By Chris Hedges
March 03, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Aristotle, Niccolò
Machiavelli, Alexis de Tocqueville, Adam Smith and
Karl Marx grounded their philosophies in the
understanding that there is a natural antagonism
between the rich and the rest of us. The interests
of the rich are not our interests. The truths of the
rich are not our truths. The lives of the rich are
not our lives. Great wealth not only breeds contempt
for those who do not have it but it empowers
oligarchs to pay armies of lawyers, publicists,
politicians, judges, academics and journalists to
censure and control public debate and stifle
dissent.
Neoliberalism, deindustrialization, the
destruction of labor unions, slashing and even
eliminating the taxes of the rich and corporations,
free trade, globalization, the surveillance state,
endless war and austerity — the ideologies or tools
used by the oligarchs to further their own interests
— are presented to the public as natural law, the
mechanisms for social and economic progress, even as
the oligarchs dynamite the foundations of a liberal
democracy and exacerbate a climate crisis that
threatens to extinguish human life.
The oligarchs are happy to talk about race. They
are happy to talk about sexual identity and gender.
They are happy to talk about patriotism. They are
happy to talk about religion. They are happy to talk
about immigration. They are happy to talk about
abortion. They are happy to talk about gun control.
They are happy to talk about cultural degeneracy or
cultural freedom. They are not happy to talk about
class. Race, gender, religion, abortion,
immigration, gun control, culture and patriotism are
issues used to divide the public, to turn neighbor
against neighbor, to fuel virulent hatreds and
antagonisms. The culture wars give the oligarchs,
both Democrats and Republicans, the cover to
continue the pillage. There are few substantial
differences between the two ruling political parties
in the United States. This is why oligarchs like
Donald Trump and Michael Bloomberg can switch
effortlessly from one party to the other. Once
oligarchs seize power, Aristotle wrote, a society
must either accept tyranny or choose revolution.
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The United States stood on the cusp
of revolution — a fact President
Franklin Roosevelt acknowledged in his
private correspondence — amid the
breakdown of capitalism in the 1930s.
Roosevelt responded by aggressively
curbing the power of the oligarchs. The
federal government dealt with massive
unemployment by creating 12 million jobs
through the Works Progress
Administration (WPA), making the
government the largest employer in the
country. It legalized unions, many of
which had been outlawed, and through the
National Labor Relations Act empowered
organizing. It approved banking
regulations, including the Emergency
Banking Act, the Banking Act and the
Securities Act, all in 1933, to prevent
another stock market crash. The Federal
Emergency Relief Administration provided
the equivalent in today’s money of $9.88
billion for relief operations in cities
and states. The Democratic president
heavily taxed the rich and corporations.
(The Republican administration of Dwight
Eisenhower in the 1950s was still taxing
the highest earners at 91%.) Roosevelt’s
administration instituted programs such
as Social Security and a public pension
program. It provided financial
assistance to tenant farmers and migrant
workers. It funded arts and culture. It
created the United States Housing
Authority and instituted the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938, which established
the minimum wage and set a limit on
mandatory work hours. This heavy
government intervention lifted the
country out of the Great Depression. It
also made Roosevelt, who was elected to
an unprecedented fourth term, and the
Democratic Party wildly popular among
working and middle-class families. The
Democratic Party, should it resurrect
such policies, would win every election
in a landslide.
But the New Deal was the bête noire of the
oligarchs. They began to undo Roosevelt’s New Deal
even before World War II broke out at the end of
1941. They gradually dismantled the regulations and
programs that had not only saved capitalism but
arguably democracy itself. We now live in an
oligarchic state. The oligarchs control politics,
the economy, culture, education and the press.
Donald Trump may be a narcissist and a con artist,
but he savages the oligarchic elite in his
long-winded speeches to the delight of his crowds.
He, like Bernie Sanders, speaks about the forbidden
topic — class. But Trump, though an embarrassment to
the oligarchs, does not, like Sanders, pose a
genuine threat to them. Trump will, like all
demagogues, incite violence against the vulnerable,
widen the cultural and social divides and
consolidate tyranny, but he will leave the rich
alone. It is Sanders whom the oligarchs fear and
hate.
The Democratic Party elites will use any
mechanism, no matter how nefarious and undemocratic,
to prevent Sanders from obtaining the nomination.
The
New York Times interviewed 93 of the more than
700 superdelegates, appointed by the party and
permitted to vote in the second round if no
candidate receives the required 1,991 delegates to
win in the first round. Most of those interviewed
said they would seek to prevent Sanders from being
the nominee if he did not have a majority of
delegates in the first count, even if it required
drafting someone who did not run in the primaries —
Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio was mentioned — and
even if it led to Sanders’ supporters abandoning the
party in disgust. If Sanders fails to obtain 1,991
delegates before the convention, which appears
likely, it seems nearly certain he will be blocked
by the party from becoming the Democratic candidate.
The damage done to the Democratic Party, if this
happens, will be catastrophic. It will also all but
ensure that Trump wins a second term.
As I wrote in
my Feb. 17 column, “The New Rules of the Games,”
“Sanders’ democratic socialism is essentially that
of a New Deal Democrat. His political views would be
part of the mainstream in France or Germany, where
democratic socialism is an accepted part of the
political landscape and is routinely challenged as
too accommodationist by communists and radical
socialists. Sanders calls for an end to our foreign
wars, a reduction of the military budget, for
‘Medicare for All,’ abolishing the death penalty,
eliminating mandatory minimum sentences and private
prisons, a return of
Glass-Steagall, raising taxes on the wealthy,
increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour,
canceling student debt, eliminating the Electoral
College, banning fracking and breaking up
agribusinesses. This does not qualify as a
revolutionary agenda.”
“Sanders, unlike many more radical socialists,
does not propose nationalizing the banks and the
fossil fuel and arms industries,” I continued. “He
does not call for the criminal prosecution of the
financial elites who trashed the global economy or
the politicians and generals who lied to launch
preemptive wars, defined under international law as
criminal wars of aggression, which have devastated
much of the Middle East, resulted in hundreds of
thousands of dead and millions of refugees and
displaced people, and cost the nation between $5
trillion and $7 trillion. He does not call for
worker ownership of factories and businesses. He
does not promise to halt the government’s wholesale
surveillance of the public. He does not intend to
punish corporations that have moved manufacturing
overseas. Most importantly, he believes, as I do
not, that the political system, including the
Democratic Party, can be reformed from within. He
does not support sustained mass civil disobedience
to bring the system down, the only hope we have of
halting the climate emergency that threatens to doom
the human race. On the political spectrum, he is, at
best, an enlightened moderate.”
The Democratic Party leaders are acutely aware
that in a functioning democracy, one where the rich
do not buy elections and send lobbyists to
Washington and state capitals to write laws and
legislation, one where the danger of oligarchic rule
is understood and part of the national debate, they
would be out of a job.
The Democrats, like the Republicans, serve the
interests of the pharmaceutical and insurance
industries. The Democrats, like the Republicans,
serve the interests of the defense contractors. The
Democrats, like the Republicans, serve the interests
of the fossil fuel industry. The Democrats, along
with the Republicans, authorized $738 billion for
our bloated military in fiscal 2020. The Democrats,
like the Republicans, do not oppose the endless wars
in the Middle East. The Democrats, like the
Republicans, took from us our civil liberties,
including the right to privacy, freedom from
wholesale government surveillance, and due process.
The Democrats, like the Republicans, legalized
unlimited funding from the rich and corporations to
transform our electoral process into a system of
legalized bribery. The Democrats, like the
Republicans, militarized our police and built a
system of mass incarceration that has 25% of the
world’s prisoners, although the United States has
only 5% of the world’s population. The Democrats,
like the Republicans, are the political face of the
oligarchy.
The leaders of the Democratic Party — the
Clintons, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer,
Tom Perez — would rather implode the party and
the democratic state than surrender their positions
of privilege. The Democratic Party is not a bulwark
against despotism. It is the guarantor of despotism.
It is a full partner in the class project. Its lies,
deceit, betrayal of working men and women and
empowering of corporate pillage made a demagogue
like Trump possible. Any threat to the class
project, even the tepid one that would be offered by
Sanders as the party’s nominee, will see the
Democratic elites unite with the Republicans to keep
Trump in power.
What will we do if the oligarchs in the
Democratic Party once again steal the nomination
from Sanders? Will we finally abandon a system that
has always been gamed against us? Will we turn on
the oligarchic state to build parallel, popular
institutions to protect ourselves and to pit power
against power? Will we organize unions, third
parties and militant movements that speak in the
language of class warfare? Will we form community
development organizations that provide local
currencies, public banks and food cooperatives? Will
we carry out strikes and sustained civil
disobedience to wrest power back from the oligarchs
to save ourselves and our planet?
In 2016 I did not believe that the Democratic
elites would permit Sanders to be the nominee and
feared, correctly, they would use him after the
convention to herd his followers into the voting
booths for Hillary Clinton. I do not believe this
animus against Sanders has changed in 2020. The
theft this time may be more naked, and for this
reason more revealing of the forces involved. If all
this plays out as I expect and if those on the left
continue to put their faith and energy into the
Democratic Party, they are not simply willfully
naive but complicit in their own enslavement. No
successful political movement will be built within
the embrace of the Democratic Party, nor will such a
movement be built in one election cycle. The
struggle to end oligarchic rule will be hard and
bitter. It will take time. It will require
self-sacrifice, including sustained protest and
going to jail. It will be rooted in class warfare.
The oligarchs will stop at nothing to crush it.
Open, nonviolent revolt against the oligarchic state
is our only hope. Oligarchic rule must be destroyed.
If we fail, our democracy, and finally our species,
will become extinct.
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.
https://www.truthdig.com/author/chris_hedges/
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