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Democracy in America Is a Useful Fiction
Corporate forces, long before the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission,
carried out a coup d'état in slow motion. The coup is over. We lost.
The ruling is one more judicial effort to streamline mechanisms for
corporate control. It exposes the myth of a functioning democracy and
the triumph of corporate power. But it does not significantly alter the
political landscape. The corporate state is firmly cemented in place.
The fiction of democracy remains useful, not only for corporations, but for our bankrupt liberal class. If the fiction is seriously challenged, liberals will be forced to consider actual resistance, which will be neither pleasant nor easy. As long as a democratic facade exists, liberals can engage in an empty moral posturing that requires little sacrifice or commitment. They can be the self-appointed scolds of the Democratic Party, acting as if they are part of the debate and feel vindicated by their cries of protest.
Much of the outrage expressed about the court's ruling is the outrage of those who prefer this choreographed charade. As long as the charade is played, they do not have to consider how to combat what the political philosopher Sheldon Wolin calls our system of "inverted totalitarianism."
Inverted totalitarianism represents "the political coming of age of corporate power and the political demobilization of the citizenry," Wolin writes in "Democracy Incorporated." Inverted totalitarianism differs from classical forms of totalitarianism, which revolve around a demagogue or charismatic leader, and finds its expression in the anonymity of the corporate state. The corporate forces behind inverted totalitarianism do not, as classical totalitarian movements do, boast of replacing decaying structures with a new, revolutionary structure. They purport to honor electoral politics, freedom and the Constitution. But they so corrupt and manipulate the levers of power as to make democracy impossible.
Inverted totalitarianism is not conceptualized as an ideology or objectified in public policy. It is furthered by "power-holders and citizens who often seem unaware of the deeper consequences of their actions or inactions," Wolin writes. But it is as dangerous as classical forms of totalitarianism. In a system of inverted totalitarianism, as this court ruling illustrates, it is not necessary to rewrite the Constitution, as fascist and communist regimes do. It is enough to exploit legitimate power by means of judicial and legislative interpretation. This exploitation ensures that huge corporate campaign contributions are protected speech under the First Amendment. It ensures that heavily financed and organized lobbying by large corporations is interpreted as an application of the people's right to petition the government. The court again ratified the concept that corporations are persons, except in those cases where the "persons" agree to a "settlement." Those within corporations who commit crimes can avoid going to prison by paying large sums of money to the government while, according to this twisted judicial reasoning, not "admitting any wrongdoing." There is a word for this. It is called corruption.
Corporations have 35,000 lobbyists in Washington and thousands more in state capitals that dole out corporate money to shape and write legislation. They use their political action committees to solicit employees and shareholders for donations to fund pliable candidates. The financial sector, for example, spent more than $5 billion on political campaigns, influence peddling and lobbying during the past decade, which resulted in sweeping deregulation, the gouging of consumers, our global financial meltdown and the subsequent looting of the U.S. Treasury. The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America spent $26 million last year and drug companies such as Pfizer, Amgen and Eli Lilly kicked in tens of millions more to buy off the two parties. These corporations have made sure our so-called health reform bill will force us to buy their predatory and defective products. The oil and gas industry, the coal industry, defense contractors and telecommunications companies have thwarted the drive for sustainable energy and orchestrated the steady erosion of civil liberties. Politicians do corporate bidding and stage hollow acts of political theater to keep the fiction of the democratic state alive.
There is no national institution left that can accurately be described as democratic. Citizens, rather than participate in power, are allowed to have virtual opinions to preordained questions, a kind of participatory fascism as meaningless as voting on "American Idol." Mass emotions are directed toward the raging culture wars. This allows us to take emotional stands on issues that are inconsequential to the power elite.
Our transformation into an empire, as happened in ancient Athens and Rome, has seen the tyranny we practice abroad become the tyranny we practice at home. We, like all empires, have been eviscerated by our own expansionism. We utilize weapons of horrific destructive power, subsidize their development with billions in taxpayer dollars, and are the world's largest arms dealer. And the Constitution, as Wolin notes, is "conscripted to serve as power's apprentice rather than its conscience."
"Inverted totalitarianism reverses things," Wolin writes. "It is politics all of the time but a politics largely untempered by the political. Party squabbles are occasionally on public display, and there is a frantic and continuous politics among factions of the party, interest groups, competing corporate powers, and rival media concerns. And there is, of course, the culminating moment of national elections when the attention of the nation is required to make a choice of personalities rather than a choice between alternatives. What is absent is the political, the commitment to finding where the common good lies amidst the welter of well-financed, highly organized, single-minded interests rabidly seeking governmental favors and overwhelming the practices of representative government and public administration by a sea of cash."
Hollywood, the news industry and television, all corporate controlled, have become instruments of inverted totalitarianism. They censor or ridicule those who critique or challenge corporate structures and assumptions. They saturate the airwaves with manufactured controversy, whether it is Tiger Woods or the dispute between Jay Leno and Conan O'Brien. They manipulate images to make us confuse how we are made to feel with knowledge, which is how Barack Obama became president. And the draconian internal control employed by the Department of Homeland Security, the military and the police over any form of popular dissent, coupled with the corporate media's censorship, does for inverted totalitarianism what thugs and bonfires of books do in classical totalitarian regimes.
"It seems a replay of historical experience that the bias displayed by today's media should be aimed consistently at the shredded remains of liberalism," Wolin writes. "Recall that an element common to most 20th century totalitarianism, whether Fascist or Stalinist, was hostility towards the left. In the United States, the left is assumed to consist solely of liberals, occasionally of ‘the left wing of the Democratic Party,' never of democrats."
Liberals, socialists, trade unionists, independent journalists and intellectuals, many of whom were once important voices in our society, have been silenced or targeted for elimination within corporate-controlled academia, the media and government. Wolin, who taught at Berkeley and later at Princeton, is arguably the country's foremost political philosopher. And yet his book was virtually ignored. This is also why Ralph Nader, Dennis Kucinich and Cynthia McKinney, along with intellectuals like Noam Chomsky, are not given a part in our national discourse.
The uniformity of opinion is reinforced by the skillfully orchestrated mass emotions of nationalism and patriotism, which paints all dissidents as "soft" or "unpatriotic." The "patriotic" citizen, plagued by fear of job losses and possible terrorist attacks, unfailingly supports widespread surveillance and the militarized state. This means no questioning of the $1 trillion in defense-related spending. It means that the military and intelligence agencies are held above government, as if somehow they are not part of government. The most powerful instruments of state power and control are effectively removed from public discussion. We, as imperial citizens, are taught to be contemptuous of government bureaucracy, yet we stand like sheep before Homeland Security agents in airports and are mute when Congress permits our private correspondence and conversations to be monitored and archived. We endure more state control than at any time in American history.
The civic, patriotic and political language we use to describe ourselves remains unchanged. We pay fealty to the same national symbols and iconography. We find our collective identity in the same national myths. We continue to deify the Founding Fathers. But the America we celebrate is an illusion. It does not exist. Our government and judiciary have no real sovereignty. Our press provides diversion, not information. Our organs of security and power keep us as domesticated and as fearful as most Iraqis. Capitalism, as Karl Marx understood, when it emasculates government, becomes a revolutionary force. And this revolutionary force, best described as inverted totalitarianism, is plunging us into a state of neo-feudalism, perpetual war and severe repression. The Supreme Court decision is part of our transformation by the corporate state from citizens to prisoners.




332 Comments so far
Show Alli've just finished reading wolin's book and recommend it to anyone who wants a deeper understanding of how we got to where we are. sadly, he doesnt see any hope of rectifying the situation and neither do i..especially after the supremes' latest pronouncement
I agree, I see no realistic way in rectifying the situation either. Anyone can write pie-in-the-sky articles about how we must organize and fight the corporate take over of the government, but unfortunately I don't think that there are enough people who "get it" to really matter. Most people are politically clueless. They will blindly believe what any hack Corporate PR machine tells them to think. A few years ago if you told me that you could convince a fairly large segment of the population that a government run health care system would have "Death Panels', or the POTUS was a secret Moslem, with a forged birth certificate, I would have told you you're crazy. Well I guess we all know I was wrong about that now don't we.
Any third "Peoples" party that tries to rise up will be crushed by the corporate money machine. Any "Peoples" candidate will be locked out of debates by the two main parties, and they will be slandered and smeared by the corporate PR whores. Like I previously said most people will believe whatever a PR campaign tells them so it is so simple and easy to smear a third party candidate. Then should that candidate try to fight back they will have to fight a corporate legal department with almost endless resources. And if a corporation vs. little guy ever makes it to this supreme court, I think we can be pretty sure a 5-4 decision in favor of the corporation is an almost foregone conclusion.
Look at what we saw in Mass. It was only a year or two ago that people were sick of the republicans and threw them out. Now they are sick of the democrats and are putting republicans back in power. And they are EXCITED about doing it! They were cheering for their centerfold candidate like this time his party is going to make their lives better. Are their memories that short? Apparently so.
People are so clueless a rich guy like Brown, with four houses,can look like a "Joe Six Pack", because he drives a pickup. Just like a guy named Bush can look like a regular guy by clearing the brush on the ranch he purchased just before he ran for president, then promptly sold and moved out of, once he left office. This charade works because we don't live in a republic or a democracy, with an informed electorate, we live in an idiot-ocracy where stupidity reins supreme...
Well I guess we all know I was wrong about that now don't we.
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I don't think so. What we saw with the "death panels" and similar was another "harry and louise" or "Iraqi soldiers killing babies" propaganda stunt. It, in turn, gave cover to those few who will say and do *anything* to "be on tv", and to the psychopaths who will do and say anything to get more power.
It would surprise the socks off of me if there were more than 2% demented enough (paranoid spectrum) to really believe the propaganda. Exploit it cynically, sure, but believe it? I don't believe it.
>>It would surprise the socks off of me if there were more than 2% demented enough (paranoid spectrum) to really believe the propaganda. Exploit it cynically, sure, but believe it? I don't believe it.<<
Believe it. Many people do indeed swallow the crap whole and are actually PROUD to be dittoheads! Or follow with panting breathes the words out of Alan beck's mouth or that of Michael Reagan or the hundred other promoters of RW paranoia.
By my figuring about 1/5th of the populace is beyond redemption, too mentally disturbed or too paranoid (far more of that than non-professionals of the behavioral sciences realize). About another fifth is too stupid to see the scam.
Gary
"Paranoia is an unfounded or exaggerated distrust of others, sometimes reaching delusional proportions. Paranoid individuals constantly suspect the motives of those around them, and believe that certain individuals, or people in general, are "out to get them.""
http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Paranoid+states
Believe it. Many people do indeed swallow the crap whole and are actually PROUD to be dittoheads! Or follow with panting breathes the words out of Alan beck's mouth or that of Michael Reagan or the hundred other promoters of RW paranoia.
---------------------------------
Sure. The same way they follow American Idol, or professional wrestling, or are proud to be a member (or non-member) of some political party. It doesn't mean they're committed believers.
---------------------------------
By my figuring about 1/5th of the populace is beyond redemption, too mentally disturbed or too paranoid (far more of that than non-professionals of the behavioral sciences realize)
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1 person in 5 is deeply psychotic? I'd be interested in how you'd go about supporting that claim.
Remember it's not just the 1/5 of the populace that is beyond redemption, that is the only problem. It is the much larger part of the population that can be manipulated by PR and the salesmen of Madison Ave. Look at how good of a job they did with muddying the issues of things like Global Climate change and health care reform. Look at how they sell drugs to people that have side effects that are potentially more deadly than the disease that they are supposed to treat. And people buy them!
These people have been honing their skills for the last 60 years or so, and unfortunately they are very good at what they do. Remember when going into battle never underestimate the ability of your enemy!
Ironic, they may spin themselves and everyone else into extinction.
I totally agree. David Swanson in his book, Undoing the Imperial Presidency, lists recent poll numbers. The majority of Americans are not buying this bs from the mainstream media, it's just that the cameras and the big-box voices are focused on the minority, hoping to make us believe we're all alone in left field and the whacky, far right is the norm. Poll after poll reveals that this is a Big Lie! The majority of Americans are fairly progressive - they just don't know it yet.
It's time to repair some bridges that were destroyed by the powers that be. They would love it if we were divided. Easier to conquer us. It's time to orgainize something BIG in response.
The Powers that be are the only ones served by a nihilistic attitude. Other people in other times fought back and won some things. We can do it too ... and I believe there is still time.
"mainstream media ... make us believe we're all alone in left field and the whacky, far right is the norm."
True. As Chomsky has pointed out, polled on issues some 70 percent of the electorate consistently hold attitudes considered "left of center".
70 percent of people's opinions lie to the left of the center. That's a mathematical impossibility (the "center" necessarily being at 50-50.). It reveals the divide between the political "spectrum" and the real span. The "political spectrum" as presented in the media is at least 20 percent to the right of the real center.
In a system where 50 percent means majority (except in the US Senate, where apparently even 59 percent doesn't amount to real majority), pulling the represented spectrum 20 percent to the right of reality means only 30 percent of the people need to be duped to go along in order to control the political system.
Elegant scam.
Well said.
ballerina: I read the book over a year ago, after reading the review by Chalmers Johnson on Truthdig.com, otherwise, I would have missed the book completely. I couldn't even buy the book in any of the bookstores in NYC, including the Strand.
I found the book enlightening, intellectually, but to tell you the truth, I was deeply saddened by the book, too! Like you, I feel that Wolin "doesn't see any hope of rectifying the situation." The issues we face are deep and systemic, structural.
New edition of Wolin's "Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism (New Edition)" out Feb.02.2010. It incorporates comments on the Obama presidency. Wait getting it until then. But do read it.
absolutely brilliant IMHO. Hedges is a National Treasure.
Corporatism is, effectively faceless as management comes and goes (occasionally off to prison), yet the corporations keep trucking along. It will take an amendment strictly regulating ALL corporations and well-monied special interests -- unless funded by small individual donors -- to un-invert things, And we need included public financing of federal elections and let the states follow suit.
From the review by Chamlers Johnson:
>>The problem is that there are too many things going wrong at the same time for anyone to have a broad understanding of the disaster that has overcome us and what, if anything, can be done to return our country to constitutional government and at least a degree of democracy. By now, there are hundreds of books on particular aspects of our situation -- the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the bloated and unsupervised "defense" budgets, the imperial presidency and its contempt for our civil liberties, the widespread privatization of traditional governmental functions, and a political system in which no leader dares even to utter the words imperialism and militarism in public.
There are, however, a few attempts at more complex analyses of how we arrived at this sorry state. They include Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, on how "private" economic power now is almost coequal with legitimate political power; John W. Dean, Broken Government: How Republican Rule Destroyed the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches, on the perversion of our main defenses against dictatorship and tyranny; Arianna Huffington, Right Is Wrong: How the Lunatic Fringe Hijacked America, Shredded the Constitution, and Made Us All Less Safe, on the manipulation of fear in our political life and the primary role played by the media; and Naomi Wolf, The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot, on Ten Steps to Fascism and where we currently stand on this staircase. My own book, Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic, on militarism as an inescapable accompaniment of imperialism, also belongs to this genre.<<
Whew, quite a reading list.
Gary
BTW If Dubhya (W) is Bush Lite then is Obama Bush Ultralight... or Bush Dark? (ow, ow, enough with the brickbats, I'm just a cranky old coot)
"A corporation's primary goal is to make money. Government's primary role is to take a big chunk of that money and give it to others."
-- Larry Ellison
Sioux Rose
GARY: Good post. Thank you for the book references. Guess I need to get busy!
Our Extreme Ennead is just a sick joke these days.
The US government has been illegitimate since the assassination of JFK. The only appropriate response to this situation is for the American people to abandon their left/right divide (as Hedges notes, the polarization, controversies and culture wars are encouraged by the power elite) and find our common ground. We all want small government; we need to decentralize (as Wolin suggests in his concluding chapter of "Democracy Inc.").
In order to do that, we'll also have to abandon our inappropriate reverence for the oldest written constitution in the world, and construct a government more suited to the needs of the people. Wolin also goes into some depth about how the US Constitution was deliberately constructed to keep an aristocracy in power. It is steeped in monarchist values.
I discussed these ideas, and came to the same conclusions as Hedges, last May, in my article, "Constitution 2.0," which is still at the top of my blog-in-hiatus, Radical Pantheist.
Tom Paine declared the constitution temporal.
The times have surely changed.
Capitalism has run its course.
Start anew.
Checked your blog out, liked what I saw.
Will wait for the book.
Good luck
Thanks.
Do you think that when a country reaches a certain size that democracy becomes impossible? After all, Athens had no more than 30,000 people. When a country has more than 300 million people, the only way to know candidates and positions is through spending a lot of money, money that comes from special interests. I am trying to think of a single country that has more than 100 million people and is still a true democracy and I can't think of one. Maybe the democratic model doesn't work in superstates.
Prof. Robert Dahl has examined that question, and his conclusions make a *VERY* interesting and important read. I can't possibly do it justice here and won't try, but the sound-bite answer is: yes, it's possible, but not the Athenian kind we usually imagine. What I found more interesting was his view that true representative government is at least as hard and perhaps harder to implement because "representatives" are unresponsive bottlenecks today, not aggregators.
I hope the prof isn't suggesting dropping stones in a jar.
No, a combination of distributing government to the lowest units that make any sense, and exploiting technology to the hilt. That summation doesn't begin to do him justice, so if you're interested it's more than worthwhile to read his work for yourself. He's probably the most important theorist of democracy in the world.
Thanks, was hoping you would reveal more. The federal government is way too big. The dismantling of the old USSR reduced the tension. Size does matter. Government should be closer to home.
Bound mandate (rep.s legally bound to vote according to views elected on, or otherwise immediately subjected to mandate cancelled), recallable rep.s, max 'median of general income'-pay and perks to rep.s - these restrictions will go a way towards opening the political "bottlenecks" of assemblies.
How to get there from here is another matter altogether...
Sioux Rose
DROSERA: Back when Clinton was president the digital bandwidth--like a non-material new frontier--opened, and a brilliant argument was published in Harper's as to how this new zone could be best managed.
As it turned out I woke up at about 1 AM, as if something WAS waking me, and I turned on my TV and there on C-span was the author (I can't recall his name) of that very piece in Harper's elaborating on the points made. What this luminous thinker related was that since these airwaves belong to the public, before they are to be handed over to the gigantic, multi-million dollar corporations, that a deal should be struck wherein a percentage of air time is made available to public concerns, like elections, candidates, and the airing of timely issues.
In other words, while your arguments are certainly viable, they leave out this quintessential heist. Had the public's airwaves been negotiated with the public's interests in mind, then no candidate would need to whore himself to monied interests to gain the big bucks to "earn" his presence on the magic tube. Statistics can be readily found that point to the direct analogy between public access ($ spent on elections for direct media access) and victorious outcomes.
It is not too late to give the airwaves back and reverse the process; of course that comment presupposes that a functioning democracy with representatives that represent the public's interests still exists. It could be restored.
Actually, I don't have a point of view on the question "Can a democracy survive in state of hundreds of millions of people?" But I must say that i have my doubts. Questions are too difficult for voters to understand and form an intelligent opinion about. Wall Street regulation? Global warming? Constitutional law? I do not think most people are equipped either with enough intelligence or with enough knowledge to answer these questions.
It is possible to solve problems without partisanship, you know. Identify problems--housing education, jobs. Define outcomes used to measure success in solving the problems. Devise many solutions taken from many traditions. Try out the proposed solutions in limited ways (in states or localities). See which ones work best and expand them. Curtail the ineffective ones. There is no democracy here, just a group of intelligent people who are working to make things better. Time to rethink democracy.
India has a rather vibrant multiparty democracy, and it has a population of over a billion.
You are looking too hard for simple answers. There are many small town, city and county governments in the US that are far more corrupt and influenced by business interests than the federal government.
Think about John Brown; kook or self sacrificing martyr trying to free four million people from bondage
Read; Dave Foreman, "Confessions of an Eco-warrior"
Thoreau to Emerson, "What are you doing out there?"
Chris Hedges ,again pulls no punches.The excesses of the monied interests have destroyed any remaining illusions that thinking people may have had about "democracy".The class war is over,the people lost.The enemy has a cloak of invisibility,endless wealth and immortality.G*dess help the beings on this blind boulder as we hurl through space.
peace
We have a national debt of about 14 trillion dollars. Who will pay? Watch out for our social security, our medicare, FDA, medicaid, tax deductions etc. Why do we need 725 military installations around the world? Who profits? Who is the enemy? Why do we need aircraft carriers, nuclear weapons, missiles, b-52 bombers to fight a few thousand terrorists? Why does the supreme court permit corporations to buy our legislators? Why do we permit Wall Street to get welfare from us taxpayers while ladling out billions in bonuses?
America wake up! We are being taken for a ride.
Brilliant article from Chris Hedges. "We as imperial citizens, are taught to be contemptuous of government bureaucracy yet we stand like sheep before homeland security agents in airports and are mute when Congress permits our private correspondence and conversations to be monitored and archived". The "consensus trance" achieved by the corporate media amongst average citizens permits the above paradox, the fate of those without history who, like the proverbial frog in a pot of increasingly hot water, have no way of analyzing what is happening to them. Perhaps this trance will be broken by the reality shock of the treachery that is in plain sight in freely available film clips of the collapses of the three world trade towers on 9-11. More people each day are understanding what those three perfect slides into their basements signify and this may reach "critical mass". Once the majority grasps what their relationship to power is, then mass organizations which could organize boycotts, strikes and non-cooperation might be formed.
Tony Vodvarka
Watching the videos of 9/11 over and over expecting it to wake up America is another distraction.
The amount of death and destruction in Haiti puts fear of terrorism in true perspective.
If I understand you correctly, Jim, I would reply that not being distracted by JFK's ambush long ago led directly to the greater treachery of 9-11.
Well, in a sense YES.
They are both consequences of War.
Now if we were to get into another endless discussion about whether the towers were brought down from the airliners, or from agents planting bombs that are set off after the airliners hit, that is another over done distraction IN MY VIEW.
THESE THINGS ARE NOT GOING TO CHANGE.... JFK AND 9/11 LIKE ALL THE OTHER TRAGEDIES OF OUR HISTORY.
But maybe you will discover some hidden truth... from your own experience.
Dear Jim, If the confusion above is all you know about 9-11, then my experience tells me that, like many folk, you are not much interested an inconvenient truth.
Your experience is correct sir, We care about provable truth.
That is what community and a new democracy can be built on.
Speculation about mystery and theory has its time and place, but somebody has to do the work.
Dear Jim, There is NO mystery in the fact that World Trade Center #7 was set up for demolition, nothing else in the world could possibly have caused that sort of perfect collapse. Furthermore, it is impossible to do the preparation for such a demolition in a few hours on a moment's notice. Therefore? Therefore the government's story is a total nonsense. This alone, and there is much, much more, is the smoking gun on plain view.
OK you believe...
Read this and tell us how 9/11 is gonna get us democracy.
http://www.debunking
911.com/pull.htm
but this is all I got to say on this now because I feel it is off topic.
Sorry
Glover, the website you cite does nothing to dispel the doubt. Indeed its arguments are rather weak compared to those of the other side.
Ignoring the 'distraction' of JFK's assassination led directly to the Vietnam War, and indirectly to everything that has followed since. It allowed for the growth of the 'Enterprise' so well described by Senator Inouye during the Iran/Contra hearings. And it is this 'Enterprise', whose activities include taxpayer, and illicitly funded political and economic warfare, as well as covert (terrorism) and overt warfare at home and abroad for political ideology and massive profit - and the playing of both sides of the 'drug war' (which can be construed as chemical warfare), has directly led us to the situation we face today. Even if you accept the idea that Al Qaeda actually exists as an organization, its existence can be shown to relate to our failure to put a leash on our dogs, and our unwillingness to be 'distracted' by such a little thing as the killing of a President whose politics didn't further the corporate idea of the 'national interest'. I have always believed that, if the truth were known about such events, there would be a massive paradigm shift away from the propaganda of the cold war which truly is the parent of the 'global war on terror', and people would find their minds freed of the deception which has pitted them against their neighbors rather than those who truly deserve condemnation.
Corporations are associations of people whose bottom line is profit and not quality of life.
Sadly this article presents a very clear description of the state of the usa. It was very clear that democracy was dead in 2000 when the supreme court chose bush and ignored the electoral process.
As of 1/27/10 it is also clear that
INSTITUTIONALIZING an ILLEGITIMATE
right wing supreme court was what made
the elections worth worth STEALING.
Treasure was paid both LONG term and
short term.
PS please note the pimp who was the
thorn in acorns side was arrested for
posing as a telephone technician and
attempting to ??? in the offices of
MARY LANDRIEU along with 3 other operatives
A most succinct and complete description of the United States of America. We citizens need to abandon our hope in government and pursue our Common Dreams!
Hedges is right as rain once again. It seems clear beyond further argument that we must find an effective way, or ways, to confront, challenge, and eradicate corporatism, or we will remain forever its slave and prisoner. For some 50 years we have allowed this monster to slowly gather into itself nearly all the wealth and power this society holds, and most especially through our acquiescence to Globalization, as if that would really benefit ordinary citizens, not just corporate power.
They duped the vast majority into believing this gargantuan lie, unless we are finally content to be nothing more than consumers of the products they hawk in a media saturated culture, where the culture itself is now nothing more than round-the-clock spectacle for advertising and consuming. We've managed to strangle and toxify the world with the waste attendant on all this maniacal consumption, while the corporate elite continue consolidating its power and seizing of all wealth.
When their habitual crimes and theft result in bankrupting the very system they plunder without remorse or pause, our lickspittle government bails them out with our tax dollars. Or what's left after funnelling most of it to militarism. This is not a sustainable situation, as we see every day. How long the collapse will take, nobody knows. Inverted totalitarianism has many tricks and schemes to keep it on indefinite life support, sucking all the vitality out of this already demented society, so that in time we become not only willing prisoners and slaves but unconsciously so, which is all engineered into the corporate design. Denial that all this has already happened is as epidemic and ubiquitous as TV advertising. We either overthrow this madness or accept our fully assimilated status as helpless captives of "the Borg." If "freedom is participation in power," as *metal* keeps reminding us, then there could not be a less free people anywhere. Unless we've finally decided that power doesn't mean anything besides consuming products.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5P2jJdrz9bY&feature=related
Funny!
Too true. Too true.
Sioux Rose
EPHRAIM: Right-on post. If you have not seen Terry Gilliam's movie, "Brazil" it is highly recommended, for while a stunning depiction of the events of our times, it is both darkly tragic and hilariously funny (not the easiest of hybrids to weave, but he manages to pull that challenge off) at the same time, and makes for a sort of therapy... it's the sci-fi version of viewing Ingmar Bergman's "Through a Glass Darkly." Sometimes when we view others up against the same "demons" we face, we gain a form of solace, and are better equipped to strategize on the use of those tools still available to us. While our efforts may not win us the goals we immediately seek, utlimately the wave will turn in our favor. It's a question of time. If humanity's evolutionary plan took on the analogy of a washing machine's cycles, we'd be in that rapid final rinse portion right about now.
Strange times call for strange analogies!
Yes, Siouxrose, I first saw "Brazil" in 1985 just after its release. Twenty-five years later it's as current as ever. As is "The Life of Brian" the post references below yours, the scene where they nuttily discuss how they have to stop just TALKING ceaselessly about taking action against the Roman Empire but actually DO something for a change. And all they can do is make one emphatic statement after another about the urgent necessity of doing more than simply talking. It's hilarious, as is much of Brazil, in spite of the dystopian future it portends.
I think we've already in that future. The future is now. When I can, I try to laugh at it as much as possible, but when we're literally trapped in it, in the sense Hedges points to as being prisoners here, no longer citizens because democracy is dead and long gone, it's hard to laugh a lot. Mark Twain saw it all coming over a hundred years ago, but of course the acceptable, stupidly popularized version of him is the image of lazily smoking a corncob pipe on the banks of the Mississippi. We have to romanticize even our best social critics (Thoreau, Whitman, Melville, Twain, Vonnegut, et al.) or consign them to oblivion. It's been a key strategy in building the corporatocracy now sealed into hardened law by the Supreme Court. How long before none of those writers (or any others of real consequence) will be taught in our "schools"? 'Brazil' converges with Fahrenheit 451.