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Time for change's Journal
Posted by Time for change in General Discussion
Thu Nov 27th 2008, 10:30 PM
The gutting of our Civil Service constitutes extremely serious crimes. They subvert the main purposes of our government. If George Bush had committed no crimes in his eight years of office, he would still be more deserving of impeachment and removal
One of the most striking hallmarks of the Bush/Cheney administration has been the privatization of as many formerly government jobs as it could get away with. This effort has sometimes been referred to as “competitive outsourcing”, and the implication of that term is that privatization creates competition which ultimately results in better or more efficient services at lower cost.

This kind of thinking gathered steam under the Reagan presidency, and reached new heights under Bush II. The prevailing philosophy behind it is, as Reagan said, “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem”. The ultimate end of this movement is the complete dismantling of the Civil Service system in our country, and its replacement by privatization of all government functions formerly covered by our Civil Service system.

I have worked as a civil servant for more than 20 years, beginning in 1982. During that time I have developed a deep appreciation of our Civil Service system, and I have had a close view of the attacks on it by the radical right, which played such a prominent role in government during those years. In this post I discuss why a Civil Service system is so important to our functioning as a nation – in part through personal reflections on the role it has played in the type of work that I have been involved with. Although many of my examples apply to my own specific type of work, the general principles could just as well apply to any of several different types of government work.

I have performed all of my government work in the role of an epidemiologist. Epidemiology is the science that deals with the causes of human disease and injury and how to prevent and ameliorate them. In my role as an epidemiologist for public health departments in Florida and Pennsylvania, my job has been to conduct epidemiological research and to promulgate policies to protect the health of the citizens in my jurisdictions. In my current role as an epidemiologist for the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA), my job has been to assess the safety and effectiveness of medical devices, and to play a role in federal policy decisions relating to those devices.

I’ll begin with some background on the Civil Service system in our country.


Some background on the need for a Civil Service System in the United States

Prior to the Pendleton Act in 1883, a political patronage system was used in the United States for handing out the great majority of federal (and state and local government) jobs. There were several serious problems with this system: Because hiring for federal positions was determined by political cronyism rather than by merit, federal employees were far from the most capable of potential employees to begin with; the constant turnover of positions meant that there was little institutional memory or opportunity for most employees to benefit from long experience; poor job security meant that employees generally built up little loyalty to their job; and the political control of federal employees by those in office meant that much time and effort was spent by federal employees on political activities, at the expense of serving the American people. Not specifically mentioned, but probably implied in the article, was the chilling effect of poor job security on the ability of professional federal employees to perform their job in accordance with the needs of the citizens that they were supposed to serve and the dictates of their conscience. For example, a federal employee who was concerned about a serious issue (for example, global warming) that was ideologically incompatible with the current federal administration could not speak of that issue without risking being fired.

The Pendleton Act of 1883 changed all that by creating a system whereby people were chosen for federal jobs based on merit rather than on political connections. And enhanced job security was provided by that Act by ensuring that federal employees could not be fired based upon political considerations alone. As a result of the Pendleton Act, eventually “nearly all federal jobs” came to be handled by the Civil Service system.


REASONS WHY GOVERNMENT CIVIL SERVICE IS NECESSARY

With that as background, let’s consider why a robust Civil Service system is necessary to the proper functioning of government:


Elimination of the profit motive

Our government is founded upon the principle that ALL government employees, even including the President of the United States, work in the service of the citizens of our country. Making a profit is never an issue. The purpose of all government work is to serve our fellow citizens – at least in theory.

Right wing ideologues hate that philosophy. They believe (or say they believe) that everything operates best according to the principles of the so-called “free market”, which means that the profit motive is the best means of ensuring that government work or any other work is of the highest quality, efficiency, and effectiveness.

Most epidemiologists in the United States work for government or for educational institutions. A few work for private institutions, such as the pharmaceutical industry. In my opinion, the principal of epidemiologists working for private institutions is very problematical.

Consider the fact, for example, that tobacco industry epidemiologists assisted the tobacco industry in their efforts to persuade the American people that cigarette smoking has no significant adverse effects on human health. Today, that seems shocking. And it would be easy to confine criticism to the specific epidemiologists involved. But consider what would have happened to those epidemiologists if they had concluded that cigarette smoking is dangerous to human health, and so had decided not to put their scientific expertise behind the assertions of the tobacco companies that they worked for. Let’s just say that the job security of such epidemiologists would have been very low.

That is why I would never consider working for a private institution as an epidemiologist – unless I was in a position such that losing my job on sudden notice would be no significant hardship for me. The major point is that the profit motive is not at all consistent with scientific objectivity. Not EVER. So how can an epidemiologist who works for a private institution expect to have credibility as an epidemiologist? Having epidemiologists-for-profit being responsible for government work is like having our elections run by private voting machine companies.


Having a dedicated, professional, and caring core of workers

Epidemiologists
Epidemiologists undergo extensive training and education in the principles of public health. Just as the training of physicians emphasizes that their patients should be their first concern and responsibility, the training of epidemiologists emphasizes that the public’s health should be their first concern and responsibility.

Long-term government service under a robust Civil Service system reinforces the values that epidemiologists imbibe during their training and education. The Civil Service system is meant to protect government workers against extraneous political pressures that attempt to move them away from their service to the public and towards the ideological inclinations of political leaders who are intent on pursuing their own private agenda.

An example of extraneous and inappropriate political pressure is the Bush administration promulgation of abstinence-only sex education, which has been proven in numerous epidemiological studies to be inferior to a broader approach to sex education, which in addition utilizes safe-sex approaches. Few if any decent epidemiologists would ever promote an abstinence-only approach to sex education. Yet, the Bush administration has managed to promulgate an abstinence-only approach to sex education, in part by having its political appointees instruct our Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to measure the performance of abstinence-only sex education programs in ways that obscure their lack of effectiveness. Actions such as these constitute meddling with our Civil Service system in ways that are totally inconsistent with the principles on which it was founded.

Bush torture policy
Another good example is the way in which the Bush administration justified its use of torture. Long-time government lawyers who were experts in the applicable international and domestic laws were totally bypassed in the promulgation of Bush administration torture policies. Instead of using its experts for guidance on these matters, the Bush administration turned to political appointees who were appointed for the sole purpose of providing and justifying pre-ordained advice. Jane Mayer, in her book “The Dark Side – The Inside Story on How the War on Terror Turned into a War on Ideals”, describes this process:

John Yoo (political appointee in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel) wrote “Mistreatment of prisoners would not ‘shock the conscience’ of the court, or violate constitutional prohibitions against ‘cruel and unusual punishment’ unless malice or sadism could be proven.” Among the practices the memo discussed as arguably legal were gouging a prisoner’s eyes out, dousing him with scalding water, corrosive acid, or caustic substance, or slitting an ear, nose, or lip, or disabling a tongue or limb… Yoo wrote that the laws were trumped by the powers of the commander in chief…

When the professional lawyers eventually found out about this kind of stuff they were shocked:

The senior uniformed lawyers for Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines, known as the TJAGs… all sent extraordinary memos of dissent… The Defense Department promptly classified them as secret… The memos from the uniformed lawyers to the politically appointed general counsel were brimming with barely concealed disbelief at the direction the Justice Department was proposing for soldiers to take… warned that the Justice Department’s radical and idiosyncratic interpretation of the law “puts the interrogators and the chain of command at risk of criminal accusations abroad”…

On April 28, 2004, ten months later, the first pictures from Abu Ghraib became public… Mora (former General Counsel of the U.S. Navy, and one of the chief adversaries of the Bush/Cheney torture program) said, “I felt saddened and dismayed. Everything we had warned against in Guantanamo had happened – but in a different setting. I was stunned.”


Efficiency

One of the main arguments put forth for “competitive outsourcing” is that the use of outsiders to perform government work is more efficient and “flexible” than having the work performed by Civil Service professionals. What a bunch of poppycock!

From time to time during my Civil Service career I have been told that we have to put more emphasis into hiring contract workers to perform epidemiological work that I and those who worked with or for me generally performed. I would respond with astonishment, “But why? Why should we spend all that time and effort to hire contract workers to perform work that we’re perfectly capable of doing ourselves? What am I here for, if not to do that kind of work?” The answer was always some version of “Well, upper management (i.e. the political appointees) has determined that it is more efficient and costs less to hire contract workers, and it gives us more flexibility.”

So we would have to drop the projects that we were working on to spend days of our time doing the multiplicity of tasks, the interviews, and the filling out of paperwork required of the contracting process. And then, when the contractors were hired, great amounts of time had to be devoted to getting them up to speed on how things worked, and otherwise training them to do the job.

What a colossal waste of time and effort!


Job security

One of the great advantages of working in the government Civil Service system to me personally (and most other Civil Service workers as well) has been the extraordinary degree of job security – even in times of economic downturn.

Some would argue that that is a personal benefit, rather than a benefit to our country. With the job security offered by the Civil Service system, Civil Service employees are free to perform the work for which the Civil Service was founded. They are not simply tools of autocratic and political bureaucrats, but are free to use their reasoning and consciences as guides in performing the important work that they are tasked to do.

Our greatest President, Abraham Lincoln, had some things to say about this issue, even before the advent of the Civil Service system in our country. He compared what he called the “mud-sill” theory, which encompasses the attitude of our corporate elite towards labor, with what he referred to as “free labor”, in December 1859, in an address to the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society (Thanks to DUer twoamericas for posting this):

By the "mud-sill" theory it is assumed that labor and education are incompatible; and any practical combination of them impossible. According to that theory, a blind horse upon a tread-mill, is a perfect illustration of what a laborer should be -- all the better for being blind, that he could not tread out of place, or kick understandingly. According to that theory, the education of laborers is not only useless, but pernicious and dangerous. In fact, it is, in some sort, deemed a misfortune that laborers should have heads at all. Those same heads are regarded as explosive materials, only to be safely kept in damp places, as far as possible from that peculiar sort of fire which ignites them. A Yankee who could invent strong handed man without a head would receive the everlasting gratitude of the "mud-sill" advocates.

But Free Labor says "no!" Free Labor argues that, as the Author of man makes every individual with one head and one pair of hands, it was probably intended that heads and hands should cooperate as friends; and that that particular head should direct and control that particular pair of hands…. And that being so, every head should be cultivated, and improved, by whatever will add to its capacity for performing its charge. In one word Free Labor insists on universal education.


THE GUTTING OF CIVIL SERVICE AS A PRELUDE TO FASCISM

A robust Civil Service system poses a great barrier to fascism because it is based upon laws that prohibit the use of government for private gain, and it is composed of hundreds of thousands of government workers who have been schooled throughout their careers in the need to separate government from the private interests of wealthy individuals who would use it for their own purposes.

Therefore, the gutting of the Civil Service system by the Bush administration has comprised some of its worst crimes. Here are some examples:


The reconstruction effort in Iraq following the U.S. invasion

I always feel frustrated whenever I read criticisms of the Bush administration for its incompetence in handling the invasion and occupation of Iraq. If you believe, as I do, that one of the main purposes of the invasion was to provide an excuse for funneling billions of dollars to Bush/Cheney cronies, then the Iraq War doesn’t seem incompetent at all – rather, it has been a resounding success. I have discussed in detail the evidence for that view in a post based on a book by Antonia Juhasz, titled “The BuSh Agenda – Invading the World One Economy at a Time”. Here is a brief description of the initial invasion of Iraq from an article by Michael Schwartz, titled “The Prize of Iraqi Oil”, taken from “The World According to Tom Dispatch – America in the New Age of Empire”, edited by Tom Engelhardt. You decide – incompetence or fascism:

While American troops simply stood by as unrestrained looting severely damaged the dawn-of-civilization treasures in the National Museum, compromised the ability of hospitals to deliver health care, and destroyed many government offices, large numbers of American soldiers were deployed to protect the Oil Ministry and its associated holdings. This effort was certainly emblematic of the newly established occupation's priorities.

Not long after President Bush declared "major combat operations in Iraq have ended"… Paul Bremer, the new head of the American occupation, promulgated a series of laws designed, among other things, to kick-start the development of Iraqi oil… He also set about creating an oil-policy framework, unique in the region, that would allow the major companies to develop the country's proven reserves and even to begin drilling new wells….

The growing insurgency, acting on a general Iraqi understanding that a major goal of the occupation was to "steal" Iraqi oil, systematically began to attack the oil pipelines that traveled through the Sunni areas of the country…

To resistance of various sorts must be added the "contribution" of the major American corporations involved in "reconstructing" Iraq, notably Halliburton and Bechtel. These crony corporations, with close ties to the Bush administration, accepted huge fees to rehabilitate dilapidated or damaged oil facilities. Almost without fail, they chose not to repair existing plants locally or to employ the raft of skilled Iraqi technicians who had used remarkable ingenuity in maintaining these facilities during a dozen years of UN sanctions. Working under cost-plus agreements that guaranteed a fixed profit rate no matter how much an operation ultimately cost, they preferred instead to install expensive new proprietary equipment. Then, in the absence of any outside oversight, they ran up huge expenses and frequently failed to complete their contracts, leaving the oil facilities they were servicing in states of disrepair or partial repair -- and equipped with technology that local technicians could not service.


Corruption at the FDA

In my nine years of epidemiological work at the Centers for (Medical) Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) at the FDA, I have encountered and heard of numerous instances of inappropriate (to say the least) interference by upper management in the work of the FDA’s scientists.

I have for the most part been spared this interference because the particular office that I work in has not been as affected as some other parts of CDRH (and FDA in general). My most dramatic exposure to this corruption came when I wrote a scientific article about deaths associated with the use of a medical device used to prevent ruptures of aneurysms of the largest artery in the human body, the aorta. The device sometimes slipped out of place, allowing blood to fill the aneurysm, causing it to expand and rupture, and that usually resulted in death.

I don’t claim that my article offered irrefutable proof that the device was responsible for those deaths. But I believe that the article presented strong evidence to make that case. Anyhow, my manuscript received FDA clearance for publication, and it was subsequently accepted for publication by the surgical journal, Vascular Surgery, where it was published online, prior to formal publication in the journal.

But the manufacturer of the device found out about it, complained to the FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford (who was later indicted for conflicts of interest), who demanded that the journal pull my article – which they did, but not without writing a scathing article about the FDA for its actions. I was not unhappy to learn that someone leaked this whole sordid affair to the Wall Street Journal, which published an account of it on their front page.

More recently, whistleblowers at FDA wrote to Congress about rampant corruption there:

Serious misconduct by managers of the FDA at CDRH is interfering with our responsibility to ensure the safety and effectiveness of medical devices for the American public and with FDA's mission to protect and promote the health of all Americans. Managers at CDRH have failed to follow the laws, rules, regulations and Agency Guidance… They have corrupted the scientific review of medical devices. This misconduct reaches the highest levels of CDRH management…

There is extensive documentary evidence that managers at CDRH have corrupted and interfered with the scientific review of medical devices…. While managers can disagree with FDA experts, they cannot (legally, that is) order, force or otherwise coerce FDA experts to change their scientific judgments, opinions, conclusions or recommendations. Managers at CDRH with no scientific or medical expertise in medical devices, or any clinical experience in the practice of medicine have ignored serious safety and effectiveness concerns of FDA experts…

To avoid accountability, these managers at CDRH have ordered, intimidated and coerced FDA experts to modify their scientific reviews, conclusions and recommendations in violation of the law…


The US attorneys scandal

In an effort to achieve permanent Republican rule in our country, in what is now known as the “US Attorneys Scandal”, the Bush administration’s Justice Department fired eight U.S. attorneys because of what they considered to be either too aggressive pursuance of crimes by high level Republicans or too lax pursuance of crimes committed by Democrats, especially regarding so-called “voter fraud”. The crime of “voter fraud” can usually be described as it was by one of the fired U.S. attorneys, John McKay, in testimony before the U.S. Congress:

I was aware that I was receiving criticism for not proceeding with a criminal investigation. And, frankly, it didn't matter to me what people thought. Like my colleagues, we work on evidence, and there was no evidence of voter fraud or election fraud. And, therefore, we took nothing to the grand jury.

George Bush’s Attorney General, Michael Mukasey, has, not surprisingly, refused to prosecute these flagrant violations of our Civil Service laws, saying “Not every wrong, or even every violation of the law, is a crime” – a statement that clearly contradicts the dictionary definition of “crime”. He has also excused his refusal to prosecute these crimes by saying “Two wrongs don’t make a right”.

Many others, including Kathy Gill, seriously disagree with this contempt for our Civil Service laws by our Attorney General:

The law that was broken dates to the 1870s. A reminder, Mr. Attorney General: the law broken – what you described as “only violations of the Civil Service laws” – was designed specifically to keep the “spoils system” out of the day-to-day running of the government.

Breaking this law is not a trivial matter, like jay walking. Civil servants are supposed to be judged on merit, not politics. What of their derailed careers?


THE GUTTING OF THE CIVIL SERVICE SYSTEM BY THE BUSH ADMINISRATION IN PERSPECTIVE

The purpose behind the massive efforts of the Bush administration to gut our Civil Service system has been to take government away from the American people, in order to use it in the service of their own ends, including the funneling of billions of dollars to their cronies and the establishment of permanent Republican rule in our country. In doing this, they have worked hand-in-glove with the corporations that benefit from their crimes. Those corporations involved in the phony reconstruction of Iraq, and those medical device manufacturing companies that benefit from friendly FDA decisions regarding their defective products, as described in this post, are just two examples. Such close incestuous relationships between government and corporations are a major component of fascism.

A 2006 article in The Nation, by Dan Zegart, titled “The Gutting of the Civil Service”, written prior to the documentation of many of the worst abuses committed by the Bush administration, summarizes the issue:

While the embedding of politicals in career jobs did not originate with Bush, the scale and coordination with which it is being done under this Administration seem unprecedented, according to more than fifty current and former government officials interviewed during an eight-month-long Nation investigation….

Three things have happened. First, long-serving careers have been shunted aside, excluded not only from decision-making, but even from providing meaningful input…. Meetings at the FDA would nominally include career staff, but the decisions would be made afterward, at a post-meeting huddle for politicals only.

A second method of political control has been simply to redefine civil service jobs as political jobs, or to create new political slots…. Another report by Representative Waxman found that Bush has added 307 new political appointees to the federal payroll, a 12 percent spike that Paul Light of Brookings calls "stunning."… “They operate with a single-minded focus that makes them very present in the day-to-day operation of the agencies…"

The third and most disturbing way the Bush Administration has consolidated its hold over the bureaucracy is the embedding of "hidden politicals" in career slots in the executive branch. Candidates are interviewed and selected supposedly on the basis of merit according to civil service procedures, but the real "play" is to hire a politically reliable person…

The changes at the FDA are but one result of an unprecedented attempt by the Bush team to extend direct political control deep into operational areas throughout the executive bureaucracy, especially at agencies where the Administration has strong policy interests such as the FDA, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Justice Department and the Interior Department….


Impeachment and the gutting of our Civil Service

The gutting of our Civil Service constitutes extremely serious crimes. They subvert the main purposes of our government. If George Bush had committed no crimes in his eight years of office other than those pertaining to the subversion of our Civil Service system, he would still be more deserving of impeachment and removal from office than any President in U.S. history. Indeed, several of the 35 Article of Impeachment against George W. Bush introduced by Dennis Kucinich into the United States Congress on June 9th, 2008, dealt with issues covered in this post, including Article XII (Initiating a War Against Iraq for Control of that Nation’s Natural Resources), Article XVI (Reckless Misspending and Waste of U.S. Tax Dollars in Connection with Iraq and U.S. Contractors), Article XVIII (Torture: Secretly Authorizing and Encouraging the Use of Torture Against Captives in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Other Places, as a Matter of Official Policy), Article XXVIII (Tampering with Free and Fair Elections, Corruption of the Administration of Justice), Article XXIX (Conspiracy to Violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965), and Article XXXII (Misleading Congress and the American People, Systematically Undermining Efforts to Address Global Climate Change).

If all of these crimes are allowed to stand without holding the Bush administration accountable, we will have set a dangerous precedent of accepting Attorney General Mukasey’s flippant opinion that blatant and repeated violations of our Civil Service laws do not pose a major threat to our democracy. We will then remain a nation progressing towards fascism.

Discuss (68 comments) | Recommend (+96 votes)
U.S. Democracy in Crisis
Time for change


The Democratic Underground was born on one of the worst days in U.S history – The day that the worst President in U.S. history took office.

Now, here we are 8 years later, and we’ve managed to remove that cancer from our nation and replace it with something much better. Notwithstanding my many ambivalent feelings towards President Obama, I have no doubt that he will be infinitely better for our country than his predecessor.

Yet despite that, our country has been terribly scarred from the events of the past eight years, and it continues to suffer from all of the root problems that brought us the worst President in our history in 2000 and 2004. Therefore, it is worth taking a look at the root problems that brought us to this sorry state of affairs.


MAJOR IMPEDIMENTS TO DEMOCRACY IN THE UNITED STATES

One thing that we must keep in mind when considering our current problems is that they are not new. They were greatly exacerbated by eight years of Bush administration misrule, but they did not start with George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.


Money in politics

All but the most naïve of the American citizenry know that the wealthy and powerful in our country routinely influence our local and national elections through huge campaign contributions. And they also know that they are generally well rewarded for their “contributions”. And they also know that bribery is presumably against the law in our country. Yet, on the rare occasion that our politicians are actually accused of bribery, our news media makes a great big deal over it, as if bribery is actually a rare event in American politics.

The end result is that a great many of our politicians do everything they can to make their wealthiest constituents happy with them, at the expense of everyone else. They do that with the knowledge that the voters they lose in doing so will be more than compensated for by the disinformation that will be paid for by their wealthiest constituents. I discuss this situation in more detail here, here, and here.

There are a few dots to connect here, but any reasonable assessment of American politics tells us that bribery is routinely used to buy and sell elections in our country. So routine is it that it is actually built into our system and legalized. But that fact is never overtly spoken of. To do so would imply that our system of government is as much or more an aristocracy than it is a democracy.

Bill Moyers, in his book “Moyers on Democracy”, explains the situation bluntly:

We have lost the ability to call the most basic transaction by its right name. If a baseball player stepping up to home plate were to lean over and hand the umpire a wad of bills before he called the pitch, we’d call that a bribe. But when a real estate developer buys his way into the White House and gets a favorable government ruling that wouldn’t be available to you or me, what do we call that? A “campaign contribution”.

Let’s call it what it is: a bribe.

The legality of contributing money to political candidates, with the implicit (though not explicit) understanding that that money will buy political favoritism, has been defended by both our courts and our Congress by sanctimoniously pointing to the free speech provisions in the First Amendment to our Constitution and claiming that money is speech. But the absurdity of that contention should be obvious to anyone with some primary school education. Speech is of value from a political standpoint (or any other standpoint) only when it is heard. But if one billionaire has one thousand times as much opportunity to speak through a medium which reaches millions than several thousand other people added together, the speech of that one billionaire will drown out the speech of most other people, thereby interfering with their right to free speech.


Election fraud

Electronic vote switching with DRE (direct-recording electronic) machines poses a great danger to the integrity of our election system – by virtue of its ability to switch a voter’s vote without being noticed by the voter. In other words, someone tries to vote for John Kerry, and the machine registers a vote for George Bush instead. What makes matters worse is that many or most of these machines don’t even produce a piece of paper with the vote on it, which can then later be used for a recount. So, if fraud is suspected there is no recourse. And worse yet is the fact that most of these machines use proprietary (secret) code to determine who the voter voted for.

We know for a fact that vote-switching occurred in the 2004 election. One study, based on voter reports to the national Electronic Incident Reporting System (EIRS), showed that vote switching incidents favored Bush over Kerry by a ratio of 12 to 1 nationally. A similar study showed that these vote switching incidents that favored Bush were 9 times as common in the heavily contested “swing states” than in non-swing states. To make the point that the EIRS reports represent only a small fraction of actual Election Day problems, an investigation by the Washington Post identified about 25 electronic voting machines in Youngstown, Mahoning County, Ohio, that were said to have been switching votes all day long. Yet only eight incidents of this nature from Mahoning County (all in favor of Bush) were reported to EIRS that day.

Clint Curtis, a computer programmer working in Florida prior to the 2004 election, testified before the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary Committee that he was requested in 2000 by his boss (at the request of a high level Republican operative, Tom Feeney) to “develop a prototype of a voting program that could alter the vote tabulation in an election and be undetectable”. Curtis’ testimony was followed by the death of Raymond Lemme, who while investigating Curtis’ allegations was found dead in a Georgia hotel room, just a couple weeks after telling Curtis that he had traced the corruption “all the way to the top”,

Another type of election fraud is the illegal purging of registered voters from the voter rolls. Like vote switching, the increasing computerization of voter registration is no doubt making it much easier to perpetrate this type of fraud on a mass basis.

This article describes a great deal of evidence that voter registration fraud played a major role in the 2004 presidential election, and in fact was probably the deciding factor in Ohio, which gave George Bush his electoral victory. Similarly, although the 2000 presidential election was stolen by a variety of means, voter registration fraud was quantitatively the most important method used. In 2000, the Florida Governor’s office used a computer program to purge tens of thousands of mostly black and Democratic voters.

There are many other means of election fraud that have been used in our country to destabilize our democracy. I discuss this issue in more detail, along with means for preventing election fraud, in this post.


Our corporate news media

If cash donated to their political campaigns is not enough to carry them through to victory, and if election fraud doesn’t happen to play a significant role, the corporate news media serves as another valuable tool for those seeking to sabotage our democracy. This problem overlaps with the role of money in politics, since those who own and control the corporate media are uniformly wealthy, and since it was their money that led to the acts that enabled our corporate media to become what it is today – Ronald Reagan’s veto of Democratic legislation to enforce the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, and the Telecommunications Act of 1996. This legislation allowed the monopoly consolidation of our news media to the point where today it is controlled by a very small number of extremely wealthy individuals.

Several excellent books have been written about the extent to which wealthy corporate interests control our news media today. I would highly recommend “Lapdogs – How the Press rolled Over for Bush”, by Eric Boehlert, “What Liberal Media – The Truth About BIAS and the News”, by Eric Alterman, and “Into the Buzzsaw – The Myth of a Free Press”, edited by Kristina Borjesson. And I have ranted about pseudo-journalists such as Tim Russert, who have made a largely successful, but hypocritical effort to appear unbiased to their viewers.

The bottom line, as Bill Moyers points out, is that the protection offered us by our First Amendment is based on the assumption of a separation of our government and a free press, which is supposed to protect us from government abuses. Moyers wrote this during the Bush administration:

What would happen, however, if the contending giants of big government and big publishing and broadcasting ever joined hands, ever saw eye to eye in putting the public's need for news second to free-market economics? That's exactly what's happening now under the ideological banner of "deregulation". Giant media conglomerates that our founders could not possibly have envisioned are finding common cause with an imperial state in a betrothal certain to produce not the sons and daughters of liberty but the very kind of bastards that issued from the old arranged marriage of church and state.

Consider the situation. Never has there been an administration so disciplined in secrecy, so precisely in lockstep in keeping information from the people at large and -- in defiance of the Constitution -- from their representatives in Congress. Never has the powerful media oligopoly ... been so unabashed in reaching like Caesar for still more wealth and power. Never have hand and glove fitted together so comfortably to manipulate free political debate, sow contempt for the idea of government itself, and trivialize the peoples' need to know.


Secrecy in government

Democracy suffers terribly when a nation’s citizens are uninformed – especially when they are uninformed with respect to the actions and motivations of their own government. If we don’t know what our government is doing, then how can we be expected to vote them out when they do something that we would consider deeply immoral had we known about it?

Consider war for example. If Americans understood the real motivations for its nation’s wars, they would probably be much more likely to strenuously object to those wars. That would make war much less politically feasible, and our country would therefore be led into war much less frequently than it has been in the past.

That is why I so hate the “national security” excuse for withholding information from us, the American people – which has become so routine that it is willingly or passively accepted by the good majority of Americans. I very much doubt that the “national security” excuse for withholding information from the American people has anything to do with national security more than 5% of the time. Rather, the reason for withholding such information from us is almost always something totally different. It is to blind us to the real reasons for war or other nefarious acts, so that we will accept them and willingly support or even risk our lives in their cause.


Rampant U.S. nationalism and the GAME

Two months ago I wrote a DU post that I titled “The GAME”, which I began by discussing “Unmentionable things in U.S. politics” – including such things as the stealing of a U.S. presidential election, calling American military or covert actions immoral rather than merely “misguided”, and imputing bad intentions rather than mere incompetence to a U.S. president.

I find this to be terribly repressive, not because I personally can’t mention these things, but because our elected representatives are under tremendous pressure not to discuss them. We elect them to represent us and our nation, and except for some rare courageous exceptions such as Dennis Kucinich, Cynthia McKinney, and Robert Wexler, they refuse to even talk about some of our very most important issues.

It has occurred to me that this provides the backdrop for a huge GAME that has been foisted upon us. A prerequisite of the GAME is to create an alternate reality that must be believed by a critical mass of people in order for the GAME to proceed. Why is that necessary? I believe it’s necessary because the reality is so terrible that if enough people consciously recognized it they would rise up and simply refuse to play the GAME.

Although the GAME’s masters set the rules, there are two related character traits of many Americans that cause them to play along: Rampant nationalism and a propensity for denial. Rampant nationalism is the attitude that our country is inherently better than any other country – so much so that it can do no wrong. This attitude is drummed into the American people from the time that most of us learn how to talk. We are made to feel that to believe or speak otherwise demonstrates a dangerous lack of “patriotism”, which makes us deserving of being shunned – or worse.

The other character trait that persuades too many Americans to play the GAME is denial. Believing terrible things about one’s country can be very painful. Accepting reality as it is, rather than as one would like it to be, can be very painful. To make this point, in a recent post titled “12 Things that Never Happened in American History”, I discuss the following official stories that we have been told (or not told):

The U.S. is not an imperialist country; FDR’s New Deal was not instrumental in ending the Great Depression; the Cold War was just about fighting totalitarian Communism; JFK was assassinated by a lone gunman; bribery is infrequent in American politics; Iran-Contra was not a criminal abuse of presidential power; U.S. presidential elections cannot be stolen; Bush and Cheney did everything they could to protect us against the 9/11 attacks; the Bush administration’s crimes are not serious enough to warrant impeachment or prosecution; and, we’re barely told about our nation’s killing of more than a million Iraqi civilians, the October Surprise, or Operation Northwoods.


CONSEQUENCES

These impediments to democracy work together to surrender great amounts of power into the hands of a small number of elites, who use that power in the cause of increasing their wealth and power at the expense of everyone else. It is a vicious cycle that is very difficult to break. Here are some of the major tragic consequences.


Rampant militarism and illegal aggression against sovereign nations

We are so often told how good and pure our nation and its people are that only a minority of Americans are aware of the extent of our many illegal and immoral activities. Many or most who aren’t aware of these activities would be shocked to learn about them and quite resistant to accepting that information as the truth.

In myriad instances we have overthrown or assisted in the overthrow of sovereign nations. In the good majority of these instances we have substituted a repressive right wing government for one that was much more responsive to the needs and desires of the nation’s citizenry. Sometimes genocide was used to accomplish our goals. The purpose of these activities has most often been to create a government that is friendlier to the desires of American businesses or corporations – though we always have some sort of rationalization for our actions.

In “Excuses for War” I discuss many of the phony excuses that the United States government has used to lead us into war, including its Indian wars, the Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War, and the Vietnam War.

In “The Roots and Consequences of U.S. Overseas Imperialism” I note or discuss our covert and overt illegal and immoral overthrowing of the sovereign nations of Hawaii (1893), Cuba (1898), Puerto Rico (1898), the Philippines (1899-1902), Nicaragua (1910), Honduras (1911-1912), Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), South Vietnam (1963), Chile (1973), Grenada (1983), Panama (1989), Afghanistan (2001), and Iraq (2003).

In “The Meaning of U.S. Imperialism, Genocide and Militarism” I note U.S. perpetrated genocides, as described in “State of Darkness” by David Model, including our atomic bombing of Japan (1945), those perpetrated against Guatemala (1954), Vietnam (1954-73), Indonesia (1965), Cambodia (1970-75), Laos (1969-74), and East Timor (1975), and our two wars against Iraq.

Other atrocities include our invasion of Cuba in 1961; U.S. Marine invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965 to put down a rebellion against their repressive right wing government; U.S. military support of Haitian tyrant and mass murderer, Francois Duvalier; and numerous brutal interventions in several Latin American and African nations.


Massive Income and wealth inequality

Inequality of wealth in the United States is truly astounding – and it is increasing at a fast rate. In the United States in 2001, 1% of the population controlled 38% of the wealth, whereas the bottom 40% owned just 1%. That means that, on average, individuals in the top 1% owned about 1,500 times more wealth than individuals in the bottom 40%.

The rising level of income inequality in our country recently exceeded the point where it stood just prior to the stock market crash of 1929, which led to the worst depression in U.S. history. There are many who see a connection between the income inequality preceding that depression and our current situation. This graph, which plots income inequality measured as the ratio between the average income of the top 0.01% of U.S. families compared to the bottom 90%, over time, makes that point.

I discuss the subject of income and wealth inequality here, here, and here.


The loss of the rule of law

During the Bush Presidency I often argued that he should be impeached for his many crimes. Now that he can no longer be impeached, I have argued that our Justice Department should prosecute him for those crimes, and if it fails to do so then the International Criminal Court (ICC) should step in.

While Bush was still President, President Obama weighed in against impeachment, saying that impeachment should be reserved for only the most serious crimes. Now that he is President he has thus far given little or no indication that he intends to have his Justice Department prosecute George Bush or any other high level Bush administration official for their crimes. But if widespread torture, an illegal war of aggression, spying on American citizens, suspending of the right of habeas corpus, and numerous other violations of our Constitution don’t constitute serious crimes, then what does?

What would people say if a prosecuting attorney failed to prosecute a rapist and murderer simply because he had high level political connections? Who would accept that? Then why when far more serious crimes are committed by a President of the United States are there so many people who seem to think that it is ok to sit passively by and make no attempt to hold the perpetrators accountable for their crimes?

I’ll tell you why. It’s like I said earlier in this post. Saying that a former U.S. President might be guilty of prosecutable crimes is simply against the rules of the GAME. Given that and the failure to hold the Reagan administration accountable for its Iran-Contra crimes, George Bush and Dick Cheney connected the dots and thought that they might be able to get away with just about anything. Testing that assumption by moving ahead with prosecutions might be politically risky for the Obama administration. The Republican Party would no doubt raise holy hell if there was an attempt to prosecute high level Bush administration officials.

Consequently, we live in country in which, protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, certain people are indeed above the law. That fact, taken together with all of the impediments to democracy discussed in the first part of this post, means that democracy and the rule of law in our country are in grave danger. Indeed, some believe that we narrowly averted a military coup perpetrated by the Bush administration.

The American people and their leaders need to reassess what our country stands for. Is our democracy important enough to take steps to remove the role of money in politics, reform our election system, break up the corporate monopoly on our news media, require government actions to be much more transparent than they now are, and dare to look more objectively at who we are and what we do? Can we give up imperialism and warfare for the sake a world in which nations live and work together to further the cause of peace and justice? Can we make our nation one in which all of its citizens truly have the opportunity for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? And do our laws apply to all people, not just to those who lack the political influence to avoid them?

If we think that these things are important we have a great deal of work to do, lest our country sinks into a tyranny from which it may never recover.
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