Do Not Pity the Democrats
Posted on Sep 13, 2010
By Chris Hedges
There are no longer any major institutions in American society, including
the press, the educational system, the financial sector, labor unions,
the arts, religious institutions and our dysfunctional political parties,
which can be considered democratic. The intent, design and function
of these institutions, controlled by corporate money, are to bolster
the hierarchical and anti-democratic power of the corporate state. These
institutions, often mouthing liberal values, abet and perpetuate mounting
inequality. They operate increasingly in secrecy. They ignore suffering
or sacrifice human lives for profit. They control and manipulate all
levers of power and mass communication. They have muzzled the voices
and concerns of citizens. They use entertainment, celebrity gossip and
emotionally laden public-relations lies to seduce us into believing
in a Disneyworld fantasy of democracy.
The menace we face does not come from the insane wing of the Republican
Party, which may make huge inroads in the coming elections, but the
institutions tasked with protecting democratic participation. Do not
fear Glenn Beck or Sarah Palin. Do not fear the tea party movement,
the birthers, the legions of conspiracy theorists or the militias. Fear
the underlying corporate power structure, which no one, from Barack
Obama to the right-wing nut cases who pollute the airwaves, can alter.
If the hegemony of the corporate state is not soon broken we will descend
into a technologically enhanced age of barbarism.
Investing emotional and intellectual energy in electoral politics
is a waste of time. Resistance means a radical break with the formal
structures of American society. We must cut as many ties with consumer
society and corporations as possible. We must build a new political
and economic consciousness centered on the tangible issues of sustainable
agriculture, self-sufficiency and radical environmental reform. The
democratic system, and the liberal institutions that once made piecemeal
reform possible, is dead. It exists only in name. It is no longer a
viable mechanism for change. And the longer we play our scripted and
absurd role in this charade the worse it will get. Do not pity Barack
Obama and the Democratic Party. They will get what they deserve. They
sold the citizens out for cash and power. They lied. They manipulated
and deceived the public, from the bailouts to the abandonment of universal
health care, to serve corporate interests. They refused to halt the
wanton corporate destruction of the ecosystem on which all life depends.
They betrayed the most basic ideals of democracy. And they, as
much as the Republicans, are the problem.
“It is like being in a pit,” Ralph Nader told me when
we spoke on Saturday. “If you are four feet in the pit you have
a chance to grab the top and hoist yourself up. If you are 30 feet in
the pit you have to start on a different scale.”
All resistance will take place outside the arena of electoral politics.
The more we expand community credit unions, community health clinics
and food cooperatives and build alternative energy systems, the more
empowered we will become.
“To the extent that these organizations expand and get into communities
where they do not exist, we will weaken the multinational goliath, from
the banks to the agribusinesses to the HMO giants and hospital chains,”
Nader said.
The failure of liberals to defend the interests of working men and
women as our manufacturing sector was dismantled, labor unions were
destroyed and social services were slashed has proved to be a disastrous
and fatal misjudgment. Liberals, who betrayed the working class, have
no credibility. This is one of the principle reasons the anti-war movement
cannot attract the families whose sons and daughters are fighting and
dying in Iraq and Afghanistan. And liberal hypocrisy has opened the
door for a virulent right wing. If we are to reconnect with the working
class we will have to begin from zero. We will have to rebuild the ties
with the poor and the working class which the liberal establishment
severed. We will have to condemn the liberal class as vociferously as
we condemn the right wing. And we will have to remain true to the moral
imperative to foster the common good and the tangible needs of housing,
health care, jobs, education and food.
We will, once again, be bombarded in this election cycle with messages
of fear from the Democratic Party—designed, in the end, to serve
corporate interests. “Better Barack Obama than Sarah Palin,”
we will be told. Better the sane technocrats like Larry Summers than
half-wits like John Bolton. But this time we must resist. If we express
the legitimate rage of the dispossessed working class as our own, if
we denounce and refuse to cooperate with the Democratic Party, we can
begin to impede the march of the right-wing trolls who seem destined
to inherit power. If we again prove compliant we will discredit the
socialism we should be offering as an alternative to a perverted Christian
and corporate fascism.
The tea party movement is, as Nader points out, “a conviction
revolt.” Most of the participants in the tea party rallies are
not poor. They are small-business people and professionals. They feel
that something is wrong. They see that the two parties are equally responsible
for the subsidies and bailouts, the wars and the deficits. They know
these parties must be replaced. The corporate state, whose interests
are being championed by tea party leaders such as Palin and Dick Armey,
is working hard to make sure the anger of the movement is directed toward
government rather than corporations and Wall Street. And if these corporate
apologists succeed, a more overt form of corporate fascism will emerge
without a socialist counterweight.
“Poor people do not organize,” Nader lamented. “They
never have. It has always been people who have fairly good jobs. You
don’t see Wal-Mart workers massing anywhere. The people who are
the most militant are the people who had the best blue-collar jobs.
Their expectation level was high. When they felt their jobs were being
jeopardized they got really angry. But when you are at $7.25 an hour
you want to hang on to $7.25 an hour. It is a strange thing.”
“People have institutionalized oppressive power in the form of
surrender,” Nader said. “It is not that they like it. But
what are you going to do about it? You make the best of it. The system
of control is staggeringly dictatorial. It breaks new ground and innovates
in ways no one in human history has ever innovated. You start in American
history where these corporations have influence. Then they have lobbyists.
Then they run candidates. Then they put their appointments in top government
positions. Now, they are actually operating the government. Look at
Halliburton and Blackwater. Yesterday someone in our office called the
Office of Pipeline Safety apropos the San Bruno explosion in California.
The press woman answered. The guy in our office saw on the screen that
she had CTR next to her name. He said, ‘What is CTR?’ She
said, ‘I am a contractor.’ He said, ‘This is the press
office at the Department of Transportation. They contracted out the
press office?’ ‘Yes,’ she said, ‘but that’s
OK, I come to work here every day.’ ”
“The corporate state is the ultimate maturation of American-type
fascism,” Nader said. “They leave wide areas of personal
freedom so that people can confuse personal freedom with civic freedom—the
freedom to go where you want, eat where you want, associate with who
you want, buy what you want, work where you want, sleep when you want,
play when you want. If people have given up on any civic or political
role for themselves there is a sufficient amount of elbow room to get
through the day. They do not have the freedom to participate in the
decisions about war, foreign policy, domestic health and safety issues,
taxes or transportation. That is its genius. But one of its Achilles’
heels is that the price of the corporate state is a deteriorating political
economy. They can’t stop their greed from getting the next morsel.
The question is, at what point are enough people going to have a breaking
point in terms of their own economic plight? At what point will they
say enough is enough? When that happens, is a tea party type enough
or [Sen. Robert M.]
La Follette or
Eugene Debs type of enough?”
It is anti-corporate movements as exemplified by the Scandinavian
energy firm
Kraft&Kultur that we must emulate. Kraft&Kultur sells electricity
exclusively from solar and water power. It has begun to merge clean
energy with cultural events, bookstores and a political consciousness
that actively defies corporate hegemony.
The failure by the Obama administration to use the bailout and stimulus
money to build public works such as schools, libraries, roads, clinics,
highways, public transit and reclaiming dams, as well as create green
jobs, has snuffed out any hope of serious economic, political or environmental
reform coming from the centralized bureaucracy of the corporate state.
And since the government did not hire enough auditors and examiners
to monitor how the hundreds of billions in taxpayer funds funneled to
Wall Street are being spent, we will soon see reports of widespread
mismanagement and corruption. The rot and corruption at the top levels
of our financial and political systems, coupled with the increasing
deprivation felt by tens of millions of Americans, are volatile tinder
for a horrific right-wing backlash in the absence of a committed socialist
alternative.
“If you took a day off and did nothing but listen to Hannity, Beck
and Limbaugh and realized that this goes on 260 days a year, you would
see that it is overwhelming,” Nader said. “You have to almost
have a genetic resistance in your mind and body not to be affected by
it. These guys are very good. They are clever. They are funny. They are
emotional. It beats me how Air America didn’t make it, except it
went after [it criticized] corporations, and corporations advertise. These
right-wingers go after government, and government doesn’t advertise.
And that is the difference. It isn’t that their message appeals
more. Air America starved because it could not get ads.”
We do not have much time left. And the longer we refuse to confront
corporate power the more impotent we become as society breaks down.
The game of electoral politics, which is given legitimacy by the right
and the so-called left on the cable news shows, is just that—a
game. It diverts us from what should be our daily task—dismantling,
piece by piece, the iron grip that corporations hold over our lives.
Hope is a word that is applicable only to those who grasp reality,
however bleak, and do something meaningful to fight back—which
does not include the farce of elections and involvement in mainstream
political parties. Hope is about fighting against the real forces of
destruction, not chanting “Yes We Can!” in rallies orchestrated
by marketing experts, television crews, pollsters and propagandists
or begging Obama to be Obama. Hope, in the hands of realists, spreads
fear into the black heart of the corporate elite. But hope, real hope,
remains thwarted by our collective self-delusion.
|