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Time for change's Journal
Posted by Time for change in General Discussion
Sun Sep 27th 2009, 10:17 PM
Now it’s about time that our elected politicians stop bowing down to the corporatocracy. In order to make that happen, we the people need to show them that they will face dire consequences for continuing to do so.
There are basically two ways to sell a product or an idea. One is to come up with a really excellent one and then explain it to people as honestly as you can. The alternative way – if your idea or product is pretty much worthless or even dangerous – is to lie about it. Of course, if you’re going to lie about it you usually have to have some help – so that the lie can be propagated without discovery by too many people.

The right wing corporate elites of the United States and their bought-and-paid-for politicians have worked out a very effective way of doing that. With their enormous wealth they have bought control of huge portions of the so-called “mainstream” television, radio, and print news media in the United States, while at the same time paying off their politicians to maintain the rules of the game such that they can maintain control of “mainstream” news media. And their huge donations to their lackey politicians have helped to maintain them in power, so that the status quo continues to be protected.

Consequently, legislation is heavily tilted to favor the wealthy. This has caused the wealth gap in our country to rise to unprecedented levels, such that by 2006 the Economic Policy Institute estimated that more than a third of the wealth in the United States was held by the top 1% of households, while less than a fifth was held by the lower 90%. That means that the average top 1% household held almost 200 times as much wealth as the average lower 90% household.

In order to maintain themselves in office, our corporate owned politicians have adopted a technique that is akin to the psychological defense mechanism known as “projection” (more on that later). Because virtually every major legislative policy supported by them harms the vast majority of the American people, in order to continue in office they must lie about their motivations and the consequences of the policies that they support. But they don’t merely lie. Mere lies would make them appear defensive. Instead, they tell us unbelievable whoppers – the precise opposite of the truth. Their corporate masters want them to relax pollution laws to enhance their profits? Call that law “The Clear Skies Initiative”. Is there a need to hide the fact that the corporate news media slants their facts and opinions to benefit the wealthy? Complain incessantly about the “elite liberal media”. Or as George Orwell said in his novel, “1984”, War is peace, Slavery is freedom, and Ignorance is strength.

Under normal conditions it is extraordinarily difficult to get away with such whoppers. But when you and your cronies control the bulk of the means of communication in a society, the job becomes much easier.


THE BIG LIE IN PRACTICE

Getting a psychopath elected and re-elected president of the United States


In 2000 the corporatocracy was salivating at the idea of installing George W. Bush as president of the United States. The problem was not just that he was perhaps the most inexperienced, incompetent and unintelligent major party presidential candidate in U.S. history; but as Governor of Texas he pushed policies that were unlikely to be popular with most Americans.

For one thing, as Governor of Texas he vetoed a patient’s bill of rights. So, when the issue came up in the third presidential debate against Al Gore, he blatantly lied that he had supported a patient’s bill of rights and got it signed into law as Governor of Texas.

He was also quite vulnerable on his plan to cut taxes for the wealthy – which of course was a necessary part of his strategy for gaining the support of the corporatocracy. But most Americans wouldn’t be too pleased about the idea of a massive tax cut that benefited only the wealthy. So Bush had to repeatedly lie about that.

These were major lies – lies that could be easily proven as lies, and which threatened to sink Bush’s bid for the presidency if exposed. So how could the corporate news media protect him? Rather than simply ignore the Bush lies, they went on the offensive and called Al Gore a liar. During one debate, Gore mistakenly said that he had accompanied FEMA Director James Lee Witt on a particular trip to Texas, though he had accompanied Witt on numerous other trips. The corporate media made that into a big lie, though there was no reason for Gore to lie about that. They said that Gore claimed he had invented the Internet, though he never said that. In short, they claimed he was a habitual liar. And all those claims were lies. But they sure did take attention away from Bush’s many real lies.

Then there was the matter of Bush getting into the Air National Guard in order to avoid being sent to fight in the Vietnam War, through the influence of his father. This posed a potentially explosive problem for the Bush campaigns of both 2000 and 2004, since both Al Gore and John Kerry had served in Vietnam. Yet, despite abundant evidence that Bush even avoided fulfilling his commitment to the Air National Guard, the corporate news media gave him a free pass on the whole issue. The importance of this in the 2004 presidential campaign was summed up by Russ Baker in his book, “Family of Secrets”:

The Democratic field included not one but two highly decorated war veterans, John Kerry and Wesley Clark. It would be a disaster if a majority of Americans were to conclude that Bush was a trigger-happy commander in chief who had plunged the United States into a cataclysmic and unnecessary war – after he himself shirked his own service.

But giving Bush a free pass on this issue wasn’t good enough. As with Gore in 2000, the right wingers had to go on the offensive. So the national news media picked up on the bogus claim that the story of Kerry’s heroism was a fraud. CNN, The New York Times, and the Washington Post ran hundreds of articles on the subject between them. The hypocrisy with which the national news media lent legitimacy to the story was shown by an episode of Meet the Press, where Tim Russert innocently challenged a guest, “If the substance of many of the charges … isn’t holding up … why is it resonating so much?” Well, duh. It resonated so much because the corporate news whores resonated it.


The BIG LIES to excuse an illegal war

The Bush administration’s justification for invading Iraq in 2003 was the absurd idea that Iraq posed an “imminent threat” to our country. Forget about the fact that Bush was told by his own intelligence agencies that Iraq had no connection to al Qaeda, or that the only evidence to the contrary came from a “confession” obtained through torture. Forget that Bush claimed that an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report stated Iraq was six months from developing a nuclear weapon – though no such report existed; or that a few days before we invaded Iraq the IAEA stated “After three months of intrusive inspections, we have to date found no evidence or plausible indication of the revival of a nuclear weapons program in Iraq.” That evidence alone – which comprises a minute fraction of the evidence for the case that the Iraq War was predicated on fraudulent evidence – is enough to convict George W. Bush of war crimes.

But forget all that. The idea that a nation with a military of relatively infinitesimal size could pose any substantial threat at all to the nation with the mightiest military machine the world had ever known is laughable on its face. That the Bush administration could sell that idea to the American people required a huge amount of assistance from our “mainstream” news media. So who posed a threat to whom? The results of the war and subsequent occupation, for anyone who cares to consider them, should answer that question definitively. Less than 5,000 U.S. soldiers have died in that war, while over a million Iraqi civilians have died. Who posed a threat to whom?

Similarly, the idea that our government refers to any Iraqi who kills U.S. soldiers in defense of his homeland as a “terrorist” represents the worst kind of hypocrisy and projection. The definition of a terrorist is one who kills or threatens civilians. Yes, there are Muslim terrorists in Iraq. But the vast majority of Iraqis who fight against the U.S. occupation of their country are fighting to defend their country. The terrorists are the ones who participate in the mass slaughter of Iraqi civilians.

Then there’s the accusation that Americans who protest against the illegal and immoral Iraq War “don’t support the troops” – thus implying that sending young men and women off to fight and die in a fraudulent war-for-profit is tantamount to “supporting the troops”.

And to top it off, those who argued that Bush should have been impeached for his many war crimes and other violations of the U.S. Constitution are accused of being “Bush Haters” – as if the desire to utilize constitutional processes to remove a war criminal from the highest office in our nation requires hate. I could understand calling us “Bush haters” if we suggested removing him from office for something relatively trivial, such as having adulterous sex with a consenting adult.


The BIG LIES to kill universal health care for the American people

The enactment of a government program for providing affordable access to health care for all Americans would be very detrimental… to certain corporate interests. That of course is why they have killed all efforts to accomplish that goal since the first time it received full presidential support, which was during the Truman administration.

Perhaps the most audacious talking point against current efforts towards universal health care is the claim that “the government will ration your health care”. What planet are those people living on? How could a person living on this planet, in this country, fail to recognize that HEALTH CARE IS CURRENTLY RATIONED throughout the United States? In fact, it is worse than rationed. Private health insurance companies in our country go well beyond rationing health care. In their search for profits, they aggressively search for any excuse they can find to deny legitimate health care claims from clients who have paid them health insurance premiums for years. A recent study found that from 2002 to June 20, 2009, private health insurance companies in California alone rejected 45.7 million claims – 22 percent of all claims made during that period. That’s not health care rationing? The only possible explanation for their audacity in claiming that proposed government health care plans “will ration health care” is that by so doing they hope to take the focus their own health care rationing.

The “Public Option” is a type of health care reform in which Americans would be given the option of choosing a government run health insurance plan or any available private health insurance plan. The opposite of this “Public Option” plan is a system where only private health insurance plans are available to most Americans. Yet continual incessant insurance company propaganda has convinced many Americans that once a public option is available Americans will have to drop their current health plans and find a different doctor. Essentially, they have made the public option into a public mandate. And not only that, but they are led to believe that the public option will contain “death panels” that will have the power of life and death over them.

Consequently, they whine that the Public Option will destroy freedom in the United States. The preference of the insurance industry is that the American people be given a choice only of private health insurance plans to meet their health care needs. And not only that, but they also approve of plans that would make it mandatory that Americans purchase private health care insurance. That’s their idea of “freedom”.


The BIG LIES about ACORN

The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, more popularly known as ACORN, has long been a bogeyman for right wingers. ACORN is an advocate organization for low- and moderate-income families that helps people register to vote, provides advice on obtaining health care or affordable housing and filling out tax returns, and provides a variety of other social services. Among reasons why right wingers attack ACORN are that most of the people whom they register to vote are Democrats (because most poor people are Democrats) and that they advocate for progressive social policies, such as a mandatory livable minimum wage.

Over the years, the most frequent right wing accusation against ACORN is that they routinely engage in “voter fraud”. The reality is quite different. ACORN employees have occasionally been charged with misconduct, such as submitting fraudulent voter registrations. When that has happened, ACORN has cooperated with government officials to prosecute the misconduct. Perhaps the most notorious case occurred in Kings County, Washington, when 7 temporary ACORN employees were charged with submitting fraudulent voter registrations. Even in that case the prosecutor acknowledged that the motivation for the misconduct was “an easy way to get paid (by ACORN), not as an attempt to influence the outcome of elections”.

The fact is that “voter fraud” is a rare phenomenon, and furthermore, ACORN has never been convicted of that or any other criminal activity. As an example of how rare voter fraud is, David Iglesias was fired from his U.S. Attorney job in the Bush administration for failing to prosecute ACORN on voter fraud charges, though he could find no evidence to substantiate those charges. By contrast, Republican operatives (not in their role as voters) were involved in illegally purging tens of thousands of mostly Democratic voters in Florida in 2000 and hundreds of thousands in Ohio in 2004. In both cases, the illegal purging of voters was responsible for George W. Bush’s “victories”. Yet, the “mainstream” news media hardly covered these attacks on American democracy.

The latest ACORN “scandal” involved a sting operation conducted by right wingers who accumulated video footage of ACORN employees, which was used to allege improper or illegal conduct with respect to tax advice that they gave. Amidst a flurry of publicity, both Houses of Congress voted by large margins to defund ACORN for being “charged with breaking federal or state election laws, lobbying disclosure laws, campaign finance laws or filing fraudulent paperwork with any federal or state agency.”

The problem, other than the fact that ACORN was neither tried nor convicted of anything connected with the recent “scandal”, is that the above wording would apply to a multitude of other organizations. For example:

The bill could plausibly defund the entire military-industrial complex… Rep. Alan Grayson (D-FL) picked up on the legislative overreach and asked the Project on Government Oversight (POGO) to sift through its database to find which contractors might be caught in the ACORN net. Lockheed Martin and Northrop Gumman both popped up quickly, with 20 fraud cases between them, and the longer list is a Who's Who of weapons manufacturers and defense contractors.


PSYCHOLOGICAL PROJECTION IN THE SERVICE OF CLASS WARFARE

The Evils of psychological projection


Psychological projection is the process whereby a person “projects” unflattering, unwanted, or reprehensible characteristics of their own onto other people. It is a psychological defense mechanism. The idea is that by projecting the characteristic onto someone else, one can feel that they do not “own” that characteristic. Presumably the process takes place unconsciously.

Most important, it can lead to highly socially destructive and dangerous behavior. A simple example is former U.S. Senator Larry Craig’s (R-ID) frequent support of anti-gay legislation, though he was quite obviously gay. A much worse example is Adolf Hitler’s demonization of Jews and several other genetically defined groups of people as the incarnation of all evil. That is not to say that Hitler was a Jew. But his demonization of various races and ethnic groups as evil most certainly represented a projection of his own perceived character traits onto those various groups of people. Indeed, it is likely that most genocides have a strong element, if not the primary motivation of psychological projection at their root.

The examples of blatant lies provided in this post would not appear on the surface to be rooted in peoples’ subconscious minds. It is very difficult to believe that the people who propagate these lies actually believe them – that these “lies” take place in their subconscious minds. But then, it’s also difficult to believe that Larry Craig is not aware that he is gay, or that Adolf Hitler really believed what he said about the Jews. I’ve read several books on the subject, and I’ve never been able to determine with the least bit of confidence whether or not he really believed it. I’ve concluded that there is a very thin line – or no line at all – between a person subconsciously projecting his/her unwanted characteristics onto another person through his/her subconscious mind vs. consciously lying about it. In all likelihood, among Nazis who demonized and killed Jews there was a continuum between how much of their beliefs and actions were motivated by subconscious vs. conscious thoughts. It does not seem possible for another person to pinpoint these motivations with any accuracy.

But then, does it really matter? If Hitler really believed, by means of subconscious psychological projection, that Jews were evil, would that excuse his actions? Not in my mind it wouldn’t. For all practical purposes, I just don’t see any substantive difference between psychological projection and outright lying. Call it what you want. The end result is the same.


Consequences for our current political climate

The BIG LIES discussed in this post – whether the result of psychological projection or not – are just a small sampling of the total. The bottom line consequence is that our whole political discourse moves way to the right. Republicans and other right wingers can lie with virtual impunity. Progressives, on the other hand, risk political annihilation if they publicly tell a lie, no matter how minute – that is, if their lie leans to the left. Progressives too can lie with impunity as long as their lies advance the cause of the corporatocracy. But if they do that with any frequency, then they aren’t really progressives, are they?

But progressives also risk being lambasted by the corporate media for telling the truth – especially for telling the truth. Indeed, any time they say something that challenges the interests of the corporatocracy they risk political annihilation – which explains why the 2008 presidential candidacies of Dennis Kucinich and John Edwards never gained much traction.

The Congressional votes to defund ACORN are a perfect case in point. Senators Feingold, Boxer, and Kerry are certainly no corporate shills. Nor (in my opinion) did any of them really want to vote to defund ACORN. Yet they all voted to do so. I can only believe that they did so under substantial pressure that signified risk to their political viability. Even the best of us sometimes bow to political realities.

Similarly, I have often been quite disappointed in President Obama for his veer to the right since being elected President. But then at other times I think about what he might face if he challenged the corporatocracy a lot more than he has. And I think about how much more difficult it is for him by virtue of the unprecedented (for U.S. presidents) racism directed against him. By that I don’t mean to make excuses for him. I believe that we must all criticize him when we disagree with his words or actions. But still, the extraordinary challenges that he faces are something to think about.

Many of we progressives were very happy in 2006 when Democrats won control of Congress, and again in 2008 when Democratic control of Congress was consolidated and a Democratic President was elected as well. But many of us have been very disappointed at what the Democratic Party has failed to accomplish with this advantage. The problem of course is that the corporatocracy is one step ahead of us. As the American people recognized the moral bankruptcy of the Republican Party they voted large numbers of them out of office – so that the Republican Party now appears to be in danger of extinction. But with that, the corporatocracy has begun transferring their financial support to certain Democrats – with unseemly results. Consequently, it appears that even the complete extinction of the Republican Party may not constitute a victory for progressives or for the American people. The American people now have a tougher job ahead of them. Having recognized the moral bankruptcy of the Republican Party, they now must learn to recognize the same for corporate shills with a Democratic label.


A light at the end of the tunnel?

What chance is there for the American people? Our Congress is filled with corporate whores and psychopaths. This is largely the result of a system that accepts the bribery of public officials as a necessary fact of political life. The system has showered special privileges on corporations while simultaneously giving them the rights of personhood. Having equated money with speech, our Supreme Court has deemed corporate bribery of public officials to be the equivalent of exercising their First Amendment rights of free speech. This ultimately resulted in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and the disappearance of the Fairness Doctrine, which led to consolidation of our national news media into corporate hands to an extent never before seen in our country.

The retired psychology professor Bob Altemeyer described what he called right wing authoritarian leaders – or “social dominators” – in his book, “The Authoritarians”. His description of “social dominators” is almost identical to what psychologists have long called psychopaths. He described them as:

inclined to be intimidating, ruthless, and vengeful. They scorn such noble acts as helping others, and being kind, charitable, and forgiving. Instead they would rather be feared than loved, and be viewed as mean, pitiless, and vengeful. They love power, including the power to hurt in their drive to the top….

Social dominators thus admit, anonymously, to striving to manipulate others, and to being dishonest, two-faced, treacherous, and amoral. It’s as if someone took the Scout Law (“A scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, ...”) and turned it completely upside down…

They tend to concentrate in certain places – such as the U.S. Congress under our present system. Yet decent people vastly outnumber them – and that is a main source of hope for the future. History has shown that no tyrannical system lasts indefinitely. Abuse of power by the elite classes eventually gives rise to enough public outrage to topple the system.

Of great potential for the future of our nation, in my opinion, is the rise of the Internet as a means of spreading information. A Pew Research Center poll showed that between 2001 and 2008 the percentage of Americans who received their news primarily from the Internet rose from 13% to 40%. That is a tremendous rise in just 7 years. Furthermore, by 2008 the percent of voters under the age of 30 whose primary source of news was the Internet equaled that of television. Though the quality of news obtained through the Internet varies a great deal, the best thing about it is that the corporatocracy (currently) exercises much less control over it than it does over TV, radio, or print journalism. Consequently, corporate control over the information Americans receive has loosened considerably since 2001. And that may largely explain the misfortune of the corporate controlled Republican Party. Who knows how far this trend will continue into the future?

So I think that Americans are wising up. Information is power, and I believe we are much better informed than we were just a few years ago. Now it’s about time that our elected politicians stop bowing down to the corporatocracy. In order to make that happen, we the people need to show them that they will face dire consequences for continuing to do so.
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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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