Fare Thee Well, and Get Ye Lost
by
William Norman Grigg
by William Norman Grigg
DIGG THIS
Now, hatred
is by far the longest pleasure; men love in haste, but they detest
at leisure.
~ Lord Byron
For the past
eight years, Republicans have diligently cultivated the doctrine
of Fόhrerprinzip and nurtured the Cult of the Imperial Presidency.
In two weeks the
harvest will start to come in as the voters
ratify the reign of His Ineffable Holiness, Obama the Blessed (peace
be upon him).
By no later
than next Spring, the Republicans who will deservedly be reduced
not merely to the status of minority party, but that of an unpleasant
political afterthought will be force-fed the nettles that sprouted
from the seeds of despotism they planted during Bush the Lesser's
first term.
Between the
passage of the post-9/11 Authorization for Use of Military Force
(aka the Enabling Act) in 2001, and enactment of the Military Commissions
Act just before the 2006 mid-term elections, the Republican Party
demolished every remaining restraint on executive power.
In the past
few weeks, amid an economic disaster precipitated in large measure
by Republican-approved public profligacy, Republicans (with the
honorable and consistent exception of Washington's sole statesman,
Rep. Ron Paul, and a handful of others) eagerly collaborated with
Democrats in creating an economic dictatorship operating out of
the Treasury Department. They also authorized the expenditure of
hundreds of billions of dollars to socialize the costs of fraud
and criminal corruption on Wall Street.
Bush the Lesser
thus ends his lamentable reign by presiding over the greatest redistribution
of wealth in human history. This accomplishment
makes a very nice matched set with the Bush Regime's other significant
achievement, a fully functioning system of totalitarian control
that is only now beginning to make its presence felt in tangible
ways.
It's entirely
appropriate that Hugo Chavez, the repellent yet consistently quotable
Marxist ruler of Venezuela, has
gloatingly observed that "Comrade Bush ... is to the left of
me now."
Republicans
seeking to stave off their richly deserved electoral massacre have
rummaged through their shelves in search of a credible re-election
theme, only to find that the cupboard is bare, the pantry is empty,
the garden has been razed, and nobody at the local grocery store
is willing to take their check.
So they have
surrendered unconditionally to what has always been the unifying
element of the Bush-bot Coalition: Pure, unalloyed, tribal hatred
of the Other Side, whether defined as "terrists" (that's Bushian
for "terrorists"), "leftists," "liberals," "cultural progressives,"
or merely "People with library cards who speak in complete sentences
and don't merely recite the latest thought-stopping slogan retailed
on the Sean Hannity program."
Conservatism,
which was once flavored with an almost imperceptible touch of principle,
has long since ceased to be anything other than a cynical movement
devoted entirely to obtaining and retaining political power.
Once the Bush-centered
conservative movement is deprived of power, it will undergo a process
I'm tempted to call reductio ad odium that is, it will
be reduced to nothing more than a shared hatred of the Obama-centered
liberal faction.
The post-Bush
conservative movement's lead demagogue will be the public figure
best able to make a thick, unpalatable reduction sauce from all
the charred bits of resentment and residual ambition that cling
to the political frying pan. I suspect that it will be ideologically
brown in color and have a flavor similar to that of other bloody-minded
nationalist movements whose deeds made 20th-Century history so stimulating.
In the meantime,
Mr. Obama who is hardly diffident in embracing what he takes to
be his destiny to "change the world" will inherit the world's
largest, most expensive, and most powerful executive apparatus.
From those who built that apparatus or supported the project we
can now hear angry, anguished warnings about the dangers of entrusting
it to the likes of Obama.
Many of those
people, carried away in flights of adolescent hubris, apparently
believed that the Republicans would rule in perpetuity. Others,
who must be the kind of people surprised by the advent of winter
each year, simply didn't foresee the possibility that the GOP would
fall out of political favor.
It's possible
that at least some who had been captured by the Bushcult will rediscover
the virtues of the separation of powers, checks and balances, and
the other key concepts and practices of federalism that we were
ordered to discard in the name of national unity in the "war on
terror." This is a possibility in roughly the same sense
that it's possible 50 Cent
could secretly be an authority on Elizabethan poetry.
The Wall
Street Journal spent the last eight years hymning the glories
of unrestricted executive rule and heaping anathemas on those who
opposed perpetual war and the destruction of the Anglo-Saxon concept
of due process. Its editorial board recently
gave tremulous voice to concerns over the uses to which an Obama
Regime would put the powers now concentrated in the presidency.
The elevation
or is the proper term "condescension," given his quasi-divine
status? of Obama to the presidency "would be one of the most profound
political and ideological shifts in U.S. history," insisted the
Journal's editorial collective in words that practically
shivered with anxiety. This "period of unchecked left-wing ascendancy"
would "mark the restoration of the activist government that fell
out of public favor in the 1970s."
No responsible
adult possessing a scintilla of political knowledge and so much
as a particle of honesty could write those words and expect them
to be taken seriously. The Journal seems to mock its own
argument by complaining that the Obama-led liberals would actually
reduce federal power in some ways. For instance, they may
demand "the watering down of No Child Left Behind testing standards,"
or "the end of Guantanamo and military commissions"; the former
would scale back unconstitutional Bush-era centralization of education,
the latter would end a civil liberties abomination that threatens
the liberties of everybody.
The rest of
the Journal's editorial offered several variations on a familiar
theme, namely that under the reign of the "Liberal Supermajority"
the State would confer its burgled bounty on a different set of
beneficiaries, and wield its enforcement powers on behalf of a different
set of prejudices.
All of this
is inspired by the equation that defines all modern politics Lenin's
axiom that the central political question is "Who does what to whom."
Both branches of the Dominant Party are thoroughly Leninist, in
that they appear to recognize no limit on the power of the State
(Lenin defined his governing model as "power without limit, resting
directly on force") and seek to be the "Who" rather than the "Whom"
in the ruling equation.
We are weeks
away from the election, months from the actual vote in the Electoral
College, and the Inauguration is on the other side of New Years'
Day. Nonetheless, Obama's handlers from Joe Biden to Madeleine
Albright to Colin
Powell are so anxious to institutionalize a new
Leader Cult that they're skipping all of these intermediate
steps.
Predicting
an unspecified "challenge" to the Holy One during the first
six months of his reign, Biden speaking to an audience of donors
during a stop in Seattle seemed to be pleading that Obama's adherents
display a religious devotion to his administration, irrespective
of the decisions they make and the reaction they get from the untutored
public.
"Gird up your
loins," admonished Biden. "I'm asking you now, be prepared to stick
with us. Remember the faith you had at this point because you're
going to have to reinforce us."
It's not clear
whether the "generated crisis" Biden predicted with utter certainty
would take the form of a military confrontation abroad, a new and
devastating permutation of our ongoing political collapse, or perhaps
the need to deal forcefully with internal opposition to the glorious
new order.
What is clear,
however, is that even as Bush-era True Believers will trade places
with the Outcasts, the
Cult of the Presidency will enjoy a growth spurt and everyone
will be ordered to set aside their reservations about the New Redeemer's
decisions in the name of national unity. I eagerly hope that, when
that confected crisis comes, the embittered Republicans tell the
Democrats to inseminate themselves. I hope that this, in turn, leads
Democrats to escalate their demands for Republican submission.
Among my fondest
hopes is that eventually this political conflict becomes an irreconcilable
split between the "Red" and "Blue" Americas, and that this rupture
would provide opportunities for regional secession by those of us
who want nothing more to do with the Empire, its wars, its corruption,
and its collapsing economy.
There is a
certain diabolical genius behind the division of the United States
into "Red" and "Blue" factions. Each of the constituencies cattle-penned
into one of those categories covets the power of the central government
to compel the other to do its bidding.
After dilating
at length on the resentments that define contemporary Conservatism,
I'm obliged to point out that Liberalism is just as laden with animus
toward those who don't share that creed.
In late 2000,
when the Bush/Gore election was going into extra innings, former
Clinton Regime spokesliar Paul
Begala took the opportunity to execrate "Red State America"
as a land of
irrational, violent bigots:
"You see the
state where James Byrd was lynch-dragged behind a pickup truck until
his body came apart it's red. You see the state where Matthew
Shepard was crucified on a split-rail fence for the crime of being
gay it's red. You see the state where right-wing extremists blew
up a federal office building and murdered scores of federal employees
it's red. The state where an Army private who was bludgeoned to
death with a baseball bat, and the state where neo-Nazi skinheads
murdered two African-Americans because of their skin color, and
the state where Bob Jones University spews its anti-Catholic bigotry;
they're all red too."
Columnist
William O'Rourke of the Chicago Sun-Times amplified this
theme, designating the states who had rejected Al Gore as "Yahoo
Nation."
O'Rourke described
"Yahoo Nation" as "a large, lopsided horseshoe, a twisted W, made
up of primarily the Deep South and the vast, lowly populated upper-far-west
states that are filled with vestiges of gun-loving, Ku Klux Klan-sponsoring,
formerly lynching-happy, survivalist-minded, hate crime-perpetrating,
non-blue-blooded, rugged individualists."
"Yahoo Nation,"
he continued, boasts not so much as "one center of thinking America,
the teeming centers of creative and intellectual life." Gore's Blue
State constituency, by way of contrast, included what O'Rourke was
pleased to call "America's great cities: New York, Boston, Washington,
D.C., Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Seattle."
What neither
Begala nor O'Rourke, nor anyone else of their ilk, has ever explained
is this: If "Red State" Americans are such irredeemable degenerates,
why are they permitted to participate in the political process at
all? One possible answer is that the current system is built around
a cynical symbiosis between "Red" and "Blue": They are indispensable
foils for each other, each anxious to be the "Who" rather than the
"Whom."
By mobilizing
resentments through appeals to various hot-button issues that never
grow cold through resolution, the Power Elite that created this
artificial division herds people into the voting booth to perform
a liturgy that has no demonstrable impact on public policy, but
ensures the continued "legitimacy" of the Regime. In this way, all
of us Red, Blue, or of neither of those synthetic political shades
are rendered part of the "Whom," the
undifferentiated "people" on the receiving end of whatever the ruling
"persons" see fit to inflict on us.
But this arrangement
may, at long last, be breaking down, just as the delusion-based
fiat money financial system has entered its terminal phase. As we
descend into what will be a long and bitter depression, it's possible
that, not all that far in the future, the "Red" and "Blue" Americas
might decide that they really don't want to be part of the same
polity.
Try as I might,
I can't see why this would be a bad thing. Our current configuration
is not a reflection of some divinely ordained design, after all.
There's no reason why several "Americas" wouldn't be able to share
the same continent, engaging in peaceful commerce and otherwise
minding their own business. And it's difficult to see how such an
arrangement would be "un-American"; those who truly love America
would want the world to be blessed with not one, but many of them.
Given
the unfortunate outcome last time a group of American states decided
to quit the "Union" club, it's clear that the dangers of political
fission are great. But remaining artificially yoked together in
a bankrupt, increasingly untenable Union would most likely be fatal
to liberty.
Painful as
it would be for the USA to disintegrate, this may well be the only
way that we can avoid descending irretrievably into undisguised
tyranny and Obama might just be the figure to precipitate such
a breakup.
And given the
fact that Washington is entirely broke and likely to run out of
credit, there's even a chance a tiny one, mind you that this
breakup could happen without Red and Blue replicating the mass bloodshed
that accompanied the attempted divorce between Blue and Gray. Without
the financial means to carry out an actual civil war, Red and Blue
might simply have to say to each other, "Fare thee well and get
ye lost."
It probably
won't happen that way. But keep a good thought, anyhow.
Just in
case you're interested, the grammatically dubious title of this
essay was inspired by
this.
October
25, 2008
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
writes the Pro Libertate
blog.
Copyright
© 2008 William Norman Grigg
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