| I
talked at length with my mother the other night, and in an unusual turn
of conversation, we ended up chatting for nearly two hours about
politics, the world, the war, the economy, and life for our loved ones
long after we’re gone.
Mom mused over world events and the possible outcomes of the war on
Iraq. She hinted that she felt like she was living under some sort of
Communist regime, where the State was all-powerful and its subjects were
at the whim and decrees of their appointed masters. She worried that her
grandson could grow up in an environment where his every movement and
action is monitored under an Orwellian state of affairs.
Now my mother would make the claim that she is no extraordinarily
deep thinker or political whiz. She would say she is just a civilian mom
who is fed up with Big Brother on her back, in her home, and trampling
through all parts of the world on her dollars. Mom doesn’t claim to be
able to make the proper distinctions in terms of ideological concepts,
but I consider her smarter than the average American because she asks
all the right questions, and isn’t afraid to answer them in a way that
deviates from the usual utterance. In fact, she doesn’t know anything
about Orwell’s 1984,
except she’ll describe similar circumstances in her very own words. [Read
Orwell's "1984" on the web]
As I explained to my Mom in terms of the present war, we are living
under fascist statism in the United States, with its related Imperialist
ambitions running roughshod over peoples abroad that have no desire to
be "democratized" or Americanized. It’s against the rules,
you see, to want to live two-hundred years behind us, in stone houses,
praising your own God, on your own land.
However, be certain that the same does not hold true for the
aspirations of others, for what would happen if the Chinese decided to
mount a presumptuous campaign to "liberate" blacks from U.S.
ghettos, or to "liberate" poor people from their "rich
oppressors?" Strangely enough, such an undertaking would probably
seem appropriate to the rest of the non-Western, non-capitalist world.
But our leaders gloss over the war and carnage by speaking of
"democracy" and "unity" in pretty and tempting
tones, and they assign the main propaganda duty to a soft-spoken Texan
who can’t possibly come off as anything but well-intentioned,
laid-back, and humanitarian. After all, if you are going to try and sell
mass murder, do your best to see that the bulk of the target market buys
the product. In spite of the boy-next door spokesman with the sleepy
drawl, what the party line really means is that the State and its
elected leaders are the righteous arbiters of what is right and wrong,
good and bad, and we, along with the rest of the world, had better not
dare question it. After all, the U.S. Cold War conquest was supposed to
be its checkmate on all of humankind well into perpetuity.
I watched conservative Michael Medved – on CNN the other day –
sounding off that some Seattle dupe wanted to pass a local resolution
naming support for the troops, while the malevolent lefties on the
Seattle City Council were not as eager about such a declaration, and
therefore didn’t opt for it. Medved spoke of this lack of
"support" with great disdain, as if the lack of total unity
behind some hollow affirmation by a bunch of trifling politicians
inevitably translates into "leftist,"
"anti-American," and all the predictable catchphrases.
Such silly resolutions, of course, are merely time-wasting,
government-decreed threats. Their purpose is to try and get us in line
behind the collective mindset and promise to shut up and keep our
dissent on a back burner so as not to upset the collective, fascist
order. We thereby note that those who do not exclaim great exhilaration
for the State’s resolutions proclaiming self-greatness are indeed not
"one of them" (whoever "they" are), and are
therefore against them, by virtue of the most simplistic and mindless
logic.
On the contrary, to not be one of them is a plus point, for it
means that you have gone out on a limb to think for yourself, rather
than follow the rest of the fools into the gas chamber.
Just what is "supporting the troops?" Has anyone yet
defined this? Of course it’s just more meaningless, murky propaganda
meant to "out" those who don’t march lockstep behind the
Imperialists and their wars. It’s a tall story to attempt to say that
anyone – except perhaps the most militant and obscene leftist – does
not "support" the individual soldier whose life is at risk in
this war. On the contrary, those against this war support human life,
peace, and prosperity for all, whereas the warmongers have no misgivings
about leaving their children behind in a nation of perpetual war, where
the militarization of society becomes a way of life in order to stay
secure in a world where we are despised.
Note how the neocons, media shills, bureaucrats, and pseudo-patriots
continuously berate the war dissenters and taunt them with their
self-described, patriotic status. "We love America and you don’t,"
they sneer, in their pretentious, smug little editorials. They flimsily
equate the skeptical grandmother or fed up autoworker with the
revolutionary pro-Marxist who lives in a tree, fending off capitalism
and human progress under the pretext of some ridiculous owl.
We are all supposed to be together on this latest undertaking, don’t
you know? We are supposed to go along with the media and the politicians
who have engaged in non-partisan killing in order to grow this great,
new collective mindset. We saw it during Senior’s Gulf War, wherein
unity, togetherness, UN veneration, and spineless yellow ribbons were
the order of the day.
Thus we find ourselves in yet another war that cannot be legitimized
or held up as righteous, no matter how relentless the song and dance.
Even the average American is beginning to question what winning really
means, where this thing will go post-fighting, and how the heck we are
ever going to get out of this mess. Of course we won’t; these latest
Imperial ambitions will keep us in that region of the world forever,
with more "freedom operations" to come.
Meanwhile, at home, there are two versions of the Patriot Act holding
sway over us. The latest version – Son of Patriot – is still
misunderstood by the average Joe who is clueless because he’s held in
a stupor by the relentless rah-rah of wartime spectacle created by the
networks. Our politicians strategize to take advantage of the
circumstances created by all of this mindless war unity in order to
shove another massive increase in federal powers down our throat.
Increased active surveillance, increased database surveillance, forced
DNA procurements, the freedom to grope consumer credit reports, new
citizen spy programs, and anti-encryption laws are all a part of our
future, thanks to Ashcroft and his fellow fascists in Washington.
Meanwhile, we operate under a system of nationalized airlines and
airports, wherein the outward appearance is that of private ownership,
but in reality, everything in that industry is subject to the rules and
regulations of myriad federalized bureaucracies that were created by the
State in order to serve the State and its interests.
Post-9/11, I’ve actually heard Americans exclaim how great it is
that El Al Israel Airlines has such splendid security, and that American
airline security goals should strive for such flawlessness. "They
don’t have problems with terrorists," the admirers say,
"because they know how to take care of business." Apparently,
the worshippers of statism believe it’s a great thing to be yanked off
the airplane toilet by a group of thugs with submachine guns, because
constipation has kept you in there suspiciously too long. Nevertheless,
a time where the United States finds itself mimicking the militarized,
authoritarian Israeli State is likely not too far off.
Mussolini would be proud of America’s new fascist direction, as his
motto was "tutto nello Stato, niente al fuori dello Stato, nulla
contro lo Stato," or, everything within the State, nothing
outside the State, nothing against the State.
Where is the money going to come from to rebuild this Middle East
hellhole that we are "liberating?" Ask a silly question and
get a silly answer. Fortune
magazine recently put that reconstruction tab at $100 billion,
but estimates by others are at $200 billion and up. And that does not
include long-term occupation costs, which could mean billions more in
the annual budget.
American corporations have long been lined up at the trough to
receive their handouts by way of U.S. reconstruction policies in Iraq.
Halliburton, for one, is already on the receiving end of cushy cost-plus
arrangements (guaranteed profits), and is slated to run military
facilities in Turkey. Countless others, in addition to Halliburton, are
now getting their big payoffs for past provisions to selected politicos.
The war is troublesome enough, but the real turmoil starts when our
government occupies and rebuilds Iraq, then sets its sights on the rest
of the uncooperative Arab nations. On the home front, disorder begins
when bombs are set off on buses, in schools, in nightclubs, and in
packed football stadiums. Even while knowing what Muslim fanaticism is
capable of, do Americans still kid themselves that this will not be the
result? But perhaps our politicians really believe that killing Muslims,
occupying a Muslim country, setting up a puppet government, taking over
its resources, and threatening the rest of the Arab nations will have no
repercussions here in the United States. And perhaps the American public
is foolish enough to believe them.
From a statement by Indiana Senator Richard Lugar
The Iraqi people have suffered for decades at the hands of their
leaders. We want to contribute to the creation of fundamental
structures for the people of Iraq to enjoy democracy and economic
growth. The American people must understand that U.S. military and
civilian personnel will be in Iraq for an extended period of time.
Most experts believe that years of public investment and expert
guidance will be required to establish Iraq as a secure and
responsible member of the world community. Failure to stay the course
in Iraq would risk great damage to U.S. credibility – particularly
after the last several months of fractious diplomacy over the
propriety of military force. Leaving Iraq prematurely also could lead
to regional instability, ethnic warfare, failure to eliminate all
Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, and the establishment of terrorist
bases on Iraqi territory.
Mussolini co-authored a definition of fascism in 1932, along with
Giovanni Gentile, wherein he said that fascism "believes neither in
the possibility nor the utility of perpetual peace. The Fascist accepts
life and loves it, knowing nothing of and despising suicide he rather
conceives of life as duty and struggle and conquest, but above all for
others – those who are at hand and those who are far distant,
contemporaries, and those who will come after."
In addition, he added, "for Fascism, the growth of empire, that
is to say the expansion of the nation, is an essential manifestation of
vitality, and its opposite a sign of decadence. Peoples which are
rising, or rising again after a period of decadence, are always
imperialist; and renunciation is a sign of decay and of death."
This spells out the present objectives of the U.S. government, and
that is to control and run the Arab nations of the Middle East for the
purpose of spreading the "democratic" Empire and the American
way of life; subsidizing American corporatist State interests; and
benefiting the political interests of our Israel allies.
Mussolini went on to say,
The foundation of Fascism is the conception of the State, its
character, its duty, and its aim. Fascism conceives of the State as an
absolute, in comparison with which all individuals or groups are
relative, only to be conceived of in their relation to the State. The
conception of the Liberal State is not that of a directing force,
guiding the play and development, both material and spiritual, of a
collective body, but merely a force limited to the function of
recording results on the other hand, the Fascist State is itself
conscious and has itself a will and a personality – thus it may be
called the "ethic" State.
Perhaps Americans are too easily thrilled by all of the puffy
propaganda, the show of false, forced unity, and the filtered war news
to notice where the finest of our country’s founders had hoped to lead
us, and where we ended up. But hey, as long as the trains run on time,
who cares?
April 9, 2003
Karen De Coster, CPA, [send
her mail] is a paleolibertarian freelance writer, graduate student
in Austrian Economics, and a business professional from Michigan. Her
first book is currently in the works. See her Mises
Institute archive for more online articles, and check out her
website, along with her
blog.
Copyright © 2003 LewRockwell.com
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