The
Rise of the American Empire
by
Cathy Cuthbert
If
you are a regular reader of literature of liberty, at some point
you must have wondered how America acquired an empire. How did a
national government based on the premise that all men are created
equal, segue into the subjugation of men living in other countries?
How did a people so profoundly uninterested in foreign people and
foreign affairs become hoodwinked into laboring for a worldwide,
fascist bureaucracy? And you must have wondered about the most amazing
irony of all How can Americans be blissfully unaware of their
government’s empire?
A
Nation of Adult School Children
I
had a series of discussions ok, ok, arguments with
a friend over the war in Kosovo. This friend had had a Vietnam draft
number but wouldn't have gone if his number came up. He said that
while traveling in Greece in the ‘70s, he had heard a very different
story about United States Government (USG) involvement in SE Asia
than the one being told at home. Yet this same man thirty years
later declared that the genocide in Kosovo was so abhorrent to him
that he was willing to go fight at the age of 48. He believed every
story of ethnic cleansing and mass graves no matter how unbelievable.
He demanded no evidence other than Tom Browkaw's word to he make
up his mind, or rather to have his mind made up for him, that Milosevic
is a Serbian Hitler. He sincerely believed that NATO was fighting
a humanitarian war and that if NATO didn't stop the slaughter of
innocents, it would go on till no one was left.
"We
have a responsibility to do something," he said. "It’s
the same as if you knew that a thug was breaking into your neighbor's
house and attacking him and his family. You'd be morally bound to
do something to stop it."
I
looked at my friend and shook my head, trying to understand how
he can so fervently believe such utter nonsense. No argument could
shake him. Does 2,000 killed on both sides over two years really
constitute genocide? Do mass graves really have head stones? Didn’t
he know about the forensic evidence found at Racak showing that
the massacre was staged? Facts and logic didn’t matter to him. I
was at a loss to explain his tenacious grip on received opinion.
Then I closed my eyes and saw my friend as he must have been forty
years ago, sitting attentively at a little desk. With this image
the whole of 20th century political history became clear to me.
The
USG has troops stationed in 135 countries. It bombed four countries
in 1999 alone. Yet few Americans are horrified at this. Any time
and anywhere in the entire world there is conflict, Americans demand
that the USG act, which means flex its military muscle. At any incident
that can be propagandized as terrorism and before any evidence or
even details are available, Pavlov’s dogs flood talk radio with
calls demanding that "we nuke the towel heads." Close
your eyes and call up a vision of a first grade classroom and the
reason will be clear to you, too.
Every
night, millions of dog tired working stiffs and I don’t mean
only the Joe Sixpacks, but those 60 hour work week Yuppies, as well
collapse onto their couches in front of their TVs, turn on
the evening news and revert back to childhood as they imbibe a constant
stream of lies and propaganda about, well, everything. "The
most trusted men in America" read a script carefully constructed
to paint just the right picture of what is happening in all aspects
of 20th century American life. Expert advice is now considered essential
to understanding foreign affairs or domestic politics or global
warming or even the lack of safety in their own neighborhoods. Exhausted
from the day’s labors and mesmerized by the flashing lights before
them, they take it all in the way they took in Miss Wormwood’s exhortations
forty years before. There is no difference.
Compulsory
government schooling began in the US in 1852 in Massachusetts. At
that time, it took guns, soldiers and the threat of bloody violence,
rather than expert advice, to force parents to submit to giving
up their children. After one generation of public schooling with
its propaganda about the sacred nature of the union and manifest
destiny, it was possible for McKinley to make the first concrete
steps toward world wide rather than continental empire. By the time
the last state passed its compulsory schooling law in 1918 and another
generation served out its prison term in government schools, the
USG was able to institute war socialism and jail war dissenters
in the land of the free and the home of the brave. After three generations
of compulsory schooling, the grip on the minds of institutionally
schooled people was so strong that the same propaganda used on the
previous generation about the Kaiser’s Germany, even though thoroughly
discredited, could be recycled and used against Hitler’s Germany.
By the time the number of non-institutionally schooled grandparents
and even great-grandparents dwindled to zero, allowing distortions
about the nature of the republic, the office of the presidency,
democracy, entangling alliances, and a standing army to become common
wisdom, it was possible for a USG functionary to claim straight-faced
that they burned the village to save it. It may not be scientific
to say it, but the cause and effect is clear to me: the road to
imperialism is paved by government schooling.
Macro-Mechanisms
of Tyranny
In
this Era of Friendly Fascism in which we live, the ruling class
is loathe to show its full-blown violent face at least not
too often on the home front. From our reading we know the
mechanisms of their tyranny. For the modest sum of $1, anyone can
buy his own copy of The
Prince.
Walter Karp in Indispensable
Enemies updates Machiavelli to modern American democracy.
In explaining the importance of the two party system to ruling class
power, the good cop/bad cop routines, the purposely lost elections
and the political extortion are exposed as tactics in an overarching
strategy that has made American politics a shadow play. Robert Higgs’
in Crisis
and Leviathan has shown how various crises, particularly
wars, have been used as excuses to rob Americans of their freedoms
bit by bit. Yes, some of the edicts promulgated in the name of war
were reversed, but never completely, yielding a ratchet effect.
Etienne de la Boetie in his 16th century treatise The
Politics of Obedience: Discourse on Voluntary Servitude
rightly attributes habituation to serfdom as the chief means the
ruling class uses to remain in power. Yet serfs must be serfs before
they can become habituated to it, and for the first one hundred
years or so Americans white Americans at least were
not serfs.
We
don’t enjoy the freedom that our ancestors had. The ruling class
forbids it; Karp’s party collusion, Higgs’ ratchet effect and de
la Boetie’s voluntary servitude prevent it. No mystery here, but
still there is a key missing element to understanding the current
political climate. On the psychological level, how does Friendly
Fascism work? How is it that the majority of the citizenry know
what is expected of them to be good citizens, and willingly do it,
like the Romper Room "Do Bees" of our childhood? The voluntary
income tax is the quintessence of Do Beeism. So is registering for
the draft. So is sending children to school, especially with homeschooling
legal in every state. The question is not, "Why do people comply?"
Chicanery, force and fear, habit, of course. The question is, "Why
do they comply willingly?" Why do they march forward to sacrifice
not only their own well being but that of their children and seem
happy to do so? Why do they deny all the evidence of their senses
and proclaim proudly that we Americans are free?
The
previous European empires that dissolved with the world wars called
themselves empires, but the American Empire can never be admitted.
The American Empire ended with the Progressive Era according to
court historians. Indeed, most Americans become angry when they
hear the term "American Empire," particularly military
personnel who labor in its service. This phenomenon cannot be explained
by the macro-mechanisms of tyranny. Cognitive dissonance of this
stunning depth must be the result of early and brutal brainwashing
and brainwashing of such stunning breadth must take place through
the only common childhood experience in the US, that is government
schooling.
The
American Empire is sustained in that first grade classroom.
Micro-Mechanisms
of Tyranny
There
can be no denying the deplorable condition of America’s public schools.
Yet, our national debate about public school reform very purposefully
misses the point. No amount of reform will solve the educational
and social problems of public school since the schools were designed
to create these very problems. They were planned as indoctrination
centers and their techniques have been continually refined so that
as each wave of reform takes hold, fewer and fewer children can
pass through the gauntlet unscathed. Do you doubt this? Do you question
the steadily declining test scores, the debasement of school textbooks
and curricula, the increasing need for remedial courses at our colleges,
the wide spread and growing use of drugs on young children, the
universal adoption of the green, racial, anti-gun and pro-drug war
agenda, the utter disappearance of personal boundaries and civility
in everyday conversation, and, of course, the abject terror and
violence?
Useful
idiots such as Bill Bennet and Chester Finn rail against the hollow
curricula of American public schools, yet, curriculum content is
beside the point. Poor curriculum would, after all, make for merely
ignorant students, not deranged, violent, suicidal or vapid one.
The content of public school course work is not the major tool for
indoctrination. Rather, it is what John
Taylor Gatto calls the hidden curriculum, administrative policies
and teaching techniques that do the trick. They work their magic
the way the Nazi concentration camps worked theirs, as Leonard Piekoff
describes in The
Ominous Parallels. Reality must be looked squarely in the
face and repeatedly and vehemently denied day in, day out over a
long period of time for cognitive dissonance to take hold. Amazingly,
public schools use the same modis operandi to accomplish
this end yet without the overt violence. Instead, they get the child
early and drive a wedge between him and his parents. Parent-child
estrangement: this is the goal of the hidden curriculum in a nutshell.
The
Real School Wars Every Parent against His Own Child
John
Holt brilliantly explains the real school wars in his book, What
Do I Do Monday? Slipped among chapters of a book written
to provide teachers with practical yet innovative classroom methods,
Holt reveals the horrifying truth about the psychology of public
schooling and I believe the key to the micro mechanism of American
imperialism. This book is far more than a bag of teacher’s tricks
as the book jacket says, the most germane chapter being "The
Killing of the Self."
Holt
applies insights about human psychology from Ronald Laing’s The
Divide Self to show how teachers drive children to insanity,
or rather, to cognitive dissonance to save what little sanity they
can salvage. He points out the physical constraints imposed by schools,
such as "children are not only required for most of the day
to sit at desks without any chance to move or stretch, but they
are not even allowed to change their position, to move in their
chairs," restrictions that adults would not endure for long.
Comparing public school to Black chattel slavery, he goes on to
describe the psychological conditioning in which parents are unwitting
collaborators:
[T]he
schools are the only organization of our times that can make people
accept and blame themselves for their own oppression and degradation.
The parents cannot and do not say to their children, "I can’t
prevent your teacher from despising and humiliating and mistreating
you, because the schools have more political power than I have,
and they know it. But you are not what they think and say you are,
and want to make you think you are. You are right to want to resist
them, and even if you resist them only in your heart, resist them
there." On the contrary, and against their wishes and instincts,
they believe and must try to make their children believe that the
schools are always right and the children wrong, that if the teacher
says you are bad for any reason, or none at all, you are
bad. So, among most of the poor, and even much of the middle class,
when the schools says something bad about a child, the parents accept
it and use all their considerable power to make the child accept
it. Seeing his parents accept it, he usually does. So far
I hope not much longer few parents have had the insight of
… the parent who not long ago said to James Herndon, author of The
Way It Spozed to Be, "For years the schools have been
making me hate my kid." Even the most cruel and oppressive
racists have hardly ever been able to make people do that.
Unlike
slave parents who demanded their children act with subservience
to the master to save them from harm, parents today demand their
children act with subservience because they believe it is right.
As a result, in the school child’s reality, he has no one to turn
to, nowhere to go, no sanctuary even in his mother’s arms from his
abusers. With the time worn excuse, "It’s for your own good,"
the wedge between parent and child that was inserted by the very
fact of enrolling him in school, tantamount to pushing the young
child out of his home before he is ready, is driven further with
each passing school term.
But
it gets worse, this psychological torture via denial of reality,
for at one time, many teachers were overt, undeniable sadists, wielding
sticks at their recalcitrant charges. Today, America has therapeutic
education with "caregivers" that wear smiles while meting
out their abuse. They claim to love your child, to have only his
welfare at heart and to be working toward world peace while denigrating
and humiliating him. It used to be that parents knew schools were
unpleasant and could sympathize with their children while unable
to rescue them. Today, parents, all adults, constantly send the
message to children that school is fun. Many children believe school
is fun because they want to believe and please their parents. They
need to believe that school is fun to be able to get through the
next day. But do an experiment as I did. Ask children who claim
they love school to list what they love about it. I guarantee you
will get answers such as pizza parties, field trips, lunch, being
with their friends, after school sports, that is, everything unschoolish
about school, everything that is outside the classroom, everything
except school itself.
In
the truly Orwellian circumstances of their daily academic lives,
either children are unable to develop any true self esteem so that
they adopt the strategy of gaining the approval of others in its
stead, or they fight back and live a grim life in constant battle
with everyone in authority. The former become the Do Bees, dutifully
memorizing the material in their government approved textbooks,
filling in government approved answers on their endless, meaningless
worksheets, turning in their parents to the DARE cops, and unconsciously
blinding themselves to any reality that doesn’t jibe with the national,
imperial curriculum:
- America
is the freest country in the world;
- Paying
our taxes is our highest civic duty;
- No
American president would start a war for political gain;
- All
religious fundamentalist are dangerous and potential terrorists;
- Americans
must make the world safe for democracy; Milosevic is a Serbian
Hitler;
- Extinctions,
pollution, global warming and the ozone hole are the greatest
threats to mankind;
- and
so on.
Without
the ability to recognize reality, the Do Bees absorb this packaged
collection of received opinions very willingly and quite happily,
the last vestiges of their sanity depending on it. They become unwitting
though avid agents of American imperialism, each generation more
unwitting and zealous than their parents before them.
The
children with spirit who can salvage their self esteem, who recognize
their oppressors for what they are and choose to fight them are
increasingly unable to escape through truancy or without graduating.
They are branded with various labels that will haunt them throughout
their academic lives, prescribed psychiatric drugs to make them
docile, enrolled in more intensive brainwashing programs. The push
to deny drivers licenses to truants, the Goals 2000 School to Work
system whereby occupations will be closed to unfavored students
and universal preschool are the latest "reforms" to control
these children and stamp out dissention.
The
Antidote to Imperialism
The
best hope for rejection of the American Empire and a resurgence
of a love of liberty is homeschooling.
Homeschool
families live their lives with a level of intimacy that families
used to enjoy before the massive interference of government programs
and policies in this century. Family intimacy is the first principle
in building a healthy emotional foundation for our children.
Homeschool
families live their lives immersed in the real world. They are not
held in the confinement of a strange, Kafkaesque world, surreal
in the uniformity of age of its inmates, its false and meaningless
rewards system, its wholly arbitrary rules, its distorted social
conventions. Being in the real world mitigates the extremes of denial
that eventuate cognitive dissonance.
Homeschool
children are not separated from their parents too early and plunged
into a Lord
of the Flies environment to fend for themselves without
their family for security and guidance. They are neither fed a constant
stream of propaganda, prevented from learning to read, inculcated
with a loathing of learning, nor psychologically manipulated and
drugged into obedience.
It
may take time for homeschool families to emerge from their parents’
public school brainwashing, but with intellectual freedom will come
the inevitable rejection of government lies and statist sophistry.
I predict that homeschoolers will dominate the minority that brings
about the next American revolution, just as homeschoolers dominated
that minority in the first American revolution. And I expect my
homeschool family to be part of it.
Cathy Cuthbert is a homeschool mother and a volunteer with The
California Homeschool Network.
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