy consumers to fuel the world economy, said economy will come to a screaming bloody crashing halt.
Peak oil, long denied by the oil companies is now openly, but quietly acknowledged as fact. Climate change, while still being denied by the fossil fuel industry PR shills, is accepted as scientific fact.
The empire is dead. The body of citizens just doesn't know it...
American Century Ends Early: Suicide Suspected
Or maybe this will be part of a local radio contest -DUMB, DRUNK, or STONED.
Did Bu$h the inferior order the illegal occupation of Iraq because he was DUMB, DRUNK, or STONED?
The winner could win an entire gallon of gasoline!
All great ideas, but none of them will happen. What will happen?Probably Bush will proceed with his star wars deal that Russia is dead set against just to show Putin he can`t tell us what to do. Also before election time, some drastic terror strike will magically happen at just the right time to wreck the Dems or stop the election for "homeland security" reasons and for our "protection". Everything of course will be secret and classified, so don`t get curious and all upset, just believe it is for our own good.
In the early days of WW2 the British empire thought of itself as invincible. Just prior to the fall of Singapore, one of the empires crown jewels, troop ships were sent to evacuate the city of British citizens. Told that they were surrounded by the Japanese, most refused to get on board. Arrogantly laughing at the nonsense of a Japanese takeover of the city they continued to party into the night. "Our boys will handle those Japs"
The USS West Point, formally the SS America and then a converted troop ship, was ordered to take on the English civilians. Only about a thousand boarded, the ship had room for thousands more. Captain Kelly sent a final warning that the ship was departing, last call for evacuating. The British continued to laugh at the silly Americans, "do you know who we are? we are English" The ship departed Singapore, nearly empty, as the Japanese bombed and then entered the city.
So goes arrogant empires.
Golub and the comments that follow are incisive. They
basically, however, center on foreign policy and the
coming financial debacle.
Try looking at the administrative procedures and the
competance of our government. Every agency or depart-
ment Cheeney/Bush have touched they've rendered in-
effective to do their job.
If Cheeney/Bush don't suspend the '08 Nov. elections
imagine the plight of the next president. He will
inherit a job from hell.
No sustained protests against the war? How about repeated national demonstrations consistently attracting hundreds of thousands of marchers - far in excess of Vietnam-era marches. Or how about regional marches of tens of thousands of marchers. In the 60's, the biggest anti-war march in Oregon did not have ten thousand marchers. Each year since the war started, there have been ten to 30 thousand people in the streets of Portland.
How about local vigils? The nation-wide vigils in support of Cindy Sheehan brought out a million people. Today there are regular anti-war vigils in every rural county in Oregon, also regional anti-war town halls in each congressional district, organized by the Rural Organizing Project.
The Nov 2006 election was a unprecedented political feat: turning out a gerrymanded incumbent Republican Congressional majority due to public anger against the war. Nothing of the sort happened during the Vietnam era. How did this political majority emerge? Certainly not due to accurate media coverage of the war. It was because the anti-war movement staked out an anti-war position that was also pro-soldiers, led by groups like Military Families Speak Out, Vets for Peace, Iraq Vets Against the War.
Now there is a political disconnect. There is a real anti-war movement that has avoided the traps of political immaturity of the 60's. But there is a Democratic majority that is terrified of its base, which it is betraying. How to break down that disconnect is the political question of our time. But it is a question that would not even have come up without a broad, powerful anti war movement.
A strange stillness has fallen on the community I live in. Gone are the once pervasive "support our troops" ribbons. Most bumpers are blank . There are quiet grumblings about the war, gas prices, housing prices, Bush's stupidity, but no real activity except for the handful of die-hard antiwar protesters on the corner every weekend with their "honk for peace" signs. Nearly everyone honks and continues on by. The coffee shops downtown have the usual gathering of retired greyhairs in their daily discussion about the past. Students work on laptops. Strollers window shop. It's all so eerily quiet.
Time to batten down the hatches. Thar's a storm a brewin.
Legal schmegel - let every state secede from the union. America, the idea, died in 2000, when the Supreme Court selected Dubya for prez in violation of the Constitution and state law. That's when I knew the "rule of law" was no longer operational in this country (see Glenn Greenwald's excellent commentary in Salon on the rule of law versus proposed immunity for the telecoms: http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/). That being the case - and Golub's analysis tells us why this is the case - do we allow ourselves to be crushed in the empire's death throes, or do we seize the moment and recreate ourselves as a confederation? Just asking.
Better yet, how about a constitutional amendment to allow two- thirds of all the states to expel a renegade state from the Union?
No more Texas would mean no more Texan presidents!! Hell, the US could even declare war on Texas, for good measure...wouldn't that be poetic justice?
forextrader October 15th, 2007 5:30 pm:
"How about a Constitutional amendment to prohibit Texans from being elected President or Vice President"
I would say, how about a Constitutional amendment to prohibit Americans from being elected President or Vice President?
We could have stayed in a good position globally for a long time if we played our cards right. Stupid idealologues let Bush and company into the white house. Anyone should have been able to see that they were lieing about everything and that their plans never had any chance at all of working unless that plan was to destroy the U.S. itself. In which case they are icredibley successful.
It's all water under the bridge now. They did break a lot of laws and there is a lot of complicity that has to be accounted for. Most of the spying laws are not designed to look for terrorist. They know this because they themselves are the terroists. They spy on us so they'll know how much we know about them and what we are going to do about it.
#
forextrader October 15th, 2007 5:30 pm
That's why I support the independence of Texas!!At least if they are independent, their problems won't be America's problems.
Texas is the only State that could, legally, declare independence from the US. The treaty between the United States and the Republic of Texas, by which it became a state, gives it this right.
Texas may have been the only Confederate State whose secession was actually legal.
as an aside - the mass protests associated with vietnam grew out of the mass protests associated with the struggle to gain civil rights for african americans, and the entire struggle toward justice that that movement inspired - america is a fragmented lonely place now and we are all sitting at the end of our electronic and wireless tethers wondering what happened to the real world that smelled good and you could really get a feeling for...
"Isn't it interesting that..."
Perhaps this particular plot should be returned to it's rightful owners - the Mexicans and the Indians.
Isn't it interesting that every time a Texan pushes or lies his way into the White House, a genocidal WAR breaks out which just happens to enormously fatten the coffers of Texan companies, and ruins the US treasury, and divides the people, and wrecks our reputation all over the world?? How about a Constitutional amendment to prohibit Texans from being elected President or Vice President? We just can't afford any more Johnsons or Bushes!!
Dargonslayer: "Isn't it interesting that every time a Texan pushes or lies his way into the White House, a genocidal WAR breaks out which just happens to enormously fatten the coffers of Texan companies, and ruins the US treasury, and divides the people, and wrecks our reputation all over the world?? How about a Constitutional amendment to prohibit Texans from being elected President or Vice President? We just can't afford any more Johnsons or Bushes!!"
That's why I support the independence of Texas!!At least if they are independent, their problems won't be America's problems.
George W. Bush may have been the best thing since sliced bread. His incompetence has started the beginning of the end for globalization. He has forced alliances that will destroy the US of A's hegemony in the Americas, the Middle East and in Asia.
The end of globalization is the beginning of environmental reforms and workers rights. Sometimes one has to thank the opposition for the unintended help.
Cheers GW.
Greed! History will record that Bush might have succeeded given the wealth and power available. However arrogance is a necessary component to empire but useless towards sustaining it. Moreover, Bush applied an imperial arrogance towards his own country. His agenda ... starving the beast tax cuts for the wealthy waged war on his own resouce generator. Combine that with phenomenal corruption ...500 billion + spent in Iraq while starving the beast found Bush starving the empire's own strength. In effect Bush assaulted his own country. Greed, arrogance and corruption plus a dire incompetence hobbled the plans for empire... but the ability had once been there, though it was wasted. Bush's agenda brought down imperial dreams, arrogance it's influence and corruption it's ideology. Greed... they couldn't resist and weakened their empire as thay attempted to create it.
When starving the beast make sure the beast you starve isn't your own horse... especially if you are riding it during a charge in a war. Greed!
"The institutional realist critics of the Bush administration have no alternative conceptual framework for international relations, based on something other than force, the balance of power or strategic predominance."
So who is best outlining the alternative conceptual framework? At Tikkun and the Network of Spiritual Progressives we are promoting a Strategy of Generosity and a Global Marshall Plan as the conceptual framework for an alternative to a Strategy of Domination. It needs a great deal of support, both intellectual and financial, to take it further. We need to demand of all candidates in the primaries that they espouse this basic orientation, if only to get the ideas circulating. We would like to be in contact with others working in that direction and would like to hear people's recommendations for the best and most thorough expressions of the Strategy of Generosity approach. Golub's critique is strong, but all too often academics stop at that point, without presenting the alternative. You can send ideas to me at dave@tikkun.org. The website www.spiritualprogressives.org explains our approach - click on Guiding Ideas.
Hell Hath no Fury than a Badly Run Economy..
2.5 trillion dollars [and counting] total accrued cost of a fascist administration's needless interventionism; a money supply gone berserk and growing at 14%; a total private and public debt at 76 trillion dollars; REAL inflation running at 8%; the greatest theft or transfer of wealth from the middle class to the cupidinously elite in American History….
Need I say more…
Oh I nearly forgot, heck-of-a-job bu$hie!
_____________________________________________
The demise of the US dollar…
A fiat monetary system allows power and influence to fall into the hands of those who control the creation of new money, and to those who get to use the money or credit early in its circulation. The insidious and eventual cost falls on unidentified victims who are usually oblivious to the cause of their plight. This system of legalized plunder (though not constitutional) allows one group to benefit at the expense of another. An actual transfer of wealth goes from the poor and the middle class to those in privileged financial positions.
~ Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX), Paper Money and Tyranny
Now that George Wanker Bush has driven the U.S. into the feces encrusted corner it now finds itself in, the next administration, Republicrat or Demican, will become obsessed with that corner, how to live in it, how to make it smell a little better, etc. Getting out of that corner probably won't even cross their minds.
Our annual military budget, including VA, supplementals, and a share of the debt interest expense, is about $1.0 trillion vs. total individual income tax receipts of $1.1 trillion. No wonder we have self destructed and become the world's biggest debtor nation , with a dollar (or should we call it North American peso?) on the skids. Even Ireland now has a higher per capita income than the good old USA. But we keep on deluding ourselves about being the best in everything. We Americans have two choices: to keep dreaming or to face up to the facts.
"U.S. leaders have thought of themselves as having a unique historic responsibility to lead and govern the globe."
Right. Or, U.S. leaders have have always pretended to think of themselves as having a unique historic responsibility to lead and govern the globe while they set about profiting from every microbe they could lay their hands on, destroying anything that dared get in the way of the true agenda. To paraphrase Wolfie: historical responsibility to lead and govern the globe was the one phrase the ruthless, greedy thieves could agree upon.
Full Spectrum Military Dominance Of All Money, Resources and Life On All Known and Unknown Planets just didn't roll off the tongue as well...
What's been crippled is America's ability to enforce it's diktat by force around the world.
And that's a good thing.
Progress toward a more civilized system that puts cooperation and survival ahead of greed and profits can now develope without the threat of being crushed by a US invasion.
JConrad you say,
"It might be good time to start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit rather than aggression and exploitation designed to serve only the economic elite."
My friend you don't have to start thinking about designing a whole new system, evolution has given "us" a system that works for the human species. It is called tribalism. This form of social arrangement works best for humans.
"The war is being funded by foreign financial flows...." What in the fuck is he talking about? The war is being financed by you the taxpaying average American Joe 6pack. The war is being financed by the Federal reserve monetizing this outrageous hyperinflation producing debt at the rate of an historically abnormal 14% per annum. This will ultimately produce stagflation which will last for decades.. The greatest theft, fraud and transfer of wealth in American History from the working and middle classes to the Uber Rich Elite of the Military Industrial Media Complex.. You know the one Dwight Eisenhower warned about...Oh I nearly forgot, the Chinese and Japanese are still just holding bits of paper; with IOU written on them. In case of financial meltdown, they are no better off in a sense...
Every indication is pointing to the conclusion that the American empire has peaked and is in trouble. What happens next depends on whether or not intelligent leadership emerges and creates a more balanced adn ethical future.
The neocon dream of complete global military domination is dead. Iraq as a test case has shown an expensive high-tech military machine can be battled to a standstill by guerrilla resistance. Nam all over again.
Even with 160,000 private contractors and all available troops, the American military is unable to give American oil corporations what they want. The Afghan situation is no better.
Apart from the criminality and suffering, this imperial system is not generating any wealth other than short term profits for war industries. The bloated military welfare war state is also being financed with borrowed money. Imperial overextension is a historic fact and it is only a matter or time before the American virtual empire runs out of gas in the middle of nowhere.
The need for Blackwater type mercenaries reveals our conventional military forces are unable to support the delusions of empire builders. The Blackwater murders have also become an example to the rest of the world of America as the home of crazed corporate Christian thugs for hire.
Not only is the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq bankrupting the finances of an imperial nation but the legitimacy of the American system has taken a beating. Legitimacy in the eyes of Americans and the world has been destroyed. This might be called an ideological crisis, but a lack of domestic support and a loss of international confidence in the American system will have diverse effects.
The global imperial militaristic financial wizard of OZ has been exposed. And every day that the Iraq occupation continues, the great American $dollar and $dream become a little more worthless. The neoliberal WTO IMF type schemes have also lost credibility and support.
It might be good time to start thinking about a new system based on cooperation and mutual benefit rather than aggression and exploitation designed to serve only the economic elite.
Aside from the pedestrian definition of the nation state, what would be a great way to further reduce the United States influence and power? Outsource them for war of course: The military service economy is hired (yes, hired) to muck about in Iraq for the benefit of the "investors". The US Elite are multinational corporate interests.
Philip Golub has it right for the most part. Others have disagreed with me before, but I reiterate my point that whenever any organization is run by a totally incompetent leader such as Bush, that person makes bad decisions, does not listen to reason, and acts on impulse without carefully thinking through the consequences. It is like having a middle-manager as a boss who runs his department as a tyrant, knows that his employees do not like him, and he makes disastrous decisions that put the entire company at risk, yet all the smart employees are the ones who lose their jobs, and the incompetent manager stays on because he is the boss's relative or friend.
I agree with vinlander, in that things have to get much worse before they get better i.e., people will have to make the choice to put food on the table, or go hungry while watching "American Idol."
==The institutional realist critics of the Bush administration have no alternative conceptual framework for international relations, based on something other than force, the balance of power or strategic predominance.
The present crisis and the deepening impact of global concerns will perhaps generate new impulses for co-operation and interdependence in future. Yet it is just as likely that U.S. policy will be unpredictable: As all post-colonial experiences show, de-imperialization is likely to be a long and possibly traumatic process.==
Coming from a view of the world that requires cooperation and inclusion for survival and progress, not the hegemony of any single country, I am struck by how little history teaches many leaders of countries. They don't learn from the hubristic failure of others. They don't learn what works for the well-being of humanity, including themselves.
This "will to dominate" is the leading characteristic of patriarchy that is psychological and institutionalized, from governments to corporations. This is a useful characteristic ONLY when there is some external threat, such as disease or environmental problems or being invaded by aliens, but it surely destroys human progress in other arenas where benign neglect or cooperation when needed is operational.
So America starts downhill. I imagine it will take a long time, as the author says, after the toppling point is reached, and it will be a painful descent.
I am beginning to think that the reason for Americans' ongoing resentment of the French has to do with this uncanny ability of French intellectuals to get right to the heart of what's wrong with US policy, culture, politics, and society. I keep going back to Immanuel Todd's book on the end of the American empire. He was right-on when he predicted the crash of the Soviet Empire back in the 1970s (when everybody dismissed him as a crackpot), and he's probably right about the American empire too. However, Todd is not exactly required reading among Americans. Too bad.
I still believe if we had tax surcharges to support our war on terror levied at the top end to pay for all costs of these activities in real time, that we would have a shorter, smaller, less expensive war, and much less loss of international respect.
I have also believed these taxes should have been levied on the largest capital gains, not on other kinds of income. America's expenditures on war and security have more to do with protecting property and commerce than they do with protecting the safety of persons, and property and commerce ought to be paying the freight.
Those payers, if they were, in fact paying, would not have given President Bush such a free hand to do odd things in the name of the United States of America.
The great mistake that the power elite and the general staff that supports its military made was to confuse "most powerful" with "infinitely powerful." Even in a wealthy nation like the USA, resources are limited. They have bitten off more than the rest of us can chew with two wars in Asia, trade policies that undermine national economic strength and social policies that keep Americans undereducated and unhealthy.
The good news is that this can't go on forever. The bad news is it could get uglier before it ends.
I've spent the last five years examining Billy Graham's drumbeat for American empire, urging presidents from Truman forward into war. I believe he did more than anyone to brand the drive for hegemony with God's blessing. Reviews of my book on the subject are linked at my site http://theprinceofwar.com.
Golub's analysis is dead on.
After 60 years of constant conditioning, it will be hard to turn public opinion and that of the power elite, to come to some conclusions of their fallacy.
I usually tell people who compain to me about the way that capitalism isn't fulfilling their desires,
"you may be an American, however, contrary to popular marketing strategies, you cannot have it all."
Nobody can.
Golub misses the point because he is still immersed in the quaint notion of nation states. Transnational corporations don't give a shit about any particular nation state, including the United States, except as a market or a producer. Production must be kept as cheap as possible and consumers must be allowed via usury to keep buying and maintain the international corporate profit flow. When the shit hits the fan, as it has in many "developing countries", the populations of the nation states are further deprived of their property by draconian land and resource grabs courtesy of the IMF and the World Bank. Since the United States has been stripped of most of its industrial productive capacity, we will probably wind up as one big farm.