To the Rogue Tyrants Belong
the Spoils
May 8 2006
Counterbias.com
by Jason Miller
Were America's ruling elites forced to become conscienceless criminals
so they could fend off the scimitar-bearing Islamic hordes itching to
rape, behead, and eviscerate the entire freedom-loving American
population?
Or is it that these avaricious, bellicose de facto rulers of America
have treated humanity with contempt for years and are simply targeting
their latest scapegoat?
Perhaps the answer lies in Adam Smith’s quote, cited by Noam Chomsky in
his latest book:
“the vile maxim of the masters of
mankind: …All for ourselves, and nothing for other people.”
With the arsenal of weapons of mass destruction at its disposal and the
economic influence it wields, the US government subjugates mankind
through intimidation, extortion, and military domination. Despite myriad
signs of its empire declining, America's ruling class easily qualifies
as the “masters of mankind”.
Noam Chomsky recently penned
Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the
Assault on Democracy, a book in which he
provided a powerfully-constructed and heavily documented argument that
the United States is a failed state, like many of the nations it has
declared to be threats to itself and its allies.
As Chomsky suggested, the Bush Regime and its multiple components
(including corporate interests, many of America’s wealthy, certain
radical segments of the Christian population, AIPAC and its supporters,
and those amongst the middle and working class still beguiled by the
corporate media) have been quick to label other nations as failed states
to achieve their imperialist goals.
Iraq was a failed state and a threat to the United States. Hence the
invasion and occupation. Haiti was a failed state and its people were
suffering. Enter United States intervention and subsequent Haitian
misery.
According to Chomsky, there are three essential components to a failed
state:
1. their inability or
unwillingness to protect their citizens from violence and perhaps even
destruction.
2. their tendency to regard
themselves as beyond the reach of domestic or international law, and
hence free to carry out aggression and violence.
3. And if they have democratic
forms, they suffer from a serious “democratic deficit” that deprives
their formal democratic institutions of real substance.
Examples abound to support Chomsky’s assertion that the United States is
indeed as much of a failed state as those it is so quick to criticize,
subvert, and in some cases, invade.
America began to decline seriously under Reagan, continued its
precipitous drop under Bush I and Clinton, and has reached disturbing
lows under Bush II. Whether Republican or Democrat, successive United
States governments degenerated into an entity which is betraying a
majority of its people and is a significant threat to the continued
existence of the human species: a failed state.
Human Beings are
Expendable in our Quest for Money and Power
Under Bush
II, the United States launched an invasion against a sovereign nation
which posed no threat to the United States or its allies. US-driven UN
economic sanctions had neutered Hussein militarily while resulting in
the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.
It is now common knowledge that significant evidence exists that the
Bush Regime took America to war based on what it knew to be false
information. To date, at least 250,000 Iraqis and 2,400 Americans have
died as a result of the lies of a failed state.
How many more Americans will die as a result of the hatred and furor
ignited by US foreign policy, particularly in the Middle East? What will
be the extent of the backlash for the US invasion of Iraq and its
ongoing support of Israel’s genocidal acts against the Palestinians?
Consider Chomsky’s take on the obscene hypocrisy of American foreign
policy:
“There is a straightforward
single standard: Their terror against us and our clients is the ultimate
evil, while our terror against them does not exist—or, if it does, it is
entirely appropriate.”
It is well-documented that the United States has slaughtered millions of
innocent civilians (3 million in Vietnam alone) in wars of imperial
conquest waged under the guise of “protecting” the American people from
grossly overstated threats like Communism. America’s elite rulers are so
intent on their short-term power and money grab that they fail to
realize (or more likely do not care) that they are putting many of their
own people in grave danger by severely abusing the rest of humanity.
Want more evidence that the US government lacks the desire or capacity
to protect the American people?
Contemplate the refusal to acknowledge the reality of global warming or
to participate in the Kyoto Treaty, the perpetuation and expansion of
its nuclear arsenal, tax cuts for the wealthy, deep cuts in social
programs coupled with increased military spending at an insane clip, the
creation of $27,000 worth of debt for each American, increased
privatization, and further deregulation of corporations. In the United
States, policies and laws hostile to the environment, consumers, the
working class, and minorities have become the status quo.
Sadly, Katrina and New Orleans provide a glimpse of the future for the
majority of Americans if current social and political trends continue.
Such is life in a failed state for the those who do not rest comfortably
atop the pyramid of wealth and power.
A strong argument exists that global warming is causing increasingly
severe hurricanes, like Katrina. Meanwhile, America’s elites decided
they had better uses for taxpayer money than to strengthen the levees or
stop the erosion of the wetlands which buffered New Orleans from severe
hurricanes. This despite eerily prescient warnings of a Katrina-like
disaster in a 2001 article in National Geographic.
Rendering FEMA impotent, robbing National Guard resources to conquer
Iraq, abandoning thousands of poor Blacks to suffer and die, patrolling
the streets with heavily armed Blackwater mercenaries, and suspending
federal wage protections during reconstruction are clear indications of
a state which has failed a majority its people miserably.
Rogue Nation
There is little room for doubt that the Bush Regime places itself above
both domestic and international law. A few illustrations include:
1. wiretapping of US citizens without seeking FISA court approval (the
FISA court has granted approval to virtually every request it has
considered);
2. passing and renewing the Orwellian Patriot Act which seriously
violates four of the ten amendments in the Bill of Rights;
3. the invasion and occupation of Iraq, a sovereign nation which had not
attacked the United States and had posed no imminent threat;
4. suspending habeas corpus and posse comitatus;
5. defying the Geneva Conventions by arbitrarily arresting, detaining
and torturing at least 14,000 alleged “enemy combatants”;
6. significant expansion of Executive powers by adding signing
statements (which direct the Executive branch to implement laws as the
president sees fit rather than as Congress intended) to over 750 laws.
In Failed States,
Chomsky provided many examples of America’s elites’ actions that
demonstrate their disregard for domestic and international law, tracing
the roots and progression of such behavior back to World War II.
A Hideous Despot Lurks
Behind the Facade of Lady Liberty
The most
disturbing aspect of Chomsky’s treatise defining the United States as a
failed state is his exploration of its “democratic deficit”.
In stark contrast to our forefathers' blueprint for a constitutional
republic in which the Constitution exists to limit government power, the
people elect their leaders, and an independent judiciary exists to
review the Constitutionality of government actions, America has devolved
into a nation governed by the elite for the elite. The Constitution has
been reduced to “just a goddamned piece of paper.”
Consider Chomsky’s analysis:
The reactionary statists who have
a thin grip on political power are dedicated warriors. With consistency
and passion that approach caricature, their policies serve the
substantial people—in fact, an unusually narrow sector of them—and
disregard or harm the underlying population and future generations. They
are also seeking to use their current opportunities to institutionalize
these arrangements, so that it will be no small task to reconstruct a
more humane and democratic society.
US corporations contribute greatly to the American democratic deficit.
Possessing rights exceeding those of human beings and bearing limited
accountability, powerful corporations enable wealthy shareholders and
executives to place profits ahead of people and the environment to a
sociopathic extent. Corporate moral compasses are consistently drawn off
course by the powerful pull of money.
Deregulation leading to decreased environmental and consumer protections, a stagnant minimum wage, skyrocketing pay for executives relative to
workers, diminished benefits for the working class, and a significant
decline in the power of labor unions are but a few results of corporate
power in the United States. Political manipulation through unbridled
lobbying combined with a revolving door between corporate suites and
government offices ensure that corporate interests supersede those of
the poor and working class.
Corporate-controlled media has interests which are closely aligned with
those of the “substantial
people”, as Chomsky called America’s elites in
Failed States.
Chomsky observed that in Nazi Germany, Goebbels used mainstream media’s
“American advertising methods”
to “sell National Socialism”.
And it worked.
History is repeating itself as mainstream print and broadcast media work
tirelessly to sell America’s “unsubstantial people” on grossly immoral
and illegal government policies detrimental to their well-being, such as
concentrating the wealth and power in the hands of a few and fighting
for global hegemony. And it is working.
America’s mainstream media has two powerful weapons at its disposal,
both of which are deeply embedded in the psyche of many Americans.
As Chomsky pointed out in his book, the media wins the hearts and minds
of many Americans by reminding them of their
“nobility of purpose”
in bringing “the Spirit of Civilization” to other peoples and
nations, even if it means killing millions in the process.
Americans have also demonstrated a repeated vulnerability to the media
manipulating them with fear. Throughout history, America’s elite have
contrived or grossly exaggerated foes such as Native Americans, Blacks,
Communists, Hispanic narco-terrorists, illegal immigrants, terrorists,
and street criminals. Manufactured irrational fear has led to
compliance, subjugation, and the creation of a host of industries
benefiting the “substantial
people”. Long live the military and prison
industrial complexes!
One of Chomsky’s most startling and often over-looked observations about
America is the chasm between political will and the popular will.
Consider that in 1984, Reagan won with 30% of the popular vote. Of those
polled, 4% said they voted for Reagan because
“he’s a real conservative”.
This equates to 1% of voters stating they were endorsing conservatism
with their vote. America’s media proclaimed the election
“a powerful mandate for conservatism”.
Polls showed that in 1984 over 80% of Americans supported increases in
social spending and a majority favored cuts in military spending over
decreased spending on healthcare. Obviously the Reagan and his
administration chose to curry the favor of 20% of the population when
they implemented policy.
The United States is the only industrialized nation with no universal
health care system. 46 million Americans are uninsured and the WHO
recently rated the US healthcare system as number 37 in the world.
Chomsky cited numerous opinion polls, including those conducted by
NBC-Wall Street Journal and the Pew Research Center. Each poll reflected
that over 60% of Americans wanted a universal health care system. Yet
the privatized system is too great a benefit to the
“substantial people”.
It is politically “untouchable”. A nation as wealthy as the United
States that does not provide basic healthcare to all of its people is a
failed state.
Deceitful manipulation of public opinion for political gain is a
specialty of US government elites. As Congress was cutting $20 billion
from the Medicaid program, Tom Delay led the charge (made possible by
corporate media) to give Terri Schiavo the
“chance we all deserve”.
Where is the duplicity, you ask? Terri Schiavo was a Medicaid patient.
How Can We the People
Reclaim the United States?
What measures would restore the American government to its
Constitutional mandates to “provide for the general welfare” and to
“provide for the common defense”, return the US to being a law-abiding
member of the world community, and eradicate the “democratic deficit”?
In Failed State,
Chomsky suggested:
1. accept the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Court and the World Court.
2. Sign and carry forward the Kyoto
protocols
3. let the UN take the lead in
international crises
4. rely on diplomatic and economic
measures rather than military ones in confronting terror
5. keep to the traditional
interpretation for the UN Charter
6. give up the Security Council veto
and have a “decent respect for the opinion of mankind”, as the
Declaration of Independence advises, even if power centers disagree
7. cut back sharply on military
spending and sharply increase social spending
Beyond Chomsky’s
suggestions, here are some avenues the poor, working and middle class
can pursue to put their
state back on a path toward success for
them:
1. massive, sustained boycotts of major
corporations which engage in egregiously criminal behavior, in the US or
abroad;
2. massive and sustained boycotts of the mainstream media;
3. America’s youth refusing to enlist in the military so long as the
United States continues to use its military for purposes other than
defense;
4. significant numbers of existing military personnel refusing to fight
wars of aggression by following the example of Kevin Benderman and
filing for conscientious objector status;
5. the formation of a viable third political party (i.e. Populists,
Socialists, or Labor) which represents the “unsubstantials” to counter
the Democrats and Republicans (both mere vehicles for the wealthy and
elite to maintain power);
6. increased unionization and enhanced cooperation amongst existing
unions;
7. massive numbers of Americans declining to engage in over-consumption;
8. American consumers limiting their debt to necessities and expenses
for their businesses if they are proprietors;
9. wide-spread support of NGOs that support human rights and provide
poverty relief;
10. individual Americans making a conscious effort to educate themselves
and to think critically;
11. sweeping efforts to teach America’s youth true American history and
to use their critical thinking skills to question their failed state;
12. wide-ranging grass roots efforts to maintain the alternative media
on the Internet, Internet communities and the integrity of the Internet
by limiting control by major corporations;
13. individuals engaging in civil disobedience when it is sensible and
necessary;
Noam Chomsky, one of
the preeminent scholars and moral philosophers of our time, has been
largely ignored by the mainstream media, presumably because of his
vehement dissent against US foreign and domestic policy.
Recently, he has also
been demonized by a number of his fellow dissenters, scholars, and
members of the reality-based community. Some criticize him for his
unwillingness to validate the assertion that 9/11 was perpetrated by the
US government. Others call him a Zionist who is soft on Israel. Some
even believe that Chomsky is actually one the
“substantial people”
and uses his brilliant dissent to advocate non-violent change as a means
of taming potentially violent revolutionaries. Still others label him a
hypocrite because of the measure of wealth he has derived from over the
course of his career.
Regardless of what
one believes about Chomsky or his motives,
Failed States is a
brilliant dissection of the increasingly inhumane and authoritarian
political structure of the United States. Chomsky advances a highly
convincing argument that America is indeed a failed state whose de facto
ruling elite are engaged in The
Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy. Like him or
not, Chomsky’s latest work exposes America’s ruling for the world to see
them as the ruthless narcissists they truly are.
==
Jason Miller is writer whose affiliations include Amnesty International
and the ACLU. He welcomes responses at
willpowerful@hotmail.com
or comments on his blog,
Thomas Paine's Corner.