Helplessly, We Await the Catastrophe Our Rulers Are Creating
by
Robert Higgs
I
cannot stop thinking of 1939, when everyone could see the war coming
and no one, it seemed, could do anything to stop it. Contemplating
the impending catastrophe, W. H. Auden wrote,
In
the nightmare of the dark
All
the dogs of Europe bark,
And
the living nations wait,
Each
sequestered in its hate;
Intellectual
disgrace
Stares
from every human face
And
the seas of pity lie
Locked
and frozen in each eye.
("In
Memory of W. B. Yeats," 1939)
Today,
the dogs of war are barking not in Europe but in the District of
Columbia, and again people are looking on helplessly as the tragedy
unfolds. We see the disaster being designed and touted, we observe
the intellectual disgrace staring from the faces of George W. Bush
and his advisers, and we note the seas of pity lying locked and
frozen in their eyes. Yet we can do nothing to prevent the makers
of this coming calamity from carrying out the devastation.
I
wonder if they ever lie awake at night and imagine the faces of
the men, women, and children people they do not know, people who
do not know them and who cannot harm them who will be dead soon,
their bodies crushed, ripped, and burned by the force of U.S. munitions
exploding in their streets, homes, shops, schools, and hospitals.
Those bombs are smart, no doubt, but they are better at math than
at morality. Even when they work as they are supposed to, they are
not smart enough to discriminate between the innocent and the guilty
as they detonate in a densely populated urban area such as Baghdad.
Do Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld sleep peacefully nowadays, or
do they awake haunted by visions of the innocent strangers they
are preparing to obliterate? Do they rise at midnight to wash their
hands, only to find that they cannot cleanse the damned spot?
In
Congress, the politicians declare their strong support for the president's
new policy of global preemptive wars and, in particular, for his
impending assault on the ailing, impoverished, nearly defenseless
Iraqis. The legislators dare not oppose the president's plan, because
then their electoral opponents would call their patriotism into
question. Their patriotism, it seems, requires that they sacrifice
their clear constitutional duty for the sake of campaign appearances.
A deeper patriotism an allegiance to the principles of the American
Republic lies beyond their comprehension. In the name of a vulgar
and superficial patriotism, they forsake all loyalty to the traditions
that once made the United States a beacon of freedom, rather than
a world-ranging bully to be feared and loathed. Congress may posture
and pretend, but it will do nothing substantial to exercise its
constitutional authority to decide whether to commit the nation
to war. Better to go along, to pass a vague, blank-check resolution.
Later, if the war goes badly, the members can criticize it; if it
goes well, they can take credit for supporting it; but in no event
will they put themselves in a position to be held genuinely accountable.
So,
with our supine and cowardly representatives unwilling to resist
the chief executive's usurpations, "we the people" can only wait
and watch as the president allows his strings to be pulled by people
for whom war will be not the last resort but the option they will
exercise as soon as they perceive a threat, however modest, to their
mastery of the world. The old boundaries have become irrelevant.
No longer does the U.S. government content itself to rule over a
vast continental domain. No longer does it find satisfaction merely
in a Monroe Doctrine that proclaims its hegemony in the Western
Hemisphere. No, our rulers have declared in sufficiently plain language,
in their new "National Security Strategy of the United States,"
made public on September 20, that they intend to dominate the entire
world. Some members of the political class speak openly of empire;
others avoid the word but embrace the substance. Make no mistake,
however: the American Republic is no longer just sick unto death;
it is stone-cold dead.
Although
many ordinary Americans appear to have no quarrel with what is being
done in their name, many others oppose this imperial impudence and
the brutalities that express and sustain it. For the dissidents,
the government has prepared a suitable reception. The TIPS informants
are getting ready to report suspicions about them. The prison cells
wait to receive more "material witnesses," "enemy combatants," and
anyone accused, no matter how baselessly, of aiding or abetting
alleged terrorists. For these unfortunates, no writ of habeas corpus
will spoil the government's day; no defense lawyer's shadow will
darken the doorway of its secret interrogations. As the president
and Attorney General John Ashcroft have made clear, if you are not
with the government, you are against it, and they have demonstrated
already how far they are willing to go to deal with those who are
against. Henceforth, thanks to the USA PATRIOT Act, all of us will
be subject to closer surveillance. As we are ever more systematically
monitored and regimented by our own government, even the elementary
freedoms of movement, speech, and assembly will go by the board.
In time, all of us will learn to keep quiet, if we know what is
good for us and our families.
We
are told that the government's new policies, with their perpetual
wars "to keep the peace," will bring us security, but they will
not do so. Instead, the American empire's global violence will create
a bottomless reservoir of vengeful terrorists. By insisting on poking
its imperial stick into every hornet's nest on the planet, the U.S.
government will ensure that Americans will continue to be stung.
Wherever they may travel, at home or abroad, they will be at risk
of attack by aggrieved men and women.
Perhaps
we should not weep. Maybe a once-free people who surrenders its
liberties so readily, so unjustifiably, deserves nothing better.
Meanwhile, we can only wait helplessly for our masters to commence
the catastrophe in Iraq, and heaven only knows where else.
September
23, 2002
Robert
Higgs [send him mail]
is senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute, editor of The
Independent Review,
and author of Crisis
and Leviathan
and numerous scholarly and popular articles on Congress.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
Robert
Higgs Archives
|