Hollow Dummies
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Recently,
we traveled by train from Poitiers and Paris and found ourselves
seated next to Robert Hue, head of the French communist party and
a senator representing Val d'Oise. He sat down and pulled out a
travel magazine, just as any other traveler would. Aside from one
Bolshevik manqué who stopped by to say hello, no one paid
any attention. A friend reports that he was on the same train a
few months ago with the Prime Minister, Pierre Raffarin, who was
accompanied by only a single aide.
Many
years ago, when the country was still a modest republic, American
presidents were available to almost anyone who wanted to shoot them.
Thomas Jefferson went for a walk down Pennsylvania Avenue, alone,
and spoke to anyone who came up to him. John Adams used to swim
naked in the Potomac. A woman reporter got him to talk to her by
sitting on his clothes and refusing to budge.
But
now anyone who wants to see the president must have his background
checked and pass through a metal detector. The White House staff
must approve a reporter before he is allowed into press conferences.
And when he travels, America's head of state does so in imperial
style; that is, he moves around protected by hundreds of praetorian
guards, sharpshooters on rooftops, and thousands of local centurions.
When President Clinton went to China in 1998, he took with him his
family, plus "5 Cabinet secretaries, 6 members of Congress, 86 senior
aides, 150 civilian staff (doctors, lawyers, secretaries, valets,
hairdressers, and so on), 150 military staff (drivers, baggage handlers,
snipers, and so on), 150 security personnel, several bomb-sniffing
dogs, and many tons of equipment, including 10 armored limousines
and the 'blue goose,' Clinton's bulletproof lectern.
"To
get the presidential entourage and its vast array of equipment to
China and back, the Air Force flew 36 airlift missions using Boeing
747, C-141, and C-5 (the largest transport, with a capacity of 145
tons of cargo) aircraft. The cost to DOD of the China trip was $14
million. Indeed, operating Air Force One alone costs over $34,000
an hour.
"While
traveling, the President is able to conduct all the functions of
the office aboard several specially-built Boeing 747s, which take
the call sign Air Force One when the President is aboard. The President
travels around Washington in an armored Cadillac limousine, equipped
with bullet-proof windows and tires and a self-contained ventilation
system in the event of a biological or chemical attack.
"The
Secret Service has over 5,000 employees: 2,100 special agents, 1,200
Uniformed Division employees, and 1,700 technical and administrative
employees...Everywhere Bush travels, his security is handled with
the usual American overkill thousands of guards and aides,
walled-off compounds, tightly scripted movements from one bubble
to another. Security was so tight during the visit [Ottawa, Canada
in 2004] that some Members of Parliament were refused entry into
the building for lack of a special one-time security pass, an act
which actually is against the laws of Canada. Americans never hear
of the grotesque measures taken when Bush travels abroad. After
Bush's stay at Buckingham Palace in London, the Queen was horrified
by the damage done to the Palace grounds. They were left looking
like the parking lot at a Walmart two-for-one sale.
President
Bush's trip to London caused considerable wrangling, after the Bush
team demanded the right to "shoot to kill" while maintaining diplomatic
Immunity to prosecution under British law. The Brits refused.
"The
Americans had also wanted to travel with a piece of military hardware
called a 'mini-gun'," reported Martin Bright in the Observer, "which
usually forms part of the mobile armoury in the presidential cavalcade.
It is fired from a tank and can kill dozens of people. One manufacturer's
description reads: 'Due to the small caliber of the round, the mini-gun
can be used practically anywhere. This is especially helpful during
peacekeeping deployments.'"
The
mini-gun was not rolled up. Instead, "sterile zones" were created
around Whitehall to make sure no one with a grudge got close enough
to the president to force a succession issue.
Institutions
have a way of evolving over time. After a few years they no longer
resemble the originals. In early 21st century, America is no more
like the America of 1776 than the Vatican under the Borgia popes
was like Christianity at the time of the Last Supper...or Microsoft
in 2005 is like the company Bill Gates started in his garage.
Still,
while the institutions evolve, the ideas and theories people have
about them tend to remain fixed; it is as if they hadn't noticed.
In America, all the old restraints, inhibitions and modesties of
the Old Republic have been blown away by the prevailing winds of
empire. In their place has emerged a vainglorious system of conceit,
deceit and delusion.
The U.S. Constitution is almost exactly the same document with exactly
the same words it had at the beginning. But the words that used
to bind and chaff have been turned into soft elastic. The government
that couldn't tax, couldn't spend and couldn't regulate can now
do anything it wants. The executive has all the power he needs to
do practically anything. Congress goes along, like a simple-minded
stooge, insisting only that the spoils be spread around. The whole
process works so well that a member of Congress has to be found
in bed "with a live boy or a dead girl" before he loses public office.
American
businesses are still "capitalistic." They operate, as everyone knows,
in the most dynamic, most free, and most open economy in the world.
But in today's press comes an article explaining that General Motors
will never be able to compete unless it ditches its crushing health
care costs. Why does it not just cut the costs? It seems to lack
either the nerve or the right. But the author has a solution: nationalize
health care! Meanwhile, CEO pay has soared...to the point where
the average chief executive in 2000 earned compensation equal to
500 times the average hourly wage. Stockholders, whose money was
being squandered, barely said a word. They were still under the
illusion that the company was working for them! They had not noticed
that the whole institution had been trussed up with so many chains,
wires, red tape and complications, it no longer functioned as the
freewheeling, moneymaking corporations of the 19th century. Meanwhile,
corporations in China a communist country had their hands and
feet free to eat our lunches and kick our butts.
The
whole homeland economy now depends on the savings of poor people
on the periphery, or it will fall apart. Americans consume more
than they earn. The difference is made up by the kindness of strangers
thrifty Asians whose savings "glut" is recycled into granite counter
tops and flat screen TVs all over the U.S.
But
these ironies, contradictions and paradoxes hardly disturb the sleep
of the imperial race. They have come to be hollow dummies, believing
so many absurd things, they can no longer tell the difference. In
the fall of 2001, people in Des Moines and Duluth were buying duct
tape to protect themselves from terrorist "sleeper cells"; they
were ready to believe anything. The Chinese are "manipulating" their
currency by pegging it to the dollar! Real estate never goes
down! You can get rich by spending! Savings don't matter. Deficits
don't matter. Let them sweat, we'll think!
We
can't help but wonder how it will turn out. So we turn to the history
of the West's greatest empire Rome for clues. There too, the
institutions evolved and degraded faster than people's ideas
about them. Romans remembered their Old Republic too...with its
rules, institutions, and customs. They still thought that was the
way the system was supposed to work; even long after a new system
of "consuetudo fraudium" habitual cheating had taken hold.
Rome's
system of imperial finance was far more solid than America's. Rome
made its empire pay, by exacting a tribute of about 10% of output
from its vassal states. There were few illusions about how the system
worked. Rome brought the benefits of pax romana. Subject peoples
were expected to pay for it. Most paid without much prompting. In
fact, the cost of running the empire was greatly reduced by the
cooperation of citizens and subjects. Local notables, who benefited
from imperial rule, but who were not directly on the emperor's pay
roles, performed many of the functions that would have been costly.
Many functions were "privatized," says Ramsay MacMullen in his "Decline
of Rome and the Corruption of Power."
He
means that in a variety of ways. Many officials, and even the soldiers
stationed in periphery areas used their positions to extort money
out of the locals. In this way, the cost of administration and protection
was pushed more directly onto the private sector. "Commoda," was
the word given to this practice, which apparently became more and
more widespread as the empire aged.
MacMullen
recalls a typical event:
"From Milan,
a certain Palladius, tribune and notary, left for Carthage in
367. He was charged with investigating accusations of criminal
negligence 'if you don't pay me, I won't help you'
brought against Romanus, military commandant in Africa. Because
of Romanus's inaction, the area around Tripoli, had suffered attacks
by local tribes, without defense from the empire. But the accused
was ready for the inquisitor, and when Palladius arrived unexpectedly
at military headquarters in the African capital carrying
the officers' pay he was offered...under the table...a
considerable bribe. Palladius...accepted it. But he continued
his investigations, accompanied by two of the local notables whose
complaints had launched the inquiry. He prepared his report to
the emperor, telling him that the charges against Romanus were
confirmed. But the latter threatened to reveal the bribes he had
accepted. So Palladius reported to the emperor that the accusations
were pure inventions. Romanus was safe. The emperor ordered that
the two accusers' tongues be torn out."
As
time went on, the empire came to resemble less and less the Old
Republic that had given it birth. The old virtues were replaced
with new old vices. Gradually, the troops on the frontier had to
depend more and more on their own devices for their support. They
had to take up farming! "The effectiveness of the troops was diminished
as they became part-time farmers," says MacMullen.
Gradually,
the empire had fewer and fewer good troops. In Trajan's time, the
emperor could count on hundreds of thousand of soldiers for his
campaigns in Dacia. But by the 4th century, battles were fought
with only a few thousand. By the 5th century, these few troops could
no longer hold off the barbarians.
The
corruption of the empire was complete.
June
11, 2005
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2005 Bill Bonner
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