Karen Kwiatkowski writes:
Americans like to think that we revolted against
injustice, embraced liberty, and became a model for a new republic in
1776.
The ideas of that experimental, tiny precursor to the modern
American empire have been lost in translation over the centuries.
Human
tendencies to love liberty and decentralization, to crave personal independence
and the right to build and create their own legacies, to be kings of their own
castles, remain, but they are in the mist in 2015 America.
For well over a dozen decades,
the mythology that we live in the best, most powerful, most influential, and
most envied nation that has ever existed has been force fed to a billion past
and present Americans.
These beliefs are part and parcel of a century of neoconservativism.
These beliefs unite what remains of the Tea Party movement, and the Reform and
the Bull Moose Parties before that. They underpin the popular rhetoric of
democratic socialist Bernie Sanders.
The Clinton and Bush dynasties
embrace and evoke these beliefs, and have substantial fundamental legitimacy
among the population as a result – regardless of how we distrust these
particular candidates.
The rhetoric of populist Democratic-Republican
Donald Trump harmonizes perfectly with deeply held beliefs about American
exceptionalism and militarism.
The 2016 choice is clear,
singular, and irrelevant – anyone leading in the polls today would make an
acceptable President, and both parties are united in state worship, couched in
the idea of Washington, DC as the center of the universe, the indispensable
capital of the world.
When the population is asked, “What kind of ice
cream do you like?” the real question, impossible to ask but necessary for our
very survival, is “Do we want any more?”
Many Americans still do want
more, and the crony capitalist class, government-connected bankster class, and
the staggering array of government dependencies throughout the country certainly
do want more.
They need more, and face an early and painful extinction if
they don’t get more.
Our Depression era grandparents would squeeze a lemon dry
and use the rind.
And so will the modern D.C. dependencies, that exist on
redistributive allocations of stolen GDP and subsidized borrowing against
future stolen GDP.
These organisms –sustained by tax-eating and
unwise borrowing – will squeeze that fount dry and consume the remainder,
before they give up the ghost.
When the entities finally do say
die, they will mean it. In the battle for bureaucratic survival, the odds
will favor the armed and popular, i.e. the armed. This is always the end
of tyrannies, and of empires.
The present day public popularity of
military and police may reveal a subconscious sense that here is where survival
power is, that in the military state many will find protection, as dog eats
dog.
The bureaucratic wolves,
sensing a cold winter approaching, have prepared, by expanding the wars
overseas while expanding domestic presence, through militarized policing,
massive and pervasive government surveillance and documenting of citizen
movements, investments, and transactions, and a wholly incompetent but
incredibly useful “homeland” security infrastructure.
As our subconscious sense of a “need” for state survival
impresses on us the value of the militarist and force heavy state, the current
ongoing wars in a dozen countries – mysterious in detail, convoluted in motive,
reported mechanically if at all, celebrated by all major political parties or
voices — are losing moral
ground and physical
territory in all cases.
The Pentagon moans at loss of its “war” budget justification
and cries at what sequestration has done to its “regular, non-war” and
continually expanding operating budget.
The very fact that this third
century of America has not only blown in with the world’s largest standing
military, but that this institution budgets for war separately (and
unarguably) from its own existential maintenance as the largest military on
earth.
The indispensable nation today is
not centered in Washington, DC or even NYC. Today, for today, it is
centered in Moscow.
How fascinating that a former Soviet man, a
modern-day dictator by most reports, a man who faces down domestic antiwar
sentiment and critiques with prison sentences, has shown the decisiveness and
will in stomping the named American enemy of the moment.
Putin’s
successful air attacks on the dread pirate ISIS in Syria have provided a big
ideological challenge to American fantasies and frightened the deciders in
Washington to their very core.
In calling the neoconservative,
Republicrat bluff that ISIS is an enemy of the US (rather than the
US-facilitated means for toppling the last independent secular leader in the
Middle East, setting the stage for endless wars, reliable higher oil prices,
and a ballooning US national security budget into the next several decades), the
new indispensable nation (or at least Putin and his military) has inadvertently
exploded the driving and unifying myth of American indispensability.
He
has, in one swift move, both clarified the issues and exposed the D.C. mob.
In another era, the shrieks from
Washington about the cheeky Putin and the potentially cheeky Chinese, might
have worked to turn the herd.
But as with the era that preceded the
British loss of the American colonies, the current king in the United States, a
modern George III, is widely believed to be crazy, obsessed, wasteful, debt
ridden and unlikeable.
His popular opposition – while statists and
militarists all, owe their popularity to how well they articulate (without
really believing it themselves) the growing and real perspective that the king
is a naked, lying, incompetent puppet and should be overthrown.
But popular politics in an empire is no match for
bureaucratic survival of an all consuming and powerful central state.
Putin’s move has delivered the happy and undeniable rationale for the immediate
end of the U.S. warfare state, and has in one act, collapsed the core tenet of
neoconservatism, the RNC and the DNC.
But the word on this isn’t yet out
to the hinterlands, and we must expect that it will be directly suppressed and
creatively propagandized by government media outlets as a rationale for even
more Washington, D.C. spending, assertiveness, and militarism.
The
leading presidential candidates will predictably use their platforms to
articulate the needs of the state, over all else.
Washington D.C. is
preparing to be burned.
The state’s terror may be due to how
they learned to stop worrying and love the bomb, or growing fear of domestic
revolts against the symbols of overweening government.
I suspect that the
state’s terror is the result of internecine bureaucratic warfare gone hot in a
collapsing Empire’s desperate capital. Terror within the (deep) state has
an immediate symptom, and it is state terror.
With Russia directly and
successfully exploding the myth of America the indispensable nation, we may
cautiously celebrate the long contest for real liberty.
But we should
expect the very worst in immediate outcomes, and not underestimate the fury of
our faltering and desperate central government in coming months.
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