By John W. Whitehead
“Never has our future been more
unpredictable, never have we depended so
much on political forces that cannot be
trusted to follow the rules of common sense
and self-interest—forces that look like
sheer insanity, if judged by the standards
of other centuries.” ― Hannah Arendt,
The Origins of Totalitarianism
August 19, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -And so it begins
again, the never-ending, semi-delusional,
train-wreck of an election cycle in which the
American people allow themselves to get worked
up into a frenzy over the misguided belief that
the future of this nation—nay, our very
lives—depends on who we elect as president.
For the next three months, Americans will be
dope-fed billions of dollars’ worth of political
propaganda aimed at keeping them glued to their
television sets and persuading them that 1)
their votes count and 2) electing the right
candidate will fix everything that is wrong with
this country.
Incredible, isn’t it, that in a country of
more than 330 million people, we are given only
two choices for president? How is it that in a
country teeming with creative, intelligent,
productive, responsible, moral people, our vote
too often comes down to pulling the lever for
the lesser of two evils?
The system is rigged, of course.
It is a heavily scripted, tightly
choreographed, star-studded, ratings-driven,
mass-marketed,
costly exercise in how to sell a product—in
this case, a presidential candidate—to dazzled
consumers who will choose image over substance
almost every time.
As author Noam Chomsky rightly
observed, “It is important to bear in mind
that political campaigns are designed by the
same people who sell toothpaste and cars.”
In other words, we’re being sold a
carefully crafted product by a monied elite
who are masters in the art of making the public
believe that they need exactly what is being
sold to them, whether it’s the latest high-tech
gadget, the hottest toy, or the most charismatic
politician.
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This year’s presidential election, much like every other election in recent years, is what historian Daniel Boorstin referred to as a “pseudo-event”: manufactured, contrived, confected and devoid of any intrinsic value save the value of being advertised.
After all, who wants to talk about police
shootings, SWAT team raids, asset forfeiture
schemes, private prisons, school-to-prison
pipelines, overcriminalization, censorship or
any of the other evils that plague our nation
when you can tune into a reality show carefully
calibrated to appeal to the public’s need for
bread and circuses, diversion and entertainment,
and pomp and circumstance.
But make no mistake: Americans only think
they’re choosing the next president.
In truth, however, they’re engaging in the
illusion of participation culminating in the
reassurance ritual of voting. It’s just another
Blue Pill, a manufactured reality conjured
up by the matrix in order to keep the populace
compliant and convinced that their vote counts
and that they still have some influence over the
political process.
It’s all an illusion.
The nation is drowning in debt, crippled by a
slowing economy, overrun by militarized police,
swarming with surveillance, besieged by endless
wars and a military industrial complex intent on
starting new ones, and riddled with corrupt
politicians at every level of government.
All the while, we’re arguing over which
corporate puppet will be given the honor of
stealing our money, invading our privacy,
abusing our trust, undermining our freedoms, and
shackling us with debt and misery for years to
come.
Nothing taking place on Election Day will
alleviate the suffering of the American people.
Unless we do something more than vote, the
government as we have come to know it—corrupt,
bloated and controlled by big-money
corporations, lobbyists and special interest
groups—will remain unchanged. And “we the
people”—overtaxed, overpoliced, overburdened by
big government, underrepresented by those who
should speak for us and blissfully ignorant of
the prison walls closing in on us—will continue
to trudge along a path of misery.
With roughly 22 lobbyists per Congressman,
corporate greed will continue to call the shots
in the nation’s capital,
while our so-called representatives will grow
richer and the people poorer. And elections
will continue to be driven by war chests and
corporate benefactors rather than such values as
honesty, integrity and public service.
Just consider: while billions will be spent
on the elections this year, not a dime of that
money will actually help the average American in
their day-to-day struggles to just get by.
Conveniently, politicians only seem to
remember their constituents in the months
leading up to an election, and yet “we the
people” continue to take the abuse, the neglect,
the corruption and the lies. We make excuses for
the shoddy treatment, we cover up for them when
they cheat on us, and we keep hoping that if we
just stick with them long enough, eventually
they’ll treat us right.
When a country spends
billions of dollars to select what is, for
all intents and purposes, a glorified homecoming
king or queen to occupy the White House, while
tens of millions of its people live in poverty,
nearly
18 million Americans are out of work, and
most of the country and its economy remain in a
state of semi-lockdown due to COVID-19
restrictions, that’s a country whose priorities
are out of step with the needs of its people.
Then again, people get the government they
deserve.
No matter who wins the presidential election
come November, it’s a sure bet that the losers
will be the American people if all we’re
prepared to do is vote.
As political science professor Gene Sharp
notes in starker terms, “Dictators are not in
the business of allowing elections that could
remove them from their thrones.”
To put it another way, the Establishment—the
shadow government and its corporate partners
that really run the show, pull the strings and
dictate the policies, no matter who occupies the
Oval Office—are not going to allow anyone to
take office who will unravel their power
structures. Those who have attempted to do so in
the past have been effectively put out of
commission.
So what is the solution to this blatant
display of imperial elitism disguising itself as
a populist exercise in representative
government?
Stop playing the game. Stop supporting the
system. Stop defending the insanity. Just stop.
Washington thrives on money, so stop giving
them your money. Stop throwing your hard-earned
dollars away on politicians and Super PACs who
view you as nothing more than a means to an end.
There are countless worthy grassroots
organizations and nonprofits working in your
community to address real needs like injustice,
poverty, homelessness, etc. Support them and
you’ll see change you really can believe in in
your own backyard.
Politicians depend on votes, so stop giving
them your vote unless they have a proven track
record of listening to their constituents,
abiding by their wishes and working hard to earn
and keep their trust.
It’s comforting to believe that your vote
matters, but Franklin Delano Roosevelt was
right: “Presidents are selected, not elected.”
Despite what is taught in school and the
propaganda that is peddled by the media, a
presidential election is not a populist election
for a representative. Rather, it’s a gathering
of shareholders to select the next CEO, a fact
reinforced by the nation’s
archaic electoral college system. In other
words, your vote doesn’t elect a
president. Despite the fact that there are 218
million eligible voters in this country
(only half of whom actually vote), it is the
electoral college, made
up of 538 individuals handpicked by the
candidates’ respective parties, that actually
selects the next president.
The only thing you’re accomplishing by taking
part in the “reassurance ritual” of voting is
sustaining the illusion that we have a
democratic republic.
In actuality, we are suffering from what
political scientists Martin Gilens and Benjamin
Page more accurately term an “economic
élite domination” in which the economic
elite (lobbyists, corporations, monied special
interest groups) dominate and dictate national
policy.
No surprise there.
As an in-depth Princeton University study
confirms, democracy has been replaced by
oligarchy, a system of government in which elected
officials represent the interests of the rich
and powerful rather than the average
citizen.
We did it to ourselves.
We said nothing while our elections were
turned into popularity contests populated by
individuals better suited to be talk-show hosts
rather than intelligent, reasoned debates on
issues of domestic and foreign policy by
individuals with solid experience, proven track
records and tested integrity.
We turned our backs on things like wisdom,
sound judgment, morality and truth, shrugging
them off as old-fashioned, only to find
ourselves saddled with
lying politicians incapable of making fair
and impartial decisions.
We let ourselves be persuaded that those
yokels in Washington could do a better job of
running this country than we could. It’s not a
new problem. As former Senator Joseph S. Clark
Jr. acknowledged in a 1955 article titled, “Wanted:
Better Politicians”: “[W]e have too much
mediocrity in the business of running the
government of the country, and it troubles me
that this should be so at a time of such
complexity and crisis… Government by amateurs,
semi-pros, and minor-leaguers will not meet the
challenge of our times. We must realize that it
takes great competence to run a country which,
in spite of itself, has succeeded to world
leadership in a time of deadly peril.”
We indulged our craving for entertainment
news at the expense of our need for balanced
reporting by a news media committed to asking
the hard questions of government officials. The
result, as former congressman Jim Leach points
out, leaves us at a grave disadvantage: “At a
time when in-depth analysis of the issues of the
day has never been more important,
quality journalism has been jeopardized by
financial considerations and undercut by
purveyors of ideology who facilely design news,
like clothes, to appeal to a market segment.”
We bought into the fairytale that politicians
are saviors, capable of fixing what’s wrong with
our communities and our lives, when in fact,
most politicians lead such sheltered lives that
they have no clue about what their constituents
must do to make ends meet. As political
scientists Morris Fiorina and Samuel Abrams
conclude, “In America today, there is a
disconnect between an unrepresentative political
class and the citizenry it purports to represent.
The political process today not only is less
representative than it was a generation ago and
less supported by the citizenry, but the
outcomes of that process are at a minimum no
better.”
We let ourselves be saddled with a two-party
system and fooled into believing that there’s a
difference between the Republicans and
Democrats, when in fact, the two
parties are exactly the same. As one
commentator noted,
both parties support endless war, engage in
out-of-control spending, ignore the citizenry’s
basic rights, have no respect for the rule of
law, are bought and paid for by the corporate
elite, care most about their own power, and have
a long record of expanding government and
shrinking liberty.
Then, when faced with the prospect of voting
for the lesser of two evils, many simply
compromise their principles and overlook the
fact that the lesser of two evils is still
evil.
Perhaps worst of all, we allowed the cynicism
of our age and the cronyism and corruption of
Washington, DC, to discourage us from believing
that there was any hope for the American
experiment in liberty.
Granted, it’s easy to become discouraged
about the state of our nation. We’re drowning
under the weight of too much debt, too many
wars, too much power in the hands of a
centralized government, too many militarized
police, too many laws, too many lobbyists, and
generally too much bad news.
It’s harder to believe that change is
possible, that the system can be reformed, that
politicians can be principled, that courts can
be just, that good can overcome evil, and that
freedom will prevail.
Yet I truly believe that change is possible,
that the system can be reformed, that
politicians can be principled, that courts can
be just, that good can overcome evil, and that
freedom can prevail but it will take each and
every one of us committed to doing the hard work
of citizenship that extends beyond the act of
voting.
A healthy, representative government is hard
work. It takes a citizenry that is informed
about the issues, educated about how the
government operates, and willing to make the
sacrifices necessary to stay involved.
Most of all, it takes a citizenry willing to
do more than grouse and complain.
The powers-that-be want us to believe that
our job as citizens begins and ends on Election
Day. They want us to believe that we have no
right to complain about the state of the nation
unless we’ve cast our vote one way or the other.
They want us to remain divided over politics,
hostile to those with whom we disagree
politically, and intolerant of anyone or
anything whose solutions to what ails this
country differ from our own.
What they don’t want us doing is presenting a
united front in order to reject the pathetic
excuse for government that is being fobbed off
on us.
So where does that leave us?
We’d better stop hanging our hopes on a
political savior to rescue us from the clutches
of an imperial president.
It’s possible that the next president might
be better, but then again, he or she could be
far worse.
Remember, presidential elections merely serve
to maintain the status quo. Once elected
president, that person becomes part of the
dictatorial continuum that is the American
imperial presidency today.
If we are to return to a constitutional
presidency, “we the people” must recalibrate the
balance of power.
The first step is to start locally—in your
own communities, in your schools, at your city
council meetings, in newspaper editorials, at
protests—by pushing back against laws that are
unjust, police departments that overreach,
politicians that don’t listen to their
constituents, and a system of government that
grows more tyrannical by the day.
As I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, the only thing that
will save us now is a concerted, collective
commitment to the Constitution’s principles of
limited government, a system of checks and
balances, and a recognition that they—the
president, Congress, the courts, the military,
the police, the technocrats and plutocrats and
bureaucrats—answer to and are accountable to “we
the people.”
This will mean that Americans will have to
stop letting their personal politics and party
allegiances blind them to government misconduct
and power grabs. It will mean holding all three
branches of government accountable to the
Constitution (i.e., vote them out of office if
they abuse their powers). And it will mean
calling on Congress to put an end to the use of
presidential
executive orders, decrees, memorandums,
proclamations, national security directives and
legislative signing statements as a means of
getting around Congress and the courts.
As historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
concludes:
“I
would argue that what the country needs
today is a little serious disrespect for the
office of the presidency; a refusal to
give any more weight to a President's words
than the intelligence of the utterance, if
spoken by anyone else, would command… If the
nation wants to work its way back to a
constitutional presidency, there is only one
way to begin. That is by showing Presidents
that, when their closest associates place
themselves above the law and the
Constitution, such transgressions will be
not forgiven or forgotten for the sake of
the presidency but exposed and punished for
the sake of the presidency.”
In other words, we’ve got to stop treating
the president like a god and start making both
the office of the president and the occupant
play by the rules of the Constitution.
Constitutional attorney and author John W.
Whitehead is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be
contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.