The
Dance of Death
By Chris
Hedges
March 13,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Truth
Dig"
- The ruling corporate elites no longer seek to
build. They seek to destroy. They are agents of
death. They crave the unimpeded power to cannibalize
the country and pollute and degrade the ecosystem to
feed an insatiable lust for wealth, power and
hedonism. Wars and military “virtues” are
celebrated. Intelligence, empathy and the common
good are banished. Culture is degraded to patriotic
kitsch. Education is designed only to instill
technical proficiency to serve the poisonous engine
of corporate capitalism. Historical amnesia shuts us
off from the past, the present and the future. Those
branded as unproductive or redundant are discarded
and left to struggle in poverty or locked away in
cages. State repression is indiscriminant and
brutal. And, presiding over the tawdry Grand Guignol
is a deranged ringmaster tweeting absurdities from
the White House.
The
graveyard of world empires—Sumerian, Egyptian,
Greek, Roman, Mayan, Khmer, Ottoman and
Austro-Hungarian—followed the same trajectory of
moral and physical collapse. Those who rule at the
end of empire are psychopaths, imbeciles,
narcissists and deviants, the equivalents of the
depraved Roman emperors Caligula, Nero, Tiberius and
Commodus. The ecosystem that sustains the empire is
degraded and exhausted. Economic growth,
concentrated in the hands of corrupt elites, is
dependent on a crippling debt peonage imposed on the
population. The bloated ruling class of oligarchs,
priests, courtiers, mandarins, eunuchs, professional
warriors, financial speculators and corporate
managers sucks the marrow out of society.
The
elites’ myopic response to the looming collapse of
the natural world and the civilization is to make
subservient populations work harder for less,
squander capital in grandiose projects such as
pyramids, palaces, border walls and fracking, and
wage war. President Trump’s decision to
increase military spending
by $54 billion and take the needed funds out of the
flesh of domestic programs typifies the behavior of
terminally ill civilizations. When the Roman Empire
fell, it was trying to sustain an army of half a
million soldiers that had become a parasitic drain
on state resources.
The
complex bureaucratic mechanisms that are created by
all civilizations ultimately doom them. The
difference now, as Joseph Tainter points out in “The
Collapse of Complex Societies,”
is that “collapse, if and when it comes again, will
this time be global. No longer can any individual
nation collapse. World civilization will
disintegrate as a whole.”
Civilizations in decline, despite the palpable signs
of decay around them, remain fixated on restoring
their “greatness.” Their illusions condemn them.
They cannot see that the forces that gave rise to
modern civilization, namely technology, industrial
violence and fossil fuels, are the same forces that
are extinguishing it. Their leaders are trained only
to serve the system, slavishly worshipping the old
gods long after these gods begin to demand millions
of sacrificial victims.
“Hope
drives us to invent new fixes for old messes, which
in turn create even more dangerous messes,” Ronald
Wright writes in “A
Short History of Progress.”
“Hope elects the politician with the biggest empty
promise; and as any stockbroker or lottery seller
knows, most of us will take a slim hope over prudent
and predictable frugality. Hope, like greed, fuels
the engine of capitalism.”
The Trump
appointees—Steve Bannon, Jeff Sessions, Rex
Tillerson, Steve Mnuchin, Betsy DeVos, Wilbur Ross,
Rick Perry, Alex Acosta and others—do not advocate
innovation or reform. They are Pavlovian dogs that
salivate before piles of money. They are hard-wired
to steal from the poor and loot federal budgets.
Their single-minded obsession with personal
enrichment drives them to dismantle any institution
or abolish any law or regulation that gets in the
way of their greed. Capitalism, Karl Marx wrote, is
“a machine for demolishing limits.” There is no
internal sense of proportion or scale. Once all
external impediments are lifted, global capitalism
ruthlessly commodifies human beings and the natural
world to extract profit until exhaustion or
collapse. And when the last moments of a
civilization arrive, the degenerate edifices of
power appear to crumble overnight.
Sigmund Freud wrote that societies, along with
individuals, are driven by two primary instincts.
One is the instinct for life, Eros, the quest to
love, nurture, protect and preserve. The second is
the death instinct. The death instinct, called
Thanatos by post-Freudians, is driven by fear,
hatred and violence. It seeks the dissolution of all
living things, including our own beings. One of
these two forces, Freud wrote, is always ascendant.
Societies in decline enthusiastically embrace the
death instinct, as Freud observed in “Civilization
and Its Discontents,”
written on the eve of the rise of European fascism
and World War II.
“It is in
sadism, where the death instinct twists the erotic
aim in its own sense and yet at the same time fully
satisfies the erotic urge, that we succeed in
obtaining the clearest insight into its nature and
its relation to Eros,” Freud wrote. “But even
where it emerges without any sexual purpose, in the
blindest fury of destructiveness, we cannot fail to
recognize that the satisfaction of the instinct is
accompanied by an extraordinary high degree of
narcissistic enjoyment, owing to its presenting the
ego with a fulfillment of the latter’s old wishes
for omnipotence.”
The
lust for death, as Freud understood, is not, at
first, morbid. It is exciting and seductive. I saw
this in the wars I covered. A god-like power and
adrenaline-driven fury, even euphoria, sweep over
armed units and ethnic or religious groups given the
license to destroy anything and anyone around them.
Ernst Juenger captured this “monstrous desire for
annihilation” in his World War I memoir, “Storm
of Steel.”
A
population alienated and beset by despair and
hopelessness finds empowerment and pleasure in an
orgy of annihilation that soon morphs into
self-annihilation. It has no interest in nurturing a
world that has betrayed it and thwarted its dreams.
It seeks to eradicate this world and replace it with
a mythical landscape. It turns against institutions,
as well as ethnic and religious groups, that are
scapegoated for its misery. It plunders diminishing
natural resources with abandon. It is seduced by the
fantastic promises of demagogues and the magical
solutions characteristic of the Christian right or
what anthropologists call “crisis
cults.”
Norman Cohn, in “The
Pursuit of the Millennium:
Revolutionary Messianism in Medieval and Reformation
Europe and Its Bearing on Modern Totalitarian
Movements,” draws a link between that turbulent
period and our own. Millennial movements are a
peculiar, collective psychological response to
profound societal despair. They recur throughout
human history. We are not immune.
“These movements have varied in tone from the most
violent aggressiveness to the mildest pacifism and
in aim from the most ethereal spirituality to the
most earth-bound materialism; there is no counting
the possible ways of imagining the Millennium and
the route to it,” Cohen wrote. “But similarities can
present themselves as well as differences; and the
more carefully one compares the outbreaks of
militant social
chiliasm during the
later Middle Ages with modern totalitarian movements
the more remarkable the similarities appear. The old
symbols and the old slogans have indeed disappeared,
to be replaced by new ones; but the structure of the
basic phantasies seems to have changed scarcely at
all.”
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These
movements, Cohen wrote, offered “a coherent social
myth which was capable of taking entire possession
of those who believed in it. It explained their
suffering, it promised them recompense, it held
their anxieties at bay, it gave them an illusion of
security—even while it drove them, held together by
a common enthusiasm, on a quest which was always
vain and often suicidal.
“So it came
about that multitudes of people acted out with
fierce energy a shared phantasy which though
delusional yet brought them such intense emotional
relief that they could live only through it and were
perfectly willing to die for it. It is a phenomenon
which was to recur many times between the eleventh
century and the sixteenth century, now in one area,
now in another, and which, despite the obvious
differences in cultural context and in scale, is not
irrelevant to the growth of totalitarian movements,
with their messianic leaders, their millennial
mirages and their demon-scapegoats, in the present
century.”
The
severance of a society from reality, as ours has
been severed from collective recognition of the
severity of climate change and the fatal
consequences of empire and deindustrialization,
leaves it without the intellectual and institutional
mechanisms to confront its impending mortality. It
exists in a state of self-induced hypnosis and
self-delusion. It seeks momentary euphoria and
meaning in tawdry entertainment and acts of violence
and destruction, including against people who are
demonized and blamed for society’s demise. It
hastens its self-immolation while holding up the
supposed inevitability of a glorious national
resurgence. Idiots and charlatans, the handmaidens
of death, lure us into the abyss.
Chris
Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more
than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing
House.
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