Thoughts on the American Empire and Its Decline
By Michael S. Rozeff
October 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - The American Empire is
deteriorating. It’s been going downhill for decades. The descent is
likely to continue, alleviated irregularly by policies that retard
the decline or even reverse it for a time.
The general pattern set by declines of previous
empires is occurring in this country. There have been at least 215
empires in the last 5,000 years. They have all declined and fallen,
as will the American Empire.
The IDEA that there is an American Empire is not
widely recognized by the general public. It’s not taught in the
public school’s history books. Scholars still debate it. American
leaders spread other myths like exceptionalism that obscure the
concept and prevent the public from realizing it.
If the public doesn’t grasp that there is an
American Empire, they cannot understand the idea that this empire is
declining and headed for greater and greater failure.
The difficulty in understanding both empires and
their decline is their complexity and variation within type. Several
factors are present operating concurrently, and this obscures
causation. No two cases are exactly the same.
An article by J.R. Fears
suggests the theory of Herodotus. It’s a starting point. He endorses
the theory of Herodotus. The pertinent passage is this:
“Herodotus believed that there were invariable
laws to the rise and fall of empires. Empires rose and fell—as they
still do today—because of individual decisions made by individual
leaders.
“The greatest mistake made by those in power, like
Darius, was the sin of hybris. That Greek word means ‘outrageous
arrogance.’ Hybris (and that is the way it should be transliterated)
is the outrageous arrogance that marks the abuse of power. Only
those invested with enormous power can commit the sin of hybris.
Hybris is the imposition of your will, at all costs. The Greeks
believed that hybris was preceded by ate or moral blindness
that makes you believe that you can do anything you want to and
there will be no consequences from either Gods or men. It was this
hybris that led Darius to undertake a preemptive war against Athens.
It was his moral blindness that believed he would never know defeat.
He ignored all the warnings that the Gods sent him because he felt
so secure in his power.”
He then asserts that this factor has been
operating in America since the fall of the USSR in 1990.
This is a helpful theory. It focuses on the
empire’s leadership and their decisions. It examines why they make
erroneous decisions that undermine the empire: abuse of power,
arrogance (hybris or hubris), attempts to impose one’s will no
matter what the costs are, and a moral blindness underlying the
desire to dominate and impose one’s system. The hybris and belief in
one’s own superiority and rightness lead the leaders to ignore all
warnings and evidence to the contrary.
There is a necessary condition for the empire to
be vulnerable to decline, which Fears pinpoints: “Only those
invested with enormous power can commit the sin of hybris.” The
empire cannot decline and fall unless the political system has
already concentrated enormous power at its apex, in just a few men
or even one man. Misuse of power can’t occur without the power being
present. This is a fault of the American system of government. The
checks and balances have failed. The check provided by the American
public and electorate has failed. Power is concentrated at the top.
This concentration of power is a necessary
condition for failure. Is it sufficient? Does the very concentration
of power induce the hybris? Does that concentration of power attract
the most arrogant candidates as prospective leaders? There is an
excellent chance that it does, in which case the system selects the
very men and women most likely to cause its downfall.
Why does the concentration of power occur? This is
not hard to understand (see
here and
here). It is inherent in the political dynamics of any
government except self-government that has continuous
accountability.
Why does moral blindness occur? Why do men think
themselves to be gods? The seed of this failing is always present in
human beings. Why does it take root and grow? Does the concentration
of power itself enhance the corruption as Lord Acton thought?
Perhaps so. But I suspect that there is more to it. When the empire
rises and its political power increases, there is an accompanying
alteration in how religion and philosophy are thought of. Power and
domination exercised by mortals come to be greatly respected, feared
and even venerated. Religion and philosophy are deformed or
newly-invented to suit the empire and its striving, and this feeds
back to encourage and support moral blindness in which men and the
empire replace gods.
This process permeates society, which is being
weakened in any event by the undue exercises of power from the
political center. Consequently, a deterioration in morals sets in
that is driven both by the perverse economic incentives caused by
the empire’s power being applied perversely and by
religious-philosophical concepts that in one way or another
rationalize and support the empire.
There is yet more to the story of an empire’s
decline and fall.
The knowledge of truth and the desire for truth
are casualties of the processes of power growth, power concentration
and power misuse. The competition for power sees to that. This
competition ignites corruption that permeates the system. Rivalries
come to the fore. Sectarian proponents routinely lie, mislead, twist
the truth and propagandize. Independent sources of truth are bought
off and become shills. Truth is suppressed and distorted. Confusion
rises.
Growth in power of the empire accompanies more
legalities and more attempts at controlling matters that are best
left alone and uncontrolled. Consequently, the enormous powers of
the governing bodies of the empire can no longer be managed
rationally by the central leaders. Even the actual administration of
these powers by underlings and bureaus cannot be known or managed by
those at the top.
Given the complexity and the overly broad scope of
government, leaders necessarily are prone to make mistaken
decisions. The distortion and/or absence of truth has an independent
negative effect on decision-making. Leaders even come to believe
their own fabrications.
Some leaders will appear to be and actually be
rash as they attempt to cut through the fog. Others will appear to
be and actually be indecisive, wavering, inconsistent and dithering.
Some candidates for the leadership will offer extreme remedies as
solutions to control what are processes out of control. Others will
offer simple-minded remedies that betray their ignorance of what’s
actually going wrong and why it’s going wrong. Yet others will
counsel war and more war or else demand even greater powers.
America today is subject to these processes of
decline. They are irreversible. They are built into the system.