Something Wicked This Way Comes
by
Charles Goyette
Recently
by Charles Goyette: Cash
for Freedom
Perhaps it's
like shouting an alarm, unheard above the engine noise of two trains
on a collision course. Or, screaming helplessly as a car slips its
brakes and rolls toward a toddler playing at the bottom of the driveway.
It is gruesome
imagery and I apologize for invoking it. But if anything, it may
be inadequate to the prospect before us.
One only has
to ask, "What is heading our way?"
Headline:
The Department
Of Homeland Security Is Buying 450 Million New Bullets
And don't kid
yourself; they're not for target practice. It's .40 caliber ammunition,
hollow point rounds that promise "optimum penetration for terminal
performance." The department also has a bid out for up to 175
million rounds of .223 caliber ammunition.
This isn't
the flipping army, you know. This is an internal national police
force, a department that didn't even exist 10 years ago.
Headline:
Supreme
Court OKs Strip Searches for Minor Offenses
It's okay with
the Supreme Court if you are detained and subjected to a demeaning
strip-search for such serious offenses against the State as violating
a leash law or having a headlight out.
Really, is
being strip-searched and perhaps even forced to take a delousing
shower for riding your bicycle without an audible bell reasonable?
Of course not. So much for the 4th Amendment.
Headline:
Police
Are Using Phone Tracking as a Routine Tool
Even in the
absence of judicial authorization, cell phone tracking has become
widespread. An ACLU report covering more than 200 police departments
finds that nearly all engage in the practice, but only a few bother
with a warrant.
Would you be
shocked to discover that some police departments are trying to keep
their activities secret because of the legal implications? Officers
have even been warned to keep their cell phone tracking out of police
reports. Now what was that oath about upholding the law?
Headline:
The NSA
Is Building the Country's Biggest Spy Center (Watch What You Say)
The crown jewel
of Federal spying is a new $2 billion, high tech center in Utah,
a million square feet devoted to data gathering and storage. "NSA
has turned its surveillance apparatus on the U.S. and its citizens,"
reports an account of the program.
The facility
will help manage information from 10 to 20 domestic telecom "listening
posts." "We are, like, that far from a turnkey totalitarian
state," says William Binney, a former senior NSA crypto-mathematician.
What Is
heading Our Way?
These are only
a few recent headlines. But the police state is growing much faster
than even these stories suggest. There is the developing proliferation
of domestic spy drones; a variety of so-called cyber-security bills
internet kill switches are working their way through Congress;
and, of course, there are executive power grabs like the presidential
power to target American citizens for assassination found in the
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
Some Germans,
although not all, were willing to ask what wicked thing was headed
their way in the 1930s. Sebastian Haffner was a young law student
and aspiring court clerk at the time. After his death at the age
of 91 in 1999, his son found Haffner's account of the era stuffed
away in a drawer.
Haffner's manuscript,
which he had left unfinished in 1939, was published as Defying
Hitler," and became an immediate bestseller. The book is
graced by fine writing, shown in a New York Times review
citing Haffner's description of Hitler: ''
personal appearance
was thoroughly repellent the pimp's forelock, the hoodlum's elegance
. . . the interminable speechifying, the epileptic behavior with
its wild gesticulations and foaming at the mouth.''
But it is the
candid search for self-knowledge, his honest inquiry of "what
became of the Germans," that makes the work a place to begin
answering how "it" could have happened. Haffner writes
that nobody saw what was to come with any clarity in the early days
of the fascist transformation of the land in 1933, but that he "had
a sense of what was in the air. I felt distinctly that what had
happened so far was merely disgusting and no more. But what was
in the offing had something apocalyptic about it."
Haffner suggests
that Germans saw in Hitler a "do-over," a chance to transform
the defeat of World War I into victory. The martial mood he invoked,
like that of the war, "provided far more excitement and emotional
satisfaction than anything peace could offer."
A 9/11 Do-Over?
Is it possible
that Americans are squandering their birthright of liberty in nostalgia
for post-World War II triumphalism, a golden age myth of good wars
and greatest generations? It is a myth that exaggerates our might
and insists on our universal benevolence.
But it is a
myth that was shattered on 9/11, when we discovered ourselves to
be both vulnerable and unloved.
Like the Germans,
determined to prove that history got it wrong with the Allies' victory
in November 1918, is ours an attempt to cling to an illusion about
America that made us hold absurd beliefs about democratizing the
Mideast and being "welcomed as liberators"?
Are Americans
spending themselves into warfare-state ruin now to reenact the myth
(for it is a myth) of the universally admired and invulnerable hero?
Like a middle-aged
man squandering his savings on face lifts and hair plugs, on expensive
sports cars, and absurdly inappropriate clothing, night clubbing
with girls half his age, trying to relive a youth that was never
anything like his imagination, are Americans trying to recapture
a period that was nothing at all like the myth of their belief?
Is it the lingering
myth of invulnerability, an unspoken promise for the storied omnipotence
of skies darkened with aircraft and seas blackened with ships that
has Americans spending almost as much as the rest of the world combined
on warfare, and digging themselves deeper into ruin?
But we never
were what the myth says we were. It is only our failure to confront
who we really are and what we have been party to that makes us subject
to the compulsion of myth, so that we act in unconscious and destructive
ways.
We were never
invulnerable before September 11, 2001.
Just ask public
school children who were drilled to "duck and cover" under
their desks when the sirens went off during the Cold War.
And we were
never the global "Good American."
At least, the
20 million 30 million human beings whose deaths the U.S.
is responsible for since
World War II would not have seen us that way. To them, we would
more readily have been recognized as mighty brutes. But since we
know nothing of their perception of our brutishness, and since we
don't hold ourselves morally accountable for any of the slaughter,
we have combined ignorance with our brutality.
In this unawakened
state, Americans stand by silently as the national security state
becomes more powerful by the day. Just as only the complete totalist
state could allow Hitler to assert what was to be Germany's ultimate
victory, only the unchecked might of such a state seems equal to
the task of forcing reality to match the myth under which Americans
labor.
The headlines
tell the story
"Something wicked this way comes."
The line is
from Macbeth. It is, of course, a tragedy about power and death.
Copyright
© 2012 Charles Goyette
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