What Is Happening in America?
by Eliot Weinberger
Vorwarts, June 1, 2003
(a publication of the German Social Democratic Party)
In the Western democracies in the last
fifty years, we have grown accustomed to governments whose policies
on specific issues may be good or bad, but which essentially institute
incremental changes to the status quo. The major exceptions have
been Thatcher and Reagan, but even their programs of dismantling
systems of social welfare seem, in retrospect, mild compared to
what is happening in the United States under George Bush-- or
more exactly, the ruling junta that tells Bush what to do and
say.
It is unquestionably the most radical
government in modern American history, one whose ideology and
actions have become so pervasive, and are so unquestionably mirrored
by the mass media here, that the population seems to have forgotten
what "normal" is.
George Bush is the first unelected President
of the United States, installed by a right-wing Supreme Court
in a kind of judicial coup d'etat. He is the first to actively
subvert one of the pillars of American democracy: the separation
of church and state. There are now daily prayer meetings and Bible
study groups in every branch of the government, and religious
organizations are being given funds to take over educational and
welfare programs that have always been the domain of the state.
Bush is the first president to invoke
the specific "Jesus Christ" rather than an ecumenical
"God," and he has surrounded himself with evangelical
Christians, including his Attorney General, who attends a church
where he talks in tongues.
It is the first administration to openly
declare a policy of unilateral aggression, a "Pax Americana"
where the presence of allies (whether England or Bulgaria) is
agreeable but unimportant; where international treaties no longer
apply to the United States; and where-- for the first time in
history-- this country reserves the right to non-defensive, "pre-emptive"
strikes against any nation on earth, for whatever reason it declares.
It is the first-- since the internment
of Japanese-Americans in World War II-- to enact special laws
for a specific ethnic group. Non-citizen young Muslim men are
now required to register and subject themselves to interrogation.
Many hundreds have been arrested and held without trial or access
to legal assistance-- a violation of another pillar of American
democracy: habeas corpus. Many have been taken from their families
and deported on minor technical immigration violations; the whereabouts
of many others are still unknown. And, in Guantanamo Bay, where
it is said that they are now preparing execution chambers, hundreds
of foreign nationals -- including a 13-year-old and a man who
claims to be 100-- have been kept for almost two years in a limbo
that clearly contravenes the Geneva Convention.
Similar to the Reagan era, it is an administration
openly devoted to helping the rich and ignoring the poor, one
that has turned the surplus of the Clinton years into a massive
deficit through its combination of enormous tax cuts for the wealthy
(particularly those who earn more than a million dollars a year)
and increases in defense spending. (And, although Republicans
always campaign on "less government," it has created
the largest new government bureaucracy in history: the Department
of Homeland Security.) The Financial Times of England, hardly
a hotbed of leftists, has categorized this economic policy as
"the lunatics taking over the asylum."
But more than Reagan-- whose policies
tended to benefit the rich in general-- most of Bush's legislation
specifically enriches those in his lifelong inner circle from
the oil, mining, logging, construction, and pharmaceutical industries.
At the middle level of the bureaucracy, where laws may be issued
without Congressional approval, hundreds of regulations have been
changed to lower standards of pollution or safety in the workplace,
to open up wilderness areas for exploitation, or to eliminate
the testing of drugs.
Billions in government contracts have
been awarded, without competition, to corporations formerly run
by administration officials. In a country where the most significant
social changes are enacted by court rulings, rather than by legislation,
the Bush administration has been filling every level of the complex
judicial system with ultra-right ideologues, especially those
who have protected corporations from lawsuits by individuals or
environmental groups, and those who are opposed to women's reproductive
rights. It remains to be seen how far they can push their antipathy
to contraception and abortion. They have already banned a rare
form of late-term abortion that is only given when the health
of the mother is endangered or the fetus is terribly deformed,
and a large portion of Bush's heralded billions to Africa to fight
AIDS will be devoted to so-called "abstinence" education.
Most of all, America doesn't feel like
America any more. The climate of militarism and fear, similar
to any totalitarian state, permeates everything. Bush is the first
American president in memory to swagger around in a military uniform,
though he himself-- like all of his most militant advisers-- evaded
the Vietnam War. (Even Eisenhower, a general and a war hero, never
wore his uniform while he was president).
In the airports of provincial cities,
there are frequent announcements in that assuring, disembodied
voice of science-fiction films: "The Department of Homeland
Security advises that the Terror Alert is now . . . Code Orange."
Every few weeks there is an announcement that another terrorist
attack is imminent, and citizens are urged to take ludicrous measures,
like sealing their windows, against biological and chemical attacks,
and to report the suspicious activities of their neighbors.
The Pentagon institutes the "Total
Information Awareness" program to collect data on the ordinary
activities of ordinary citizens (credit card charges, library
book withdrawals, university course enrollments) and when this
is perceived as going too far, they change the name to "Terrorist
Information Awareness" and continue to do the same things.
Millions are listed in airport security computers as potential
terrorists, including antiwar demonstrators and pacifists. Critics
are warned to "watch what they say" and lists of "traitors"
are posted on the internet.
The war in Iraq has been the most extreme
manifestation of this new America, and almost a casebook study
in totalitarian techniques.
First, an Enemy is created by blatant
lies that are endlessly repeated until the population believes
it: in this case, that Iraq was linked to the attack on the World
Trade Center, and that it possesses vast "weapons of mass
destruction" that threaten the world.
Then, a War of Liberation, entirely portrayed
by the mass media in terms of our Heroic Troops, with little or
no imagery of casualties and devastation, and with morale-inspiring,
scripted "news" scenes-- such as the toppling of the
Saddam statue and the heroic "rescue" of Private Lynch--
worthy of Soviet cinema.
Finally, as has happened with Afghanistan,
very little news of the chaos that has followed the Great Victory.
Instead, the propaganda machine moves on to a new Enemy-- this
time, Iran.
It is very difficult to speak of what
is happening in America without resorting to the hyperbolic cliches
of anti-Americanism that have lost their meaning after so many
decades, but that have now finally come true.
Perhaps one can only recite the facts,
and I have mentioned only some of them here. This is, quite simply,
the most frightening American administration in modern times,
one that is appalling both to the left and to traditional conservatives.
This junta is unabashed in its imperialist ambitions; it is enacting
an Orwellian state of Perpetual War; it is dismantling, or attempting
to dismantle, some of the most fundamental tenets of American
democracy; it is acting without opposition within the government,
and is operating so quickly on so many fronts that it has overwhelmed
and exhausted any popular opposition.
Perhaps it cannot be stopped, but the
first step toward slowing it down is the recognition that this
is an American government unlike any other in this country's history,
and one for whom democracy is an obstacle.
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