By Sheldon S. Wolin
Sheldon S. Wolin is emeritus
professor of politics at Princeton University and the author of
"Politics and Vision: The Presence of the Past" and "Alexis de
Tocqueville: Between Two Worlds."
July 18, 2003
Sept. 11, 2001, hastened a significant shift in our nation's self-understanding. It became commonplace to refer to an "American empire" and to the United States as "the world's only superpower."
Instead of those formulations, try
to conceive of ones like "superpower democracy" or "imperial
democracy," and they seem not only contradictory but opposed to basic
assumptions that Americans hold about their political system and their
place within it. Supposedly ours is a government of constitutionally
limited powers in which equal citizens can take part in power. But one
can no more assume that a superpower welcomes legal limits than believe
that an empire finds democratic participation congenial.
http://jahtruth.net/democra.htm
No administration before George W.
Bush's ever claimed such sweeping powers for an enterprise as vaguely
defined as the "war against terrorism" and the "axis of evil." Nor has
one begun to consume such an enormous amount of the nation's resources
for a mission whose end would be difficult to recognize even if
achieved.
Like previous forms of
totalitarianism, the Bush administration boasts a reckless
unilateralism that believes the United States can demand unquestioning
support, on terms it dictates; ignores treaties and violates
international law at will; invades other countries without provocation;
and incarcerates persons indefinitely without charging them with a
crime or allowing access to counsel.
The drive toward total power can
take different forms, as Mussolini's Italy, Hitler's Germany and
Stalin's Soviet Union suggest.
The American system is evolving its
own form: "inverted totalitarianism." This has no official doctrine of
racism or extermination camps but, as described above, it displays
similar contempt for restraints.
It also has an upside-down
character. For instance, the Nazis focused upon mobilizing and unifying
the society, maintaining a continuous state of war preparations and
demanding enthusiastic participation from the populace. In contrast,
inverted totalitarianism exploits political apathy and encourages
divisiveness. The turnout for a Nazi plebiscite was typically 90
percent or higher; in a good election year in the United States,
participation is about 50 percent.
Another example: The Nazis
abolished the parliamentary system, instituted single-party rule and
controlled all forms of public communication. It is possible, however,
to reach a similar result without seeming to suppress. An elected
legislature is retained but a system of corruption (lobbyists, campaign
contributions, payoffs to powerful interests) short-circuits the
connection between voters and their representatives. The system
responds primarily to corporate interests; voters become cynical,
resigned; and opposition seems futile.
While Nazi control
of the media meant that only the "official story" was communicated,
that result is approximated by encouraging concentrated
ownership of the media and thereby narrowing the range of
permissible opinions.
This can be augmented by having
"homeland security" envelop the entire nation with a maze of
restrictions and by instilling fear among the
general population by periodic alerts raised against a background of
economic uncertainty, unemployment, downsizing and cutbacks in basic
services.
Further, instead of outlawing all
but one party, transform the two-party system. Have one, the
Republican, radically change its identity:
From a moderately conservative
party to a radically conservative one.
From a party of isolationism,
skeptical of foreign adventures and viscerally opposed to deficit
spending, to a party zealous for foreign wars.
From a party skeptical of
ideologies and eggheads into an ideologically driven party nurturing
its own intellectuals and supporting a network that transforms the
national ideology from mildly liberal to predominantly conservative,
while forcing the Democrats to the right and and enfeebling opposition.
From one that maintains space
between business and government to one that merges governmental and
corporate power and exploits the power-potential of scientific advances
and technological innovation. (This would differ from the Nazi warfare
organization, which subordinated "big business" to party leadership.)
The resulting dynamic unfolded
spectacularly in the technology unleashed against Iraq and predictably
in the corporate feeding frenzy over postwar contracts for Iraq's
reconstruction.
In institutionalizing the "war on
terrorism" the Bush administration acquired a rationale for expanding
its powers and furthering its domestic agenda. While the nation's
resources are directed toward endless war, the White House promoted tax
cuts in the midst of recession, leaving scant resources available for
domestic programs. The effect is to render the citizenry more dependent
on government, and to empty the cash-box in case a reformist
administration comes to power.
Americans are now facing a grim
situation with no easy solution. Perhaps the just-passed anniversary of
the Declaration of Independence might remind us that "whenever any form
of Government becomes destructive ..." it must be challenged.
Copyright © 2003, Newsday,
Inc. t
The ONLY solution is to enforce The Plan:-
http://jahtruth.net/plan.htm
.



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