The Politicians Really Love Us and Here's Why
By Sheldon Richman
October 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - U.S. politicians
across the spectrum -- including nonpolitician politicians like
Donald B.S. Trump, Doctorben Carson, and Carly H.P. Fiorina --
insist they love the American people.
Of course they love us: they need us. What
would they do -- what could they do -- without us?
Think what the American empire would be if we refused to cooperate.
I use empire in its broadest sense to include
domestic as well as foreign domination. The empire needs
functionaries and soldiers and workers and entrepreneurs and
intellectuals to keep the machinery running smoothly. It needs
wealth. We, after all, are the geese that lay the golden eggs, and
the politicians -- no matter what else they may be -- are not
stupid. They know better than to alienate or kill (too many of) the
geese.
Our rulers also know better than to destroy the systemic incentives
for the production of wealth. Admittedly, this has them treading
nervously along a tightrope. They need to maximize wealth extraction
without discouraging us from producing more than subsistence. As
Jean-Baptiste Colbert, minister of finance under France's King Louis
XIV, understood, "The art of taxation consists in so plucking the
goose as to obtain the largest amount of feathers with the least
possible amount of hissing." (That apparently makes him an early
supply-sider.)
If enough of us got it into our heads that we were mere means to the
politicians' (and their "private"-sector cronies') imperial ends, we
might rise up, or sit down, and that would be it. We outnumber them,
don't we? In the final analysis, don't we hold ourselves in bondage?
(See my article
"Subjugating
Ourselves" on Étienne de La Boétie and his
The
Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude.)
The competition between conservatives and progressives is actually
just a contest over who has the upper hand. But we must not let this
contest deceive us. Neither side wants to see the system junked and
the people liberated from its grasp. Neither would want to defeat
the other by toppling the machinery of exploitation. The two sides
have a simple difference of opinion over who should ultimately call
the shots and who should occupy the junior position. Aside from
that, they are happily united in their program of goose-plucking so
that they may pursue their larger aims of wealth and power. (We
should take care not to overemphasize the former at the expense of
the latter. Human beings live not by bread alone.)
You can find confirmation of this thesis in the U.S. government's
conduct on the world stage. The partisan debate over foreign policy
is between those who support imperialism and those who support
imperialism. With rare honorable exceptions, conservatives (not all
of them neoconservatives) fault Barack Obama for "leading from
behind" and even retreating from global battlefield, as though he
were some kind of pacifist. How absurd. This is the guy whose policy
of murder-by-drone makes George W. Bush almost look like Robert
Taft. This is the guy who bombed Libya into regime change, who backs
a military dictatorship in Egypt, who facilitates the Saudis'
barbaric war against the Yemenis (aiding al-Qaeda), who supports the
Israeli regime to the hilt at the expense of the long-suffering
Palestinians, who conducts bombing raids in Iraq and Syria, and who
threatens a war of aggression against Iran despite the nuclear deal.
And let's not forget that his neocon-led State Department coup in
Ukraine, which consciously provoked the Russians so that the
administration could step up its ludicrous but useful demonization
of Vladimir Putin, as though he were a threat to Americans. (The
Nobel Peace Prize-winner further promotes peace by staging war games
at Russia's doorstep with recently inducted NATO members that used
to be in the Soviet orbit.)
To take one example, what interest do Americans have in who rules
Syria? And even if they had an interest, how could that justify a
policy which wittingly or unwittingly assists gangs -- the Islamic
State and al-Qaeda affiliates -- that force feed their brand of
religion and behead their prisoners? (The rise of a radical
caliphate as a result of U.S. policy was anticipated by the
Defense Information Agency.)
What's that you say? Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is a nasty
guy? But so are the guys trying to overthrow him, and between the
two poisonous sides, Syria's Christians, other minority sects, and
even many Sunnis prefer Assad. (The Russians seem to understand this
-- but then they are not obsessed with Syria's ally Iran.)
And speaking of nasty rulers, what about those who run Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and the other Gulf states, Jordan, Iraq, and Israel -- not to
mention a few dozen other American allies?
What's that you say? The Islamic State is Assad's fault? Right.
That's the official line of the war party -- which includes the
neoconservatives, the overlapping Jewish/Israel Lobby, and the
"humanitarian interventionists" -- but it is sheer nonsense. The
Islamic State grew out of al-Qaeda in Iraq, which did not exist
before George W. Bush invaded Iraq and overthrew secular
nasty guy (and former ally) Saddam Hussein, upsetting the balance
(however unpleasantly procured) between Sunni and Shia. (Just as the
Obama crew overthrew secular nasty guy and former ally
Muammar Gaddafi in Libya, turning that place into a Islamist
free-fire zone.) The Islamists moved into Syria from Iraq after
Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declared that Assad
(formerly a loyal ally-in-torture in the "war on terror") had to go
(by what authority?), aborting conciliatory efforts to head off the
then-emerging civil war. (For documentation of how U.S. policy
helped make Syria the hellhole it is, see Jonathan Marshall's
reporting
here and
here.) Suffice it to say here that the war party's narrative --
faithfully amplified by the supplicant Fourth Estate -- is false and
self-serving. And just when you thought U.S. policy in the Levant
couldn't get worse, it now risks conflict with Russia, that
insignificant nuclear nation.
Syria is just one example. Many more could be described. The point
is that the ruling elite's machinations bear no relationship to the
general interest of Americans and the rest of the world. If the
American people ever wake up to that fact, they will reject the
militarist politicians professions of love -- along, one hopes, with
the state that empowers them.
Sheldon Richman keeps the blog Free
Association and is a senior fellow and chair of the trustees
of the Center
for a Stateless Society. Become a patron today!