The
Democrats' Dangerous Diversion
The Democrats won’t admit that they lost to Donald
Trump because they ran a deeply flawed,
corporate-oriented candidate, so they blame Russia
instead, a very dangerous diversion, says Nicolas J
S Davies.
By Nicolas J S Davies
March 13,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
- The current debate over “fake news” has reminded
me of a conversation I had several years ago with a
former citizen of East Germany, now living in the
United States. He explained that, in East Germany,
everybody knew that what the media told them about
their own country was a bunch of lies and
propaganda. So they assumed that what the media told
them about the West was just propaganda, too.
Now living
in the U.S., he had come to realize that a lot of
what the East German media said about life in the
U.S. was actually true. There really are people
living on the street, people with no access to
healthcare, widespread poverty, a lack of social
welfare and public services, and many other
problems, as the East German media accurately
reported, and as the Chinese government also noted
in its latest report on
human rights in the U.S.
My
friend wished he and his countrymen had understood
the difference between what their media told them
about their country and what they reported about the
West. Then they could have made more intelligent
choices about which aspects of life in the West to
adopt, instead of allowing Western experts to come
in and impose the entire
neoliberal model on
their country.
In the
West, of course, the state media of East Germany and
other Communist countries were held up to ridicule.
I remember hearing that people in the U.S.S.R. would
open their newspapers in the morning and have a good
laugh at the latest “fake news” in Pravda. But,
as my German friend eventually understood, there was
some truth amongst the propaganda, and the hidden
danger of such a corrupted media system is that
people end up not knowing what to believe, making
informed democratic choices almost impossible.
In the end,
people all over Eastern Europe were cornered into a
false choice between two ideological systems that
both came as top-down package deals, instead of
being able to take charge of their own societies and
democratically decide their own future.
In
the U.S., we live under a two-party political
system, not a one-party system as in East Germany,
and our media reflect that. As each of our two main
political parties and our media have fallen more
totally under the sway of unbridled plutocratic
interests, our mass
media has devolved into a bifurcated version of what
my friend observed in East Germany, triply corrupted
by commercial interests, partisan bias and
ideological and nationalist propaganda.
Down the Rabbit Hole
Since the
2016 election campaign, our political
system seems to have devolved into something
like the nonsense world of Lewis Carroll’s Alice
In Wonderland, with Donald Trump as the
Queen of Hearts, Hillary Clinton as Humpty Dumpty,
the Republicans and Democrats as Tweedledum and
Tweedledee, the election as the Caucus Race (which
Lewis Carroll based on U.S. political caucuses) and
the whipsawed American public as the permanently
baffled Alice.
In Lewis
Carroll’s Caucus Race, an assortment of creatures
ran randomly around a racetrack with no start or
finish line, until the Dodo called the race over,
declared them all winners and told Alice (the
public?) she had to give them all prizes.
In similar
fashion, the 2016 election between two of the most
unpopular presidential candidates in U.S.
history seems to have no finish line, but to live on
in round-the-clock campaigns to corral the public
into one of its two camps. The artificial, top-down
nature of both these campaigns should be a warning
that, like the election campaigns they grew out of,
they are designed to corral, control and direct
masses of people, not to offer real solutions to any
of the serious problems facing our country and the
world.
On one
hand, we have President Trump, Republican
Congressional leaders, Breitbart, Fox News and Rush
Limbaugh, spouting nonsense worthy of Lewis Carroll,
even in major presidential speeches,
while dismissing criticism as “fake news.”
The
Trump camp will never acknowledge that only
a quarter of voting-age Americans
voted for him, nor that even less of us share his
views or the interests he represents. In this
corrupt two-party system, no effort or expense is
spared to persuade the public that we must vote for
one of the two major party presidential candidates,
whether we agree with either of them or not. But
that cuts both ways, leaving most of the public
unrepresented no matter who wins, and depriving any
new government of a genuine popular mandate.
But Republican leaders play a more straightforward
winner-take-all game than the Democrats. So they
will try to ride Trump’s victory and their
Congressional majorities as far as they will take
them on all fronts: more tax breaks for the wealthy
and corporations; more draconian cuts in social
spending; more privatization of healthcare,
education and other public services; more detention
and deportation of immigrants; a more aggressive
police response to social problems and public
protest; more destruction of the natural world and
the climate; and more increases in a military budget
that already
broke post-WWII records
under Bush and Obama, to fuel a
more openly aggressive
and dangerous war policy – in other words, more of
all the things that most Americans would agree we
have already had too much of.
On the
other side, Democratic Party leaders and the CIA,
supported by the New York Times, the
Washington Post, CNN and MSNBC, have conjured
up unproven charges that Russia stole the election
for Trump as the heart of their campaign against
him. In Trump, history has handed them a political
opponent with a piñata of vulnerabilities, from
unprecedented conflicts of interest to policies that
benefit only his own wealthy class
to willful ignorance of how almost everything he is
responsible for as president really works.
And
yet the cabal formerly known as the Clinton campaign
shows little interest in pointing out that our new
Emperor has no clothes on, let alone in seriously
resisting his repressive, plutocratic policies, and
is instead obsessed with convincing the public that
a birthmark on his naked bum looks like a hammer and
sickle.
A
Saving Grace?
Paradoxically, if Trump really reduced tensions
between the U.S. and Russia, as his
hawkish Democratic opponents
fear, that could be the saving
grace of his entire presidency. George W. Bush’s and
Barack Obama’s regime change wars, NATO expansion
and the U.S.-backed coup in Ukraine have ignited a
new Cold War that many
respected scientists believe has
raised the risk of human mass extinction to its
highest level since the 1950s.
In
the pursuit of false security based on
post-Cold War triumphalism
and a fleeting mirage of
military supremacy,
our corrupt leaders have jeopardized not just our
security but our very existence, leaving us at
two
and a half minutes to midnight on
the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (BAS)’
Doomsday Clock.
As Jonathan Marshall at
Consortiumnews.com reported
on March 10, experts from the Federation of American
Scientists, the Natural Resources Defense Council
and MIT wrote in
a recent BAS article that new
“super-fuzes” installed on U.S. nuclear warheads
since 2009 have significantly increased the danger
of nuclear war by giving the U.S. the ability to
destroy all Russia’s fixed land-based nuclear
missiles with only a fraction of U.S. own weapons.
Coupled with President Obama’s deployment of a
formerly illegal
ABM (anti-ballistic missile) system on Aegis missile
destroyers and at bases in Eastern Europe, the
authors wrote that this upgrade to U.S. nuclear
warheads is “exactly what one would expect to see if
a nuclear-armed state were planning to have the
capacity to fight and win a nuclear war by disarming
enemies with a surprise first strike.” They
concluded that “Russian planners will almost surely
see the advance in fuzing capability as empowering
an increasingly feasible U.S. preemptive nuclear
strike capability.”
In the case
of a suspected Russian nuclear missile launch, the
U.S. satellite-based early warning system can give
President Trump 30 minutes to judge whether we are
really facing a nuclear attack or not. But Russia’s
land-based early warning system is not so generous.
In the case of a suspected U.S. nuclear launch
targeting Russia, President Putin would have as
little as 7 to 13 minutes to decide whether Russia
was really under nuclear attack and whether to
retaliate.
In the
midst of escalating tensions over Syria, Ukraine,
Iran or some other new crisis, a realistic fear of a
U.S. first strike could force a hasty decision by
Russian officials and seal the fate of humanity. The
BAS authors believe that this predicament
leaves Russia little choice but to pre-delegate its
nuclear launch authority to lower levels of command,
increasing the risk of an accidental or mistaken
launch of nuclear weapons.
In an
epitome of understatement, they point out that,
“Forcing this situation upon the Russian government
seems likely to be detrimental to the security
interests of the United States and its Western
allies.”
While U.S.
officials are largely silent about the dangers of
these developments in U.S. nuclear weapons policy,
President Putin has spoken frankly about them and
expressed dismay that the U.S. has rejected every
Russian offer of cooperation to reduce these risks.
Talking to a group of journalists at the St.
Petersburg International Economic Forum in June
2016, he concluded, “I don’t know how this is all
going to end. … What I do know is that we will
need to defend ourselves.”
But despite
the existential dangers of deteriorating relations
with Russia, Democratic Party leaders have grasped
the CIA’s unproven “assessments” that Russia may
have tried to influence the outcome of the U.S.
election as a lifeline by which to salvage their
positions of power after their party’s electoral
implosion.
Since the leadership of the Democratic Party was
taken over by the corporate-backed
Democratic Leadership Council (DLC)
a generation ago, it has followed an unwritten rule
that it must never accept responsibility for losing
an election, nor respond to signs of public
disaffection with any weakening of its commitment to
pro-corporate, neoliberal policies. In its
desperation to prevent the democratic reform of the
Democratic Party, it is aggressively tarring
nuclear-armed Russia with the same brush it used to
tar and feather Ralph Nader after the 2000 election.
The
mortal aversion of Democratic Party leaders to
progressive reform suggests that they prize their
own control of the party even above winning
elections, the rational purpose of any political
party. Their
ugly smear campaign against Keith Ellison,
the progressive candidate for Democratic National
Committee (DNC) chair, mirrored
the DNC’s corrupt campaign to undermine Sen.
Bernie Sanders in
the Democratic primaries and the DLC cabal’s
bare-knuckles response to progressive challengers
for the past 30 years.
For
the DLC Democrats to snatch defeat from the jaws of
the long-term victory that the country’s shifting
demographics seem to guarantee their party requires
a
truly historic level of corruption.
Their
unshakable commitment to fight tooth and nail for
the interests of their wealthy campaign contributors
over those of poorer, younger and
darker-skinned voters in every election, every
national, state and local party committee and on
every issue, even as they pretend they are doing the
exact opposite, could only be a viable political
strategy in Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland. In the real
world, their demonstrated disdain for the people
from whose votes they derive their power is a
strategy for political suicide.
Different Kind of Politics
These corrupt party leaders and their corporate
media cheerleaders dare not remind us that Bernie
Sanders’s candidacy for president inspired more
enthusiasm and drew bigger crowds than Trump’s or
Clinton’s, despite one
eightieth of the early media promotion
lavished on Trump by some corporate media and the
fact that almost the entire Democratic Party
establishment
lined up against him.
For
decades, DLC Democrats have run on vague messages
about “values” to avoid being cornered into
explicit progressive policy positions that might
alienate their wealthy patrons. Sanders was greeted
with open arms by
younger voters
ready for a renaissance of real politics based
on actual policies that solve real problems, like
universal healthcare, free college tuition,
progressive taxation to pay for it all and a
more cautious approach to U.S.-backed “regime
change” in other countries.
By
contrast, an
analysis of campaign messaging
by the Wesleyan Media Project found that “Clinton’s
message was devoid of policy discussions”
when compared to other recent presidential
campaigns, including even Trump’s, and that this was
a critical factor in her failure.
According to opinion polls, Bernie Sanders may now
be
the most popular politician in America. Polls
consistently showed that
Sanders was likely to beat Trump
in the general election if the Democratic Party
allowed him to get that far, but the DNC
fundraising machine pulled out
every trick in the book
to make sure that didn’t happen. If truth be told,
Sanders’s success was probably a more accurate
reflection of the evolving political views of a
majority of Americans in 2016 than the
billion-dollar auction of the presidency between the
Game Show King and
the
Queen of Chaos.
These
two camps represent factions of the powerful
interests that have controlled American politics for
decades, from the military-industrial complex and
the CIA to the dirty energy and for-profit
“healthcare” industries, to say nothing of the
commercial media industry itself, which covered this
election
all the way to the bank
and for whom the show must go on and on and on … and
on.
Lies of Both Sides.
Like the
people of East Germany in the 1980s, we now face the
challenge of a society in crisis, compounded by a
treacherous media environment, with not just one,
but two competing camps presenting us with false,
self-serving interpretations of the
multi-faceted crisis their corruption has spawned.
While they compete for our trust, they share a
common interest in insisting that one of the two
mythological worldviews they have staked out must be
right.
But as
Cornel West recently told the students at my local
high school in Miami in a Black History Month
speech, “You don’t have to choose between the lies
on one side and the lies on the other side.” So
the question becomes where to turn for something
other than lies, and how to recognize the truth when
we stumble across it.
Break
Free From The Matrix
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The
paradox of our Internet age is that we nearly all
have access to a wider range of media than ever
before, yet we are still exposed and susceptible to
corporate, partisan and ideological propaganda. In
theory, we no longer have to be victims of
for-profit media whose
business models
prioritize their profits over their duty to inform
the public. But in reality, we do not form our views
of the world as independently as we think we do.
This is
easier to grasp in the case of commercial
advertising than in the arena of political or
ideological indoctrination. There is a well-known
dictum in the business world that goes, “I know that
half the money we spend on advertising is wasted. I
just don’t know which half.” The flip-side of this
is that the other half is not wasted.
So
the advertising industry in the United States spends
$220 billion per year,
$700 for each man, woman and child in the country,
to sell us products and services. And yet we
still like to think that we make independent,
rational choices about our spending, based
on enlightened self-interest and cultivated tastes,
not on the work of copywriters churning out pitches,
images and jingles in ad agency cubicles.
One
of the by-products of the mass monetization of
American politics since the 1980s is that
politics has become a
profitable new arena
for advertising, marketing and public relations
firms. Its practitioners apply the techniques and
experience they’ve developed in other areas to the
world of politics, helping politicians and parties
to convert the money they raise from wealthy
campaign contributors into votes, and ultimately
into power over all our lives. So we should be just
as wary of political marketing and advertising as of
the commercial variety. We should also be
more humble in recognizing our own vulnerability to
these profitable forms of persuasion and deception.
My copy of
Alice in Wonderland has a quotation from
James Joyce in the front of the book: “Wipe your
glasses with what you know.” What we know is often
our best protection against being misled by
advertisers, politicians and pundits, if we will
only remember what we know and trust it over the
misinformation that surrounds us.
“Wiping our
glasses with what we know” can provide a reality
check on the current Russophobia campaign. We know
very well that the U.S. and Russia possess the bulk
of the world’s nuclear weapons, and that war between
our two countries would likely mean
death for ourselves and our families and the end of
life as we know it for people everywhere.
We
also know that
it is our country and its allies,
not Russia, that have launched invasions,
military occupations, bombing campaigns, coups and
drone wars against at least ten countries in the
past 20 years, while Russia only recently become
engaged in two of these conflict zones when its
interests were directly impacted by our actions.
So we can
see that the greatest danger in this relationship is
not the threat of some unprovoked and unprecedented
act of Russian aggression. The more real and serious
danger is that a confrontation with Russia over one
of the hot spots we have ignited will lead to an
escalation of tensions in which a mistake, a
misunderstanding, a miscalculation, a bluff called,
a “red line” crossed or some other kind of failed
brinksmanship will trigger a war that will escalate
to the use of nuclear weapons, and from there to
Armageddon.
Even
with the lines of communication set up after the
Cuban missile crisis and the stabilization of the
Cold War balance of terror by the principle of
Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD), we now know that
we came very close to Armageddon many times,
including simply by accident.
Instead of
being corralled by either side in the “Russia did
it” campaign, we should be urging our leaders to sit
down and talk seriously with Russia’s leaders, to
stop taking dangerous actions that exacerbate
tensions, uncertainties and mutual isolation, and to
return to serious negotiations to leave our children
and grandchildren a peaceful world, free of nuclear
weapons, where these dangers will no longer threaten
them.
Amid
lies and distortions on all sides, the corruption of
politics and media by commercial interests and the
billion dollars per year
our government spends directly on public relations
and propaganda, James Joyce’s advice can still serve
us well. Make sure to wipe your glasses with what
you know as you read or watch “news” from any source
or listen to politicians of any party, and we may
just find a way out of this rabbit hole before the
roof crashes in on us.
Nicolas J S Davies is the author of
Blood On Our Hands: the American
Invasion and Destruction of Iraq. He also
wrote the chapters on “Obama at War” in Grading the
44th President: a Report Card on Barack Obama’s
First Term as a Progressive Leader.
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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