More and more people are starting to take notice. My colleague Bill Hicks did a two part post on some of the historical aspects of the Nazi regime that are often forgotten:
Though obviously much shorter lived, the German empire built by the Nazis followed a trajectory very similar to our own. Germany in the 1930s went through a period of rapid expansion not all that dissimilar to how America aggressively conquered a continent and then began expanding its reach overseas. The amount of physical territory acquired by Germany didn’t actually peak until 1942, at the time of its greatest advance on the eastern front but well beyond the point where its battlefield successes were going to be sustainable in the long run. Likewise, America’s “Operation Barbarossa” moment came in the wake of 9/11 when the Bush administration decided to double down on America’s planetary hegemony by launching two wars of choice in the Middle East while simultaneously expanding both our military presence around the globe and the national security state here at home. Ten years later, the national debt has nearly tripled in size and we have already passed the point where our “successes” at expanding the reach of the empire during the War on Terror will be sustainable in the long run.People think of fascism as just a man with a silly mustache. Because of their compartmentalized thinking, they cannot accept the tell-tale signs when they are wrapped in pro-America rhetoric. Simply put, people supported Hitler because in the short run things were better, he had the backing of wealthy industrialists, and they were the finest masters of twisting manipulating people's passions the world had yet seen at that point.
The lesson here is again fairly simple: governments become more repressive during times of national crisis, and that repression increases as the situation becomes more desperate. Looking back at some of the greatest assaults on individual liberties throughout American history—the Alien and Sedition Acts in the late 1790s, the suspension of Habeas Corpus during the Civil War, the imprisonment of antiwar protestors during World War I, the Palmer raids during the first wave of Red scares, the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, the McCarthy hearings early in the Cold War, the Kent State shootings when the Vietnam War had become a hopeless quagmire and waterboarding, rendition, and warrantless wiretapping during the “War” on Terror—shows that they all occurred at a time when America was either actively at war or feared it was about to be attacked.
The fact is, if you were a non-Nazi “Good German” during this time—law abiding, able bodied, willing to work and not too vociferous in your complaints about the nation’s leadership—the first seven years or so of Hitler’s rule must have seemed like a glorious time to be alive. Even after Hitler launched the war and chronic shortages of nearly every consumer good became endemic, for awhile you could at least take national pride in the seemingly never ending stream of German military successes. In fact, unless you were one of the unlucky souls slogging it out in the brutal combat of the eastern front, it was only after the defeat at Stalingrad and the appearance of American and Royal Air Force bombers overhead with relentless regularity that your quality of life really began to suffer.
Morris Berman has an excellent post in the same vein documenting many of the things we've been talking about here. I urge you to read it in its entirety. He documents six major areas of creeping authoritarianism:
- I. The creation of a political climate in which the police are out of control, arbitrarily free to intimidate anyone for virtually anything.
- II. The persecution of whistleblowers, protesters, and dissenters
- III. The dramatic expansion of the surveillance of American citizens on the part of the National Security Agency (NSA)
- IV. The corruption of the judicial system by means of show trials of Muslim activists
- V. The construction of political detention centers, also known as Communication Management Units (CMU’s)
- VI. The shredding of the Bill of Rights by means of the National Defense Authorization Act.
In June 2011 the sheriff of Nelson County, North Dakota, called in a Predator B drone from the local Air Force base to capture three men who had stolen some cows. Once the unmanned aircraft located the suspects, police rushed in to make the first known arrests of U.S. citizens with the help of a Predator spy drone. It turns out that predator drones are frequently used for domestic investigations all over the U.S.—by the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and by state and local law enforcement officials.Berman concludes:
At the height of its insanity, the Stasi in East Germany was spying on 1 out of 7 citizens. The U.S. is now spying on 7 out of 7.
The NDAA, also known as the “indefinite detention bill,” was signed into law by President Obama on 31 December 2011. It has no temporal or geographic limitations, and can be used by Mr. Obama or any future president to military detain U.S. citizens. As in pre-Magna Carta days, you can simply be swept up and put away forever—disappeared—with no explanation of why, no right to call a lawyer or anybody else, and no right to a trial. You can actually be tortured to death, if the government decides it is in the national interest. The NDAA is probably the greatest rollback of civil liberties in the history of the United States.
The bottom line, of course, is that if you destroy the judicial system, then finally nobody is safe. The government could wind up railroading anyone they don’t like, and I very much doubt that this possibility is far-fetched. First they came for the Muslims...
Where do the suspected Muslim terrorists go? It turns out that the government is using secret prison facilities to house inmates accused of non-violent activities, i.e. of allegedly being tied to terrorist groups. As it turns out, these are not just Muslim groups; the CMU’s are also being used to house environmental activists.
Just as an aside, there are, in general, more people under “correctional supervision” in America than there were in the Russian gulag under Stalin, at its height. Writing in the New Yorker on 30 January 2012, Adam Gopnik declared: “Mass incarceration on a scale almost unexampled in human history is a fundamental fact of our country today.”
This leads me to my final point. The distinctive characteristic of American democracy, from 1776, was the protection of the individual and the preservation of individual rights. That no longer exists. Anyone is a potential terrorist now; anyone can be persecuted, prosecuted, and in effect, destroyed. Democracy is only possible if dissent is not only permitted, but also respected. This too is finished. What does this mean for someone such as myself?, is something I lay awake nights thinking about. I have published three books, and half a collection of essays, showing where we have gone wrong, predicting our eventual collapse—indeed, this repression is part of that collapse—and arguing that the U.S. no longer has a moral compass; that it is spiritually bankrupt. I run a blog that is anything but polite: it says the U.S. is finished; that it is basically a corporate plutocracy, run by a gangster elite; that the American people are basically morons, with little more than fried rice in their heads; and that anyone with half a brain and the means to do so should emigrate before it’s too late. I’m not really a threat to the U.S. government, largely because I am not a political activist and because it’s not likely that more than 74 people out of 311 million regularly read my blog (it’s probably more like 24, in fact). But as the definition of terrorism widens in this country, what is to prevent the creation of a category known as “intellectual terrorism” from arising, and putting folks like myself in that category? What is to prevent the government from calling such activity a clear and present danger to national security? As must be obvious by now, the government can do anything it wants to now; as in Nazi Germany, we now have a government of men, not of laws. Indeed, the “laws” are little more than a pretext for whatever the government wishes to do.Slouching Toward Nuremberg (Dark Ages America)
-When a country puts laws such as torture or indefinite detention or arbitrary assassination on the books, sooner or later it will use these legal instruments. They won’t just lie dormant, in other words. As in the case of technology, once the mechanisms are there, the temptation to employ them simply becomes too great to resist. That is what is happening today.
-In a world that is politically construed along Manichaean lines—which, as I have argued elsewhere, America has been doing since Day 1—the first line of attack is against the enemy outside. It doesn’t matter if we are talking about Protestants or Catholics or al-Qaeda operatives or infidels of any kind, the first order of business is to go to war with them. But as the British anthropologist Mary Douglas shows in her book Purity and Danger, or Norman Cohn demonstrates in The Pursuit of the Millennium, if the war goes on long enough, inevitably the enemy is also seen to be a fifth column, i.e. within the walls of the body politic itself. They become Huguenots or Marrano Jews or heretics of whatever stripe, and as in the case of Goya’s famous painting, Saturn Devouring His Son, the country begins to eat itself alive. Everybody becomes an enemy; no one is safe any longer. And so I believe that I, and you, really do have reason to worry.
That last point is one that worries me too. Are we going to have to watch what we say; watch what we do? Is this what the Founding Fathers wanted?
In a similar vein, Naomi Klein writes in The Guardian:
Some have argued that this present "war on women" is a war against progressivism – or a war against feminism, in particular. I would say, looking at the big picture, that it is more serious than that – not that those options are not plenty serious enough. I would say that the call for transvaginal probes, for gagging medical providers, for sending the state to shake a finger for an extra 72 hours at a distressed woman and stand between her and the discussion she is having with her inner-most and private conscience, is all part of the larger crackdown we see on privacy, private space, freedom and personal choice.If Germany, one of the most intelligent and literate places on earth, with multiple newspapers and an educated citizenry could not hold off fascism, then how can America, full of cranks, charlatans, opportunists, and zealots, seething with poverty and racial tension, where most people have no access to any information outside of Fox News, and with no essential cultural connections binding us together, hold off the tide?
It is on the same spectrum of control: the will to gag Bradley Manning or Julian Assange also seek to gag a medical provider in South Dakota. The same impulse to peer into personal emails and listen to private phone calls that has led the NSA to pour billions into surveillance stations in Utah, is the same impulse of panopticon state control that wants to get between the sheets of men and women in consensual sexual decision-making, and monitor or restrict their access to condoms and contraception. And it is the same Big Brother impulse for control that maintains that what a woman does with her own care-provider is a function of state management.
But in fact, the bigger crackdown shows us that it is merely the genderized manifestation of state control. This impulse to mediate and regulate personal choices has been inflamed, I would argue, not by women being particularly uppity – but by people being uppity. The awakening of protesting and demanding behavior of Occupy communities and of Ron Paul supporters, of the unions in Wisconsin, and the students in Montreal, and the rebellious Greeks in Athens, has made the gatekeepers seek every kind of method of control available to them.
I'm surprised, given his recitation of the rollback of civil rights for Jews, Berman did not point out that the exact same things are being done in the United States today using homosexuals as scapegoats. Numerous states have taken the time to take legislative action to strip civil rights from gays (while simultaneously ignoring more pressing issues like mass unemployment and deteriorating infrastructure). And now the corn-pone Nazis are now openly calling for homosexuals to be rounded up into concentration camps and murdered, every last one. Please watch the following, and feel a chill go up your spine:
Laugh and dismiss these clowns all you like. That's exactly what they did with Hitler and his reprobate followers early on too. Who had the last laugh there?
You call it "Authoritarian Capitalism" but its technical term is Neoliberal Capitalism which really started during the Reagan/Thatcher era hailing the free market as the God to worship.
ReplyDeleteWhat makes this time even more concerning is that it's happening in an era of peak resources and converging environmental problems. The first world's exploitation of oil and other resources is at the root of much of terrorism. This reaction to the West's Imperialism has now been turned into the quixotic and endless 'War on Terror', a tool for The Military Industrial Complex to justify its bloated existence just as it used the Soviet Union as an excuse (See the book 'Sorrows of Empire).
I wrote something up on all this as well on a blog I just started to keep track of world events:
Liberty through better Shopping & Consumerism as Hegemony
That mean stupid cow needs a bullet in the back of her skull.
ReplyDeleteHi, Nebs. I had a feeling you'd be here in a post about the collapse of the republic and the failure of mass democracy.
DeleteYou know me; a glutton for punishment. =P
DeleteYes, but you're just as much a glutton for dishing it out as you are for taking. Ah, the life of a top...
DeleteOkay, now that I've 'had my feelings' [see comment above], what do you recommend?
ReplyDeleteYou have totally dismissed even the concept of 'armed citizenry as deterrence'. Elections are rigged by money. Protest has obviously become futile. So what now? Just suck it up and say "Sieg Heil"?
It's not Sieg Hiel, it's "God Bless America." And if you don't say it, you probably will be under suspicion. I remember how creepy I felt when "God Bless America" somehow became an official song at baseball games after 9-11 in addition to the traditional national anthem played at the beginning of all sporting events. WTF? How many patriotism orgies can we cram into our sporting events? And certainly you'll be ostracized if you don't play along or roll your eyes. My view is that the more you have to "force" patriotism on people, the less they actually have to be patriotic about. You can't hold a gun to someone's head and force them to love you.
ReplyDeleteFor his part Berman says leave the U.S. I think we will see an exodus from the United States, especially highly skilled educated people. At first it will be for economic reasons, then later for cultural reasons, just as there was from Germany in the 1930's (with the US as a major beneficiary). This will, of course, be censored by the U.S. media. See:
Many U.S. Immigrants’ Children Seek American Dream Abroad (New York Times)
http://www.imackgroup.com/mathematics/811751-pursuing-the-american-dream-in-brazil-russia-india-china/
Americans eye opportunities in Brazil's booming economy (BBC)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-12745667
What about the rest of us? I've thought about it, especially since I have very few ties keeping me here. Most of us do not have the means; I certainly don't. Add to that the fact that economic meltdown means other countries are less likely to let you in. If you can cultivate ties abroad, do so, and then help the rest of us.
The only silver lining is that repressive regimes always fall, eventually. The eventually is the kicker. Twelve years for Hitler, seventy for the USSR, twenty for Pinochet, etc. What the future holds, nobody knows. I just hope it won't take actual concentration camps before the public sees the light, but I fear it might.
Sorry, but there is really no where to run to. Even Canada is sliding into Fascism.
ReplyDeleteAnd those countries in that NYT piece? Brazil is barely two decades out of a pure military dictatorship and still has active police death squads. Most of India is still poverty stricken with only 7% of the population actually having salaried work and Maoist guerillas hold sway over a fifth of the country. Russia is, well, bloody brutal Ol' Russia, with Putin working on become a 'nice' Stalin. China? *laughs* Get real.
No, we either make this work here or we give up and eat it. So, in essence, you really have no solutions except 'ride it out'. *sigh*
Well, keep up the good work here while you can. It helps me make my own case elsewhere. =)
That's it, we're headed to Norway....
ReplyDeleteBut seriously, I think culture matters. As you accurately point out, all countries have their problems. But the atmosphere seems much less oppressive for the average ordinary person (which I am) than it does here. People work less and appreciate things like quality of life elsewhere, as opposed to America where making a killing is the only measure of the good life. Europe has walkable cities and is investing heavily in renewable energy. Here, our Koch-funded governor cancelled a fully-funded train to Madison even as the factories were gearing up to make the cars, and state legislatures are passing resolutions against urban planning and smart metering as part of international socialist conspiracies.
I'm sympathetic to Morris Berman's analysis here - America has never had to live within limits. Everything is based around getting rich and hustling. You can't have a society based around that. Other countries seem to be recognizing that capitalism as we know it can't go on like this forever. The Unites States will tear itself apart before it acknowledges this. If that means locking up half it's citizens, poisoning its groundwater, and selling every street corner to a "private" company, than that's what will happen.
No where is 'safe' it's true. But I think certain cultures will hold up better in the Long emergency than others.