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by John and Nisha Whitehead
May 27, 2026
from
TheRutherfordInstitute Website

Who is actually running the
government...?
That is no longer a rhetorical question.
As
America's war with Iran lurches
from escalation to ceasefire to renewed threats of military force,
Americans are being asked to trust that someone, somewhere, knows
what they are doing.
But who...?
This is the constitutional crisis hiding in plain sight.
The question is not merely whether
Donald Trump is fit to lead.
The question is whether any president still leads in any
meaningful constitutional sense once the permanent war
government gets moving.
The Iran war is merely the latest test case.
If the war machine keeps moving even when the public cannot tell who
is steering it,
then what remains of constitutional
government...?
This is the nightmare Rod Serling warned
about in
Seven Days in May.
Released in 1964, Seven Days in May imagined a dramatic
military coup:
generals plotting in secret to overthrow
an unpopular president because
they believed they knew better than the American people what was
best for the nation.
The coup is eventually foiled.
The republic is saved.
The Constitution survives.
At least on screen.
In the real world, the plot has thickened and
spread out over decades.
The old fear was that the military might
seize power from the civilian government.
The modern reality is that the permanent government does not
need to seize power.
It already has it...!
The coup no longer requires generals in
smoke-filled rooms plotting to overthrow the president at midnight.
It does not require tanks on Pennsylvania Avenue or soldiers
storming the Capitol. It does not even require an official
suspension of the Constitution.
All it requires is,
secrecy, fear, endless war, executive power,
emergency declarations, classified intelligence, compliant
courts, cowardly legislators, corporate profiteers, militarized
police, and a public too distracted, exhausted or
frightened to resist.
That coup has been underway for decades.
It is the coup that occurs when Congress
surrenders its war powers to the president.
It is the coup that occurs when presidents of both parties wage
war without meaningful constitutional authorization.
It is the coup that occurs when intelligence agencies spy on the
American people and then hide behind national security.
It is the coup that occurs when federal agencies arm themselves
like military units.
It is the coup that occurs when local police are transformed
into extensions of the military.
It is the coup that occurs when whistleblowers are punished,
dissenters are surveilled, protesters are treated like enemies,
and the public is told to trust whatever version of events the
government chooses to release.
It is the coup that occurs when unelected bureaucrats,
contractors, data brokers, intelligence analysts, defense
executives and crisis managers exercise more practical control
over government policy than the voters do.
This is how freedom disappears:
not all at once, not in one dramatic seizure
of power, but incrementally, bureaucratically, profitably and in
the name of national security.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
warned us about this in 1961.
A five-star general who understood war better than most modern
politicians ever will, Eisenhower cautioned Americans to,
"guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military
industrial complex."
The danger, he warned, was that "misplaced power"
would endanger liberty and democratic processes.
He was right.
The military industrial complex has become
one of the most powerful governing forces in America.
This is not a left-right problem.
Both parties built this.
Republicans and Democrats alike
have,
funded the wars, renewed the surveillance
powers, armed the police, expanded executive authority,
protected intelligence agencies, rewarded defense contractors,
and treated the Constitution as an inconvenience whenever fear
could be used to silence dissent.
One president abuses power. The next one inherits
it. The next one expands it. The next one normalizes it. The next
one weaponizes it.
This is how emergency powers become everyday
powers.
This is how temporary measures become permanent law.
This is how the president becomes a king in all but name.
And this is how the people become spectators in their own
government.
This is exactly where we are.
We have allowed the government to wage war
without declarations of war.
We have allowed intelligence agencies to operate behind walls of
secrecy.
We have allowed presidents to rule by executive order.
We have allowed Congress to become a spectator.
We have allowed the courts to defer to national security.
We have allowed police to become soldiers.
We have allowed corporations to profit from fear.
We have allowed unelected officials to make decisions that alter
the course of the nation.
And then we act surprised when no one seems to
know who is actually in charge.
The answer is as obvious as it is disturbing.
The permanent war government is in charge.
This is the coup that does not end.
This is the lesson of our age:
the greatest threat to freedom is not always
a madman seizing power in a single moment of crisis.
Sometimes it is a bureaucracy that never
sleeps, a war machine that never stops, a security state that
never shrinks, and a political class that never says no.
So what do we do?
We stop allowing the government to turn every
crisis into a blank check for more power.
And we start insisting, relentlessly, that those
who claim to defend the United States must defend it with the tools
the Constitution supplies.
If the government wants war, make Congress
vote on it.
If the government wants surveillance, make it get a warrant.
If the government wants to police dissent, make it answer to the
First Amendment.
If the government wants to spend trillions on war, make it
explain why the American people are being robbed blind to enrich
defense contractors.
If the government wants emergency powers, make it prove the
emergency and surrender the powers when the crisis passes.
If the Pentagon wants to run foreign policy, remind it that in a
constitutional republic, the military answers to civilian
authority, and civilian authority answers to the people.
The permanent war government has
given us endless wars, bankrupting debt, militarized police, mass
surveillance, constitutional erosion, fear-driven politics, and a
republic that increasingly resembles an occupied territory.
If we are to remain free, the war machine must be brought back under
constitutional control.
The generals, bureaucrats, contractors, intelligence agencies,
police forces and presidents must all be reminded of the same truth:
They do not own this country...!
As I make clear in my book
'Battlefield
America - The War on the American People'
and in its fictional counterpart 'The Erik Blair Diaries',
they do not rule us.
They work for us...!
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