Empire in the Blood
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
Recently by Michael S. Rozeff: Essentials
of Panarchism
An empire is
"a group of nations or peoples ruled over by an emperor, empress,
or other powerful sovereign or government: usually a territory of
greater extent than a kingdom, as the former British Empire, French
Empire, Russian Empire, Byzantine Empire, or Roman Empire."
(See here.)
It is pertinent
that Alexander Hamilton consistently thought of the pre-constitutional
confederation of thirteen sovereign States as an empire. In Federalist
13 he writes:
"The
ideas of men who speculate upon the dismemberment of the empire
seem generally turned toward three confederacies – one consisting
of the four Northern, another of the four Middle, and a third
of the five Southern States. There is little probability that
there would be a greater number. According to this distribution,
each confederacy would comprise an extent of territory larger
than that of the kingdom of Great Britain."
In Federalist
1:
"The
subject speaks its own importance; comprehending in its consequences
nothing less than the existence of the UNION, the safety and welfare
of the parts of which it is composed, the fate of an empire in
many respects the most interesting in the world."
Hamilton said
in Federalist 22 that the existing structure under the Articles
of Confederation was infirm because it did not rest on a vote
of "the PEOPLE." He wanted American empire to be more
solidly based:
"The
fabric of American empire ought to rest on the solid basis of
THE CONSENT OF THE PEOPLE. The streams of national power ought
to flow immediately from that pure, original fountain of all legitimate
authority."
James Madison
in Federalist 14 sees an empire in place in America prior
to adopting the new constitution:
"Hearken
not to the unnatural voice which tells you that the people of
America, knit together as they are by so many cords of affection,
can no longer live together as members of the same family; can
no longer continue the mutual guardians of their mutual happiness;
can no longer be fellowcitizens of one great, respectable, and
flourishing empire."
If America
was an empire in 1787, how much larger an empire is it today?
But calling
America an empire and knowing that America is an empire, which indeed
it is, does not resolve important questions that affect the lives
of those who are ruled. An empire is ruled by a "powerful sovereign
or government." How powerful? How far does its rule extend
over the lives and activities of its subjects? The rule of American
government keeps expanding, over many who dissent from it.
Do these subjects
of empire consent to be ruled? Do we Americans consent? By what
means?
If the government
is powerful, what restrains it? What is to stop a government from
gaining inordinate power?
Who are the
persons who have this sovereign power that creates an empire? How
do they decide what to do with it? Who is "the PEOPLE"
that sanctions their power? Is it all Americans? Who says we are
one people with this sovereign power?
Wherein lies
the consent in those persons who do not regard other people (and
thus the U.S. government) as sovereign over them? Why should some
people have the power to boss everyone else around ad infinitum
if the former do not approve? Wherein lies the consent in those
who believe that it is a mistake to elevate any man to a position
of power unless under constraints that are not in evidence in an
existing empire?
What happens
if the sovereign reinterprets its constitution without the direct
involvement of "the PEOPLE"?
Is a person
automatically a subject of a sovereign by virtue of where he is
born? Is he automatically part of "the People"? Wherein
lies his consent?
Does sovereign
power actually rest and emanate from "the PEOPLE"? If
so, how does that come about? What of the people who do not accept
this notion?
These questions
reveal that empire does not rest on a solid theoretical basis. Empire
has no basis in a reasoned understanding, nor does it rest on agreement,
morality, or even a freely-offered consensus. The American civil
war made that clear of the American empire. Compulsion is an important
supporting pillar to American empire. Raw force, domination, and
power are key ingredients in American empire. Without these, the
empire would quickly dissolve, and new structures would emerge.
That power includes the power to tax. It includes the power to regulate
and legislate in every sphere of American life. It includes the
power to communicate and heavily influence communications to the
American people. The government has the tools to create enough approval
and consensus among enough people and institutions to support its
acts of domination. It has the tools to assure that whatever virus
of empire is in the blood stays there and multiplies.
George Bush’s
attack on Iraq in March, 2003 was an act of empire. It was an act
of a sovereign attempting to extend its sovereignty to a foreign
land. At a minimum, it sought the goal of changing Iraq’s form of
government. The attempt to institute democracy or otherwise control
the affairs of a foreign state via war is not a charitable act of
giving. It is an act of an empire using force. Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld used the term "shock and awe" to describe its
effects.
President Bush
and others took advantage of the 9/11 massacre to promote the Iraq
War. Neither the American government nor the American people have
learned from the Vietnam experience to stay away from interminable
and costly wars with unachievable objectives. Neither places much
value on lives lost, bodies injured, or on families, livelihoods,
and structures torn asunder, so long as they are not American. A
minimum of 100,000 Iraqis have died. In most cases, no one knows
who killed whom, or why. Terrorists were attracted to Iraq. Various
groups within Iraq begin to kill each other. The American attack
and victory unleashed forces beyond its immediate control.
America attacked
another country that was no threat without provocation and justification,
or with a host of false justifications. Americans were subject to
a propaganda campaign. Bush revved up an incredible and false propaganda
machine. It fell on many accepting ears. He had no compunctions
about attacking a country that was no threat to the United States.
Clinton’s bombing of Iraq and his war making in Yugoslavia were
a prelude.
Congress funded
the war. Congress approved the war. The war is an act of the American
government as a whole. Warfare between the U.S. and Iraq did not
begin in 2003. It has been going on since August 2, 1990, when Iraq
attacked Kuwait. Leading up to that war, America armed Saddam Hussein,
even with the means of creating biological weapons that he used
against Iran and his own people. American empire has been operating
in Iraq and other countries of the Middle East for a long time.
Empire has gotten into the American blood, not without a receptive
host and an active effort by government and others to assure its
virility. Empire does not meet with anything more than token resistance
or disapproval from most Americans.
The United
States has significant and influential war lobbies, oil lobbies,
construction lobbies, weapons lobbies, and Israel lobbies. The lobbyists
influence Congress, which funds the wars through taxes, borrowing,
and inflation. Lobbyists have been effective in influencing Congress.
They have been effective in gaining media exposure to support their
causes. This influences public opinion. The government itself goes
to great lengths to influence public opinion. The acts and powers
of empire rest on a machinery of money, influence, communications,
and legality.
The ambitions
of American empire are alive and undiminished today under a new
President and a new Congress. How well they are, given the financial
problems of the government, is another matter. The government acts
as if it still has access to plenteous resources to fund its adventures
abroad and at home. As expected, Democrats are less interested in
Iraq than in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but it’s still empire. The
press carries accounts of the Israeli option to attack Iranian nuclear
facilities without American approval, but it is extremely unlikely
that such an attack is possible without outright American approval
or perhaps signals that America would not seriously sanction Israel
for such a campaign.
The concept
of American empire has deep historical roots, going back as they
do to 1787, including the American civil war, the continental expansion,
and the coming of age as a world-class power. American empire has
deep institutional roots. It has deep financial roots. And it has
deep roots in the hearts of Americans.
Neither the
British empire, the French empire, the Southern states, the Spanish
empire, the German empire, the Japanese empire, nor the Russian
empire have checked the American empire. The American empire may
have reached and passed its apogee. At present, it’s on a downhill
slide. Its policies are increasingly rigid. The business success
that formed its financial foundation is increasingly hamstrung.
The American people are increasingly subservient and dependent on
transfer payments. Their governments are increasingly powerful and
yet dysfunctional. The leadership is increasingly shallow. High
debt and depreciation of the currency are facts of life. A marked
tendency toward concentration of power is present. Large business
corporations and lobbies increasingly turn first, last, and always
to Washington. Now, with the bailout programs, even venture capital
firms are looking to public funding.
A
resurgence of empire, an increase in its status and vitality, is
not out of the question. There are few signs of it in the political
sphere at present. The empire has apparently passed its prime. Empire
is something that poisons the blood of the body politic. Empire
brings about its own demise. There are signs of increasing fragmentation,
as in the case of some legislators in some individual States beginning
to resist the national government and speak of secession. The worse
that things get for the empire, the more such movements will arise.
Americans are
going someday to have to live with the end of their empire. They
will have to get it out of their system. This will be a very good
thing, because a renaissance in American life at all levels will
accompany a diminishment of American empire. Making the transition
away from empire and back to a healthy society will be an important
and tough challenge, far more so than sending a man to the moon,
because this involves such deep changes in thinking and institutions
at the personal, social, and political levels. Empire is in the
blood of Americans. Purging it is going to be a traumatic experience.
July
16, 2009
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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