11/14/05 "ICH " -- -- Understanding the collective American psyche
is no easy task. To those living in other lands we Americans are an
enigma. Indeed, we are an enigma unto ourselves. To others we appear
foolish, dim-witted, cowardly and morally bankrupt. To allow the rise
of a fascist regime to take power is compelling evidence for those
views. Let me try to explain why.
Nothing in America is what we are told it is. Whenever the
president speaks—it matters little which president we are talking
about—we can be reasonably certain that they do not utter truth as we
know it. During the past fifty years America has not had a socially
progressive president. The Clinton presidency was under siege from day
one by the power hungry ideologues fueled by Christian evangelicals.
Bill Clinton certainly was no progressive, as his detractors would have
us believe. At his most liberal Clinton was nothing more than Bush
lite. He twice won the presidency by out righting the right. Clearly,
this was no victory for progressives. No modern era American president
represents the interest of the people. They represent the rich and
powerful. The same is true of Congress.
Every branch of the American government is awash in corporate money
in sums so vast as to boggle the mind. Little wonder that the American
government does not serve the interest and needs of the people. It
serves the wants of soulless corporate entities whose only concern is
unbridled bottom line capitalism.
To further complicate matters, the vast majority of the media is
under the control of the same corporate oligarchy that direct the
government. The corporate media, as the name implies, serves the
corporate interest. Little that the corporate media tells us has any
relevance to truth as most of us know it. The corporate media are
purveyors of lies and distortions that are used to subdue and control
the public mind, often for sinister purposes. Seek alternative channels
of information that flow from non corporate sources. There you will
find what you need to know to be free.
Every branch of government and ninety nine percent of the media
operates in the corporate interest—not in the public interest, as we
all too willingly assume. America is not even close to resembling a
democracy, as the national myth proclaims—it is a corporate oligarchy.
It is a deeply class divided society in which the rich prey upon the
poor. Here it is the poor who do the bidding of the rich. It is the
poor who fight the wars for the economic gains realized by the power
elite. It is the antithesis of Robin Hood. Here the rich routinely
steal from the poor. They rob them senseless and call it democracy!
America is a land of contradictions. Under the edicts of
unrestrained capitalism, the people serve primarily as drones and
producers of capital for the wealthy. The majority of the people are
mindless consumers of goods. They are automatons at the service of the
unscrupulous gods of finance and material power. Their needs do not
matter to those in power. They exist to cheer the captains of commerce
on in their joyful work of consuming the planet.
The world knows only too well that America is a violent nation.
They know, many of them first hand, that America preys upon the poor
and the defenseless. The manner in which the corporate oligarchy that
drives American politics treats its own down trodden is a microcosm of
how it treats the rest of the world. The extermination of the
indigenous people of North America by pious Anglo invaders is an
atrocity that makes the Nazi liquidation of the Jews pale in
comparison. America has yet to come to grips with its initial episode
of genocide and ethnic cleansing that may be at the root of its
pathological behavior. The annihilation of the American Indian was just
the beginning of what capitalism could do.
Multinational corporations view the earth as a vast aggregation of
commodities and markets to be exploited for profit. They do not regard
the world’s citizens as human beings. They are sources of cheap labor
and consumers, to be exploited by those in power. Ecosystems and the
biological systems that promote life are summarily ignored by
corporatism.
Global capitalism is a malignancy intent upon devouring the world.
It seeks to commodify everything and every one. It intends to privatize
the entire planet, effectively placing the world’s resources into the
smooth, grasping, white hands of a few wealthy individuals. This
explains the existence of the Bilderbergers, an annual gathering of the
world’s wealthiest and most powerful people who meet to determine the
course of global capitalism. Along with the World Bank and the IMF it
sets the world’s financial and political agenda. It also represents the
establishment of a world government—George Herbert Walker Bush’s ‘New
World Order.’
From cradle to grave the collective American mind is under the all
pervasive assault of corporatism. This is all we have ever known; it is
all most of us will ever know. It explains our combined failure to see
the world in terms that can only be described as Disneyesque. Every day
in America is an adventure in the implausible Land of Oz As a people we
have no conception of reality. We have been carefully insulated from
the pain and suffering we have inflicted and continue to inflict upon
the world. Quite literally, we not know not what we do. But even more
tellingly, we don’t want to know.
When we invade sovereign nations we are told that we are liberating
its oppressed people from the throes of tyranny. When we enslave and
torture Islamic people we are told that they are terrorists who mean us
harm. In true Machiavellian terms, the ends justify the means. This
also explains why we cannot come to grips through honest reckoning with
the horrors of the national tragedy we call history. We have unelected
leaders who lie, maim and murder and we call them Christian. Isn’t that
strange?
We target nations with left wing leaders like Venezuela’s popular
president Hugo Chavez and call them threats to democracy, when we
ourselves have no conception of what democracy looks like. The only
threat that Hugo Chavez poses to the United States is that he places
the needs of the people above the profits of multinational
corporations; and that is as un-American as it gets. Anti-capitalist
equates to un-American in the diseased mind of corporatism. This is why
the U.S. has deposed not only Chavez but Aristeed in Haiti, and a whole
litany of South American pro people, pro environment, pro democracy,
and pro labor leaders. That is why CIA operatives have routinely
instigated coups against the hemisphere’s most popular democratically
elected leaders. That is why so many of them have been assassinated by
bullets paid for by our tax dollars. Countless others have been beaten,
tortured, and disappeared, courtesy of U.S. tax dollars.
The corporate oligarchy loathes democracy because democracy demands
the evenhanded distribution of wealth. It demands accountability. It
requires justice. It seeks to know truth. No matter what pretensions we
may make to the contrary, the U.S. has a long history of opposing
democracy throughout the world. The undeniable proof lies hidden in our
national history; a history that has been carefully thrust down the
memory hole of an Orwellian nightmare we have unwittingly helped to
forge through unfettered complacency.
From North Korea, Viet Nam, Guatemala, Panama, Columbia, Cuba,
Venezuela, Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq, the Philippines, Cambodia, the
former Soviet Union, Iran, Syria, Eastern Europe, Haiti, and Jamaica—I
could go on indefinitely—America’s military might has always opposed
and snuffed out fledgling democracies. Every U.S. military intervention
during the past fifty years and longer acted to put down insurrections
of popular movements of the people. A thoughtful examination of the
evidence makes it clear that the obvious and only possible conclusion
is that our military might is used not to promote liberation,
democracy, and freedom. It serves as the iron fist of capitalism to
smash the face of people’s movements for social justice and autonomy.
U.S. militarism is the arm of corporatism that invades and plunders
sovereign nations to rob them of treasure and resources. Its purpose is
to open new markets to capitalism; to create pools of slave labor and a
constant stream of cheap goods for American consumption. It is Wal-Mart
amplified a hundred thousand times and projected across the globe.
None of this is news. We are simply witnessing the unrestrained
avarice of the rich and powerful running rough shod over the principles
of democracy and social justice. It is the continuation of Manifest
Destiny. It is the sound of the rich and powerful preying upon the poor
and the innocent. None of it is what we have been told. We must open
our eyes and our minds to see it for what it really is. We must come to
grips with our own sordid history and all that it has wrought. Only
then we can begin to do something about the present and the future.
Charles Sullivan is a furniture maker, photographer, and free lance
writer living in the eastern panhandle of West Virginia. He welcomes
your comments at earthdog@highstream.net