128 22
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WORLD, BEWARE! Theodore Roszak is one of the nation’s boldest and most eloquent social critics. This book is an alarm bell intended to
awaken present
us to the long-term dangers of our
We must
course.
Roszak’s message
if
we
all
listen
to
are to survive as a
decent society at one with the world.
— Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States
Big
issues,
small packages, cutting-edge
thinkers ...P
R O V O C AT IONS.
WORLD. BEWARE!'
IN AN AGE OF TERROR
Theodore Roszak
Between the Lines Toronto
World, Beware!
©
2006 by Theodore Roszak
First
published in Canada in 2006 by
Between the Lines 720 Bathurst Street,
Suite
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Roszak, Theodore, 1933American triumphalism World, beware! Theodore Roszak. :
in
an age of
terror
/
Includes index.
ISBN 1-897071-02-7 2. World politics United States - Foreign economic relations. 4. United States 3. Imperialism. 2 1 st century - Forecasting. Foreign relations - 200 1-. 5. United States - Politics and government 1.
- 2001-.
I.
Title.
E895.R68 2006 Interior
327.73’oo9’o5ii
C2005-904203-6
and cover design by Jennifer Tiberio
Page preparation by Steve Izma Printed in
Canada
Between the Lines gratefully acknowledges assistance for its publishing activities from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishers Tax Credit program and through the Ontario Book Initiative, and the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program.
Contents
Introduction: All the President’s Lies
i
1
The Unexpected Empire
13
2
America’s Worldwide Attack Matrix
31
3
The Corporados
58
4
The Triumphalists
106
5
The Fundamentalists
155
6
The Tiberal
7
The Devolution of American Democracy
204
8
America’s Global Constituency
245
Failure of
Index
About
Nerve
178
289 the
Author
297
“All free nations are vainglorious, but national pride
is
not displayed in the same manner. The Americans in their intercourse with strangers appear impatient of the smallcensure and insatiable of praise. The most slender eulogium is acceptable to them; the most exalted seldom
est
contents them; they unceasingly harass you to extort praise, and if you resist their entreaties, they fall to praising themselves.
It
would seem
as
if,
doubting their
own
constantly exhibited before
merit, they wished to have
it
their eyes. Their vanity
not only greedy, but restless
and
jealous;
it
will
is
grant nothing, whilst
it
demands the same
ready to beg and to quarrel at time. ... It is impossible to conceive a more troublesome or more garrulous patriotism; it wearies even those who everything, but
is
are disposed to respect
it.”
Alexis de Tocqueville,
Democracy
in
America 1835 ,
INTRODUCTION All the President’s Lies
T
his
soon
book has an unusual history. after the Iraq
war began,
it
Written
was part
of an
astonishing barrage of angry criticism aimed at
Bush administration. Not since the right-wing Liberty League of the 1930s set out to vilify Franklin D. Roosevelt as the devil incarnate has any president faced the
such virulent denunciation. But unlike other liberal tiques intended to discredit the president, this
not find a U.S. publisher. Instead,
abroad as,
And
even
or,
in
now
edition via a
under such
titles
La Menace Americaine (The American Germany, Alarmstufe Rot (Red Alert).
in France,
Menace)
book did
was published
it
in several foreign translations
cri-
it
appears in
its
first
English-language
Canadian publisher.
To some degree in the English
this circuitous route to publication
language
is
appropriate. World, Beware!
warning to an audience beyond the borders of the United States. It is meant to reach America’s global directs
its
constituency, the billions of people
who
are being treated
by our unilateralist policy-makers as junior partners or
mere spectators. That
is
why
it
contains a certain
amount
of rather basic information about American politics and history. Its thesis,
however,
readers as anybody
else.
is
And
intended as I
suspect
it
much is
for U.S.
that thesis,
which has been warmly welcomed abroad, that has kept it from finding publication in the United States.
WORLD, BEWARE! major books and films that castigated George W. Bush emphasized sensational revelations, many of them brought to light by former high-level policy-makers. Other works, mainly
Through
2004
the
election season, the
by journalists, targeted the president personally for his lack of candour, competence, and intellect. With the exception of a few left-liberal voices and periodicals, those the
out to savage the president zeroed in on that carried us into the Iraq war. Even the most
who
lies
set
inflammatory of these efforts, Michael Moore’s film Fahrenheit 9/1 1, sought primarily to portray the presi-
away
dent as a dolt, stripping
the deceptions
meant
to
hide his blundering.
Muckraking of
this
kind
is
shatters the air of infallibility in
and
to cloak themselves,
undeniably valuable.
which men of power
forces
it
all
we can
like
of us to face the
unpleasant facts of failure and dishonesty. the truth-telling
It
We
need
get, especially in dealing
all
with an
administration as secretive as the Bush White House.
Whistle-blowing by insiders seems the only way we have in the United States to achieve transparency in government. But there get
beyond
is
a
problem with
nitty-gritty,
any larger patterns
criticism that does not
piecemeal attacks.
We
never see
in the events of the day. Rather, the
comes down to a pack of lies that make him seem no better (but no worse) than many another politician. After all, in politics, lying comes with
case against the president
the territory.
But in George W. Bush’s case,
we have
a different
random, off-the-wall improvisations like the lies that Lyndon Johnson told about the war he was losing in Vietnam or the lies that Bill Clinton told about his sexual escapades in the White House. In kind of lying. His
Bush’s case, the
lies
lies
are not
are deliberate
2
and co-ordinated, part
All the President’s Lies
of an ideological pattern that
out to transform both
is
domestic and foreign policy. They precede policy and prepare the
way
for
it.
Their main purpose
obscure while something
much
that neo-conservatives
lies
tell
to distract or
is
bigger rolls forward.
The
are not hasty efforts to
avoid embarrassment by covering up stupid or criminal
misdeeds in the past. Rather, they look to the future as part of a well-orchestrated campaign that seeks to shape the history of the twenty-first century.
administration
embedded
are
in
a
The
lies
long
of the Bush
sequence
of
remarkably lucid statements by leading neo-conservatives about what they want to do with power once they have In this sense, there
about
their designs.
political
it.
nothing hidden or conspiratorial
is
They
are the clear objectives of a
movement - triumphalism
,
as
I
call
it
in these
pages - that has been preparing to take over the federal
government
for a quarter-century. Indeed, these lies
have a
certain puzzling transparency that suggests they have not
been formulated to hide something that the
ashamed of. They seem that at some point there country will have been poses behind those
way
lies.
are
liars
to be told in the full expectation will be
no need
to
lie
because the
won over to the values and purWhat else could explain the casual
which the Bush administration dropped its claim that the war was fought to eliminate Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction? “Alright,” said the war-makers, “if that won’t do as a reason, how about this? The world is better off
in
without Saddam Hussein.
We
are fighting to
Iraqi people happy.
No? Not good enough
many dead? Okay,
let’s
try:
can
satellite,
the
to justify so
The war was launched
spread freedom. That has a nice idealistic ring to
And when,
make
to
it.”
eventually, Iraq turns out to be an Ameri-
so what?
By that time the U.S. public
have accepted the idea that
it
3
is
will
our nation’s destiny to
WORLD, BEWARE! societies in
remake other
much
pretty
like that idea already.
be seen as
lies will
our image. Most Americans
justified,
At that point
all
the
even noble, for they will have
served a higher purpose. In short, these are the sort of lies that Dostoevsky’s
Grand Inquisitor told: lies that are good for you, whether you know it or not; lies that are told with an oily condescension as
if
they were acts of noblesse oblige.
This book
is
not by an
nor does
insider,
seek to
it
expose closely guarded state secrets. It is not based on who said what to whom; it does not ask what the president knew and when he knew it. It wastes no time ridiculing George to
W. Bush, an easy
do something that
my
purpose
as important for intelligent
is
zenship as muckraking.
target. Rather,
And
that
is
is
citi-
to trace the ideologi-
cal pattern that explains the overall thrust of policy. This is
why
believe World,
I
side the United States.
and
intellectuals, are
Beware! had to come to Americans, even
light out-
many academics
uncomfortable with ideology. They
has no place in our pragmatic society. They do not take it seriously even when conservatives boast that
think
it
their strength lies precisely in their ideological purity.
once tion
we -
take the neo-conservatives at their
as those
“end to
whom
evalua-
destiny has anointed to bring an
evil” (the title of
form the world into
own
But
one of
their
books) and to trans-
a free-market utopia
- we
arrive at
alarming conclusions about the state of our society. That
what few want to take is
and
U.S. publishers or political
on. Indeed, focusing
foibles of the president
-
commentators
on the personal
for example,
failures
snooping into
1970s or showing how he took seven minutes to respond to the September 11 attack - might almost be a comforting digression, a
his record of military service in the
form of denial that
lets
us avoid facing up to the fact that
4
All the P resident’s Lies
American politics is an ugly spectacle. It is a picture that combines a saddening amount of ignorance, intolerance, and authoritarianism at the grassroots with even more shocking ruthlessness on the commanding the big picture of
heights.
Thanks tuals and to
to the resourcefulness of triumphalist intelleca corporate largesse that has financed
dozens
of conservative think-tanks and electoral campaigns, the
United States has, over the into the
last quarter-century,
hands of right-wing elements
who
drifted
have attacked
with the same venomous hostility once reserved
liberals
Kremlin during the Cold War, as
for the
the difference.
And
that
may
if
they cannot see
actually be true. In the neo-
conservative ideological perspective, the weather bureau
and Environmental Protection Agency are the equivalent of the Gestapo. They are “big government.” Thus, in the
name
of
“freedom,”
the
neo-conservative
goal
is
to
uproot every institution that seeks to protect the public
from corporate exploitation, every program that strives to secure greater social equality, every law that seeks to share the national wealth more equitably. As if interest
they do not understand that the historical role of liberal-
ism has been to save capitalism from
its
own
worst
vices,
the neo-conservatives have cast their liberal foes as the
deadly enemies of freedom. Unable to imagine that corporate wealth
is
capable of abusing
take the protection of government
its
power, they would
away from
the public
most and place it in the hands of those who already dominate our money-corrupted political system.
that needs
it
The key to the triumphalists’ project is war: war that demands patriotic acquiescence from the press and the public, that wastes enough money to bankrupt the public sector, that gives
major corporations and private military
contractors access to limitless profits, that
5
makes
all
WORLD, BEWARE! home
opposition at
war
or abroad look soft, effete, and disthat never ends, that never ceases to
loyal.
Above
make
the public afraid, that never fails to call for
all,
leadership, that guarantees the
macho
worldwide superpower from here to eternity.
supremacy of the United States Nothing could fulfil all these criteria more perfectly than the war on terror. It is what George Orwell once characterized as the state of permanent war. It is no great secret that a war of this kind has been
on the neo-conservative agenda since the collapse of the Soviet Union. The neocons have been scrambling to find empire.
evil to replace the evil
another great
We now
Middle East (starting with Iraq) was being brainstormed from the inconclusive end of the first Gulf War and was sched-
know
that a massive military intervention in the
2002 congressional elections. Could the Bush administration have managed to win the country over to that war without the September 11, uled to be rolled out for the
2001, terrorist attack? Certainly, implicating Saddam Hussein in that attack made the task all the easier. September 11 was what some neo-conservatives were seeking as the equivalent of Pearl Harbor.
It
offered the
opportunity of declaring war on the Muslim world from North Africa to the Philippines and on an al-Qaeda net-
work
that hides in every
How different the have been
if
nook and cranny
of the planet.
history of the past few years might
the fbi and cia and the National Security
Advisor had not laid back
in
2001 and waited
for
some-
thing to happen.
An finds
understanding of
itself
in
a
state
how and why
of permanent
the United States
war under
a
tri-
umphalist leadership cannot be achieved by focusing on the journalistic moment. It requires historical back-
ground and sociological analysis - and indeed more of 6
All the President's Lies
both than
we
are
offer in this short book.
I
now
that
building in the Middle East grows out of the
conservative
backlash that began during the Reagan
One needs
presidency.
how
The imperium
that broad context to understand
conservative shibboleths like “free market,” “family
and “ownership
values,” “spreading democracy,”
came
ety”
words
to be code
soci-
for a determined effort to
place the world at large under corporate hegemony. social criticism
cannot think on that large
it
will
and audacity of the triumphalist
to grasp the scope
fail
a scale,
If
vision. Liberals will continue fighting a rearguard action
on
them more votes than they gain -
issues that lose
civil
same-sex marriage, racial equality, environmental preservation - as more and more abortion
liberties,
rights,
of the public succumbs to pious posturing and patriotic
schwarmerei.
My of
my
political life has
been spent on the dissenting edge
always
society, but
in the
hope that
this rich
powerful nation would one day be a force for
and
and of us thought the end of the Vietnam justice
compassion.
Many
War would
usher in that bright prospect. But liberals
Vietnam poorly, and now that better day seems further off than ever - and not least of all because so many members of the American public have
played the end
game
proven willing to
who lence
invoke
and
to
bow
God and
religiosity.
to the
country.
It is
Our
society
Watching Gulf War
aftermath unfold on television infuriating.
moral authority of leaders
is
awash in vioand its bloody
is
II
as heartbreaking as
also an instructive insight into the
state of the union.
it is
moral
Hardly a day goes by but we learn that
more young Americans have been Iraqi cities. Like drops of
casualties stain the
killed in the streets of
blood from an open wound, the
news of the
day.
One
today, three or four yesterday, twenty or
7
two dead
or
more
a
few days
WORLD, BEWARE! down
ago when the insurgents brought
doubt somewhere
in the depths of the
No
a helicopter.
Pentagon, generals
and strategists are comforting themselves that we are well below the casualty levels of Vietnam, and so they believe that they are still at a safe distance from public protest. Yet each death - whether American or Iraqi - is a total loss for the
man
take, but harder
families of the
or
woman
still
newly
killed.
The deaths
are hard to
are the inevitable interviews with the fallen: tearful
mothers, fathers, wives
holding flag-wrapped photos, insisting that their loved
ones died doing what they wanted to do. “He wanted to go. She wanted to be there. He was proud to be defending his country.
She joined up to fight for freedom.”
With each passing day such displays of grief become more surrealistic. At times I wonder if these people are perhaps actors reading from a script. Can they really believe what they are saying? Are they unaware that their pathetic sentiments are exactly what the cynical decisionmakers in Washington - the people who gave us this war - want to hear? After learning how we were deceived about the reasons for invading Iraq, can these mothers, fathers, wives still naively believe that this war has any relationship whatever to national security, to democracy, to
any defensible cause? Having read again and again
about the war profits filling the pockets of the administration’s favoured corporations, are they never troubled that these deaths are making others rich? I think back to the election of 2000.
candidate
who
Would any
of
them have voted
for a
and husbands and wives, and spend hunof dollars to do a really nice thing for
said he intended to sacrifice their sons
daughters, their
dreds of billions
the people of Iraq?
Perhaps the worst of these
reports
it is
the trivializing
way
in
which
reach us on television, wedged between 8
All the President’s Lies
inane commercials for cellphones and erectile dysfunction medications, narrated by news readers eager to get on to
more work
cheerful material, bannered by artfully designed netgraphics: “Conflict Iraq,” “Crisis Iraq,” “America at
War.” There
invariably film showing explosions, dead
is
bodies, soldiers dodging through the debris of battle, kick-
ing if
down
doors, patrolling the war-torn streets of Iraq as
was
it
And
their country.
finally
a quick shot of a
square-jawed colonel or steely-eyed general assuring view-
making steady
ers that we’re
progress, that the insurgency
72 percent under control in 55 percent of the country. Three minutes, five minutes of superficial coverage from our far-off conquered province - then on to weather, is
and the latest hit Who’s Your Father?
sports, .
.
.
And
all
and
dreds
show. Extreme Makeover
reality .
.
.
Trading Spouses.
the while Americans are dying by the hunIraqis
are
dying
by the thousands.
Who
The cunning few at the top or the millions down below who
deserves the greater blame?
who
exploit our trust,
seem so eager
to believe all the president’s lies?
doubt that historians looking back from a few generations in the future will see Gulf War II as one of the most daring power grabs in modern history. I
have
The war American
little
in
Iraq
is
the centrepiece of a revolution in
politics that will
shape the
every corner of the world. twenty-first century.
small
number
swiftly
It is
One can almost
will
ripple through the
the brain child of a remarkably
of ideologues
and boldly than
It
lives of billions in
who
have moved
their critics could
far
more
have predicted.
congratulate them on the
skill
with
which they have employed a revivified military-industrial complex to impose their vision on a trusting society. Far from pursuing their goal by a coup, the triumphalists can claim to have achieved a democratic, even a populist
9
WORLD, BEWARE! sanction for their policies. In that sense, they have once again demonstrated one of the bleak truths of modern times: that in the absence of searching
and
debate, democracies can be as corrupted by
any
intelligent
power
as can
dictator.
am
drawing a formidable picture of triumphalist power. Some will find that view In these pages
exaggerated.
I
don’t.
I
I
deliberately
believe the triumphalists
may
very
well be able to redesign the world to their specifications.
They
new
are a
breed of ultra-conservative, fuelled by an
irrational hostility for liberalism
and the welfare
state.
They have assembled a robust political coalition; they have found ways of winning elections; they have shown a willingness to make ruthless use of the power they gam But there are a few soft spots in their armour, weaknesses that may offer an opportunity to deconstruct their political coalition. I review those
from those
elections.
weaknesses
in the last section of this
book; each of them
represents an opportunity for liberals to clear the air and achieve an honest debate about the uses of U.S.
power. In addressing myself at least partially to a non- Amer-
ican audience, tive
from
my
purpose
is
to offer a critical perspec-
inside the United States that
may
help others
understand the ominous direction of U.S. policy. Above all, I want to clarify the intimate connection that exists
between
my
country’s domestic and foreign affairs - a
connection that not even tered.
many Americans have
The American imperium stems from an
regis-
ideological
transformation that has captured the political culture of
my
country. That culture
is
now
diverging
more and
from the mainstream of the industrial world. America is fast becoming an aberration among
more
radically
modern
nations.
To some
degree, this
io
is
the result of the
All the President's Lies
avaricious style that has overtaken our business
But
nity.
it
goes beyond that. The avarice of the well-to-
do has been given might almost say a of
tion
fanatics.
commu-
a powerful
ideological thrust, one
by a new genera-
religious impetus,
and fundamentalist These are people drunk on the strong wine of triumphalist
intellectuals
extremism; they are out for blood. Yet nothing gives the
international
me more hope
perspective
that
in this
debate than
book seeks
this
to
develop. American liberals are not alone in the struggle
humane
They have That is why this book was cast in to the non-American public. If we for a
politics.
a global constituency.
the
form of an appeal
are not to be the sort
of imperial brute that other nations have become,
need to see ourselves as others see
us.
we
Within that per-
spective, readers
might be able to find the
critical objec-
how
divergent our society has
become under
tivity to see its
triumphalist leadership. That appeal also corresponds
to the
way
in the
world; for eventually nations everywhere will find
in
which U.S.
politics implicates every nation
themselves under pressure to adapt to the triumphalist
agenda. As part of a global constituency, an informed
and thoughtful international community needs to join forces with embattled American liberals to resist an ideological assault that has at its disposal the most powerful military establishment - and one of the most militarized publics - in the world. At
this
point
how
it
may
be
still
difficult for
most people
and brutal the triumphalist takeover is. It is as if one team in a football game suddenly began using guns and knives. The shocked response might well be, “Can this really be happening?” Yes, it can - and it is happening with astonishing speed. Hence this to
grasp
audacious
warning to the world.
When '
“democracy”
ii
is
presented as
WORLD, BEWARE! the private property of one society that dentially anointed, beware\
When
deems
itself
provi-
politicians of very
little
brain and less conscience purport to be the agents of God,
beware When the word “freedom” becomes a mindless drumbeat meant to rally millions to the cross and the flag, !
beware\
12
ONE The Unexpected Empire
“You will
more with a kind word and kind word alone.”
will get
with a
a
gun than you
A1 Capone, noted American gangster, 1926
“You will
more with a kind word and kind word alone.”
will get
with a
a
gun than you
Donald Rumsfeld, U.S. Secretary of Defense, 2003
WORLD, BEWARE! AM TEMPTED TO OPEN line.
I
“A
spectre
is
THIS CHAPTER with a famous
haunting Europe.” That was the
dark prophecy with which Karl Marx began his Communist Manifesto in 1848. Then, a troubled Europe, '
still
in the turbulent
dawn
of industrialization, seemed to
be balancing on the brink of social revolution. Today, with social revolution placed on indefinite hold, the spec-
looms over mankind is the exact opposite. It is the prospect that Europe - and most of the rest of the world — may soon fall under the control of a nation that
tre that
is
becoming increasingly conservative not only
domestic policies but also in the influence
it
in
exerts
its
upon
the global economy. I
take no joy in issuing this warning, nor in holding
country to account for the moral, economic, and physical harm it is doing itself and other people in the
my
view international terrorism as the most serious threat that the modern world has ever faced. It is an attack upon all the best that mod-
name
of defending high ideals.
ernism has to
offer, as
well as
I
much
of the worst.
The
danger of that attack is all the greater because it has found a way to use our strength against us. Think back to September 11, 2001. Consider the structure of the calamity that struck that day.
A couple
of
big planes crashed into a big building in the heart of a big its
city.
Can we even imagine
the
modern world
lacking
big planes, big buildings, big cities? Ponder the
com-
mercial necessities and cultural imperatives that underlie the rapid transport, the colossal architecture, the urban lifestyle that
was targeted
tragedy of that event
is
for attack that day.
fully parallelled
The human
by the symbolism
embodied. And then think of how the act was carried out. No advanced technology, no weapons of mass destruction. All that was needed were nineteen men
it
14
The Unexpected Empire dispatched from the barren wilderness of Afghanistan
and armed with box-cutters hidden in their shoes. It was as if the King Kong that once assailed the Empire State Building, that fanciful epitome of the primitive rising up against civilized mankind, had returned in the flesh, this time armed with a God-intoxicated ideology. Nineteen men, but behind them, driving them to the deed, was a
was
outmanoeuvre all our means of self-defence, as well as our complacent certainty that the industrial world has left enemies like this fanatical hatred that
able to
in its dust.
How
can any modern nation defend
from an
itself
endless succession of similar tragedies unless
it
finds a
moral leadership that deals with the root causes of that hatred and regains an idealism that can match the fanaticism?
My ship
thesis
is
simple but controversial. The leader-
we need cannot come from
a nation
whose
politics
more and more based on a social Darwinist ethic that places wealth and power above compassion and justice, a nation whose political spectrum stops at dead centre is
with a fainthearted liberalism that seems uncertain that with health care or a pension,
it
can provide
a
nation in which the conservative party that has domi-
its
citizens
nated the political scene for twenty years eagerly anticipates
auctioning
off
country’s
the
parks, water, and power, even
its
schools,
armed
highest private bidder, a nation that
now
national
forces to the
counts
its
mil-
and billionaires in the hundreds, but where record numbers of the working poor can now be found sleeping in their cars in Wal-Mart parking lots. In short, a nation that is rapidly travelling backward towards the lionaires
darkest days of free-market anarchy.
The
vices
and
failures
I
list
15
here are blemishes in our
WORLD, BEWARE! But they offer a significant insight into our country’s state of soul as the one remaining superpower. That is what makes the United States’ social condomestic
affairs.
dition relevant to our role in the international
For there are those
nity.
in positions of
commu-
policy-making
power who would have the world become what we are. They control a major political party, and through it they hold a
commanding
the Pentagon, the
position in the Congress, the courts,
Washington bureaucracy.
election in the years to
come
No
single
will erase that power.
With each passing year, right-wing elements in the United States grow more determined to impress their vision of a corporate-dominated, market economy on the world
at large. If they
should succeed in achieving that
goal, then the United States
may
very well be able to use
overwhelming military force to prevent any other superpower from coming into existence to challenge its its
authority.
I
would not be surprised
already pre-emptive plans under
to learn that there are
way
to block China, the
one industrial nation that may one day be able to match America’s military and economic might, from achieving superpower status. How long would the domination of the United States then last? Conceivably for generations.
We may
be seeing the birth of a
new
imperial order
widespread and more enduring than any empire past.
The
stakes are that high.
oughly discredited
in the
more
in the
Imperialism, so thor-
aftermath of World
War
II,
is
being unexpectedly reborn in the policies of a nation that
has long claimed that
world
its
historic role
is
to
make
the
safe for democracy.
do not believe this drive towards global hegemony arises from the American public. Americans have waged wars to resist imperial aggressors. As a child growing up during World War II, I learned that only wicked dictators I
The Unexpected Empire seek to conquer and rule other people. That the
first
is
why, when
President Bush announced in the early 1990s
that the goal of the United States
“new world
'order,”
I
was
the creation of a
was shocked - not only by
the
phrase but also by the arrogant and implacable tone in
which
who
it
was
uttered.
believed they
Had we
had the
make people everywhere
not once fought enemies
do exactly that, to and think and believe like
right to
act
themselves?
Ask ordinary American
citizens
if
they have any
and they will surely reject the idea. But ordinary American citizens have less and less awareness of the things that are being done in their name in far-off places, and they have less and less interest in dictating to other nations,
control over great decisions about the national purpose.
Overwhelmed by
and complexity of everyday life, scrambling to keep their jobs and provide for their children, too many Americans seem to have fallen asleep in front of their television sets. They fill the quiet desperation of their daily lives with trivia and distraction. They the pace
pay more attention to the
latest celebrity
scandal than to
Too many voting (and non-voting) Americans are falling far short of what the citizens of a superpower are called upon to become. paramount
issues of
war and
Meanwhile, there are others corporate community
in
peace.
our government and our
who grow more
obsessed each day
with the imperial destiny of the United States. They
openly declare that over those
who
it
is
America’s right to exert power
lack the will, the resources, and the real-
ism to qualify as world leaders. This
is
distinctly new.
We
did not hear such boastful claims made, even when, dur-
World War II and the Cold War, the United States had the power to dominate and subjugate. In this book I call those who promote these imperial ing
17
8
WORLD, BEWARE! Although they think of themselves as arch-conservatives, they might be seen as hyper-radicals, in the sense that they are out to foment “the
designs
triumphalists.”
more change more
rapidly than are
many
revolutionaries.
These are men of daring, dynamism, and high ambition, filled with a zeal to rebuild the world. They see themselves as the saviours of a confused and weak-willed humanity. Like
fanatics,
all
they have a crystal-clear,
rock-solid view of their objective.
They
are out to create
market economy dominated by a small number of multinational, mainly U.S. -controlled, corporations. They may not be the first policy-makers to harbour such a global
goals;
some form
of
corporate
U.S.
supremacy was
Cold War. But they are the first to have unquestioned military supremacy at their command. One would have to reach back to the days of the ancient river-valley empires to find examples of a people achieving the unchallenged dominance that the implicit in the assumptions of the
United States It
chills
now enjoys in my blood to
(Donald Rumsfeld)
wealth and arms. hear a secretary of defense
justify U.S. foreign policy
by quoting
A1 Capone, the most villainous gangster in American history: “You will get more with a kind word and a gun
than you will with a kind word alone.” Such tough-guy
moral urgency you will find in these pages. I believe the chauvinistic bravado one hears in right-wing circles these days is more than talk; the lan-
talk accounts for the
guage reveals an uninhibited Machiavellian willingness to use raw power in order to have one’s way with both allies
and enemies.
I
am
convinced that the triumphalists
what they seek than many political By chance and by design, history has hands, and they have been quick to cap-
are closer to gaining
analysts realize.
played into their italize
on
their advantage.
1
The Unexpected Empire One
point
I
want
to establish at the outset.
There are
and they include a good many of my disgruntled fellow liberals, whose operative political principle has become “blame America first” - for anything and every-
those,
wrong
thing that goes
world, including the attacks
in the
am
among them. To blame
of September 11, 2001.
I
the victim - even
the victim
when
not
a rich
is
and powerful
nation - betrays a twisted morality, especially
who
are
suffer
innocent civilians.
always the case where terrorism
make
should also
clear that, as
is
Muslim
my
By
I
that
those
almost
is
concerned. Perhaps
much
historical contributions of Islam,
social system.
And
when
as
I
appreciate the
I
am no
admirer of
its
admittedly ethnocentric standards,
society represents too
much
that the Western
Enlightenment called into question three centuries ago autocracy, cruel
theocracy,
and patriarchy.
and unusual punishment,
tanism,
its
its
penchant for
Its
misogynistic
use of vengeful self-immolation
puri-
make my blood
run cold. Every chapter of the Koran begins by naming Allah as “all-merciful,” but
I
have seen
little
of that mercy
on the part of His fundamentalist worshippers. fanatics
cans” or eager to
who
proclaim that
it is
their goal to “kill
Ameri-
Jews” frighten me. The people they are so might be members of my family. They might
“kill kill
include me. Whatever their grievance,
such
Suicidal
right.
There
is
no more
I
grant them no
justice in the violence they
do
than in the civilian deaths caused by U.S. troops in Iraq. take terrorism to be the
symptom
I
of a fatal disease within
the international community, a disease that can annihilate all
civilized
norms.
We
must
certainly understand the rea-
sons that underlie the anger of terrorists, but whatever the reasons, they cannot justify massacring the innocent.
ble.
With that much said, let me be as emphatic as possiThe imperial course on which the United States has 19
WORLD, BEWARE! immoral as it is misconceived. This is not a popular or prominent position to advocate not even among Democratic voters who reject everything else the Bush administration and the triumphalists stand for. There are a great many Americans who voted against George W. Bush who turned out in the 2004 election to
embarked
is
as
support his war on
terror.
The
grieving parents
who
gathered outside the president’s ranch in Texas during the
summer
of
2005
to
demand an end
clear sign of serious discontent. But polls have
war,
is
it
to the
if
war
are a
public opinion
some reservations about not because increasing numbers reject
begun to
reflect
the the
design behind the war, but because that design has not
been achieved as quickly as promised. The United States is a very frightened nation. Even in a time of economic recession,
it
is
willing to spend billions of dollars to
build a “National Security State” (as
it
has
come
to be
Washington) to defend itself from terrorism, a threat that we have been told will never go away. I believe this course has been charted by narrow and
called in
unworthy as
interests
whose
vision of the future
is
as bleak
anything anticipated in the most pessimistic anti-
utopian literature.
There were thousands of us who spoke out against the invasion of Iraq, but there were millions more who cheered our troops into battle. Despite the war,
my
I
cannot help but
feel
my
opposition to
conscience-stricken to see
country become a bully on the international stage,
dedicated to imposing the will of a small, covetous minority
of corporate profiteers and militarists on the rest of the
world.
I
and coercion will until it undermines all
believe that their arrogance
continue and grow even more fierce international
structures,
all
shared responsibility, every
form of international law and economic co-operation. At
20
The Unexpected Empire which point history interests,
become captive
will
to one nation’s
one nation’s values - or rather to those
who
determine those interests and values.
Those responsible national
character
the
for
increasingly
United
of the
States
divergent
pursue their
course with invincible conviction. They relish seeing the
United States stand as a people apart. To stand apart so they believe, the privilege of those superior. America’s history
is
who
are morally
haunted by such
exceptionalism. Since the time
when white
is,
a sense of
settlers
came
to these shores seeking to escape the corruption of the
“old world,” deep religious wellsprings have underlain the United States’ grandiose self-image. In the
1980s Ronald Reagan
won
the hearts of the
American people by playing expertly on that theme as only a professional actor could. Again and again, with a throb in his voice and a tear in his eye, our movie-star president referred to the United States as “a city on a hill,” the world’s “last, best hope.” The triumphalists are the ideological heirs of the Reagan presidency. They believe in Reagan’s bombastic rhetoric and want to transform it into a worldwide policy. Over the past two decades American politics has slipped more and more under the control of people a providential nation
who
see the United States as
and themselves
as a messianic van-
guard assigned the task of leading the way into the
That task may not stop with military intervention and economic exploitation; it may include forms of cultural aggression aimed at Christianizing the “heathen” peoples of the Middle East and elsewhere. When George W. Bush first declared war on terrorism in 2001, he future.
announced
it
public opinion the that
may
Out of respect for Muslim word was quickly withdrawn. But
as a “crusade.”
not have been a
slip
21
of the tongue at
all.
There
WORLD, BEWARE! is
war on terrorism become it may have been no mere
willing to see the cross. Similarly,
when on
would be war for the
a sizeable public in the United States that a
fit
of temper
the evangelical superstar Pat Robertson appeared
television to issue a fatwa calling for the assassination
of Venezuelan president
gunning down a
eyes,
Hugo
Chavez. In Robertson’s
legally
elected
leader
socialist
serves God’s agenda.
Claiming the right to lead
is
what
politics
is
all
about. However, America’s triumphalists not only claim the right to lead, but also claim the right to specify a des-
from the goal that people in industrialized nations have long sought. That is why nothing that Washington says about U.S. foreign policy can be taken at face value. One must understand
tination that
is
radically different
the ideological motivation that drives that policy.
2003 the Bush administration carried the day on Gulf War II. It won public approval for a war that it was already committed to fighting. The triumphalists targeted In
Iraq not because
it
was
a serious threat to U.S. security,
wake of January-February 1991, Iraq was a
Gulf War,
but quite the opposite. In the
the
of
depleted nation, a
third-rate
power,
poverty.
was
It
poorly
governed
ripe for conquest.
first
and sinking into
We now know
that the
march into Baghdad George W. Bush took power in
triumphalists were determined to
from the moment that Washington after the disputed election of November 2000.
2005 we had only scant evidence of that pre-existing design. One had to glean rumours and hearsay from the memoirs of Bush administration Until the spring of
insiders like former treasury secretary Paul O’Neill or
Richard Clarke,
who
served as Bush’s counter-terrorist
co-ordinator until his resignation in 2001. For example,
22
The Unexpected Empire in
Ron
O’Neill,
2004 book The Price of Loyalty one-time ceo of Alcoa Aluminum and a man of Susskind’s
impeccable Republican credentials, recalled early meethe was astonished to
invasion of Iraq. Clarke, in his All Enemies
had similar
,
2001
which hear intense discussions about the
ings of the National Security Council in
plans for a pre-emptive
2004
tales to tell.
war on
in
Against
best-seller
He
reported that
Iraq were under discus-
sion well before al-Qaeda’s September 11 attack
World Trade
pm
Center.
He remembered
the blame for that attack
days of the event.
When
on the
being pressured to
on Saddam Hussein within
he protested that a retaliatory
aimed at al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld dismissed the idea, cutely informing him that “there aren’t any good targets in Afghanistan and there are lots of good targets in Iraq.” By the summer of 2005 we no longer had to rely on strike
should
be
scraps of insider gossip to trace the ideological origins of
was when memos of British cabinet meetings dating from March 2002 found their way into print. They record frank and worried discussions of America’s determination to go to war months before any sort of legal case had been made against Saddam Hussein. The memos make it clear beyond all doubt that the trithe war. That
umphalists were using selected intelligence and outright lies
to build a case for invading Iraq even before
sible plans
guerrilla
had been developed
war
that
would follow
any sen-
for the occupation
and
the invasion. All the evi-
dence one could wish to find for deception and manipulation
is
there.
Indeed, Bush himself has confirmed the obsession
with Iraq that dominated his closest advisers. In views with Bob
Bush
Woodward
for
inter-
Woodward’s 2002 book
at War, the president told of having to reign in those
23
WORLD, BEWARE! war with Iraq. There was apparently a period of a month or so in late 2001 when Bush may have been the least belligerent figure in the White
who wanted
to rush into
House. This was, experience
after
all,
a
man
of limited international
who had campaigned on
a platform that called
an end to “nation-building.” But there he was,
for
sur-
rounded by a team of triumphalist advisers for whom Iraq was the gateway to the domination of the Middle East and the foundation of the American imperium. The hawks won out in the debate, prevailing upon Bush to cast himself as a
“war president”
in a far larger theatre of
operations.
months following September 11, the administration managed to convince millions of Americans that Iraq was a serious threat to the country’s national security. The media, taking Bush and Tony Blair at their word, carried stories that warned of Saddam Hussein’s vast arsenal of chemical and biological weapons. United Nations inspectors (who were usually portrayed in the news as bumbling, naive foreigners) declared that these claims were unproven and probably false, but Bush administration spokespeople insisted that Iraq was on the brink of having nuclear weapons. The words “weapons of mass destruction” echoed like a hypnotic drumbeat in the public mind for months. Others were persuaded by hints and rumours from the Bush administration that Saddam Hussein had personally ordered the September 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center and was plotting more assaults with al-Qaeda. Still others approved of the war because of their concern for the survival of Israel, a continuing theme in American politics. And millions more - perhaps the largest number of In the
all
-
and
rallied
behind the administration
in their
confusion
fear with the sort of knee-jerk patriotism that
24
is
The Unexpected Empire inevitable in
Out
any society
time of national emergency.
of this loosely defined public, the Bush adminis-
an overwhelming majority solidly
tration cobbled together in
in a
favour of going to war with Iraq.
hard evidence that the nation was
and the
force of the presidency
It
claimed to have
at risk;
put the
it
full
behind
joint chiefs of staff
and exaggerations and then worked the obsequious media tenaciously through every outlet of news and opinion. At the same time, the a collection of speculations, lies,
administration brushed aside
abroad as misguided or
What we have deception
cratic
William Pulitzer
disloyal.
here of
home and
protest at
all
is
most pernicious and auto-
the
public
U.S.
the
President
since
McKinley and newspaper publishers Joseph and William Randolph Hearst stampeded the
nation into the Spanish-American
War
in
1898.
Like the leaders of every imperial regime in history,
America’s triumphalists seek to their
of
own
make
the world over in
image. They wish to purge the modern world
all collectivist
and welfare-state tendencies,
tendencies were the very
work
as
if
those
of the devil. Indeed, they
any form of economics that deviates from market orthodoxy as a heresy that must be hounded into the
see
ground. Theirs ple
have done
is
a crusade against everything that peo-
in the
modern
an instrument of the public
dom” If
interest.
requires in their worldview. the triumphalists have their way, the
government
will be placed
who occupy
the
economy. They
wholly
commanding
policies
powers of
at the disposal of those
heights of the corporate
see the rich as uniquely the “wealth cre-
ators” of the world. Therefore, all
government into That is what “free-
era to turn
must bend
all
laws,
to their interests.
remainder of the population 25
is
all
The
to live out
institutions, fate of the
its life
as the
WORLD, BEWARE! obedient employees and uncomplaining servants of the
ruggedly individualistic few, silently suffering whatever fluctuations the global marketplace may undergo, keeping or losing their jobs, their homes, their social status as
economy dictates. Ideas like these amount to a sharp reversal of modern history. For more than a century, modern societies have been fitfully crafting a social contract whose purpose is to share the wealth of nations equitably among all
the world’s corporate
those
who
have contributed their labour, their
capital, their service.
been to those
stabilize
who
fall
objectives of that contract have
The
economies, to place a safety net beneath
upon hard
times, to guard the public
health, to provide a decent education for
the natural
skills, their
beauties
all,
to safeguard
and resources of our planet, to
increase the amenities of everyday
life.
The once-revolu-
tionary words that hover over these goals should be as
precious to conservatives as to liberals. Liberte fraternite
- “The right to
life, liberty,
happiness.” Instead, America’s
new
,
egalite ,
and the pursuit of
triumphalist leader-
out to replace that social contract with policies
ship
is
that
would return us
to the dog-eat-dog social
ism of the 1890s. Gone
Darwin-
any meaningful form of egalitarianism, gone any hint of fair shares or social democracy. The triumphalists would impose a new kind of high-industrial feudalism upon us in which we must defer is
to the interests of vast, baronial corporations.
do not mean the United States alone. The project that the triumphalist leaders have assumed reaches beyond the shores of the United States. As ser-
And by
“us”
I
vants of the major U.S. corporations that have built the global economy, they seek to eliminate social ideals.
Through
their influence
tional bodies such as the
all
competing
on key interna-
World Trade Organization, 26
The Unexpected Empire International
Monetary Fund, and World Bank, they
are
determined to replace those alternatives with market orthodoxy. In their view, that things, a
movement
is
the natural order of
of history that transcends the inter-
ests of nations. U.S. access to global
markets means the
eventual elimination of every institution, every restriction created to defend the public interest.
If
the freedom
of the marketplace results in child labour, sweat shops,
and an unrestricted right to pollute and deplete, so be it. That is what the victory of markets means to the American business community and its right-wing political servants: the abolition of wage and labour laws, the subversion of all environmental protection, an end to the regulation of profits, the unimpeded expansion of monopoly control in every area of trade, finance, communications, and manufacturing. It means the privatization and commercialization of everything - until we find ourselves living in a world in which there is no countervailing power to hold against the privileges of corporate property. Intoxicated with a quasi-religious fervour, the
triumphalists are out to create a world order based not
on consultation and dialogue but on
unilateral force
and
hierarchical subjugation. If
the United States
had nothing but its economic achieving the imperium it seeks,
power to draw upon in that would be threatening enough. But with Gulf War II, we have crossed a line. The triumphalists now stand prepared to enlist brute military power in the service of their
expansionist objectives. Their open contempt for the country’s former allies should serve as a warning about
how
far they are willing to
Those who
go to press
their advantage.
believe that America’s military
reserved for minor Third
North Korea, that
it
power
World nations such
will be
as Iraq or
will never be used to intimidate
27
WORLD, BEWARE! Europeans, the Japanese, the Chinese, are granting the triumphalists far too much diplomatic restraint. These are impetuous
mined
to seize
men driven by an ideological fury, deterthe moment that history has given them.
by other countries, the United States threatens to become a rogue nation. Some would say it already has. That tendency In the absence of intelligent restraint
even though administrations in Washington change. Over the course of the next decade, the Republican Party - now the main locus of triumphal-
may remain
in
force
an election or two; the velocity of America’s imperial advance may from time to time slow. The triumphalists are certain to confront roadblocks and ist
influence
- may
lose
unforeseen detours along their path. But the forces that produced Gulf War II will continue to exert pressure on U.S. politics.
The money and
the voting
power they com-
not soon desert them. These factors will remain in play even if the White House changes hands or the Democratic party gains a majority in Congress.
mand
will
The presidency of George W.
Bush
should
be
regarded as a distant early warning sign of powerful forces that are fermenting in the depths of the American
among
corporate community and
strategically
placed
who more and more dominate the media. In Gulf War II we have glimpsed a frightening prospect. Like storm clouds on the horizon, we are seeing opinion-makers
runaway American power. We may soon be living in a world in which decisions taken unilaterally in Washington behind locked doors will result in regime change by pre-emptive war and the threatening prospect of
long-term U.S. military occupation in every part of the world; and that
mocks
all
of this done in an unabashed
macho
style
the intelligent restraint of other nations as
cowardice.
28
The Unexpected Empire Regime change, when sion or by espionage,
nothing
War
new
pursued by armed aggresnever easy to justify - and it is
is
it is
American foreign
in
policy.
During the Cold
the United States resorted to covert action aimed at
overthrowing non-compliant governments of the world.
Middle East,
Most in
significantly for
in
many
our future
parts
in
the
1953 the cia engineered the coup that
dislodged a democratically elected government in Iran,
thereby seeding the
from which
soil
fundamentalism would
arise.
a vengeful Islamic
In times past
some have
excused the ruthlessness of such policies on the grounds that America’s Cold
War
rival
was every bit as secretive was fighting fire with fire.
and brutal. The United States Even if one endorsed that view, with the collapse of the Soviet Union the rationale for subversion and covert aggression lost its moral force. Yet even while political leaders in the United States preach the gospel of freedom
with a Biblical fervour, forces on the right wing of U.S. politics
are
supporting militaristic policies and
interests that
pose a threat to the freedom of people
everywhere. The United States
own
selfish
is
worst enemy, a nation that
reserves of trust
pretensions? For reasons
in the I
is
its
destroying whatever
may still have. way of America’s imperial
and admiration
Can anything stand
rapidly becoming
it
discuss below,
that the people of the United States,
I
do not
much
believe
less
their
do more than pose meagre resistance to the triumphalist agenda. There has been a dispirited liberal leaders, can
failure of nerve, a failure of intellect in the
United States and
triumphalist advance
is
among
among
liberal forces
the public at large.
If
the
to be stopped, people in other
lands will have to help with ideas, with examples, with
and perhaps with outright defiance in the diplomatic, economic, and cultural arenas. They must come to criticism,
29
WORLD, BEWARE! see themselves as America’s global constituency, as concerned about decisions made in Washington as in their
own
capitals.
It is
in their
own
interest for other nations
to help create that wider constituency
serve their
freedom and
if
they want to pre-
their national dignity.
As much
any devastating natural disaster - flood, famine, earthquake - American triumphalism needs to be met by a as
critical international
response.
We
need a dialogue on the future of global industrialism that presents a humane alternative to the narrow, free-market idolatry of America’s corporate elite and its triumphalist brains trust.
Beyond
that,
we must
find con-
ways of controlling decisions about the use of force so that the enormous power that now belongs uniquely to the United States cannot fall into the hands of any erratic ideological faction that manages to take over the White House. My hope is that this book will
sensual
provide some of the insight that people of other lands will
need to launch that dialogue.
30
TWO America’s Worldwide Attack Matrix
“Saddam’s removal provides a new opportunity for a different kind of Middle East. But if that different future for the Middle East is to be realized, we and our allies must
make
a generational
commitment
to helping the people
of the Middle East transform their region. That security challenge
the
is
- and moral mission - of our time.”
Condoleezza Rice, National Security Advisor to George W. Bush, speaking in Houston, Aug. 8, 2003
“We
are a uniquely benign imperium. This
self-congratulations; ers
it
is
is
a fact manifest in the
not mere
way
oth-
welcome our power.” Charles Krauthammer, neo-conservative journalist,
The Weekly Standard June ,
4,
2001
WORLD, BEWARE!
THE WARS was born
IN
MY
LIFE
in 1933, the year that
saw both Franklin come to power. At
D. Roosevelt and Adolph Hitler the time my father was one of America’s “forgotten men,” one of the millions left unemployed, impoverished,
I
and despairing by the Great Depression. For my family the Roosevelt New Deal had a clear, restorative meaning. would produce It was a boldly democratic program that the
most sweeping domestic reforms
in the nation’s his-
the while the Roosevelt administration struggled to overcome the economic stagnation of the country, another crisis was unfolding in Europe that would, at the
But
tory.
all
expense of
much blood and
treasure,
do a
far
more
effec-
job of putting an end to the Great Depression. Nazism was marching towards a war that would do tive
more
change the United States than did
to
of the
all
the reforms
New Deal.
By the time
I
was old enough
to
give
serious
thought to the history unfolding around me, the steady drift towards war had already begun. Everything I
childhood about the world was profoundly shaped by the experience of war - impending war and then actual war. Like all children, I grew up fiercely patriotic - and with good reason. During World learned in
War
II, I
lization. late
my
came to see my country as the defender of civiBy the time the United States entered the war in
1941, our
allies
were
either defeated or
dependent
nations that had to be rescued from fascist and imperialist aggressors who represented what I still regard as
Cold War that folworld as vulnerable and help-
intolerable evil. Then, during the
viewed the entire less. I accepted my government’s policies at face value, namely, that the Cold War was wholly the fault of the
lowed,
I
32.
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix Union,
Soviet
that
nations
everywhere
needed
the
United States to defend them from communist subversion and Soviet aggression.
Moral absolutism comes easily to the young - and all the more so when objective conditions seem to make one’s choices clear. If America had not become the policeman of the world, could there be any doubt that millions more would be overrun and held subject, as the people of Eastern Europe had been? Through my youth, without realizing it, I was carrying forward the perceptions of an earlier generation of
was the attitude my parents had inherited First World War, when the nations of Europe
Americans.
It
from the were seen by Americans
as morally
bankrupt
societies
lacking the will, the strength, and the virtue to solve their
own
problems. As the
hit
song of 1917 proclaimed, “The
Yanks are coming, the Yanks are coming, and we won’t be back till it’s over over there.” And when would it be “over”? Not until the Yanks had made the world safe for democracy and set Europe on the right course. At which point, they would come marching home as quickly as possible. It
was not
until
I
was
in
my
college years that
I
grew
aware of the deeper issues of the Cold War, and especially of the arms race that threatened human survival. Step by step I became steadily more sceptical and critical. And then, at last, the Vietnam War transformed me into a social critic willing to question all that my government told me.
We
refer to that period
bled as the United States all
still
as “the sixties.”
was during
As trou-
that time, suffering
the generational turmoil that unsettled other coun-
tries,
When
there
was
a spirit of healthy
change
in
the
air.
agony of Vietnam ended, many of us looked forward to a better future governed by a new the long
33
WORLD, BEWARE! agenda of postindustrial values. We hoped to see an America that would fight free of the avarice of the corporations and the violence of the Pentagon warlords. One need only turn back and listen to the music of that period to sense the glad, creative anticipations of the young. For all its naivete, the countercultural rebellion of that period
was driven by authentic
idealism.
Its
goal
abundance and technological power of high-industrial society to abolish poverty and free our lives from the compulsions of corporate greed and
was
to use the
could never have predicted- that, after Vietnam, there would come a time when a benighted militarism would rise again to take control of my coun-
power
politics.
I
government as part of another all-consuming cause: the war on terrorism. Why has this happened? That is the question this book addresses. At this
try’s
point,
me
let
only say, in
brief, that the
life-affirming
hopes of the 1960 s were thwarted by forces whose cunning and power were grossly underestimated by the anti-
war movement. Utopia was never as close as many of us thought. Even before the smoke had cleared from the of
battlefields
Vietnam,
social
elements
that
totally
were at work seeking to reinvigorate the military-industrial complex of Cold War days. The corporate community, the warlords, and a younger generation of right-wing intellectuals had begun
rejected countercultural values
to lay the foundations for a resurgent conservatism that
more effectively persuasive than anything Americans had seen in the twentieth century. The counterculture, which had never numbered more than a creative minority of its generation, changed
would be
America
far
in
many enduring ways.
It
helped transform the
United States into a multicultural society.
34
It
helped create
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix the atmosphere in
which human
cause and not merely a phrase.
woman’s
It
become a launched movements rights could
gay liberation, environmentalism -
liberation,
that remain active today. But by the 1980s conservatives
were winning the allegiance of more and more Americans who had lost faith in liberal social values. The Republican Party was picking up the votes of working-class, blue-collar,
mainly middle-aged male voters - “Reagan
Democrats,” as they were attracting a
new and
called.
Republicans were also
troubling kind of electorate: the sin-
who go
on the basis of one, overriding issue, no matter what else might be at stake. Opposition to abortion, opposition to gun
gle-issue voter, people
to the polls to vote
control, opposition to gay rights, opposition to taxes of
any kind, opposition to banning prayers
in the schools,
opposition to teaching Darwinian evolution: while als registered
amazement
at the
number
of people
liber-
who
cared deeply about such issues, Republicans provided a
home
narrow-gauged voters, amplifying their wrath and endorsing their values as pious and patriotic. It was a strategy with which liberals have not yet
for these disgruntled,
found
a
way
to compete.
In the course of the twentieth century, three generations
war as a curse visited upon them came to believe that only the United
of Americans, viewing
by other countries,
had the purity, the power, and the moral authority to rescue mankind. America’s historic mission was a chivalric undertaking, the strong coming to the aid of the States
weak. I
recall
images from the Second World
War
that cap-
tured this sense of shining American goodness. Photos of
35
WORLD, BEWARE! battle-weary U.S. soldiers resting amid the ruins of war, passing out candy bars to ragged kids or offering a dis-
mother a helmet so she might bathe her baby. The soldiers, young and handsome, always had a kind of dishevelled, unpretentious nobility about them. They were ordinary guys who might have been the boy next
tressed
door - a high-school football hero, an auto mechanic, a teacher. They were citizen soldiers who had risked their lives defending the defenceless. There was nothing about conqueror,
the
empire builder. They had no wish but to mind their
own
them of
the
professional
soldier,
the
and experience the simple pleasures of life. At war’s end we cheered to see them coming home, modest heros wearily disembarking from troop ships to embrace their waiting wives and babies. Wherever they were returning from - Europe, Korea, Vietnam - they were greeted with the conviction that this would
business, raise a family,
be the
last time, this
would be
the
war
to
end
all
wars.
Americans love a human touch in the midst of horror. In the background of pictures showing our soldiers befriending some war-torn population we sometimes saw
and tanks had pounded into rubble. Perhaps thousands of civilians had been killed by violence rained down from the skies. But that was not America’s fault; we did it to kill off the bad guys. a city that U.S. planes
Nobody would think of blaming Americans for such destruction. And now that we had defeated the aggressor, we would pick up the pieces, heal the wounds, and head for
home.
COME BACK SHANE! The 1952 movie Shane
is
a classic
embodiment
of our
national myth. Shane, the blond hero dressed in buckskin,
36
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix rides into
town, places himself
at the service of the
gered farmers and their families, and finally guns the
wounded, he
all
faraway mountains without
rides into the
waiting for thanks. The
courageous stranger darkening plain,
Shane
down
one big shootout. Then, though badly
in
villains
endan-
his
boy who has made this hero calls after him across the
“Come
little
back, Shane!
Come
back!” But
rides on.
Now,
more basking
are once
They
as the twenty-first century begins,
see
vast
a
in a sense of
new horizon
Americans
power and
virtue.
of conflict opening out
which America must again play the role of the righteous gunfighter. The conflict is called “the war on terrorism,” and the bad guys are now worse than ever. As American armies are sent off to liberate oppressed nations and punish villainous characters, patriotic citizens listen for that same forlorn call from out of the past. before
them
“Come
in
back, Shane!”
Once
again, great political issues
The presisummons us to war in a
are being personified in simple-minded ways.
dent (our gunfighter-in-chief) folksy Texas drawl. “Bring
it
on,” he
tells
Saddam Hus-
The bad guys are regarded as little better than homicidal maniacs whose hostility has no cause and whose violence makes no sense. Bearded, swarthy terrorists have become the new Nazis, the new communists. Osama bin Laden and Sadsein
dam
from
a
good,
safe
distance.
Hussein take their place alongside the German
Adolph Hitler, Joseph Stalin. The American man and woman
Kaiser,
in the street naively
believe that the job of eliminating the terrorist
enemy can
be finished quickly. U.S. presidents and generals always
promise short wars. Even Vietnam was supposed to be a
same promise in Iraq. The against terrorism, we were warned, may go on
short war. struggle
They made
the
37
WORLD, BEWARE! armed engagement - in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Iran - will be over in a jiffy. In contrast to what happened in Vietnam, the president and his military advisers insisted that the United States would have the firmness of will and the modern weapons of war indefinitely,
to
any
but
win quickly and
single
efficiently.
Infantry shipped off for Iraq in the front gate of their
home
When
the U.S.
March 2003,
Third
the sign at
base read, “Kick butt and
hurry home.”
So the troops get moved and rotated; camps are relocated; weapons are upgraded. It all occurs casually, subdued developments that happen in remote places. Eventually the public forgets that the United States has hundreds of thousands of troops on permanent duty in well
over one hundred camps and bases around the globe. Until the government of
North Korea
confrontational about
nuclear ambitions,
its
recently
became
how many
Americans were aware that there are over thirty thousand U.S. troops stationed in South Korea - and that they have been there for more than fifty years? (And how
many were aware
that South Koreans
those troops go home?)
I
would
suspect that not
prefer to see
many Ameri-
know we still have sixty thousand troops in Germany and twenty thousand Marines on Okinawa. The
cans
public seems to have only a vague, dreamlike awareness that their nation has gradually
grown
into the
most
far-
power since the days of the British Empire. The American public may continue to hope it can eliminate the bad guys in one big shoot-out, but in the wake of World War II, U.S. military might has grown into a fixed and prevailing fact of life in international relations. No knowledgeable commentator expects that
flung military
to
change
tary
is
in the
not what
near future. But the role of the U.S. miliit
once was, a force that participated
38
in
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix alliances or served
becoming
under international
treaties. Its use
unilaterally determined with respect to
is
weapons
technology and strategic locations. Already the master plan
for
what
the
cia
calls
“the
worldwide attack
matrix” involves moving troops out of uncooperative
European countries and unstable Middle Eastern states and into “forward operating locations” and “hub bases,” where long-term agreements with small and needy governments can be purchased. This includes Middle Eastern states
such as Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Uzbekistan, Tajik-
and Kyrgyzstan. Former Soviet republics are proving especially attractive places for basing rights and there istan,
many to choose from. When Uzbekistan asked the U.S. in summer 2005 to give up its airbase, the Pentagon simply moved next door to Turkmenistan. The U.S. miliare
tary
is
now
running “train and equip” operations
Republic of Georgia, where stabilize
the
it
in the
hopes to see the Georgians
Caucasus. Small poor countries such as
Leone and Djibouti are sought out to provide “marshalling yards” from which the Pentagon can “surge” troops into trouble spots. The Philippines and
Sierra
some
Australia are also being developed as bases. In
cases the military will settle for a bare-bones establish-
A
mere landing strip may do, from which highspeed catamarans might ferry thousands of troops over hundreds of miles across the open sea in a day’s time. Beyond that, there will be troop emplacements in Bulgaria, Poland, and Rumania - the “new Europe,” as
ment.
Donald Rumsfeld once called them, meaning nations willing to rent territory and make no Secretary of Defense
trouble. In
many
cases these bases will be
left
with a
skeleton force on hand, but they will be available as staging areas for the
movement
of heavy equipment.
declared assumption behind U.S.
39
basing policy
is
The the
WORLD, BEWARE! need for rapid response to unpredictable terrorist attacks. But the mere existence of such preponderant military
bound to play an ever larger part in international negotiations on all matters. The United States is develop-
force
is
ing “interests” in every last corner of the world. Early in 2004 reports surfaced in the press of extensive training
and counter-terrorist activities by U.S. special forces throughout North Africa - in Algeria, Mali, Chad, Niger, Mauritania, Morocco, and Tunisia. This region, mainly consisting of the desolate Sahel, has been identified as a
prime recruitment hub for al-Qaeda. Across the continent, Djibouti, a country that most Americans could not find on the map, is now home to a task force of 1,600 troops monitoring the
And
Horn
of Africa.
then, least visible of
all,
“war on drugs” that the United
there
is
the protracted
States has been pursuing,
largely with privately contracted
forces,
in
Colombia.
More ominous still in Latin America was the U.S. proposal made at the 2005 meeting of the Organization of permanent committee to monitor “troubled democracies” in the Western hemisphere. The proposal was clearly aimed at intimidating any future
American
States for a
government that might try to follow the populist path of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez. As one Latin American minister put it, the United States seemed bent on set-
up “some sort of democratic police force.” The State Department preferred to describe its goal as “a process” that would “address threats to democracy in a timely fashion.” But against the background of pre-emptive war in the Middle East, what Latin American government
ting
would
trust the
intentions of the United States? This
global expansion of America’s military
power -
all
of
it
within the context of a pre-emptive security strategy (‘shoot
first,
ask questions later”) - has happened so
40
America’s Worldwide Attack Matrix rapidly that analysts at the Center for Strategic and Inter-
national Studies in Washington, D.C., have referred to
it
“as a sort of military big bang.”
confess to being astonished by
I
States has initiated since the
Within a few years’ time,
what
the United
September 11, 2001, attacks.
name
in the
of defending
itself
against a huge but nebulous danger called “terrorism,” the U.S. military has, with maniacal speed, unilaterally cre-
ated a vast and expensive network of alliances, bases, contracts, investments,
and
installations in every part of the
world. In a demonic way,
But
if
terrorism
in
which
all
a remarkable achievement.
a threat to every nation,
is
effort not seen as
it is
why
this
is
an international endeavour, something
people have an interest and for which
ple will bear collective responsibility?
And why
all
peo-
does
this
do with addressing the root causes of terrorism? The Osama bin Ladens of the world may never be willing to bargain with Western nations, but others in the Arab world, including “the Arab street,” as it has come to be called, are surely not beyond communicaeffort
have so
tion. Is
it
too
little
to
much
to ask
why
Of
they are so hostile?
course, there are those in Washington
who
believe they
have no need to ask. They believe they already possess the best medicine for the world’s discontents. “Markets,” they insist.
Or “democracy,” by which
they
mean opening
economies to unrestricted corporate access. But what that very prescription tent?
one
How
is
among
if
the causes of the discon-
can they be so sure that their ideology
is
the
size that fits all?
Weapons, bases, and troops are among America’s largest and most politically consequential exports, the nation’s main way of asserting its interests. At the end of World War II, the act of stationing troops abroad could be presented to the public as generous and idealistic - a 4i
WORLD, BEWARE! gift
to
nations in need of protection.
But as of the
twenty-first century, something has shifted.
The
picture
is
taking on confused and ominous overtones. Vaguely, Americans sense that the war on terrorism is not producing the cheers
we once
expected. Instead, people around
They from the
the world are often deeply critical, even hostile.
sometimes behave as if they had more to fear United States than from anybody else. Such criticism baf-
and angers the American people, who sincerely believe that they are making great sacrifices for the benefit of others. Why, then, are we not still the most admired and best beloved of nations? How infuriating it must then be when the television news shows Iraqi crowds in
fles
Americans to go home. In the face of such ingratitude, the public can become petulant. Just below the surface, Americans hide strong
the street shouting for the
xenophobic dents in
my
that, at the
instincts that
can bubble over quickly. Stu-
history courses always find
outbreak of World
War
I,
it
amusing to learn
as the United States set
about
renaming everything German. Under orders from
Presi-
prepared to fight “the Hun,” our government
dent
Woodrow
Wilson, the frankfurter was renamed the
pup” and sauerkraut became “liberty cabbage.” I wonder if my students found it just as silly to see the same thing happening in their time during the run-up to Gulf War II. This time, patriotic politicians and media pundits “liberty
targeted France for vocabulary reform. French
proposed, should become “freedom
fries,”
fries, it
was
and French
become “freedom toast.” Others called for a boycott of French imports, and some ultra-patriots were filmed on television pouring bottles of Dom Perignon down the toilet. At a White House picnic, hot dogs were served, but Dijon mustard was forbidden even if it was
toast should
made by
a U.S.
company.
A 42
television
commercial for a
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix fast-food chain that
no longer served French
number of French Prussian war, World War
fried potatoes
defeats: Waterloo, the Franco-
listed a
Vietnam.
II,
“We
don’t serve
loser food!” the advertisement proclaimed.
What had
done to merit such punitive treatment in 2003? Why, they had dared to assert their right to pursue their own foreign policy. They had blocked the Bush administration’s efforts to rally the United Nations behind its war on Iraq. They remained unconvinced that Iraq posed any serious threat to other the French
countries. In the eyes of politicians as highly placed as
impudent independence reason to launch a wave of ridicule and
the U.S. secretary of state, such
was
sufficient
hostility against the country’s oldest ally.
French government was not alone
war
effort;
it
was simply
the sympathies of
its
course, the
in resisting the U.S.
most outspoken
the
people.
Of
And
is
in voicing
not speaking out for
one’s people a defensible interpretation of democratic
government?
If
the heads of state of
all
the nations that
gave token support to the United States in Gulf
had expressed the true
will of their people
ing alone.
It
United States would have found
would not have had even
II
(who were
demonstrating by the hundreds of thousands streets), the
War
itself
the
in
stand-
the support of the
few governments that reluctantly offered words of encouragement to Bush’s war. The only way in which the war on Iraq could be called a “coalition” was by way of deception and exaggeration. Even the British and the Spanish, where popular resistance to the large
it
war was
so
might have toppled governments, could not have
been counted on Washington’s
That would have made no
Bush administration was in dealing
with Iraq as
it
side.
difference, of course.
just as
was 43
The
stubbornly unilateralist
in other areas of foreign
WORLD, BEWARE! policy;
it
had no
interest in the
approval or consultation
As Bush bluntly put it, “Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.” Speaking in the National Cathedral in Washington a few days after the of other nations.
September 11 attack, Bush declared that America’s goal had attained mythic proportions; it was no less than “to
world of evil.” The only reason the president went before the United Nations was at the desperate urging of British prime minister Tony Blair, who was under severe pressure from his own political party not to support preemptive action by the United States. At some point it
rid the
must have occurred to the Bush advisers that going to the un was well worth doing - not because they cared about securing the approval of other nations, but because going
before the Security Council gave
them
the chance to offer
the rest of the world an arrogant take
it
or leave
it
choice.
was not only Saddam Hussein who was being given a “last chance” to do as Washington wanted; it was It
the rest of the world.
A
On
BENEVOLENT GLOBAL HEGEMONY LIKE IT OR NOT
-
the surface, such diplomatic bravado by the United
States
might seem
like a display of
emotional pique, a
fit
shown towards the un was coldly deliberate. There are new forces at work in Washington, policy-makers who welcome the chance to thumb their noses at the Security Council. For the hawks of the American Defense Department and the Penof hurt feelings. But in fact the spleen
tagon, the UN’s intractability offered the opportunity for a
showdown with an
institution they detest. Here, then,
44
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix was a chance to kill two birds with one stone. Not only would the war against Saddam Hussein give George W. Bush the chance to play Lone Ranger on the world stage, but it would also give him a reason to repudiate the United Nations for being weak and incompetent, a barrier to America’s clear intention to extend its power across the planet. States
A
year
was back before
the
un
tinue the Iraqi occupation. In
ington would win either way. that
would be seen
had been prove
as
right. If the
how
of course, the United
later,
asking for
making If
the
money
to con-
that appeal,
money was
Wash-
offered,
an admission that the United States
money was
withheld, that would
stubborn and worthless the un
is.
That was the deeper purpose behind Gulf War II. The road to Baghdad was the road to American global supremacy. As early as 1996, right-wing elements
in the
United States were talking about imposing a “benevolent
hegemony” on the world. The phrase is that of Robert Kagan and William Kristol, writing in Foreign Affairs. Iraq offered just that opportunity. By resisting what the Bush administration wanted, the United Nations simply hastened the moment when Washington felt free to dismiss it - along with nato and the European Union - as irrelevant. The new American century had dawned, and the sooner the world at large recogglobal
nized that fact, the better. Nevertheless, in the face of unprecedented diplo-
matic bullying, most of the world
still
held out against
Bush and company - not because they supported Saddam Hussein. Public opinion everywhere condemned the Iraqi tyrant, so unanimously that one was left wondering how so odious a man could ever have come to power in the first
place.
For indeed Saddam was a creature of the
Western world’s
own making. He had 45
been elevated to
WORLD, BEWARE! leadership and strengthened in his position by the very nations - including the United States - that finally pur-
ported to find him morally repulsive. We have photos of Saddam Hussein being warmly welcomed at the White House by Ronald Reagan. Donald Rumsfeld courted his
him as our stalwart ally in the Middle East. But all this went unmentioned by the Bush administration as it swept towards war. In every briefing and support, praising
up to the war, one sensed an air of exhilaration. “Going it alone” can be a heady experience, almost like that of coming of age and feeling one’s
press conference leading
full
adult power.
During the next several years the triumphalists may continue to equivocate about their true intentions, offering different stories actions.
on
different occasions to explain their
The Bush administration has shown how
political leaders
can go
in contradicting themselves.
far
Why
W. Bush go to war with Iraq? Supposedly to eliminate Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction. When no such weapons were found, other reasons were produced. To drive an evil man from power ... or better did George
democracy to the Middle East. In the advertising world this approach is called “bait and switch.” Advertise one thing, but when the customer shows up, still,
to bring
him 2000
trick
into buying something else that costs more.
If,
in
George W. Bush had proposed that the country go to war to bring democracy to Iraq, he surely would have been decisively defeated. For what did the
the
elections,
American people think they owed to Iraq? In any case, I doubt that behind closed doors in Washington, policymakers waste much time mapping out a democratic future for Iraq. Any regime that provides an open market for U.S. investment will pass muster with them as “democratic.” Yes, there
was an
election in Iraq in January 2005,
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix a
courageous display of democratic sentiment on the part
who
of the Iraqi people,
defied the threats of
insurgents and risked their lives to cast their
murderous votes. The
eager congratulations with which the media surrounded the heroism of the election easily distract us
from remem-
bering that elections are the most fragile aspect of democracy. In themselves
tructure, they
and without
may
achieve
sufficient political infras-
little,
especially
if
the insur-
gency cannot be brought to an end and the country’s basic services restored.
The January 2005
election in Iraq
was
held as part of a deliberately protracted political process
devised by the United States and requiring approval from
As Washington policy-makers would have it, democracy in Iraq must wait upon still more elections to come, as well as upon the writing of an acceptable constitution that will not allow Iraq to become
Washington
at every step.
an Iranian-style Islamic Republic. Most importantly, Iraqi independence
is
of co-operation will
hold
this
dependent on achieving some stable form
among
most
Shiites,
artificial
W. Bush may once have run
Sunnis, and Kurds that
of nations together. George
for office promising an
end to
experiments in nation-building, but nation-building on the
what he has committed our country to. Whatever else is uncertain about that project,
grand scale
much
is
is
clear:
the
longer
it
takes to
build
this
anything
remotely resembling “democracy” in Iraq, the longer the troops stay where they are and the longer the Iraqi econ-
omy
stays under U.S. control.
what triumphalist policy tion, the
Which
calls for.
of course
is
exactly
For public consump-
war-makers assure us that they have no
interest
permanent occupation, but all the while military contractors like Halliburton and KRB continue to build in a
expensive “enduring bases” across Iraq. Critics of the
war
press the
Bush administration
47
for a date
when
the
WORLD, BEWARE! come home, as if they cannot believe that Iraq is a conquest, meant to be held indefinitely. So they receive mixed messages. For example, as of June 2005, Vice-President Dick Cheney insisted that the insurgency
U.S. forces will
was
in
its
“last
throes,”
while Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld predicted that Iraq may have U.S. troops on soil for
another ten to twelve years. Secretary of State
may have come
Condoleezza Rice
when,
closer to the truth
in a foreign-policy address in
defined the role of the United States in a
its
August 2003, she the Middle East as
“moral mission” that would require a “generational
commitment.” Washington has promised to restore Afghanistan to the Afghan people and Iraq to the Iraqi people, but it will never set up governments that it cannot control. Instead it indulges in exactly the sort of double-speak for which
we once condemned cloaking
its
the Soviet
Union
in
its
practice of
domination of Eastern Europe. Just as the
deceit of the Soviets
Washington’s
lies.
proved to be
tissue-thin, so too are
The triumphalists may turn themselves
blue in the face loudly denying that the United States colonial power, but there
is
only
word
is
a
that describes an
act of conquest that places a victorious nation in charge
of a defeated nation’s people, resources, and governance.
That word is “colonial.” As has always been the case with colonial powers, the benefits of imperial domination are not shared throughout the victorious nation at large. The American public has not yet registered
how
costly policies of con-
become and how much power place in the hands of corporate and
quest and domination can those policies will
military leaders. For the time being,
and
it is
all
patriotic celebration, with endless talk
much good
the United States
48
is
flag-waving
about
how
doing for people
in
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix distant lands. In the teeth of the evidence, the official line is
that people everywhere
ship and that
all
want
the benefits of our leader-
our conquests are temporary.
do not run smoothly,
well, there
is
bound
If
to be
things
some
“untidiness,” as Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld put
when
became
it
clear that Iraq
was rapidly turning
it
into a
protracted insurgency. will not be possible to
It
Who
initely.
maintain
this
charade indef-
can doubt that there will be opposition
in
every land taken over by the United States? That opposition will have to be suppressed by the military
power of governments beholden There
is
and police
to the United States.
a great deal of “untidiness” in our future. But
then, imperial policies politics of the
may
be so deeply
embedded
by
in the
United States that uprooting the world-
wide attack matrix
more than
will be
a confused public
can achieve.
THE STRANGE CASE OF TONY BLAIR The high-handedness and bare-faced deception of the Bush administration during the run-up to Gulf War II
may have been
a breathtaking display of political hubris,
but even more jarring was Prime Minister Tony Blair’s eagerness to back the invasion. In whose view “jarring”? I
suspect in the view of every liberal in the United States,
myself included,
momentum Blair
is
who hoped
before
it
came
to halt the administration’s to the brink of war. True,
not the gutsy, crusading left-winger
who made
Labour Party Old Style an ethical beacon, but these days one must take what satisfaction one can from small gains. Like Bill Clinton in the United States coming in the wake of the Reagan presidency, Blair did find a way to win back power in post-Thatcher Britain. And for that the
49
WORLD, BEWARE! and resourcefulness; they could never have imagined someone as smart as Blair and as left-of-centre (at least by Ameri-
many American
admired
liberals
his
intelligence
can standards) climbing into bed with a reactionary
like
Bush - unless, that is, the crisis at hand was as severe as Washington insisted. And that was what Blair did. At exactly the right moment, he lent the great Republican war scare of 2003
no U.S.
a credibility that
politician could
have conferred
on so questionable a policy. Indeed, it was Blair who made the single most consequential contribution to Bush’s war policy. Not only did he support the war, but he also supported the phony reason for the war; his was the clinching argument in the debate over weapons of mass destruction. Through early 2003 it was still possible for those
who
resisted the
war
to cite the United Nations
inspectors in arguing that Iraq posed threat.
Tony
But then,
like a bolt
no serious military
from the
blue, there
was
Blair at the president’s side, looking as earnest as
an
boy and telling us, in words more crisp and urgent than Bush could have managed, that the world had more to fear than anybody realized. I confess that as dubious altar
as
was about wmd,
I
it
made a was so
great difference to learn
on British sources. I was brought up short and made to wonder: could the war-makers be right after all? Was our national security truly at stake? When Blair produced his dire warning about Iraqi missiles that could be readied and
that Bush’s intelligence
launched
dam
in less
solidly based
than forty-five minutes, not only at Sad-
Hussein’s Middle Eastern foes but also at targets as
Europe, one could palpably feel American pubopinion - especially the media - shifting in Bush’s
far off as lic
favour. Suddenly, a handful of hypothetical Iraqi missiles
were made to seem more menacing than the 50
entire Soviet
America’s Worldwide Attack Matrix arsenal of icbms
we had
lived
with - and deterred -
throughout the Cold War. Blair’s
were
attack, dling.
fabulous missiles, poised for instantaneous
It
was
like a lighted all
match thrown
but impossible for
many
into dry kin-
of us to feel that
he could be gullible or devious enough to
dramatic declaration unless he
knew
make such
was
it
true.
a
With
Blair steadfastly at his side in pre-war press conferences,
Bush had exactly what he needed to cripple the anti-war movement. He had an ally, an important and trusted ally who agreed with him one hundred percent in identifying Saddam Hussein as an immanent threat to world peace. In Bush’s mouth allegations about weapons of mass destruction were a lie, but in Blair’s mouth they became one of those big lies that flatten all scepticism. Because who could believe that somebody as honourable as Tony Blair
would
lie
Ah, but he
on such did.
a scale?
And
it
gets worse.
When
his
warning
was shown to be a deliberate false alarm, he resorted to the same witless defence that Bush was using. To paraphrase: “Yes, that was quite a mistake about the wmd, but you have to understand, somebody unloaded all this rotten intelligence on me. No, I don’t know who. And no, I’m not going to try to find out now, because to put
all this
behind
us.
Why
didn’t
I
it’s
time
double-check?
I
never thought of doing that. But then, with those terrible, hair-trigger
was the moving
weapons pointed
at us
-
as
case - there really wasn’t time. right along
-
aren’t
we
I
truly thought
And
besides -
better off with
Saddam
Hussein out of power and democracy on the march?”
And
so
we have
a
new
definition of democracy. Pres-
and prime ministers are allowed to escape judgment by claiming ignorance or incompetence. They bear no responsibility for making very big, bad mistakes as idents
5i
WORLD, BEWARE! long as they can find a
fall
guy. “I’m in charge, but don’t
now Americans
blame me.” By
ing double-talk like this
from
are accustomed to hear-
than
their less
brilliant
and
from candid president; he has lived out his entire political career laying blame on others for his blunders. But it was little short of surrealistic to watch Blair acting as if he could deceive the British public with such chop
far
- to the point of bludgeoning the BBC news for daring to suggest that he had bent the truth in order to sex up Bush’s Iraq policy. At least in my eyes, Blair’s conduct logic
is II
more egregious than that of Bush. After all, Gulf War was not his policy; he was not under the thumb of neodid
future
political
conservative
ideologues;
depend upon
a large-scale military diversion; he
his
not
had no
need to move his country back into the hands of a military-industrial complex. So why did he lie at the risk of making himself look like Bush’s lackey? What did he expect to gain from serving the interests of Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, Paul Wolfowitz, and a collection of evangeli-
What
cal fanatics?
more than
own
could he possibly gain that was worth
colleagues? That
frequently
American picked up
and many of
the trust of British voters
discussed critics
is
the question
I
have heard more
among
any other
than
Some
of the war.
at social gatherings
his
puzzled
of the reasons I’ve
have been purely splenetic,
expressions of bitter disappointment that are too mean-
and purely personal to take seriously. Blair, I’ve heard from some, was mesmerized by Bush’s macho, gunslinger manner and hoped some of that might rub off spirited
on him. Or, so others have
said,
that the linguistically challenged
he enjoys the admiration
Bush has
to speak the English language so well.
there are those to
privatize
who wonder
everything
if
2
More
seriously,
the neo-conservative drive
might
5
for his ability
not
appeal
to
Blair’s
America’s Worldwide Attack Matrix penchant for shrinking the public
sector. Still others sus-
pect that Blair believes he has something to learn from
Bush’s blunt and pious approach to “moral values,” as
2004 election. This may give him a new card to play. In 2004 Blair delivered a speech on public morality in which he blamed the incivility and antisocial behaviour of the young on the bad influence of the 1960s. “People have had enough of this part of the 1960s consensus,” he declared. “They want a community where a decent, law-abiding majority are in charge.” Blair’s solution was to support the wider use of
named
such issues were
Antisocial
Behaviour Ordinances. This has a decided
Bush-conservative ring to
On
in the
it.
the other hand, perhaps this line of questioning
simply misses the point. Perhaps Blair needed no special reason to throw in with Bush; his decision was simply a
matter of
inertia.
Like prime ministers before him, his
relations with the United States travel in a deep, self-serv-
mg
and he had no inclination to change direction. Gulf War II was another chance to preserve the old “spe-
cial
rut
relationship”
assumed most of
with
nation
the
that
has
in
Britain’s once-imperial status. Like
effect
Mar-
good opinion of Ronald Reathe knees when he was offered
garet Thatcher courting the
gan, Blair went
weak
in
the chance of being uniquely favoured by Washington.
What might
those favours be?
Some
struction contracts that have been
Halliburton
Company and
share of the recon-
worth
billions to the
Bechtel Corporation? Conces-
sions in the oil fields of Iraq,
if
those fields ever begin pro-
ducing again? Access to the market economy that the
United States
is
imposing on Iraq? Or maybe simply the in the
Mid-
honour of
shar-
gratification of
throwing one’s weight around
dle East? After
all,
Britain
was given
the
ing control of the no-fly zones over Iraq with the United
53
WORLD, BEWARE! States;
power alongside during the Kosovo campaign in 1999.
was allowed
it
the United States
to deploy
Here was an even bigger
its
air
that involved
role
standing
shoulder to shoulder with the world’s only superpower. As more becomes known about British support for
grows more and more questionable. Documents disclosed in 2005 by the British journalist Michael Smith reveal that there was significant dissension within the cabinet about the coming war as early as March 2002. Cabinet ministers, diplomats, and senior military officials raised all the doubts that one heard
War
Gulf
Blair’s role
II,
from anti-war protestors States.
there
Was a
well-conceived plan
Was
ently Blair
the invasion?
Iraq likely to
was prepared
is
quoted as saying,
close to America.
If
we
for
to dismiss
“I
the
Was
occupation that
Did the war have any legal become a quagmire? Appar-
reservations in order to stay
He
the streets of the United
there a real threat to national security?
would follow status?
in
all
these well-founded
on George Bush’s good tell you that we must
don’t,
we
side.
steer
lose our influence to
shape what they do.”
Now we
can see that portraying Blair as Bush’s lapdog misses the point. Blair’s position was more complicated and
more
pathetic.
He assumed
the position that a
frightened wife might take with an abusive and erratic
husband. Please him, appease him, and hope you can keep him under control. But just as that strategy rarely
works in domestic life, it did not work for Blair in the world of high diplomacy. Like the timid wife, he gained no influence. He simply became an enabler. He convinced Bush that his conduct was acceptable and that he could go even
further.
Blair’s service to the triumphalists
liberalism
dearly.
If
you sense 54
a
has cost American
good deal of anger
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix behind these words, that
The triumphalists
the reason.
is
might have been willing to go
it
alone in Iraq, but having
made
the boots-on-the-ground support of the Brits
war up
the easier to dress the In doing that, Blair
vatism that his
is
threw
an international
as
stakes.
the
more reactionary and more triumphalists
Not only has
Blair
effort.
with a brand of conser-
in
are
aggressive than
More
party ever faced under Thatcher.
because
it all
playing
for
aggressive
higher
far
embarrassed himself by play-
ing second fiddle to a president of very
little
brain, but he
has also strengthened the hand of ideological forces that
democracy everywhere as they drive the global economy towards American corporate control. And for these services I doubt that a sin-
will continue to
undermine
gle neo-conservative in the
to offer so
much
as a
social
United States has
felt
inclined
“thank you.” As proof of
his diplo-
may
shown he
matic dexterity, Blair
believe that he has
can accommodate Republican extemists as well as any
Tory can, but what
is
that worth? Probably precisely
nothing to Bush and company. After Labourite as Blair the
American
may
liberals
be,
all,
as
moderate
he stands well to the
whom
left
a
of
neo-conservatives despise
and seek to destroy. He may have gained a few favours from the Bush administration, but why should he be given more than crumbs off America’s plate? After the triumphalists have gotten all they can from Blair’s New Labourites, they will not hesitate a
when
moment
to cheer
he and his party are replaced by conservatives
are less
encumbered by any concern
the welfare state.
55
for social justice
who and
WORLD, BEWARE!
THE MONEY, THE BRAINS, AND THE MUSCLE Three convergent social forces are driving the United States towards global hegemony. We might refer to them as the money the brains and the electoral muscle behind ,
,
the conservative resurgence that began with the
Reagan
presidency.
The money
derives
from
a
new
rapacious corporate
leadership that has taken control of the U.S. economy. That money and class privilege should play a part in the politics of ity
and
any society
is
hardly surprising. But the audac-
limitless avarice that drive the
corporados as ,
we
them, have no precedent in modern times. The brains derive from a rising generation of highly
will call
militarized, right-wing ideologues
who now dominate
country’s think-tanks and exert significant influence
the
upon
and political journalism. I call them the triumph alists. At first sight the term “triumphalism” may seem to relate mainly to foreign policy.
the media, universities,
But the hyperconservative elements to lord
it
who
are determined
over other nations are just as obsessed with
crushing their domestic liberal opposition. The triumph they seek
is
total: electoral
supremacy
at
home, military
supremacy abroad. Finally, the fundamentalists provide the
electoral
dependable
muscle that has put triumphalism in power. The
and evangelical religious congreAmerican society is by far the strangest ele-
role of fundamentalist
gations in
ment
in the
new
hyperconservative mix. The best orga-
nized and most politically active sationalist or
Dominion
among them
Christians,
are Dispen-
whose gaze
is
fixed
not on the next election but on the apocalypse that they believe may arrive any day now. When they go to the polls they are casting their votes for the
56
second coming of
America's Worldwide Attack Matrix which they expect good Christian leaders like George W. Bush to hasten. Bizarre as this may seem, evangelicals of this stripe may be the most formidable as well as the most erratic force in American politics. Each of these groups has its own peculiar agenda, but they have smoothly coalesced in pursuing policies Christ,
that seek to radically transform the role of government, shift the distribution of
wealth, reshape the global econ-
omy, and redefine the meaning of democracy.
57
.
THREE The Corporados
“We have
seen the speeches and metaphors of conservative
politicians,
bankers, and journalists hailing markets as
economic voting machines and corporations as the demoSuch choruses cratic selectees of the marketplace. swelled during the 1990s like an economic version of Handel’s Messiah The market and the people are one and the same. Hallelujah. Buying, selling, and consuming is .
true
democracy.
Hallelujah.
.
.
Popular will
is
expressed
through the law of supply and demand. Hallelujah. Populism is market economics. Hallelujah. Opposition to the verdict of the market is elitism. Hallelujah. The Nations
and the Peoples
.” shall rejoice. Hallelujah. Hallelujah
Kevin
Phillips,
former consultant to
and Democracy: American Rich 2002
President Richard Nixon, in Wealth
A
Political History
of the
,
The Corporados
GREED INCORPORATED merica
Deadline for United NAtions.” “America Gives Saddam One Last
“A find
I
be
Sets
Chance.” “America Begins Rebuilding Iraq.” it
remarkable
by
misled
how
headlines
even thoughtful people can
like
these.
congressional
In
debate, in the media, and even in the non-American press,
we
constantly see and hear the
word “America”
means something obvious and unambiguous. But what does “America” mean? Which used as
if,
by
itself,
it
“America”? Whose “America”?
A
little
In
the
semantic clarity
is
in order.
context of high-level decision-making, the
word “America” does not
refer to the public at large as
if
As with the names of
that public speaks with one voice.
other countries that regard themselves as democracies,
“America”
sense
in this
means those who control the
government and can use that control to gain their goals. That America - the triumphalist America I am concerned with here - surely does not speak for me, nor does it speak for millions of other Americans. Needless to
say, all politicians, presidents,
and mem-
bers of Congress like to pretend they are the voice of “the
people.”
on the
They
will insist that they
basis of a free
and
were elected to
fair election.
popular facade that politicians
in
If
But despite the
Washington so eagerly
display to the world, American politics
functional system.
office
the definition of
is
a seriously dys-
democracy
is
“gov-
ernment with the informed consent of the governed,” then the U.S. political system can hardly be called democratic. Decisions must still be made to appear as though they represented the will of the people. But do “the people”
-
in
sufficient
numbers - any longer know what 59
WORLD, BEWARE! their will
Can enough
is?
of
them
tell
the difference
and fiction? For reasons we will discuss United States is later, there is good reason to fear that the the rapidly slipping into a post-democratic era where
between
fact
consent of the governed can be bought and sold, engineered and fabricated. All that remains of democracy is a tattered pretense
made up
of symbols
and
gestures.
The techniques developed for engineering consent are numerous enough to fill entire books. But in the United finally States all the ways and means of manipulation come down to money. And in exerting that kind of power, nobody compares with the corporados, the heads of the great corporations that hold a position in American society rather like that of the barons of the
Middle Ages.
movement meant when it raised the cry “No blood for oil!” The war, we said, was being promoted by a small number of moneyed interests who
That
is
what
the anti-war
had bought the Congress and the White House. U.S. political and military leaders were insistent that oil had nothing to do with the war, but that was, of course, a fatuous deception.
What
interest
would the United
States
and pomegranates rather than oil fields? If the protestors were wrong, it may only have been because they were too narhave in Iraq
if
the country’s major resources were figs
row in identifying oil as the only concealed reason for making war on Iraq. As we have learned in the wake of the military occupation,
many
sources of profit are to be
had in this defeated land, some of them potentially worth more than oil. It may take years for the oil to flow again from Iraq, but long before that happens, U.S. corporations will be making billions of dollars repairing the damage done by the war effort and snapping up other assets and resources of a nation that may soon be regarded by business interests as America’s
60
fifty-first state.
The Corp orados The power of corporate money has become that
so great
has turned candidates and politicians into mere
it
commodities. This elections play
no
is
not to say that public opinion and
role in U.S. politics.
But that role has
become so vulnerable to the pressures of money that it has very nearly no independent status. If the word ‘‘America” means anything when it comes to the use of power, it means the will of major campaign contributors and those who can afford to send full-time lobbyists to Washington.
The dominance of dollars - and, in the republic’s early days, the dominance of landed wealth - is business as usual in American politics. Since the days of the great captains of industry in the nineteenth century, the corpo-
rados have ruled the Congress and the presidency. There
have been only two historical exceptions to that condi-
During the Progressive era at the beginning of the twentieth century - the period that saw the presidencies tion.
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson - the trustbusters managed to mount an effective, if only temporary, resistance to the worst excesses of corporate domination. That was the period when the power of the trusts was so overbearing that even the least educated Ameriof
can voter could recognize their
role. Intoxicated
by the
laissez-faire ethos of the day, big business rashly over-
stepped
all
prudent boundaries, using
its
control of
rail-
roads to exploit millions of farmers, placing protective tariffs
on manufactured goods that allowed U.S. manu-
facturers to charge arbitrarily high prices, enlisting state
and federal military power to break strikes, and blithely selling the public contaminated meat and toxic drugs. As a result, a spate of reforms curbed the worst abuses. Then, during the Great Depression some later,
Franklin
Roosevelt,
himself the
61
thirty
scion
of
years great
WORLD, BEWARE! wealth, derided business leaders as “economic royalists” and “privileged princes.” The New Dealers waged open political it
warfare against the business community, holding
responsible for the Depression.
During these two periods the power of money
in
American politics was temporarily blunted; the business community, cursing Franklin Roosevelt as a “traitor to his class,” was forced to pay high taxes, submit to rigorous regulation, and tolerate social programs aimed at sharing the wealth
more
equitably. This
was
the period in
which an important and still hotly disputed line was crossed in American politics. Before the New Deal, taxa-
was principally used to defray the cost of government and pay for national defence. During the 1930s taxation was significantly diverted towards redistributing income from the rich to the poor. In the United States that transition was never fully accepted by corporate
tion
interests,
with the result that
fifty
years after the
New
determined anti-tax movement would take up the goal of ending redistributive social programs. The New Deal ushered in a generation of liberal reform that reached its culmination in the 1960s under
Deal a
fiercely
Lyndon Johnson. Johnson, a disciple of Franklin Roosevelt, launched a wave of costly social programs (the
President
Great Society, as Johnson called
it)
aimed
at
ending
poverty and healing race relations, but his efforts ran afoul of public discontent with his war in Vietnam. Johnson’s
war
policy ruptured the Democratic Party in
that have not yet been fully repaired
the beginning of troubled times for
ways
and can be taken as American liberalism.
Vietnam, followed by the Watergate scandal of the early 1970s, left many Americans so distrustful of
The
their
fiasco of
government that conservatives had no
difficulty
their liberal foes. Since the
1980s the
stealing a
march on
62
The Corp orados corporados have stormed back into power, no doubt considering themselves the natural leaders of the nation.
Not
only have they returned to power, but they have also
brought with' them an unparalleled rapacity, together with a determination to carry out institutional
American society
will be part of
The rapid
rise
of this
changes that
for generations to
new and
come.
rapacious corporate
has radically redefined the American political sys-
elite
tem, placing more power in the hands of fewer people
than at any point since the age of the robber barons in the nineteenth century. In effect, the United States
returning to the unbridled plutocracy that
1890s.
it
was
anything, the plutocrats are richer
If
is
fast
in the
now
than
ever before. Today, in the United States, 40 percent of the
wealth of the nation the population. That
percent of
boom
all
all
richest
percent of
percent receives 13
1
percent took in 42
- and were the people most
market before the bubble
major industrial nations
is
likely to
Nowhere
burst.
wealth so polarized as
it
United States.
in the
As
1
1
yearly income; during the stock-market
profits
pull out of the
is
same
the richest
of the 1990s, that same top
percent of
in the
owned by
is
on the American domestic scene, such great wealth obviously results in enormous political influence. But now the swiftly unfolding course of economic a factor
globalization has amplified the elite,
making
it
power of
the plutocratic
reckoned with
a force to be
in
every cor-
ner of the globe. Meanwhile, changes in the basic institutions of
American democracy - the
political party system, control of the
made
it
all
electoral
process,
mass media - have
but impossible to stage a significant debate
about national policy that would hold the goals of the corporados up for
critical attention. All
have brought about
a
of these factors
powerful corporate assault on ^3
WORLD, BEWARE! Washington that has quite simply stymied the nation’s liberal opposition.
THE SUPERceoS Who,
and what are they
then, are the corporados
During the 1980s
a
new breed
after?
of entrepreneur
appeared in the U.S. marketplace, especially in brokerwere highly age, banking, and financial services. These high predatory business types who were willing to run risks
and to bend the law
corporations.
in order to take
over existing
The new entrepreneurs might take
the
form of “corporate raiders,” a fierce managerial species who were determined to replace an older business elite who, so the raiders charged, had failed to wring the
maximum
companies. In
profits out of their
many
cases
new managers knew nothing about the companies a they wanted to take over. Some had never marketed
the
product or met a payroll. What, then, were they doing not building. in business? Often they were destroying, They viewed companies as a sort of fat prey waiting to be carved up and eaten. Once in charge of the compaelimnies they had hijacked, corporate raiders set about looting inating jobs, cutting benefits, slashing wages,
pension funds. Just as car thieves know they can make more money by disassembling automobiles and selling the parts than by selling the killed the
whole
companies they owned
car, the raiders often
in
order to
sell
off
their assets.
The
result
was an unprecedented
level of
short-term
value of the company’s value on the stock market. In short order the price of stock became the key factor in business decisions. Forced to defend themselves from looking fat and slow
profitability
that
raised
the
64
The Corp orados and backward - or in some cases simply to protect themselves from being taken over - other business leaders began to imitate the corporate raiders in order to stay out of their clutches. for a
company
The important thing now was
to look fabulously profitable, willing to
do anything no matter how reckless to raise its earnings. Not only did companies have to make high profits, but they had to make them quickly - as quickly as the raiders might make money by exploiting the speed with which new computer networks can move investments around the world. In this new business climate, the chief executive officers of major companies - especially the multinational corporations - came to be valued for above all restructure companies, and their toughness,
The ceo culture.
is
There
their ability to cut payrolls, raise profits rapidly.
the principal figure in the are, of course,
many
new corporate
thousands of ceos
in
com-
them reasonably honest people who play by the rules. The ceos I deal with here are the heads of major, usually multinational companies. They have become a class unto themselves, gifted with power over tens of thousands of workers around the world and often part of an oligopoly that dominates panies large and small,
an
entire
industry.
of
Perhaps
they
should
be
called
“superCEOs.” Sociologists would no doubt argue that so small a group cannot constitute a social class. But if not, they deserve to be treated as a distinct subculture
among
from the rest of the business community as royalty once was from the lesser nobility. Steadily over the past two decades, these once the well-to-do, as distant
anonymous figures have stepped out of the shadows to become celebrities. In running their firms, they are ordinarily given near absolute power. They are the voice and the public face of their companies. They are nearly
h5
WORLD, BEWARE! the impresarios
who
“roll
out”
new products and
often
give a global identity to their sprawling multinational
fiefdoms.
Among
the
first
was Lee
of these celebrity ceos
Motor Company through the 1960s and later (from 1978) of the Chrysler Motor Company. Iacocca was the first CEO to perform in his com-
Iacocca, head of the Ford
pany’s television commercials. Posing as a hard-headed,
who
no-nonsense boss
could look the American public
and
straight in the eye
talk sense, he
made
himself the
During the 1980s he became a media personality as well as a corporate executive. At one point, there was serious talk of running him for pres-
embodiment of
Chrysler.
main achievement was his rescue of the failing Chrysler automobile company. Ironically enough for someone who talked the case for free enterprise so
ident. Iacocca’s
authoritatively, Iacocca saved Chrysler
ernment
subsidy
Iacocca called
to
upon
bail
the
industrial policy that
the
by securing a gov-
company
Indeed,
out.
government to frame a national
would make
U.S. business
more
competitive. His rescue of Chrysler turned out to be a
short-term achievement. Eventually, failed to prosper,
it
when
the
was bought up by Daimler
company in a deal
that has not proven to be a success. In the early 1990s Iacocca wrote his memoirs, calling the
book
career,
At one point, in reviewing his he complained about how the American corporate Straight Talk.
community was changing. production and looking to
It
was
losing
make money
its
interest in
in other
ways -
through finance and speculation. Younger executives, Iacocca said, no longer cared about making cars. They
would rather
talk
about
real estate. Iacocca
was
register-
had come over the U.S. business community during the Reagan presidency. As
ing the astonishing change that
66
The Corp orados vicious as businessmen were in the past,
had
at least left
Morgan and Carnegie
in
McCormick
the
deep family roots
Rockefellers
Pittsburgh, in
of them
behind major companies that produced
Many had
hard goods.
many
New
in
Henry Ford
Some even
Chicago.
in their city: J.P.
Andrew
York,
in
Detroit, Cyrus
retired into philan-
thropy after piling up vast personal fortunes. Iacocca realized that
watching the end of an
all
this
was
passing; he
was
Manufacturing was begin-
era.
ning to leave the United States, exported to cheap-labour
soon to be followed by high-tech service
areas,
jobs.
Paper profits based upon esoteric financial transactions
way
enormous earnings. The big corporations were abandoning factories and assembly lines, with results that nobody could
were proving to be a
faster
have imagined a generation
automobile giant, was
home
ating
light
General Motors, the
now making more money
negoti-
Thanks to the comcould now be made by moving money
loans than selling cars.
puter, vast profits
around the
earlier.
of posting
financial
markets of the world
at the
speed of
twenty-four hours of every day. Arbitrage, the most
sterile
form of
enterprise,
had become more profitable
than production. Globalization made
move
it
possible not only
around the world but to off-shore every aspect of production and marketing. The supercEOs were assuming life and death power over entire economies. Nothing but profit determined their loyalty and alleto
capital
giance.
As assembly-line manufacturing began to wither away in the United States, the key industrial cities that had made the United States an economic colossus in the days of Carnegie and Ford went into steep decline. Industrial centres throughout the Northeast and Midwest were declining into what would come to be called the “rust 67
WORLD, BEWARE! ceos, with
belt.”
little
interest in the heritage they
were
became less connected with a company, a product, or a place. Thus their management strategy might seek to downsize or even eliminate whole sectors
leaving behind,
company they manage. At the extreme, they might decide to move the entire company to another part of the country or beyond its shores. If the company finally died, of the
they were free to quit and take jobs elsewhere.
was to widen the gap between industrial management and its workforce, as well as between superCEOs and the companies they head. The
result of
changes
like these
That gap, in turn, translated into power, transforming the superCEOs into a new political class that has no loyalty to the nation, its
In the 1980s the elite as
workforce, or
its
people.
media celebrated
proof of America’s
the hard-charging bosses
ability to
who had
this
new
business
compete. These were
the
machismo
to take
over companies and reorganize them, often stripping
away jobs and low-profit operations. The polite name for them was “turn-around managers.” They were also called “killer ceos.” Their assignment was to squeeze as
much
profit
from
companies as possible. One legrewarded CEO of the period - A1 Duntheir
endary and richly lop - was called “Chainsaw.” His specialty was hacking a
company selling off
This
is
to pieces, firing people in all directions, then
anything that was not making enough
profit.
and mean.” Dunlop eventually problems after ruining a major by the stockholders and became
called being “lean
ran into serious legal
company; he was fired one of the few ceos ever to be fined by the government. Meanwhile, Jack Welch, the most admired ceo of the
1990s, took over General Electric, the nation’s largest
producer of quickly set
equipment and appliances, and to work downsizing his workforce. At the electrical
68
The Corp orados expense of
many
back on
jobs, he cut
things electrical
all
and expanded ge into entertainment and financial services, forms of business that the company had never done before but that were of goods.
When
he
now more lucrative stepped down from
than the old the
line
company
in
2000, Welch put together the richest retirement package in history.
It
included lifetime use of the
company
jet
and
limousine and season tickets to various sporting events.
Welch’s luxurious retirement became the talk of the business world, the sure sign of a great man. For the
ceos, the only measure of success they respect
money
they
make under
is
new the
lucrative contracts that guaran-
them a prosperous retirement even if they have ruined the company. In April of 2003 Fortune the leading business magatee
,
zine in the United States,
ing corporate
ceos
produced
a front cover depict-
as well-dressed pigs.
It is
surely a sign
of the times that a magazine of such conservative charac-
condemnation of the corporate community. The cover article detailed the myriad ways in which ceos enrich themselves at the expense of stockholders, employees, and the public. A few statistics tell the story. In 1988 the best-paid ceo in America made $40 million. By 2000 a mere $40 million in compensater
should be so frank in
tion
its
would not have placed
that
ceo among
the top ten.
In that year the richest executive officer in the United
States (the
head of Citigroup) earned $290 million; the
next in line (another Citigroup executive) earned $225
on the list earned $164 million. Between 1990 and 1998 the average compensation of top ceos at the ten largest corporations rose by 480 percent.
million;
Yet
the
in
third
an era when the corporados are proving to be
more rapacious and more disregarding interest than ever before, they
69
have seen
of the fit
public
to designate
WORLD, BEWARE! who
themselves as uniquely those nations.
If so,
they are also the country’s greatest wealth
A
generation ago, in the 1960s, the ceos of
consumers. the
create the wealth of
country’s
largest
corporations
earned
twenty-five
2001 they were paid over four hundred times more. It was only
times
more than shop-floor workers. As
of
after the recent spate of corporate scandals that share-
holders
made
a serious effort to rein in executive
com-
pensation. Still,
a prosperous
greatest asset.
they
take
ceo
ceos negotiate when corporation guarantee them huge
The contracts
over
a
regarded as a company’s
is
that
salaries, spectacular perquisites,
rich retirement plan (as of
2004
bonuses, tax breaks, a the average severance
package for ceos of major companies was $16.5 million) - and all this even if the company fails. If the company’s earnings
fall
rewards
may
now
and employees must be
laid off, the ceo’s
actually increase. In hard times companies
“ceo retention” - a scheme launched by ceos themselves, based on the assumption that only a well-paid ceo will be able to save a troubled company. For example, in my state of California, the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, one of nation’s largest energy companies, was so poorly managed that in 2002 it had to declare bankruptcy, pg&e had committed itself to a poorly conceived (and in many ways deceptive) deregulation scheme that proved disastrous both for the company and the public. Nevertheless, after bankrupting the firm, pg&e executives paid themselves a bonus of $80 million. The ceo awarded himself $17 million, presumably to keep himself from leaving the company. The logic is marvellous. If the corporation prospers, pay the ceo more; if it goes broke, pay him still more. The ceo is the captain of the ship; if it begins to flounder, practice
70
The Corporados only he can keep
it
from sinking.
In the presence of a
predatory ceo, shareholders, employees, and boards of directors can find themselves mercilessly cheated.
If
a
Marx were to appear, he might try to inspire revolution among shareholders rather than among the new
Karl
proletariat.
At
this point,
question.
What
it
might be good to pause and ask a
motivates the superCEOs?
I
have been
attributing their behaviour to greed. But does greed ade-
why a man will drive himself to earn when he already has billions? Perhaps we
quately explain
more
millions
are dealing with something
chotic need to eat
more
like gluttony,
more even when one has no
suspect that the corporados are motivated by a
a psy-
appetite.
I
mad com-
pulsion, a competitive fever that only a psychiatrist could
understand. After of
sort
money
behaviour
is
all,
nobody could possibly spend
the
that the superCEOs are earning. Their
like the players in a hotly contested
game,
each struggling desperately to score more points than the
becomes a matter of pride to outclass your rivals by making a few million dollars more. Greed can be gratified, but wanting more points than your competitors never ends. For ceos who view their careers as a sport, it is impossible ever to have enough because there is always somebody ahead of you in the race whom you must overtake, or somebody coming along behind you. others.
We
It
tolerate behaviour like that in adolescent boys
are out to prove their little
manhood, but among
adults
who it
is
short of insane.
THE GREAT CORPORATE CRIME WAVE Whatever
ceos does what the law allows. Over the past two
their true motivation, the avidity of
not stop short at
7i
WORLD, BEWARE! decades the United States, along with other nations, has been living through the worst corporate crime wave in history. In the financial
pages of any U.S. newspaper,
most of the stories are about criminal misconduct either proven or under investigation, and the firms involved are
among
the largest in the land.
The new climate
of corporate financial permissiveness
can be traced back to the early 1980s. Following tion to the presidency in 1980,
of his
first official
ings-and-loan
his elec-
Ronald Reagan made one
acts the deregulation of the nation’s sav-
institutions,
the
country’s
second-largest
banking system. These were home-loan banks created during the Roosevelt New Deal in the 1930s for the single purpose of lending money to buy or build homes. In total these banks held trillions of dollars in assets. Reagan’s deregulation allowed the s&ls to do anything they wanted
with their money; there would be no government oversight. It was as if a signal had been given: the policeman has been taken off the job;
feel free to steal all
you can.
what happened, s&l funds were appropriated for every wild and fraudulent scheme imaginable. The savings-and-loan system was rapidly and efficiently pillaged by crooked financiers (some of them linked to organized crime) in what has been called “the greatest
That
is
exactly
swindle in the history of the world.”
Some
arrests
were
made, but only a handful of culprits were punished. So many embezzlers were accused and indicted that the courts could not bring
them
all
to
trial.
Since savings-and-loan institutions were insured by the federal government, the general public
with the figure
full
that
was saddled
cost of paying off the debts left behind, a
amounted
to
several
thousand dollars for
every taxpayer in the country. That should have served as a
wake-up
call
for
the
public,
72
which should have
The Corp orados registered with considerable alarm that the business
munity had
com-
hands of bandits. I remain mystified by the complacency with which this monumenfallen into the
was greeted by
American people. In any case, the savings-and-loan debacle was only the beginning. Over the next two decades the United States found itself drowning in the most damning accumulation of business fraud and financial misconduct in the nation’s
tal act
of larceny
history.
Some
the
of these events, like the scandal surround-
power company whose main execufriends of George W. Bush and Dick
ing Enron, the Texas tives
were close
Cheney, made international news. in
2000, Enron’s leaders
supporters
summoned
to
Upon Bush’s election were among the first campaign Washington. They came to map
out a new, more lucrative energy policy for the entire
United States. The meetings, presided over by Vice-President Cheney, were held in secret. These were private ceo meetings, with no consumer groups or environmentalists invited.
The Enron scandal of 2001 and 2002 instructive.
It
is
particularly
represents corporate criminality at
its
zenith.
Enron, a natural gas company founded no further back than 1985, rapidly manoeuvred
itself
into the nation’s
power grid in a way that would allow it to make enormous profits, especially in a deregulated market. Its first effort at middle-manning electrical power was underelectrical
taken in Britain in 1988 following the Thatcher government’s privatization of the power industry. In 1994 Enron positioned
itself to
well-financed
do the same
movement
in the
United States as a
for deregulating the
power indus-
up speed. Deregulation was sold to the public with the usual argument that competition in the free market would guarantee lower prices. So far that has haptry picked
pened nowhere
in
the country.
73
What
deregulation did
WORLD, BEWARE! produce was an opportunity for companies like Enron to “game” the market - meaning to manipulate supplies to secure the highest price.
thing like this
happen
in
was
full
It is
a sign of the times that any-
possible at
all, let
alone that
it
could
public view and not be seriously ques-
tioned.
Enron had become the conduit for much of the nation’s energy supply. The company was in the business of channelling electricity from one market to another by a simple flick of a switch. What was the switching all about? Profit. There was no need for Enron In short order
to exist at
all. It
was
there simply to track energy markets
across the United States, instantaneously redirecting electricity to the
ing
most
more than
women
lucrative areas.
a building in
Enron
Texas
itself
filled
was noth-
with
men and
computer monitors, looking for the most profitable way of diverting electricity from one place to another. As highly questionable as this practice was, it was a legal activity made possible by deregulation. It also displayed how computer power can be abused for the purposes of profiteering. Telephone tapes and internal memos recovered from Enron after the comstaring at
pany collapsed
into bankruptcy reveal
profiteering could be.
The
recordings,
how
filled
brutal that
with laughter
and obscenity, disclose the sadistic glee that Enron energy traders took in bilking the public, especially the “grandmothers” of California, by which they seemed to mean all the easy marks in the state. On its legal operations alone, Enron made billions of dollars.
But that was not enough. Not content with
wringing the highest possible prices out of the U.S. energy market, Enron created hundreds of shore businesses in order to disguise
up
its
profits.
The company went 74
its
fictitious off-
debts and to run
further: in
what
is
The Corp orados surely the worst of plicity of
its
many
crimes,
major accounting firms
it
enlisted the
in these frauds.
comLong
held to be the foremost guarantee of business honesty, the bookkeepers
became part of the corruption. Enron’s
accountants and auditors adjusted their records to report
enormous profits, conceal debts, and hide criminal dealings. By way of bribes, Enron prevailed upon one of the nation’s most respected accounting firms, the Arthur Andersen company, to cover up its dubious activities. Andersen, destined to be dragged down and destroyed by Enron (though not before it had shredded thousands of records), became the first major firm to reveal how ethically questionable the accounting industry had become. were given a special place in the U.S. economy as the trusted watchdogs of the marketplace. But once it became known that In times past, big accounting firms
Anderson had helped Enron undermine the investments of its own employees and drain the company pension fund, it was clear that nobody could trust anything any corporation stated about this
has
left
its
financial condition. In effect,
the general public with
no way of believing
anything corporations report about their earnings, their indebtedness, their most basic economic
statistics.
Book-
keeping, the most elementary aspect of the capitalist sys-
tem, has become utterly untrustworthy.
Because corporate lobbyists have diluted every effort
and accounting practices, U.S. busifantasyland of crooked numbers, mass
to reform financial
become a deception, and secret ness has
been called.
No
deals:
“crony capitalism,” as
significant reforms
it
has
have been imposed,
only a few minor corporate leaders have been convicted
and punished. The corporados have weathered the
The game goes
on.
75
crisis.
WORLD, BEWARE!
THE MARIE ANTOINETTES OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY When
Franklin Roosevelt lashed out at the “economic
royalists” of the 1930s, he could never
much worse tions.
things might
The major ceos
become
in
have guessed
how
another few genera-
of the United States today have
been called the Marie Antoinettes of the modern world.
They have become a separate, self-selected, self-governing caste. They appoint the highest corporate officers in their companies, and they staff their boards of directors with friends. They do not balk at exploiting their shareholders as savagely as they do the general public. They pursue their jobs with a “public be damned” air that matches the contempt of old Commodore Vanderbilt, the great railroad tycoon of America’s Gilded Age. For all practical purposes, they are above the law. for crimes, they
know
that
later,
If
they are ever indicted
as part of endlessly pro-
tracted legal manoeuvring, their lawyers will find a
way
them out of the accusation and leaving them as rich as Croesus. Throughout the 1990s numerous ceos violated every rule and regulation on the books; some high-profile arrests took place, but few of the major executives suffered any punishment at all. Most of them arranged settlements that permitted them to keep the money they had looted from their companies or stolen from their employees; many even gave themselves extravagant rewards - usually in the form of bonuses and pension plans worth millions of dollars - as they left their of bargaining
companies. These, then, are the people
who dominate
U.S. poli-
Through their control of parties and politicians, they exert power on a worldwide scale and yet are essentially
tics.
responsible to nobody. In the course of the last twenty
76
The Corp orados years they have lost
mal
interest in maintaining even mini-
all
respectability. If anything, they
flagrant as they have
most privileged
become more
have become more invulnerable.
They
walk the face of the Earth since the aristos of the ancien regime and as of this date there are no guillotines in sight. Can anybody “prove” that these ceos are the force behind the new American imperium? The question is absurd - not are the
class of people to
,
because the corporados are so expert at hiding their
They have no need
tracks.
place.
to leave tracks in the
These are not people
who
They have no need
to
first
conspire to achieve their
exchange whispered messages or clandestine documents. They comprise a comgoals.
munity of
and so integrated with desires are communicated spon-
interest so tightly knit
power that their taneously. They are like so many bodies linked to a single bram that thinks profit profit profit. All they need do is political
,
to eliminate whatever
the marketplace,
by
,
government regulation remains
and the void
in
will be filled automatically
their interests.
One might
expect, as a matter of principle, the cor-
porados to be solid conservatives, ited
government, the
free
property rights. But there
strict
market, basic is
adherents of limcivil liberties,
and
not a single aspect of conser-
vative philosophy that they have not
has been in their interest to do so.
abandoned when
Which
is
it
only to say
As a matter of historical record, the U.S. business community has never really wanted a diminished role for government. What it wants is a big, powerful government that will serve its interests. It wants a Defense Department that passes out fat contracts; it wants armed forces that will protect its overseas investments - and perhaps pick up a few spoils of war, such as the Iraqi oil fields. It wants an Interior that business people are not philosophers.
77
WORLD, BEWARE! Department that
will license oil-drilling,
deforestation,
and strip-mining. It wants access to tax-funded government debt. It wants the support of the Federal Reserve Board in stabilizing the economy and perhaps manipulating it for maximum profits. It has no problem with the dangers posed to civil liberties by an increasingly intrusive Homeland Security Department or an expanded FedBureau of Investigation, because it has never valued any freedom except the freedom to make money. It has
eral
no
real objection to high taxes, as long as
have to pay them. After ing-class
all,
and middle-class
loan guarantees, bailouts,
it
does not
taxes - collected from work-
- are what pays for subsidies, and miscellaneous
citizens
forms of what has come to be called “corporate welfare,” programs that allow corporations to siphon off govern-
ment money on its way to some authorized purpose. Taxes - yours and mine - are also what will be used to pay
off the lawsuits that are
brought against corpora-
damages and legal defence is written off as deductions. Doing business with the government has always been the fastest way of making a fortune in capitalist societies. There is no investment on Wall Street that beats buying legislators and legislation, and no better business strategy than hiring Washington insiders.
tions, as the cost of
As
for the free market,
one cannot name a single cor-
poration that ever voluntarily sacrificed monopoly power in
order
to
keep
Microsoft in our
the
own
marketplace competitive. day, every
Like
major U.S. company
and Andrew Carnegie has made the elimination of rivals and control of the largest possible market share its highest priority. Ironically, it is only government intervention during peri-
since
the
days of John D.
Rockefeller
ods of liberal political leadership that has kept the cartels,
trusts,
and conglomerates from devouring the economy. 78
The Corp orados World War II, no interest group in the land has worked harder to keep government big and costly than has corporate America. But the corporados want the bigness on their side, and they want the costs paid by those Since
who
cannot afford to finance off-shore tax dodges. What corporate America means by “shrinking” the government is
eliminating social programs that benefit middle-class
and working-class families or, where possible, privatizing government programs and converting them into forprofit businesses.
There
more
another,
is
troubling,
influence
that
ceos of the current generation have in U.S. political life. Their money has bought them adulation. Their values have come to permeate American culture as never before. As their stature and glamour have grown, ceos have tapped into the American infatuation with fame and fortune. They have set the standard for leadership in our society. Tough, decisive, practical, they are celebrity
the
men who know how
to get things done,
men who
expect unquestioning loyalty from their underlings. They are under at all
no obligation
to explain themselves to
anyone
- not shareholders, not employees, not the public
at
They claim the right to wield power with absolute authority and total secrecy. Even their arrogance and large.
their frequent acts of clear dishonesty
models of “sucnobody expects those who run companies
ished the public’s admiration for cess.”
It is
as
if
them
have not dimin-
as
worth billions to be kind, honourable, or democratic. In early 2004 one of the major TV networks screened a new “reality” show starring the New York property developer Donald Trump as a hard-nosed but glamorous boss in search of a new employee. The contestants who took part in the show were expected to become beasts of prey willing to
do anything
to eliminate their rivals
79
and gain
WORLD, BEWARE! the boss’s favour. That, the
show
told
youthful audi-
its
how you become as rich as Donald Trump. These are the men to whom politicians must look
ence,
is
the funds they need to
values were to
them
bound
win
for support.
And
At some point ceo
elections.
to rub off
on the
for
who
politicians
at last this
is
look
the style of gov-
ernment that was brought to Washington by George W. Bush and his vice-president, Dick Cheney. Gulf War II is a perfect
Bush
example of policy made
felt justified in
in the
ceo
spirit.
If
undertaking war against Iraq in a
high-handed, secretive, manipulative way, he was simply
running bis government in the
way
that a
ceo runs
bis
company.
DARWINISM REDUX Many
mention here are not unique to the American corporate community. As the global economy solidifies, corporations headquartered in of the characteristics that
I
every nation have taken on similarly ruthless characteristics.
The corporate
elite
are well
on
their
way
to
becom-
- an encapsulated entrepreneurial fraternity that grows more disconnected from any national identity as it grows more integrated. As a public virtue, “patriotism” is something now expected of those who pay taxes or shed blood to ing an international society in their
own
right
defend the nation, but not of the ceos. Their allegiance pledged elsewhere: to the international republic of
is
profit.
For example, at a corporate conference in January
2004, Carly Fiorina, a former ceo of Hewlett-Packard (and one of the very few women to reach the heights of
announced that there was “no job that is America’s God-given right anymore.” She was defending the growing practice of outsourcing high-tech
the corporate world)
80
1
The Corp or ados jobs to China. Indeed, the very purpose of the conference she
was addressing was
make
it
to
demand
even easier for companies to
Her warning was willing to
government
that the
move
jobs offshore.
American workers are accept the same low wages paid to Chinese clear:
unless
workers, they will lose their jobs. She did not mention that well over half of the “Chinese” companies that she
claims to be competing with are U.S. -owned. The jobs
What can we
leave the United States, the profits stay.
expect from business leaders
who
breakfast
flying the flag of the tax-free
head
in
New
Tokyo? One the world may be
York, lunch in Brussels, and have dinner
day every multinational corporation
in
Cayman
in
Islands over
its
office.
Searching for cheap labour
is
common enough
in the
global economy; but American corporados have diverged
from the capitalism of other nations. They have become fanatically infused with a religious commitment to Darwinian self-interest. This has happened because radically
they have fallen under the spell of triumphalist ideologues
who
take pride in the harshness of their social
and whose goal is to repeal everything that has been done over the past century to tame the rapaciousness of early industrial capitalism. Given the enormous ethics
industrial productivity of the world’s developed nations,
some way of making life less and less secure and to keep working people scrambling to keep their jobs. But that is what the corporados have managed to do. it
takes a certain genius to find
In reviving the social Darwinist ethic, the corpora-
dos draw heavily on a body of folklore that
is
ingrained in the American soul. Americans
honour
frontier
worldview
in
which
it is
every
man
In the early pioneering days, self-reliance
8
still
deeply a
for himself.
was
a necessity
WORLD, BEWARE! of
life
-
as
in all
it is
newly
settled societies.
But as every
knows, those who struggled to settle the American frontier were desperate to replace it with a more benign social order, and they did so as rapidly as they could. Once the land had been settled, the cities that followed were built by government. The basic amenities of life were laid on, taxes were levied to pay for schools and public services, a federal marshal was brought in to
historian
drive off the gunslingers.
That was
won. The harshness of the
new
replaced by a
the west
was
was spontaneously
social contract that anticipated a
secure and civilized order of ing in frontier
frontier
how
life.
And what was happen-
America was happening across the urban-
industrial world.
A
small history lesson the
In
later
years
is
of
in order.
the
Victorian
period,
the
English statesman Joseph Chamberlain raised a pregnant question. Chamberlain
was
the rising star of William
was then championing an agenda of advanced social reforms. The program was called “municipal socialism.” Chamberlain, who wanted to push that agenda even further, asked, “What ransom will property pay for the security it enjoys?” He was phrasing the issue bluntly, but his words nicely dramatize a major transition in Western society. Throughout Western Europe, the late nineteenth century saw the beginning of a historical movement towards compassionate reforms that would spread the wealth of nations at least a bit more equitably. Yet as much as business Gladstone’s Liberal Party, which
ChamWhat we
leaders of that period might have been shocked, berlain
was announcing
call the
“public sector”
hope of
a
new
social
the
wave of
the future.
was being born, and with it system that was neither of the
or the right.
82
the left
The Corp or ad os Through
its first
two
centuries, industrial society
was
tormented by dreams of ideological perfection. Conservaelaborated the free market into a comprehensive sys-
tives
tem of
and economics. Radicals invented grand designs for collective ownership under a paternalistic state. If we have learned anything, it is that ideological purity
ethics, politics,
is
unattainable;
more ominous
still,
the effort to
achieve such purity leads to fanaticism and coercion.
Despite the ideological fevers of blazed so hotly in
modern
left
and
right that have
politics, the general trend of
.Western and Japanese capitalist societies over the past
century has been towards mixed economies in which
planning and the public sector play an ever larger role
in
keeping the economy stable and relieving the severest kinds of poverty. In return for the freedom to do business
and frequently disruptive ways, everywhere have agreed to have buffers and
in innovative, risky,
capi-
talists
safe-
guards built into the economy to prevent the worst forms
The arrangement makes business community from
of instability and suffering. fect
sense.
It
spares the
responsibility of guaranteeing a floor under the
and
it
allows
it
more freedom
best: invent, innovate,
do what
to
and run
it
per-
the
economy,
claims to do
risks for the sake of
mak-
ing money.
Accordingly, most of these societies have generated a substantial welfare state. In every industrial society, there are
still
rich people; the entrepreneurial spirit continues
market continues to have its ups and downs. But there is also a central commitment on the part of politicians left, right, and centre, to to be generously rewarded; the
maintaining a shared, high standard of
living.
No more
Great Depressions, no more starvation wages.
commitment has not eliminated poor,
it
If
the extremes of rich
that
and
has at least narrowed the division between the
83
WORLD, BEWARE! how generous the retirement system can afford to be, how much money can be spent on schools and health care, how long paid vaca-
two. There
tions
may
still
be debates over
and leaves of absence should
be.
But there
is
nificant disagreement that these amenities should
no
sig-
have a
permanent claim upon the wealth of the nation. Out of a long history of welfare-state reforms, we have inherited a vision of what industrialism might become: the basis of a stable, healthy society that places a higher value on fair shares than on competitive acquisition.
There have been two exceptions to this trend: Great Britain since the Thatcher government and the United
Reagan presidency. With these two societies the later twentieth century saw a recrudescence of ruggedly individualistic capitalist ideology, a throwback to the primitive economic style of the nineteenth century. In both societies social programs have been systematically starved while economic policy has reverted to freemarket orthodoxy. Margaret Thatcher once said that her goal was “to kill socialism.” Ronald Reagan said his goal was “to get the government off our backs.” In both nations the bargaining power of organized labour was severely weakened, and substantial amounts of public property and public programs were privatized. At the same time, dismal forms of social Darwinism long defunct in the rest of the industrial world came roaring States since the
back into fashion.
As a result, in the United States the children of what the government quaintly calls the “working poor” go to bed hungry, sweatshops have reappeared streets of
our
cities,
in
the
back
over forty million people have no
unemployed are allowed to drop precipitously into poverty, and single mothers are deprived of welfare support and forced to take poorly access to health insurance, the
84
The Corp orados paid jobs. In
across the United
cities
libraries, public
schools,
parks, health clinics, and hospitals are
being cut back or closed unaffordable.
are
States,
down on
the grounds that they
Ordinary working-class
citizens
are
expected to bear the brunt of economic fluctuations in distant
corners
of the
world.
They
are
expected
to
approve of having jobs moved to cheap-labour markets and to let their standard of living fall. Simply to cite one
Reagan presidency of the 1980s, the reported number of homeless and derelict people who have been allowed to die of exposure, hunger, and disease in U.S. cities has risen steadily. The totals are now well above a hundred a year in most major cities. Not long ago, lethal neglect of this kind would have been intoleratelling statistic: since the
ble
even to conservatives in the United States. Like every
other developed society, America had
left
when people
Now, thanks
perished in the streets.
behind the days to the
Darwinian recrudescence, things have changed.
The corporados
way
see hardship like this as a legitimate
of disciplining the labour force of the nation and of
punishing the poor. They
call
it
“freeing”
people of
dependency. In their eyes, subjecting the population
good soul of the nation. Making workers compete for large to the insecurity of the marketplace
is
at
for the jobs,
if
not their very survival, supposedly encourages initiative
and resourcefulness -
Above to be social
all,
qualities that
made America
fighting for one’s daily bread forces
more
like
them:
alert, self-reliant,
great.
everybody
tough. Like
all
Darwinists of the past, the corporados regard
themselves as the very flowers of civilization.
By a convenient coincidence, the Darwinian management style of the killer ceos has turned out to be ideal training for the global economy that got underway in the 1990s. Thanks to the great trade and tariff treaties 85
WORLD, BEWARE! negotiated in that era, the ceos of the United States have
been free to discard narrow nationalistic considerations. In negotiating
nafta and gatt, President
Bill
Clinton, a
Democrat, gave the corporados the greatest gift they have received from any president since Calvin Coolidge beat back the trade unions in the 1920s. U.S. corporations
can
now
export goods, factories, capital, and entire
industries across the globe.
As they do
so, jobs are trans-
ferred to cheap-labour areas, leaving millions of Ameri-
can workers, some of them highly trained professionals, to
go unemployed or take any job they can
programmer who earns $65,000
puter
United States can
now
be replaced by one
find.
A
com-
a year in the
who
earns only
$10,000 in India or Pakistan. In effect, major U.S. companies under the direction of killer ceos are undermining their
own economy. But
they see such disloyalty as a
healthy development, a return to the old to the
work
ethic
and
natural order of things in which only the
fit
deserve to survive.
THE IDOLATRY OF MARKETS Among
the corporados, the infatuation with markets has
reached a cult-like status. The word - usually undefined
and without
historical specificity
modern
-
is
taken to summarize
won
Cold War. “Markets” are the world’s guarantee of freedom and prosperity. “Markets” are the panacea for all social ills. Like the Christian missionaries who went out to convert heathen peoples to the one true faith, the American corporate community now brings the gospel of markets the course of
history.
“Markets”
the
to a benighted humanity.
From there
is
no
the viewpoint of triumphalist conservatives, limit to the role of
86
markets
in
our time. The
The Corporados extremes to which
nebulous concept can be extended
this
have become ludicrous. For example, consider the Policy Analysis Market proudly proposed by the Pentagon in
2003
July
as a
new weapon
in the
war on
terrorism.
Developed by the highly prestigious Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, this project sought to create an Internet futures for the idea
market
for terrorist incidents.
was based on
The model
futures trading in currencies
and commodities, but in this case investors would be betting on bombings, assassinations, hijackings, and the overthrow of governments. The justification offered for the program was the value of an economic model called the Efficient Market Hypothesis as a means of collecting reliable information. The assumption was that knowledgeable people around the world would draw upon their
estimates
of future
terrorist
say,
an attack on the
month were booming, ity
and
their
could develop leads for investigation. for,
activities
money accordingly. By watching which way smart money was pointing, U.S. intelligence agencies
wager the
best
that
Eiffel
If terrorist
Tower within
must indicate
futures
the next
a high probabil-
of such an attack occurring.
some news media reported it as if it were a joke or a hoax. The program was quashed the next day, but it was a serious proposition; the Defense Department had already spent nearly a million dollars on it and wanted three million more. What was instructive was how much the proposal overlooked. As critics were quick to point out, terrorist acts are hardly like wheat or oats, products that often fluctuate beyond human control. What a gift such a program would be for al-Qaeda; it would be perfectly free to take out futures either to make money on its own attacks or, more likely, to manipulate the probabilities in ways
The proposal was so outlandish
87
that
WORLD, BEWARE! would distract and confuse. Indeed, that so obvious flaw was overlooked indicates how blinded people can
that a
be by anything that wears the label “markets.”
“Markets” has become the God-word of the American right wing. If the corporados have their way, there will be a market solution for every problem. Education?
Disband the public school system
in
favour of providing
vouchers that parents can “spend” on any school of their choice. Health care? Let private
companies compete to
medical insurance policies. Pensions? Let retirement
sell
savings be diverted into the stock market to find the best earnings. Environmental protection?
Any number
of mar-
ket incentives have been suggested to replace regulatory legislation: for
example,
up pollution
set
credits that
can
be sold by clean companies to dirty companies; convert public land into private property so that it will be
guarded by the
self-interest of the
owners. Incredible as
it
some hyperconservative environmental groups favour selling off the oceans of the world and all the seems,
resources in them. These organizations have published
papers on
how
to brand schools of fish to identify
them
as private property.
Market
enthusiasts have even found a solution for
money
the corrupting influence of
Simply stop worrying about tics.
The marketplace
is,
it.
in
American
politics.
Let markets replace poli-
so they believe, the most
demo-
mechanisms. Think of people as consumers rather than citizens. To spend is to vote - to vote with dollars. What people buy is what they want. If they
cratic of all social
freely
then
spend more on basketball than on grand opera,
it is elitist
for the
subsidize the opera.
If
government to use tax dollars to they would rather have a home
entertainment centre than public schools, so be all
it.
Once
public programs and institutions have been translated
88
The Corp orados into
market terms, what
will there be for politicians to
do? The invisible hand of the free market will
settle all
issues.
why should elections not be as open money as the marketplace? Just as con-
For that matter, to the free use of
sumers buy products,
who
buy
politicians
let
votes.
Those
have the money to pay for votes should be allowed
do so. The freedom to buy votes is no different from freedom of speech. Money is the eloquence of the rich.
to
Let those
whom
the market has favoured have the right
- and not
to use their wealth to purchase political office in
some
guilty, surreptitious
In the course of the last
way, but openly and proudly.
two decades more and more
lionaires have used their
own money
mil-
to finance election
campaigns. In 1996, a candidate for the U.S. Senate from California spent over $40 million of his his
campaign. (He
lost.)
A
own money on
candidate for mayor of
York City spent over $70 million. (He won.) Americans are coming to see millionaire politicians
New
Many as the
solution to the hopelessly corrupt condition of the existing electoral system. Millionaires are seen as honest can-
didates because they use their
own money;
they do not
have to make deals with anybody.
In
2002
a
television
series
titled
The Commanding
Heights premiered on the Public Broadcasting System the
United States, where
many
times.
It
was
it
in
was subsequently shown
a well-funded, highly touted produc-
tion scripted by the economist Daniel Yergin. Given the
money and
brains behind the series,
it
may
record for the most perniciously erroneous broadcast. Yet by virtue of
89
its
hold the
work
ever
very misconception,
it
WORLD, BEWARE! reveals
much about
the infatuation of triumphalist con-
servatives with markets.
It
also offers in
one convenient
main assumptions underlying what American foreign policy may soon become under the control of the corporados and their intellectual henchmen. At the outset of the series, a dichotomy is set up. The
package
all
history of
the
modern economic thought, we
between a
left
wing and a
“market economics”
have
Hayek and
right wing.
are told, oscillates
On
represented
as
Much
the Chicago school.
the right,
we
by Friedrich
of the series
is
a
paean to the genius of Hayek based on the assumption that he
the greatest economist since
is
Adam
years he has spent lacking appreciation are length; his triumphant
The many bemoaned at
Smith.
emergence from the wilderness pro-
vides the dramatic structure of the production.
Now
Hayek is the right wing of modern economics, what do we have on the left? One might have expected some reference to a socialistic or even communistic source. Karl Marx, perhaps? Mao Tse Tung? The British Fabians? The social democrats? But no. For if
Daniel Yergin, the far
represented by the British
left is
economist John Maynard Keynes and the welfare
There
is
of Keynes in ist
a consensus
among
historians that the role
modern economics was
system during
its
to save the capital-
darkest hour - which
way
state.
is
indeed the
which Keynes wanted to see his theories applied. To identify him as the supposedly discredited left-wing extreme amounts to an Orwellian revision of the historical record. Suddenly the utterly non-revolutionary
first
dreary century of industrial history, with
ery, strife, it,
in
and
the radical
injustice, vanishes
and
socialist
mis-
completely - and with
wing of modern economic
thought. The collapse of the Soviet is
all its
cited as a refutation of the entire
90
command economy argument
for social
The Corp orados justice
under capitalism. That leaves economic centrism
as the far-left
This its
is
enemy.
a revealing
way
of rewriting history.
practitioners to target liberalism as the
market.
free
significant
It
wipes out
all
much
as
means of produc-
None
tion, the regulation of the market.
so
main foe of the
issues of property rights,
unjust enrichment, the control of the
is
allows
the issues that once animated
economic debate -
moral questions
It
mentioned
of these great in the series.
Hardship and exploitation never happened; industrialism simply leaped into existence as a great good thing for concerned. Those
who
dared to
criticize
it
all
were ideologi-
cal malcontents.
This
foster in his
ans
in
,
society.
Hayek himself sought to 1954 anthology Capitalism and the Histori-
the viewpoint that
is
which he
No
offers a bizarre
account of industrial
sooner do the steam engines begin to roar in
working class is catapulted to a higher standard of living. There are statistics to prove the point. The price of tea and sugar dropped; underwear and funerals got cheaper. Why, then, the
Midlands of England than the
entire
do so many historians tell us that the Iindustrial Revolution was filled with hardship? Because the story has been systematically distorted by left-wing critics. Thus, left
Keynes came along,
to believe that before
we all
are
was
well with the industrial societies. There were no prob-
lems
that
required
whose lopsided the
government
theories are
left
intervention.
to stand unquestioned as
one correct way of viewing economic
declared to be right and Keynes
is
policy,
is
curtly dismissed as
no mention made of how Hayek’s notion market was the prevailing orthodoxy in eco-
wrong. There of the free
Hayek,
is
nomic thought until the Great Depression, when it became indisputably clear that an unregulated market 9i
WORLD, BEWARE! by an ethic of self-interest had chance of producing recovery within a fuelled
time
frame.
It
economists that
made
politically realistic
their theories.
Nor
in this series to the role that
nomics played Depression.
and had no
was not the prejudice of his fellow sent Hayek and the Chicago school of the wilderness after 1930; it was the
economics into obvious inadequacy of ence
failed
during the troubled
any
refer-
Keynesian eco-
worst damage done by the
in repairing the
Had Hayek
is
been called on to make policy
thirties, the
world might
still
be wait-
ing for the Great Depression to end.
But with the dismal 1930s
now
far
behind
us,
can
we assume that Hayek’s day has at last arrived? Only if we are prepared to join the triumphalists in their wishful Bear
thinking.
mind
in
Keynes and Hayek
is
that
the
difference
between
the difference between fact
and
pure theory. Keynes’s ideas bear the scars that come with historical application; Hayek’s ideas are framed in terms of an ideal market system that has never existed. Con-
main disagreement with Keynes. Hayek believed that any line of economic policy that did not rely totally on the market for its pricing mechanism would, of necessity, become dictatorial. As the producers of The Comsider his
by the end of the twentileaders everywhere had conceded
manding Heights would have eth century political that there
is
it,
no pricing mechanism superior to the com-
petitive market.
But that
is
sheer nonsense. For one thing, this view-
point allows only two choices: unregulated markets or dictatorial socialism. The economy must be one thing or the other.
We
are asked to ignore the plain fact that the
mixed economies, all of which have some combination of a public and a private sector. Among these economies we would find some, like those
world
is
made up
of
92
The Corp orados in
Germany, Holland, or the Scandinavian countries, that
have a large welfare-state
Have
sector.
the citizens of
these countries lost their freedom because they enjoy
decent health care and long paid vacations? States “freer” because
it
Is
the United
has forty million citizens
cannot afford health insurance? Moreover,
if
we
who
take the
United States as the world’s main capitalist economy, do
we
market in operation there? Hardly. By way of mergers and takeovers, major U.S. corporaactually find a free
tions have rapidly evolved into a congeries of oligopolies
that dictate prices.
One would
be hard-pressed to find a
single industry in the United States in
for that matter, wages, interest rates,
which prices - or, and the quality of
products - are any longer determined by market forces.
spokesman for the Ford Motor Company once put it when he was asked why Ford was raising the prices on its cars, “We’re doing it to keep up with our competi-
As
a
tion.”
With each passing year there are fewer and fewer companies in the United States competing for a share of the market for any major product or service. Some monopolies,
like
Microsoft, are so entrenched that the
government has given up on trying to control them. Almost by a law of nature, competition in the United States gravitates towards a chummy kind of oligopoly. If anything, the U.S. economy is an example of how the corporate system can vitiate the free market. If he were alive today,
would Hayek be honest enough
to recognize
that the private sector, in the absence of regulation, can
become socialist
as
much
a
command economy
as
any
state
system?
The predictions made by manding Heights are presented fest destiny of the
human
producers of
as
they were the mani-
race.
93
Com-
the if
The steady advance
of
WORLD, BEWARE! market economies
is
viewed as the
result of natural
law
triumphing over misconceived efforts to tamper with the
mechanisms of economic science. Left to itself so we are to believe - the global economy gravitates towards markets in the same way that the rain falls from the skies and the tides ebb and flow in the oceans. But, in fact, it is the relentless pressure and leverage of corporate delicate
interests that are
now
determining everything about the
economic future of the world. Globalization is the result of constant and frenzied efforts by entrepreneurs and financiers to make the world over in their image. Every meeting of the World Trade Organization, International Monetary Fund, or World Bank is fraught with deals and manoeuvres whose purpose is to make the big banks and corporations of major nations richer and to quash every
more localized alternative. And where the power of money is not enough to produce that result, then blunt military force may be called in. That is what we see happening in the wake of Gulf War II. In effect, Iraq is a test smaller,
case for the grand global design of America’s corporate
community.
It
is
the proving
ground where the vision
presented with such scholarly restraint in
Commanding
Heights ceases to be a television program and becomes a blueprint for domination.
GULF WAR Gulf
War
II
II:
THE WAY WE DO BUSINESS TODAY
was supposedly fought with
the promise of
transforming Iraq into a democratic society. All through the 1990s, Washington triumphalists
view since the days of the
word
first
who had
this
war
in
president Bush were busily
Middle East were “dysfunctional.” These backward Arab societies needed to be dragged out of their medieval past into the spreading the
that the nations of the
94
The Corporados modern world. Supposedly Gulf War all
the blessings
would bring Iraq of freedom and prosperity. It would be II
benign, efficient, constructive.
But no sooner had victory been declared
in
Iraq
(remember “mission accomplished”?) than the promise of restoring Iraq to its people was crudely swept aside and covered over with obfuscation. It had never been more than propaganda. Long before even the most tentative form of democracy had appeared in Iraq, the American imperial pattern was emerging. With an American army of occupation
still
struggling to bring peace and safety to
the streets of Iraq’s major cities,
and long before basic
had been restored to a decent standard, the chief U.S. administrator in Baghdad was unilaterally turning Iraq into the nation that the corporados wanted it to be. Without offering the Iraqi population even token consultation, the Bush administration issued orders to eliminate all state-owned industries and replace them public
utilities
with privatized companies. Nothing
had ever been mentioned by the Bush administration in any forum - the United States Congress or the United Nations before the war. At the same time, all Iraqi import duties were scrapped
like this
at a stroke of the pen. Like
it
or not, the
people of Iraq, so Washington decided, were to have a
market economy open to global competition. That has
meant the destruction of nearly
all
businesses, since few of these can
existing Iraqi-owned
compete with cheaper
from more developed economies. Is this what the Iraqi people want? Does anybody in Washington care about what they want? By the time Iraq has a democratic government - if goods brought
in
comes - the country’s new economic order will have been established and its industrial assets will have been franchised to foreign interests. Water supplies, that day ever
95
WORLD, BEWARE! power - all will have been privatized, with many of them brought under foreign ownership. Policies like these, which come close to being plunder, would seem to violate international law, but Washinggas and
oil, electric
ton’s response to that
simply to
is
rattle its sabre.
And
who can take issue with the world’s only superpower? One might almost suspect that the protracted disorganization of postwar Iraq and the insecurity of daily
life
part of a deliberate effort to keep the defeated nation the brink of chaos while
appropriated by
its
its
riches
conquerors and
its
are
on
are systematically
economic future
is
locked into place. The American military occupation may end some day, but the American economic occupation will continue indefinitely. This
is
what makes
all
discus-
sion of an exit strategy in Iraq so painfully naive.
Com-
who must know better persist American military like so many boy scouts
mentators and politicians in
viewing the
who
will hasten
home
after they
have done their good
deed for the day. Oust Saddam, give the Iraqi people a
few lessons in civics, accept their thanks, and leave. Whether one wants to regard this scenario as an outright lie or a wishful fantasy, the truth is that the United States invaded Iraq to conquer and to occupy. The triumphalists may have set their sights on a quick victory that
would
leave troops available for swift redeployment to
other places. (Iran? Syria? North Korea?) But even
war bogs down, we
are there to stay. This
is
if
the
far too valu-
given up.
and economic real estate to be a quagmire can be an efficient
way
of social programs, provided
able a piece of military
to
And besides, suck money out
it
can be surrounded with patriotic rhetoric.
The occupation is already paying handsome diplomatic and economic dividends. By currying Washington’s favour, foreign leaders can hope to share the spoils of
96
The Corp orados war. At one point Canada, which did not support the
war,
was on
the no-contracts
list;
a bit later,
when
it
looked diplomatically advantageous, the Bush adminis-
Canadian firms to enter bids for or construction. Whether Republican or Demo-
tration decided to allow services
cratic, presidents in the future will find
it
difficult to give
up patronage like that. In effect, Iraq - or any other terrorist hotbed that the U.S. army occupies in the years to come - will become a slush fund used to bribe and reward. Whenever
we
hear U.S. policy-makers
tell
us that
the United States cannot simply pull out of Iraq or that
we have there,
tation
move
to
suspect the
I
is
cautiously towards true democracy
more compelling reason
reluctance to break off
all
for such hesi-
the lucrative deals
that have been financed out of the conquest.
With Gulf War
new
entered a
stockpile the
America’s superpower status
II,
Once content
phase.
weapons
to produce
of war, the Pentagon
now
and asks,
weapons go to waste? Why not use them - at least for such minor military operations as conquering lesser nations?” Once that has been
“Why
let
efficiently
these marvellous
accomplished (with deaths
in battle held to a
level that the public considers acceptable
- two hun-
dred, five hundred, six hundred), then the conquered
province
lies
open
economic exploitation by the
to full
corporados. Some firms,
like Bechtel
Corporation, will
be ready at hand to repair the damage to infrastructure.
Deals for that service are particularly sweet, because
who
ever inspects to see
done? And
if
The Congress
if
the
work has been adequately
the rebuilding has been shoddy, so what? will simply appropriate
more funds
to
do
Even before Gulf War II began in March 2003, Bechtel had been awarded contracts worth $680 million for construction work. By the job over again - and again.
97
WORLD, BEWARE! August of that year, Bechtel had decided that this would not be enough; accordingly, the U.S. administrators in Baghdad recommended giving Bechtel an additional
By then it had been revealed that the Halliburton Company had been awarded hitherto unpublicized contracts by the Army Corps of Engineers that would earn the company $1.7 billion. Other firms will
$350
in
million.
time doubtless receive no-bid contracts to develop the
economy
of the occupied nation.
what we see happening with Iraqi oil, already being promised away to major companies by the U.S. administrators on the scene. The firms that are rehabiliThis
is
tating the Iraqi oil fields have
open-ended arrangements.
money, they can simply return to ask for more if the cost of the project rises which, of course, it inevitably does. This is a variation on
Whatever the
original allocation of
the well-established cost overrun that has always been a feature of U.S. military contracting. to
produce a weapon.
good - mere
nickels
It
may
A
firm
makes
a bid
bid anything that sounds
and dimes. The
initial figure
does
not matter, because in another year the firm will be back
more on the grounds that the project has become more expensive. Think how profitable contracts for rebuilding whole countries can be on that basis. In the months preceding Gulf War II, spokesmen for the Bush administration stepped forward to ridicule protestors who charged that the war was about oil. The spokesmen suavely observed that if oil were the main
to ask for
reason for the war, the United States might simply follow the example of other nations (especially a few of our
European allies) and do business with Saddam Hussein. The implication was that U.S. companies were too highly principled to make deals with a bloody tyrant. This was untrue. Halliburton, the company once run by Vice-
98
The Corp orados Cheney and now receiving fat contracts to repair the Iraqi oil fields, was deeply involved throughout the 1990s with Saddam Hussein. Through subsidiaries in the Near East, it signed contracts with the same Baghdad regime that it would later insist on destroying. Cheney, as ceo of Halliburton, lobbied to have U.S. trade sanctions President
against Iraq lifted. Still,
sound.
the
Why
argument had not
settle for
superficially
reasonable
doing business with Saddam
War
Hussein? Because Gulf
a
II
achieved what no mere
business deal could. Deals require contracts that specify rules, limits, obligations.
Why
not sweep
all
that aside
and put the full force of America’s military power to work? A war fought at public expense allows the United States to conquer the oil reserves of Iraq and do with them as the president and his advisers see fit. And what
To
did they decide to do? the
form of
liberal
administrators and lic
franchise Iraqi oil reserves in
arrangements worked out by U.S.
oil
company
executives without pub-
scrutiny. Is this not a far better
arrangement than hav-
ing to negotiate with an erratic dictator under the eye of the United Nations?
As
what could was more advanta-
for the terms of that arrangement,
Saddam Hussein have
given that
geous than the deal the Bush administration had to
May 2003
White House issued an Executive Order governing contracts for U.S. oil companies in Iraq. Issuing an Executive Order is the most covert offer? In
the
action a president can take; such orders are a unilateral
by the president requiring no approval or consultation; they rarely attract much attention. But in this case act
Washington watch-dog group spotted Executive Order 13303, which bears the title “Protecting the Development Fund and Certain Other Property in Which Iraq a
99
WORLD, BEWARE! Has an
Interest.”
By the terms of eo 13303, U.S.
companies operating
in
Iraq
cannot be held legally
They
responsible for anything they do.
human-rights violations and
all
oil
are
immune from
forms of environmental
damage. They are exempt from lawsuits and criminal prosecution relating to contractual disputes, discrimination suits, labour law violations, international treaties,
and environmental disasters. The order grants total immunity from Iraqi, U.S., and international law to all individuals and corporations involved in producing, selling, and marketing Iraqi oil. As one public interest lawyer put
it,.
“It is a
blank check for corporate anar-
ceo politics at its purest: an unabashed effort to raise the American corporate community above the law, in much the same way that the monarchs of old were excused from all legal culpability. chy.”
Here
Nor
is
are these convenient arrangements limited to
With Iraq under U.S. control for the the country’s entire economy is open oil.
indefinite future,
to exploitation.
Bleeding Iraq for profit has already begun. country’s
most
lucrative possessions
that could give those
who
is
Among
the
water, a resource
run Iraq tremendous leverage
throughout the Middle East.
It
is
already clear
how
Washington intends to deal with water. The Bechtel Corporation has been awarded a no-bid contract to restore the entire water system of the nation - after which the system
is
likely to be
taken under private management in
same way that Western entrepreneurs have monopolized water systems in many African and Asian countries. The result has generally been to price clean water beyond what the poorest residents can afford. There seems to be no limit to how crass the corporathe
dos are willing to become, often without the least effort to cover
up
their greed.
Given the chance, they
ioo
will pick
The Corporados the carcass of defeated Iraq
down
May
to the bone. In
2003, with Operation Iraqi Freedom barely completed, Joe Allbaugh, an old Texas friend of George W. Bush and
2000 elections, quit the job he held in the administration and went into the war-profiteering business. He and others closely tied to Bush set up a consulting firm called New Bridge Strategies. The objective of its “consulting” was to give its clients an his
campaign manager
in the
On
inside track for gaining contracts in Iraq.
company announced, “The
the
its
website,
opportunities
Iraq
in
today are of such an unprecedented nature and scope
no other
and experience to be effective both in Washington D.C. and on the ground in Iraq.” The company, which includes no Iraqis, referred to its purpose as “cross-pollination.” Oththat
ers
would
call
existing firm has the necessary skills
it
influence-peddling.
would not be suralso do business in
I
prised to learn that people like this stolen wheelchairs.
So here science.
is
While
the state of the
our
troops
American
are
dying
political conin
Iraq
and
Afghanistan, close friends of our pious president scram-
from the nation’s imperial adventures. The president says nothing about the matter, and conservative pundits continue to celeble to
skim
all
the profits they can
brate his “leadership qualities.” If
the
corporados get what they want
in
Iraq -
namely, an endless supply of million-dollar contracts plus
an unfettered opportunity to take over the resources and the economic planning of a conquered nation - it may not be long before the American imperium becomes a private, for-profit,
off-the-shelf,
will be firms standing
regime-change
industry.
There
ready to fight the wars, organize
the occupation that follows, rebuild the ruined infrastructure that results
from the wars, IOI
recruit
new governments,
WORLD, BEWARE! and manage the postwar economy. There may even be private educational services hired to train the conquered population in the rudiments of high-consumption democ-
and hoards of evangelical true believers eager to save heathen souls from damnation. Most of this will be paid for by the taxpaying public, but there are other sources of revenue. During congresracy,
sional hearings before the Iraq war, there
who were
were
politicians
frank enough to admit that the United States
pay for the war and for whatever it might cost to rebuild the country to America’s specifications. The rebuilding would, of course, be done by U.S. companies. There was never any concern
would use
for
Iraq’s oil resources to
who would monitor
the bookkeeping for such a ven-
ture or ensure the quality of the work.
Would an
Iraqi
parliament or the U.S. Congress have any role to play in supervising this left
enormous undertaking? Or would
to the Pentagon, the Defense Department, the
it
be
Army
Corps of Engineers, and various favoured corporations? In the
summer
of 2003, the Halliburton
proposed a plan that would guarantee
it
Company
unrestricted
government funding for whatever it cared to do - or purported to be doing - in Iraq. Halliburton, which was caught
in early
2004 overcharging and taking kickbacks
on its Iraqi projects, proposed that it should be given a permanent claim to an off-the-top percentage of Iraq’s oil revenues. And in the event a future Iraqi government reneged on this arrangement, Halliburton proposed that the debt be transferred to U.S. taxpayers in the form of a special budgetary allocation.
Whatever happens in Iraq will surely become the model for future military occupations by the United States. There are always riches and resources of some kind that can be taken over, marketed, and merchandized
102
The Corporados by the side that wins - and the corporados stand ready to carry out the job. lage.
Once
this
would have been
American leaders prefer
to call
it
called pil-
“building democ-
racy.”
This penchant for an all-powerful, highly militarized state
under tight corporate control leads some
(like
myself) to perceive fascist tendencies in the American
business community.
It
may
be that few ceos give the
matter any thought as they scramble to accumulate profit
and
may
influence; they
simply see themselves as astute
entrepreneurs maximizing they can.
all
But deals made by people of such power
inevitably take the
form of
sidy,
criticism.
They become be protected from scrutiny
political policy.
sources of profit that have to
and
the business opportunities
Thus, contract by contract, subsidy by sub-
they are laying the foundations for exactly the sort
of corporate state that the fascist dictators of the twentieth century aspired to. fate,
it
will be despite
change our
If
what
the corporados have
done
to
society.
Sometimes the impersonal arrive at a
the United States avoids that
moment
social forces that
that gives
them
Such an emblematic moment for the
shape history
name and a face. new militarized cona
was the appointment of Paul Wolfowitz as head of the World Bank in March 2005. Why should the former Deputy Defense Secretary emerge as the best choice servatism
to
head the
largest,
international
banking institution?
Because as a leading architect of Gulf
War
II,
Wolfowitz
was foremost among those arranging for the elimination of Iraq’s public sector. Under his supervision the country’s state-owned enterprises were sold to private companies,
103
WORLD, BEWARE! and new investment laws were imposed that facilitated the creation of a market economy. In doing so, he was advancing the interests of what
Naomi
Klein (writing in
The Nation) has
called “disaster capitalism,” a rich,
new
opportunity
combine ideology, public
and
profit.
War,
redesign
to like
whole
policy,
natural disaster, offers the chance to societies
by
way
of
“reconstruction.”
Transforming Iraq into a market economy might be seen as Wolfowitz’s apprenticeship for heading up the World Bank. Along with the International Monetary Fund, has been reconstructing the
same
its
it
impoverished client nations by
principles for decades. In effect, disaster capital-
ism holds devastated societies up for ransom. Desperate
governments
in
war-torn or storm-damaged areas are told
that, in order to receive foreign aid, they
publicly
owned companies
must
retire their
in favor of private investors
and allow construction companies like Bechtel to rebuild their infrastructure on whatever terms and to whatever specifications the company cares to honour. No doubt triumphalists believe they are making good use of the disaster;
they are infusing a failed
economy with dynamic
entrepreneurial energy. Accordingly, as in Afghanistan,
or not and with no vote taken, the nation’s water,
like
it
oil,
gas,
mining, telecommunications, electrical power,
and health care has been opened to private business on favorable terms. Or, as in the countries devastated by the 2004 tsunami, land may be transferred from small owners - farming and fishing villages - to the international tourist industry.
August 2004, the interests of disaster capitalism were institutionalized under the Bush administration in the Office of Reconstruction and Stabilization, a signifiIn
cant but largely invisible victory for triumphalist policy-
makers. The
office
has drawn up plans for the rebuilding
104
The Corp orados some two dozen countries where the United States may be called upon to wage war against terrorists. The plans mandate that everything in the “post-conflict” sociof
ety should be privatized. “Pre-completed contracts” with
private
companies have been drawn up
Should the United States find
itself
drawn
in
advance.
into another
theater of the war, rapid-response teams will be able to
move
in fast to
improvise a market economy. The teams
will include private-sector consultants
and “democracy
and will, of course, enjoy the services of the United States Marine Corps in carrying out their liberatbuilders,”
ing mission.
105
FOUR The Triumphalists
“And this I said, ‘It seems likely that our rulers will have to make considerable use of falsehood and deception for the benefit of their subjects.
We
agreed,
was in the category was right,’ he said.”
‘And that
believe, that the
of medicine.’
use of such things “
I
Plato,
The Republic
“Hence, philosophy or science must remain the preserve of a small minority, and philosophers or scientists must respect the opinions
opinions
them
is
on which
To respect from accepting
society rests.
something entirely different
as true. Philosophers or scientists
who
hold
this
view about the relation of philosophy or science and
employ a peculiar manner of writing which would enable them to reveal what they regard as society are driven to
the truth to the few, without endangering the unqualified
commitment of the many to the opinions on which society rests. They will distinguish between the true teaching as the esoteric teaching and the socially useful teaching as the exoteric teaching.”
Leo
Strauss,
What
Is Political
Philosophy?, 1959
The Triumph alists
THE HYPERCONSERVATIVE ASCENDANCY n the United States, ists”
the people
I
call
“triumphal-
(and sometimes “hyperconservatives”) are more
I commonly known conservatives.”
as “neo-conservatives” or
“Reagan
prefer the term “triumphalist” because
I
it
better expresses the aggressive, winner-take-all intentions
of the
movement. The important point
umphalist brand of conservatism
is
is
not that the
“new,” but that
triit
is
most ruthless political faction to command the resources of a major political party in the ruthless. This
by
is
far the
nation’s history.
The people policy-makers
have
I
who
in
mind comprise
a small circle of
have both a foreign and domestic
agenda. They are few in number but strategically placed
With the exception of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who became a and
relentless in their determination.
Since the
names and
bound
change
to
affiliations of the
in the
years ahead,
ongoing policy orientation rather than
I
hyperconservatives are
refer to
them here
as an
as personalities. But in the
bound to show up again and again in American politics. The more prominent hyperconservatives in and around the George W. Bush administration include Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, formerly Undersecretary of Defense and now head of the World Bank, Douglas Feith,
years ahead a few leading figures are
Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, William Luti, Undersecretary of Defense,
James Woolsey, former head of the
Libby, Chief of Staff to the Vice-President,
of
Special
Defense,
Plans,
Robert Bolton,
now ambassador
to
the
Abram
cia,
I.
Lewis
Shulsky, Office
former Undersecretary United
Nations,
for
Richard
Armitage, Undersecretary of State, Richard Haas, Director State
Department of Policy Planning, Abram Shulsky, Director of Special
Plans,
Stephen Cambone, Undersecretary of Defense for
Michael Ledeen and Richard Perle of the American Enterprise Institute, Robert Kagan, David Frum, and William Intelligence,
Kristol, editor of
The American Standard.
107
WORLD, BEWARE! War
none of the
lead-
ing triumphalists holds a major cabinet position;
none
fleeting
media
star during
has been elected to crats
office.
who work on
Gulf
Most
II,
are second-level bureau-
top-secret committees, jockeying for
advantage as they make private alliances to favour some
and undermine others. Others are positioned outside government in think-tanks or on various conservative journals; they are the sort of pundits
who
are apt to
appear on news and talk shows to provide “expert opinion.”
As deeply buried
Washington, they have become quite better-informed public.
may be in official well known to the
as these figures
Few
administrators and policy
experts have ever received as
much comment
in
the
media. With each passing month, the American public if
it
is
member
paying attention - learns the name of another of the circle
who
has influenced the deliberations
of the Defense Department, the cia, the State Depart-
ment, or the Pentagon. Some appear on television
view shows pontificating about their
policies.
inter-
Triumphal-
do not shun the limelight. One senses that they believe they will one day be able to take their true intentions out of the shadows and win the rousing approval of the American public - and perhaps of the world at large. They may expect that one day people everywhere will cheer for the American imperium and offer thanks for the protection and prosperity it has brought them. Meanwhile, of course, they will have to bribe, dissemble, and coerce to get the modern world in shape. The triumphalists, the most intellectual of all Ameriists
can conservatives, are the
Reagan, one of the
political
progeny of Ronald
American presidents. In this odd coupling of the movie star and the policy-makers, all the brains were on one side and all the charm on the other. What the triumphalists found in least intellectual of
108
The Triumph alists Reagan was a persuasive anti-communist spokesman who had the charisma (at least on television) to appeal to a wide variety of voters. He could win over blue-collar workers and middle-class suburbanites; he could also attract Southern voters who had until the 1980s been a Democratic constituency. Out of these elements, Reagan created a powerful electoral coalition - the “new Republican majority,” as it came to be called. But in one important respect Reagan was not very Republican at all. He was a spendthrift. Though he called himself a “fiscal conservative,” he was willing to run up the highest deficits in U.S. history. Once he was installed in the White House, Reagan gave no further thought to balancing the budget or holding down government spending. Instead, he spent money, a great deal of money. Not on social programs, but on the military. Reagan’s anti-communism demanded a
military establishment second to none.
umphalists this suggested a marvellous militarized conservatism, free of
new
For the
possibility: a
all fiscal restraint,
to connect with state-of-the-art technology
tri-
able
and offering
a
message of hope and patriotic pride. In effect,
were opening
Reagan and a
new
hyperconservative advisers
his
chapter in the history of America’s
military-industrial complex.
The main
determination to win the Cold
War
II.
War
thrust behind their
dates back to
World
With the advent of that war, the Roosevelt
administration fashioned an alliance between the govern-
ment and
the country’s major corporations that
all
but
erased the distinction between civilian and military. Since
World War II, it has been the practice for highlevel military commanders to retire from duty and then assume executive positions in the very corporations that
the end of
service the Pentagon. This
is
called “the revolving-door”
system: out of the public sector into private enterprise.
109
It
WORLD, BEWARE! pays to invest in old soldiers. They can use their contacts to
negotiate lucrative contracts with the government.
and admirals are
Generals
essentially
corporados
in
training.
The term “military-industrial complex” was coined in 1960 by President Dwight Eisenhower, who employed it in the
context of a warning issued in his farewell address
to the nation. “In the councils of government,” he said,
“we must guard against influence,
the acquisition of unwarranted
whether sought or unsought, by the military-
industrial complex.
The
potential for the disastrous rise
power exists and will persist.” This was the only memorable remark that Eisenhower ever made, and it was certainly a surprising sentiment for an old general of misplaced
to express.
Eisenhower had,
after
all,
seen the military-
complex rise into existence during his war years. Until he was assigned command of the D-Day invasion, he had always been more an executive officer than a battlefield leader. During his presidency he made a point industrial
of entrusting his cabinet offices to the heads of big corporations.
He
called this
“dynamic conservatism.” As an
outspoken admirer of the corporate community and efficient
managerial techniques, he was the
last
one might have expected to speak out against
its
person his col-
leagues in the Pentagon. In any case, his warning
came
By the time he left the presidency, the militaryindustrial complex had become the American way of life. It was the anchor of the nation’s prosperity, pouring out huge profits and handsome paycheques. The ongoing alliance of the generals and the corporados made the
too
late.
United States an affluent
By 1960 basis
of a
Through
the military-industrial
new
the
society.
first
social
complex was the
contract in the United States.
forty years of the arrangement, the
no
The Triumph a lists corporate community was willing to pass through high
wages and guaranteed benefits to a prospering workforce. Never before in American history had the working class shared so generously in the profits of big business as it
did during the period 1940 to 1980. But this generosity
on the part of corporate America was not to last. Under Ronald Reagan the military-industrial complex would be given a very different orientation. link
It
would become
between the domestic and foreign
the
policies of the tri-
umphalists.
THE MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX: PHASE
TWO
As the spokesman for a growing conservative backlash, Reagan assumed office with a fierce determination to dimmish all government programs that liberals had initiated under the Roosevelt New Deal and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society. His attack on liberalism took the form of a novel strategy. In the past the main way in which conservatives had resisted liberals had been to call for fiscal responsibility: lower taxes, less spending. This
was prudent but colourless. Now the Reagan Republicans hit on a new idea. They would use the militaryindustrial complex as a way of curtailing social programs intended to transfer wealth to the middle and working 'class.
They would run
the military budget through the
roof. Let there be deficits,
that they
the
money
would
huge
deficits, deficits
so large
scare even spendthrift liberals. But
let
be spent on defence. That would give the pres-
ident a patriotic argument for eliminating social pro-
grams and government regulation. the country,
Therefore,
“We cannot
let
In effect,
it
warned
afford both guns and butter.
us choose guns for the sake of national
hi
WORLD, BEWARE! security.”
With dazzling speed, Republicans went from
being a party of penny-pinching
fiscal
conservatives to
being a gang of record-breaking big spenders.
As his opening gambit in pursuing this new strategy, Reagan began his presidency by vilifying the Soviet Union as never before. He called it “the evil empire” and vowed to oppose the Soviets more adamantly than any president before him. He at once announced a colossal increase in military spending. At the same time Reagan would live up to his reputation as a tax reformer by cutting
upper-income taxes substantially. Year after year
through the 1980s, as tax receipts diminished, Reagan
money
Pentagon on a scale that seemed to assume the imminence of all-out war. There were reports at the time that the generals could not find shovelled
into
the
ways of absorbing the enormous allocations they were receiving. They were forced to make up wish lists that included all the most expensive and exotic weaponry they could imagine.
But Reagan had a problem. His crushingly expensive
arms buildup became less and less sensible as the Soviet Union began stumbling towards its unexpected demise. The Soviet war in Afghanistan was clearly failing; the Kremlin’s grip on Eastern Europe was slipping; the Soviet
economy was sagging under
the weight of corruption,
bad planning, and a bloated military budget. Yet even as the Cold War was fading out, Reagan insisted that the Soviets were a greater threat than ever. By the time Mikhail Gorbachev launched his policy of glasnost and began offering sweeping disarmament treaties, the Reagan hard line made no sense at all. Nevertheless, Reagan continued to spend lavishly on armaments; he proposed his trillion-dollar Strategic
Soviet
Defense
power was crumbling
Initiative
even though
visibly, sdi, advertised as a
112
The Triumph alists weapons system
that
would protect
Soviet ballistic missiles by destroying
was an absurd
the country
them
from
in mid-flight,
idea; all the evidence clearly indicated that
the system could not work. But
it
really did not matter to
Reagan’s hyperconservative advisors whether the system
worked or not; the true objective of Reagan fiscal policy was to burn as much money as possible in order to keep it
out of the hands of
liberals.
Reagan’s presidency was the policy that
was
essentially
first
example of foreign
an adjunct of
a triumphalist
domestic program. His military policies had with the Cold War. deficits icy,
He was more
have an ironic
liberals
result.
It
to
do
interested in producing
than in producing weapons. But
which caught
little
this line of pol-
completely by surprise, was to
may
very well have been the
straw that broke the Soviet camel’s back.
It
is
entirely
was terminally insolvent by the late 1980s. The Reagan arms buildup, however, may have contributed one last push, and so the Soviet Union came tumbling down - leaving Reagan and his successor, possible that the USSR
the
first
George Bush, without an excuse
such a high
new
level of military
for continuing
spending. At that point a
phrase entered the American political vocabulary:
“the peace dividend.” Liberal political leaders began to talk
about diverting substantial amounts of the defence
budget to social programs. Nothing could have been
more unnerving
for the military-industrial
the prospect that peace might break out.
complex than If
that should
happen, what would keep the nation from beating
its
swords into ploughshares?
That could have happened - were
it
not for one
bit
of lucky timing for the military industrialists. In 1991
Saddam Hussein provided
the
first
George Bush with
convincing reason for making war. With Gulf
113
War
I,
a
the
WORLD, BEWARE! triumphalists perceived a grand opportunity to resume the policies of the
Reagan
years.
The
oil-rich societies of
Middle East, many living under unstable dictatorial regimes, might be turned into a new field for military adventures. When the first George Bush failed to press the
War
Gulf
ists in his
I
to the point of occupying Iraq, the triumphal-
administration were furious. They saw that as
a lost opportunity to lay the foundation for another
wave
of big military spending, something to take over from the
No
doubt some triumphalists also saw Bush’s decision to stop the war as a lost opportunity to impose a
Cold War.
durable peace in the Near East.
The Clinton presidency showed little interest in the triumphalists’ view on foreign affairs. Right-wing policymakers approached Clinton to propose ambitious designs for
overthrowing Saddam Hussein, but the president
would not commit sive than bombing
and more expenraids over Baghdad. He had other domestic priorities in mind, such as an expensive health insurance program that was being stoutly resisted by the insurance industry.
to anything riskier
Still,
the triumphalists did not give
up
on their goal. Instead, in 1997 they formed a new, wellfunded lobby called the Project for a New American Century and in March 1998 sent a position paper to Clinton, openly advocating an expansionist policy in the Middle East.
The paper
ognized that
it
also carried an
ominous prophecy.
It
rec-
might take a long while to bring the
United States around to such an ambitious, long-term foreign policy - unless there should be “a catastrophic
and catalyzing event like a new Pearl Harbor.” That event was to come on September 11, 2001. Here was a more traumatic and costly attack upon the continental United States than anything that the Soviet
Union had
inflicted
through
all
the years of the
Cold
The Triumph alists War. Suddenly, a
on terrorism,
new
national mission
was born:
the
war
would presumably continue for as long as there was an enemy anywhere capable of setting off a bomb. Finding such culprits would be an immense project; it would involve a vast military establishment, every variety of expensive armament, and bases of operation everywhere. Prospectively this was larger than the Cold War - and more psychologically effective as a
way
a struggle that
of mustering public support.
Once, during the McCarthy witch hunts of the 1950s, Americans had been prepared to believe that com-
munists might be lurking in every dark corner of the country. That fear had long since lost
its
cogency. But
ter-
were another matter. September 11 proved they had already infiltrated the country and might be hiding anywhere armed with hideously potent weapons. Terrorrorists
ists
even looked more frightening than communists. You
only had to see their swarthy, bearded, and scowling
on television for a shiver to run down your spine. Here was the perfect enemy: mysterious, cunning, merciless, and maniacal. They were far more alien than any communist; they bore exotic Arabic names and believed in a heretical religion. Most fearful of all, they were faces
fanatics
who
delighted in sacrificing their lives for their
cause. For purposes of national propaganda, the terrorist
had
all
the qualities that George Orwell
ined for his fictitious character generic
enemy
Emmanuel
Goldstein, the
would Osama bin Laden had now
of the state in 1984, the face that
inspire instantaneous hatred.
become
had once imag-
that face.
Overnight, terrorist experts appeared on every side.
A
body of literature on terrorism dating back twenty years was hauled before the public. Grim scenarios that involved attacks on major targets - the water supply,
WORLD, BEWARE! food, electricity, the very air
we
breathe -
filled
the
media. Warnings went up, including a colour-coded
ter-
rorist alert.
What more
could the triumphalists ask for?
no question but that the war on terrorism will extend the life of the military-industrial complex into the indefinite future and probably make it even richer. For unlike the Cold War, which focused on the activities of nations - primarily the USSR and China - the war on terrorism is a murky affair that can go on forever. What are There
is
the terrorists doing?
How many
are there?
Where
are
they operating? Only the government can say. At any
moment, on
the basis of clandestine information, the
government can announce that there is a national crisis, that terrorist communications have been intercepted, that there is the threat of an immediate attack. In
league with the corporados,
the
triumphalists
have transformed war into a banquet of business opportunities
where anything that can be turned into
a prof-
itable contract will be sold off. In Iraq, the billion-dollar
contracts that were granted to major firms like Hallibur-
ton and Bechtel were awarded without competitive bids.
The Defense Department
has, in fact, established a
category of business deal called
new
“non-bid contracts.”
Bush Republicans, who never cease to lecture the nation about the virtues of competition in the marketplace,
would take too long to solicit bids from other sources. And besides it was wholly predictable that the same big, well-connected firms would get the contracts anyway. They alone have the size and the experience to do the job. It is almost as if these firms, along claim that
it
with the major U.S.
oil
companies, have become an hon-
orary branch of government.
During the 1970s Ronald Reagan positioned himself as the voice of the “taxpayer revolt,” an effort that has
116
The Triumph alists since spread to state,
and
House
in
all
federal.
levels
He
of government:
county,
city,
escorted that revolt into the White
1980. George W. Bush, in turn, placed the
Republican Party under even more extreme right-wing influence. His massive tax-cutting bills,
which
total over
a trillion dollars, have shifted the weight of taxation
from the very rich to middle-class and working-poor citizens. In 1950 corporations were paying a quarter of federal taxes. As of 2000, though they were richer than ever, they were paying only a tenth. In large measure this change came about because an increasing number of corporations pay no taxes at all. They have found numerous ways of avoiding taxation, including moving their official location to various tax havens.
ton Company, with
The notorious Hallibur-
connections to fraud and greed,
its
(much of it from its contracts in Iraq) in the Cayman Islands, Bermuda, Trinidad and Tobago, Panama, Liechtenstein, and Vanuatu in the South Pacific. In all these places it has offices in which nobody does anything except maintain an address. As a shelters
vast profits
its
result, the
company pays hardly any
taxes.
2002 Bush
Yet, despite these massive tax cuts, in
revived Reagan’s proposal for a multi-billion-dollar antiballistic missile
defence system.
He was
even bolder than
Reagan; he demanded that the system be funded immeeven without meeting the standard Pentagon
diately
requirement that the weapon be tested before into production.
As with Reagan,
breathtaking measures will all but
to
programs.
put
the purpose of such
produce
deficits that it
reductions in public services and
Little
2003 Bush’s demand Iraq for
clearly to
is
bankrupt the federal government, forcing
make Draconian
social
is
it
wonder, then, that
in
September
$87 billion to pursue the war in the next year was followed by rumours that for
WORLD, BEWARE! domestic spending would have to be cut back sharply. This
is
telling
most perfect form, a co-ordination of foreign and
triumphalist politics in
example of the close
its
domestic policy.
THE NATIONAL SECURITY STATE Gulf
War
II
answered a question that has hovered over
the world since the
the place of the
fall
What
of the Berlin Wall.
Cold War
will take
in international affairs? In gen-
eral terms, the triumphalists
have had their answer ready
since the 1980s. Sharing a distrust of international insti-
wing of the the yawning power vacuum
tutions that has long characterized the right
Republican Party, they see left
behind by the collapse of the Soviet system as an
opportunity to create the only world order they can
dominance. That
respect, a unilateral U.S.
implication that they see
the clear
America’s status as the
in
world’s only superpower. Their intention
moment and
is
is
to impose their political vision
to seize the
on the world
for the indefinite future.
Though
the triumphalists claim that they
want
to
shrink the size of the federal government to a crippling
minimum,
want to create is exactly the opposite. No political movement in the history of the United States has ever been so enamoured of the National Security State they
power, so convinced of
its
to flatten all opposition to ists
own its
rectitude, so determined
intentions.
The triumphal-
are determined to create a federal colossus capable of
overcoming
all
posed by the basic under the
Bill
That includes the resistance
resistance.
civil liberties
of Rights.
No
guaranteed to Americans
Justice
Department
since the
Second World War has pressed for more authority than has Bush’s attorney general to imprison, to arrest without
118
The Triumph alists trial,
to
eavesdrop
by the most advanced electronic
means, to collect personal and private information, to use coercion and perhaps torture in questioning sus-
pected terrorists.
Soon after September 11, 2001, the Bush Justice Department instituted a Total Information Awareness program that allows the government to collect and coordinate every kind of personal data: medical, psychiatric, legal,
even library records.
employees
(like the letter carriers
It
also encourages public
who
deliver mail for
the post office) to report suspicious behaviour.
gram was later renamed gram in order to sound changes made
law to
itself.
The pro-
the Terrorist Information Pro-
threatening, but with
less
no
in the provisions or the operation of the
The ominously
titled Patriot
Act allows the fbi
perform surveillance and “sneak-and-peek” searches
without permission from any court. In
empowered
its
original
form
it
federal agents to carry out investigations of
book-buying and Web-surfing. The intention of the act supposedly to
crack
down on
terrorists,
but
is
has
it
already been used for other purposes, such as prosecuting
pornographers. Even Republicans, members of Bush’s
own
party,
have raised objections to the law. But the
Congress has already adopted a second Patriot Act, one that
makes
it
even easier for the government to collect
personal records by issuing even broader “administrative
subpoenas” that require no court oversight. Some umphalists
are
calling
for
still
more
tri-
state-of-the-art
surveillance, such as a national identity card bearing bio-
metric data (fingerprints, retinal scans, dna).
If
these
American people, with marvellous Orwellian irony, will soon be the most monitored and documented population on Earth - all in the name of forces have their way, the
defending freedom. 1
19
WORLD, BEWARE! The
goals of the triumphalists are not simply a matter
of domestic concern.
What
has emerged from the conser-
vative insurgency in the United States is
is
a grand plan that
intended to take effect in the world at large. The rising
generation of American triumphalists that
may
policy
gives
House with Ronald Reagan, but
their
greater urgency.
the post-Cold sibility
drives U.S.
be dominated by the same ideological zeal that
entered the White factor
now
efforts
The
War
far
a
new
and With the coming of
greater consequence
stakes have risen.
era, the triumphalists see the real pos-
of placing the global
economy under
nent control of a U.S. -dominated business
the perma-
elite
that will
spread the gospel of free markets to every corner of the planet. Caesar’s legions carried the
Roman law
across the
world; Britain brought Christianity and free trade to the
heathen peoples. So the triumphalists and corporados will bring the blessings of “democracy,” meaning the unrestricted
movement
nations.
What
is
of capital, to timid
and backward
the triumphalists’ vision of the future?
A
worldwide market economy run by entrepreneur statesmen and military proconsuls, decisive men of affairs who
know
you care to put think Dick Cheney and his cronies.
the proper uses of power.
on that
future,
If
a face
In carrying out this bold mission, the United States
may have
to use
nate competitors.
its
formidable military might to elimi-
The general
outline of this
new world
order was formulated during the Reagan presidency by
Defense Department analyst Paul Wolfowitz, care at the time to state that the U.S. sufficiently
who
took
hegemony “must
account for the interests of the advanced
industrial nations to discourage
them from challenging
our leadership.”
That was the triumphalist view as of the mid-1980s. One wonders now if the interests of other industrial
120
The Triumph alists nations are any longer of concern. There
is
reason to
and diplomatic planners now include a faction that is quite willing to go it alone. Under the Bush administration, the Pentagon revealed plans to spend heavily on extending, varying, and upgrading the U.S. nuclear arsenal in ways that will leave believe that our military
other nations far behind.
all
with the Soviet Union
to
ited
States’
arms race
be ended, but the country
is
The goal equip itself with “usable” nuclear weapons for limwar. But at whom can such measures be aimed
racing to outdistance the rest of the world.
still is
may
The United
except the existing nuclear club, with a view to intimidating will
all
resistance? Is
it
unthinkable that the triumphalists
undertake the nuclear disarming of former
1992 the triumphalist
allies?
As
had hardened. In a policy paper circulated among Washington triumphalists in that year, the Pentagon was given a new and more ominous assignment. It was to be the job of the military “to establish and protect a new order,” following which “the United States must be sure of deterring potential competitors from even aspiring to a larger regional or global role.” Those who believe France, Germany, Russia, and at some point China might band together to offset U.S. power should bear in mind: the triumphalists have decided that such a union must never happen. early as
If
line
on
allies
an excuse for strong-arming our former
needed,
it
will not be
hard to
find.
allies is
Even before Gulf War
Washington made it clear to the Iranians that if they cannot do a better job of hunting down and capturing terrorists, the United States may have to intervene to do the job for them. The war on terrorism has redefined U.S. II,
national security to include the entire world.
have guessed that nineteen
men
Who
could
using box-cutters to take
over four airplanes on September 11, 2001, could have
121
WORLD, BEWARE! provided the justification for American military action
anywhere on Earth? Imagine what vigilance to prevent another such act of terrorism.
other nations
to
fail
show
will take
it
And what
if
the vigilance that the United
There have already been complaints from Washington that airport security in other countries is not up to the U.S. standard. Perhaps the United States will States expects?
have to intervene to teach those countries job.
the
how
to
do the
As Bush put it (and quite belligerently) in his State of Union address in January 2004, “America will not
seek a permission slip to defend the security of our coun-
Nothing the president said that day drew more applause from the assembled lawmakers.
try.”
CORPORATE WARRIORS: THE RETURNOF THE MERCENARIES Overwhelming military power lies at the core of the American imperium. The willingness to exploit that advantage to umphalist
fullest is the distinctive feature of tri-
politics.
stands in the
and
its
way
precisely. It
basic element of
is
But there
is
of using that
a serious obstacle that
power
rapidly, flexibly,
the tradition of the citizen soldier, a
American democracy. The new Ameri-
can imperium requires another kind of military force: readily available, highly trained, ent.
and dependably obedi-
Creating that kind of military has been
among
the
highest of priorities for the triumphalists.
the
“A democratic people,” de Tocqueville observed of United States when it was still a frontier society, “must
despair of ever obtaining from soldiers that blind, minute,
submissive, and invariable obedience which an aristocratic
people
may impose on them without
queville’s
words have proven
difficulty.”
De
Toc-
to be prophetic. In a time of
122
The Triumph alists and pre-emptive warfare, citizen soldiers are a For one thing, recruiting them is becoming very
unilateral liability.
expensive. to those
The army now
who
volunteer, plus as
No
lege tuition.
offers a
$20,000 signing bonus
much
as
$70,000 for
doubt these inducements
col-
will increase as
part of “sky’s the limit” military budgets. But even so, that
money buys
is
a single tour of duty, often involving
poorly educated youth or those
mind. Nor
is
all
who
have other careers
in
When,
at
conscription a viable alternative.
the beginning of Gulf
War
II,
a
member
of Congress sug-
gested that there ought to be military draft to raise the
Bush administration was quick to bury the proposal. (For that matter, so too was the Congress. There was only one congressman with a son serving in the war. The rest were happy to have their children spared.) Draftees, the Pentagon insisted, take too long to train and are not good fighters. The Vietnam War proved how crippling it can be to rely on a conscript army. Conscription fills the ranks with the poor, the meagrely educated, and troops, the
the badly trained.
If
the draft brings in middle-class col-
lege students, the result
tance.
way
is
The troops make
reluctance,
As
in
not outright
their discontent
or another; discipline breaks
sets in.
if
known
resis-
in
one
down, demoralization
Vietnam, the troops turn to dope. Or worse,
they “frag” their officers, meaning they gun them
down
or
blow them up rather than follow them into battle. Back home draft dodging becomes so rife that there is no hope of punishing all the offenders. Moreover - and I suspect this is the main concern - conscription provides dissenting youth and their families with a target for protest. It brings the war home in ways that the triumphalists would prefer to avoid.
The new American military has a very acter from yesterday’s citizen soldiers. 123
different charIn
American
WORLD, BEWARE! popular culture, the lovable grunts of yesteryear have been upgraded into a career-military corps. They are elite and professional: tough, cold-blooded Delta Force and
Navy
Seals types
who
much James Bond
are as
secret
agents as soldiers. Trained as sharp special-forces units,
they fight with complex, usually computerized weapons.
For the most part they are recruited not from the poorest classes, as was the case in Vietnam, but from the ranks of
men
America’s blue-collar workforce. They are young
and women who once would have found assembly-line employment before those jobs were lost to globalization. What we have here is the beginning of an imperial military, on call to serve anywhere in the world on a
moment’s
The goal
notice.
is
to
move
in fast, clean
up the
problem, and suffer practically no casualties.
More than
professionalizing the military, the
umphalists are out to privatize their ideological tor.
commitment
it.
This
is
in line
tri-
with
to diminish the public sec-
For the triumphalists, the panacea for
all
social
government to entrepreneurs who will - so the argument runs - find a way of covering costs, adding a profit, and yet making services cheaper. How can this be done? Supposedly by needs
is
to entrust the responsibilities of
the greater efficiency of the private sector. Triumphalist
conservatives
would
privatize
all
aspects of social policy,
substituting corporations for government. In
all
cases,
would replace public service as a driving force. They would turn all education over to private firms, they would turn the weather bureau into a private business, they would sell all national parks and wilderness areas to private companies. They have already begun to privatize the prisons of the nation, where an incarcerated workforce is now employed at the cheapest wages in the country. Exploiting convict labour was
the profit motive
124
The Triumph alists once
crime in the United States;
a
Now,
like the child
lands,
it
called peonage. in foreign
emerges as sound business practice. For, after
the
if
was
labour used by U.S. firms
goods produced market justified the means? all,
it
sell
Privatizing the military
is
at a profit,
the boldest and the least
visible innovation that the triumphalists
American
has not the
have introduced
Mercenary soldiering is a growth industry in the global economy. Worldwide, more than $100 billion is being spent on private military contracinto
politics.
tors,
with the United States by far the largest
War
II
is
client.
Gulf
the test case for this line of policy. Private
troops are a basic element in Washington’s effort to cre-
supposedly autonomous, self-governing Iraq. While
ate a
the
U.S.
diminish, Iraqi military
under U.S. control - as ing
number If
Baghdad may eventually forces will remain in place and
administration
in
in all satellite nations.
An
increas-
of those forces will be privately contracted.
the triumphalists succeed in their goal,
ominous implications ing America’s armed
for the
world
services
into
at large.
it
will
have
Transform-
for-profit,
contract
labour will place military forces at the disposal of the nation’s commander-in-chief, with the Congress
and the
public having less and less control. Contract warriors
tend to drop out of sight; the public
may
they are being used. In both Gulf Wars, as
not even
know
we now know,
on the ground in Iraq weeks before the shooting started. They were laying the groundwork for the attack that would follow. A clever tactic, perhaps, but it leaves one to wonder if, in the future, the United States may be at war in ways that the public will know nothing about. That is all the more there were U.S.
likely
when
special
forces
the troops involved are responsible to private
employers rather than to any elected authority.
125
WORLD, BEWARE! In small, surreptitious ways, military outsourcing has
been growing over the years. the
Vinnell Corporation,
army
as far
A
Virginia-based company,
was contracted by
the U.S.
back as 1975 to organize the training of the
Saudi National Guard. The arrangement has
made
company’s buildings the target of more than one
terrorist
Then, under President Clinton, privately salaried
attack.
were dispatched to Colombia to pursue America’s
forces
largely clandestine effort
the
“war on drugs”
was small - only
in that country.
The
a handful of contract troops hired
by Military Professional Resources Incorporated - but it was an instructive example of how effectively military
The triumphalists
action can be hidden from view. clearly a
are
determined to outsource their military policies on
much more ambitious
to turn the nation’s
scale.
armed
They
working
are
forces into a lucrative collec-
tion of private, for-profit services
-
as
if
they cannot tol-
erate seeing a federally controlled military play in their designs.
steadily
Once again they have
any
role
hired the Vinnell
Corporation, this time to train a peacekeeping force that will take over in Iraq
if
army
the U.S.
ever departs. Until
then, for as long as occupying forces remain under guerrilla elements, private security firms
fire
by
have been con-
tracted to provide U.S. troops with protection. Other firms holding military contracts are the Virginia-based
Blackwater usa, and urs, a California engineering firm.
A
subsidiary of the Halliburton
Company
has taken over
the basic service of provisioning the military, a task once
performed by the quartermaster corps. Other companies contracted by the
Army Corps
of Engineers construct
camps, provide transport, and build the roads, bridges,
combat or for occuothers have been hired to do reconnaissance
and docks that the military needs pation.
Still
and gather
intelligence. It
is
126
for
difficult to
name
a single
)
The Triumph alists aspect of military operations that has not been taken
under some degree of private control.
who
After the Pentagon,
has contributed the largest
number of 'military personnel to the coalition forces in Iraq? The British? No. The answer is: private American contractors. Fully fifteen thousand police, security guards,
and support workers are the hired employees of private companies. They are flown from drivers,
trainers,
assignment to assignment
in giant
cargo planes, usually of
Russian manufacture. They can parachute into combat.
They
are armed, they fight, they
kill,
they die - but conve-
niently enough, their deaths need not be reported, which,
of course, creates the impression that bloodless.
Of
2004, $30
billion
much
as
the
$87 went
billion
war
is
becoming
allocated for the
to private contractors,
war
who pay
in
as
$1,000 a day for security guards. Over the past
decade the Pentagon has awarded over three thousand contracts to the private sector.
The United
States
is
not alone in transforming war
into an entrepreneurial investment.
The
British
have also
turned to hired guns to train and deploy troops. Global Risk Strategies, Erinys International, and Genric Securities
now
Consultants Worldwide are
among
the firms that
provide the soldiers of the Queen. Erinys, which
is
dangerous highways of Iraq,
moving troops along the had gross earnings of $150
million in 2004. Since
a violation of international
the principal “taxi service” for
it
is
law for nations to use mercenaries, contract forces are not placed in that category - but they are licensed to kill.
They carry arms and have been involved
in
firefights.
One
military analyst (Peter Singer at the Brookings Insti-
tute,
author of Corporate Warriors
dozen contract personnel have been Iraq, but they are not
believes that several killed or
numbered among I2 7
wounded
in
the casualties of
WORLD, BEWARE! war.
Many
of the contracted military are former police
officers or special forces;
other countries.
One
some
are trained soldiers
from
contingent of security guards hired
by Kellogg, Brown, and Root, a subsidiary of the Halliburton Company, is made up of Nepalese Gurkhas. The
Pentagon has recruited other forces from Nepal, Chile, Ukraine, Israel, South Africa, and Fiji. Moving kbr into
was Dick Cheney’s major
lucrative military contracting
achievement at Halliburton after he tary of defense under the
first
left his
job as secre-
George Bush. In Iraq alone
kbr now holds contracts worth $12 billion. As part of the imperium, mercenary soldiering is apt to become a growth industry. War is, after all, dirty work, the sort of menial labour that Americans prefer not to do.
The triumphalists may have lic
prefers.
How
long,
hit
then,
upon something
the pub-
before the U.S.
military
becomes an all-mercenary corps maintained by private firms on long-term contracts ready to go to war on a moment’s notice, perhaps without the need of congressional approval or financing - rather like the British East
Company before it was taken under crown control? And when combat ends, these sturdy professionals will India
ideally
have the
political skills for
long-term occupation
and administration. This is so new a that some analysts have begun to
role for the military refer
troops as “enforcers” rather than soldiers. enforcing?
“Norms
that magnitude
is
forces will have to
to
American
What
of international behaviour.”
are they
A
task of
obviously beyond mere gis. American
become -
as
one
field
commander
sees
- “diplomats, international negotiators, and guardians of economic security.” Rudyard Kipling once referred to Britain’s millions of dependent people as “half devil and half child.” It was the “white man’s burden” to civilize them. The United
it
128
The Triumph alists new proconsular enforcers seem to see things the same way. And once they have taught the world’s people States’
how ists
to
behave properly, the next
step, so the triumphal-
believe; will be nation-building, the only long-term
solution to terrorism.
LEARNING FROM EUROPE There
is
a peculiar connection
between Europe and the
To an extraordinary degree, American conof the post- World War II generation have
triumphalists. servatives fallen
under the influence of emigre
who
intellectuals
brought the horrendous lessons they had learned about
European fascism to the new world. Figures of significant academic status - Friedrich Hayek, Leo Strauss, Hans Morgenthau, Eric Voegelm, Ludwig von Mises, Karl Popper, Hannah Arendt, and Richard Pipes - arrived in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s like missionaries whose goal was to awaken naive Americans to the ugly facts of contemporary life. Later, a younger Henry Kissinger would have the same tale of flight to tell and adopt the same conservative philosophy. Ayn Rand, whose experience was drawn from Soviet Russia, might also be counted among their number. Rand, whose outreach was enhanced through fiction and film, became the head of a small and particularly vitriolic philosophical movement called “Objectivism,” whose purpose was to promote a rigid capitalist orthodoxy as the only sure guarantee of freedom.
The warnings may have been
sincere, but
trating their critique of totalitarianism
by concen-
on the
state
and
disregarding the role played by private wealth in bankrolling fascism, the emigres granted the corporate
nity a convenient
pardon from searching
129
commu-
criticism.
They
WORLD, BEWARE! either did not foresee or simply ignored the possibility
that corporations were fast outgrowing national aries
and evolving
own
bound-
into self-governing state systems
some
in
and richer than the governments of smaller countries. They were even willing their
right, in
cases larger
to turn a blind eye to the U.S. corporations, such as the
Ford Motor Company, that did lucrative business with
As focused as they were on the abuse of power, the European emigres paid practically no attention to the way vast sums of money in private hands can corrupt the political process. Perhaps because they were fixated on the brute force of guns and clubs, they ignored what cold cash can do to win influence and abuse power. Above all, once they were on American soil, the danger that many of these Europeans intellectuals targeted most persistently was liberal social policy, which they saw as dangerously statist. Some of them saw in American liberalism the same weakness that had brought down the Weimar Republic; others believed liberals were too soft on communism. As brilliant as many of the emigres the Nazi regime.
were, they failed to grasp the wholly different social structure of the United States: the absence of aristocratic tradition, the lesser status of the military, the
dition of the
American
left
anemic con-
wing, the generally non-ideo-
logical nature of the labour
movement, and the robust
condition of constitutional safeguards. Yet, as misguided as they often ily
imagine
were about American
how
gratifying
it
intellectuals to bring a timely
country.
No
was
politics,
one can eas-
for these displaced
warning to
their
adopted
doubt they believed they were performing
a
valuable service.
From
European exiles, a generation of young conservatives inherited a monstrous image of state power that bears no relationship to their country’s own history. these
130
The Triumph alists Indeed, they were equipped with a worldview that dramatically embraced the whole of Western civilization. In the eyes of Strauss, Voegelin,
reached back to the earliest phy.
It
possessed a
and Popper, totalitarianism days of European philoso-
terrific historical
momentum
against
which they believed modern liberalism was a feeble defence. Liberals, they charged, lacked the moral fibre to stand up to evil. Being pluralistic and morally relativistic, liberals lacked an appreciation of the absolute. Under the influence of charismatic teachers such as Strauss, suscep-
students were apparently willing to agree that a
tible
value
is
absolute because their teacher told them so.
how
am who
I
from the Hitler youth believed that the Fuhrer’s words were absolute - or from the Taliban who believe that every word of the Koran is divine. All of us - even liberals like myself - hold values not sure
that
this
differs
we wish everybody
I
do
have the right to force anybody to do
so.
not assume
I
And
suspect,
that,
I
is
accepted as absolute. But
the difference that convinces con-
servatives that liberals lack conviction.
With unabashed exaggeration, Hayek, destined to become the patron saint of market economics, titled his most widely read work The Road to Serfdom choosing a reference - serfdom - that has no equivalent in American history. Even as an ill-fitting metaphor, the term “serfdom” might better describe the conditions under which workers lived in nineteenth-century America before trade unions provided them with a somewhat countervailing power in the political arena. Long before there was a social safety net or a single regulatory commission there were trusts and monopolies, strikebreakers and state militias against which workers could muster no significant resistance. Only someone blinded by ideological conviction could overlook the form of near-serfdom that ,
131
WORLD, BEWARE! when laissezfaire reigned supreme. This was an era when labour and management fought pitched battles, when the captains of did exist in the United States in the years
industry hired the Pinkertons or brought in state troopers to crush industrial action.
towns
It
was
which workers served
in
company
also the era of
as indentured servants
constantly in debt to employers for their food and shelter. so committed to the anti-statist views that
Were he not
he had brought with him from middle Europe, Hayek
might have displayed
at least
minimal concern for the
domineering role that monopolistic wealth has played the United States. Like his fellow
made no allowance ment has played interests of
European
in the
United States in defending the
embattled farmers, supporting the collective
gationist institutions that
were
left
down
the segre-
over from slavery.
time to time the baronial status of America’s
big corporations rises to the surface again, often in ing ways. In
many
he
exiles,
for the role that the federal govern-
bargaining rights of labour, and striking
From
in
2002
amaz-
financial journalists discovered that
U.S. companies were taking advantage of
what
are
“dead peasant laws.” These laws allow a corporation to purchase life-insurance policies on their employees called
without notifying them. The policies serve as the basis for favourable financial arrangements between the
certain
company and - even
if
this is
before - the if
the
the insurance firm.
an employee
company
who
When
the employee dies
lost his job or quit years
collects his life insurance,
worker were indeed
a peasant
owned by
almost as the
com-
pany.
No
one
who knows
the history of the twentieth cen-
tury questions the dangers of totalitarianism. There course,
good reason
Brother potentiality
to
is,
of
be on guard against the Big
of the
132
modern
state.
But when
The Triumph alists triumphalist conservatives project fears of Hitlerian dic-
New
tatorship onto
programs or
Deal reforms or Great Society social
civil rights legislation,
away with them. They
ological excess to run
way
they are allowing ide-
on
are
their
to a political stance that sees the post office, the
weather bureau, the Social Security Administration, and the National Park Service as fascist precursors, but over-
looks the obvious possibility that the overconcentration
money and institutional power in the hands of a corporate elite may be a far greater danger to democracy. of
But then,
it
is
not at
want democracy. At
all
clear that the triumphalists
certain points their fear of the vulgar,
non-philosophical masses leads them to the conclusion
some form
that
of authoritarian control
to safeguard property
and guarantee
may
be necessary
intelligent political
Leo Strauss, for example, believed that there might be good reason for telling the sort of “noble lies” leadership.
that Plato trol.
He
recommended
as a
way
of exerting social con-
Strauss believed that the best of
agreed with
Marx
that
it
all lies
was an
was
opiate, but he
nothing wrong with feeding people opiates -
them acquiescent. The triumphalists ffed elitism in their politics, as
credentials. In their
if
religion.
if
it
saw kept
relish a certain Tari-
to assert their intellectual
ongoing debate with
liberals,
they
emphasize that the United States was never intended to be a democracy at all, but a “republic” - which entrusts
power
to responsible representatives, not to the public
directly.
That distinction
gral part of the
is
American
and
valid
is,
in fact,
political system.
an
inte-
There are few
provisions in the United States at any level of government for
direct
democracy.
whelmingly the
rule.
Elected
Some
representation
states
is
allow laws to be
overiniti-
ated and passed by an electoral vote; others allow political leaders or judges to be recalled.
133
These are
relatively
WORLD, BEWARE! marginal political phenomena. But the triumphalists keep harping on
how
way
which the democracy is unin
American makes one suspicious of their true intentions. The destructive fury with which the triumphalists have turned upon
how
liberals in the
United States reveals
sense of proportion and historical depth they
little
Their opposition to liberalism
have.
extreme, as
if
they can think of no reason
agencies or welfare-state programs
absolute
is
came
why
and
regulatory
into existence in
Those who deviate from their principles by so much as an iota are no better than their worst Marxist foes. The spirit that dominated George W. Bush’s foreign policy from the day he entered the White House - “Either you are for me or against me” - arose from the intolerance and sweeping extremism with which the
first
place.
his triumphalist advisers
pursue their goals at
home
as
well as abroad. All the rancour that conservatives once directed at the
whom
als,
America’s
communist
threat
is
now
focused on
the triumphalists regard as the source of ills.
These are people
who must
enemy, and that enemy must be seen as wholly
What
liber-
are the unpardonable sins of
Believing that wealth should be
all
have an
evil.
American
liberals?
more equitably shared,
that graduated taxation should be used for that purpose, that the
ing
life
power of government should be devoted to makmore secure through welfare-state programs, that
the market should be regulated in the public interest.
These are modest objectives; they could almost be called dull.
Liberalism
is
neither exciting nor dramatic.
the passion of a fully
blown
ideology.
It
It
lacks
has no great
patchwork of well-intentioned fixes designed to correct injustices and imbalances as they arise. Speaking as a liberal, I would be the first to agree that these fixes sometimes do not work. They can philosophical elegance.
It
is
a
134
The Triumph alists be expensive and inefficient - and be corrected or abandoned.
grams,
I
if
they are, they should
recognize that liberal pro-
anything done on a large scale, tend to gener-
like
ate bloated
and
porations.
certainly grant that others
all is
I
So do big cor-
insensitive bureaucracies.
may
reject
some or
what we have in the liberal agenda an open and honest declaration of intentions back across two centuries of reform politics.
of these goals. But at least
that dates
Liberalism
nothing strange, nothing new;
is
is
it
indeed
part of the political mainstream of American culture,
making no pretense of being grounded
in transcendent
values or divine truth. Yet, at
its
extreme, the triumphalist war against
lib-
eralism takes on a grand inquisitor’s zeal to destroy
heresy root and branch.
Grover Norquist, has eral groups.
“We
A
leading right-wing organizer,
on “defundmg” libhe vows, “hunt them down one
set his sights
will,”
by one and extinguish their funding sources.” Anne Coulter, a popular right-wing journalist, has gone so far as to accuse liberals
who opposed
son.” In the 1950s Senator Joseph
Gulf
War
II
McCarthy
of “trea-
raised the
same charge, accusing liberals of treason because they were supposedly soft on communism. Coulter, in her unseemly rage, has sought to rehabilitate McCarthy’s reputation. In her eyes, the sins of liberalism date back to
from power fifty years ago. And like Senator McCarthy before her and many another triumphalist today, Coulter’s goal is not simply to win elections, McCarthy’s
fall
but to obliterate the opposition.
Name me
a better
mea-
sure of totalitarian tendencies than the desire to create a
one-party political system.
As the triumphalists see it, liberal disrespect for markets, competition, and good, solid middle-class morality amounts to a war on “values.” Values have become the 135
WORLD, BEWARE! wing in the United States. Values - their values - are to be honoured and kept absolute. Nothing seems to grate on the triumphalist sensibility more than the alliance between liberals and the arts. In the name of freedom of expression, they believe liberals are out to undermine the moral absolutism to which special preserve of the right
they aspire. Since the days of the Federal Arts Project
launched under Franklin Roosevelt in the 1930s, liberals - so conservatives have long believed - have allied themwith
selves
artists.
And what
are
layabouts, libertines, atheists. After the 1960s found the National
artists?
all,
Bohemian
did not liberals in
Endowment
for the Arts,
which has insisted on funding distasteful and obscene work? Away with all this, the triumphalists insist - and with it the entire liberal wing of American politics.
CONSERVATISM AND THE INTELLECTUALS While conservatives been
anti-statist,
tics as
much
in
the United States have always
they have never before given their poli-
intellectual elaboration as in recent years.
happened to Through the early
Since the 1980s, something surprising has
conservatism.
It
has grown a brain.
and middle years of the twentieth century, intellect was a liberal monopoly. The Progressive movement of Teddy Roosevelt’s day was a movement of books and magazines, academic research and heady conversation. Progressives were eager to introduce intellect into politics; they recruited academic specialists to serve on the new regulatory commissions that were then being established at the state and federal level. From that point forward, developed strong connections with the universities, while conservatives - and especially the business community - came to distrust intellectuals as the main liberals
136
The Triumph alists voices for reform, the
enemy
if
not outright revolution. Intellect was
of wealth.
As
a result, conservatives
quently characterized as philistmes in
The
ideas.
right
who
were
took no interest
wing of American
politics
depicted in the literature of the period as a class
with social types
had
was filled
Lewis
like those the novelist Sinclair
satirized in his novel Babbitt.
fre-
Those who followed
were called the “boobocracy.” During the 1930s, mainly through its programs in the and literature, the New Deal enlisted still more intel-
their lead
arts
lectuals for liberal causes; Roosevelt
took pride
in sur-
rounding himself with a “brains trust” largely made up of
As of the mid-twentieth century, the reigning minds in the universities (even the Ivy League schools), in the media, and in the intellectual world generally were well left of centre. Liberals published most of the weighty journals of opinion and took the initiative in setting up study centres and think-tanks in which new ideas and social programs might be brainstormed. At the university professors.
far left, liberalism
or another; even
shaded off into Marxism of one
among
those
who
eventually
stripe
condemned
Union and developed serious reservations about communist methods, few would ever have undertaken to write on politics or economics without including a respectful nod in Marx’s direction. Knowing the convoSoviet
the
luted history of radical left-wing thought, tions
and
its
infighting,
was
its
various fac-
the sign of being politically
sophisticated.
Then, from the 1970s onward, the corporate nity too
began to invest heavily
in brainpower.
journals of opinion, subsidized books, and set
It
commulaunched
up foundations. Above all, it recruited among students on university campuses through well-endowed political clubs and organizations like Young Americans for Freedom. The United
137
WORLD, BEWARE! States
today abounds
in conservative think-tanks largely
funded by corporate money. There one finds conservative analysts issuing papers and books that quote - usually
- from Edmund Burke or The Federalist Papers to justify their policy recommendations. The pompous literary style initiated by conservative journalists William F. Buckley and George Will - big words, convoluted sentences, a smug tone - has spread among rightquite sententiously
wing writers as a way of advertising intellectual credentials. The number of conservative journals has increased markedly, even as
has become more and more
it
magazine of any kind.
to sustain a
No
difficult
serious political
publication can survive these days without foundation
money
or private patronage.
It is all
to the
good that conservatives should want
to
join into intellectual debate. But, as liberals learned long
ago, big ideas - ideas that seem to explain the supreme
- can be intoxicating. One cites the ideas, and at once one assumes the authority of the minds - Plato, Locke, Hegel - that created the ideas. values and purposes of
The
result
life
can be a suffocating arrogance. As one reads
from conservative sources, one senses that ideas have taken on a domineering reality of their own, displacing common sense and simple truths. At that point ideas harden into ideology, a self-contained system of unassailable principles and the literature that flows these days
more than experibeing beyond compromise or
irrefutable deductions that counts for
ence and that takes pride in
even open debate.
Perhaps
all
of this
create an intellectual
is
part of an effort by the right to
pantheon that matches the
left-lib-
eral cultural establishment that reigned during the
of such notable political journals as Partisan
Commentary
,
New
Masses and Dissent ,
138
all
days
Review of which ,
The Triumph alists frequently
also
Hayek (whom
from
suffered
conservatives
pretentious
now
erudition.
prominently tout not
simply as an economist, but as the greatest philosopher
Dewey; Leo Strauss George Will becomes the Walter
of our time) takes the place of John replaces Lionel Trilling;
Lippmann But
of the right.
how
absurd
this ideological
confabulation seems
when one realizes that conservative intellectuality, even when it is decked out with footnotes and bibliography, is finally all about money and privilege - the money and privilege of an already powerful corporate elite. And here we do have a difference between left and right. Liberal and left-wing writers have never collected fat paycheques from labour unions or the unemployed. Nobody ever got rich pouring their hearts out for the sake of the poor and disadvantaged. On the other hand, the right wing of American politics has more than enough wealth to buy the politicians, media, and lawyers it needs to defend its interests.
Of
the right-wing intellectuals
all
found a following
more
credit for
in the
who
have
United States, none deserves
candour than does Ayn Rand. Believing
that the wealth of capitalists
was
the only sure defence
against Bolshevism, she frankly advocated the worship of the dollar sign. For her, politics
lowed by nothing
at
was money
first
.
fol-
of the to real
- such as providing day care for working-
poor mothers or paying medical
Then what do we
see?
bills
Programs
for senior citizens.
like these,
which are
intended to help hard-pressed citizens through savagely
.
all.
And how much more absurd the pretensions triumphalists become when they are finally applied political issues
.
condemned by conservative
are
thinkers as a threat
to the nation’s freedom.
At which point the
sophical rhetoric that has
become so dear 139
life,
lofty philo-
to conservatives
WORLD, BEWARE! sounds no better than a growling tirade by Ebenezer Scrooge. Even worse, the intellectual pretensions of the triumphalists look plain
phony given
that their entire
agenda depends on the largesse of the country’s major corporations. Without the benefit of corporate millions, conservative candidates could not be elected to office
and
right-wing policies could not be implemented. What, then,
do the eternal
verities of Plato or
Spinoza
mean
to the cor-
porados? Precisely nothing. For the ceo of the nation, the only “literature” that matters
on the currency they use conservative intellectuals
is
the denomination printed
buy influence. The talent that need most is the ability to sup-
to
must surely feel ideas of the greatest minds at the
press the embarrassment they
as they lay
the greatest
feet of cor-
porate money-grubbers.
As Straussian
chaos
disciples, the triumphalists are a
of contradictions. Secretly, they aspire to the privileges of intellectual superiority, but publicly they claim to
have a
populist appeal. Secretly, they believe they have the right to use
any
trumpet
dirty trick to gain power, but publicly they
most basic assumptions of the American founding fathers - and indeed the entire Enlightenment worldview from which the United States emerges - as a radical deviation from the absolute truth about man and nature, but publicly their love of virtue. Secretly, they regard the
they present themselves as patriots. Secretly, they reject egalitarianism, but publicly they claim to speak for the
people. Secretly, they view religion as
weak-minded and
superstitious, but publicly they associate themselves with biblical fundamentalists
How
and apocalyptic
evangelicals.
does one account for such confusion on the
part of reasonably well-educated
men? Perhaps
it
all
comes down to hypocrisy practised for social advancement. These are people whose appetite for power makes
140
The Triumph alists a
mockery of
their high principles.
Given the chance,
they are willing to hire on as speech writers and advisers
some of the most dim-witted politicians ever to appear on the American scene, among them Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. They make individual character a to
higher priority than social programs and institutions, but
work
they
for a political party that
sleaziest corporate criminals
willing
to
religion
see
masses, but in order to
in U.S.
is
beholden to the
history.
What,
at last,
are
function as the opiate of the
gam
the votes of the evangelical
electorate they hide their disdain for those opiate.
They
who
need that
has any of this to do with Plato,
with philosophy, with esoteric teachings, or the eternal verities?
When
did any politician need Plato to justify
deception, cheating, obfuscation, or striking an expedient
As the triumphalists understand Leo Strauss, every crooked party boss in American history has been a natudeal?
ral-born Straussian.
The most curious aspect ity is its
fascination with esoteric teachings, a puzzling
from
feature acquired
dents to
of triumphalist intellectual-
whom
Strauss. If
believe the stu-
he entrusted his most intimate convic-
tions, Strauss believed that there in the classic texts to
some
we can
were hidden meanings
whose study he dedicated
his
life.
In
cases he apparently detected teachings concealed in
intricate
numerical codes that only the gifted few could
properly understand. These subtexts were supposedly too explosive to be revealed to the unenlightened. At costs, then,
one must never
Plato really said! There
is
let
the rabble
all
know what
something almost comic about
the fear that Straussians have of revealing the hidden
teachings of their mentor. There are few writers
esoteric
are
from popularity as is Strauss. If there messages in his work, they are safely
as well protected
are
who
141
WORLD, BEWARE! sequestered from the public. His scholarship
pedantic
extreme - dense, subtle, complex - as indeed are
in the all
is
works he spent
the
his
lifetime
elucidating:
Plato,
Even as acaamong the most demanding
Lucretius, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Spinoza.
demic
literature, Strauss
is
(and fatiguing) of writers.
to question his
depth and insight.
Which is not Like many another
great mind, he
requires hard work.
When
Strauss says that philosophers
driven to employ a peculiar
“are
which would enable them to reveal
manner of writing what they regard as
the truth to the few,” he can surely be given credit for
having mastered that “peculiar manner.”
On teric
the other hand, Strauss’s penchant for the eso-
can take on an ominous quality when one imagines
the influence
it
might have had upon those of
who went into crats who work in ples
was
there
politics, especially the
who
is
busy bureau-
the shadows. Strauss believed that
a role for the Nietzschean
the leader
his disci-
prepared to dirty
superman in society, his hands making a
world for the benighted masses. Ideas like this are dangerous when they are taken up by politically ambibetter
tious types
who
tional morality.
essay after
“On
are
all
Take
too willing to trample on conven-
a teaching like this (from Strauss’s
Tyranny,” 1963): “The rule of the tyrant who,
having come to power by means of force and fraud,
or having committed any
number of
suggestions of reasonable men,
is
crimes, listens to the
essentially
more
legiti-
mate than the rule of the elected magistrates.” That seems to mean a vicious and corrupt tyrant may make an acceptable leader provided he
is
willing to take advice
from his intellectual superiors. In the essay, Strauss’s meaning is ambiguous. He may simply be playing with an intriguing idea that he found in the Greek historian Xenophon. But when I read the passage, my blood runs
142
The Triumph all st s Behind the Nietzschean posturing that Strauss encouraged in his students, I see triumphalist policy-makcold.
work, inventing the lies they will use to lead the nation into war - and telling themselves they have the licence to do so. If only the would-be Straussian superers at
men who
are piloting
American foreign policy could be
written off as purely ludicrous. Unfortunately, they are in a position to
do the world too much harm.
THE FURTHER RIGHT WING By the standards of other
industrial societies, America’s
triumphalists represent an ideological extreme. In Europe,
only groups openly committed to racist policies, especially
with respect to immigration, would qualify as
standing further to the right. That orientation does exist in the
United States;
ica-first”
it
takes the form of a crude, “Amer-
populism whose most prominent voice would be
Ronald Reagan’s former communications director, Patrick Buchanan. Buchanan, whose policy orientation is isolationist and protectionist, speaks for a strain of Old Guard conservatism that dates back to the Barry Goldwater Republicans of the 1960s. Buchanan still contests presidential elections, but his following has been effectively
marginalized by the triumphalists. There are other
ments of the American
right wing, however, with
the triumphalists continue to have an relationship.
ele-
which
odd and awkward
Indeed, one unforeseen result of the
tri-
umphalist ascendancy in national politics has been to
encourage and to some degree legitimize more fanatical right-wing types
whose goal
is
to abolish
government
*
entirely.
For
all
their rhetorical hostility to big
the triumphalists
mean
to govern.
143
They
government,
are out to hold
WORLD, BEWARE! and make policy. Although they verbalize an antigovernment line, their goals are those of realp olitik. office
Their objective take
it
not to destroy federal power but to over and then use it to achieve global hegemony.
That goal
is
in itself
commits them
to creating a strong,
indeed a domineering, government. They need to wield the taxing authority of the Congress and the executive
power of the presidency, and to maintain a formidable military and intelligence establishment. Indeed, the first decisive
move made by
W. own,
the triumphalists after George
Bush entered the White House was to create
their
top-secret intelligence unit: the Office of Special Plans,
which was headed by Abram Shulsky, a disciple of Strauss. Convinced that they could not trust the cia to do the job they wanted done, the triumphalists, with a cold, almost
Kremlinesque premeditation, found a way
of selecting their
on terrorism intelligence
own
confirming information for the war
a practice called “cherry-picking” in the
community. They used
Plans to assemble the case for
their Office of Special
war on
Iraq, turning out a
hasty fabrication of exaggerations and outright
lies.
The
foremost source for that case was the Iraqi National Congress, an exile group headed by Ahmad Chalabi, a
shadowy figure who had been haunting Washington for years. The triumphalists also chose Chalabi to be the key player in a
new
government. In a comically inept manoeuvre, they smuggled him and his own private mercenary force into Iraq just after the invasion had begun, Iraqi
expecting him to rally a resistance
movement
make him
effort failed dismally,
president of Iraq.
The
that
would
and, not long after that, the triumphalists dropped Chalabi, seeing him as a loose cannon.
This obsession with absolute control old-line conservatives
is
exactly
why
do not regard the triumphalists
144
as
The Triumph alists
ism, in
its
who
There are some
their allies.
believe that triumphal-
upon
foreign policy position at least, draws
a
Woodrow Wilson, the proDemocratic president who sought to make the
tradition that dates back to gressive
United States the moral arbiter of international relations in the
They
wake
of
World War
I.
Others take a darker view.
see the triumphalists as a distant reflection of the
authoritarianism that
many
Troskyites brought with
went over
era as they
political spectrum.
servative
It is
movement
disenchanted Stalinists and
them
in the post- World
a
good
thing.
a striking fact that the neo-con-
United States includes a great
in the
When
immediately picked a
II
to the conservative side of the
many embittered ex-leftists among who might once have believed that is
War
its
founders, people
iron party discipline left,
they
liberals,
who
they deserted the far
fight
they insisted were soft on
with American
communism:
a bizarre accusa-
had been gullible enough to swallow the Stalinist line and liberals had not. Whatever the origin of triumphalists’ secretive and cliquish style, their brand of power politics is anathema to conservatives who stand to their right, but whose support is still courted by the Republican party. The most important of these are the libertarians and the paramilitarists. tion, given that the old lefties
The
libertarians are organized into a political party
that enters candidates in elections across the country.
Although they run for office, they reject almost all aspects of government beyond police protection and military defence.
If
they had their way, the United States
would once again become
the social jungle of our early
industrial period. In their view, anything that
mises such a state of capitalist anarchy
become social
a
totalitarian
state.
Darwinist maximalists
145
In
brief,
who
is
compro-
bound
libertarians
believe that
it
is
to
are
the
WORLD, BEWARE! duty of every citizen
in a free society to fight for his or
her survival. Libertarians argue a spirited case for tearing down welfare programs and federal regulation, but it is difficult to
take their claims to heroic self-reliance
seri-
of them are academics or professionals
who
Most
ously.
simply are not convincing in the role of rugged individu-
One wonders how many
alists.
greater oppression at
them have suffered any the hands of the government than of
having to stand in a long line at the post office. Libertarians tend to be highly discursive, offering ornate justifications for limited government, yet they have
trouble allying themselves with an anti-tax
whose goal thing
.
.
.
On
except, well,
the
surface
maybe it
little
movement
no taxes
brutally simple-minded:
is
had
for any-
for the national defence.
might seem that .
an
alliance
between power-seeking triumphaiists and power-fearing libertarians
impossible.
is
If
libertarian ideology
were
would all but cripple the triumphaiists’ grand design for worldwide hegemony. Still, triumphaiists and libertarians are bound together by one major fact. Some enforced,
it
of the key figures in the triumphalist intellectual pantheon, among them Friedrich Hayek and his leading disciple, the
Nobel laureate economist Milton Friedman, are
very close to being libertarians. Hayek’s critique of eral economics is of such crucial importance to the
umphaiists that they cannot
even though
it
is
not at
drum him out all
clear that
militaristic apparatus.
Nor
Hayek would
no
larger,
more
spendthrift,
more
all
the
has Friedman
been a prominent supporter of their views. There all,
tri-
of their corps,
endorse the triumphaiists’ imperialistic vision and
accompanying
lib-
is,
after
self-serving bureau-
cracy in Washington than the Defense Department. Its budget and administrative superstructure dwarf every other agency in the federal government, and
146
its
waste
is
The Triumph alists legendary. secretive
The Pentagon
is
the very essence of big, costly,
government. Similarly, no aspect of U.S. govern-
ment endangers personal liberty more than do the cia, fbi, and various military intelligence agencies, all of which are essential to the triumphalists who work within these structures. These conditions alliance with the libertarians. Yet
it
make is
for
an uneasy
the rise of the
tri-
umphalists that has done most to publicize and popularize libertarian ideas.
Even more remarkable is the fitful relationship that has developed between the triumphalists and the paramilitary right, the most extreme and delusionary conservative element in the United States. Paramilitary conservatives subscribe to an exaggerated interpretation of the
Second Amendment to the United States Constitution, which forbids the Congress to make laws that infringe
on the
right to bear arms.
That
right as
it
appears
in the
Constitution clearly relates to the role of state militias in the eighteenth century. But as the “gun nuts” understand the constitution, they have the right to carry automatic
hand grenades, anti-tank artillery, and even missiles. As absurd as this may be, protecting that extreme interpretation of the Second Amendment has become the special interest of one of the most effective lobbying rifles,
groups
in the country: the
The nra
is
National Rifle Association.
the very essence of “single-issue politics,”
and value to one overarching goal. It has collected enough money and developed enough political cunning to exert significant influence in elections - and for that reason the the willingness to submerge every other problem
organization has become a precious electoral property for the
block
Republican Party. The nra’s single goal
any attempt to
firearms, even
weapons
147
to
on the possession of designed for use on the
legislate
clearly
is
WORLD, BEWARE! field
of battle.
No
group
in the
United States, not even
organized crime, has done more to flood our
automatic
rifles
and armour-piercing
nra. The support eral politicians it
it
musters
is
bullets
than has the
so fanatical that
have given up opposing
its
with
cities
many
lib-
power. Indeed,
has become almost mandatory for presidential candi-
dates - alas! even Democratic candidates - to be pho-
tographed hunting or taking target practice to prove they have nothing against guns.
Where does the maniacal loyalty of nra members come from? There is a zany nostalgia among Americans, especially in the less-urban
Western
states, that clings to
images of cowboy and frontiersman
self-reliance,
the
gunfighter mystique on which American children have
been raised for generations. In the guise of militias or people’s armies, small contingents of paramilitarists can
be found on any weekend of the year training for guerrilla
warfare in the woods and
that only an alistic as
fields.
Their conviction
armed population can remain
these fantasies
may
free.
is
As unre-
be, they influence people to
denounce
government programs as demeaning and treacherous handouts intended to oppress the citizenry. The nra speaks for millions of Americans who believe that even the slightest
the prelude to a dictatorial
measure of gun control is takeover by Washington. And
since liberals are in the forefront of
gun control, the nra
and programs. For that matter, paramilitary conservatives have armed themselves against the fbi, the atf (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms), and other law-enforcement agencies, all of which they see as little better than the Gestapo. In some rejects all liberal values
and Jews are seen as the driving force behind Washington’s effort to disarm and enslave the scenarios, blacks
nation; others regard the United Nations as the
148
main
The Triumph alists culprit.
Some claim
un
that the
clock surveillance of their
on round-the-
carries
homes from
a secret fleet of
black helicopters. Ironically, for all their patriotic
conservatives
may
bravado, paramilitary
pose as great a terrorist threat as
al-
Qaeda. The most destructive act of terrorism committed in the
United States before September 11, 2001, was the
Oklahoma City 168 people. The man who
bombing
of the federal office building in
in April
1995, which killed
was a disgruntled right-wing militia member whose purpose was to retaliate for an attack by the fbi and atf on an armed evangelical church in Waco, Texas, in 1993. The fbi was pursuing the Waco evangelicals - the Branch Davidians, as they called themselves carried out the attack
because they possessed
illegal firearms. In the
compound
course of
which the group had taken refuge was set afire - the fbi claims accidentally - and seventy-six men, women, and children died in the conflagration. There is no question but that this was an unforthe attack, the
in
givably incompetent episode that deserves the severest censure. Yet not a single federal agent
manded. Bad mistakes
like that
(if
was
fired or repri-
indeed this was a mis-
take) can only feed the paranoia that haunts
American
society.
Paramilitary conservatives do not see their stance as
“anti-government”; they refer to themselves as “pro-constitutional.” is
But their interpretation of the Constitution
wholly negative.
It
would grant
the
government no
authority to collect taxes or to deal with social issues.
Some
paramilitary groups have gone as far as creating an
which only the “common law” would be enforced. Their definition of common law seems to amount to vigilante justice and kangaroo courts dominated by local gunslingers. In some backwoods alterative court system in
149
WORLD, BEWARE! areas,
paramilitary units have claimed a special legal
managed agents. The
authority called the “posse comitatus” and have to intimidate local magistrates
and federal
overall effect of fantasies like these
is
to permeate Ameri-
can society with a mistrust of government that neatly serves the interests of the triumphalists.
PARANOIA GALORE Anti-government scenarios
promoted by the
like those
paramilitary right are not limited to fringe elements in the United States. Since the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy in 1963, the United States has become a hotbed of conspiratorial rumours, the sure sign of a society that
is
losing confidence in
itself.
Next
to pornogra-
phy and gambling, the most prominent features of the World Wide Web are websites and chat rooms dedicated to anxious reports of plots and skullduggery. As Americans have grown more aware of how often the government has resorted to clandestine activities over the past generation, paranoia has become a standard category of political analysis.
There mainly
in
no denying that the level of official secrecy, the form of covert operations, that has come to is
surround U.S.
politics since the
extreme suspicion.
Who
Cold War very nearly
jus-
John Kennedy - and his brother, and Martin Luther King, and Marilyn Monroe? Convoluted interpretations of events like these have become part of the folklore of our time. There are tifies
now
self-styled “conspiracy theorists” for
baroque scenarios of art form.
distrust
speculation.
whom
spinning
and betrayal has become an
They can braid together every
and scandal of the zied
really killed
last forty years into
political
networks of
death fren-
September 11 and the triumphalists
150
The Triumph alists have not been excused from such attention. Search the Internet
Were .
.
and you
will find a
wealth of worried conjecture.
the twin towers perhaps brought
or Israeli intelligence ... or George
.
In these thickets of conjecture,
sometimes come to
tions
light
down by
the cia
W. Bush himself?
intriguing connec-
- obscure relations involv-
somebody who knew somebody who knew somebody. The triumphalists easily fall into this mould. Many of the advisers who have made basic policy during the Reagan years and the two Bush administrations trace to ing
a
common
background. For example, their paths crossed
key triumphalist organization: the Project for the
in a
New
American Century, which openly advocated an advanced policy of military assertiveness in the Middle East targeted on Iraq. These are the people, after all, who believed it would take “a new Pearl Harbor” to produce
the radical
new
policy orientation they sought.
In hindsight, these are frightening words.
One Euro-
pean newspaper referred to the organization’s 1998 position paper as “a secret blueprint for U.S. global tion.”
A
secret,
pnac was
blueprint
it
may have
been, but
was published
for
was hardly
a well-publicized organization;
were high-profile Washington
bers
it
all
to read. This
figures, is
domina-
and
its
mem-
its
paper
hardly the behaviour
of a conspiratorial group. In fact, suspicion hangs so thick in the air these
room
days in the United States that there
for secrets:
all
list
of interconnecting possibili-
But for that matter does one have to invent something
as sensational as conspiracy to account for
happening great
in U.S. politics
many
what we
today? True, there are
see
now
a
triumphalists scattered throughout the Bush
administration. These people to
no
the blackest deeds one can imagine
have been placed on the ties.
is
know
each other;
many went
school together; some had the same teachers; they
151
WORLD, BEWARE! belong to the same organizations and mittees. Doubtless they frequently
These are
They help one another
go to lunch together.
since the
and out of
in
on the same com-
many have been
political scavengers;
around positions of power
sit
Reagan
hovering
presidency.
jobs, author the occa-
sional policy paper, look for opportunities to curry favour
They are doubtless uous bureaucratic manoeuvring -
in the right places.
all
involved in stren-
retaliating
old
for
grudges, cultivating alliances, toadying up to superiors. Isn’t petty
nonsense
like this exactly
what preoccupies peo-
whether public or private?
ple in big bureaucratic systems,
any case, much of what goes on among the
In
umphalists and Washington policy-makers chronicled in the press. all
the players,
we do not know
If
we can
take
every eminence grise there
who
also in the
is
game
it
is still
for
is
routinely
the
names of
for granted that behind
another eminence
money
or glory.
And
grise,
we
if
could document the motives of the triumphalists,
much worse could
tri-
how
they be than those that have already
been attributed to them? As part of the anti-war
effort,
thousands of us accused the Bush administration and
minions of serving the
oil interests.
We know
its
from the
media that many of the Bush henchmen are beholden to private companies and foreign governments for jobs and
power is written across the front book in the conviction that the tri-
payoffs. Their lust for
pages.
write this
I
umphalists are obsessed with the project of redrawing the
map
of the Middle East,
that,
if
not the rest of the world, and
should they succeed, they will be richly rewarded.
Simple sociology - the study of shared interests -
enough
to account for the influence wielded
by the
is
tri-
umphalists.
The eager
to
intellectual credentials that triumphalists are so
display
are
little
152
more than an
effort
to
The Triumph alists bamboozle the
much
how
of
Worried left-wing
public.
number
a
of
Strauss’s
Chicago students are to be found
critics
University
in politics
of
- especially
during the George W. Bush administration.
(who died
make
Is
Strauss
1973) perhaps the posthumous centre of a
in
triumphalist conspiracy?
The
closer
convincing this seems.
may
well be that Strauss’s per-
sonal tastes in
It
one looks, the
were conservative, but there
life
his
academic work that has obvious
He
is
said to have
less
is little
in
political relevance.
admired a society governed by a rural
aristocracy - of
which there are not many left. Strauss’s reputation rests on erudite interpretations of major philosophers, mainly Plato, Nietzsche, and Spinoza.
Some
praise his scholarship for the insights
it
offers into
found an esoteric sub-
Plato; others find his claim to have
text in Plato to be bizarre. Strauss’s intellectual mission
was
to salvage the
into a
damning
wisdom
critique of “modernity.”
succeeded with students
on the printed page fessorial
dust.
scholarship
of the ancients and shape
his
who knew him words wear
Where does any
it
He may have personally, but
a thick coat of pro-
of his finely nuanced
connect sensibly with the
politics
of
an
urban-industrial society rapidly falling under the control of multinational corporations?
The triumphalists lives serving the
are people
who
needs of the well-to-do. They are the
children of socially ambitious families that
money
validates
all
things.
They
are the legitimate rulers of society. ples, they despise the
no proper claim
have spent their
who were
taught
believe that the rich
On
Darwinist princi-
lower orders as proven failures with
to political power.
None
ever experienced economic insecurity;
I
them has suspect none of of
them has spent a single day in the company of the country’s poor or non-white population. After all, the poor do 153
WORLD, BEWARE! not serve the best Scotch.
man would
consider
it
It
is
enough
to
know
an intolerable hardship
if
that a
he could
not dine in the best restaurants and drink the finest wine.
you need to know about his politics. And if people like this meet to share their grievances and lay plans to improve their fortunes, simple vanity will explain what they are up to. “Birds of a feather flock together.” One need have no recourse to conspiracy. Does that make matters better or worse for the future of American politics? Worse, I think. If the triumphalists were a handful of fanatics operating in deep secrecy, they might be all the easier to expose and disThat
tells
credit.
you
all
But that their designs are so well
known
to the
and the public makes one fear for the moral vigilance of the American people. There are still brave voices of dissent in the United States - columnists, political car-
press
commentators who express their disapproval of the war in Iraq. There have been major documentaries - many by the pbs Frontline series - detailing how the triumphalists moved into few
toonists,
even
power
Washington. But none of
in
a
television
this
has registered
strongly with the public at large as the basis for signifi-
cant protest.
One can
only conclude that a great
many
Americans sympathize with what the triumphalists want, or - even worse - that they are simply too lethargic to
Approval or complacency at the grassroots provides more cause for worry than do conspiracies in high
care. far
places.
154
FIVE
The Fundamentalists
“We have
seen that current events are fitting together simul-
taneously into the precise pattern of predicted events. Israel
has returned to Palestine and revived the nation. Jerusalem is
under
Israeli
control.
Russia has emerged as a great
northern power, the avowed enemy of revived
Israel.
The
Arabs are joining in a concerted effort to liberate Palestine under Egyptian leadership. The black African nations are beginning to move from sympathy toward the Arabs to an open Alliance in their ‘liberation’ cause. “It’s happening. God is putting it all together. God
may have
his
meaning
‘now generation’ which on mankind than anything since
for the
have a greater effect Genesis 1. Will you be ready
will
if
we
are to be part of the
prophetic ‘now generation’?”
Hal Lindsay, The Late, Great Planet Earth 1970 ,
“We, the People of the United States recognizing the being and attributes of Almighty God, the Divine Authority of the Holy Scriptures, the law of God as the paramount rule, and Jesus, the Messiah, the Savior and Lord of all, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the general wel-
and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and to our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for fare,
the United States of America.”
Revised Christian Preamble to the U.S. Constitution
WORLD, BEWARE!
THE
RISE OF
OLITICS, IT HAS
P
THE SUNBELT
LONG BEEN RECOGNIZED, makes
strange bedfellows.
But there have never been
stranger bedfellows than
we now
find
on the
right
where avaricious and cynical corporate leaders snuggle up to fire-and-brimstone preachers who believe that the world was created in six days and Jonah really was swallowed by the whale. It would seem that the mismatch could not be greater. While the corporados remain sunk in the sordid commercial affairs
wing of U.S.
politics,
of the world, seeking opportunities for long-term invest-
ments and swinishly huge
profits,
an increasing number
of austere and prudish evangelicals are girding them-
Armageddon - which they expect to happen any day now. How can two such divergent views of life come together in a political alliance? The selves for the battle of
answer to that question can Sunbelt.
From
lies in
the history of the Ameri-
the viewpoint of electoral politics in the United
most significant development of the late twentieth century was the emergence of the Sunbelt as a new base of power. The Sunbelt is made up of two somewhat dissimilar areas. Looking east from Texas, it encompasses what was once known as the Deep South. Looking west, it is made up of Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, and Southern California. Throughout most of States, the single
the twentieth century, the southern portion of the Sunbelt
was underpopulated, underdeveloped, and mainly nonurban. This is the Old South of the Confederacy “Dixie,” as it was called in Abraham Lincoln’s day - that fought to preserve slavery and, by
was allowed Civil
way
of punishment,
to sink ever deeper into poverty after the
War. For three generations after 1865 the majority
156
The Fundamentalists of the population in the
Deep South
(largely sharecrop-
pers often referred to as “white trash”)
worked
the land
under conditions that resembled those of a Third World country.
Meanwhile,
western edge of the Sunbelt,
at the far
retirement communities and resort areas predominated,
more conservative population. For reasons of geography and climate, this was also an underpopulated part of the country. Until great dams tending to attract an older,
and water projects were
built in the 1930s, the aridity of
on the size of cities and the growth of industry. Once water became available, however, great metropolises bloomed in the desert: Tucson, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and above all the sprawling Los Angeles - San Diego conurbation, which was a major centre of wartime ship- and aircraft-building. Throughout the Western Sunbelt, remnants of the lighter, more playful, less industrial past linger on in the casinos of Las Vegas and the film and television production of Hollywood. There has been one important addition to the Western Sunbelt: it has grown an extension in the Rocky Mountains that connects it with the evangelical South. Throughout several Western states (Utah, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and parts of Idaho and Oregon) the Mormons (Church of Latterthe Western United States placed a strict limit
day Saints) have become sading for
much
the
a significant political force cru-
same
set of
“family values” as the
fundamentalists. This has resulted in adding a strip of “solid
mountain”
states to
support for the Republican
Party.
Soon
after
World War
II,
thanks mainly to
new
investment connected with the military-industrial com-
whole began to prosper. Sunbelt with Lyndon Johnson and including
plex, the Sunbelt as a
presidents (starting
157
WORLD, BEWARE! every president since then except for Gerald Ford) fun-
government money into the area. Virginia, Georgia, Florida, and Texas enjoyed heavy doses of aerospace and defence spending; the area became deeply embedded in military programs and bases, including the political values that accompanied the Cold War period. In time, nelled
non-defence industries relocated to prospering Southern
mainly to escape the power of trade unions in northern cities. War production and anti-union manufac-
cities
turing gave the area a cultural bias that
conservative.
Northern
That
orientation
was
increased
distinctly
as
big-city,
Democratic Party took up the imposing sweeping legal and elec-
liberals in the
cause of racial justice,
on Southern states that had for generations been committed to a policy of racial segregation. In reac-
toral reforms
Southerners deserted the Democratic Party,
tion
first
becoming Dixiecrats and then converting to Republicans.
Few Republicans may have
realized
it
at the time,
with the Sunbelt was destined to
but
them to a new demographic. The party of Abraham Lincoln was about to become the party of the solid white, born-again their alliance
tie
Christian South.
Dwight Eisenhower, who
left office in
1960, was the
moderate Republican president. In the very next election - in 1964 - the Republicans nominated Barry Goldlast
water, a far-right Arizona senator. Goldwater’s for the
nomination was a
eral East
bitter fight against the
Coast Republican establishment.
It
campaign
more
pitted
lib-
him
against Nelson Rockefeller, the Republican governor of
New
York.
One might have expected
that a Rockefeller,
American name synonymous with money, would have little trouble winning the nomination of the Republican Party. But Goldwater managed to portray his millionaire opponent as a liberal interloper the holder of a legendary
158
The Fundamentalists And he was right. Rockefeller Republican who would have endorsed the
with no place in the party.
was
the sort of
welfare state, accepting
it
omy.
He
tion
and cosmopolitan
also
embodied
market econ-
as the ballast of a
big-city, big-business sophistica-
Resistance
values.
Republican ranks was a significant indicator:
America that rejected the cultural world, preferring traditional family for
style life,
of
him in there was an the modern to
a subordinate role
women, piety, and bourgeois respectability. That was a decisive moment. The Sunbelt had taken
over a Republican Party that had formerly belonged to the cities,
banks, and Ivy League alumni of the East
Coast. In elections to come, Republican presidential candidates
would be
belt strongholds,
Even the
first
selected almost exclusively
mainly Texas and Southern California.
George Bush, an East Coast, Yale Univer-
sity patrician if there
connection for
Texan. The
The
last
all
shift
it
was
was one, used
ever
was worth felt in
his oil-industry
to pretend he
from outside
te
was
a
the Democratic Party as well.
Democratic president to be elected
eth century
from Sun-
in the twenti-
Sunbelt was John Kennedy in
1960 - and only by a tissue-thin majority. As for the Old South, it was rapidly changing. Its population was growing, and its wealth accumulating. The region had managed to preserve its culture and even
make
example grass
it
attractive to the rest of the country, for
in the
form of country-and-western or blue-
music. The popularity of Elvis Presley in the
1950s and 1960s was one small sign of the emerging Sunbelt. Presley offered a white version of Southern black music. As the culture of the South once more asserted
itself,
so too did
its
religion.
From
Virginia to
Texas^ the Southern Sunbelt has proudly and pugnaciously
remained the
“Bible
159
belt,”
the
most pious
WORLD, BEWARE! portion of the country,
with evangelical and fun-
filled
damentalist congregations that remain faithful to the old-time religion. Here were millions of people
war with Darwin’s theory of evolution and ways of big-city liberals.
the
still
at
immoral
Evangelical Christianity has long been one of the
main else
forces opposing
Sunbelt churches
contemporary values. Yet whatever
may
reject
have eagerly appropriated the
about modern times, they
latest
means of communica-
and organization. They have built powerful massmedia networks on radio and television. Their methods of proselytizing have become as sophisticated as those of any merchandising business. Churches - many of them “megachurches” that rival the size of stadiums and convention halls - have adopted the latest marketing techniques; tion
some have become small broadcasting empires. They have built theme parks and opened resorts for their members. And as their numbers multiply and as they become more aware of their voting power, evangelical churches have grown steadily more politicized. They participate eagerly in election campaigns and fight for issues that mean the most to them. In the process they have become a dependable voting bloc, willing to give their support to candi-
dates
who
speak out against abortion, women’s
rights,
and homosexuality.
The
increasingly pious character of Southern politics
has set the region squarely at odds with liberals and therefore with the Democratic Party. In times past, the
South was the most dependable part of Franklin Roosevelt’s
won
New
Deal
alliance.
But in 1980 Ronald Reagan
very nearly the entire South for his brand of conser-
vatism. His victory
was
he was running against
the
more remarkable because
Jimmy
Carter, the former gover-
all
nor of Georgia, a true son of the South and a devoutly
160
The Fundamentalists born-again Christian. As moderate as he was, Carter
proved to be too
liberal for
compatriots. Carter
was
many
of his
own
Southern
a staunch advocate of racial jus-
and had even toyed with the idea of legalizing marijuana. What Sunbelt voters wanted was a sweeping rejectice
tion of the loose morality that they associated with liberalism, especially
president
who
its
sexual permissiveness.
They wanted
a
talked religion and promised to impose
good, Christian morals on the nation. That was what
Reagan offered in his campaign, even though his Hollywood background displayed none of these characteristics. As president he did little to deliver on the cultural and moral values that he had advocated. Nevertheless, his sweep of the South was a stunning political transformation. The Sunbelt, especially the southern wing of the area, had turned solidly Republican and become the anchor of conservatism
in the
United States.
Ever since the Reagan presidency, the Republican Party has been assiduously cultivating the votes of the evangelical community. Evangelical churches and sects,
Mountain States, have become the political base of the party. They contribute enormous amounts of money and manpower during elections. They including those in the
get out the vote. This base has profoundly influenced the
triumphalist agenda.
One cannot spend
years currying
favour with a resolutely religious community and not
wind up with a binding commitment to its worldview. At some point the moral absolutism and simpleminded piety of that constituency rubs off. The result is a brand of conservatism that sounds more and more like a profession of religious faith. Thanks to the Sunbelt, American politics is growing steadily more pious and more fanatical. It is important for the world at large to know that finally
161
WORLD, BEWARE! American imperium is indebted to a militant religious constituency. The America that is leading the war on terrorism is not the America that led the grand alliance of World War II and the Cold War. Liberals with a broad, international outlook are no longer in charge of the the
country’s politics. For the foreseeable future, every conservative politician in the United States, especially at the
presidential level, will be to
one degree or another under
the influence of a religious belief system that sees the
world as a Manichaean
and absolute
battle
between absolute good
American fundamentalists had their way, Christian prayers would be compulsory in our schools, the Ten Commandments would be displayed in every public building, and the courts of the land would work from biblical principles. The teaching of Darwinian biology would be outlawed in the schools, and so too would most of modern astronomy, since it posits that the universe
is
evil. If
a great deal older than the six
chronicled in the different,
but,
Book
thousand years
The doctrines may be uniting church and state is
of Genesis.
ironically,
what the shariah requires in the eyes of fundamentalist Muslims - and for that matter what the Torah requires in the eyes of orthodox Jews, whose influence exactly
has never been greater in Christian, Jewish,
images of one another.
Israel.
and Muslim
We
fanatics are mirror
are living in an era in
which
angry factions that subscribe to fundamentalist dogmas are sinking the world in ever greater sectarian violence.
The broad and tolerant secular humanism that we inherited from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment is in danger of losing ground everywhere - and most significantly in the
United States. At a time
principles
are
needed
when
pluralistic political
more urgently than
ever,
the
world’s one remaining superpower has fallen under the
162
The Fundamentalists influence of the least tolerant, least pluralistic elements in
our
society.
APOCALYPSE NOW! The
first
munity
significant
in politics
movement
involvement of the evangelical com-
was
as part of the great
temperance
of the nineteenth century. Conservative Protes-
tant churches were the great crusade,
main organizational base
which achieved success
for that
in the years follow-
World War I by imposing Prohibition on the United States. Hard as it is to believe now, for fourteen years it was illegal to make, sell, or transport beer, wine, or whisky in the United States. Prohibition did not happen because most Americans agreed to give up booze, but because a puritanical and militant minority achieved sufficient power to impose its moral code on the country at large. Eventually, when it was recognized that Prohibition was doing more harm than good - it was in effect capitalizing an illegal bootlegging industry - the law was repealed. By then organized crime had become a permaing
nent part of the U.S. economy. After that, evangelical elements remained politically active at the local level
struggling to keep
and campaigning
and mainly
in the
Southern
states,
Darwinian evolution out of the schools
for puritanical values in the areas of sex,
marriage, and domestic
life.
influence of the churches
Following World
War
the
II,
seemed to be waning rapidly
as
became more urban and cosmopolitan. War generally takes its toll of public morality, and the United States was no exception. The countercultural the United States
rebellion of the
many tight
1960s with
its
hedonistic style looked to
of us like the end of the old-time religion and
moral code. Movements
like
163
women’s
liberation
its
and
WORLD, BEWARE! gay rights were rapidly transforming social mores. By the
was becoming commonplace for couples to live together out of wedlock, teenage sex was widespread, and movies were filled with nudity and profanity. The forces of change seemed ready to sweep all but the most liberal forms of religion from the scene. But that was a serious miscalculation. In reality, another form of evangelicalism was gaining strength beneath the surface of American life. It goes by two late
1970s
it
names: Premillennialist Christianity, or Dispensational Christianity. Starting as a small and marginal form of
fundamentalism
in the late nineteenth century,
tionalism
was based upon what seemed
doctrine
even
period.
As
it
to
many
the English preacher
like
a bizarre
of
Christians
believing
was announced
Dispensa-
to the Christian
John Nelson Darby
that
world by
in the mid-nine-
teenth century, Dispensationalism believed that the Bible
contained a precise prophetical countdown leading to the
The countdown chronicled the fate of the Jews in the modern world. Before Christ could fulfil his promise to come again, the Jews had to be restored to their ancient homeland. It was this precondition that
End
of Days.
made Darby’s message
premillennial. Before the
Day
of
Judgment, there was history that still had to be lived through, an enormous loose end that God was working to tie up.
Darby’s teachings were picked up by the dynamic
and lay preacher William E. Blackstone, who dedicated his life and his fortune to Zionism. His fol-
U.S. businessman
lowing was small but impassioned;
it
was convinced
once the Jews had regained their homeland, the phase of the apocalypse as described
in
164
final
the books of
The Jews Temple Mount
Daniel, Ezekiel, and Revelation could begin.
could then rebuild the third temple on the
that
The Fundamentalists in
Jerusalem - approximately where the Muslim
the
Rock now
for
all this,
stands.
Soon
after that (there
is
Dome
of
a timetable
but even evangelicals disagree on the details)
the Antichrist
would appear
to
make
mischief and mislead
Armageddon would descend upon
the gullible. After that the great battle of
would ensue, and at last Jesus Jerusalem to announce the Day of Judgment. At which
who
point those
away to mankind -
merit salvation will be whisked
moment and the rest of including all Jews who refuse to convert and accept Jesus as the true Messiah - will be damned for eternity. That moment is called “the Rapture.” heaven
a single
in
In accordance with these teachings, Dispensationalist
Christians in England and the United States began contributing their labour, prayers,
Jews
promising a
They became Christian Zionists. From the Balfour Declaration was issued in 1917, “national home” for the Jews, Dispensation-
evangelicals have been convinced that their reading
of scripture
prophecy
is
correct.
fulfilled in the
They believe they are seeing news of the day. They were to
become even more convinced of this after the Israel was founded in 1949 and after the Israeli in
resettling
in Palestine.
the day that
alist
and money to
subsequent wars
The
neighbours. Ezekiel
is
(1956,
Israelis
1967) with
won
the
war;
state of
victories
Israel’s
the
Arab
prophet
vindicated! In the Dispensationalist view,
all
these developments -
and indeed everything that happens in the Near East day by day - are fulfilments of God’s word. At any time now the End of Days may come. That event
may
require the destruction of the
Dome
of the
Rock and a war of enormous bloodshed throughout Muslim world - but so be it!
One might tory of the
the
well ask why, at this late stage in the his-
modern world, 165
at
a
time
when
societies
WORLD, BEWARE! everywhere are enveloped by
scientific technology,
any-
moment’s attention to absurd beliefs of this kind. The answer is: 47 percent - nearly half of the people who live in the world’s major industrial and military power - now identify themselves in public opin-
body should
give a
ion polls as “born-again Christians.” the world
was created by God
Darwinian evolution that Jesus will
They
believe that
in six days; they regard
as a Satanic falsehood; they believe
come again
to judge the saved
and the
damned.
Not
born-again Christians are
all
tionalists,
strict
Dispensa-
but Dispensationalists are the most politically
organized religious force in the country; and they are
making more and more converts each year precisely because people believe they offer the most accurate reading of God’s word. Accordingly, books based on premillennialist teachings have become astonishing bestsellers. Hal Lindsey’s 1970 exposition of Dispensational doctrine The Late Great Planet Earth was the biggest seller of its
A
1990s Dispensationalist fiction series called Left Behind - the story of humans who failed to qualify for the Rapture - has sold eighty-five million copies. decade.
When
Dispensationalist preachers seek out politicians,
they claim to
command
the votes of between forty
seventy million biblical people. Ronald Reagan first
Republican leader to bid for those votes.
by affirming
his
own
belief that the
End
of
was
He
and the
did so
Days was
at
hand.
Oddly enough, Reagan’s Bush, did Despite
little
successor,
George H.W.
to ingratiate himself to the evangelicals.
all his efforts
to disguise himself as a boots-and-
saddle Texan, he smacked of Atlantic-seaboard manners
and morals. He was not comfortable with the Biblethumpers, and they were not comfortable with him. His 1
66
The Funda?nentalists George W. Bush displayed none of his father’s qualms. As a lifelong Texas businessman, he made himson
home with
self at
the
good
ol’
step with their sub-intellectual,
boys.
He
macho
fell
style.
right into
Moreover,
he threw in unreservedly with Sunbelt evangelicals. In the
White House he instituted weekly prayer breakfasts, and he banned swearing. Upon awakening, he would spend an hour or so in the West Wing reading evangelical sermons - mainly the work of Oswald Chambers. Chambers, a
World War
tine to
preach the Dispensational message to the Aus-
I
Baptist minister, travelled to Pales-
who had
tralian troops
occupied the former Ottoman
ter-
and taken Jerusalem. Here is a sample of what Bush learned from the homilies of Reverend Chambers: “If you debate for even one second when God has sporitories
ken,
it
totally
is
Be reckless immediately,
over for you. ...
unrestrained and willing to risk everything by
casting your
all
upon him.
.
.
.
You
will only recognize
His voice more clearly through recklessly being willing to risk
your
all.”
ness with the
Combine that kind of religious impulsivemilitary power of the Pentagon, and we all
worry about. It should come as no surprise, then, that Bush promised his evangelical followers that he would divert surely have something to
as
many
federal
tax dollars as possible into
“faith-
based” programs. Faith-based programs are social
ser-
down-and-out run by churches (usually evangelical churches) and inevitably vices
for
the
distressed
used to proselytize for
and
new
converts. This
is
a jarring
violation of the separation of church and state, a basic
constitutional
principle.
But then, evangelicals
reject
and would remove it from the Constitution. They have sponsored a “Christian Nation” amendment that begins, “The United States is a Christian that principle
167
WORLD, BEWARE! nation. Congress shall exercise of
all
make no law
abridging the free
Christian religions.”
Dispensational evangelicalism has an agressive leg-
agenda.
islative
It
opposes gay marriage, cohabitation
our of wedlock, stem-cell research, and traception that
may
all
risk causing abortion.
forms of conalso the
It is
form of Christianity to take an interest in foreign affairs. It has an intense concern about the United States’
first
population policy in the world.
blocked support of any
relief
has,
It
Saddam Hussein,
services
example,
and family-planning pro-
grams that might permit abortion. In of
for
Iraq, after the fall
doctors sent in to rebuild medical
had to be anti-abortion. The Dispensationalists
are also the
first
religious
movement
to establish a lobby
promotion of foreign policy: the National Christian Leadership Conference on Israel. The for
the
aggressive
is
simple: support hardline parties, such as Likud,
in Israel.
Send them money, send them armaments, make
policy
sure they win,
no matter what the
cost. In the nineteenth
century Christians, especially evangelicals, were
among
most anti-Semitic Americans. They would have said that the Jews had been offered their chance to accept Jesus as the Messiah two thousand years ago and had missed the boat. Today the Jews are at the very centre of the
Dispensationalist theology.
Millions of evangelicals have issue voters in support of the
ments
in Israel;
and
mentalist card,” and
when
Israeli
it
It is
single-
most uncompromising
in turn those
vated evangelical support.
now become elements have
ele-
culti-
called “playing the funda-
has been played boldly. In 1998,
prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited
Washington looking for support for his hardline policies, he all but snubbed President Clinton in favour of addressing an evangelical rally, where he was cheered
168
The Fundamentalists long and hard. The event was sponsored by Rev. Jerry
group that claims to number two hundred thousand ministers who can turn their members
Falwell, leader of a
out to vote. Falwell has publicly warned politicians that evangelical voters will punish any candidate
who
votes in
support of compromise with the Palestinians.
The
among them who hap-
triumphalists, even those
pen to be Jewish, are not
a religious group.
But there are
some triumphalists who seek to resolve the instability in the Near East by backing the hardline Israeli parties, and that is where they connect with the fundamentalists. Their hope is that a powerful U.S. military presence in Iraq can be used to intimidate Iran and the Arab countries into making peace with Israel, and so to cut off the support that Palestinian militants have received from those governments. When George W. Bush sought the votes of evangelical Christians,
may have
it
been because
he accepts their theology; but his triumphalist advisers see the evangelicals as their
backing extreme policy East.
And
main
initiatives
electoral support for
throughout the Middle
of course that orientation
ties in nicely
the prospect of taking control of the oil fields in Iraq
elsewhere.
One
left
is
to
wonder which party
in
with
and this
implausible alliance of true believers and hardened political operatives
is
the
more
opportunistic.
George W. Bush’s personal story is particularly illuminating as an example of how a politician becomes so deeply entangled in
religiosity. In his
of Christian temperance reclaimed
As
a
result
believe
youth, a strong dose
him from alcoholism.
of this therapeutic benefit, he decided to
whatever evangelical Christianity has to teach,
including
its
conviction that the end of the world
hand and that the
state of Israel
for the return of Jesus.
needs to be
Nobody can 169
say
if
is
at
made ready
this
provided
WORLD, BEWARE! the
major force behind Bush’s foreign
policy; the press
we can
has been too timid to raise the question. But what say
is
that once
we have accounted
for
all
the other ques-
tionable elements that stand behind that policy - the drive to control the world’s oil markets, the need to find a
new post-Cold War
justification for
tary budget, the sheer
macho
an enhanced
mili-
fascination with throwing
around in the world - we have this crowning inanity to add to the mix. Bush has bequeathed the one’s weight
United States a foreign policy that
Armageddon. He was
willing to give favourable attention
to fanatical religious types in the
preparing us for
is
who
are tracking
pages of scripture. Incredible as
it
world
affairs
seems, there are
Christian congregations that meet every Sunday to decide
American foreign policy is approved by God and cated by quotations from the Book of Ezekiel. if
vindi-
THE RED HEIFER Whatever setbacks the future may hold politics,
we can
for evangelical
be sure that the Republican right wing
produce a long, steady stream of leaders like George W. Bush. There is an America - a large, assertive America - that wants people like him in the White House. Bush is will
destined to hold his place in our history as a sobering
example of the leadership produced by piety. If
this
new
political
anything should serve to put the world on
its
guard about the international goals of the United States, it is that a man of this kind could become - by hook or by crook - president.
One
day, looking back to Gulf
War
II,
historians will
marvel that one of the greatest transformations of world affairs
could have been carried out by a
painfully limited abilities
man
of such
and dubious moral character.
170
The Fundamentalists Bush may well rank among the shallowest and most narrow-minded presidents to hold office since Warren Harding in the 1920s. Before entering the White House, he had done
little
travelling
and
little
reading.
He was
edu-
cated in business administration, an academically sub-
which he performed with no distinction. His greatest accomplishments as a university student were as a “party animal” and football cheerleader. Beyond that, his career was that of a minor business figure who once owned a baseball team. As an executive of a Texas oil company, he cut corners to make a bit more profit. Questioned about his business record, he found no standard
better
field in
way
of justifying his conduct than to say that
what
main reading material has long consisted of sermons and simpleminded religious tracts. During his years as governor of Texas, these provided his main connection with thought. Drawing on sources like these, he quickly convinced himself that he was God’s chosen agent in the struggle against cosmic evil. Where else does a simple man find he did was not technically
illegal.
Bush’s
megalomaniacal self-confidence? Of course - by associating himself with God. What we have in Bush is an example of hubris elevated to the highest political level
equipped with the mightiest military arsenal
The growing power of
and
in history.
sternly intolerant evangelicals
within the Republican Party has driven American politics
anyone could have imagined through most of the twentieth century. Under pressure from religious conservatives, the Republican Party now unabashedly enunciates policies that fly in the face of common sense and sound science. On global warming further to the right than
and other urgent ecological with evangelicals
who
issues,
Republicans
now
side
End
Days
will
believe that the
come long before any environmental 171
of
crisis
requires
WORLD, BEWARE! attention. For apocalyptic Christians
it
makes no sense
to
worry about the fate of a planet that will soon be swallowed up in the Rapture. Similarly, the Republican position on stem-cell research is based on the evangelical insistence that biotechnology
may
to God’s law. There
is
unnatural and contrary
be grounds for ethical concern
about some forms of genetic research; but introducing a narrow, literal reading of the Bible into the discussion hardly helps to clarify the issue. In
ways
that are nearly too bizarre to take seriously,
religious extremists tie into the foreign as well as the
domestic program of the triumphalists. In droves bornagain Americans journey to Jerusalem on Bible tours that
show them
exactly where Jesus will stand as the heavens
and the damned are judged. The only question they find worth debating is whether those who are swept away in the Rapture will arrive in heaven fully clothed or naked. With the support of political allies in Washington, fall
evangelical congregations are sending missionaries into
Muslims from what they consider to be a false, if not a demonic, religion. At certain points, evangelical politics can become surrealistic. Iraq to convert
Take, for example, the story of the red
heifer.
According to the Book of Numbers, before one can approach the temple, one must be purified with a pinch of ashes derived from the ritual slaughter and burning of a perfect red heifer, a
body of any other
cow
colour.
that has not one hair
The
on
its
sanctifying remnants of
when the second by the Romans in AD
the last red heifer vanished into history
temple in Jerusalem was destroyed
Even now, when modern Jews have returned to the Holy Land and reclaimed it as their home, the third tem70.
ple remains
where
it
unbuilt.
In part, that
must be raised
is
now 172
is
because the
occupied by the
site
Dome
of
The Fundamentalists most sacred places. But there are those in Israel who would tear down the Dome at a moment’s notice - if they were pure enough to enter the site and build the new temple. That purity depends upon discovering another red heifer and reducing it to sacred the Rock, one of Islam’s
ashes.
There are pious
who
Israelis
are keeping a sharp
some
eye out for that heifer. But in the United States
hope to speed things along. According to
evangelicals
Rod Dreher
National Review,
writing in the
devout
Texas cattlemen are carrying out breeding experiments with a view to producing a perfect red heifer at the
earli-
est possible date. Israeli settlements in the
the second
West Bank
coming of Jesus
.
.
.
.
.
.
Iraqi oil
the Rapture:
.
what
.
.
a
nightmarish mixture of realpolitik and sheer superstition
American foreign policy has become!
THE WAR AGAINST PLURALISM The year was 1972. The young woman seated across from me in my study was the first “Jesus freak” I’d ever met. She was in her early twenties, bright-eyed and assertive, dressed in the thrift-shop motley that was the hippie fashion of the 1960s. She had asked to interview me for a new Berkeley-based magazine called Right On, but she came as much to talk as to listen. She wanted to tell me about the Christian commune that she had helped organize. Though I heard her out politely, it was with a kind of smug dismissiveness. That was, after all, the period
when people with any
taste
for
religion
were
- towards Zen or Hinduism or Sufism - rather than back to the old rugged cross. I soon discovered that she had come with a purpose inclined to journey east
in
mind. Would
I
be willing to
173
let
her quote
me
to the
WORLD, BEWARE! and her barefoot apostles were the true counterculture of the day? I had recently coined the term to suggest that youthful protest had to do with issues that went beyond standard politics. I had to admit that the Christian populism she was advocating - “Give all effect that she
you have to the poor and follow me” - was decidedly “counter” with respect to mainstream American materialism. But there was a vexing theme that kept popping up in our conversation. “One” - that word echoed through all
she said. That
was
the emblematic Jesus-freak gesture:
a single finger pointing skyward.
one way, one ity
truth,
was exactly
One
finger up,
meaning
one road to salvation. Such exclusiv-
the opposite of
what
I
found most
attrac-
tive in the youthful dissent of the time: its spirit of
ness
and adventure,
ment,
its
its
willingness to sample
fascination with the exotic
contrast,
my
interviewer’s
open-
and experi-
and forbidden. In
Judaeo-Christian
religiosity
smacked of a crying need for strict orthodoxy. And of that I had had enough in my own pre-Vatican-II Catholic school days. At St. Veronica’s in Polish Chicago where I grew up, religion meant the Baltimore catechism learned by rote under threat of a sound knuckle-rapping. What chance was there that something as retrogressive as my visitor’s old-time religion would be around long enough to merit comment? How wrong can one be? Some two months after my interview appeared in Right On, Time magazine ran a cover story on “the Jesus people” as the biggest new thing happening on campuses around the country. We were in the early dawn of a potent political development in the
United States: the
rise
of evangelical power.
Fast-forward another decade or so, and the religious
movement role in
Moral Majority would play a major putting Reagan in the White House. Skip forward called the
174
The Fundamentalists another twenty years to the opening of the twenty-first
and we have George W. Bush, the most overtly religious president in American history, a born-again Texan who opens cabinet meetings with a prayer, holds century,
the record for his frequency in using the
press conferences,
out asking
God
and who never
to bless America.
Bush with giving
word
“evil” at
finishes a speech with-
We
can not only credit
his conservative political base every-
thing they have long
wanted by way of domestic policy
(faith-based social programs, curtailing abortion rights,
defending prayers and the teaching of creationism in the schools), but also with
imbuing our foreign
affairs
with a
providential sense of national destiny.
we might
But,
does not freedom of religion
ask,
apply to the president’s evangelical Christianity as as to
any other
does. But
cussions
citizen’s religious beliefs?
Of
much
course
it
we can still have reservations about the reperof so much high-level bibliolatry. I’m haunted
by the argument that right wingers once raised about
communism
during the McCarthy years. Communists,
they contended, use
civil
liberties in
order to overturn
them once they take power - if they ever do. I wonder how long religious freedom would last if militant fundamentalists took over our government. These are people
who
speak of having “a biblical duty” (the words of Ran-
dall
Robertson, leader of the anti-abortion movement
Operation Rescue) “to conquer But there
is
something that
this nation.” I
find even
more
unsettling
about the growing influence of the religious right over
American
my
political
life. It
goes back to that encounter with
Jesus-freak student in 1972. Pleasant and courteous as
she was,
when
bulletproof.
it
came
Why?
to hearing divergent ideas, she
Because as a humanist and
qualified in her eyes as a
damned 175
soul.
was
liberal,
I
While we talked,
WORLD, BEWARE! she kept her guard up, lest
Was
I
was doing.
annoyed? Not In
my
exactly that way.
my
secularism contaminate her.
really.
recognized what she
I
Catholic boyhood
From
I
related to people in
the vantage point of
my
sinless
most of the people I met were surely damned. I remember weeping into my pillow at night, fearing that my parents were going to hell for missing Mass or eating meat on Friday. Being among God’s chosen gave me a purity,
certain
smug comfort
in dealing
or disagreed with. After
all, I
with anybody
was
a
member
I
disliked
of the most
exclusive club in the universe - the club of the elect.
Nothing
distorts
our relations with others more than
am bound
and you are condemned to eternal perdition. And the more literal the belief, the greater the distortion. Those who harbour that belief may find ways of being tactful, but believing that the difference between you and me is all the difference between heaven and hell fixes the greatest possible gulf between us. At the extreme - and bear in mind that we the conviction that I
for glory
are talking about an increasingly popular
gious extremism - worshipping the
form of
One Great God
reli-
easily
an all-out war on pluralism. That is what worries me most - not only from a civil libertarian perspective, but with respect to the quality of our culcarries over into
tural
life.
By “pluralism,” ciple.
I
mean
I
do not mean an abstract
that spontaneous joy
variety, the delightful surprise
we
we
legal prin-
human when we
take in the
experience
meet someone who has taken another road in life, perhaps a road we will want to follow. Exuberant variety is what Walt Whitman had in mind when he defined
democracy as singing the song of ourselves. He saw America as a massive jazz improvisation on a million themes that we inherit from the past. “I hear America
176
The Fundamentalists The San Francisco poet Robert Duncan expressed Whitman’s singing,” he wrote, “the varied carols
democratic ideal nicely a
Symposium
when
I
hear.”
we are when “all
he said that
of the Whole, a time
living in
the old,
excluded orders must be included, the female, the proletariat, the foreign, the
animal and vegetable, the uncon-
and the unknown, the criminal and failure - all that has been outcast and vagabond.” A true Whitmanesque democracy does not simply scious
grant us the right to sing our to
do
so.
own
song;
True democracy longs for
it
encourages us
diversity, originality,
experimentation. In that sense, democracy not an end.
It is
the
theme that
all
a
is
means
,
of us vary and pass
good jazz combo playing its music. Can jazz and Jesus go together? That is something for individual Christians to decide. Every religion is what its believers make of it. But I do know that those who regard pluralism as the work of the devil undermine democracy and impoverish our culture. That is the greatalong, like a
est
price
we
are paying for the political success of a
growingly religious right wing
America.
in
We
are losing
And countrymen who
touch with the existential roots of democracy. there are millions of
praising
God
my
fellow
yet are
to see that happen.
The result is not simply a blight upon our own culture. The war against pluralism carries over into foreign affairs. Bad enough for the United States to embark on an imperial course of policy; but much worse empire should
thumpers tion of
fall
who
damned
if
that
under the control of bigots and Bible-
see the rest of the souls.
1
77
human
race as a collec-
S
I
X
The Liberal Failure ofNerve
“It’s
time liberals had some compassion for parents
are trying to raise their kids in the liberal policies
them
make
moral vacuum that
have created. Liberals ask that
money we
who
we
trust
government is spent properly. Well, people are tired of that con game. Conservatives today want to give people value for their tax dollars and open up real opportunities for poor people to better themselves. That’s real to
.
.
sure the
give
.
compassion, not the fake kind liberals peddle when they throw money at problems so they can add to the power they have over other people.”
Rush Limbaugh, leading conservative radio commentator, 1992
“I’m not out to eliminate government. bring it
it
down
into the
to a size that will
bathroom and drown
make it
it
I
just
want
to
possible to drag
in the tub.”
Grover Norquist, President of Americans for Tax Reform, leading conservative organizer
The Liberal Failure of Nerve
ARCHIE BUNKERS OF THE WORLD, ARISE! he main opposition that faces
T
ists in
Democratic
Party.
the liberal
But over the
Ronald Reagan wrote
that
is
last
wing of the
twenty years
have fallen upon hard times. Some even believe
liberals
As we have ism
the United States
the triumphal-
are, to
changes in
their obituary in the 1980s.
American liberala significant degree, the result of demographic voting patterns. The Sunbelt has swung Amerseen, the misadventures of
ican society sharply to the right. Moreover, the United
now more
States
is
than
was
it
labour
of a suburban middle-class society
in the post- World
in the big cities
the Democrats.
As big
was
War
II
era,
when organized
main voting bloc behind business has grown bigger, big the
which for decades after the days of the Roosevelt New Deal was the strongest single constituency that liberals could rely upon, has been shrinking. But more than that, the values and psychology of the American working class have changed in ways that have left liberals in a quandary. In effect, the working-class voter has become more and more illiberal. Nothing has done more to demoralize the American left-wing than the emergence of Reagan blue-collar voters. There is a lesson to be learned here from popular culture. For almost a decade during the 1970s the most popular television show in the United States was the situation comedy All in the Family. The show (based on a British labour,
TV
series,
hero:
Till
Death Us
Do
Part) featured
an unlikely
an ignorant, loud-mouthed, reactionary loading-
dock worker named Archie Bunker. Archie espoused the right-wing views
all
and values of the period. He was
anti-black, anti-Hispanic, anti-trade-union, anti-gay, anti-
woman,
anti-government. Every week, his bigotry was
179
WORLD, BEWARE! comically contrasted with the views of his daughter and
who
son-in-law,
represented the generation of the rebel-
lious sixties. Archie
was everything
read, college-educated, middle-class
the intelligent, well-
American despised -
the perfect target for liberal ridicule.
What liberal America never suspected was how many Archie Bunkers there were out there in the real world, viewers who sympathized with Archie’s views and resented the knocks he took from his sassy, dren. Archie’s constant complaint that the
was
smug
chil-
government
victimizing hard-working white guys like himself
echoed sympathetically
in
many American homes. But
it
Ronald Reagan became the spokesman for the embattled Archie Bunkers of America that the truth came home. There really are working-class voters who will vote for a far-right-wing candidate, someone who bashes the government, spurns racial minorities, waves the flag, cuts taxes, and sticks up for troubled white guys - especially if that candidate looks like a cowboy. Reagan could pummel trade unions and still enjoy the support of Archie Bunker voters. One of his first acts as president was to order the replacement of striking air-traffic controllers with non-union workers. And this was a union that had supported him in the campaign. His popularity
was not
until
did not suffer at
all
for this act of political treachery.
The flesh-and-blood a
shock to the nation’s
gan
won
He
Archie Bunker came as
liberal leadership.
How
had Rea-
many traditionally Democratic voters Now, decades later, I sense that many
so
his side? still
reality of
over to liberals
refuse to look for a frank answer to that question.
did
it
by playing upon a backlog of discontent and
insecurity that
was bubbling beneath the
surface of our
Never mentioning the domineering role of big corporations in American life, Reagan portrayed liberal society.
180
The Liberal Failure of Nerve programs
as “big
government,” a remote, bullying force
dominated by elite intellectuals and academics. His position on the role of government and the universities merged nicely with his reputation as the defender of middle-class virtues. Since his days as
governor of California
during the turbulent 1960s, he had established himself as a stalwart critic of the nation’s dissenting
whom
young,
he mockingly portrayed as bearded beatniks and campus layabouts
not communist drug-pushers) bent on defy-
(if
ing law enforcement
and undermining mainstream Amer-
ican values. In his role as the avuncular hippies,
Reagan played
a
key role
in
hammer
of the
burdening the word
“liberal” with implications of perversion, disloyalty,
and
immorality.
Reagan
also capitalized
on the
efforts that liberals
had made to reform the criminal justice system. Through the 1960s and 1970s, a liberal Supreme Court and liberal lawyers significantly expanded the legal rights of those accused of crimes, especially racial minorities. never to occur to those that
a
great
who
It
seemed
cheered for these reforms
many non-mmority,
middle-class
whites
might not be cheering with them. As Richard Nixon once
summed
the matter
up
in explaining his successful
cam-
“Most Americans are not young, not poor, not black.” Reagan went further; he soundly condemned liberals in the judicial system for taking the side of criminals. They were “soft” on crime, Reagan argued. Since African-Americans made up a disproportionately large part of all convicted criminals, it was easy to make paign strategy,
reform of the criminal
justice
system look
like liberals
siding with blacks against whites. Reagan, in contrast,
spoke out for “victim’s rights.” enforcement policies aimed in the streets of
American
He
growing fear of crime He - and especially his
at the
cities.
181
enunciated tough law-
WORLD, BEWARE! Nancy - were
wife
responsible for the severe
laws that have since
U.S. prisons to overflowing
filled
with inmates whose only offence
amount
a small
new drug
of marijuana.
may
be that of carrying
The drug laws were
the
beginning of the “family values” motif in Republican
campaigning. Liberals
made one more
Ronald man of meagre intel-
great mistake about
Reagan. While the president was a he was a seasoned actor
lect,
knew how
to face the
who knew
camera and
his craft.
deliver his lines.
He He
could cock his head at just the right angle, wink charm-
whenever the script actor, Reagan had specialized in playin the movies: the handsome, ingratiatyoung man who could easily be hurt.
and assume demanded it. As an
ingly,
ing roles like this ing,
but sensitive
He had
a bashful smile
spent years perfecting that image, with the result
was hard for people not glib and intellectually
that
to think
it
Americans. So give the
vulnerable that
hard questions.
was
of him.
If
he was
agile, well, neither are
man
to expect the president to
about. Reagan
ill
a break
-
as
know what
if it
most
were unfair
he was talking
good at looking sympathetically it seemed cruel to embarrass him with That was the sense in which he was “the so
great communicator”: he
knew how
to fake
it
for the
cameras. Liberals were slow to appreciate Reagan’s mastery of the media, but Republicans quickly learned the impor-
tance of looking good on television - even
nothing behind the look.
More than any
if
there
was
president before
him, Reagan was granted an important concession by the public.
He
convinced people that
dent’s function to policy.
The
know
details
president’s job
was
it
was not
and argue
fine points of
to unfurl a
broad vision,
to surround that vision with catch phrases
182
the presi-
and glowing
The Liberal Failure of Nerve rhetoric, to cheer or to
condemn
in lofty terms,
make
sweeping announcements, smile, frown, and wave goodbye. In short, the president should not be required to do
more than read
from the teleprompter and look sincere in staged television events. Reagan, who remained popular to the end of his term, gave the public a licence his lines
for electing presidents
In
who
simply looked presidential.
one pathetic but highly revealing episode that few years after he had left the presidency, Reagan
came a was called back before the Congress to answer questions about what came to be called the Iran-Contra scandal. Some people (myself included) believe Iran-Contra was the most blatant and serious blow to constitutional government in American history. It involved a secret government working out of the White House basement. This shadowy operation had raised illicit funds by selling armaments to Iran; they then used the money to finance a surreptitious war against a left-wing government in Nicaragua - even though the Congress had expressly
banned such aid. It was also soliciting large contributions of money from wealthy Republican supporters to arm and supply the Nicaraguan Contras, a guerrilla force opposing the ruling Sandinistas. In effect, Reagan’s agents were using the presidency to raise money without going to the Congress - an egregious violation of the Constitution. When Reagan was called upon to give fur-
wagged his head, looked befuddled, and claimed that he had never really understood the matter - or what was illegal about it. And he seemed to be telling the truth. In any event, there was
ther details about the effort, he
never any indication that Reagan’s supporters held Iran-
Contra against him.
“America is essentially a conservative country,” Reagan conservatives proclaimed. And astonishingly, as 183
WORLD, BEWARE! Reagan’s popularity grew, liberals of that period were
They began to retreat even before the most inane Reagan policies, convinced that conservatives had now found a
willing to
accept that assertion at face value.
winning political formula. Conservatives purported to have all the hot new that ideas the country needed: supply-side economics, family values, an uncompromising position on law enforcement, privatized social services,
deregulation, an expanded market economy.
one, on issue after issue, the right wing
One by
was
able to
argue that liberal social solutions were not working, despite
all
the
money
that
had been spent on them: not
in race relations, poverty, social security, health care, or
education. Conservatives presented liberals as emperors
and too many liberals agreed. The rise of the triumphalists had everything to do with the retreat of liberals on all fronts. The gestation stage for triumphalist dominance reaches back to the early years of the Reagan presidency. As Reaganites and triumphalists won ever more ground on domestic policy, they opened up a frontier for
who wore no
clothes,
militarized foreign-policy initiatives.
Somewhere
in the
mid-1980s, position papers began to circulate through
Reagan administration advocating an aggressive new phase in foreign affairs, starting with a more threatening the
posture towards the failing Soviet Union. These papers
documents for the triumphalist that came to fruition under George W. Bush. are the founding
policies
STANDING UP FOR THE WHITE MAN The triumphalists clarity.”
But
more than
like to praise
in truth
Reagan
for his
“moral
Reagan’s morality was often
little
a petulant appeal to self-interest. His thinly
184
The Liberal Failure of Nerve disguised racism
is
a
again Reagan played
prowling the for strict
dramatic case in point. Again and
upon white
streets of
America’s
fears of black criminals cities.
When
he called
law enforcement, he was endorsing the Archie
Bunker conviction among whites that they were being pushed around by blacks and haughty white politicians
who
sided with blacks. His successor, the
George Bush, used a similar tactic in his 1988 presidential campaign. His most effective television commercials featured the scowling face of a black convict
who had
first
named Willy Horton
been pardoned, as the law mandated, by Bush’s
Democratic
rival,
the
very
liberal
governor of Mas-
Soon after his release, Horton raped a white woman. The message was a typical Reagan-Republican exercise in hate and fear-mongering. Their message was: “Liberals care more about black rapists than about us good white folks. Liberals would take our guns away and then turn black criminals loose to rob and kill us.” The Reagan Republicans skilfully found ways of blaming the black victims of racism and standing up for the white man. Reagan’s special target was the many liberal measures aimed at racial justice, a central concern of youthful protest during the 1960s. He came out firmly against affirmative action programs that offered racial minorities advantages in education and employment, characterizing these as anti-white. He also opposed programs for the “forced busing” of white children to distant schools in black neighbourhoods, programs aimed at achieving racial balance in the classroom. Reagan gave voice to the feeling that programs like these had gone too far, that they were working against the interests of white Americans. He used them as prime examples of his contention that “government is the problem, not the solusachusetts.
tion.”
185
WORLD, BEWARE! Liberals badly miscalculated the effectiveness of Rea-
on racial issues with both working-class and middle-class suburban voters. By the time Reagan left the White House, conservatives were casting liberals as villains for even attempting to achieve racial justice in America. To do that was to abandon the majority of white citizens who believed that the government had already done more than enough to help African-Americans. Perhaps gan’s appeal
there
is
est in
such a thing as ethical fatigue: people losing
an
by the 1980s
was
seems to ask too
issue that
racial justice, as a
clearly beginning to lose
the public
was simply
again and again, as
make up
much
of them.
moral cause appeal.
its
A
in
interIf so,
America,
large part of
same grievances not enough could ever be done to
tired of hearing the
if
for the great sin of slavery.
If
anything, “reverse
racism” - policies that favoured African-Americans over whites - was the urgent issue for
by then a black middle
who seemed
many
class of
to be living proof
-
if
tive
was
educated professionals
one looked no further
back - that racism was a thing of the licans
whites. There
past. Indeed,
Repub-
have made a point of showcasing solidly conserva-
African-Americans in the party as examples of black
support.
The
first
George Bush even managed to saddle
Supreme Court justice (Clarence Thomas) who is possibly the most reactionary judge ever to serve on the high court. Meanwhile, liberals failed to the country with a black
clarify the
many forms
the country
males into
many
of covert racism that
still
existed in
and that were often driving young black
lives
of crime in search of quick riches. That
black neighbourhoods throughout the country were
on which petty drug wars took the lives of thousands of young men each year came to be seen as a matter of personal failure on the part of the victims, still
killing fields
rather than as a social issue.
186
The Liberal Failure of Nerve an
In targeting race as liberal sore spot.
the end of
issue,
Reagan touched upon
For most of the twentieth century -
World War
II
parties could pretend to
- neither of the major
a
until
political
have a creditable record on race.
Indeed, the Republicans simply ignored the issue, even
though they were originally the party of Abraham Lincoln,
born out of a movement to abolish
after the Civil
War
the Republicans
slavery.
But soon
became the party of
on the industrial cities of the North and with only minor organization in the Deep big business, wholly focused
South.
In
state
after
state
throughout the South, the
Democratic Party became the party of white supremacy. remained that way
New
all
It
through the years of the Roosevelt
Deal, which, for
all
its
daring innovation, never
addressed issues of segregation, lynching, or
civil rights.
Roosevelt was too dependent on Southern Democrats in
Congress to challenge their social system.
The two movements that have had the most to do with shaping American liberalism are the Populist and Progressive movements of the late nineteenth century, both of which have dubious histories on race relations. Progressives
may have been courageous
they could also be bigoted and white,
Anglo-Saxon,
Many came from
elitist.
protestant,
reformers, but
They tended
to be
and highly educated.
They saw racial and ethnic minorities as part of the “shame of the cities” - places of debauchery, corruption, and crime. Even great Progressive heros like Woodrow Wilson were capable of making slurring remarks about immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe; and it was Wilson, a Virginian, who imposed Jim Crow segregation on the city of Washington, D.C. small towns.
Progressivism carried with
As
it
a dark heritage of racism.
for the Populists, these
ers of the late nineteenth
were the embattled farm-
century
187
who saw
their political
WORLD, BEWARE! power fading away before the advance of industrial interests. Their angry campaign to “soak the rich” failed badly; the power of the trusts and the voting power of the big cities were too great for them to overthrow. While the Populists can be cast in the role of heroic underdogs, the
movement was
severely inhospitable to non-whites in the
South. Indeed,
many Southern
farmers finally refused to
from the North and West because they would not make common cause with black farmers. The New Deal, to its shame, never took up the issue of race for fear of alienating the “solid South” on which its politijoin with Populists
cal
power
significantly rested.
That
left
race as a festering
sore in the Democratic Party until the post-World period,
when
War
II
democrats were willing to gamble on
liberal
losing their political base in the South in order to carry rights
civil
and voting
lose the South.
It
rights legislation.
And
Republican
steadily drifted into the
camp, where concern for
racial justice has
they did
been
all
but
totally absent.
where race is concerned, the difference between the major political parties could not be greater. Thanks to its liberal wing, the Democratic Party has maintained a strong commitment to the country’s racial minorities. Democrats come as close to being a multicultural party of the poor and working-class population as any major party in the country’s history. Because too few blacks and Hispanics turn out to vote, Democrats suffer Today,
for that orientation.
On
- and the triumphalists
the other hand, the Republicans
who
run the Republican Party -
have been eager to exploit race as a “wedge issue” that divides people against one another. So far this tactic has
worked very well their
own
for the conservatives.
interests,
Though
poor Southern whites
it
hurts
(especially
males) simply refuse to join with black voters in asserting
188
The Liberal Failure of Nerve their needs. Instead, they side
with the party of the cor-
porados and triumphalists. The anti-government stance of the Republicans appeals to these resentful whites
know
Democrats will use taxation as a way of transferring income to blacks. Hence, from Ronald Reagan forward, Republicans have railed against taxation and against all the programs that taxes support. because they
that
In the United States, conservatives have succeeded in
making
the phrase “class warfare”
seem unpardonably
Marxism
that has been swept
impolite, a vestige of the
from the ners,
if
political landscape.
It
considered bad man-
is
not downright un-American, to suggest that the
and the poor have divergent interests. For this reason, one would not expect American politics to be highly divisive. Yet it has become embittered in a largely senseless way! Conservatives insist that a yawning gulf divides them from liberals; they like to portray the choice between themselves and liberals as a struggle between what they define as “freedom” and some dark and terrible alternative. The names for that alternative sound quite dramatic: “slavery serfdom dictatorship Big Brother government.” But what this great threat to freedom finally amounts to is often nothing more than raising enough tax dollars to finance the retirement of the rich
.
elderly, to
.
.
.
.
.
.
provide decent health care for the nation’s
dren, to build
some badly needed
mail delivery.
How
.
.
chil-
schools, or to improve
threatening are programs like this?
them as being too expensive or inefficient, they hardly amount to a totalitarian onslaught. Yet as modest and as moderate as liberalism has become, Even
if
you
reject
conservatives cation that
What
still
it is
is it,
refer to
it
as “the left,” with the impli-
radical, disloyal, subversive.
then, that accounts for the emotional heat
that parts liberals
from conservatives?
189
I
think
it
is
the
WORLD, BEWARE! submerged issue of race that is being played out again and again behind every debate that touches upon fairness, the redistribution of wealth, and the role of the government.
THE THIRD PHASE OF RACISM Institutionalized racial injustice
heart
of the
is
the dirty secret at the
triumphalist ascendancy.
Thanks
course that conservatism has taken over the years, the United States
is
now
in the third
last
ships arrived
from Africa four centuries ago.
was
Then
there
was Jim Crow
America’s version of apartheid. presidency of the 1980s,
Now,
we have
the
twenty
phase of the
racism that has plagued this country since the
slavery.
to
first
slave
First there
segregation,
since the
Reagan
entered a phase that
manages to be mystifying and vicious at the same time. The mystification has to do with the existence of a number of high-earning African-American athletes and media stars; the viciousness has to do with African-Americans who fall short of being superstars. That includes nearly 70 percent of black children who still live below the poverty line. This is a peculiarly American solution to a serious social issue. That a small percentage of AfricanAmericans have had the talent and drive to achieve high success means that those left behind have only themselves to blame. And being left behind is a matter of life and death. In a nation in which whites enjoy a life expectancy that reaches the high seventies, the average black male cannot expect to live beyond fifty-nine. This might be called racial
Darwinism.
In the days before the Civil War, white Southerners
were pleased to believe that blacks were a childish and primitive people who were intended by nature to be
190
The Liberal Failure of Nerve days of Jim Crow, whites enjoyed
slaves. Later, in the
shows that depicted blacks
minstrel
minded
folk
players have
who
as happy, simple-
liked to be laughed at.
come
to
Now,
as black
dominate many professional sports
(whites are a distinct minority in basketball, football,
and
and Hispanics) and as more and more black performers appear in movies and on television, Americans are free to believe that racism no longer exists. Indeed, the glowing success of a Tiger Woods or Denzel Washington probably fuels the resentment of many poor and struggling whites who believe baseball, well behind blacks
that the system unfairly favours African-Americans.
What
remains hidden beneath the surface of American
life
is
underway by the right wing to disenfranchise African-Americans, and in so doing to cripple liberal programs that serve the interests of the poor and
the aggressive effort
disadvantaged. At the heart of this effort
is
the prison
system.
The United
States has the second-largest prison pop-
ulation in the world:
people behind bars.
made up 35 make up 65
women jail
A
million.
Only Russia has more
half-century ago, in 1950, blacks
now they black men and
percent of the prison population; percent - with over a million
in prison.
than
two
There are indeed more black males
in college.
This
is
the direct result of the law-
enforcement campaign that Ronald Reagan launched the 1980s, with especially
its
purpose of cracking
drug possession.
in
down on
From 1985
to
in
crime,
1991
the
African-American prison population rose by over 450 percent as judges imposed ever harsher sentences, espe-
on young black men. Many of those sentenced to long terms were guilty of minor, drug-related offences. With some equivocation, President Clinton finally went along with the Republicans. Seeking to improve his cially
191
WORLD, BEWARE! call for
“tough-on-crime” image, Clinton joined the
more
severe sentencing. In the United States, going to political
has far-reaching
jail
consequences. In forty-eight states, incarcerated
criminals cannot vote; in thirty-seven states, those released
on parole
still
office.
A
in fourteen states, ex-con-
permanently barred from voting or holding
are
victs
cannot vote; and
total of 4.4 million
Americans, most of them
blacks, have been disenfranchised in this way. In states (mainly in the South)
some
30 to 40 percent of African-
American men have been denied the
right to vote because
they have a prison record. In Florida, one of every four
black
men
has lost the right to vote.
If
that were not the
Democratic candidate A1 Gore would certainly have carried the state of Florida in 2000 and become presi-
case,
dent. Florida
is
among
the states that have introduced a
computerized “felony-disenfranchisement” voting system.
When
voters present themselves at polls,
database checks to see
if
a
computer
they have prison records any-
where in the country. If so, they are not permitted to vote; and that is what happened to thousands of AfricanAmericans in the 2000 presidential election. The program, primarily used to check on black voters, is, perhaps deliberately, highly error-prone. nificant
numbers of voters
as
It
misidentifies sig-
former criminals and so
provides grounds for the officials at the voting station to
Overwhelmingly these rejected voters are blacks who would have voted Democratic. The felony-disenfranchisement voting program is becoming
deny them a
ballot.
more popular with each passing are considering adopting
There
is
election. Several states
it.
a great deal of
money
to be
made from
mass incarceration of black criminals. The United has been experiencing a “prison
192
boom”
the
States
over the past
The Liberal Failure of Nerve twenty years. As the prison population grows, more need to be
built.
An
increasing
number
of these
jails
jails
are
government and run on a for-profit basis. Prisoners are, after all, an excellent source of cheap labour. Whole communities can prosper by agreeing to provide a home for a state or federal prison. Prisoners, who cannot vote, are nevertheless private businesses subsidized by the
counted as part of the local population for purposes of
which increases the community’s share of fedmoney for roads, parks, water projects, and other
the census, eral
amenities that the prisoners never have the chance to use.
Moreover, jailhouse communities receive special govern-
ment
subsidies to run the prison
and employ personnel.
Prison-guard unions across the United States are a powerful
lobby that invests heavily
They
are
among
in the nation.
the
The
in
political
most highly paid public employees
U.S. criminal justice system has been
called the “prison-industrial complex,”
tary-industrial
campaigns.
complex
it is
and
like the mili-
the focus of vested interests.
In this case there are people
who
profit
from having
a
and growing number of prisoners behind bars. It is also a welcome bonus for conservatives that so many of large
the convicts are African-Americans fice their
who
are apt to sacri-
voting rights as part of their punishment.
The United
States
is
a nation of frightened people,
and nothing frightens them more than crime in the streets. I confess to sharing that fear. There are neighbourhoods in my area where I would never go walking.
The town next door to me, Oakland, California, is the “murder capital” of the United States. Every year hundreds of people are gunned down on the streets of Oakland. The deaths are mainly among young, black men
who
are involved in “turf wars” for the control of local
drug-trafficking. But, as violent as the United States
193
may
WORLD, BEWARE! be,
have come to
I
many
feel
no
safer because
we have
built so
prisons, for eventually the criminals finish their
same
sentences and return to the streets to find the
squalor and demoralization.
Conservatives like to argue that nobody has to be a criminal; those
who
are convicted
and imprisoned have
only themselves to blame. But the racial bias of our incarcerated population raises serious doubts. There
is
clearly
a social issue here that relates to poverty, prejudice,
more people that issue? Does
injustice. Is putting
we can
find for
and
in jail the best solution
the disenfranchising of
way of strengthening The money that goes into
millions of those people provide a their
sense of citizenship?
building prisons and warehousing convicts usually comes
out of programs for drug education and treatment, social rehabilitation,
or
job-training.
These are exactly the
kinds of “big government” programs that conservatives despise and refuse to support with their taxes.
would rather use
the
money
to punish.
They
The crowning
irony of that position shows up in the true cost of the prison-industrial complex. Keeping people in
jail
costs
anywhere from $25,000 to $40,000 per prisoner per year. If
we
simply offered that
people as a yearly income,
we might
of dealing with poverty and
Many
much money
its
to distressed
be doing a better job
repercussions.
factors have shifted the United States further
and further
to the right.
I
have mentioned the influence
European academics and intellectuals of the World War II era had on the younger generation of trithat exiled
umphalists. But there
is
conservatives to steal a
something more that has allowed
march on
their liberal opposition.
The buried issue of race still smoulders in the depths of the American soul. Nothing calls the honesty and general intelligence of conservative voters more into question 194
The Liberal Failure of Nerve than their unwillingness to admit the veiled racism of the party they support.
THE MORAL ASYMMETRY OF AMERICAN POLITICS Future historians will surely regard the deluge of Bush-
bashing books and films that appeared
in
2004
remarkable cultural phenomenon, a tribute to the
as
a
vitality
of U.S. publishing and the surviving political literacy of
may
the public. But they
why
find themselves puzzling over
on Bush ultimately had so little effect on his political base. They may conclude that 2004 was the year in which partisan polarization spun out of control, the point at which persuasion and dialogue - always in short supply - became things of the past. this assault
Behind
all
the
Bush-bashing of the election year
stands the same idealistic assumption that once inspired the muckrakers of old: the public will rise
up
in
if
only
we can
get the truth out,
wrath and drive the “lying
liars”
from power. For that matter, Bush’s handlers make the same assumption. That is why they labour so strenuously to exploit sent.
the latest techniques for manufacturing con-
all
But what
if
both sides are wrong about
how much
can be achieved by shocking revelations on film or print?
What
if
to be lied to?
George Bush’s
What
if
his
political base never
in
needed
people have recognized the
lies
and cover stories for what they are all along? That might explain why, despite Fahrenheit 9/1 1 and all the other enraged documentaries (the best of which, incidentally,
is
Hijacking Catastrophe by the Media Education Fund), the polls never stopped reflecting unswerving strong popular support for Bush’s “leadership,”
and why he contin-
ues to find cheering crowds, especially at military bases
195
WORLD, BEWARE! where troops destined give their
commander
to be delivered to the terrorists in chief the big “hu-ah.”
people are not deceived. They
know
exactly
These
what Bush
is
- and they approve. And here we have the root cause of polarization, the difference that has set political left and right in the United States at one another’s throats. There is a fundamental moral asymmetry between left and right in the
up
to
United States. Vietnam-era liberals
through the anguish of losing turning against
Chicago
in
it.
The crowds
like
myself suffered
faith in their party
and
that took to the streets of
1968, demonstrating outside the Democratic
Party convention, were not irate conservatives; they were conscience-stricken liberals
who were
prepared to
sacri-
an election victory - and with it Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society agenda - on an issue of principle. Looking
fice
back, Republicans might want to thank people like the
young John Kerry and the Vietnam Veterans for Peace. Their opposition, primarily on the anti-war side in 1972, cost the Democratic Party dearly and launched the country
towards the great conservative backlash of the Rea-
gan presidency. For that matter,
liberals
were doing electoral favours
Grand Old Party (gop) long before Vietnam. One of my earliest political memories is the Democratic convention of 1948. With my ear glued to the radio, I recall how Hubert Humphrey galvanized the party liberals to push through a strong civil-rights platform against powfor the
erful recall
Southern opposition.
my
How thrilling,
I
thought. But
I
Roosevelt-Democrat father fuming, “They’re
throwing away the election!” Following the adoption of
wing of the party walked out on the convention. It looked as if my father might be right. (Incidentally, the Dixiecrat candidate in 1948 was that platform, the Dixiecrat
1 96
The Liberal Failure of Nerve Strom Thurmond, destined to become a Republican stalwart.) Harry Truman won that election, but in the end principled liberal support for civil rights led to Barry
Goldwater’s
Sunbelt
“Southern strategy,” the of
disgruntled
and Richard Nixon’s steps towards a new South
coalition
white
first
When Lyndon Johnson
voters.
signed the 1964 Voting Rights Act, he remarked “I think
we
just delivered the
time to come.”
South to the Republicans for
Few would
a long
think of LBJ as a moral hero,
and the gop was on its way to becoming the most monoracial party since Reconstrucbut he did sign the
bill,
tion.
Here
is
what
I
think most infuriates liberals. They
up against a Republican opposition that has shown no comparable willingness to risk party unity on a matter of conscience - nothing that compares to the sacrifice are
that liberals were willing to
make over
Vietnam. Republicans have had no
and swallowing
civil rights
difficulty
McCarthyism and Watergate. Indeed, the relentless effort to impeach Bill Clinton was largely retaliation for what conservatives still see as the “persecuepisodes like
tion” of Richard Nixon. Others (like
now
Ann
Coulter) are
McCarthy, including his charge that liberals are “traitors.” Ronald Reagan went to his grave all but officially pardoned by Republitoiling to rehabilitate Senator Joe
cans for Iran-Contra.
We
group of Republicans
who
blemish,
let
have yet to see any sizeable will
admit to
a single
moral
alone display a willingness to defect.
Hardly surprising, then, that few Republicans play the least discomfort over a
an obvious hoax. Bush’s
that liberals see as
political base has
ologically entrenched that
it is
become so
During the Cold War,
wingers purported to be horrified by the
197
ide-
willing to offer his admin-
istration a blank ethical check.
right
war
dis-
way
WORLD, BEWARE! Communists bowed
How
to the iron discipline of the party.
could people abase themselves so abjectly? Well,
their
own conduct would seem
And
the loyal moderates
to answer that question.
among them would do purged first by Communist
well to
remember who got zealots once the dust had cleared. The moderates, of course. Which is exactly what we see happening now as Republican ultra-conservatives declare open season on “rhinos” (as
they
moderates) in their
call
own
party. After
all,
to
Cheney savaged Jim Jeffords back in 2001 after the Vermont senator made a minor show of disobedience on an educational allocation. The wrath of liberals, their all but desperate willingness in 2004 to vote for any Democratic candidate who might defeat George W. Bush, arises because the Republicans have shown no sign of bona fides no willingness to stand up to malefactors and fanatics in their party’s leadtake just one example, Bush and
,
ership. Right wingers liberal
have registered the spleen of their
opponents, but have they recognized our honest
me
The Republican Party scares the living daylights out of me, and that has nothing to do with differing interpretations of The Federalist Papers. It has to do with the willingness of the Republican rank and file to pay any price for the sake of holding power. There is much talk of God and values on fear? Let
be the
to admit
first
it.
the right, but the ferocity of right-wing politics belies the sincerity of those professions for
As
a case in point, let
me
me.
offer the
Republican house
Tom
DeLay. There could be no better example of a “stupid white man” (to borrow Michael majority leader,
Moore’s Party)
label for those
the Republican
- provided that one recognizes that
of stupidity After
who dominate
all,
is
a certain kind
compatible with a certain kind of cunning.
politicians
like
DeLay helped capture
198
the
The Liberal Failure of Nerve Sunbelt for the Reagan
Republicans, along with the
DeLay
Archie-Bunker, working-class vote. strategist, no-
so high in
doubt about
American
on the part of
that.
But a yahoo
is
a
crafty
like this rises
only by criminal negligence
politics
his political party.
How could
any honest conservative fail to find DeLay an embarrassment to the country - in the same way that liberals
once found Mississippi Senator Theodore Bilbo a
national disgrace? There are
more
ever in the United States; there
is
college graduates than
world of information
a
media - and yet here we have a major political leader whose worldview is a bizarre stew of evangelical religion and social Darwinist business valavailable through the
ues. Balance,
moderation, and discriminating intelligence
play no role in his politics. This that the Environmental Protection lent of the als,
DeTay
is
a
man who
Agency
is
believes
the equiva-
Gestapo. Far from limiting his spleen to insisted that even
Newt
liber-
Gingrich, the ultra-
right-wing speaker of the House, did not qualify as a true conservative. After
all,
Gingrich called off the great gov-
ernment shutdown of 1995, which DeLay would have continued until hell froze over. In DeLay’s eyes, Gingrich
was
a “think-tank pontificator
and
a flake”
who
never
read the Bible. By the late 1990s, DeLay’s take-no-prison-
was well along towards giving the Republicans permanent control of Congress. Today in Washington, DeLay and his colleagues gov-
ers
political
style
ern with a winner-take-all ferocity, as
if
the Democratic
Party simply does not exist. They invite lobbyists to write
and give Democrats no chance to debate or amend. The secret of their success? Covertly, they draw upon the racist fears of rednecks and blue collars; but, overtly, they attribute their triumph to unswerving evangelical faith. This is the point at which the right wing legislation
199
WORLD, BEWARE! away
melts
who
into the lunatic fringe. DeLay,
attends Bible classes,
is
an
ally of the
Hagee’s Cornerstone Church in
Scfn
faithfully
Reverend John
Antonio, Texas. In
he fancies himself the Congressional voice
this capacity
of “God’s foreign policy,” which
demands
unstinting eco-
nomic and military support for Israeli hardliners from here to the Second Coming. The right wing of American politics today is a crazy quilt of single-issue voters, many of them gathered from
among nist,
disaffected Democrats.
anti-gay,
anti-tax,
anti-affirmative-action,
It is
the party of anti-femi-
anti-gun-control,
anti-Darwin,
anti-environment,
pro-prayers-
in-the-school, pro-faith-based-social-services electorates.
Maybe
this
but there
No
of winning elections,
was created in Amendment must be read rifles.
spectrum of
this
great Republican leader ever taught that
the world
assault
way
no philosophy that unites
is
discontent.
a deucedly clever
is
Raw
political
six
days or that the Second
as approval for the sale of
opportunism
is
the only glue
holding together this bundle of impassioned causes. As for Republican foreign policy, the neo-conservatives
engineered the Iraq war have not been
have
less
and
less
that secret
all
about their grandiose designs. As time goes
who
by, they
may
need for secrecy. The colonial pipe
dreams they are spinning
in
the Defense
Department
these days read like realpolitik
from the era of Cecil
Rhodes and Count von
When was
Biilow.
ever a Republican priority?
Why,
then, has
colonialism it
become
acceptable to moderates in the party to see the United States resurrect the discredited imperialism of the past
and, worse, to turn our nation’s military defence over to battalions
of privately
contracted troops?
If
the
tri-
umphalists manage to replace citizen soldiers with mercenaries
from many nations who are off-budget and whose
200
The Liberal Failure of Nerve casualties need not be reported, they will have
gone well
beyond Iran-Contra in removing control of our foreign policy, including war-making, from Congress and the people.
How
ple of limited
does that jibe with the conservative princi-
government?
Given the gravity of the constitutional these policies raise, one tives willing to join
would expect
issues that
to find conserva-
with liberals in declaring that the
Bush administration has gone too far. But given the unshakable loyalty of the Republican base, I cannot imagine that happening. Suppose, then, that Bush were to drop all pretences and simply declare, “Okay, you wanna know my domestic agenda? Here is it. Dick Cheney, Tom DeLay, and I aren’t just gonna defeat the liberals; we’re gonna obliterate them, along with every Progressive reform since the days of Teddy Roosevelt, every New Deal program, every Great Society entitle-
Why
do you think we’re running these skyhigh deficits? We’re handing as much dough as we can to the people who know how to run this country - namely the super-rich. Sure, that’s gonna cost the rest of you jobs and social services, but isn’t it worth it to give the poor, the non-white, the welfare queens, the gays, and the femment.
else
inazis a swift kick in the teeth?
“What’s
yank that because
oil
my
gonna out from under those dysfunctional Arabs
we need
foreign policy? Listen up. We’re
it
to preserve our gas-guzzling
and I’m not asking anybody
way
of
life
for a permission slip to
do
We’re God’s chosen people and we intend to make
that.
most of it. And if anybody gets in our way, we’ve got what it takes to clobber them. So start wavin’ those flags and singin’ those hymns, because isn’t it about time we stuck it to all them smug, Brie-eating, oh-so-sensitive, libthe
eral
wimps?” 201
WORLD, BEWARE! If
the Republican leadership took that line,
would
I
wonder
do not already have. And how many swing-voters might be won over by such decisive, non-flip-flopping leadership? As for the single-minded evangelicals who have become the key to any winning political strategy, the Republicans have them so locked in that even if Bush were discovered havif it
it
cost a single vote that they
ing lunch with the devil, they as long as he treated
them
would
still
vote for
him -
to an occasional kick at the
gays and the feminists.
By any defensible historical standard, we are living under the most ideologically aggressive regime since the Republican dominance of the 1920s. Its style comes straight out of the ceo’s how-to handbook. The compulsive boardroom secrecy and iron corporate discipline of this
administration break
all
records. So too does the
entrepreneurial back-scratching of the last four years,
beginning with Dick Cheney’s clandestine meetings with
moguls before Bush had been sworn into office. At those gatherings Cheney almost certainly guaranteed his cronies a free hand at bilking the public for billions - especially the ratepayers of California. And the country’s energy
how oil
can one not be curious about the maps of the Iraqi fields that were on the table at those meetings? Were
those perhaps investment brochures? In a very real sense, the health of our
may
democracy
hinge on the conscience of Republican moderates.
Only they can keep their party from being hijacked by crony capitalists and gay-and-feminist-bashing evangelicals. If they stand by and let the free market be recast as playground for greedy corporados who need not worry about competitive bidding or honest accounting, if they a
let
the fiscal conservatism that
their party be
drowned
was once
the hallmark of
in red ink, if they stand
202
by and
The Liberal Failure of Nerve watch the Patriot Act be used to squelch dissent, if they let neo-conservative advisers hand our foreign policy over to a militarized corporate elite, there will be no stopping the continued descent of American politics into the slough of megalomania. When polarization becomes as severe as it is in our country today, politics becomes pathological. Unprincipled campaign managers (and they exist in both parties)
and
slick spin doctors
become the
arbiters of elections.
honed to a high art, moderation becomes cowardice, war becomes the touchstone of patriotism. Worst of all, people lose sight not only of the common good but also of their own obvious interests, which Obfuscation
is
ought surely to include having retirement,
and health
care.
a steady job, a decent
At a minimum,
mean not sending their kids to get unknown in the streets of Baghdad.
203
killed
it
should
for reasons
SEVEN The Devolution of
American Democrat)
necessary to be a great pretender and dissembler;
“It is
and men are so simple and so subject to present that he
ties,
one
who
who
necessi-
seeks to deceive will always find some-
will allow himself to be deceived.”
Niccolo Machiavelli, The Trince
“The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country. We are governed, our minds are moulded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we .
.
.
have never heard of. This is a logical result of the way in which our democratic society is organized. Vast numbers of
human
beings must cooperate in this
manner
if
they
are to live together as a smoothly functioning society.
.
.
.
In almost every act of our daily lives,
whether in the sphere of politics or business, in our social conduct or our ethical thinking, we are dominated by the relatively small number of persons who understand the mental processes and social patterns of the masses. It is they who pull the wires which control the public mind.” .
.
.
Edward C. Bernays, founding
father of public relations,
Propaganda 1928 ,
The Devolution of American
D emocracy
FANTASY POLITICS
A
of-The twenty-first century, the American people are more highly educated than at any time s
in the nation’s history.
the country’s voters in
1960 was
less
now
More than 50
percent of
hold a college degree. (The figure
than 25 percent.) American universities
are overflowing with students preparing for professional
Every high-industrial economy requires such a
careers. skilled
workforce, but in the United States even white-col-
lar jobs
once held by high-school graduates - bank
insurance adjusters, junior executives versity degree.
new
the
The United
States
is
now
tellers,
require a uni-
also the heartland of
high-tech economic frontier, which
would be
unthinkable without an educated workforce.
One might have expected yield the
social facts like these to
most astute voting public
in the nation’s history.
Elections should have long since been characterized by serious intellectual debate, articulate
men and women
thirty years ago, as the
came flooding
into the
hands and
their
and those who win should be
social idealism,
Some
younger generation of that day
world with university degrees
at least
many
of high intelligence.
in
a passing acquaintance with
of us thought
we were on our way
which the brute deception and crass dishonesty of the past would rapidly fade from
to
an enlightened society
in
the political scene. Instead,
devolution,
and
we have seen democracy go into a steep a downward spiral that has allowed knaves
fools to continue exploiting the populace. Elections
in the
United States are becoming intellectually shoddier
with each passing year. They seem designed to bring out all
the worst in the voting public.
Campaigns have been
swallowed up by the media and placed
205
in the
hands of
WORLD, BEWARE! the
same commercial
interests that
market
all
other prod-
Meanwhile, the highly educated Americans who emerged from the 1960s grew up to become - by and large - an overworked, overbusy, menucts in the United States.
and physically fatigued population of workaholics
tally
struggling to build careers,
manage
their investment port-
take advantage of the real estate market, and plan
folios,
a comfortable retirement.
As
for their children, the so-
called Generation X, they have
become something
still
- again, by and large -
sadder: a bewildered, job-worried
collection of resentful cynics
who seem
human
all
culture
is
bounded on
to believe that
four sides by the World
Wide Web. For them, the graphic design of a clever website is worth more time and attention than any of a hundred great books. As a tinction
between
been
always endangered
politics, advertising,
has finally vanished. higher
result, the
We
dis-
and entertainment
have entered the realm of the
form of electronic philistinism that has commercialized and made politically ser-
illiteracy, a
efficiently
viceable.
This
began
the culmination of an
is
in the
ominous trend
that
United States in the early twentieth century.
Warren G. Harding, a bland, undistinguished senator from Ohio, became the first pres-
In the election of 1920,
idential candidate to hire his
an advertising agency to handle
campaign. The firm was noted for having made a suc-
Harding brought
cess of a toothpaste called Pepsodent.
only one quality to the campaign: he looked presidential.
Handsome,
and square-jawed, he might have been supplied for the role by central casting in Hollywood. But behind his imposing face, he was one of the stupidest
silver-haired,
men
ever to hold public office.
By
his
own
understood almost nothing about the
admission,
he
paramount
issues of the day.
He was
206
a
heavy drinker, a
The
D evolution
of American
D emocracy
womanizer, and a compulsive poker player. His closest political friends - the “Ohio gang,” as they came to be called
- were, crooks
who would
various acts of corruption,
later be
some of those
imprisoned for acts
committed
White House under the president’s nose. But thanks to clever packaging and promotion, Harding won the election and in so doing pointed the way forward. in
the
His victory inspired the next president-to-be, Coolidge,
who was among
dates ever to reside in
Calvin
most colourless candithe White House, to take the same the
approach. Coolidge, indeed, hired the best to run his
campaign: Edward Bernays.
The Austrian-born Bernays
is
often regarded as the
founder of the public relations industry; he
is
certainly
one of the greatest advertising talents of the twentieth
more important, he was among the first to recognize that what advertising was to economics, propaganda was to politics. He not only foresaw that convercentury. But
gence of public relations and public policy, but also wel-
comed it as the best hope for making democracy work. He was convinced that the future of democratic societies depended upon “the engineering of consent” by political leaders. Therefore,
men
like himself, experts in fine-tun-
and choices, would become a new elite, using sophisticated psychological methods to manufacture consensus. As he put it, “If we understand the mechanism and motives of the group mind, it is now posing people’s tastes
sible to control
will
and regiment the masses according
without their knowing It is
it.”
when Bernays government during World War
to Franklin Roosevelt’s credit that
offered his services to the II,
to our
the public relations master
may have understood than Thomas Jefferson
to say, Bernays
racy better
was turned away.
207
But, sad
democor James Madison.
the future of
WORLD, BEWARE! From
1920s onward, more and more candidates
the
manage
campaigns and produce their television and radio materials. By the close of the twentieth century, political campaigning had become in every respect a marketing exercise in which everything depends on imagery and subliminal enlisted advertising talent to
their
persuasion.
Democracy has always demanded more of its citizens than liberal political philosophers have wanted to admit. While
it
may
not require vast erudition or expert knowl-
edge to cast an intelligent vote,
amount
of
common
it
does require a certain
sense and basic education.
requires fundamental character traits,
firm sense of one’s
own
identity
and
It
among which
also is
a
a clear understand-
ing of one’s authentic needs. “Identity,” as
I
speak of
it
means knowing what you share with others on the basis of class, race, gender, and ethnicity, as well as your peculiar and autonomous qualities as an individual. It means having a firm idea of your rights and your responsibilities in the commonwealth. These are not things that here,
need to be learned
in school; they
enough upon immediate identities
reflection.
should be apparent
And when
people’s
have been violated and their needs have gone
unmet, the pain that results should be as
hunger we
real
as the
when we have been deprived of food. But what happens when society spawns an entire feel
whose purpose it is to manipulate people’s identity and fill their minds with false needs? That is, of course, the role of advertising. Advertising, which seems inseparable from a highly developed consumer economy, industry
uses every psychological tool at identity.
It
its
disposal to reshape
presents people with alluring images, with
men and women like, live like. It
they
feel
they ought to look
like, act
conjures up needs for the commodities
208
it
The Devolution of American is
out to
searches for
sell. It
human
D emocracy
weaknesses;
ways of exploiting the reflexes that lead people and purchase. Advertising is expert deception sake of profit. But
commodities
its
in the
same techniques themselves. For
it
finds
to crave for the
techniques need not be limited to Politicians can use the
marketplace.
to sell their programs, their policies, is
not voting a great deal
like
and
shopping?
Today in the United States, candidates are programmed and scripted from first to last. They have to look good on television, they have to choose exactly the right words and phrases. A clever (meaning well-rehearsed) retort or sound-bite in a debate counts for more than substance. Political speeches are tested word by word on focus groups - small groups of supposedly average voters
who
respond to what the candidate says by pressing but-
tons to indicate their approval or disapproval of words or
phrases they like or dislike. George W. Bush, for example,
words “moms and dads” for “parents” in his speeches because it had a better sound to focus groups. Policies and military campaigns are named
was advised
to substitute the
with an eye to
how
Storm
Freedom.” There are marketing
who
.
.
.
Iraqi
they will play in the media. “Desert
specialize in syllables
convey the right
mood
the
history
letters.
Which sounds
or feeling for a product or an idea?
“K” sounds crisp and and relaxing. In
and even
specialists
“m” sounds soothing
businesslike,
thought,
of political
expected to see democracy come
down
nobody ever
to such profes-
sional trickery. But “selling” a policy has always borne an
uncomfortable similarity to cars.
It
merged
was only
selling
a matter of time before the
into a single profession.
us into the
soap or clothes or
And who
wonderland of fantasy
communicator himself? 209
politics
two were
better to usher
than the great
WORLD, BEWARE! Ronald Reagan’s fantasy
politics
culminated
in
his
election to the presidency in 1980. In that election there
were three important candidates: a Republican, a Democrat,
and an Independent.
gamed
In the final tabulation,
Reagan
the votes of only 28 percent of the country’s eligi-
more than half of the country’s eligible voters turned out to vote. The number of votes he drew was lower than the number of the non-voting near-majority. That was a turning point in American history. From the 1980 election onward, nonvoting became, as one analyst put it, “the largest mass movement of our time.” But in 1980 that made no great difference to Reagan or to the Republican Party. Actor that he was, Reagan pretended that he had been elected by a landslide. He interpreted the election as a mandate ble voters in
an election
in
which only
a bit
to repeal every piece of social legislation passed since the
Roosevelt
New
Deal. His speech writers even quoted
Roosevelt in support of Reagan’s plans. Such obvious
seemed to overshadow Reagan’s immense popularity. The media generally regarded him as above criticism, too dear to the hearts of most Americans to be faulted for his often inane and ignorant fraudulence
never
remarks. Reagan’s presidency marked the beginning of an
ominous trend
in
American
politics: the
of sheer fantasy into politics - as politics
to
unfold
like
a
if
movie.
brazen intrusion
people wanted their
At times
Reagan’s
behaviour bordered on delusion. For example, he claimed
World War II hero. When he led the nation in commemorating the fortieth anniversary of DDay, he did so as if he had himself been there for the invasion. Of course this was not true. Reagan had played the role of a soldier in some of his movies, but he had to have been a
never served
overseas.
Bewilderingly,
210
the
mainstream
The Devolution of American
D emocracy
media never called his claims into doubt - as if that might be too unkind. In the mid-1980s Reagan threw his full support behind the astronomically expensive Strategic Defense
At the time there was a clear consensus among scientists and technicians (at least those who were not on the payroll of the military-industrial complex) that no such weapon could be built. Nevertheless, Reagan presented the public with computer simulations showing a Initiative.
system that was
much
infallible.
The simulations looked very
like the special effects
then being featured in
sci-
ence fiction movies - hence the nickname “Star Wars,” originally coined by the press to emphasize the flashy,
Once again
futuristic character of the system.
proved willing to accept a fantasy,
the public
in this case a fantasy
would have cost over $1 trillion. Had the Soviet Union not collapsed during Reagan’s term, the United States would very likely have undertaken to build the that
SDI.
1984 Reagan launched an attack upon the tiny Caribbean island of Grenada, claiming that Cuban troops on the island were holding U.S. students captive. That was untrue, but Reagan pretended that it was a fact. For this role, he was given a marvellous new movie set: a state-of-the-art war room in the White House cluttered with television screens, maps, and the very best communications equipment. It might have been a movie In
set.
Here, as
commander
in chief,
he was shown suppos-
edly co-ordinating manoeuvres as the marines to
moved
in
defend America from the godless communist foe.
When
had cleared, it was revealed that there were no Cuban troops on Grenada. There had been some Cuban workers on the island helping to build an airport runway, but no danger greater than that. Grenada was a the dust
211
WORLD, BEWARE! fantasy war, but the American public accepted
it
as a
little
wars
great victory.
There have been other examples of neat
The elder George Bush staged such a war in Panama, swooping in overnight to capture the disagreeable dictator Manuel Noriega. President Clinton staged bombing raids in Somalia and in the Balkans that were like this.
carried out without U.S. casualties. Then, in April 2003,
only days after Baghdad had been occupied, George W.
Bush sought to out-Reagan Reagan by staging ular military photo-op.
He
a spectac-
flew to an aircraft carrier sup-
posedly well out at sea to announce victory in Iraq. Bush,
who had
never seen military action, purported to have
been at the controls of the plane that landed him on the
deck of the
carrier.
below
a
troops
who
He
alighted in a flight suit and helmet
banner that read “Mission Accomplished.” The the ship sent
filled
commander
played; the
up
in chief
declaring that “major fighting” in
a wild cheer; the
band
gave a rousing speech Iraq was over - words
he would later regret. It
was
a pure fantasy
had simply was he somewhere far out the plane; he
offshore. His press corps
moment. Bush had not
piloted
sat in the co-pilot’s seat. at sea;
Nor
he was only a few miles
had arranged
for the carrier to
be turned around so that the television cameras on board
would not show the city of San Diego in the background. Can fraudulent nonsense like this win elections and determine policy? The answer is yes. The hucksters who run campaigns have even perfected the fine art of driving voters away. to
draw
as
no sense
many
to
is
own
it is
there a
in
the object
voters as possible,
do anything that
nent’s vote. If
turnout,
of your
If
will increase
it
is
makes
your oppo-
your interest to produce a low voter
way
of discouraging voting?
212
Of
course
D emocracy
The Devolution of American there
is.
Simply make voting seem too disgusting, too
demeaning, above
all
ative.” In negative
too
futile.
This
is
called “going neg-
campaigning, issues are never raised
or debated. Instead, a candidate simply spreads a thick layer of scandal or criminality over the
opponent with
a
view to driving away the opponent’s supporters. Obvican be self-defeating. If both candidates take course - as is now invariably the case - the result is
ously, this this
to drive
away more and more
voters.
And
that
is
exactly
what has been happening as non-voting increases. To be sure, there are countless well-read, thoughtful, and discerning Americans - but not enough of them to carry decisive weight in the country’s political election
provides
where the
power waves
party in
who)
those
the
who
In
the flag
any
and
scapegoat (communists, terrorists, welfare
a
mothers, immigrants, gays, feminists ... ter
life.
yahoo element
will
it
does not mat-
almost always outvote
have actually read the Constitution of the
United States,
know enough
history to
name
four presi-
and can locate China on a map of the world. The depth of volatile ignorance under which most of the American electorate functions is a matter of record. There are fewer serious magazines and newspapers with each passing year; those that survive must make do with dwindling readerships. Meanwhile, trashy publications wholly devoted to .trivia, celebrity, and personal vanity dominate whatever is left of the reading market. Television now provides Americans with most of what they know about the world, but most of what passes for dents,
crowded with local scandals, sensational crimes, frivolity, and endless commercials. A typical news program - and very few people below the age of thirty-five watch any kind of news in the United States - spends most of its time on stories that can be captured “news” on the screen
is
213
WORLD, BEWARE! on videotape, preferably
exciting, salacious, or violent
There are car chases, shootouts, drug busts, fires, robberies, and rapes, each given several minutes of detailed reporting and interviews from eyewitnesses. “Talking heads” - meaning analysis and opinion - is events.
anathema.
The major networks handled the war in Iraq as a big production number. Ace reporters accepted the invitation of the military to be “embedded” in units that went to war. The result was a tight, exciting focus on action, but with very little perspective and next to no critical coverage of the politics behind the war. And that was as good as it got. As it turned out, most Americans watched the war transpire, not on the major networks, where there is still
a marginal willingness to raise a
few
critical
ques-
on Rupert Murdoch’s Fox television network. Fox was designed to appeal to “the young demographic,” meaning audiences (mainly male) between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five. Most of its programs are little tions, but
better than trash.
ber 11, the Gulf
When
big stories
War - Fox
come along - Septem-
switches over to twenty-four-
hour, saturation coverage, but the coverage action,
human
interest,
and patriotism. Fox
flag-waving and battle scenes.
It
is
geared to
likes lots of
uses the current style of
crowding the screen with a confusing mix of images: two or three pictures, a crawl at the bottom of the screen, headlines and lists, all competing with one another to
The result is an assault on the attention span that makes complex analysis or even minimal continuity impossible. Such commentary as there may be is brash, abrasive, and solidly jingoistic. How do people survive from day to day when offered such a feeble grip on reality? It may be that they balance catch the eye.
one delusion against another, offsetting confusion with
214
D emocracy
The Devolution of American consolation. for
And by
Americans
the
is
most consoling delusion of
far the
hope of getting
all
lucky. In the nine-
teenth century- the author Horatio Alger wrote over three
hundred books
same
for children. All of his
books told the
how a starving street urchin rose from rags to his own efforts. Alger stamped an identity on the
story:
riches
by
United States that
holds sway: America, the land of
still
opportunity, America, the place where self-improvement
pays if
For generations Americans have been taught that
off.
they
work hard and remain
covered and rewarded.
A
delusionary thinking, are
patient, they too will be dis-
great still
many Americans,
telling
beset by
themselves that same
seem to believe that they are already rich. In 2001 a major news magazine ran a public opinion poll asking the question, “Are you among the richest 1 percent of the population?” Almost 20 percent believed story. Indeed, they
they were; another 20 percent said they expected to be in the top
1
percent sometime in the near future. This poll
on the order of 40 percent of the public - which would amount to well over one hundred million people - place themselves in that exalted rank. Perhaps that finding explains why so many Americans approved the sweeping tax cuts carried out by the Bush administration. They even approved of repealing suggests that something
the inheritance tax,
Any number ily
which
of critics have
favour the top
1
paid only by millionaires.
is
warned
that these cuts heav-
percent of the population. But appar-
number of Americans believe they are percent. They have even approved of abol-
ently a substantial
part of that
1
ishing the estate tax, an inheritance tax that falls
on only
the very wealthiest citizens.
Today
in those states
pay higher taxes,
means of
where people have refused
state lotteries
have been introduced as a
raising revenues for schools
2I
5
to
and other
social
WORLD, BEWARE! needs.
Many
Americans play the
money
laying out a great deal of
lottery compulsively,
to
buy
tickets.
who
play regularly wind up paying out far
they
would otherwise pay
growing
in popularity,
in taxes.
But
Those
more than
lotteries
keep
because they hold out the promise
win millions of dollars. The big winners - those who win over a hundred million dollars - are invariably shown on the television news smiling and cheering. Their stories join those of the successful movie actors or rock stars or athletes who fought their way to the top and now make millions. There are now highly popular television shows that feature amateur performers out to win the applause and approval of the that
some one person
will
watching audience. People are invited to vote for favourite
singer,
musician,
or comedian.
their
The winner
becomes an “icon” and is awarded contracts, tours, television appearances. The shows serve to instil the ethos of success. They proclaim that opportunity is still there, waiting for every American who has the drive and the talent to go after it. The implication is clear: only losers need social programs. If you are not a success, that must be your fault. I would not be surprised to learn that those who phone in to vote for the performer of their choice regard that act as a significant democratic exercise.
an With each passing
year, politicians
and
political parties in
up in elections whose costs mount steadily. Races for major governorships and Senate seats can cost a hundred million dollars. Presidential campaigns run into many hundreds of milthe United States find themselves caught
lions.
What
is
the
money used 216
for? Primarily to
pay for
D emocracy
The Devolution of American coverage in the media, which
from
political
campaigns,
now
earn enormous profits candidates
forcing
pay
to
must compete with commercial advertising. Though the issue receives practically no attention, this is prices that
in fact
an outrageous practice. Technically, the broadcast
airwaves belong to the people and must be used to serve the public interest. During elections the airwaves ought to he available to candidates free of charge, but that possibility
time
has long since been forgotten.
rolls
When campaign
around, the media expect to be paid hand-
somely for running announcements and commercials for the candidates. a
They
bridle at
few presidential debates for
making time available which they are not - as
for
yet
- paid.
The high cost of the media makes candidates ever more indebted to those who have money, and that is the corporations, many of which now routinely give to both political parties (though more to Republicans than Democrats) to make sure they
will
ence in the next administration.
have access and It
also
influ-
makes them
beholden to the image and fantasy-making talents that have mastered the media. Since the days of Ronald Reagan, campaign commercials have
become
steadily slicker:
camera angles, the right sound-bites, the right editing. As with all merchandising, the major goal of a political campaign is to gam push-button control over the attention and the responses of the consuming public. That includes finding ways of finessing the pubjust the right
lic’s
scepticism.
Like
all
advertising, political advertising
now
begins
with the assumption that people are on their guard, that they recognize phoniness a mile away, that they
know
they are being lied to and manipulated. The pitch, therefore, begins
from
there.
By
a strange tacit agreement, the
217
WORLD, BEWARE! audience for such material seems to acquiesce in paying attention
and even being persuaded - provided we
by agreeing that we are participating
start
in a
all
mutually
demeaning exercise that has no relationship to truth or decency. Who’s fooling whom? It is hard to say. But one thing is certain: cynicism has become the coin of the political realm. The result is that, with each election, the public - battered by deception and obfuscation - agrees to
dumb down A
still
more.
NATION LOST
IN
THE FICTIVE ZONE
In a viable democracy, there
is
no
gence. But in our time intelligence
substitute for intelli-
up against a monster of its own making. For the sake of fun and profit, people in the high industrial societies - and none more so than the people of the United States - have ensconced themselves in a Active zone, a
is
worldwide electronic environ-
ment in which everything can be simulated, enhanced, cut and edited, adjusted, tweaked, upgraded, improved. One can no longer assume that any photograph, any television or film footage,
may
all
a picture of the real thing.
have been redesigned
room. But lated,
is
how
if
in the
camera or the cutting
everything including real
can you
tell
possible that simulation
life
when something is
better
,
It
more
can be simuisn't}
Or
exciting,
is
it
more
immediately gratifying?
As
a writer
I
have occasion to appear on radio and
television for interviews.
The people
I
meet working
in
media are almost invariably smarter than they let themselves seem to their audience. On screen or on the page, they talk down, lest they overload us. The demographics tell them that we prefer to wallow in the Active zone. As far back as the mid-1970s, Paddy Chayefsky the
218
The Devolution of American Network
D emocracy
media would soon become a madcap carnival in which the news would be invented and re-enacted, scripted and hyped. Journalists would be replaced by mimics and actors. The audience predicted in his film
would be given what
it
that the
wanted.
News would
be whatever
draws the highest ratings. Another film, David Mamet’s Wag the Dog, is a mordant commentary on how Chayevsky’s
Mamet
prediction
has
played
out.
In
the
film,
imagines that an embattled president distracts the
public’s attention
from
his sexual
misconduct by hiring a
Hollywood producer to stage a war on television. The ruse works. The public accepts the war as a real event. As the key adviser in the movie keeps repeating: “It must be true. They saw it on television.” At the time the film was released, President Clinton was ordering bombing raids in the Balkans, perhaps
hoping to distract the pub-
from the sex scandal that was just then brewing in the White House. Life imitating art. Are the media masters right in assuming the public prefers fluff and sound-bites, simulations and celebrities? I often wonder if there is something about electronic media that embalms the mind. Once when I appeared for a brief interview on the Today show, a major network production, I found myself looking out on a plaza just behind the cameras where a few hundred people show up every morning to cheer, wear wacky hats, and hold up funny banners. Doing their best to act zany, they hope to lic
camera for that split second before the commercial break. They want so fiercely to share a few crumbs of celebrity exposure. “Take me deeper,” they seem to be saying, “deeper into get their faces in front of the roving
the fictive zone.”
At the extreme, such sensational coverage merges with “reality television,” the most popular and successful
219
WORLD, BEWARE! programming
in the
United States
filled
The
shows came from Europe:
original inspiration for reality
programs
in recent years.
with amateurs recruited for their looks or
on whose unrehearsed antics the audience can eavesdrop. The programs promise their audiences a chance to spy on people’s most intimate or idiotic activities. The great appeal of the shows seems to
their general zaniness
the
be the possibility that
audience will be able to
observe beautiful young people fornicating. This
enough
are in fact highly edited is
fraudulent,
and
their
enough, the audience knows
Most
of the
it
shows
carefully cast. Their spon-
candour contrived. Oddly all this,
but
with the deception. Again, one wonders
whom.
bad
as a substitute for decent entertainment; worse,
has blurred the meaning of “reality.”
taneity
is
it
plays along
who
is
fooling
In a recent poll, younger viewers admitted that
they watch television to escape the problems of the day.
And where do
they turn for escape? To reality television.
Inevitably, politics has picked
up the character of
programming. Political candidates are now filmed round the clock by reporters with mini-cams, often very intrusively. Some have complained that they must now assume they are being filmed during every waking hour and that the least mistake or foolish remark or awkward expression may wind up on television. That is exactly the
reality
style of reality television.
What can
the result of this be
but that eventually political success will require the ability to
alert,
to
endure 24/7 video coverage and to look smart,
charming? Either
demand
that, or the candidates will
have
the right to edit the footage.
from the pressures of daily life, the Internet has proven to be a godsend - especially for the most desperate among them. There have been any number of reports about the addictive spell that Internet For those seeking
relief
220
The Devolution of American activities
D emocracy
such as chat rooms and auctions
now
exert over
an audience of millions. Role-playing games have become particularly enticing. These games - often filled with fabulous creatures and fantastic situations - can go on indef-
absorbing hours of time each day. Though most
initely,
of these
drawn
games were developed
a substantial
number
for adolescents, they have
of adult players. Those
who
pursue the games assert that they provide a chance to “get out of themselves,” to live another
ous
life.
dence
Of
course,
all
they are doing
in the fictive zone. It
American troops
kill
and
is
is
more adventurtaking up
a jarring thought.
resi-
While
die in distant lands in obedi-
ence to policies that cry out for intense debate, millions
home
and masked villains through chimerical landscapes, hoping to find hidden treasure, magic implements, and cosmic glory in a of citizens back
galaxy
far, far
are chasing dragons
away.
Sometimes the fantasies carry over into real life in ways that are of great consequence. Consider the fascination that Americans have developed for the suv - the sport utility vehicle, the worst gas-guzzling cars ever produced. The Bush administration came to office promising to free the nation
Hence,
its
from
its
dependence on foreign
plans for developing
oil
fields in
oil.
wilderness
same time, U.S. automakers have been promoting suvs, which rarely get more than ten miles to a gallon of gas. They are heavy, four-wheeldrive cars mounted on the frame of a truck. They were areas and offshore. At the
developed for rugged, off-the-road travel rain: deserts,
in
rough
ter-
mountains, swamps. Very few drivers use
their
suvs for such driving. Most suv drivers are women,
who
use the cars to drive to the mall or to deliver their
children to school. These vehicles are as expensive to run as they are to buy, but
Americans,
221
in the early years of
WORLD, BEWARE! Bush administration, turned them into the most popular cars on the market. What is the appeal of the suv to these drivers? The answer is: the car provides the illusion of power and
the
invulnerability.
It
has the
feel
of a military vehicle.
One
marketing expert has recommended building the cars even larger and mounting a
The
mock gun
turret
on
top.
And
and heaviest of the line, the Hummer, was patterned on the HumVee, which is now being used in Iraq by U.S. forces, suvs are not safe that has happened.
they tend to
roll
largest
over in accidents - but no matter. The
what counts. On freeways or even on city streets, American drivers delight in the illusion of intimidating size and weight. That is exactly what commercials for suvs emphasize: images of drivers racing across open fields, across rivers, over rocky mountain passes, shooting past other smaller cars, forcing them to the side of the road. It would be no exaggeration to say that the fantasy
is
price for these fantasies
Middle
is
being paid in blood in the
East.
McLuhan once
media “the extensions of man.” But extensions of what? Folly, greed, vanMarshall
ity,
called
desperation? It is
one of the great and troubling paradoxes of the
modern world. As the experience of the world’s urban billions is more and more filtered through media that can manipulate their materials with ever greater cunning, people have
less
contact with the reality outside their
minds. Yet where the defence of one’s basic interests
concerned - earning a
living, staying healthy, raising chil-
and sanity - there is no substimaking discriminating judgments about real
dren, preserving dignity tute
for
is
problems.
222
The Devolution of American
D emocracy
ENTER THE TERMINATOR Once, not long ago,
I
would have
Reagan
said that the
presidency was as extreme as delusionary thinking could
become
United States. The whimsy and wishful-
in the
ness that surrounded this sadly incompetent
man
still
ranks as an alarming testimony to the gullibility of the
worse was yet to come, and it came California. There in the fall of 2003 a recall election
American in
was held
public. But
that
made Arnold Schwarzenegger governor
of
most educated, and most demographically varied of all the states. It was an event that embodies everything that has gone wrong with the democratic the largest, richest,
process in the United States. Recall elections were a major reform of the early
twentieth century, an effort to achieve what the leaders of the Progressive
Movement
democracy.”
lot-box
Recalls
of that period called “bal-
allow
the
replace elected officials before their term
2003 the
is
electorate
to
finished. Until
had never been used to remove a governor in California. But in that year a combination of factors led to a financial crisis that overwhelmed the Democratic governor, who had been elected only one year before.
recall
The main ingredient of
that crisis
was
the col-
dot-com boom that had vastly enriched California through the 1990s. With the collapse of hundreds lapse of the
of Internet companies, California lost
much
of
its
tax
base and began to run short of funds. This was not a
unique misfortune; other states suffered a similar
loss of
tax revenue. But the high-tech recession hurt California,
home of Silicon Valley, worst of all. Nor was the dot-com bust the only nia’s financial
cause of Califor-
woes. Quite as important was the energy
crisis that hit the
state in the year
223
2001. As
we have
WORLD, BEWARE! noted, that crisis
was engineered by
a small
number
of
companies that had campaigned to deregulate the California energy market and then deliberately created shortages that drove the price of electricity and natural gas sky high. California’s governor,
tion
was taking
aware that price manipula-
place, appealed strenuously to federal
regulators in Washington to intervene and stabilize the
market. Meanwhile, the state assumed responsibility for
and buying electricity at the best price available. The new Bush administration refused to help California, insisting that such aid would be a violation of the free market. All the while, Vice-President Cheney was among those working with the energy companies to exploit Califinding
fornia.
The was
result of the
dot-com bust and the energy
The budget taxes, but Repub-
a state deficit of alarming proportions.
gap might have been closed by a
rise in
licans in the California state legislature,
the try,
crisis
most adamantly conservative
who
are
among
politicians in the coun-
refused to allow a tax increase. Instead, they
went
blame for California’s fiscal debacle on him. A Republican millionaire provided the money to launch a state-wide recall campaign. Less than a million signatures were required to place the recall on the ballot; even so, the recall petition might not have after the governor,
heaping the
full
Arnold Schwarzenegger had not signalled that he would be willing to run in the election. Schwarzenegger, a body-builder and action-hero
carried
if
movie star, might seem like an unlikely candidate by any intelligent set of standards. He had no previous political experience and had never publicly addressed a significant issue. Still he had been hinting at running for office - either for governor or senator - for several years.
Once he entered
the recall election, the popular
224
The Devolution of American
D emocracy
among Democrats and Republicans alike was overwhelmingly enthusiastic. Though his campaign was
response
about giving power back
a tissue-thin -fabric of cliches
to the people, he
one end of the
was cheered by excited throngs from
state to the other.
He
affected a populist
stance, accusing the politicians of creating a “mess,” but
never once did he indicate
On
mess.
most other
how
to say he
He
lem.
was vague and non-coma demand for more clarity
issues he
mittal. His usual response to
was
he would clean up that
would appoint people
to study the prob-
refused to debate with other candidates and
carefully avoided press conferences. Instead, Schwarzenegger found
ing the public.
He appeared on
new ways
of reach-
television talk shows,
where he was eagerly welcomed as a celebrity. That was where he announced his candidacy and where he worked to build his public image, political outsider. In these
away from light
appearances he veered sharply
serious political matters
and stayed
close to
and movie gossip. He also camshopping malls, where he staged large rallies
humour, small
paigned in
which was that of an angry
talk,
drew people who would never attend a more conventional political gathering and many of whom had given up on voting. He was especially popular among young voters who were fans of his movies. Perhaps there that
is
this
much one can
result of his
unusual campaign
draw members
None tactics
give Schwarzenegger credit for: the
may
indeed have been to
of the non-voting public into the election.
of Schwarzenegger’s evasive and obfuscating
counted against him. Voters did not seem to care
what he knew or did not know about any
He
clearly
relevant issue.
understood almost nothing about finance or
legislation, but that
longed to stand
in his
made no
difference. People simply
presence and share his celebrity. At
225
WORLD, BEWARE! one point questions were raised about
women sets.
his
treatment of
during his body-building days and later on movie
women came
Several
forward to accuse him of grop-
and abusing them. Schwarzenegger admitted that he had. But his supporters - including his female supporters ing
- brushed the issue aside, as if that kind of behaviour was what one must expect from a movie star. Indeed, his womanizing and his admission of group sex were seen as part of his macho image, which was his main appeal to the electorate. After an abbreviated campaign, he won a decisive victory in the election.
What
accounts for Schwarzenegger’s meteoric suc-
cess in his first political exercise?
The answer
is
“star
power.” Schwarzenegger’s handlers cloaked their candidate in the persona that he brought with
him from
film roles. “Arnold,” as he prefers to be called,
He
Terminator.”
He
“Conan
is
“Hercules” and “The
is
his
‘The
Commando.”
and “The Last Action Hero.” He has tried to soften this image by making a few comedies, but his political image is that of the superhuman brute. Throughout his campaign he referred conis
the Barbarian”
stantly to the action roles, often quoting lines
from
his
movies. His stance was that of an invincible tough guy, the outsider
who makes
his
own
rules
opposition. Did his supporters expect
and annihilates
him
all
go to the
to
Sacramento and beat the politicians into submission? Submission to what? Even that did not seem state capital in
to matter, for Schwarzenegger never indicated
what he
planned to do as governor except “clean up the mess.” Star
power was
And
it
is
all
star
he needed.
power
that Schwarzenegger continues
to use as a threat to his political opponents. to accept his leadership
and defer to
If
they refuse
his priorities,
he will
“go to the people.” Meaning he will use the ballot
226
The Devolution of American Democracy which,
initiative,
like
the
recall
election,
is
another
reform of the Progressive Movement. The electorate votes
directly
becomes
a
on
a
ballot
initiative.
law that overrides
all
approved,
If
it
other legislation. “Going
means participating in local campaigns to use star power to defeat opposing politicians and replace them with members of the governor’s party. to the people”
On
the surface, tactics like this
democratic. first
also
When
the recall
invented, they were
and the
meant
may
look admirably
ballot initiative
were
to be forms of “direct
democracy” that would recapture American politics from party bosses and their big business supporters. They were intended to break the control of
But
in
money over government.
we have a very different use instruments. Combined with star power
Schwarzenegger’s case
of these political
and the contributions of wealthy supporters, they have become a way of corrupting what remains of the democratic process. For, as it turns out, Schwarzenegger is little
most moneyed interests in the country. Though he promised he would use his own
more than
money
the facade for the
to run his campaign, he immediately accepted con-
tributions
from the business and
whose goals he seeks
real
estate
interests
to promote. His so-called solution to
the California budget crisis
was
to
make
severe cuts in
health and education, in programs for the elderly and the
same time refusing to raise taxes on the wealthy. This is little more than standard right-wing politics, but star power clouds that reality. Like Ronald Reagan before him, Schwarzenegger invited voters to associate him with his movie roles. They had seen him flatten his enemies on the big screen and so they expected him to do the same in real life. How excitgoing to the ing that would be! Why, it would be like disabled, while at the
.
movies!
And who
can say
how 227
.
.
far he will be able to ride
WORLD, BEWARE! on the delusionary thinking that seems so dominant among the American public? No sooner did he win the recall election than Republicans in the Congress began to about repealing the constitutional provision that excludes foreign-born citizens from holding the presi-
talk
Ronald Reagan could leap from being governor of California to the presidency, why not Arnold dency. After
all, if
the action hero?
As Schwarzenegger’s success makes
clear, the
obses-
sion with celebrities has reached a pathological extreme in the
United States. Celebrities -
as people
who
are in such
are well
demand by
known the
who
have been defined for being well known -
media that
it
seems there are
no longer enough of them to go around. Television shows and magazines now compete fiercely to get “AList” names and faces before the public, paying ever higher fees. The same may be true of other countries in which the media play a larger and larger role in daily life. But the disease is more serious in the United States, where celebrities now threaten to invade politics and turn government into a form of entertainment. In the years ahead it may well be the case that, as politics and show business grow ever more intertwined, actors will crowd out politicians. Washington has been called “Hollywood for ugly people.” Well, what if beautiful people from Hollywood get interested in replacing those ugly people in Washington en masse? Constant rumours now circulate about movie stars
who
are preparing to run for various political offices
around the country. No doubt they would follow the lead of Reagan and Schwarzenegger. The whole purpose of their campaigns would be to submerge themselves in their movie personas. They would use the mesmerizing power of the big screen to overwhelm their opposition.
228
D evolution
The After
all, if
of American
Schwarzenegger, an actor
D emocracy who
specializes in
playing inarticulate thugs and robots, can win public
how much more
approval,
who have been There is now serious
so those
as wise, charming, or fatherly?
cast talk
among Republicans about running the talk-show hostess Oprah Winfrey for the Senate or even the presidency. She most popular entertainer in the land especially with women. Her persona is that of a friendly, compassionate millionaire - a winning combination. Others believe that the actor Martin Sheen should run is,
after
all,
the
for president because he has played the part of a presi-
show The West Wing. He certainly looks presidential - and isn’t that what matters most? Perhaps we are seeing a new third party born in the United States: the movie star party. I have no doubt that it would sweep dent on the hit
the country.
With each passing year, American television presents more and more “awards shows,” modelled on the motion picture Academy Awards. It does not seem to matter what the awards are for; people simply enjoy the vicarious thrill of seeing famous people win prizes. The shows are little more than a glitzy and mindless parade of celebrities
shows
is
dressed in expensive clothes.
One
of these
an annual popularity contest called the People’s
done by phone or on-line by the audience. The winner can be any celebrity who is well-liked by enough people. Clint Eastwood has won the prize. So have Tom Hanks and Bill Choice Award. In
this case, the voting
Cosby and
Roberts.
once.
Julia
Maybe
this
is
is
Oprah has won more than
the future of democracy:
no
issues,
no debates, no thinking. Simply let the people choose their favourite celebrities and let the celebrities become our political leaders.
Welcome
to
life
in the Active zone.
229
WORLD, BEWARE! The public can be quite fickle about its likes and dislikes. As rapidly as it can make celebrities, it can tire of them and There
is
spurn them.
of course one
A
drawback
to star power.
facade with nothing behind
it
is
easily
overturned. In the blink of an eye, the hero can become a
bum.
A
COMMUNITY OF RAGE
This book - seemingly - offers a harsh evaluation of the
American public, of which, I must remind myself, I am a member. But beyond the ignorance and cynicism I target here for criticism,
I
believe there lies a deeper explanation
for the political incompetence that dominates try. It
my
coun-
has to do with anger - with justifiable anger.
we can
anger that
understand and
all
in
which we
all
An par-
ticipate.
some
from popular culture. Since the early 1970s, the U.S. movie industry has produced a steady stream of Dirty Harry Death Wish Die Hard movies grounded in “damn-’em-all” distrust of the system - any system. It is a central feature of such vigilante movies that the brutal and dim-witted heroes Start with
lessons
,
have
little
justification to offer for their usually massively
contempt
destructive behaviour except
makes no as
it
,
for authority.
difference: the public applauds
does any irate voice
it
It
them anyway,
hears on the broadcast band.
Generic in-your-face rage has become the staple of talk
and phone-in radio. Pit-bull commentators fill the air waves with vituperation, goading their listeners to ever higher levels of outrage. Being serious means getting mad and talking tough.
Where
is all
coming from? Some of it might account for. The gangsta rap that
the rage
seem easy enough
to
230
The Devolution of American comes pounding out of
my
radio as
I
D emocracy
sweep the
dial cata-
logues familiar objects of black rage: police, landlords,
employers, crack-dealers. The flagging progress of racial
America gives more than enough reason
justice in
content in that quarter. Sadly enough, black
come
good deal of male abuse
in for a
for dis-
women
also
in these lyrics,
which suggests that at its extreme the anger transcends politics. Beyond the indignation of the rapsters, we have the angry white guys, “Wiggers” like the rapper
Eminem.
But experts do not agree on where their ugly
comes from. Could
mood
have to do with jobs and income? There are pollsters who say “no” - not primarily. They it
report that whatever white males it
has
that,
to
little
as
may
be incensed about,
do with the economy. The
pollsters believe
with the evangelical Christians and National
Rifle Association, the source of
white male fury has more
do with emotionally explosive issues of gays, guns, and God. I would not so lightly dismiss the economic origins of public discontent. But I would agree that there may be other, less rational forces at work, igniting the wrath that fills the air around us. Much of the anger resonates with what historian Richard Hofstadter once called “the paranoid style” in American politics, a bottom-dog sense of being victimized by privileged elites that dates back at to
least to the
days of the Populist
movement
in the nine-
teenth century. Different victims target different
though there culprits.
The
for example,
and
is
a
fbi
elites,
growing consensus about some of the
and the International Monetary Fund,
rank high among the grievances of both
left
right.
But
it
begs the question to write
noia.” There are
elites;
all this
off as “para-
they really exist - and they strive
to further their interests. Scandals like Watergate
23
and
WORLD, BEWARE! Iran-Contra have produced ample evidence of efforts to a
create
secret
government
Washington. Even the
in
lumpen-intellectual militia groups, in their indiscriminate suspicion,
may
And
be justified in some of their fears.
then there has been the wave of financial scandals that has erupted on Wall Street, in every case proving that
when men
in expensive suits gather in secret, they are
very likely up to no good. All this
is
reason enough for
anger.
There may, however, be lated forces at
work
in the
anxieties that connect us
still
other, less easily articu-
depths of the public mind,
all in
a
growing community of
rage,
and which go well beyond anything that
fixed
by finding somebody to blame. One factor
sure
there: intellectual
is
There
Harpo
is
a scene in a
will be I
am
embarrassment.
Marx
Brothers
picks up a book, stares into
it,
comedy
in
becomes
which
furious,
and begins tearing the thing to shreds. An astonished onlooker says to Chico, “Say! He must really hate what he read there.”
Chico answers: “No.
He
just
mad
gets
at
books
itself in
some-
because he can’t read.” I
suspect the American public finds
thing very like Harpo’s position.
We
are
all
staring into a
book we cannot understand and experiencing a bewildered fury. It is called An Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth. That was the title that Buckminster Fuller, the visionary technician, used for a slender volume published in 1969 that made him one of the prophets of the ebullient sixties and seventies. Though he was a great bamboozler, Fuller radiated
an infectious confidence that sent
people away feeling at least momentarily hopeful. “Spaceship Earth,” the phrase he coined,
was
a marvellously
catchy figure of speech, offering a simple mechanical
232
The Devolution of American model Fuller
D emocracy
worldwide industrial system. The Earth, u announced, is a mechanical vehicle just like an for the
automobile.” All this
celestial
bmw
required of us
is
that
do that? Simple. We need “a design and invention revolution.” And where will that come from? From “powerful thought tools.” Such it
be “serviced in total.”
And how
to
as? “Topology, geodesics, synergetics, general systems the-
That was
making the world a more efficient mechanism. All we needed to do was to put our “thought tools” to work on the banking and finance ory.”
Fuller’s solution to
networks, the great technological systems, the natural
environment. Fuller
sound so easy. But those who were operating manual were destined to dis-
made
it all
studying his
left
human understand human
beings can create systems
cover a sobering truth:
do not
that
beings and will not serve
their needs.
That was where the
ment began.
We
a Frankenstein’s
Why
realized that Spaceship Earth
way.
does intellectual embarrassment
It
was
really
monster that was running out of control.
angry? Because ignorance hurts. sible
embarrass-
intellectual
It
make
us so
hurts in the worst pos-
disempowers and humiliates.
It
undermines
the basic biological urge of adulthood: the need to be a
responsible parent. In times past,
asking
how
when
children
came
had reasonably
the world worked, parents
They knew basic, pragmatic things about the seasons and the migration of herds and the planting of crops. They had durable skills to teach. Makfunctional answers.
ing
fire,
river.
tracking animals, raiding the tribe just across the
Grown-ups knew how
to
manage
these things. Peo-
ple can take great pride in that simple parental act of
passing the as
now,
life
skills
of their culture along.
was precarious; but when
Of
233
went wrong, forces beyond
things
people could attribute their bad luck to
course, then
WORLD, BEWARE! human
control.
At which point they resorted to prayer
and expiation, hoped for the best, and waited for the crisis to pass. The result might be calamitous, but then no one assumed that human beings had built the world and were supposed to know how to fix it when it malfunctioned.
A
proper humility in the face of great trouble can
go a long way towards assuaging frustration.
Today our children come to us with very different questions. They ask about inscrutable technologies that were not repair.
Or
built
non-technicians to
for
understand or
they ask about news of the day that often tran-
okay to eat genetically modified foods? What should we do about the balance of trade? Why is gatt a good thing? What is acid rain, what is ozone depletion? Is the globe warming scends the competence of experts. “Is
Why
or cooling? Israel?
Why
are
did those
Trade Center?
Why
it
all
these people being killed in
men
crash airplanes into the World
did you lose your job, daddy?”
A
lot
come up with adequate answers to questhese. Or worse still, maybe we sometimes
of us cannot tions like
sense that there
is
no point
in asking questions
because
we nor our children will understand the answers when we hear them. I suspect so many people are desperately trying to neither
master the Internet these days because they hope there
is
magic machine somewhere that will tell them all they need to know about this big confusing world. But what a
they find along the information superhighway
is
more
technological dependency: computer protocols, networking complexities, faulty connections,
and constantly
shift-
ing interfaces that are even harder to master than their
vcr line,
even
controls.
And
what they
much
if
they do finally succeed in getting on-
find there
reliable
is
not truth and
information,
234
wisdom
or
but a great deal of
The empty
D evolution
chat,
many
of American
trivial
D emocracy
pursuits, lots of angry folks
flaming away.
High tech both symbolizes and anchors the spreading sense of helplessness that bedevils people - which is not the same as saying that it causes the problem. The computer is the signature technology of our era in the same way that the steam engine was the centrepiece of the Industrial Revolution. We know from everyday observation that computers are important. We see them everywhere around us. In the workplace, people are required to be proficient in their use and to keep upgrading that
skill.
Otherwise, one might be fired for not hav-
Windows. But
ing learned the latest version of
as a solu-
tion to our intellectual embarrassment, high tech
makes
matters worse by confronting us with ever-increasing levels
of complexity.
One
brings a computer
home
only to
discover within a few months’ time that nothing works as advertised.
The
parts are incompatible; the error mes-
sages that flash across the screen are as inscrutable as
pronouncements by the oracle of Delphi. So people buy books with titles like The Internet for Dummies or The Complete Idiot's Guide to Windows. Purchasing books like these is an open confession of powerlessness
we
in the face of the
simply have to master.
I
technology
suspect the
we
are told
books only
meant to relieve, because even books written for “dummies” are hard to understand, or follow. What sort of “help” do they offer? increase the anxiety they are
Redraw your desktop. Purge all the your machine. Update your spam filter. Fine-
Revise your pif viruses in
file.
machine lock up or slow pace. Simple enough for hackers, per-
tune your memory,
down
to a snail’s
lest
the
haps, but are the rest of us expected to have the time or skill
to
do
all this?
235
WORLD, BEWARE! The alienating and stupefying relationship between people and high tech is unique in the history of industrial technology. The steam engine, the locomotive, the automobile, the airplane, the assembly
powerful, were not they revealed
that difficult to understand. Often
all
moving
all their
while big and
line,
parts in the open; or, as in
the case of household appliances, their uses were singular
and simple. You plugged them in, turned them on, and forgot about them. Nobody had to be “refrigerator-literdocumentation to run What one needed to know about
ate,” or study encyclopaedia-sized
their
vacuum
cleaner.
these machines could be set
down
in a small
explained by a few diagrams. Even
more than
technicians
knew
the rest of us did about mysterious gadgets
and
no one thought of such people soaring geniuses; nobody had to envy or fear their
like radios
as
if
booklet and
television,
expertise.
How
does one deal with a general, all-pervading
sense of powerlessness, especially one’s ignorance
advantage? ing
is
going wrong.
of staving off humiliation
blame
to
suspects that
being exploited by others to their
One way
someone
when one
for everything that
Any convenient scapegoat
is
by
find-
seems to be
will do: illegal
immigrants, homosexuals, welfare cheats.
If all else fails,
there are always the know-it-all politicians
who
keep
promising to make us happier and more secure, but whose programs always fall short. When it comes to attacking politicians, cians,
we have
a zealous ally: other politi-
always eager to indulge in partisan
vilification.
There are more than enough scapegoats available, but none of them can dispel the spreading sense of infuriating ignorance because that ignorance industrial society.
Washington
is
One
that
is
built into high
of the cliches of current debate in
the
Democrats are the party of
236
The Devolution of American
D emocracy
“dependency.” Dependency can be a mortifying condition for
grown-up
lives.
who want to tearing down
citizens
But short of
bound
feel in
charge of their
the global industrial
on vast systems of investment, communication, production, and distribution. Making government “smaller,” especially if that means indiscriminate decimation of public services order, our lives are
to be dependent
do no good, because inherently big. Take away big
and regulatory protection, urban-industrial society
is
government, and we will be
will
face to face with the
raw
corporate power that fostered big government in the
first
left
place and with even less control over those interests than
we had I
before.
am
impressed by
how we
use the
word “smart”
Smart machines, smart systems, smart weapons. But what a high industrial society needs most is smart people. Indeed, the smarter the machines become, the smarter the people must be to keep the machines under control. But in a society where intelligence is what we need, there is clearly a growing sense that too many of us are coming up short. I am speaking of technological dependency and intellectual embarrassment as I see them around me in the United States. But the community of rage may be a worldthese
days.
wide condition. Industrial society may have reached
boundary condition:
who
it
is
a
outdistancing the intelligence
and the forbearance of those who look to it for all good things. At that point, ignorance and anger begin to amplify; competence vanishes at the top and compliance seeps away at the bottom until the system becomes unmanageable and ungovernable. What do we find just below the sleek surface of the information society? Bedlam, Babel, Pandemonium. Terrorism is now supposed to be the one dominating of those
invented
it
237
WORLD, BEWARE!
We
thought on the mind of the American people.
are
and anger because of what Osama bin Laden and his henchmen, hidden away in some mountain wilderness beyond the supposed to be
Hindu Kush,
living in a vigilant state of fear
are plotting to do. But
Americans most fear
terror
our door lurking
side
in the
is
it
may
nearer home.
be that the
It is
just out-
mechanisms of everyday
life.
THE PERFECT AUTHORITARIAN STORM “They hate us and they hate freedom and they hate people who embrace freedom.”
W. Bush, interviewed on A1 Arabiya television, May 6, 2004
President George
If
the
war
in Iraq
policy, that
with
was
all
stood by
itself as
would be enough
an issue of foreign
to fire
American
the moral heat of another Vietnam. But
politics
Vietnam
a shared liberal-conservative responsibility, as
much
John Foster Dulles, Republican secretary of state (1953-59), as Robert McNamara, the Democratic secretary of defense (1961-68). Iraq is a far more troubling story. In marked contrast to the way in which the Democrats imploded over Vietnam, this war is being led the fault of
by a
political party that
cipline
associated
in
has achieved the sort of iron
times past with
dis-
Bolsheviks and
Maoists. As the unilateral and pre-emptive policy of a rigidly ideological party,
Gulf
War
II
was powered by
a
perfect storm of highly conservative social forces that are
bound
to shape our culture as well as our politics for
years to come.
That
is
terly ironic.
tion”
of
what makes
We
Iraq
the party line
bit-
and again that the “libera“freedom on the march.”
are told again
symbolizes
on the war so
238
D emocracy
The Devolution of American Democracy -
like
it
or not -
is
the Christian God’s gift to
Middle East. The terrorindeed, what President Bush
the dysfunctional nations of the ist
hatred of 'freedom
war
thinks his
world
in Iraq
is all
infested with
is
is,
The
about. Just that.
who want
bad guys
to
Islamic free
kill
people - a rationale that elicited a witty rebuttal from the
Muslim for a
terrorist in chief.
man
make
as
I
good word
hesitate to say a
bloody-minded as Osama
bm
Laden, but he
October 30, 2004, preelection address to the American people: “Contrary to did
a telling point in his
Bush’s claim that did
not
we
Sweden.”
attack
seems to be
bm
hate freedom,
(That
hollowing World psychologists led by called
him
tell
remark,
us
why we
incidentally,
Laden’s only clear statement that he was
responsible for the attack on the
type
let
War
II,
a
Center.)
group of Lrankfurt
Theodor Adorno created
“authoritarian
the
World Trade
personality”
social
a character
that
they
hoped would explain the appeal of totalitarian movements like Naziism. In later years their work was seen as too polemically Marxist to qualify as objective psychology. (Conservatives especially bridled at being assigned a
high “fascist receptivity” quotient.) But
now
that
we
find
ourselves in the hands of a triumphalist regime that has
achieved so impressive a consensus
among
U.S. voters,
I
wonder if it might be time to revisit the issues raised by Adorno and company. Even when polls reflect doubts about the war,
it
is
the absence of speedy success that
troubles people, not the underlying policy.
Look behind what you find is
the catch-phrases of official policy
and
a cross-section of the anti-democratic
forces that have turned the
gop
into the
most monolithic
party in American history. Begin with America’s new,
all-
volunteer military, the triumphalists’ sacred cow. “Support our troops”
is
the teary-eyed mantra that resonates
239
WORLD, BEWARE! from the West Wing through every lunch counter, bowling alley, saloon, and church in middle America. Lost in the ceaseless flag-waving is the knowledge that America is becoming the most militarized nation on Earth. What supposedly freedom-loving conservatives so eagerly adu-
who
men and women
young, often poorly educated
late are
have opted to
live a
barracks
march
to
life,
in step,
snap to attention, salute, and obey every order they are
They may be volunteers, but what have they volunteered for? To lead the most regimented life available in the United States. This is a far cry from the ornery, unruly homo democritus that has been the American ideal from frontier days down to the citizen soldiers of past wars. Yet images of a samurai military - special given.
and contract security forces which read “hired guns”) - fill our popular culture,
forces, top guns, elite units, (for
including the video games so popular with adolescent
males. With each passing year, as conservatives diminish
funding for education, working poor and middle-class
youth must turn to military service leges they
Add power of like a
in order to attend col-
cannot otherwise afford. to
this
ethos
of militarization
the corporate mandarins
conquered province. Like the
who
the
growing
are treating Iraq
military, the corpora-
dos are a closed community that operates within top-
down,
hierarchical structures of
dominance and submis-
These are the very types that Franklin Roosevelt once called “economic royalists.” Still, the Bush adminission.
tration takes pride in importing their
government. Indeed, corporate leaders
market
is
the
most democratic of
needs elections
when we have
all
elitist
insist
style into
that the
institutions.
Who
the law of supply and
demand? But think again. The “free” market supposedly works by natural laws as inexorable as the law of
240
The Devolution of American
D emocracy
Those laws can only function properly, so the classical economists argued, if the lower orders do not get out of hand and seek to defend their interests by collective action. There are still libertarian conservatives gravity.
who
believe that legislating a
working conditions
is
minimum wage
or decent
not only folly but also sacrilege.
Today, as the global economy congeals, the corporados,
having
fled their industrial
homelands, are once again
championing the iron laws of the marketplace, this time in Third World economies, where they seek to outlaw unions, exploit the cheap labour of children and convicts, and elude environmental restrictions. The most distinctive element in this thickening authoritarian ethos is the growing influence of evangelical Christianity.
The
evangelicals see themselves as God’s
troops pitted against Islamic infidels in a holy war. But in fact they are the mirror
image of Muslim extremists
like
power to impose their reading they must settle for beating their
the Taliban. Lacking the
of God’s will by force,
“pagan” opposition into submission But their program
at the voting booth.
no less patriarchal and theocratic than any Wahabi imam. They would base our laws on the Bible; they would have the United States declared a Christian nation; they would have the schools teach the literal truth of scripture and the unique validity of the Christian revelation; they would have families founded on paternal supremacy; they would legislate “normal” is
sexual behaviour; they
would outlaw abortion, pre-mari-
and extra-marital sex, all forms of sexual deviancy, profanity, and pornography both hard-core and softtal
core.
when
Reagan administration was ushering in the great conservative backlash, Margaret Atwood wrote a prescient piece of fiction called The Handmaid's In 1986,
the
241
WORLD, BEWARE! The novel envisions what would result if religious fundamentalists won the culture war they insist on wagTale.
She pictures a God-fearing dystopia run by fire-and-
ing.
brimstone preachers and male-chauvinist husbands. As
may once have
exaggerated as this
seemed,
it
has become
the social ideal of America’s biblical people, a goal
no
now dare to question for fear of voters. And the evangelicals are not
right-wing politician will
offending evangelical
alone in seeking to erase the separation of church and
An
state.
increasingly politicized
Catholic church has
them in the struggle against gay marriage, aborand women’s rights. For many Catholic priests and
joined tion,
bishops, unquestioning submission plays a key role in social ethics: strict obedience to age-old
up
religious superiors Finally,
who
dogmas and
to
to the pope.
we have
the neo-conservative intelligentsia
provide the ideological rationale for triumphalist
policy.
One cannot
object to the intellectual elaboration
that neo-conservatives offer for their purposes. But, as
we have
seen, the
troubling
conservative brains trust has
characteristics.
intellectuals
values, as
new
For
some
one thing, conservative
pride themselves on defending “absolute”
opposed to the wishy-washy,
nihilistic “rela-
tivism” supposedly preferred by liberals. “Relativism,”
according to Allan Bloom, “has extinguished the real
motive of education, the search for the good
life.”
In
practice, the conservative hostility to cultural relativism
means
resisting
any educational
initiative that challenges
supremacy of the Great Books - all written by white, European males. Include Sylvia Plath or James Baldwin in the curriculum and you insult Aristotle and
the absolute
Cicero.
What we have
here
social forces at just the
is
a convergence of authoritarian
moment when 242
the U.S. military
is
The Devolution of American capable of throwing
its
weight around
D emocracy world
in the
like
no ruling power since the days of ancient Rome. Clearly, a lot of Americans are looking for a very macho Big Daddy to teach them right from wrong. The result is an emerging
on dominance-and-submission relationships. Good soldiers obey their commander in chief. Good employees obey their boss. Good Christians obey scripture. Good wives obey their husbands. Good children obey their parents. Good neo-conservative thinkers defer to whatever their mentors have taught them are absolute values. political culture
Where
is
this
based at every
level
craving for structure and certainty
coming from? Authoritarianism, as the Frankfurt School understood the term, was largely a response to the anxi-
Weimar Republic. But the United only superpower that we are apt to see
eties that bedevilled the
the
States,
between the collapse of the Soviet Union and the China,
is
tress. Is
it
possible that the psychological roots of author-
Was Franz Kafka
we have
so far realized?
closer to the truth in believing that
childlike submission to a punishing father
is
the
normal
condition?
In their effort to recast themselves as the ulists,
of
hardly in such an advanced state of social dis-
itarianism reach far deeper than
human
rise
the
champions of blue-collar and
rural America,
conservatives often chide liberals for being labic intellectuals
and the
who
new pop-
elitists,
polysyl-
supposedly dominate the media
universities but are woefully out of touch with
nascar and gun-club America. There
is
some
truth to the
do tend to favour solving problems through big government programs run by experts. The result can be the sort of social engineering that leads to an intrusive and domineering “nanny state. ” For example, liberals tend to favour the sort of health and safety charge.
Tiberals
-
243
WORLD, BEWARE! regulations
- campaigns
mandatory use of
against
second-hand
seat belts for drivers
smoke,
and helmets
for
example - that rugged individuals abhor. But there is a larger political framework that
motorcyclists,
for
should be taken into account. In actual day-to-day politics,
liberals
have worked with labour unions, women’s
rights organizations, the civil rights
movement, environ-
and numerous citizens’ groups that are anything but docile. The same conservatives who accuse liberal Democrats of being elitist have gone on to mock them for being unable to discipline their rank and file. mentalists,
And
that has sometimes been the case, especially during
the primary season is
and
at presidential conventions.
There
nothing in the liberal political world that shares the top-
down
regimentation of the corporate hierarchy or the
authoritarian control of evangelical ministers over their
congregations.
Kant once defined the Enlightenment as mankind’s coming of age. He was surely right in believing that the fall of the ancien regime imposed an adult sense of responsibility on the common man. But what if the era of democratic revolution has been an aberrant and ephemeral stage
in
human
history?
What
if
that stage
is
coming to an end in the country that is bound to have the most influence over the future? That may be the real victory of the jihadists even
if
the United States suc-
ceeds in stamping them out of existence. They have
whetted an underlying appetite for authority and
recti-
tude that the turbulent modern world has never been able to gratify.
244
EIGHT America’s Global Constituency
“It is
time to stop pretending that Europeans and Ameri-
common
view of the world, or even that they occupy the same world. On major strategic and international questions today, Americans are from Mars and Europeans are from Venus: they agree on little and understand one another less and less. And this state of affairs is not transitory - the product of one American election or one catastrophic event. The reasons for the transatlantic divide are deep, long in development, and cans share a
.
likely to endure.
When
it
.
comes
.
to setting national priori-
determining threats, defining challenges, and fash-
ties,
ioning and implementing foreign and defence policies, the United States
and Europe have parted ways.” Robert Kagan, “Power and Weakness,” Policy
“The president
said he didn’t
ing terms or conditions for
some left.
Review
We
June/July,
2003
want other countries dictatthe war on terrorism. ‘At
point,’ the president said, ‘we
That’s okay with me.
,
may
be the only ones
are America.’
George W. Bush, quoted
”
Bob Woodward, Bush at War 2003
in
,
WORLD, BEWARE!
TRIUMPHALISM UNLIMITED
F
rom the time the occupation down
in Iraq bogged
more and more voices
in guerrilla warfare,
media and the Congress have raised reservations about the long-term sustainability of the American imperium. Given the calculated patriotic pretensions that have been laid on so thickly over this vicious and cynical policy, the only surprise is that there are any dissenting voices left to be heard in the land. The doubts that critics in the
of the imperium raise are valid - but often they do not go
deep enough. Their main point even that of a superpower, has
is
that
its limits.
much
that brute force can do. But
lie? I
suspect
we
are
all
military policy,
There
is
only so
where do those
limits
nowhere near discovering how
new
the triumphalists are prepared to go in building their
world If
far
order.
the foreign policy of the United States were
pragmatic and rational,
if it
were based on
a defensible
estimate of the requirements of national security,
we
might have expected to see no commitment of U.S. troops beyond the international effort undertaken in Afghanistan, a rugged, loosely governed tribal area being exploited by al-Qaeda as a base of operations. In the Taliban al-Qaeda had found a government eager to shield its activities. Transforming Afghanistan into a unified,
prosperous,
(very likely the
work
credible line of policy
reasonably
democratic country
many years) could have been a in the wake of September 11 and
of
a clear benefit to the international
community.
But that was exactly what did not happen. For the triumphalists,
who
apparently see
much
trouble and
little
value in the country, Afghanistan turned into a painful distraction. Afghanistan
would be nearly impossible
246
to
America's Global Constituency occupy and
few economic or strategic assets except, perhaps, opium, which would be a risky business. Instead, the United States cut back sharply on its contribution to the United Nations effort to rebuild Afghanistan and turned its attention to Iraq. Later, especially as the
offers
occupation of Iraq became a quagmire, the
overcommitment became a reality - though I suspect not from the triumphalists’ viewpoint. They are getting exactly the result they want. For remember: the triumphalists are driven by ideology, and ideology is the pursuit of the absolute. It respects no limits. That is both its strength and weakness. possibility of
Here, for example,
is
how
may
triumphalists
deal with the obstacles that are
most
seek to
likely to
block their
power overextended?
In a sense,
advance. 1.
yes,
Is
and
U.S. military
for all their zeal the triumphalists
pace themselves carefully. They
may
may have
to
even have to pause
and make readjustments. At any given moment, U.S. forces may be spread too thin. For example, would the United States have the human resources to open up another front in the war on terrorism if that in their designs
became necessary within the next few years? Very likely not. The goals of the triumphalists may already have been temporarily thwarted
in that respect. Until the resis-
tance in Afghanistan and Iraq took hold, they
may have
had plans to invade Syria, Iran, or North Korea. The Defense Department has issued threats of that kind. Through 2002 there were rumours in the press that if student protestors in Iran reached the point of violent rebellion, U.S. forces tate
might be sent
in
from Iraq to
facili-
regime change.
These ambitions have clearly been placed on hold.
At the same time, during and
after the
247
2004
election year,
WORLD, BEWARE! Washington signalled more friendly and peaceful intentions, a greater willingness to exert its influence through diplomacy and the United Nations. We are apt to see strategic fluctuations of this kind on the part of the triumphalists, intervals
when
vention or pre-emption
is
the threat of military inter-
played
down and
co-operation become prominent. That
is
gestures of
especially likely
happen at election time. Bear in mind, the American imperium is in its early days; for the American public it still represents an unfamiliar role. The triumphalists are testing and probing as they seek the most effective way of winning public approval. If existing U.S. forces prove unable to move on to other operations from Iraq and Afghanistan, the triumphalists may have to find ways of expanding the nation’s military power. The country will have to have more men and women under arms, more advanced bases, more firepower, more highly trained special forces. It to
takes time to achieve those goals.
It
also takes time to lay
propaganda groundwork required by pre-emptive action. The public has to be made fearful enough, and
the
acquiescent enough.
ahead
In the years
rhythm develop quiescence tion,
when
I
believe that
we
will see a certain
in triumphalist geopolitics:
there
is
periods of
talk of international collabora-
followed by periods of superheated belligerence,
supposedly
in
response to an elevated security
alert.
Americans are already being trained to respond to
this
rhythm. Announcements go out by the week from the
Department of Homeland Security that “chatter” has been picked up from al-Qaeda sources indicating an imminent threat. Accordingly, the president announces that the nation is on yellow, orange, or red alert. Police surveillance is increased; cities and states are required to
248
America's Global Constituency
money
appropriate
on more
lines lay
sizes that the
for
more
security procedures; the air-
war on
terror continues right
The danger never diminishes. Once such a psychology of cated,
all
the triumphalists will
and risk is inculever need do to demand a fear
army and more firepower is incident: an embassy bombed, an larger
terrorist
ring
emphahere at home.
restrictions. All of this activity
to wait for a credible airliner shot
uncovered within our
down,
borders.
a
Mere
rumours of hostile intentions by a nation said to have weapons of mass destruction may be enough to begin moving troops and ordering air strikes. It worked in Iraq, why not elsewhere? North Korea, after all, has openly advertised its nuclear arsenal. That probably places the Koreans somewhere near the top of the list of triumphalist
targets.
At any given moment the military force that
the United States can exert will have
once the American public
is
its
limitations.
But
trained to accept the basic
assumptions of triumphalist policy - that the United States
is
under attack, that we have a right to defend our-
by pre-emption, that our goal is to bring democracy and free markets to the world - no limit will be perselves
manent. All that need be done of events and act official face
on
fast.
An
television, a
is
to increase the pressure
urgent news bulletin, a grim
dramatic revelation based on
supposedly reliable information - that
is
all it
will take.
The media will applaud the president for taking immediate and decisive action. The president may even be a Democrat. No matter. In the future no president of any party can dare to be
W. Bush was 2.
who
Can
less
in his first
rapidly responsive than George
term of
office.
the United States afford
its
imperium? Those
believe that the United States cannot afford
its
pre-
emptive foreign policy are both right and wrong. The
249
WORLD, BEWARE! country cannot continue to spend
money on
military
adventures on the scale undertaken by the Bush adminis-
- unless the American people agree to sacrifice every domestic priority to the war on terrorism. But once tration
the public crosses a certain line in that willingness to sacrifice,
be possible to multiply the costs of the
will
it
imperium many times is
a very rich country.
over.
The
For indeed the United States
Afghanistan have so far been
War II. Nor are losses on we take World War II as
and than the cost of World
cost of the wars in Iraq less
the battlefield nearly as great.
the criterion of all-out war, the
United States can afford a very great deal more; and
may come
If
to that. Indeed, that
is
exactly
what
the
it
tri-
umphalists want. Recall that triumphalism tic
agenda
of
America’s
is
a reflection of the
domes-
The
hyperconservatives.
tri-
umphalists are out to destroy every remnant of the welfare state
and
to root out all social programs.
They have
launched a scorched-earth campaign against liberalism;
purpose
is
to reduce the public sector to a bare
Their primary deficit,
From
if
sible to
fiscal train
that
campaign
is
budgetary
if
deficits
climb so high that they
wreck, good! That will
make
it
pos-
argue that liberal social policies are obstructing defence.
national
Medicare
war on
in
minimum.
necessary pushed to the point of bankruptcy.
their viewpoint,
produce a the
weapon
its
is
Supporting
unpatriotic.
Social
They must be
and
Security
sacrificed to the
terror.
Day by day we can
see this subliminal line of policy
being tested in the United States. Throughout 2002,
critics
accused George W. Bush of hiding the true cost of the war in Iraq. Finally, in
lenge.
He
2003, Bush boldly answered that chal-
asked the Congress to appropriate $87 billion
for the war.
It
was
a staggering request,
250
coming
as
it
did
America's Global Constituency on top of tens of billions already spent. But the money was almost unanimously approved by the Congress. There was no- significant dissent in the Congress or in the public opinion polls. Even Democrats who were critical of the
war agreed
that the country could not leave U.S.
When more
troops without funds.
supplementary appro-
war they were granted without delay. As
priations were called for, pushing the cost of the
towards $300
billion,
-
for rebuilding Iraq
how
could America leave that task
incomplete?
The request by Bush came on the heels of huge tax cuts, which had already depleted the treasury, and during a serious recession. levels of
At the time funds were needed
government
public health.
No
at all
for schools, police, infrastructure,
matter. Both the tax cuts
and the war
appropriations were approved. The following year, the
announced that, in view of the deficit, several social programs would have to be cut back or eliminated, and the Congress agreed. If this is what the American people believe they can afford in hard economic times, think what they will be willing to spend when the economy is booming. The years ahead will see similar budgetary manoeuvres. And doubtless there will be fiscal train wrecks by president
regretfully
the score as one social
program
after
another
is
buried
under an avalanche of public debt. By 2004 even archconservative organizations, such as the American Conservative
Union and
the
Heritage
Foundation, were
howling with displeasure at the runaway spending of the Bush administration. Republicans in Congress banded together to petition the White deficit.
House
to control
the
Perhaps they were being disingenuous for the
sake of their public image. Surely they know that crushing deficits are exactly what the triumphalists want.
251
WORLD, BEWARE! They
are conditioning the
American people
like Pavlov’s
dogs to learn the right response: everything for the war on terrorism, nothing for domestic programs. The conbeing carried out by the best market and advertising expertise that money can buy - the same ditioning
is
expertise that effort
is
is
used for political campaigning.
successful, then step
If
the
by step the public will
agree that social programs should be abandoned (or better still privatized) so that the government can use all of its
resources for priority 3.
number
one.
Will the morale of U.S. troops remain high enough
to sustain multiple
of discontent
war
among
efforts?
There have been reports
high, but unspecified level of suicide.
On
network news report allowed several their
minds.
One
soldier even
Secretary of Defense
- including
the troops in Iraq
made
a
one occasion a
soldiers to speak
nasty remarks about
Rumsfeld. Afterwards the army
took sanctions against those
soldiers,
extending their
tour of duty. Soldiers called in from the
army
reserve
have been especially outspoken about the length of time they are expected to serve. The two hundred thousand
men and women
in the reserves are
the United States has ever
come
now
the closest that
to having a citizen army.
modest stipend for taking basic training one weekend each month. Few of these volunteers expected that they would ever see combat. Now, however, as part of the war on terror, some sixty-five thousand reservists are on active duty, and some of them have been called upon repeatedly for lengthy tours of up to a
They
receive a
year - and then
many
are called back for a second tour
and the national guard are functioning as the equivalent of conscripted troops. They have every good reason for seeing this as a raw deal, for why should they shoulder the full weight of a war that is of duty.
The
reserves
252
America’s Global Constituency supposedly defending the nation? Their service requires them to give up their jobs, with the result that some famof reserve troops face the real prospect of slipping
ilies
News
into poverty. stories in
reports have featured human-interest
which the
families of reserve troops express
Meanwhile, the government is seeking new ways of excusing the well-to-do from taxes and is negotiating ever more lucrative contracts with its their sense of injustice.
business cronies. If
these tendencies continue, they will surely erode
war effort and civilian morale back home - especially when the television news focuses closely, as it frequently the
does,
on the
grief suffered
by the families of fallen and
wounded troops. But there is a solution: the privatization of our modern military, with more and more of the training, fighting,
and dying being done by contract forces
hired by military services corporations that operate with
minimal congressional oversight and out of public view. These companies are under no obligation to hire Amerithey recruit their soldiers of fortune on a world-
cans.
If
wide
basis, as the
generations,
French Foreign Legion has done for
would anybody
in the
United States
know
care that the nation’s wars were being outsourced?
or
Who Who
would care about the morale of mere mercenaries? would keep track of the casualties? “The Iraqi dream” - that is what the slum dwellers of San Salvador call military service for private American contractors. as security
They
up by the thousands to take jobs Iraq. Many are former soldiers and
line
guards in
police trained by the United States during the civil
that raged in El Salvador for twelve years
down
war
to 1992.
San Salvadorans can earn as much as $3,600 per month from private firms, such as Triple Canopy, for guarding oil
fields,
business offices, and diplomatic installations.
253
WORLD, BEWARE! This
an extravagant wage by the standards of
is
their
country and far more than U.S. troops are paid. Unless
Congress protests, ists
would
refrain
other Third all,
the cost
Even
it is
why
difficult to see
from extending such
the triumphal-
a poverty draft to
World countries. Expensive, yes. But after of the war goes on the national credit card.
if
the
U.S.
military
remains predominantly
American, boosting morale simply means that the Pentagon must find more forces so that
more
frequently. All
it
takes to
it
can rotate troops
expand the
size of the
money, and, as we have seen, the Congress and the public seem quite willing to pay the price. Indeed, a major new recruitment effort might solve a
military
is
serious social problem.
The United
the global economy, not only by
States
way
is
losing jobs to
of “offshoring” but
also because of the increased productivity of
modern
technology. Even in a time of high productivity and
growing earnings, secure, well-paid jobs are vanishing. They could be replaced by jobs in health care and education, but that risks raising taxes
and expanding the pub-
sector - exactly
what conservative Republicans stand against. Job erosion has not yet become explosive in the United States, but it is real and frequently mentioned in the news. An expanded military is one obvious solution to this problem - especially for younger workers. Volunlic
teering for military service for thousands of
is
already a prominent choice
young Americans
for
of military service provide their only college education.
that the
whom
hope
a
few years
for affording a
The triumphalists may even
imperium provides exactly the
the next generation.
It
believe
right future for
teaches discipline, patriotism, and
a proper respect for superiors. 4.
Will the American public
limit to the patience of the
tire
of war? There
American people when
254
it
is
a
comes
America’s Global Constituency The wars
Korea (1950 to 1952) and Vietnam (1950s to 1975) lasted too long and were finally rejected. These were wars that after a time seemed unwinnable and to war.
in
produced a great number of casualties - over fifty thousand killed in the case of Vietnam. Americans prefer wars
and
that are short, bloodless,
won, as perhaps all worldwide imperium that
easily
people do. Expecting to build a
never requires bloodshed would be the height of delusionary thinking. Yet there are several ways in which the
tri-
umphalists can try to avoid the sort of debacles that the
United States experienced
the
in
Korea and Vietnam.
To begin with they can find ways of holding down casualties - and boasting about it. That is being done
assiduously in Iraq. There have been complaints about the availability of
body armour, but even
so, U.S. soldiers in
the Gulf are the best-protected fighting force in history.
Their encampments are practically impregnable by any
power and long-range artillery. The flak jackets that U.S. forces wear are ingeniously designed to be nearly bulletproof. The wounded now receive immediate battlefield care, or they are whisked away by air to foe without air
hospitals throughout the immediate region.
Without such
defences and rapid care the casualty levels in Iraq would
be
many
times higher.
It is
getting harder to injure Ameri-
can soldiers - a small mercy
in the history of warfare.
Beyond these measures, there is a great deal that can be done by clever public relations and deception. Reporting losses can be slow and obscure. In Iraq, soldiers who do not
die
at
once of their wounds are almost never
accounted for after they are removed from the
Once
field.
they are reported as “wounded,” they are not mentioned again.
If
they die
killed
in
battle.
States, the
later,
they are not counted
When body
news media
among
those
bags arrive in the United
are not permitted to film them.
2-55
WORLD, BEWARE! on the war the government can find ways of sounding upbeat and positive. During Gulf War I, the first George Bush made a point of controlling images of gore and suffering. The press was not permitBesides, in reporting
show
ted to
pictures of either the military or the civilian
Dead
victims of the war.
Iraqi
soldiers
were quickly
ploughed into mass graves and forgotten. Short of a total collapse before the enemy - an unlikely prospect for the wars that the United States will fight in the future - who is
to say
whether the war
going well or not? In Iraq the
is
public hears constantly of the constructive things that
American forces are doing. Once again, the damage done to civilians is kept off camera. Public figures never sound than exuberant about the progress of the occupation. Indeed, the occupation is not referred to as an “occupaless
nor
tion,”
is
the guerrilla
The insurgents
war.”
war
referred to as a “guerrilla
are always characterized as a
fraction of the population, an embittered
and
minor
fanatical
collection of “dead-enders.” 5.
Can
the triumphalists be defeated at the polls?
There is one last reason - and this the sleaziest reason of all - why the triumphalists may prove difficult to dislodge from power, even
if
their policies
run into serious
The Republican party is now in the hands of campaign managers who may have discovered a fooltrouble.
proof formula for winning public opinion polls
all
future elections, even
show widespread
if
discontent and dis-
approval of any future Republican administration. This
formula begins by recognizing that, between elections, popularity counts for nothing. On the other hand, winning
when
the election rolls around licenses a free
with federal power. After
all,
of the people? It
works
like this:
256
who
hand
can question the will
America' s Global Constituency •
Going
any election to come, the triumphalists know they have an unbreakable grip on the Southern and Mountain states, which can amount to nearly two into
hundred need do
Republican candidate throw these voters some red meat - a good
electoral votes. All the is
gay or feminist-bashing issue - and he or she
will lock
up nearly enough electoral votes to win. That will leave the party only a few key districts in a few swing states to contest.
come
•
For those key
•
up with an explosive last-minute issue like Willy Horton or Swift Boat Veterans for Truth and use its clear advantage in campaign contributions to saturate media markets with sensational revelations. The party might also persuade its loyal contributors to
districts, all the
party need do
is
help fund a Nader-type rival for left-liberal votes.
The
wing has nothing to fear along those lines, but the Democrats are always vulnerable to significant right
electoral defection. •
Wherever necessary, black voters should be turned
away
at the polls,
if
not denied the right to vote alto-
gether through the felony-disenfranchisement voting
program. Most of these •
It
is
Democratic votes.
not necessary to win a decisive victory by these
means.
rowly the
will be
If
the vote can be
can be
lost election
Supreme Court,
made
close enough, a nar-
litigated all the
a la Florida in
Republican majority of
2000.
A
on the court
five
count for more than a majority of millions •
Finally,
if
none of
this
do.
incident, real,
A bomb
disaster,
a
week before
rumored, or wholly
attack in a major
threat
from
al
2 57
city,
Qaeda
to
dependable will
always
at the polls.
seems to be working
resort to a terrorist scare one
Any
way up
reliably,
the election.
fictitious, will
a suspicious airline .
.
.
Assuming the
WORLD, BEWARE! White House
is
in
Republican hands
at the time, the
him time of national emergency. By
president can then appeal to voters to rally around
or his successor in a
the time the dust clears, the votes will have been cast
and
it
put the election behind
will be time to
Admittedly,
I
am
us.
exaggerating the power and the
no difficulty in imagining all the tactics I mention here coming into play. Remember, these are people who were prepared to take the nation into war on the basis of lies they knew would not hold up under the least scrutiny. And what then - after the lies have been found out? Provided America’s wars in the Middle East and elsewhere are kept at a certain low level of public visibility, and as long as people have enough diversions to occupy their attenresources of the triumphalists, though
I
find
tion, the overall intentions of the triumphalists will con-
tinue unimpeded. In the end, then, there are
umphalist policies will
fall
few ways
of their
own
in
which
weight.
tri-
And
from the American public when it comes to changing those policies. There may be millions who speak out against pre-emptive wars and
there
is little
that one can expect
colonial occupation, but millions critics,
with some of them -
by ideological fevers every
more
will outvote the
like the evangelicals
bit as
- driven
powerful as the motives
behind the triumphalists. Theirs will always seem the patriotic option.
And
as the re-energized military-indus-
complex takes shape, the war on terror will become as important a source of profits and jobs as it was in the days of the Cold War.
trial
If
triumphalism
is
to be defeated, the effort will need
support from outside the United States. America must
have an
effective global constituency.
258
America's Global Constituency
SOFT SPOTS The triumphalists
are a formidable force, but they are not
movements, they have their weaknesses, points at which the coalition may
invincible. Like all political
internal
soon reveal cracks. Liberals need to take advantage of these chinks in the right wing’s armour. For example, the
between the triumphalists
relationship
and remaining
Republican moderates shows an increasing
The
strain.
Republican leadership has done a good job of muzzling
moderates and keeping them
moves
and further
further
find themselves
will
may
may
to the right, moderates
odds with the traditions of the
fiscal
party.
conservatives agree to imperialist
adventures and sky-high
wars and
in the fold, but as the party
unable to continue supporting extreme
policies that are at
Fiow long
its
deficits?
Similarly the
culture
agenda so dear to evangelical militants drive moderates from the party - especially if extreme social
right wingers continue to run candidates against them. is
It
not unthinkable that some centrist Republicans will turn
independent, or even throw in with the Democrats. American politics
There
is
is
long overdue for such a realignment.
also the possibility that corporados will at
some point begin
to see their alliance with evangelical
Christians as a double-edged sword.
By anybody’s
stan-
dards, corporate America’s egregiously materialistic values are sharply at odds with Christian virtues, ceos are
cosmopolitan, often sophisticated, globe-trotting, highliving
types;
they are the
world. They eat well, drink well, in the lap of luxury.
attend
They
modern and make their homes
aristocracy
of the
are patrons of the arts
swanky openings. These
are not people
who
and see
profanity or obscenity or homosexuality or abortion as significant issues, except
perhaps as ways of tying up
259
WORLD, BEWARE! energy.
liberal
many
Indeed,
have been
corporations
quick to adapt to domestic partnership arrangements
among
employees. Decisions like that have already
their
led evangelical pressure
groups to undertake boycotts
against major corporations like ibm, Microsoft,
At times the anger of the religious right
ney.
and unpredictably, zany, exactly the
and Disis
totally,
sort of public rela-
tions nightmare that the corporados hate.
Not long
ago,
there were evangelical churches that believed that the
corporate logo used by Proctor and
Gamble
for over a
- was a Satanic sign. Other watchful fundamentalists have targeted Sesame Street's purple dinosaur Barney as a surrogate for the great beast century - a
himself.
moon and
Still
stars
others believe the Teletubbies are surrepti-
homosexuals. Corporate America has lumbered
tious
with an embarrassingly quirky political
itself
Look
ally.
below the surface of its public relations, and the corporate world has a great deal to answer for. Those who own the banks and brokerage houses of the nation are deeply invested in very sleazy forms of usury; those
just
who own
the media are similarly invested in both
and hard-core pornography. Most of the rest are committed to business practices that break every ethical rule in the Bible. Evangelicals tend to blame the moral soft-core
degeneration they see on their television screens as the fault of liberals.
and
But the smut they see
in
commercials
and
is
produced by
in the content of film
television
the very corporations that bankroll the Republican Party.
Corporate America knows that sex tians,
ues,
sells.
with their concern for clean living
Devout Chrisand family val-
have already served notice that they will not stand
for anything that deviates
from G-rated
culture; indeed,
they probably prefer broadcasting that transmits sermons
and homilies around the clock.
260
America's Global Constituency
What would happen
some point, evangelical draw a bead on the manners, morals, of the corporate rich, reminding them
watchdogs were to and business ethics
how much
about
easier
it is
the eye of a needle’s than
What
heaven?
who
camel to pass through
for a
it
for
is
any of them to enter
born-again Christians, especially those
if
believe the
at
if,
End
of
Days
is
hand, demanded that
at
America’s billionaires start living godly This
may seem
unthinkable, but
lives?
it is
worth remem-
bering that in times past the most radically egalitarian social
movements
in
Western history were driven by
just
such religious convictions. The prophets of Israel were, after
all,
the original voices of social justice, defending
the rights of the
widow and
castigating the rich.
the orphan and constantly
Long before
Adam
ideology, the biblical image of
simple, God-fearing piety
implications - as
was
modern
the advent of
and Eve
living in
was fraught with revolutionary
the idea that the Christian gospel
preached to the meek and poor. In the
Mid-
was
first
dle
Ages peasant revolts hoisted banners that asked,
“When Adam gentleman?” great wealth
late
who was then the Fundamentalist ministers who now enjoy and status may have forgotten it, but many delved and Eve span,
evangelical Christian congregations began their practice
among
the
downtrodden and
the persecuted.
At
least a
few evangelical groups have translated those beginnings
programs of radical social change, arguing that the rich and powerful fail to respect “biblical values.” Jim Wallis’s Washington-based Sojourners is one example. into
Since the 1970s Sojourners has been seeking to heed “the Biblical call to integrate spiritual renewal tice.” If the influence of
grow,
it
groups
like this
would not be good news
They might
find
themselves
261
and
social jus-
should begin to
for the corporados.
pressed
to
present
their
WORLD, BEWARE! Christian credentials.
Can we imagine
the directors of the
Fortune 500 hosting prayer breakfasts, holding Bible classes, or
washing one another’s
imagine them agreeing to give
feet?
all
Worse
still,
can
we
they have to the poor
and follow Jesus? Politically speaking, evangelicals are mavericks.
people start by asking,
no
“What would
When
Jesus do?” there
is
where they might end up. Yes, the biblical peocan be used to rag liberals on late-term abortion and
telling
ple
X-rated movies, marvellously useful distractions for the conservative agenda. But reports
that
leading
what
one to make of recent
is
evangelical
involved with “creation care”?
A
figures
have
become
February 2005 story in
The Washington Post by Blaine Harden reports that pollsters find a growing concern among born-again Christians for the environment, which they see as “God’s body.” Accordingly, Rev. Ted Haggard has declared that “the environment
is
a values issue.”
that the environmental cause should not be ists,
is
who
Haggard,
left
believes
to secular-
president of the thirty-million-member National
Association of Evangelicals. “There are,” he says, “signifi-
cant and compelling theological reasons
why
[the environ-
ment] should be a banner issue for the Christian right.”
His “Evangelical Call to Civic Responsibility” (available
on the World Wide Web) represents the
first
time that an
evangelical leader has identified environmental protection
and insisted that it is the role of business and the government to safeguard a sustainable
as every Christian’s duty
environment. In league with the highly influential James
Dobson
of Focus on the Family,
stand on global the
warming
Haggard
is
encouraging a
that clashes with the policies of
Bush administration.
Newly green
evangelicals
do not primarily pay
attention to the scientific evidence; they see a
262
more
America's Global Constituency abstemious,
One group,
godly.
way
environmentally friendly
of
life
as
the Evangelical Environmental Net-
work, has launched an
initiative against gas-guzzling cars
“What Would Jesus Drive?” If sentiments like harden into a more pious and militant form of envi-
that asks, this
ronmentalism, will business leaders approve? If it is difficult
to believe that the link
porate America and the evangelicals
even greater weakness exists
in
is
all
between corthat solid, an
the coalition that has
sprung up among fundamentalists and Catholics. Evangelical Protestants are
not alone in seeking to return the
United States to more godly ways. Since the pontificate of
Church has been reverting to an ever more ascetic and authoritarian orthodoxy, a trend that will surely be accelerated under Pope Benedict. Indeed, the Catholics are even more extreme in their puritanism. Not only do they reject homosexuality and
John-Paul
II,
the Catholic
abortion, but they also regard contraception, masturbation,
and any sexual
activity that goes
tected genital stimulation as mortal sins.
beyond unpro-
A
rising genera-
tion of militant priests (“John-Paul’s Warriors,” as they call
themselves) believes that being more-repressive-than-
thou will give them an edge ful
in the struggle to
win youth-
converts from the evangelicals. Competitive proselyfaiths creates
an underlying division
who would
erase the separation of
tizing
between the
in the
ranks of those
church and
state. Liberals
should use that division to
concerned - including the most fanatic Catholics and Protestants - of the debt they owe to the secular humanists who safeguard our pluralistic social
remind
order.
all
At
best, that
may encourage some
fundamentalists
to think again before they begin battling to see
whose
Christianity should be written into the Constitution. At a
minimum,
it
may weaken
the uneasy unity that Catholics
263
WORLD, BEWARE! and evangelicals have achieved against abortion and gay rights. These are not,
two groups
there
right hostility.
shared campaign
Between the long history of suspicion and out-
after all, natural allies.
is
On
in their
a
three occasions in the twentieth cen-
Democratic Party was willing to do what Republicans will never do: nominate a Catholic for presithe
tury,
When John
Kennedy ran for the presidency in 1960 (and A1 Smith before him in 1928), the staunchest resistance to having a Catholic in the White House arose dent.
in
F.
conservative Protestant churches. In the eyes of funda-
mentalists, the
Pope
is
the Great Beast, the
Babylon. For that matter, evangelical bigotry
Whore of may have
had more to do with John Kerry’s defeat in 2004 than anybody wants to admit. Even when Protestant and Catholic pro-lifers co-operate on the issue of abortion, underlying divisions may at some point come to the surface. The Catholic hierarchy sees banning abortion and same-sex marriage as part of a larger campaign against divorce, contraception, and even masturbation. Do the evangelicals who picket Planned Parenthood clinics with Catholics share those goals? If evangelicals were challenged to declare their position on contraception, would Catholics still team up with them? Perhaps it is time for liberals to raise those questions. Wedge politics someprovides
times
the
best
way
of revealing
important
truths.
That same kind of wedge might be driven between
and neo-conservative intellectuals. After all, neo-conservatives - especially the followers of Teo Strauss evangelicals
- are hardly a pious bunch. They have been able to an
alliance with the religious right only
their
own
must be
strike
by soft-pedalling
arrogant secularism. But what intellectual hell
for triumphalist policy-makers to
264
know
it
that their
America's Global Constituency grand design tic
fanatics
must
in the
who
Middle East
are expecting the
be like for them to
it
is
sit
in
Second Coming. What
on strategy meetings with
who
evangelical power-brokers
beholden to apocalyp-
expect the president to
hold prayer breakfasts and want to discuss what Jesus would do about the national debt? How do they keep a dealing
face
straight
with
a
political
following
that
was created in six days and that sun stand still upon Gibeon? Do they
believes the universe
Joshua made the
want
really
nation?
to see the United States declared a Christian
Would
neo-conservative think-tanks and publica-
tions be willing to take the creationist side against Dar-
Commandments
winian biology? Or identify the Ten the
word
who
of
God? Or
as
enlighten us as to whether those
depart this world at the time of the Rapture will
leave their
wade
underwear behind? Would they be willing to
into the slough of biblical literalism in order to stay
church-friendly?
The triumphahsts have one more chink in their armour - and it is a big one. As the sworn enemies of big government, they are out to bury the nation’s two largest welfare-state
programs - Social Security and Medicare.
But these programs are the safety net of the nation’s older population. As baby boomers go into retirement, they will
most dependable voting bloc in the country. Once boomers awaken to recognize that their hippie days are long behind them and swell the ranks of senior voters, already the
that they have
be
all
become America’s older population,
but impossible to scale back,
entitlements.
Which
is
precisely
let
why
it
will
alone eliminate
neo-conservatives
have been working so feverishly to undermine these programs. They want to reform senior entitlements out of existence before the
dow
boomers
of opportunity closes.
get to
It is
265
them and
their
win-
a risky strategy that has
WORLD, BEWARE! The various cock-eyed Republicans have come up with for entitle-
already begun to reveal
“reforms” that
its
flaws.
ments are transparently deceptive, poorly veiled attempts to privatize the programs by turning them into brokered accounts.
scheme
Worse
still,
George W. Bush’s prescription-drug
clearly subordinated the
interests of the big
public interest to the
pharmaceutical companies that con-
and them, seniors have a canny
tribute to Republican candidates. Because health care
retirement income matter to
eye for such skulduggery; they are not the doddering
them to be. making political
imbeciles that the Bush administration takes
most persuasive factor in decisions, and nobody feels the necessity of having a decent retirement and good medical care more than the country’s seniors - unless it is their children, who would
Necessity
is
the
have to pay their parents’
bills if
entitlements were abol-
ished.
At some point even the most dedicated
voters
now
safely lodged in the
Republican camp will not
be willing to vote their entitlements tion of having a Congress
and
single-issue
away
for the satisfac-
a president
who
will
bash
gays and feminists.
Given
move
its
widespread, current appeal, the smartest
the Republican Party could
make would
be to
embrace Social Security and Medicare honestly and go to work shoring up their funding and even expanding their benefits.
Other
Republican
Nixon, Reagan - have done
presidents
-
Eisenhower,
By siding with the longevity revolution that is shifting voting power into senior hands, the gop might establish a lock on power that would last for the next century. All it would take is the courage to face down a few major campaign contributors - the pharmaceutical houses, the brokerage and just that.
financial services industry, the insurance industry.
But the
Republicans have fallen under the control of extremists,
266
America's Global Constituency and big government programs are exactly what those extremists deplore. Social Security and Medicare are at the heart of the welfare state that they intend to destroy.
Thanks to their ideological rigidity, neo-conservatives are on the wrong side of a massive demographic transition that will
empower
older voters as never before.
have
Neo-conservatives
discovered
that
they
can
more popular support than they lose by siding with resentful white males on issues of race and gender. They
gain
are
now
trying to cast themselves as defenders of the
young against the
old.
But seniors are a different kind of
and permanent social category. Young people get older and eventually become seniors. By the time people reach the age of forty in an insecure job market, they begin to worry about retirement and health care. Moreover, both young and old belong to families whose loyalty and responsibility cross generational boundaries. We have learned from history that nobody suffers more from old-age indigence than public; they are not a fixed
working young who must support their impoverished parents. That is why the conservative effort to inspire the
generational warfare pens, they are
bound
Finally, there
is
is
apt to backfire.
to see their
And
as that hap-
power erode.
the one factor that has proved to be
the nemesis of even the
most
ogy, whether of the
or right: the intrusion of objec-
left
fanatically defended ideol-
That intrusion may take years to register its impact, as it did in the case of the Vietnam war, a war the American public finally saw as unwinnable at any tive reality.
cost
it
was
willing to pay.
Or
it
may make
itself
known
with the suddenness of a natural catastrophe that strikes down all pretense and obfuscation. Hurricane Katrina in
September 2005 was that kind of jarring encounter with the facts of life for the Bush administration. In the wake
267
WORLD, BEWARE! of the disaster, as in the
wake
on the World Trade Center,
of the September it
1 1
attack
was obvious beyond
dis-
pute that only swift, wide-ranging federal action could
cope with such a many-sided calamity. Despite ample advance warning, the task that followed the hurricane
was badly botched by an administration that was committed from the day it was elected to starving public services and skimping on programs like flood control. Undermining the ability of government to protect the health and safety of the nation may have been high on the triumphalist agenda, but with the distress of the Gulf
Coast dramatically displayed on television screens across the world, all talk of the evils of big government was stilled.
Not
a single neoconservative dared to propose a
free-market solution to the dilemma - though, as one
might have expected, private construction firms with strong Washington connections were quick to negotiate lucrative contracts to repair the
damage.
Everything that will be happening for years to come
government in action - city, state, and federal workers doing what we expect them to do: care for the victims, pick up the pieces, find the money, muster the forces. Not that government does all these things well; we simply have no other way to do the
to rebuild the Gulf Coast
is
Even hard-working volunteers, whose indomitable compassion is neither liberal nor conservative, and least of all market-based, must wait for government to orgajob.
nize their efforts.
How
sad that
it
takes tragedies like this to reveal
the shallowness of radical right ideologues
who
have
come close to claiming that we need no government at all. The net result of their influence over the past two decades has been to gut social programs, undermine regulatory agencies, and drive talented people out of public
268
America’s Global Constituency But when the sky
service.
even the
fiercest anti-tax,
look for
shelter. In
starts falling, notice
where
anti-government conservatives
hard times, there
is
no way around
the simple truth: well-prepared and properly
public servants are our
line of
first
empowered defence. Complex
good government and lots of it, i.e., people with imagination and conscience who are well-trained and well-paid for doing all the things our survival demands. industrial societies need
WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS There
a
is
bumper
United States, a
around the cautionary statement that is meant to sticker frequently seen
save lives on the road: “Friends don’t
let
friends drink
and drive.” If I had to summarize the lesson that the world needs to teach the United States, it would read something like that. “Friends don’t let friends build empires.” In an ica’s allies
awkward way,
that
have been trying to say
what I think Amerthe wake of Septem-
is
in
They see the United States responding to the very real threat from al-Qaeda by generating a new, worldwide imperium. They have every right to be suspicious ber
1 1.
about the true motives that
lie
That resistance ought
resist
it.
when
the occasion presents
for triumphalist policies
behind that effort and to
to be taken into the streets
itself.
U.S. leaders
who
speak
ought to expect to be greeted
with mass demonstrations of disapproval wherever they travel abroad.
But more
is
needed, because the ideologi-
and religious forces that undergird the American imperium will not be easily deterred. What follows are the three best ways I can imagine
cal
for thoughtful people to exert a
American
politics.
269
healthy influence on
WORLD, BEWARE! Therapy
1.
As
critical as
I
for the dysfunctional family of nations.
have been of the new American imperium,
few well-developed international instruments to which the United States - or any other threatened nation - can turn to find security. CritI
also recognize that there are
ics
of the Bush administration have again and again
demanded
that
Washington work through the United
Nations. But, in truth, the
un
is
a faulty instrument, the
which have
feeble creature of the world’s great powers,
never wanted toils
to be a strong, independent institution.
It
under a cumbersome bureaucracy and often bogs
down
in petty bickering or
had too
when
it
it
little
windy moralizing.
money and human
resources of
It
its
has long
own. And
has been entrusted with a large-scale expensive
- for example, the $100-billion-a-year Iraqi Oil for Food program - the effort has been cloaked in
responsibility
rumours of waste, corruption, and questionable judgment. Little wonder that triumphalsecrecy and attended by
ists
have mocked the
how
un
mercilessly. Ffere, for
example,
Richard Perle and David Frum, two leading
is
tri-
umphalists, sardonically characterize the United Nations
book An End to Evil: Strategies for Victory in the War on Terror: “The un is not an entirely useless organization. ... It creates employment for the less employable in their
relatives of presidents for
life. It
feeling that their views count.
gives smaller countries a
And when
the
chamber
is
empty and touring schoolchildren walk the halls, the extravagant building can for a quiet moment seem to give substance to the age-old dream of a world without war.” When people call upon the United Nations to act, a great deal of wishful thinking is involved. The call is often little more than an idealistic gesture, an expressed need for something other and better than unilateral action. If
we
think of the
un
as the family of nations,
270
we
America’s Global Constituency need to acknowledge that tional.
It
this
family
needs fixing. Triumphalists
may
Nations with open contempt
is
seriously dysfunc-
who
treat the
United
not be right in
reject-
good reason
ing collective security, but they have
impatient with an institution whose structure
is
to be
such a
distorted reflection of the real political world.
With that much
we should
said,
United Nations displayed remarkable
recognize that the initiative in dealing
was commendably persistent in its arms inspection duties and its application of sanctions.
with the Iraq
crisis. It
These were impressive peacekeeping
one of the
mam
initiatives.
Indeed,
reasons that the Bush administration
grew so impatient with the un is that the organization’s weapons inspectors were doing too good a job. They were calling into question Bush’s insistence that Iraq was a threat to American security. As for the sanctions, there is no question but that they were imperfect in their operation.
The
civilian
of their weight.
population of Iraq bore far too
Still,
they set a valuable precedent for
determined intervention Iraq, the
in
the future. In dealing with
United Nations was willing to go further
tailing the sovereignty of a
had
in the past.
much
member
nation than
That might have been
promising precedent for a new era
a
in curit
ever
powerful and
in international policy.
Along the lines laid down by the un, other rogue nations might have been disarmed without military intervention — though possibly not without the threat of the
same kind of intervention that occurred in Afghanistan. Through the un, other peacekeeping initiatives could have been taken short of
full-scale war.
whole of Iraq been declared
Saddam Hussein
Why
couldn’t the
a no-fly zone, thus denying
his air force?
Why
couldn’t the United
Nations have mandated that Iraqi airfields and missilelaunching pads be placed under international supervision 27 I
WORLD, BEWARE! or even dismantled? Airfields and launching pads, as
we
war began, are easily monitored from the air and easily marked out for destruction with minimum collateral damage. If weapons of mass destruc-
discovered once the
were a valid reason for concern, why wouldn’t it have been sufficient to deny Saddam Hussein possession of the delivery systems without which chemical and bio-
tion
logical
weapons
are useless?
would have been enough to satisfy the Bush administration, of course. It was determined to place an intimidating American military presence in the Middle East and an obedient puppet government in Baghdad. And all of this was a mere prelude to even
None
of this
greater designs for domination throughout the region.
Rather than making a major effort to reorganize the United Nations as an effective deterrent to terrorism, the triumphalists prefer to rely upon the unilateral, world-
wide projection of U.S. military power. They should not be given any excuse for doing that, least of all that there is
no other option. Here is an area
constituency could
in
which the United
make
States’ global
a solid contribution to thwart-
ing the triumphalists. In the face of triumphalist unilateralism,
American
liberals
need to
United Nations central to their
know
making the foreign policy is more that
than a symbolic gesture and a naive hope. There could be
no
better
way
of blunting the designs of the triumphalists
than for the major powers to undertake a crash program for reforming and modernizing the United Nations especially the Security Council - so that there can be no excuse for ignoring or defying
have to do
this
in the
it.
Other nations might
teeth of resistance by the
would effort and
many Americans
umphalists, but they
find
to second their
to pressure
272
tri-
willing
Washington
into
America's Global Constituency helping to create efficient international instruments for
keeping the peace. 2. Pulling the financial chain.
realize
it,
people in
many
Although they may not
countries already hold a deci-
form of influence over U.S. affairs, an economic lever that their governments might use at any time. That lever is the power they hold as creditors to the most indebted sive
nation in history.
As
far as the general public
kept secret in the world U.S. economy.
is
is
concerned, the best-
the deteriorating state of the
The only thing
that disguises the nation’s
deep economic trouble (especially from Americans themselves)
is
the universal assumption that the United States
simply must be the richest society there ever was. Americans keep saying so, and people around the world believe
them. To be sure, the wealth
is
there, but
its
increasing
maldistribution and precariousness have been the object of a desperate cover-up for the last twenty years.
many Americans know
that
until
the
mid-1980s the
United States was a creditor nation - and that deficit
was zero?
How
its
trade
Just as everybody everywhere has to
agree to believe that gold
is
valuable, so everybody every-
where has to believe that America is the rock-solid foundation of the global economic order. Doubting the stability
of the U.S.
power and
economy
the equivalent of doubting the
is
sanctity of the
papacy on the brink of the Ref-
ormation. Moreover, admitting the failing state of the U.S.
economy would
call into
question the entire project
of building a global economy, something no government
wants to do with
its
“customer of
last resort.”
economic policy grows more deluGovernments both Democratic and Republican
All the while, U.S.
sionary.
insist that “the
fundamentals” of the economy are strong
and that globalization
will
make them even 273
stronger. But
WORLD, BEWARE! we
money
are borrowing the
to
buy the world’s goods.
Meanwhile, the working-class standard of living declines as jobs pay less and grow more insecure, and as the number of Americans living in poverty (especially children) increases.
The middle
debt ($2
trillion as of
gages,
class saves less
and goes deeper
2004, not including
into
home mort-
or about $19,000 per household), the nation’s
and
infrastructure erodes, public services are cut back,
entrepreneurs
move
their capital to other lands.
For twenty years the United States has been running ever higher trade deficits.
It is
now
government investors for $3
and measure
in debt to private
trillion.
In large
made
it
possible for the United States to
invest as heavily as
it
has in armaments. Foreign debt
that debt has
undergirds our military budget, which means our status as
a
superpower
is
heavily mortgaged.
As U.S. debt
increases abroad, the domestic budget gap has steadily
widened - and it has done so under Republican presidents (Reagan and the two Bushes) who advertised them-
Now,
selves to the electorate as “fiscal conservatives.”
even that pretense has crumbled; Republican leaders have
openly acknowledged that they are running
how
deficits
-
for
could they hide the fact any longer? But they are
quick to
insist that deficits
do not matter. During
his
presidency George W. Bush has never vetoed a single pork-barrel project presented to
words of one drunken sailor.”
the
him by
the Congress. In
analyst, he has spent
money
“like a
Calculating the cumulative effects of the recent recession, tax cuts,
Budget Office
and higher spending, the Congressional (a
highly reliable source) predicts that the
U.S. budget deficit will reach $2.4 trillion over the
com-
Even the U.S. -dominated and stoutly conservative International Monetary Fund (which has been ing decade.
274
America’s Global Constituency called America’s
speak out on the
“largest shareholder”) has seen issue. In
fit
January 2004 the imf issued
to a
warning that U.S. indebtedness was now endangering the stability of the global economy. It estimated that Amer-
would economy - “an
net financial obligation to other countries
ica’s
soon amount to 40 percent of its total unprecedented level of external debt for a large industrial country.” Other nations, among them Japan, Germany, and France, are also running serious deficits, but they are not pumping their debt into
And
any
sterile military
adventures.
do not bear the responsibility for anchoring the world economy. When the imf warning was sounded, the Bush in
case, they
administration shrugged
month, President Bush,
it
as
off as “alarmist.” In that if all
too eager to tempt
same fate,
and Space Administration to announce a costly new program to colonize the Moon and place a man on Mars. The price tag? Some $12 billion to start with, followed by $500 billion over the next decade. Where would this money come from? The question went unanswered; the program was not
came before
monitored
the National Aeronautics
after that.
Those who hold
a nation’s debt are in the position to
pull the financial chain that they hold in their hands.
not a nice thing to do; major economic players hesitate to do so, though the United States itself has done
That
is
exactly that to express
within
its
power. For
America propped up
its
much
War
that
II,
of the twentieth century,
a sagging British empire, preferring
to let Great Britain act as
When
disapproval of debtor nations
its
surrogate in world affairs.
became an untenable arrangement
after
World
the United States did not hesitate to use the finan-
power of the imf to thwart the 1956 British (and French and Israeli) invasion of Egypt. It may be difficult cial
275
WORLD, BEWARE! happening with a
to imagine that kind of intervention
country as powerful as the United States, especially for purely ethical reasons. Certainly nobody in Washington,
whether Republican or Democrat, fears that prospect. But in 2002 investors in Saudi Arabia dared to tweak Washington’s nose by withdrawing $200 billion from U.S. financial markets, mainly due to dissatisfaction with
U.S. economic policy and to continued criticism
Bush administration
from the
Saudi royal family’s sus-
for the
pected support of terrorists. It
is
worth remembering that European and Asian
governments that have it
lent the
United States the
money
more power The European
requires to remain a superpower have far
than the Saudis to influence U.S. policy.
Union, with
its
strengthening euro,
is
especially well
- and not only in an American accent. As the economist William Greider puts it, “As the euro establishes its durability and comes into wider usage, the dollar will no longer be the only option. At that point, it will be easier for Europe or placed to prod the United States.
Money
talks
others to exercise their financial leverage against the
United States without damaging themselves or the global financial system as a whole. Europe is not quite there yet, but the euro
is
rising
and so
is
European anger.”
America’s increasingly precarious position in world trade offers a telling example of
how
reckless U.S. policy-
makers have become. One would have thought that this shaky position would encourage Washington to behave with a certain courtesy and gratitude towards its creditors.
But what are
George W. Bush and
we
to
make
of the arrogance that
his advisers decided to display
they took over the White House?
when
They revealed an
underlying right-wing willingness to be insultingly unilateral
about major policy decisions. Their approach proves
276
America’s Global Constituency that there are policy-makers in the United States
who
reserve the right to handle the nation’s fiscal affairs with
how
near disregard for
budget
America’s ballooning trade and
might jeopardize the position of foreign investors, almost as if they were daring the world to deficits
abandon
the dollar.
How
far
can the United States travel
in that direction before its investors decide to teach
it
good manners? Since the end of
World War
II
the dollar has, of
course, been a privileged currency in international trade,
form of the petrodollars that undergird market. Other currencies, like the euro, are
especially in the
the world oil
now more
stable than the dollar, but
United States were using tinue bolstering
its
it
almost as
if
the
supremacy to concurrency. Some might say the United
States has every right to
dens
it is
its
do
military
that, given the military bur-
has shouldered for several decades, defending
nations that could not provide for themselves. But with
Cold War, America’s military has assumed another and more menacing aspect. Washington is using its military supremacy as a means of intimidating even its allies into submission on all issues of trade and finance the end of the
and especially on the future of the global oil market. That is the goal of its supposedly “benign imperium.” Indeed, as the United States takes over the conquered Iraqi oil fields,
as a
way
it
may
seek to use these rich
new
reserves
of beating back any effort by the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting Countries (opec) to substitute
euros for dollars.
Armed might Thus,
it
creates the illusion of omnipotence.
has always been the vice of imperial powers to
subordinate sound economics to military power. In the long run this approach is bound to be self-defeating.
Empires have gone broke financing
277
their arsenals,
paying
WORLD, BEWARE! the costs of military occupation, defending their
bound-
and administering their domains while their economies faltered. Basically, the United States is an industrial powerhouse blessed with real wealth and great skill, but its economy is badly out of balance. The inanity aries,
of the recent dot-com
boom
clear evidence of
is
how
delusionary thinking can infiltrate even the hard-headed
board rooms of major corporations. And the wave of financial scandals that has swept over Wall Street - especially the crooked bookkeeping - may mean that the masters of the universe no longer have any idea of what the true state of the
economy
is.
Its
creditors might
do
the United States a great favour by pulling that financial chain. Indeed, that might be the only
corporados and cal right 3.
way
that
politicians, especially those
American
on the
politi-
wing, can be brought to their senses.
Re-educating America.
that U.S. creditors
It
might seem unthinkable
would ever use
their financial leverage
to counter Washington’s imperial policies. But
if
the
tri-
umphalists continue to use military force to intimidate the rest of the world, the rest of the world
may have no
The triumphalists are ideological to and it is the essence of ideology to be
choice but to act. their very core,
uncompromising, and aggressive. Ideologues cannot tolerate opposition; they cannot even tolerate diversity of opinion and value. The triumphalists are out absolute,
market economics on the world; that is their saving mankind from the sin of collectivism.
to impress
plan for
Add
to that ideology the unswerving religious conviction
of the fundamentalists, and the result
AmerAs long
a fanatical
no alternatives. the American people view the world through
ican nationalism that will permit as
is
umphalist designs.
filter,
a
tri-
there will be a voting public for such
At some point, other nations may have to make
America's Global Constituency
common
cause with embattled liberals in an effort to
re-
educate the American public.
We
need an all-out
intellectual assault
on triumphal-
ism, an ongoing public debate that calls into question the
assumptions and values of the American right wing.
It is
not enough for this attack to be carried out by American critics;
imperium
the
to counter best
it is
is
a
worldwide
what we need
an international effort undertaken by the
minds around the world.
and debate
issue;
circuit that
We
should create a lecture
keeps a steady stream of Euro-
pean, Asian, and Latin American intellectuals before the
American public so that Americans can perceive that other nations have a stake in our political life. The most suitable forum for this debate would be U.S. universities. Indeed, drawing the universities into this great encounter would energize higher education, lending it some of the seriousness and social relevance that enlivened the campuses during the Vietnam era. The spirit of the teach-ins has been sadly missing from university life. It is time to restore that spirit, is
and the
issue
we need
for that purpose
before us.
What might
the response be to such an intellectual
invasion from around the world?
No
doubt sparks would
xenophobic reflex would occur throughout conservative circles. But that very response would make the issue clear. It would reveal the narrowness and ideologifly;
a
cal rigidity of the triumphalists.
tion of
non-Americans would,
The prominent
participa-
make
clear the
in itself,
true dimensions of the crisis.
another important reason for internationalizing the debate on the American imperium. Because triumphalism draws upon the influence of European emigres
There
is
of the 1930s and 1940s, spective
on
this
we need
body of thought 279
a
non-American
per-
a re-evaluation of the
WORLD, BEWARE! experience that stands behind the exiles brought with
it
them
and the conclusions that
to the United States. Tri-
umphalism is a backward-looking worldview; it stems from a time that no longer exists. The Europe of violent ideological strife and totalitarian movements has been swept away in favour of benign and pluralistic social systems. The same is true of the social Darwinism that gives triumphalism
its
harsh edge. This too
the dusty past. Outside of the
is
a philosophy of
American corporate com-
munity one would be hard pressed to find people who still believe that the world must be the sort of jungle it was in the early industrial period. Nasty and brutish nonsense of this kind has burned itself out in other countries. But in the United States, a society in
which right-wing think-
tanks dominate political discussion, this historical context is
easily ignored.
Beyond the universities, there are at least a few media outlets that might help to present the debate. And there is also the Internet, which has become an alternative broadcast medium. The Howard Dean presidential campaign in 2004 is one example of how the Internet can be used for mainstream political purposes. Dean raised an unprecedented amount of money and support from all corners of the country. The Internet does not reach everybody, but it draws together an educated, politically active audience, which can use the experience of non- Americans to offset the triumphalist insistence that all social prob-
lems must be
left
to market-based solutions.
Under commercial pressure, public affairs coverage in both the print and broadcast media has become ever more insular. Moreover, the Bush administration has sought to use the fcc as a way of censoring liberal and international criticism. Information about the rest of the
world rarely makes
its
way through 280
the
news media, even
America's Global Constituency Might that be remedied by lively, well-edited “packages'” of foreign opinion to which newspapers, -along with television and radio networks, could subscribe? The package might be only five minutes in length, but it would be a reminder that there is a world beyond our shores that cares about what America does and comments on our ways. Although they are building a worldwide imperium, Americans are not great travellers. Only 18 percent of the population holds passports. And when they do travel, what do they go to see except the obvious tourist attracso significant dissent.
less
tions? But suppose other countries created social tours, a
chance to observe
and
how
they deal with crime, health, child
elder-care, education, retirement, culture?
fect as these institutions
at least alternatives that
Americans have and
might be
in
As imper-
other lands, they are
would broaden
offset the various
the choices that
schemes that
tri-
umphalists have developed for privatizing social services.
The more Americans trial societies, 9
learn about daily
life
in other indus-
the less hold triumphalist orthodoxy will
have over them. There
is
another arena
need help. The time
is
at
in
hand
which American
liberals
to confront the teachings of
the fundamentalist churches with a firm critical response.
This
is
more liberal would help to
primarily the responsibility of the
Christian congregations, but here again
it
include an international perspective. Even though evangelical
Christians are aggressive proselytizers, criticizing their
religious beliefs
is
often seen to be bad manners in the
United States. That might be appropriately polite
if
those
were not being intruded into the country’s politics, often in ways that are fiercely intolerant - and especially beliefs
given that the apocalyptic expectations of these churches are
now
a significant influence
281
on U.S. foreign
policy.
WORLD, BEWARE! never expected to see the day
I
Age of Reason to be put
back
when Tom
that classic of village atheism
in circulation.
nation in which the Bible
Yet here
I
am
being read as the
is
Paine’s
- needed
living in a literal
truth
many
fundamentalist zealots
would not expect to see won away from their faith
by the
intellectual challenge
am
by more and more people.
Bible-thumpers see their
I
I
proposing. After as
critics
they should
know
impinge on
political decisions, will
in
light
Above
how
of the use they
all,
Satan’s pawns.
that their views, especially
They should be challenged
all,
the
But
where they
be stoutly resisted.
make sense of make of modern to
their beliefs
technology.
they should be held responsible for explaining
the theocratic authoritarianism they are promoting
can be made compatible with democratic values.
POWER CORRUPTS walk among my fellow citizens on the streets and in shops and parks, I find myself wondering how many of them grasp the peril in which we are living.
These days, as
I
Not the threat of terrorist attack: that threat is being hammered into us by the hour by the government and media. I mean the ethical and political peril into which our country
is
rapidly drifting as the three forces - the
corporados, the triumphalists, and the fundamentalists tighten their grip
own
on our
society.
Each of them
for their
reasons exerts a steady, convergent pressure driving
the United
States
towards an imperial role that our
nation has neither the right nor the competence to wield. In that direction lies the endless
war and growing
repres-
sion of the National Security State.
around me know how close we are to losing control of the instruments of democracy? Do
Do
the people
I
see
America's Global Constituency they care? Sometimes
I
suspect that they have deliberately
blinded themselves to the
seriousness
of the
moment
because they sense that the task of thwarting such powerful forces is
too demanding, the responsibility too great.
It
and deny and evade - to immerse oneself in media make-believe and illusions of well-being. I am again and again appalled by the escapism and denial is
easier
that
by
far to ignore
Americans have become so expert
at
practising.
Worse still is their willingness to permit obvious crimes and deceptions to be covered over by patriotic self-congratulations.
many Americans who
Like so
through the
lived
ordeal of Vietnam and the ensuing Watergate scandal,
have become wary of patriotism. used to deceive the public;
I
have seen noble words
I
have seen
used to hide atrocities. Even so, as
have become to patriotic
sured high expectations for what able to
offer
my
country’s flag
immune
as
is
because
my
More than
the world.
power and material wealth,
I
believe
I
not been an
bluster, this has
easy book to write. Perhaps that
I
I
once trea-
country might be its
technological
the United States has always
possessed a brash and brawling egalitarianism, a fascination with innovation, a tolerance for eccentricity that
I
hoped might humanize the postindustrial world. Now I am not at all sure my children will see that America survive. Instead,
ologues
who
my
country has fallen into the hands of ideare bent on establishing a worldwide corpo-
imperium, and authoritarian true believers who believe it is America’s role to prepare the world for the
rate
Second Coming of Jesus. Although I have a decent appreciation of my country’s virtues, I cringe at such overweening nationalistic bravado.
When
I
I
know
look at
too
my
much
history to join in the cheering.
nation’s historical record,
283
what
I
see
WORLD, BEWARE! there
is
a mixture of
perfection.
I
long, bloody
good and bad
that falls far short of
which only a the lynchings and vari-
see the dismal fact of slavery,
war could
end.
I
see
ous forms of de jure and de facto racial apartheid that followed that war for the next three generations.
I
see the
near-extermination of the native American population
and the shameless rape of our once-magnificent natural environment. I see the vicious class warfare of our early industrial cities.
see the violence of the Prohibition era
I
and the organized crime that arose from it to permeate our lives. We are hardly a society of angels. Yet in the face of these moral blemishes, Americans are marvellously quick to forgive themselves.
comes
to unpleasant truths,
we
When
it
are always eager to “put
things behind us” or even to turn our misdeeds into virtues.
Our
remembered
devastation as
of the
American Indians
is
“winning the west”; our worst gangsters
have been transformed into folk heros;
many once even
subscribed to the belief that black Americans were a
and
jovial
who
childlike people gifted with natural
never cared
enslavement. light as a
We
that
much about
their centuries of
prefer to view ourselves in a sentimental
kind and generous people.
Needless to
Many
all
rhythm
say, there
is
truth to that benign image.
of America’s failures can be balanced by
able achievements. as benevolent
commend-
Taken one by one, Americans can be
and decent
as the people of other lands.
Along with our crime bosses and robber barons, our gunslingers and Indian fighters, our red-neck bigots and corporate swindlers, we have also had our champions of reform and our great humanitarian spirits. But Americans, for all their virtues, have no claim to moral superiority over other societies whose fundamental decency, simply as measured by how they share their wealth, puts our
284
America's Global Constituency pretensions to fairness and generosity to shame.
If
Ameri-
cans were brave enough to review their history with an honest and critical eye, their delusions of moral grandeur
would soon evaporate, and they would be having seen the truth. For ourselves that
we
are
all
we
better off for
it is
because
the
more dangerous
think so well of today.
We
tions.
who cannot doubt the purity of our intenLeaders who tell us a flattering story about our-
selves
win our
are a people
ists
who
tell
votes.
Hence
the success of the triumphal-
we deserve to inherit economy that is now
us that
The global
the Earth.
taking shape so
rapidly under the guidance of the world’s richest nations
and corporations has already made clear that the national boundaries we inherit from the past are losing their importance in the realm of commerce. Environmentalists have been at great pains to teach us the same lesson about the planetary ecology. boundaries
restrict
We
let
national
our understanding of the great geo-
biological systems that envelop our
we have
cannot
human
habitat. But
not yet matched our environmental science and
our economic ambitions with cultural integration. The United States in the era of Gulf
example of what
results
when
War
II is
a frightening
a powerful nation rejects
dialogue with other people. Then
we have
a
smug and
heavy-handed imperialism that blunders across the world creating havoc, inviting hatred, making enemies where it might have made friends. The triumphalists believe in a militant democracy, willing to take on the world if necessary to defend their warped, class-ridden version of
"‘free-
dom. ” With the intoxication that power brings, they believe in pre-emptive and unilateral action. They have yet to register the idea that
freedom understood
as a
worldwide market economy under corporate control can only become a
new
chapter in the history of colonialism.
285
WORLD, BEWARE! But then, as British historian Niall Ferguson puts
it,
America has been “an empire in denial” ever since it began seeking to rebuild the fallen Pax Britannica as a Pax Americana at the end of World War II. One thing can be said to the credit of the triumphalists: they seem almost eager to
call a
spade a spade. They
their true goals, but they
make no
may
lie
to hide
effort to disguise their
determination to use power in the national interest. They take pride in being tough and assertive in ways that they believe liberals lack the guts to match.
am
I
struck by
how
the United States
is
alone in the
no experience of the downmight have learned that from los-
twenty-first century in having side to imperialism.
ing the
war
in
We
Vietnam, but
we
did not. In 1991,
he had gained what he was prepared to
Gulf
War
I,
the
first
when
call victory in
George Bush proudly announced
syndrome” was now a thing of the past by which he meant the widespread fear that all future wars would lead to a similar failure. To the triumphalists
that “Vietnam
announcement cleared the way for resuming the pursuit of hegemony. That was the point at which the United States began to diverge from the international consensus that saw policies of imperial expansion as a thing of the past. Every other major nation and many a minor one the British, French, Germans, Russians, Italians, Spanish,
that
Portuguese, Japanese, Dutch, Belgians - have suffered the tribulations of failed colonialism.
They have conquered
and they have lost, and in losing have learned that only a privileged few - the business elite, military commanders, colonial administrators - enjoy the fruits of the Great
Game
of imperialism.
For
all
of these nations that lesson
is
written in
blood and moral embarrassment. The people of imperial
powers may once have cheered
286
their troops into battle;
America's Global Constituency they
may have
thrilled to see their flag raised over distant
lands; but they ultimately paid a heavy price for subju-
gating populations that hated them. Nations that have
been through that ordeal have earned cious
wisdom
that
still
learn that despite our
eludes Americans.
armed strength and
cannot remake the world that
we
can, to
recklessly, will
in
our
own
employ that strength
do very
a bitter
little
We
but pre-
have yet to
vast riches,
image. To
we
insist
unilaterally
and
except to spread chaos.
“Power tends to corrupt.” We all know Lord Acton’s famous warning. But how many know there was a second part to his familiar aphorism? “Power tends to corrupt,” he said, “and absolute power corrupts absolutely A The second part may be less well known because there have been few nations to which it could be applied. There have been great powers in the past, but never a great power that stood alone without rivals that could discipline its ambitions. As of the beginning of the twenty-first century, the United States
tion of being as close to absolute
is
in the risky posi-
power
as
any nation
has ever come. Perhaps, given the pious temperament of the times in the United States, biblical terms.
it
would help
“What
whole world and
shall
it
lose his soul?”
287
to translate that risk into profit a
man
to
gam
the
.
'
Index
Acton, Lord John 287
Bush, George W. 101, 104, 107,
Adorno, Theodor 239
113, 116, 119, 128, 141, 144,
Afghanistan 48, 112, 250, 271;
159, 262; and Bush bashing
and triumphalist policy 23, 246-249; triumphalist reconstruction of 104, 246 Al-Qaeda 6, 24, 40, 87, 149, 246, 248, 257, 269
and United Nations 20-25, 270-272; as distant early warning sign 28; and Gulf War II 43M6, 114-115; and Iraq elections of 2005, 47; and Tony Blair 49-55; and Enron scandal 73; and corporate style 80; and reconstruction contracts in Iraq 94-99; and tax policy 117; and use of military force 121-123; and September 11, 151-153; and evangelical Christianity 56-57, 166-171, 175; and use of Reagan campaign techniques 184-186, summary of foreign and domestic policy 201-202; and use of media 209; and suvs 221-222; and energy policy 224; and “democracy,” 238-240; and terrorism 245; and future of U.S. imperium 249-251, 286; and deficit spending 274-276; and entitlements policy 266-267
All in the Family 179
Allbaugh, Joe 101 Arendt, Hanna 129
Atwood, Margaret 241 authoritarian personality 239
authoritarianism 5, 145, 243, 282 Bechtel
Company
53, 97, 98, 100,
104, 116 Bernays, Ed\yard 204, 207 Bilbo,
Theodore 199
bin Laden,
Osama
37, 115, 238
Blackstone, William 164 Blair,
Tony 24, 44, 49-55
Branch Davidians 149 British East India
Company 128
Buchanan, Pat 143 Buckley, William F. 138 Bunker, Archie 179, 180, 185, 199 Bush, George Herbert Walker 256,
286; and Gulf War I 113-114; and Sunbelt 159; and evangelicalism 166; and campaign of 1988, 185; and Clarence
Thomas 186; and Panama 212
attack on
1-4, 195-196;
Carter,
Jimmy
160, 161, 164
Catholics 174, 176, 242, 263, 264
ceos (Chief Executive
new
Officers),
65-71; ceos,” 68, 85-86; as
role in U.S. business
as “killer
WORLD, BEWARE! government 73, 80, 100; as “Marie Antoinettes,” 76; and global economy 86; and fascism 103; and evangelicalism style of
259-260 Chamberlain, Joseph 82 Chambers, Oswald 167 Chavez, Hugo 22, 40 Cheney, Dick,, and Gulf 52, 80; and
War
II
48,
Enron scandal 73;
and Halliburton Company 98-99, 128; as face of the future 120; and energy policy 224 chief executive officers. See ceos Christian Zionists 165 civil rights 133, 187, 188, 197, 244 Clarke, Richard 22, 23 Clinton, Bill, and nafta and gatt 86; disinterest in triumphalists
Dispensational Christianity 164
Dobson, James 262
Dome
of the
Rock 165,
1
73
Duncan, Robert 177 Dunlop, A1 “Chainsaw” 68 economic royalists 62, 76, 240 efficient market hypothesis 87 Eisenhower, Dwight 110, 158, 266 End of Days 164-166, 171, 261 Enron Company 73-75 Erinys International 127 evangelical Christians 22, 52, 102,
199, 202, 231, 281; as electoral muscle 56-57; and triumphalists
140-141; and Branch Davidians 149; and rise of Sunbelt 156-157; and conservative backlash 160-164; and End of Days 165-171; and the Rapture 172-175; and war against pluralism 173-177; and authoritarianism 241-244; and Catholics
and war on drugs in Columbia 126; and evangelicalism 168; and law enforcement 191-192; Republican persecution of 197; and Somalia 212; and sexual escapades 219 Cold War 32, 33, 158, 162, 197, 258, 277; Ronald Reagan and end of Cold War 112-116, triumphalists’ use of 118, 120; and paranoia 150
Evangelical Environmental Net-
Commanding Heights
felony disenfranchisement 192,
1
14;
television
264; as possible right-wing soft spot
258-265
work 263 empire 6, 112 Executive Order 13303, 100
evil
Falwell, Jerry 169
257
Ferguson, Niall 286 Fiorino, Carly 80
92 conspiracy theorists 150 Coolidge, Calvin 86, 207 Coulter, Ann 135, 197 counter culture 34, 163, 174 series 5, 25, 89,
274 market 132, 202, 224; as form
fiscal
free
conservatives 112, 259,
of capitalist idolatry 30, 280;
Darby, John Nelson 164
Darwinian evolution 35, 162-163, 166, 265 Dean, Howard 280 DeLay, Tom 198-201, 251 deregulation 70, 72-74, 184 Dewey, John 139 disaster capitalism 104
290
and deregulation 73; and corporados 77-78, and mixed economies 83; as model of “democracy,” 89; ideology 91, 93
in triumphalist
Frum, David 107, 270 Fuller, Buckminster 232, 233 Gingrich,
Newt 199
Index global constituency
1,
1
1,
30, 258,
272
Jeffords, Jim 198
John-Paul
II
263
Global Risk Strategies 127 Goldwater, Barry 143, 158 Gorbachev, Mikhail 1 12
Kant, Immanuel 244
great depression 32, 61, 83, 91, 92
Kerry,
Great Society 62, 111, 133, 196,
Kellogg, Brown, and
Kagan, Robert 45, 107, 245
201 Greider, William
Gulf Gulf
War War
I
276
22, 113, 114, 256, 286 in triumphalist policy
II,
27-28, 108; and British cabinet memos 23-24; and U.S. allies 42-45; and Tony Blair 52-54; and Halliburton Company 97-99; and Paul Wolfowitz 103-104; and U.S. unilateralism 7, 9,
121-125 Hagee, John 200 Haggard, Ted 262 Halliburton
Company
John 196, 264
Root Com-
pany (kbr) 128 Kennedy, John 150, 159, 264 Keynes, John Maynard 90-92 “killer ceos”. See ceos Kipling, Rudyard 128 Kissinger, Henry 129 Klein, Naomi 104 Krauthammer, Charles 31 Kristol, William 45, 107 Left Behind fiction series 67, 72, 85, 118, 166, 190 Lewis, Sinclair 137
47, 98, 99,
102, 117, 126, 128 Harding, Warren G. 171, 206, 207 Hayek, Friedrich 90-93, 129, 131, 132, 139, 146 Heritage Foundation 251 Hijacking Catastrophe 195 Hofstadter, Richard 23 Horton, Willy 185, 257 Humphrey, Hubert 196 hurricane Katrina 267 1
liberalism,
and Bush-bashing 1-2;
extreme
hostility of neo-conser-
toward 5, 10, 1 1, 133-139; and single-issue voters 35; and New Deal 62-63; and corporate power 78; and John Maynard Keynes 91; and military-industrial complex 1 13; and libertarians 145-146; and paramilitary right wing 148; and evangelical Christians 160-163; and conservative backlash of 1980s 178-189; and loss of the Sunbelt 158, 184-195; and internal dissension 196-199; and absolute values 242-244; and neo-conservative soft spots 259-264; and American global vatives
'
Hussein,
Saddam
3, 6, 23, 24, 37,
44-46, 50, 51, 98, 99, 113, 114, 168, 271 Iacocca, Lee 66, 67
imperialism 16, 200, 285, 286 Iran-contra scandal 183, 197, 201,
232 and Gulf War II 24; and Near East policy 114; and evangelical Christians 162-170; and red heifer 170-173; and Temple Mount 173; and “God’s foreign policy,” 200
Israel,
291
constituency 279-281
Limbaugh, Rush 178 Lindsay, Hal 155 Lippmann, Walter 139 McCarthy, Joseph 115, 135, 175, 197 Marx, Karl 14, 71, 90
WORLD, BEWARE! mercenaries in Iraq 122, 127, 200,
253
Populists 187, 188, 243 Premillennialist Christianity 164
Military Professional Resources
Presley, Elvis
Incorporated 126 Military Contractors. See merce-
progressive
159
movement 136, 187,
223, 227 prohibition 163, 284
naries in Iraq
Murdoch, Rupert 214
nascar (National Stock Car Racing Association) 243 National Christian Leadership Conference on Israel 168 National Rifle Association (nra) 147, 231 national security state 20, 118, 282 neoconservatives 3-6, 52, 55, 200,
203, 264-268. See also triumphalists Netanyahu, Benjamin 168
New Deal
32, 62, 72, 111, 133,
137, 160, 179, 187, 188, 201,
210 Nixon, Richard 29, 58, 181, 197,
266 noble
lies
133
Noriega, Manual 212 Norquist, Grover 135, 178 Office of Reconstruction
and
Stabi-
lization 104. See also disaster
capitalism O’Neill, Paul 22
opec 277 Orwell, George Paine,
6, 90,
115, 119
Thomas 282
Patriot Act 119,
203
peace dividend 113 Pearl Harbor 6, 114, 151 Perle, Richard 107, 270 Phillips,
Kevin 58
Plato 106, 133, 138, 140-142, 153
pluralism 173-177 Project for a
New
American Cen-
tury (pnac) 114, 151
Popper, Karl 129, 131
Rand, Ayn 129, 139 Rapture 165, 166, 172, 173, 265 Reagan, Ronald 49, 66, 85; and conservative backlash 7, 56, 84, 109, 111, 113, 181, 184, 196;
and providential view of U.S. 21; and triumphalists 21, 107-109, 114, 120; and bluecollar Democrats 35, 179-180; and Saddam Hussein 46; and Margaret Thatcher 55, 84; and Savings and Loan debacle 72; and ideological use of deficit spending 109, 111, 113, 274; and “evil empire,” 112; and end
Cold War 113,
and tax“star and payer revolt 116, 189; wars,” 112, 211; and religion 141, 161, 166, 174, 241; and racism 160-161, 184-186, 190; and liberals 180-181, 186; and law enforcement 181-182; and use of media 182-183, 217; and Iran-contra 183, 197; and drugs 191; and fantasy politics 210-211; and star power 223, 227-228; and entitlements 266 red heifer 170, 172, 173 to
21.1;
Republican Party 171, 182, 217, 260; and blue-collar voters 35, 179-180; new role as party of record-breaking deficits 111-112; and taxpayer revolt
116-118; and Patriot Act 119; and libertarians 145-147; and Sunbelt 156, 159-160; and evangelical Christians 160-162; as the white-man’s
champion
185-187; dilemma of moderates
Index in
party 197-198, 202-203,
and 198-iron party discipline 199; and Tom DeLay 203; California Republican Party 224; and deficit spending 25 1-252, 254; and nasty campaign tactics 236; and single-
and Catholics 264; growing extremism of 266; and fiscal conservatism 274-275 Rice, Condoleezza 31, 48 Robertson, Randall 175 Rockefeller, John D. 67, 78 Rockefeller, Nelson 158-159 issue voters 266;
Roosevelt, Franklin D. 32,61, 62,
179, 187, 196, 207, 210; and
Great Depression 72; and World War II 109-1 1 1; and artists and intellectuals
136-137; and
solid
south 160; and economic royal-
240 Roosevelt, Theodore 61, 136, 201 Rove, Karl 52 Rumsfeld, Donald 13, 18, 23, 39, 46, 48, 49, 107, 252 76,
ists
Leo 106, 129, 131, 133, 141-144, 153, 264 139, Sunbelt 156-161, 167, 179, 197, 199 superCEOs. See CEOs Susskind, Ron 23 Strauss,
259; 197- and Joseph McCarthy 197;
San Salvador 2A3 Saudi Arabia 29, 276 Schwarzenegger, Arnold 223-229 Singer, Peter 127
taxpayer revolt 116 Temple Mount 164 terrorism, and September 11,
2001
attack 6, 14, 19, 115; as cultural threat to modernity 14; moral
obscenity of 19; and scare tactics 20, 115-116, 249, 257; propa-
ganda imagery of 37, 1 15; and U.S. world-wide attack matrix 40, 104-105, 121; paramilitary right wing and domestic terror (Oklahoma City) 149; and purported hatred of freedom 239 Thatcher, Margaret 49, 53, 55, 73, 84 Thomas, Clarence 186 Tocqueville, Alexis de 122 Total Information Awareness Pro09- 119 gram Trilling, Lionel 139 Triple Canopy Company 253 triumphalism, or neo-conservatives 3;
opposition to “big govern-
Smith, A1 264
ment,” 5-7; imperial designs 6-7, 20-24, 200; as hyper-radi-
Smith, Michael 54
cals 18; ruthlessness of 11, 12,
Darwinism 85, 199, 280
social
110-
25, 28, 256-258; alliance with
15, 26, 81, 84,
Social Security 133, 184, 250,
265-267 Sojourners evangelical
movement
261-262 Soviet
Union
112-114,
184,211,243 power 226, 227, 230
121-,
star
6, 29, 33, 48,
137,
star wars. See Strategic
Defense
corporados 25; inadequate liberal response 28-30; true intentions in Iraq 46-48; role in Bush administration 107-108; and Friedrich Hayek 90-96, 130-131; and Ronald Reagan 1 14, 184; and new mili1 tary-industrial
complex
114; and National Security
Ini-
118-122; use of unilateralism 120-122; and European emigres 129-134; and State
tiative
Strategic Defense Initiative (sdi)
112, 211
293
WORLD, BEWARE! disenchanted Stalinists 145; and
Leo Strauss 131, 140-143, 153; as
new
conservative
gentsia 136;
intelli-
and esotericism
141-142; critique of liberalism 134-136, 184, 189; as conspiratorial group 150-154; and Israel 169; and race 188-189; and authoritarianism 242; future use of
power 246-251;
and John Kerry 196; and “Vietnam syndrome,” 123, 286; and patriotism 283 Vinnelle Corporation 126 Voegelin, Eric 129, 131 Von Mises, Ludwig 129
electoral
techniques 256-258; possible friction
French 43; and implosion of Democratic Party 62, 196-197, 238; and conscription 123-124;
Jim 261 Watergate scandal 62, 197, 231, 283 Welch, Jack 68, 69 Wallis,
with evangelical Chris-
264-265; and senior entitlements 265-267; and United Nations 269-271; need for more tians
effective liberal critique
278-280. See also neoconserva-
welfare state 90, 159, 265, 267; triumphalist hostility toward 10, 25, 55, 134, 250, 265; place in
and freedom 92-93; and entitlements 267 Whitman, Walt 176 Will, George 138, 139 history 83-84, 134;
tives
Trump, Donald 79, 80 United Nations, and Bush administration 43-45, 247; UN inspectors in Iraq 50; object of right-
wing paranoia 48-149; rejected by triumphalists 269-271; need for reform 279-270; role in prewar Iraq 271-272
Wilson,
Woodrow
42, 61, 145,
187 Wolfowitz, Paul 52, 103, 107, 120
Woodward, Bob 23, 245 World Bank 27, 94, 103, 104 Yergin, Daniel 89, 90
Vietnam war 2, 7-8, 33-34, 37-38, 279; public rejection of war 36, 2 55, 267; and the
294
Zionism 164
About
Theodore Roszak
renowned
ing of a
professor emeritus of history at
social critic.
His influential The Mak-
Counter Culture helped define the youthful
He
a leading “neo-Luddite”
and
founder of the ecopsychology movement. Roszak’s
six-
rebellion of the sixties. a
Author
University, East Bay, and an interna-
California State tionally
is
the
teen published
been translated
works of into
Berkeley, California.
is
fiction
fourteen
and
non-fiction
languages.
He
have
lives
in
POLITICS, HISTORY, SOCIAL ISSUES
WORLD, BEWARE!
T
HIS
FAR MORE than just another Bush-bashing
IS
book.
World, Beware!
provides the historical background
and sociological depth we need to understand the full scope of American triumphalism. Theodore Roszak lays bare the forces dominating U.S. politics: the
corporate
elite,
the
neo conservative
intelli-
and the fundamentalist churches. Fearing the emergence of the U.S. as a "rogue nation,” he issues an affirmative and pragmatic call for global accountability and restraint. gentsia,
America has proven unable rest
to alter
of the world must play a greater
its
own
destructive course.
The
role in reining in the superpower's
excesses.
Roszak shows us why and how.
— Mel
Hurtig, founder, Council of Canadians, author
of Rushing
to
Armageddon
Combines a searing-hot indictment of the imperial
society
we have
become, with a cool-headed, concise, and highly enlightening account
of how we came
to this.
Roszak
sees
our countiy plain and warns the
world, of which, he reminds Americans,
— Daniel the
Ellsberg, author of
we are
Secrets:
a part.
A Memoir of Vietnam
and
Pentagon Papers
RO VQC P
A T
I
onC
ISBN 1-897071-02-7