NOVEMBER
17, 2017
Big Brother in the Aisles of HyVee
Repeat
a lie often enough, the conventional Nazi propaganda wisdom ran, and it will
become an accepted truth.
This
last Veterans Day weekend, I couldn’t watch a sporting event, listen to a car
radio, or even go shopping at the local grocery store without hearing a Great
American Lie repeated over and over.
Sports
announcers, radio talk-show hosts, commercials, and even a recorded voice
blasted into the aisles of the HyVeee supermarket told me again and again that
I owed my great American “freedom” to veterans and current enlistees of the
U.S. military – in other words, to the Pentagon.
We
are free to attend football and basketball games, I was told, because of our
military veterans, thanks to the U.S. military.
We
get to go shopping, the recorded voice at HyVee instructed me, because of “our”
military. So “thank a veteran.”
Leaving
my local grocery store last Sunday, I almost expected to see U.S. Marines
guarding the perimeter of the parking lot so that terrorists couldn’t slaughter
grateful citizens as we tried to purchased provisions. Was that an Army Rangers
team in the frozen foods section?
Liberty
and Justice for Some
And
how much cherished freedom do U.S. Americans really enjoy in the U.S.-American
“homeland,” home to the largest mass incarceration system in human history and
to a giant, burgeoning, and lethal corporate police and surveillance state?
Some Americans seem to have quite a bit more liberty than others, that’s for
sure. Real freedom exists mainly for the nation’s upper One Percent, which owns
well more than 90 percent of the nation’s wealth. The holdings include
much of the political class and a highly concentrated corporate and commercial
media that generates images and narratives that “manufacture [mass] consent” to
that savage inequality while selling an endless stream of consumer goods that
help ruin livable ecology.
The
selfish and reckless financial manipulations and transgressions of the wealthy
Few carry few criminal penalties even when they clearly ruin the lives of
millions of Americans, but poor
inner-city drug dealers get sent to prison for years for selling piddling
amounts of narcotics. Rich people who purchase, use, or sell illicit drugs hire
fancy lawyers to stay out of jail and he felony record databases. Hence the
penetrating title of Glenn Greenwald’s neat 2012
book: With
Liberty and Justice for Some: How the Law is Used to Destroy Equality and
Protect the Powerful.
Another
useful volume on this highly racialized class hypocrisy is Matt Taibbi’s The
Divide: American Injustice in an Age of the Wealth Gap(2014). Taibbi
exposed a “legal schizophrenia” that relentlessly punishes the poor but shows
mercy for Wall Street. Reflecting on the Obama administration’s refusal to
arrest top banksters, Taibbi found that the U.S. legal system exhibits a
two-faced double standard – “letting major systemic offenders walk, bypassing
the opportunity for important symbolic prosecutions [but]. . . putting the
smallest of small fry on the rack for negligible offenses.” After detailing
numerous cases of massive high-level financial fraud that escaped prosecution,
Taibbi showed how ghetto residents are strip-searched for “blocking pedestrian
traffic” and how public assistance applicants are forced to let drug-spooking
investigators poke through their closets and cabinets. Poor U.S. women get jail
time for lying about whether they live with a boyfriend or receiving welfare
overpayments. The police arrest a man for carrying a joint but not a banker who
supplies international drugs lords with billions of dollars.
The
Public is Powerless
Meanwhile,
the nation’s political system amounts to an open plutocracy wherein
concentrated business power generally gets whatever it wants from government
while the progressive, left-leaning and social-democratic working-class
majority almost never gets any of the policies it desires. Majority opinion is
technically irrelevant in a nation where the (ex-)citizenry has been turned
into a “corporate-managed electorate” (Sheldon
Wolin) whose supposedly meaningful input comes for two minutes in a voting
booth in carefully stage-managed big money-major party-narrow-spectrum and
candidate-centered electoral spectacles once every two or four years.
Corporate
and financial cash, connections, personnel, and blackmail have gummed up the
workings of the nation’s political, legal, educational, and criminal justice
systems. This plutocratic sickness runs through U.S. politics and society like
bad cholesterol. It chokes the arteries of the body politic, turning “our”
ballyhooed “democracy” into an empty shell.
Don’t
take it just from an openly Left radical. There’s a considerable mainstream
political science and investigative journalist literature confirming that the
U.S. is a de facto corporate and financial dictatorship in
which the wishes of the populace are regularly cancelled and insulted by
concentrated wealth. Summarizing the basic findings of this literature,
distinguished liberal political scientists Benjamin Page (Northwestern) and
Martin Gilens (Princeton) report in their new book Democracy
in America? that:
“the
best evidence indicates that the wishes of ordinary Americans actually
have had little or no impact on the making of federal government policy.
Wealthy individuals and organized interest group – especially business
corporations – have had much more political clout. When they are taken into
account, it becomes apparent that the general public has been virtually
powerless…The will of majorities is often thwarted by the affluent and the
well-organized, who block popular policy proposals and enact special favors for
themselves…Majorities of Americans favor specific policies designed to deal
with such problems as climate change, gun violence…inadequate public schools,
and crumbling bridges and highways…[and favor] various programs to help provide
jobs, increase wages, help the unemployed, provide universal medical insurance,
ensure decent retirement pensions, and pay for such programs with progressive
taxes. Most Americans also want to cut ‘corporate welfare.’ Yet the
wealthy, business groups, and structural gridlock have mostly blocked such new
policies [and programs].”
Thanks
to this “oligarchy,” as Page and Gilens unabashedly call it, the United States
ranks at or near the bottom
of the list of rich nationswhen it comes to numerous
core indications of social health: economic disparity, intergenerational
social mobility, racial inequality, racial segregation, infant mortality,
poverty, child poverty, life expectancy, violence, incarceration, depression,
mass literacy and numeracy, environmental sanity, and more. Economic
globalization and labor-displacing technology are part of what plagues the
U.S., Page and Gilens note, but “all other advanced countries have faced
[those] same pressures” and “nearly all of them have done much better than we
have at” limiting inequality.” Those countries have used “a range of
egalitarian public policies to spread the gains from trade and technology more
widely, allowing many more of their citizens to benefit.”
Thanks
to the ideological power of the American oligarchy, moreover, U.S. business
elites have advanced the false notion that workers and the poor are personally
to blame for their dire straits more successfully than have
capitalists and their servants in any other nation.
Workplace
Despotism
Page
and Gilens are highly privileged and tenured academics who enjoy remarkable and
autonomous control of their own work lives. That and the fact that they
aren’t Marxists, or some other kind of anti-capitalist radicals means that they
have nothing to say about a very underestimated way in which the United States
is not a democracy. As the radical economist Richard Wolff
likes to remind us, ordinary working-class and working-age Americans spend
most of their waking lives on the job, under the authoritarian and often
despotic supervision of employers, to whom workers must rent out their labor
power to obtain the means of exchange with which to purchase basic life
necessities. When it ceases to be profitable or otherwise “cost-effective” to
retain workers, employers throw them out onto the wage-suppressing “reserve
army of labor,” turning millions of once productive engaged citizens into “surplus
Americans.” Until its workers themselves own, direct, and structure their
own workplaces (and
labor processes) as “associated
producers,” democratically determining the purpose and nature of their
productive activities and appropriating the surplus generated for themselves
and the broader common good, it is difficult to think of a society as
meaningfully democratic.
The
Right-Handed State
Thanks
to the relative scarcity and weakness of “egalitarian public policies” in the
U.S. compared to other rich nations, American “social control” (class rule)
relies on police-state repression to a relatively greater degree. The weaker
the velvet-gloved “left hand of the state” (as Pierre
Bourdieu called the social-democratic and inclusive parts of modern
government) in maintaining social order, the stronger the iron- fisted “right
hand of the state.”
The
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) permits the U.S. military to arrest
anyone, including U.S. citizens, and detain them indefinitely without due
process (and even to send them to torture chambers in any foreign country) on
suspicion of offering “substantial support” to those organizations determined
“terrorist” by the Pentagon. The federal executive branch is free to draw
up and act on kill lists that include U.S. citizens.
The
NDAA also codifies into law the participation of the military in domestic
policing, violating a libertarian U.S. principle that goes back to the
nineteenth century. The principle holds little meaning in a time when
U.S. police departments have become militarized (and para-militarized) and
high-tech private “security” companies loaded with military veterans
proliferate across the “homeland” as well the imperial hinterland.
Oligarchy
is not freedom. A corporate police state is not popular self-rule.
Empire’s
Service to “Homeland” Inequality
Corporate
War/Welfare
What
is the role of the military in all this? Where to begin? Beyond what I’ve
already suggested, the Pentagon System’s giant budget of so-called defense
contracts is a potent mechanism for upward wealth distribution to the
politically powerful owners and top managers of high-tech military firms like
Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Boeing. The military budget is a colossal
form of corporate welfare that helps make the plutocratically entrenched Few
yet more opulent and powerful.
Open
Door
The
U.S. Air Force, Army, Navy, and Marines have long worked to expand and protect
the global capitalist “open
door” system of untrammeled investor rights. By opening-up and
protecting U.S.-based multinational corporations’ access to foreign markets,
labor supplies, and raw materials, the Pentagon helps capital bid down the
price of labor power and win weakened government regulations, unions, and lower
taxes in the U.S. “homeland.”
Imperial
Repression Migrates Home
The
military’s endless foreign wars and interventions are a continual source of
tools and techniques for repression of the restless Many at home. From
the development of “nonlethal crowd control” technologies (lethal for the right
of public assembly) like the Long Range Acoustic Device (sound cannon) to the
formation of urban counter-insurgency strategies and latest means and methods
of surveillance, tracking, and interrogation, the military’s foreign missions
are a great boon from the project of suppressing “homeland” dissent.
“The
fetters imposed on liberty at home,” James Madison noted in 1799, “have ever
been forged out of weapons provided for defense against real, pretended, or
imaginary dangers abroad.”
Just
over one century later, another great American thinker, Mark Twain, pondered
the United States’ brutal pacification of the Philippines. Writing an imagined
history of 20th century America, Twain reflected on how the
United States’ “lust for conquest” had “destroyed the Great Republic” since
“trampling upon the helpless abroad had taught her, by a natural process, to
endure with apathy the like at home; multitudes who had applauded the crushing
of other peoples’ liberties, lived to suffer for their own mistake.”
“Indeed,”
the distinguished American historian Alfred
W. McCoy notes, “just a decade after Twain wrote those prophetic words,
colonial police methods migrated homeward from the Philippines to provide
models for the creation of an all-American internal security apparatus.” That
process has continued to the present day.
Have
you ever been surveilled, my fellow American, by a drone? I have, right
in the “democratic” U.S., heartland, protesting the construction of the
eco-cidal Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) in southeastern Iowa last year.
Ask
the DAPL-fighters and water- and climate-protectors from Standing Rock about
the homeward migration of imperial police tools and methods (Of course, Native
American activists might remind you that the means and culture of overseas imperial
conquest and repression were first developed in the U.S. military’s original
genocidal ethnic-cleansing of indigenous North Americans).
The
Great Demonic Suction Tube
At
the same time, the military budget eats up vast resources needed to build a
welfare state that could help ordinary U.S. citizens participate meaningfully
in “their” purported exemplary democracy. “We the people” cannot pay for
the good
social-democratic things that most U.S.-Americans want – things like
single-payer health insurance, free college, giant public works and green jobs
programs, and a broadly expanded social safety net – while they (well, their
plutocratically selected “representatives”) continue to dedicate 54 percent of
federal discretionary spending to paying for a colossal, historically unmatched
global military empire that carries the world’s single largest institutional
carbon footprint while accounting for 40 percent of the world’s military
spending, maintaining at
least 800 military bases spread across more than 80 foreign countries,
and keeping (in David Vine’s words) “troops or other military personnel
in about 160 foreign countries and territories.”
It’s
an old problem. As Martin Luther King, Jr. explained in his famous Riverside Church
speech on April 4, 1967, America will “never invest the necessary
funds or energies” to end poverty and domestic economic insecurity so long as its
military machine “continue[s] to draw men and skills and money like some
demonic destructive suction tube.”
Someone
should tell Bernie Sanders. Again and again, the “independent” (progressive
Democrat) Senator from Vermont cites the Scandinavian nations of Denmark,
Norway, and Sweden as his social policy role models without mentioning that
these countries spend comparably miniscule portions of their national budgets
on the military.
The
War Budget as Class Rule
The
war budget’s trumping of the social democracy budget is, among other things, a
democracy issue in the “homeland.” Imagine the freedom and democracy
dividend that would flow from the United States finally honoring majority
public opinion by making health care a human right with the passage of Medicare
for All. Millions of U.S. workers are afraid to say, write, or do anything
their bosses might disapprove of on or off the job. The dependence of employees
on their bosses for their health insurance has all-too rarely noted
authoritarian implications. The self-described homeland and headquarters of
global freedom is a country in which you put not just your job but also your
health care coverage and often your family’s health coverage at risk merely by
saying, writing or doing anything your workplace superiors find objectionable.
The
kinds of basic activities that can jeopardize you and your loved ones’ medical
coverage are endless. They include trying to form a union, participating in a
work stoppage, putting up a Facebook post against racism, backing a political
candidate your employer dislikes, attending an environmentalist protest or even
just dressing in a way that irritates a boss or letting it be known that you
have a better way to perform some work task. First Amendment rights of free
speech and public assembly don’t mean much when exercising them can cost you
your job, or your health care and that of your family.
It
isn’t just about health care, of course. There’s an intimate relationship
between the strength of a nation’s left-handed social welfare state and its
ordinary citizens’ capacity and willingness to fight for their own interests
and/or the common good. It’s not for nothing that you can’t receive food stamps
while engaged in a labor strike in the U.S. The American business class used
its influence to prohibit state food assistance to striking workers long ago.
Capitalists know that working people’s marketplace, workplace,
and political bargaining power are enhanced by the existence of a
strong government safety net, which reduces the hazard workers face when they
challenge capitalist authority. Big business has pushed through the dismantlement
and delegitimization of social welfare programs for decades, in no small part
because capitalists-as-employers want, in political
science professor Frances Fox Piven’s words, “to make long hours of
low-wage work the only available option for many.”
The
roll-back and pre-emption the welfare state net carries a double windfall for
the U.S. capitalist class: (1) slashing social expenditures and programs saves
the rich tax payments to support and uplift the poor and common good; (2)
the-working-class majority has less power to resist and challenge the wealthy
Few’s power when there’s no strong, left-handed welfare state backing it up.
Along
with the plutocratic policy-ordained collapse of U.S. unions and collective
bargaining, the comparative weakness of the U.S. welfare state is a key factor
behind the long
stagnation of wages and the nation’s extreme levels of economic,
social, and political inequality. The giant military budget and “suction tube”
is a key part of that weakness.
To
make matters worse, the military state and its many political and intellectual
champions justify the Pentagon’s exorbitant taxpayer bill by appealing to
nationalistic values paraded in such a way as to blunt popular consciousness
and anger regarding class and other “homeland” disparities. Proper nationalist
homage to “our” troops and veterans – to the giant U.S. military empire–
requires us to put aside our supposedly minor and selfish grievances against
domestic class rule, racism, the police and prison state, and corporate pollution,
etc. We must drop such trifling concerns to demonstrate proper allegiance to
“one nation, under God, indivisible, with,” supposedly, “liberty and justice
for all.” So what if real liberty and so-called justice are reserved primarily
for those with a lot of wealth – for Greenwald’s “some”?
“The
Military Keynesian Alternative”
It’s
no accident that the U.S. business “elite” preferred guns over butter when it
came to sustaining and sparking the U.S. economy with government outlays after
the Great Depression and World War II. It was understood across the U.S.
establishment that large-scale government spending was required to keep U.S.
and global capitalism afloat after the war. The only question was what
kind of spending would best provide this state-capitalist function: guns
(militarism) or (social welfare) butter? The answer was the former.
Massive spending on empire, war, and the preparation for war provided a
useful way for the U.S. government to stimulate demand and sustain the
corporate political economy without threatening business-class power and
wealth. As the leading capitalist magazine Business
Weekcandidly reflected in early 1949:
“There’s
a tremendous social and economic difference between welfare pump-priming and
military pump-priming…Military spending doesn’t really alter the structure
of the economy. It goes through the regular [corporate state]
channels. As far as a businessman is concerned, a munitions order from
the government is much like an order from a private customer. But the
kind of welfare and public works spending that [liberals and leftists favor] …does
alter the economy. It makes new channels of its own. It creates new
institutions. It redistributes wealth…It changes the whole economic
pattern” (emphasis added)
“Business
leaders recognized that social spending could stimulate the economy, but much
preferred the military Keynesian alternative —for reasons having to
do with privilege and power...The Pentagon system’s form of industrial
policy does not have the undesirable side-effects of social spending directed
at human needs. Apart from unwelcome redistributive effects, the latter
policies tend to interfere with managerial prerogatives; useful production may
undercut private gain, while state-subsidized waste production (arms,
Man-on-the-Moon extravaganzas, etc.) is a gift to the owners and managers, to
whom any marketable spin-offs will be promptly delivered. Social spending may
also arouse public interest and participation, thus enhancing the threat of
democracy; the public cares about hospitals, roads, neighborhoods, but has no
opinions about the choice of missile and high-tech fighter planes. The defects
of social spending do not taint the military-Keynesian alternative.” (Noam
Chomsky, World
Orders Old and New, 1994, 100-101).
We
should also factor in the Fox-Piven point: social-welfare safety net programs
and spending give the working-class majority more freedom, more back-up, to
resist ruling business class power and demands within and beyond the workplace.
It’s
the Opposite
Meanwhile,
I’d like some sports announcer or HyVee’s public relations director to explain
to me exactly how the U.S. military’s savage crucifixion of Southeast
Asia (with an Asian death toll as high as 5 million) during the 1960s and 1970s
(in a one-sided war of U.S. invasion to prevent a poor peasant nation from
following its own independent path of socially just development), how the U.S.
military’s destruction of Iraq (1991 to present) and Libya (2011), and how the
killing of thousands of civilians by U.S. drones in the Muslim world have
increased ordinary Americans’ freedom at home?
If
anything, it’s the opposite. The American Empire’s terrifying and
oppressive, widely loathed presence and position around the world puts U.S.
citizens at risk of terrorist “blowback” at home and abroad. The U.S. is
the overwhelming
choice (for damn
good reasons) of world citizens polled by Gallup on the question of which
country represents the biggest threat to peace on the planet . How would U.S.
citizens like to live in constant fear of a foreign power’s killer drones and
jets overhead and/or its special forces paramilitaries in a nearby town and/or
its nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers just offshore? “Our” military’s
nasty habits of invading and occupying other “sovereign” nations, supporting
vicious regimes (Saudi Arabia, Israel, Columbia, Ukraine, etc.), dictators and
absolutists, and blowing up women, children, and villages around the planet
makes U.S.-Americans less, not more, safe and secure. People don’t take kindly
to that kind of treatment.
Less
safe, it is important to add, from Big Brother at home. The wars
and “blowback” – terrorist attacks on U.S. citizens and military personnel at
home and abroad – that our frankly terrorist Empire (Google up my name and
“Bola Boluk,” “Highway
of Death,” and “Fallujah” to read accounts of mass-murderous U.S.
terrorism) provoke create endless pretexts and opportunities for U.S.
authorities to attack civil liberties and foster an authoritarian culture of
“national unity” that silences dissent at home.
I
often thank veterans – the numerous ones I’ve met who have turned against the
Empire they once served and who have since chosen instead to serve the people
in their struggle against the unelected and interrelated dictatorships of
money, race, and empire at home and abroad.
Please
help Paul Street keep writing here.
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