The Demobilization of the American People and the
Spectacle of Election 2016
By Tom Engelhardt
October 31, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "TomDispatch"
- You may not know it, but you’re living in a futuristic science
fiction novel. And that’s a fact. If you were to read about our
American world in such a novel, you would be amazed by its
strangeness. Since you exist right smack in the middle of it, it
seems like normal life (Donald Trump and Ben Carson aside). But
make no bones about it, so far this has been a bizarre American
century.
Let me start with one of the odder moments we’ve
lived through and give it the attention it’s always deserved. If
you follow my train of thought and the history it leads us into, I
guarantee you that you’ll end up back exactly where we are -- in the
midst of the strangest presidential campaign in our history.
To get a full frontal sense of what that means,
however, let’s return to late September 2001. I’m sure you remember
that moment, just over two weeks after those World Trade Center
towers came down and part of the Pentagon was destroyed, leaving a
jangled secretary of defense instructing his
aides, “Go massive. Sweep it all up. Things related and not.”
I couldn’t resist sticking in that classic Donald
Rumsfeld line, but I leave it to others to deal with Saddam Hussein,
those fictional weapons
of mass destruction, the invasion of Iraq, and everything that’s
happened since, including the establishment of a terror “caliphate”
by a crew of Islamic extremists brought
together in American military prison camps -- all of which you
wouldn’t believe if it were part of a sci-fi novel. The damn thing
would make Planet of the Apeslook like outright realism.
Instead, try to recall the screaming headlines
that
labeled the 9/11 attacks “the Pearl Harbor of the twenty-first
century” or “a new Day of Infamy,” and the attackers “the kamikazes
of the twenty-first century.” Remember the moment when President
George W. Bush, bullhorn in hand, stepped onto the rubble at "Ground
Zero" in New York, draped his arm around a fireman, and
swore payback in the name of the American people, as members of
an impromptu crowd shouted out things like “Go get ‘em, George!”
“I can hear you! I can hear you!” he responded.
“The rest of the world hears you! And the people -- and the people
who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon!”
“USA! USA! USA!” chanted the crowd.
Then, on September 20th,
addressing Congress, Bush added, “Americans have known wars, but
for the past 136 years they have been wars on foreign soil, except
for one Sunday in 1941.” By then, he was already
talking about "our war on terror."
Now, hop ahead to that long-forgotten moment when
he would finally reveal just how a twenty-first-century American
president should rally and mobilize the American people in the name
of the ultimate in collective danger. As CNN put it at the time,
“President Bush... urged Americans to travel, spend, and enjoy
life.” His
actual words were:
“And one of the great goals of this nation's
war is to restore public confidence in the airline industry and
to tell the traveling public, get on board, do your business
around the country, fly and enjoy America's great destination
spots. Go down to Disney World in Florida, take your families
and enjoy life the way we want it to be enjoyed.”
So we went to war in Afghanistan and later Iraq to
rebuild faith in flying. Though that got little attention at the
time, tell me it isn’t a detail out of some sci-fi novel. Or put
another way, as far as the Bush administration was then concerned,
Rosie the Riveter was
moldering in her grave and the model American for mobilizing a
democratic nation in time of war was Rosie the Frequent Flyer. It
turned out not to be winter in Valley Forge, but eternal summer in
Orlando. From then on, as the Bush administration planned its
version of revenge-cum-global-domination, the message it sent to the
citizenry was: go about your business and leave the dirty work to
us.
Disney World opened in 1971, but for a moment
imagine that it had been in existence in 1863 and that, more than
seven score years ago, facing a country in the midst of a terrible
civil war, Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg had
said this:
“It is rather for us to be here dedicated to
the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored
dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they
gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly
resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this
nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom at Disney
World -- and that government of the people, by the people, for
the people, shall not perish for lack of vacations in Florida.”
Or imagine that, in response to that “day of
infamy,” the Pearl Harbor of the twentieth century, Franklin
Roosevelt had gone before Congress and, in an address to the nation,
had
said:
“Hostilities exist. There is no blinking at
the fact that our people, our territory, and our interests are
in grave danger. With confidence in our airlines, with the
unbounding determination of our people to visit Disney World, we
will gain the inevitable triumph -- so help us God.”
If those are absurdities, then so is
twenty-first-century America. By late September 2001, though no one
would have put it that way, the demobilization of the American
people had become a crucial aspect of Washington’s way of life. The
thought that Americans might be called upon to sacrifice in any way
in a time of peril had gone with the wind. Any newly minted version
of the
classic “don’t tread on me” flag of the revolutionary war era
would have had to read: “don’t bother them.”
The Spectacle of War
The desire to take the American public out of the
“of the people, by the people, for the people” business can
minimally be traced back to the Vietnam War, to the moment when a
citizen’s army began voting with its feet and antiwar sentiment grew
to startling proportions not just on the home front, but inside a
military in the field. It was then that the high command began to
fear the actual
disintegration of the U.S. Army.
Not surprisingly, there was a deep desire never to
repeat such an experience. (No more Vietnams! No more antiwar
movements!) As a result, on
January 27, 1973, with a stroke of the pen, President Richard
Nixon abolished the draft, and so the citizen’s army. With it went
the sense that Americans had an obligation to serve their country in
time of war (and peace).
From that moment on, the urge to demobilize the
American people and send them to Disney World would only grow.
First, they were to be removed from all imaginable aspects of war
making. Later, the same principle would be applied to the processes
of government and to democracy itself. In this context, for
instance, you could write a history of the monstrous growth of
secrecy and
surveillance as twin deities of the American state: the urge to
keep ever more information from the citizenry and to see ever more
of what those citizens were doing in their own private time. Both
should be considered demobilizing trends.
This twin process certainly has a long history in
the U.S., as any biography of former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover
would indicate. Still, the expansion of secrecy and surveillance in
this century has been a stunning development, as ever-larger parts
of the national security state and the military (especially its
70,000-strong Special Operations forces) fell into the shadows.
In these years, American “safety” and “security” were
redefined in terms of a citizen’s need not to know. Only bathed
in ignorance, were we safest from the danger that mattered most
(Islamic terrorism -- a threat of
microscopic proportions in the continental United States).
As the American people were demobilized from war
and left, in the post-9/11 era, with the
single duty of eternally thanking and praising our "warriors”
(or our "wounded warriors”), war itself was being transformed into a
new kind of American entertainment spectacle. In the 1980s, in
response to the Vietnam experience, the Pentagon began to take
responsibility not just for making war but for producing it.
Initially, in the invasions of Grenada and Panama, this largely
meant sidelining the media, which many U.S. commanders still blamed
for defeat in Vietnam.
By the First Gulf War of 1991, however, the
Pentagon was prepared to produce a weeks-long
televised extravaganza, which would enter the living rooms of
increasingly demobilized Americans as a riveting show. It would
have its own snazzy graphics, logos, background music, and special
effects (including nose-cone shots of targets obliterated). In
addition, retired military men were brought in to do Monday Night
Football-style play-by-play and color commentary on the fighting in
progress. In this new version of war, there were to be no
rebellious troops, no body bags, no body counts, no rogue reporters,
and above all no antiwar movement. In other words, the Gulf War was
to be the anti-Vietnam. And it seemed to work... briefly.
Unfortunately for the first Bush administration,
Saddam Hussein remained in power in Baghdad, the carefully staged
post-war “victory” parades faded fast, the major networks lost ad
money on the Pentagon’s show, and the ratings for war as
entertainment sank. More than a decade later, the second Bush
administration, again eager not to repeat Vietnam and intent on
sidelining the American public while it invaded and occupied Iraq,
did it all over again.
This time, the Pentagon sent reporters to “boot
camp,” “embedded”
them with advancing units,
built a quarter-million-dollar movie-style set for planned
briefings in Doha, Qatar, and launched its invasion with
“decapitation strikes” over Baghdad that lit the televised skies of
the Iraqi capital an eerie green on TVs across America. This
spectacle of war, American-style, turned out to have a distinctly
Disney-esque aura to it. (Typically, however, those strikes
produced scores of dead Iraqis, but managed to “decapitate”
not a single targeted Iraqi leader from Saddam Hussein on down.)
That spectacle, replete with the usual music, logos, special
effects, and those retired generals-cum-commentators -- this time
even more
tightly organized by the Pentagon -- turned out again to have a
remarkably brief half-life.
The Spectacle of Democracy
War as the first demobilizing spectacle of our era
is now largely forgotten because, as entertainment, it was reliant
on ratings, and in the end, it lost the battle for viewers. As a
result, America's wars became ever more an activity to be conducted
in the shadows beyond the view of most Americans.
If war was the first experimental subject for the
demobilizing spectacle, democracy and elections turned out to be
remarkably ripe for the plucking as well. As a result, we now have
the never-ending presidential campaign season. In the past,
elections did not necessarily lack either drama or spectacle. In
the nineteenth century, for instance, there were campaign
torchlight parades, but those were always spectacles of
mobilization. No longer. Our new
1% elections call for something different.
It’s no secret that our presidential campaigns
have morphed into a “billionaire’s
playground,” even as the right to vote has become
more constrained. These days, it could be said that the only
group of citizens that automatically mobilizes for such events is
“the billionaire class” (as Bernie Sanders
calls it). Increasingly, many of the rest of us catch the now
year-round spectacle demobilized in our living rooms, watching
journalists play... gasp!... journalists on TV and give American
democracy that good old Gotcha!
In 2001, George W. Bush wanted to send us all to
Disney World (on our own dollar, of course). In 2015, Disney World
is increasingly coming directly to us.
After all, at the center of election 2016 is
Donald Trump. For a historical equivalent, you would have to
imagine
P.T. Barnum, who could sell any “curiosity” to the American
public, running for president. (In fact, he did serve two terms in
the Connecticut legislature and was, improbably enough, the mayor of
Bridgeport.) Meanwhile, the TV “debates” that Trump and the rest of
the candidates are now taking part in months before the first
primary have left the
League of Women Voters and the
Commission on
Presidential Debates in the dust. These are the ratings-driven
equivalent of food fights encased in ads, with the “questions”
clearly based on what will glue eyeballs.
Here, for instance, was CNN host Jake Tapper’s
first question of
the second Republican debate: “Mrs. Fiorina, I want to start
with you. Fellow Republican candidate, and Louisiana Governor Bobby
Jindal, has suggested that your party’s frontrunner, Mr. Donald
Trump, would be dangerous as president. He said he wouldn’t want,
quote, ‘such a hot head with his finger on the nuclear codes.’ You,
as well, have raised concerns about Mr. Trump’s temperament. You’ve
dismissed him as an entertainer. Would you feel comfortable with
Donald Trump’s finger on the nuclear codes?”
And the event only went downhill from there as
responses ranged from non-answers to (no kidding!) a discussion of
the looks of the candidates and yet the event proved such a ratings
smash that its 23 million viewers were
compared favorably to viewership of National Football League
games.
In sum, a citizen’s duty, whether in time of war
or elections, is now, at best, to watch the show, or at worst, to
see nothing at all.
This reality has been highlighted by the
whistleblowers of this generation, including
Edward Snowden,
Chelsea Manning, and
John Kiriakou. Whenever they have revealed something of what
our government is doing beyond our sight, they have been prosecuted
with a fierceness unique in our history and for a simple enough
reason. Those who watch us believe themselves exempt from being
watched by us. That’s their definition of “democracy.” When
“spies” appear in their midst, even if those whistleblowers are
“spies” for us, they are horrified at a visceral level and
promptly haul out the World War I-era
Espionage Act. They now expect a demobilized response to
whatever they do and when anything else is forthcoming, they strike
back in outrage.
A Largely Demobilized Land
A report on a demobilized America shouldn’t end
without some mention of at least one counter-impulse. All systems
assumedly have their opposites lurking somewhere inside them, which
brings us to Bernie Sanders. He’s the figure who doesn’t seem to
compute in this story so far.
All you had to do was watch the
first Democratic debate to sense what an anomaly he is, or you
could have noted that, until almost the moment he went on stage that
night, few involved in the election 2016 media spectacle had the
time of day for him. And stranger yet, that
lack of attention in the mainstream proved no impediment to the
expansion of his campaign and his supporters, who, via social media
and in person in the
form of
gigantic crowds, seem to exist in some parallel
universe.
In this election cycle, Sanders alone uses the
words “mobilize” and “mobilization” regularly, while calling for a
“political revolution.” (“We
need to mobilize tens of millions of people to begin to stand up
and fight back and to reclaim the government, which is now owned by
big money.”) And there is no question that he has indeed mobilized
significant numbers of young people, many of whom are undoubtedly
unplugged from the TV set, even if glued to other screens, and so
may hardly be noticing the mainstream spectacle at all.
Whether the Sanders phenomenon represents our past
or our future, his age or the age of his followers, is impossible to
know. We do, of course, have one recent example of a mobilization in
an election season. In the 2008 election, the charismatic Barack
Obama created a youthful, grassroots movement, a kind of cult of
personality that helped sweep him to victory, only to
demobilize it as soon as he entered the Oval Office. Sanders
himself puts little emphasis on personality or a cult of the same
and undoubtedly represents something different, though what exactly
remains open to question.
In the meantime, the national security state’s
power is largely uncontested; the airlines still fly; Disney World
continues to be a destination of choice; and the United States
remains a largely demobilized land.
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.
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