2011
by
Paul Craig Roberts
Recently
by Paul Craig Roberts: The
Greatest Gift For All
"Dissent
is what rescues democracy from a quiet death behind closed doors."
~ Lewis H.
Lapham
The year 2011
will bring Americans a larger and more intrusive police state, more
unemployment and home foreclosures, no economic recovery, more disregard
by the US government of US law, international law, the Constitution,
and truth, more suspicion and distrust from allies, more hostility
from the rest of the world, and new heights of media sycophancy.
2011 is shaping
up as the terminal year for American democracy. The Republican Party
has degenerated into a party of Brownshirts, and voter frustrations
with the worsening economic crisis and military occupations gone
awry are likely to bring Republicans to power in 2012. With them
would come their doctrines of executive primacy over Congress, the
judiciary, law, and the Constitution and America’s rightful hegemony
over the world.
If not already
obvious, 2010 has made clear that the US government does not care
a whit for the opinions of citizens. The TSA is unequivocal that
it will reach no accommodation with Americans other than the violations
of their persons that it imposes by its unaccountable power. As
for public opposition to war, the Associated Press reported on December
16 that "Defense Secretary Robert Gates says the U.S. can’t
let public opinion sway its commitment to Afghanistan." Gates
stated bluntly what has been known for some time: the idea is passé
that government in a democracy serves the will of the people. If
this quaint notion is still found in civics books, it will soon
be edited out.
In Gag
Rule, a masterful account of the suppression of dissent
and the stifling of democracy, Lewis H. Lapham writes that candor
is a necessary virtue if democracies are to survive their follies
and crimes. But where in America today can candor be found? Certainly
not in the councils of government. Attorney General John Ashcroft
complained of candor-mongers to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Americans who insist on speaking their minds, Ashcroft declared,
"scare people with phantoms of lost liberty," "aid
terrorists," diminish our resolve," and "give ammunition
to America’s enemies."
As the Department
of Justice (sic) sees it, when the ACLU defends habeas corpus it
is defending the ability of terrorists to blow up Americans, and
when the ACLU defends the First Amendment it is defending exposures
of the lies and deceptions that are the necessary scaffolding for
the government’s pretense that it is doing God’s will while Satan
speaks through the voices of dissent.
Neither is
candor a trait in which the American media finds comfort. The neoconservative
press functions as propaganda ministry for hegemonic American empire,
and the "liberal" New York Times serves the same
master. It was the New York Times that gave credence to the
Bush regime’s lies about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, and
it was the New York Times that guaranteed Bush’s re-election
by spiking the story that Bush was committing felonies by spying
on Americans without obtaining warrants. Conservatives rant about
the "liberal media" as if it were a vast subversive force,
but they owe their beloved wars and coverups of the Bush regimes’
crimes to the New York Times.
With truth
the declared enemy of the fantasy world in which the government,
media, and public reside, the nation has turned on whistleblowers.
Bradley Manning, who allegedly provided the media with the video
made by US troops of their wanton, fun-filled slaughter of newsmen
and civilians, has been abused in solitary confinement for six months.
Murdering civilians is a war crime, and as General Peter Pace, Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at the National Press Club on
February 17, 2006, "It is the absolute responsibility of everybody
in uniform to disobey an order that is either illegal or immoral"
and to make such orders known. If Manning is the source of the leak,
he has been wrongfully imprisoned for meeting his military responsibility.
The media have yet to make the point that the person who reported
the crime, not the persons who committed it, is the one who has
been imprisoned, and without a trial.
The
lawlessness of the US government, which has been creeping up on
us for decades, broke into a full gallop in the years of the Bush/Cheney/Obama
regimes. Today the government operates above the law, yet maintains
that it is a democracy bringing the same to Muslims by force of
arms, only briefly being sidetracked by sponsoring a military coup
against democracy in Honduras and attempting to overthrow the democratic
government in Venezuela.
As 2011 dawns,
public discourse in America has the country primed for a fascist
dictatorship. The situation will be worse by 2012. The most uncomfortable
truth that emerges from the WikiLeaks saga is that American public
discourse consists of cries for revenge against those who tell us
truths. The vicious mendacity of the US government knows no restraint.
Whether or not international law can save Julian Assange from the
clutches of the Americans or death by a government black ops unit,
both executive and legislative branches are working assiduously
to establish the National Security State as the highest value and
truth as its greatest enemy.
America’s future
is the world of Winston Smith.
December
29, 2010
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail], a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House.
Copyright
© 2010 Paul Craig Roberts
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