by Chris Hedges
November
5, 2020
from
ScheerPost Website
Art by Mr. Fish
Original to Scheerpost
However
inequitable its bias,
capitalist
democracy at least
offered the
possibility of
incremental and
piecemeal reform.
Now it is a
corpse...
Well, it's over. Not the election. The
capitalist democracy...
However biased it was
towards the interests of the rich and however hostile it was to the
poor and minorities, the capitalist democracy at least offered the
possibility of incremental and piecemeal reform.
Now it is a corpse...
The iconography and
rhetoric remain the same. But it is an elaborate and empty reality
show funded by the ruling oligarchs - $1.51 billion for the Biden
campaign and $1.57 billion for the Trump campaign - to make us think
there are choices. There are not...
The empty jousting
between a bloviating
Trump and a 'verbally
impaired' Joe Biden is designed to mask the truth.
The oligarchs always
win.
The people always
lose...
It does not matter who
sits in the White House.
America is a failed
state...
"The American Dream
has run out of gas," wrote the novelist J.G. Ballard.
"The car has stopped.
It no longer supplies the world with its images, its dreams, its
fantasies. No more. It's over. It supplies the world with its
nightmares now."
There were many actors
that killed America's open society.
The
corporate oligarchs who bought
the electoral process, the courts and the media, and whose
lobbyists write the legislation to impoverish us and allow them
to accumulate obscene amounts of wealth and
unchecked power.
The militarists and war
industry that drained the national treasury to mount futile and
endless wars that have squandered some $7 trillion and turned us
into an international pariah.
The CEOs, raking in
bonuses and compensation packages in the tens of millions of
dollars, that shipped jobs overseas and left our cities in ruins
and our workers in misery and despair without a sustainable
income or hope for the future.
The
fossil fuel industry that made
war on science and chose profits over the looming extinction of
the human species.
The press that turned news into
mindless entertainment and partisan cheerleading.
The intellectuals who
retreated into the universities to preach the moral absolutism
of identity politics and multiculturalism while turning their
backs on the economic warfare being waged on the working class
and the unrelenting assault on civil liberties.
And, of course, the
feckless and hypocritical liberal class that does nothing but
talk, talk, talk...
If there is one group
that deserves our deepest contempt it is the liberal elites, those
who posture as the moral arbiters of society while abandoning every
value they purportedly hold the moment they become inconvenient.
The liberal class, once
again, served as pathetic cheerleaders and censors for a candidate
and a political party that in Europe would be considered on the
far-right.
Even while liberals were
being ridiculed and dismissed by Biden and by the Democratic Party
hierarchy, which bizarrely invested its political energy in
appealing to Republican neocons, liberals were busy marginalizing
journalists, including Glenn Greenwald and Matt Taibbi,
who called out Biden and the Democrats.
The liberals, whether at
The Intercept or The New York Times, ignored or
discredited information that could hurt the Democratic Party,
including the revelations on Hunter Biden's laptop.
It was a stunning
display of craven careerism and self-loathing...
Biden's campaign
was utterly
bereft of ideas and policy issues,
as if he and the
Democrats could
sweep the
elections by promising
to save the soul
of America...
The Democrats and their liberal apologists are, the election has
illustrated, oblivious to the profound personal and economic despair
sweeping through this country.
They stand for nothing.
They fight for nothing...
Restoring the,
rule of law,
universal health care, banning fracking, a Green New Deal, the
protection of civil liberties, the building of unions, the
preservation and expansion of social welfare programs, a
moratorium on evictions and foreclosures, the forgiveness of
student debt, stiff environmental controls, a government jobs
program and guaranteed income, financial regulation, opposition
to endless war and military adventurism,
...were once again
forgotten.
Championing these issues
would have resulted in a Democratic Party landslide.
But since the Democratic
Party is a wholly owned subsidiary of corporate donors, promoting
any policy that might foster the common good, diminish corporate
profits and restore democracy, including imposing campaign finance
laws, was impossible.
Biden's campaign was
utterly bereft of ideas and policy issues, as if he and the
Democrats could sweep the elections by promising to save the soul of
America.
At least the
neofascists have the courage of their demented convictions...
The liberal class
functions in a traditional democracy as a safety valve.
It makes piecemeal
and incremental reform possible.
It ameliorates the
worst excesses of capitalism.
It proposes gradual
steps towards greater equality.
It endows the state
and the mechanisms of power with supposed virtues.
It also serves as an
attack dog that discredits radical social movements.
The liberal class is a
vital component within the power elite.
In short, it offers
hope and the possibility, or at least the illusion, of change...
The surrender of the
liberal elite to despotism creates a power vacuum that speculators,
war profiteers, gangsters and killers, often led by charismatic
demagogues, fill.
It opens the door to
fascist movements that rise to prominence by ridiculing and taunting
the absurdities of the liberal class and the values they purport to
defend.
The promises of the
fascists are fantastic and unrealistic, but their critiques of the
liberal class are grounded in truth.
Once the liberal
class ceases to function, it opens a Pandora's box of evils that
are impossible to contain...
The disease of
Trumpism, with or without Trump, is, as the election
illustrated, deeply embedded in the body politic.
It is an expression
among huge segments of the population, taunted by liberal elites
as "deplorables," of a legitimate alienation and rage that the
Republicans and the Democrats orchestrated and now refuse to
address.
This Trumpism is
also, as the election showed, not limited to white men, whose
support for Trump actually declined.
Fyodor Dostoevsky saw the behavior of Russia's useless
liberal class, which he satirized and excoriated at the end of the
19th century, as presaging a period of blood and terror.
The failure of liberals
to defend the ideals they espoused inevitably led, he wrote, to an
age of moral nihilism.
In
Notes From Underground, he
portrayed the sterile, defeated dreamers of the liberal class, those
who hold up high ideals but do nothing to defend them. The main
character in Notes From Underground carries the bankrupt
ideas of liberalism to their logical extreme.
He eschews passion and
moral purpose. He is rational. He accommodates a corrupt and dying
power structure in the name of liberal ideals. The hypocrisy of the
Underground Man dooms Russia as it now dooms the United States.
It is the fatal
disconnect between belief and action.
"I never even managed
to become anything: neither wicked nor good, neither a scoundrel
nor an honest man, neither a hero nor an insect," the
Underground Man wrote.
"And now I am living
out my life in my corner, taunting myself with the spiteful and
utterly futile consolation that it is even impossible for an
intelligent man seriously to become anything, and only fools
become something.
Yes, sir, an
intelligent man of the nineteenth century must be and is morally
obliged to be primarily a characterless being; and a man of
character, an active figure - primarily a limited being."
The refusal of the
liberal class to acknowledge that power has been wrested from the
hands of citizens by corporations,
-
that the
Constitution and its guarantees of personal liberty have
been revoked by judicial fiat
-
that elections
are nothing more than empty spectacles staged by the ruling
elites
-
that we are on
the losing end of the class war,
...has left it speaking
and acting in ways that no longer correspond to reality.
The "idea of the intellectual vocation," as Irving Howe
pointed out in his 1954 essay This Age of Conformity,
"the idea of a life
dedicated to values that cannot possibly be realized by a
commercial civilization - has gradually lost its allure. And, it
is this, rather than the abandonment of a particular program,
which constitutes our rout."
The
belief that capitalism is the
unassailable engine of human progress, Howe wrote,
"is trumpeted through
every medium of communication: official propaganda,
institutional advertising and scholarly writings of people who,
until a few years ago, were its major opponents."
"The truly powerless people are those intellectuals - the new
realists - who attach themselves to the seats of power, where
they surrender their freedom of expression without gaining any
significance as political figures," Howe wrote.
"For it is crucial to
the history of the American intellectuals in the past few
decades - as well as to the relationship between 'wealth' and
'intellect' - that whenever they become absorbed into the
accredited institutions of society they not only lose their
traditional rebelliousness but to one extent or another they
cease to function as intellectuals."
Populations can endure
the repression of tyrants, as long as these rulers continue to
effectively manage and wield power.
But human history has
amply demonstrated that once those in positions of power become
redundant and impotent, yet retain the trappings and privileges of
power, they are brutally discarded.
This was true in
Weimar Germany.
It was true in the
former Yugoslavia, a conflict I covered for The New York
Times.
The historian
Fritz Stern
in The Politics of Cultural Despair, his book on the rise of
fascism in Germany, wrote of the consequences of the collapse of
liberalism.
Stern argued that the
spiritually and politically alienated, those cast aside by the
society, are prime recruits for a politics centered around violence,
cultural hatreds and personal resentments.
Much of this rage,
justifiably, is directed at a liberal elite that, while speaking the
"I-feel-your-pain" language of traditional liberalism, sells us out.
"They attacked
liberalism," Stern writes of the fascists emerging at the time
in Germany, "because it seemed to them the principal premise of
modern society; everything they dreaded seemed to spring from
it; the bourgeois life,
Manchesterism,
materialism, parliament and the parties, the lack of political
leadership.
Even more, they sense
in liberalism the source of all their inner sufferings.
Theirs was a
resentment of loneliness; their one desire was for a new faith,
a new community of believers, a world with fixed standards and
no doubts, a new national religion that would bind all Germans
together.
All this, liberalism
denied.
Hence, they hated
liberalism, blamed it for making outcasts of them, for uprooting
them from their imaginary past, and from their faith."
We are in for it.
The for-profit health
care system, designed to make money - not take care of the sick
- is unequipped to handle a national health crisis.
The health care
corporations have spent the last few decades merging and closing
hospitals, and cutting access to health care in communities
across the nation to increase revenue - this, as nearly half of
all front-line workers remain ineligible for sick pay and some
43 million Americans have lost their employee-sponsored health
insurance.
The pandemic, without
universal health care, which Biden and the Democrats have no
intention of establishing, will continue to rage out of control.
Three hundred
thousand Americans dead by December.
Four hundred
thousand by January.
And by the time
the pandemic burns out or a vaccine becomes safely
available, hundreds of thousands, maybe a few million, will
have died.
The inevitable
social unrest
will see the
state, no matter who is in the White House,
use its three
principle instruments of social control
- wholesale
surveillance, the prisons and militarized police -
buttressed by a
legal system that routinely
revokes habeas
corpus and due process,
to ruthlessly
crush dissent.
The economic fallout from the pandemic, the chronic
underemployment and unemployment - close to 20 percent when
those who have stopped looking for work, those furloughed with
no prospect of being rehired and those who work part-time but
are still below the poverty line are included in the official
statistics - will mean a depression unlike anything we have seen
since the 1930s.
Hunger in US
households has already tripled since last year. The proportion
of US children who are not getting enough to eat is 14 times
higher than last year. Food banks are overrun.
The moratorium on
foreclosures and evictions has been lifted while over 30 million
destitute Americans face the prospect of being thrown into the
street.
There is no check left on corporate power.
The inevitable social
unrest will see the state, no matter who is in the White House, use
its three principle instruments of social control:
-
wholesale
surveillance
-
the prisons
-
militarized
police,
...buttressed by a legal
system that routinely revokes habeas corpus and due process, to
ruthlessly crush dissent.
People of color,
immigrants and Muslims will be blamed and targeted by our native
fascists for the nation's decline.
The few who continue
in defiance of the Democratic Party to call out the crimes of
the corporate state and the empire will be silenced.
The sterility of the
liberal class, serving the interests of a Democratic Party that
disdains and ignores them, fuels the widespread feelings of
betrayal that saw nearly half the voters support one of the most
vulgar, racist, inept and corrupt presidents in American
history.
An American tyranny,
dressed up with the ideological veneer of a christianized fascism,
will, it appears, define the empire's epochal descent into
irrelevance...
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