The New American Order
1% Elections, The Privatization of the
State, a Fourth Branch of Government, and
the Demobilization of "We the People"
By Tom Engelhardt
March 19, 2015 "ICH"
- "Tom
Dispatch" - Have
you ever undertaken some task you felt less
than qualified for, but knew that someone
needed to do? Consider this piece my version
of that, and let me put what I do understand
about it in a nutshell: based on
developments in our post-9/11 world, we
could be watching the birth of a new
American political system and way of
governing for which, as yet, we have no
name.
And here’s what I find
strange: the evidence of this, however
inchoate, is all around us and yet it’s as
if we can’t bear to take it in or make sense
of it or even say that it might be so.
Let me make my case,
however minimally, based on five areas in
which at least the faint outlines of that
new system seem to be emerging: political
campaigns and elections; the privatization
of Washington through the marriage of the
corporation and the state; the
de-legitimization of our traditional system
of governance; the empowerment of the
national security state as an untouchable
fourth branch of government; and the
demobilization of "we the people."
Whatever this may add up
to, it seems to be based, at least in part,
on the increasing concentration of wealth
and power in a new plutocratic class and in
that ever-expanding national security state.
Certainly, something out of the ordinary is
underway, and yet its birth pangs, while
widely reported, are generally categorized
as aspects of an exceedingly familiar
American system somewhat in disarray.
1. 1% Elections
Check out the news about
the 2016 presidential election and you’ll
quickly feel a sense of been-there,
done-that. As a start, the two names most
associated with it, Bush and Clinton,
couldn’t be more familiar, highlighting as
they do the curiously dynastic quality of
recent presidential contests. (If a Bush or
Clinton should win in 2016 and again in
2020, a member of one of those families will
have controlled the presidency for
28 of the last 36 years.)
Take, for instance, “Why
2016 Is Likely to Become a Close Race,” a
recent piece Nate Cohn wrote for my
hometown paper. A noted election
statistician, Cohn points out that, despite
Hillary Clinton’s historically staggering
lead in Democratic primary polls (and lack
of serious challengers), she could lose the
general election. He bases this on what we
know about her polling popularity from the
Monica Lewinsky moment of the 1990s to the
present. Cohn assures readers that Hillary
will not “be a Democratic Eisenhower, a
popular, senior statesperson who cruises to
an easy victory.” It’s the sort of
comparison that offers a certain implicit
reassurance about the near future. (No,
Virginia, we haven’t left the world of
politics in which former general and
president Dwight D. Eisenhower can still be
a touchstone.)
Cohn may be right when it
comes to Hillary’s electability, but this is
not Dwight D. Eisenhower’s or even Al Gore’s
America. If you want a measure of that,
consider this year’s primaries. I mean, of
course, the 2015 ones. Once upon a time, the
campaign season started with candidates
flocking to Iowa and New Hampshire early in
the election year to establish their bona
fides among party voters. These days,
however, those are already late primaries.
The early primaries, the
ones that count, take place among a small
group of millionaires and
billionaires, a new caste flush with
cash who will personally, or through complex
networks of funders, pour multi-millions of
dollars into the campaigns of candidates of
their choice. So the early primaries --
this year mainly a Republican affair -- are
taking place in resort spots like Las Vegas,
Rancho Mirage, California, and Sea Island,
Georgia, as has been
widely reported. These “contests”
involve groveling politicians appearing at
the beck and call of the rich and powerful,
and so reflect our new 1% electoral system.
(The main pro-Hillary super PAC, for
instance, is aiming for a
kitty of $500 million heading into 2016,
while the Koch brothers network has already
promised to drop
almost $1 billion into the coming
campaign season, doubling their efforts in
the last presidential election year.)
Ever since the Supreme
Court opened up the ultimate floodgates with
its 2010
Citizens United decision, each
subsequent election has seen record-breaking
amounts of money donated and spent. The 2012
presidential campaign was the first
$2 billion election; campaign 2016 is
expected to hit the $5 billion mark
without breaking a sweat. By comparison,
according to Burton Abrams and Russell
Settle in their study, “The Effect of
Broadcasting on Political Campaign
Spending,” Republicans and Democrats spent
just under $13 million combined in 1956 when
Eisenhower won his second term.
In the meantime, it’s
still true that the 2016 primaries will
involve actual voters, as will the election
that follows. The previous election season,
the midterms of 2014, cost
almost $4 billion, a record despite the
number of small donors
continuing to drop. It also represented
the
lowest midterm voter turnout since World
War II. (See: demobilization of the public,
below -- and add in the demobilization of
the Democrats as a real party, the breaking
of organized labor, the fragmenting of the
Republican Party, and the return of
voter suppression laws visibly meant to
limit the franchise.) It hardly matters just
what the flood of new money does in such
elections, when you can feel the
weight of inequality bearing down on the
whole process in a way that is pushing us
somewhere new.
2. The
Privatization of the State (or the U.S. as a
Prospective Third-World Nation)
In the recent coverage of
the Hillary Clinton email flap, you can find
endless references to the
Clintons of yore in wink-wink,
you-know-how-they-are-style
reporting; and yes, she did delete a lot of
emails; and yes, it’s an election year
coming and, as everyone points out, the
Republicans are going to do their best to
keep the email issue alive until hell
freezes over, etc., etc. Again, the
coverage, while eyeball gluing, is in a
you’ve-seen-it-all-before,
you’ll-see-it-all-again-mode.
However, you haven’t seen
it all before. The most striking aspect of
this little brouhaha lies in what’s most
obvious but least highlighted. An American
secretary of state chose to set up her own
private, safeguarded email system for doing
government work; that is, she chose to
privatize her communications. If this were
Cairo, it might not warrant a second
thought. But it didn’t happen in some
third-world state. It was the act of a key
official of the planet’s reigning (or
thrashing) superpower, which -- even if it
wasn’t the first time such a thing had
ever occurred -- should be taken as a tiny
symptom of something that couldn’t be larger
or, in the long stretch of history, newer:
the ongoing privatization of the American
state, or at least the national security
part of it.
Though the marriage of the
state and the corporation has a pre-history,
the full-scale arrival of the
warrior corporation only occurred after
9/11. Someday, that will undoubtedly be
seen as a seminal moment in the formation of
whatever may be coming in this country.
Only 13 years later, there is no part of the
war state that has not experienced major
forms of privatization. The U.S. military
could no longer go to war without its crony
corporations
doing KP and guard duty, delivering the
mail, building the bases, and being involved
in just about all of its activities,
including
training the militaries of foreign
allies and even fighting. Such warrior
corporations are now involved in every
aspect of the national security state,
including
torture,
drone strikes, and -- to the tune of
hundreds of thousands of contract
employees like Edward Snowden --
intelligence gathering and spying. You name
it and, in these years, it’s been at least
partly privatized.
All you have to do is read
reporter James Risen’s recent book,
Pay Any Price, on how the
global war on terror was fought in
Washington, and you know that privatization
has brought something else with it:
corruption, scams, and the gaming of the
system for profits of a sort that might
normally be associated with a typical
third-world kleptocracy. And all of this, a
new world being born, was reflected in a
tiny way in Hillary Clinton’s very personal
decision about her emails.
Though it’s a subject I
know so much less about, this kind of
privatization (and the corruption that goes
with it) is undoubtedly underway in the
non-war-making, non-security-projecting part
of the American state as well.
3. The
De-legitimization of Congress and the
Presidency
On a third front, American
“confidence” in the three classic
check-and-balance branches of government, as
measured by polling outfits, continues to
fall. In 2014, Americans
expressing a “great deal of confidence”
in the Supreme Court hit a new low of 23%;
in the presidency, it was 11%, and in
Congress a bottom-scraping 5%. (The
military, on the other hand, registers at
50%.) The figures for “hardly any
confidence at all” are respectively 20%,
44%, and more than 50%. All are in or near
record-breaking territory for the last four
decades.
It seems fair to say that
in recent years Congress has been engaged in
a process of delegitimizing itself. Where
that body once had the genuine power to
declare war, for example, it is now
“debating” in a
desultory fashion an “authorization” for
a war against the Islamic State in Syria,
Iraq, and possibly elsewhere that has
already been underway for eight months and
whose course, it seems, will be essentially
unaltered, whether Congress authorizes it or
not.
What would President Harry
Truman, who once famously ran a presidential
campaign against a “do-nothing”
Congress, have to say about a body that
truly can do just about nothing? Or rather,
to give the Republican war hawks in that new
Congress their due, not quite nothing. They
are proving capable of acting effectively to
delegitimize the presidency as well. House
Majority Leader John Boehner’s invitation to
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
undercut the president's Iranian nuclear
negotiations and the
letter signed by 47 Republican senators
and directed to the Iranian ayatollahs are
striking examples of this. They are visibly
meant to tear down an “imperial presidency”
that Republicans gloried in not so long ago.
The radical nature of that
letter, not as an act of state but of its
de-legitimization, was noted even in Iran,
where fundamentalist Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei
proclaimed it “a sign of a decline in
political ethics and the destruction of the
American establishment from within.” Here,
however, the letter is either being covered
as a singularly extreme one-off act (“treason!”)
or, as Jon Stewart
did on “The Daily Show,” as part of a
repetitive tit-for-tat between Democrats
and Republicans over who controls foreign
policy. It is, in fact, neither. It
represents part of a growing pattern in
which Congress becomes an ever less
effective body, except in its willingness to
take on and potentially take out the
presidency.
In the twenty-first
century, all that “small government”
Republicans and “big government” Democrats
can agree on is offering essentially
unconditional support to the military and
the national security state. The Republican
Party -- its various factions increasingly
at each other’s throats almost as often as
at those of the Democrats -- seems
reasonably united solely on issues of
war-making and security. As for the
Democrats, an unpopular administration,
facing constant attack by those who loath
President Obama, has kept its footing in
part by allying with and fusing with the
national security state. A president who
came into office rejecting torture and
promoting
sunshine and transparency in government
has, in the course of six-plus years, come
to identify himself almost totally with the
U.S. military, the CIA, the NSA, and the
like. While it has launched an
unprecedented campaign against
whistleblowers and leakers (as well as
sunshine and transparency), the Obama White
House has proved a powerful enabler of, but
also remarkably dependent upon, that
state-within-a-state, a strange fate for
“the imperial presidency.”
4. The Rise of the
National Security State as the Fourth Branch
of Government
One “branch” of government
is, however, visibly on the rise and rapidly
gaining independence from just about any
kind of oversight. Its ability to enact its
wishes with almost no opposition in
Washington is a striking feature of our
moment. But while the symptoms of this
process are regularly reported, the overall
phenomenon -- the creation of a de facto
fourth branch of government -- gets
remarkably little attention. In the war on
terror era, the national security state has
come into its own. Its
growth has been phenomenal. Though it’s
seldom pointed out, it should be considered
remarkable that in this period we gained a
second full-scale “defense department,” the
Department of Homeland Security, and that it
and the Pentagon have become even more
entrenched, each surrounded by its own
growing “complex” of private corporations,
lobbyists, and allied politicians. The
militarization of the country has, in these
years, proceeded apace.
Meanwhile, the duplication
to be found in the U.S. Intelligence
Community with its
17 major agencies and outfits is
staggering. Its growing ability to surveil
and spy on a global scale, including on its
own citizens, puts the totalitarian states
of the twentieth century
to shame. That the various parts of the
national security state can act in just
about any fashion without fear of accountability
in a court of law is by now too obvious to
belabor. As wealth has traveled upwards in
American society in ways not seen since the
first Gilded Age, so taxpayer dollars have
migrated into the national security state in
an almost plutocratic fashion.
New reports regularly
surface about the further activities of
parts of that state. In recent weeks, for
instance, we learned from Jeremy Scahill and
Josh Begley of the Intercept that
the CIA has spent years trying to
break the encryption on Apple iPhones
and iPads; it has, that is, been
aggressively seeking to attack an
all-American corporation (even if
significant parts of its production process
are actually in China). Meanwhile, Devlin
Barrett of the Wall Street Journal
reported that the CIA, an agency barred
from domestic spying operations of any sort,
has been helping the U.S. Marshals Service
(part of the Justice Department) create an
airborne digital dragnet on American cell
phones. Planes flying out of five U.S.
cities carry a form of technology that
"mimics a cellphone tower." This technology,
developed and tested in distant American war
zones and now brought to "the homeland," is
just part of the ongoing militarization of
the country from
its borders to its
police forces. And there’s hardly been
a week since Edward Snowden first released
crucial NSA documents in
June 2013 when such “advances” haven’t
been in the news.
News also regularly
bubbles up about the further expansion,
reorganization, and upgrading of parts of
the intelligence world, the sorts of reports
that have become the barely noticed
background hum of our lives. Recently, for
instance, Director John Brennan
announced a major reorganization of the
CIA meant to
break down the classic separation
between spies and analysts at the Agency,
while creating a new Directorate of Digital
Innovation responsible for, among other
things, cyberwarfare and cyberespionage. At
about the same time,
according to the New York Times,
the Center for Strategic Counterterrorism
Communications, an obscure State Department
agency, was given a new and expansive role
in coordinating “all the existing attempts
at countermessaging [against online
propaganda by terror outfits like the
Islamic State] by much larger federal
departments, including the Pentagon,
Homeland Security and intelligence
agencies.”
This sort of thing is par
for the course in an era in which the
national security state has only grown
stronger, endlessly elaborating,
duplicating, and overlapping the various
parts of its increasingly labyrinthine
structure. And keep in mind that, in a
structure that has
fought hard to keep what it's doing
cloaked in secrecy, there is
so much more that we don’t know. Still,
we should know enough to realize that this
ongoing process reflects something new in
our American world (even if no one cares to
notice).
5. The
Demobilization of the American People
In
The Age of Acquiescence, a new
book about America’s two Gilded Ages, Steve
Fraser asks why it was that, in the
nineteenth century, another period of
plutocratic excesses, concentration of
wealth and inequality, buying of
politicians, and attempts to demobilize the
public, Americans took to the streets with
such determination and in remarkable numbers
over long periods of time to protest their
treatment, and stayed there even when the
brute power of the state was called out
against them. In our own moment, Fraser
wonders, why has the silence of the public
in the face of similar developments been so
striking?
After all, a grim new
American system is arising before our eyes.
Everything we once learned in the civics
textbooks of our childhoods about how our
government works now seems askew, while the
growth of poverty, the flatlining of wages,
the rise of the .01%, the collapse of labor,
and the militarization of society are all
evident.
The process of
demobilizing the public certainly began with
the military. It was initially a response
to the
disruptive and rebellious draftees of
the Vietnam-era. In 1973, at the stroke of
a presidential pen, the citizen’s army was
declared no more, the raising of new
recruits was turned over to advertising
agencies (a preview of the privatization of
the state to come), and the public was sent
home, never again to meddle in military
affairs. Since 2001, that form of
demobilization has been etched in stone and
transformed into a way of life in the
name of the “safety” and “security” of the
public.
Since then, “we the
people” have made ourselves felt in only
three disparate ways: from the left in the
Occupy movement, which, with its slogans
about the 1% and the 99%, put the issue of
growing economic inequality on the map of
American consciousness; from the right, in
the Tea Party movement, a complex expression
of discontent backed and at least
partially funded by right-wing
operatives and billionaires, and aimed at
the de-legitimization of the “nanny state”;
and the recent round of post-Ferguson
protests spurred at least in part by the
militarization of the police in black and
brown communities around the country.
The Birth of a New
System
Otherwise, a moment of
increasing extremity has also been a moment
of -- to use Fraser’s word --
“acquiescence.” Someday, we’ll assumedly
understand far better how this all came to
be. In the meantime, let me be as clear as
I can be about something that seems murky
indeed: this period doesn’t represent a
version, no matter how perverse or extreme,
of politics as usual; nor is the 2016
campaign an election as usual; nor are we
experiencing Washington as usual. Put
together our 1% elections, the privatization
of our government, the de-legitimization of
Congress and the presidency, as well as the
empowerment of the national security state
and the U.S. military, and add in the
demobilization of the American public (in
the name of protecting us from terrorism),
and you have something like a new ballgame.
While significant planning
has been involved in all of this, there may
be no ruling pattern or design. Much of it
may be happening in a purely
seat-of-the-pants fashion. In response,
there has been no urge to officially declare
that something new is afoot, let alone
convene a new constitutional convention.
Still, don’t for a second think that the
American political system isn’t being
rewritten on the run by interested parties
in Congress, our present crop of
billionaires, corporate interests,
lobbyists, the Pentagon, and the officials
of the national security state.
Out of the chaos of this
prolonged moment and inside the shell of the
old system, a new culture, a new kind of
politics, a new kind of governance is being
born right before our eyes. Call it what you
want. But call it something. Stop pretending
it’s not happening.
Tom Engelhardt is a
co-founder of the
American Empire Project and
the author of The United States of Fear
as well as a history of the Cold War,
The End of Victory Culture. He is a
fellow of the Nation Institute and runs
TomDispatch.com. His latest book is
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret
Wars, and a Global Security State in a
Single-Superpower World (Haymarket
Books).
[Note: My
special thanks go to my friend John Cobb,
who talked me through this one. Doing it
would have been inconceivable without him.
Tom]
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Copyright 2015 Tom
Engelhardt