If Voting
Made Any Difference, They Wouldn’t Let Us Do It
By John W.
Whitehead
“The
people who cast the votes decide nothing. The
people who count the votes decide
everything.”—Joseph Stalin, dictator of the
Soviet Union
August 02,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- No, America, you don’t have to vote.
In fact,
vote or don’t vote, the police state will continue
to trample us underfoot.
Devil or
deliverer, the candidate who wins the White House
has already made a Faustian bargain to keep the
police state in power. It’s no longer a question of
which party will usher in totalitarianism but when
the final hammer will fall.
Sure we’re
being given choices, but the differences between the
candidates are purely cosmetic ones, lacking any
real nutritional value for the nation. We’re being
served a poisoned feast whose aftereffects will
leave us in turmoil for years to come.
We’ve been
here before.
Remember
Barack Obama, the young candidate who campaigned on
a message of hope, change and transparency, and
promised an end to war and surveillance?
Look how
well that turned out.
Under
Obama, government whistleblowers are routinely
prosecuted, U.S. arms sales have
skyrocketed, police militarization has
accelerated, and surveillance has become widespread.
The U.S. government is literally
arming the world, while
bombing the heck out of the planet. And while
they’re at it, the government is bringing the wars
abroad home, transforming American communities into
shell-shocked battlefields where the Constitution
provides little in the way of protection.
Yes, we’re
worse off now than we were eight years ago.
We’re being
subjected to more government surveillance, more
police abuse, more SWAT team raids, more roadside
strip searches, more censorship, more prison time,
more egregious laws, more endless wars, more
invasive technology, more militarization, more
injustice, more corruption, more cronyism, more
graft, more lies, and more of everything that has
turned the American dream into the American
nightmare.
What we’re
not getting more of: elected officials who
actually represent us.
The
American people are being guilted, bullied,
pressured, cajoled, intimidated, terrorized and
browbeaten into voting. We’re constantly told to
vote because it’s your so-called civic duty, because
you have no right to complain about the government
unless you vote, because every vote counts, because
we must present a unified front, because the future
of the nation depends on it, because God compels us
to do so, because by not voting you are in fact
voting, because the “other” candidate must be
defeated at all costs, or because the future of the
Supreme Court rests in the balance.
Nothing in
the Constitution requires that you vote.
You are
under no moral obligation to vote for the lesser of
two evils. Indeed, voting for a lesser evil is still
voting for evil.
Whether or
not you cast your vote in this year’s presidential
election, you have every right to kvetch, complain
and criticize the government when it falls short of
your expectations. After all, you are overtaxed so
the government can continue to operate corruptly.
If you want
to boo, boycott, picket, protest and altogether
reject a corrupt political system that has failed
you abysmally, more power to you. I’ll take an
irate, engaged, informed, outraged American any day
over an apathetic, constitutionally illiterate
citizenry that is content to be diverted, distracted
and directed.
Whether you
vote or don’t vote doesn’t really matter.
What
matters is what else you’re doing to push
back against government incompetence, abuse,
corruption, graft, fraud and cronyism.
Don’t be
fooled into thinking that the only road to reform is
through the ballot box.
After all,
there is more to citizenship than the act of casting
a ballot for someone who, once elected, will march
in lockstep with the dictates of the powers-that-be.
Yet as long as Americans are content to let
politicians, war hawks and Corporate America run the
country, the police state will prevail, no matter
which candidate wins on Election Day.
In other
words, it doesn’t matter who sits in the White
House, who controls the two houses of Congress, or
who gets appointed to the Supreme Court: only those
who are prepared to cozy up to the powers-that-be
will have any real impact.
As Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist
Chris Hedges points out:
The
predatory financial institutions on Wall Street
will trash the economy and loot the U.S.
Treasury on the way to another economic collapse
whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is
president. Poor, unarmed people of color will be
gunned down in the streets of our cities whether
Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president.
The system of neoslavery in our prisons, where
we keep poor men and poor women of color in
cages because we have taken from them the
possibility of employment, education and
dignity, will be maintained whether Donald Trump
or Hillary Clinton is president. Millions of
undocumented people will be deported whether
Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is president.
Austerity programs will cut or abolish public
services, further decay the infrastructure and
curtail social programs whether Donald Trump or
Hillary Clinton is president.
Money will replace the vote whether Donald Trump
or Hillary Clinton is president. And half
the country, which now lives in poverty, will
remain in misery whether Donald Trump or Hillary
Clinton becomes president. This is not
speculation. We know this because there has been
total continuity on every issue, from trade
agreements to war to mass deportations, between
the Bush administration and the administration
of Barack Obama.
In other
words, voting is not the answer.
As I
document in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, the nation is firmly under
the control of a monied oligarchy guarded by a
standing army (a.k.a., militarized police. It is an
invisible dictatorship, of sorts, one that is
unaffected by the vagaries of party politics and
which cannot be overthrown by way of the ballot box.
“Total
continuity” is how Hedges refers to the manner
in which the government’s agenda remains unchanged
no matter who occupies the Executive Branch. “Continuity
of government” (COG) is the phrase policy wonks
use to refer to the unelected individuals who have
been appointed to run the government in the event of
a “catastrophe.” You can also refer to it as a
shadow government, or the
Deep State, which is comprised of unelected
government bureaucrats, corporations, contractors,
paper-pushers, and button-pushers who actually call
the shots behind the scenes.
Whatever
term you use, the upshot remains the same: on the
national level, we’re up against an immoveable,
intractable, entrenched force that is greater than
any one politician or party, whose tentacles reach
deep into every sector imaginable, from Wall Street,
the military and the courts to the technology
giants, entertainment, healthcare and the media.
This is no
Goliath to be felled by a simple stone.
This is a
Leviathan disguised as a political savior.
So how do
we prevail against the tyrant who says all the right
things and does none of them? How do we overcome the
despot whose promises fade with the spotlights? How
do we conquer the dictator whose benevolence is all
for show?
We get
organized. We get educated. We get active.
If you feel
led to vote, fine, but if all you do is vote, “we
the people” are going to lose.
If you
abstain from voting and still do nothing, “we the
people” are going to lose.
If you give
your proxy to some third-party individual or group
to fix what’s wrong with the country and that’s
all you do, then “we the people” are going to
lose.
If,
however, you’re prepared to shake off the doldrums,
wipe the sleep out of your eyes, turn off the
television, tune out the talking heads, untether
yourself from whatever piece of technology you’re
affixed to, wean yourself off the teat of the nanny
state, and start flexing those unused civic muscles,
then there might be hope for us all.
For
starters, get back to basics. Get to know your
neighbors, your community, and your local officials.
This is the first line of defense when it comes to
securing your base: fortifying your immediate lines.
Second,
understand your rights. Know how your local
government is structured. Who serves on your city
council and school boards? Who runs your local jail:
has it been coopted by private contractors? What
recourse does the community have to voice concerns
about local problems or disagree with decisions by
government officials?
Third, know
the people you’re entrusting with your local
government. Are your police chiefs being promoted
from within your community? Are your locally elected
officials accessible and, equally important, are
they open to what you have to say? Who runs your
local media? Does your newspaper report on local
events? Who are your judges? Are their judgments
fair and impartial? How are prisoners being treated
in your local jails?
Finally,
don’t get so trusting and comfortable that you stop
doing the hard work of holding your government
accountable. We’ve drifted a long way from the local
government structures that provided the basis for
freedom described by Alexis de Tocqueville in
Democracy in America, but we are not so far
gone that we can’t reclaim some of its vital
components.
As an
article in The Federalist
points out:
Local
government is fundamental not so much because
it’s a “laboratory” of democracy but because
it’s a school of democracy. Through such
accountable and democratic government, Americans
learn to be democratic citizens. They learn to
be involved in the common good. They learn to
take charge of their own affairs, as a
community. Tocqueville writes that
it’s because of local democracy that Americans
can make state and Federal democracy work—by
learning, in their bones, to expect and demand
accountability from public officials and to be
involved in public issues.
To put it
another way, think nationally but act locally.
There is
still a lot Americans can do to topple the police
state tyrants, but any revolution that has any hope
of succeeding needs to be prepared to reform the
system from the bottom up. And that will mean
re-learning step by painful step what it actually
means to be a government of the people, by the
people and for the people.
John W. Whitehead's commentaries have appeared in
the Los Angeles Times,
New York Times, Washington
Post, Washington Times and
USA Today.
https://www.rutherford.org
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