The Receding Tide
by
Fred Reed
Recently
by Fred Reed: Spinning
Business as Usual
Several things
characterize countries of the Third Word, whatever precisely "Third
World" means.
The first is
corruption. America is rotten with it, but American corruption is
distinct from corruption in, say, Guatemala or Thailand, being less
visible and better organized.
Several major
differences exist between the usual corruption in the Third World
and that in America. In most of the Third World, corruption exists
from top to bottom. Everyone and everything is for sale. Bribery
amounts to an economic system, like capitalism or socialism. By
contrast, in the United States, graft flourishes mostly at the level
of government and commerce. You dont (I think) slip an admissions
official at Harvard twenty grand to accept your shiftless and dull-witted
slug of a misbegotten offspring. Nor do you pay a local judge to
drop dope charges against your teenager. And in the Guatemalas and
Egypts of the planet, corruption tends to be personal. The briber
and the bribed act as individuals.
In the United
States, corruption occurs at the level of policy and contracts,
between corporations, special interests, and Congress. It is done
gracefully and usually legally. For example, Big Pharma pays Congress
to insert, in some voluminous bill that almost no one will read,
a clause saying that the government will pay list price for drugs
instead of negotiating for a better price. Over time, this is worth
hundreds of millions, paid by you. Yet the clause is legal. Or military
industry pays Congress to buy an enormously expensive and unneeded
airplane. Its legal. Read the bill. Or agribusiness pays Congress
to cough up large subsidies. Also legal.
In Mexico you
pay your useless daughters useless teacher to give her grades
she didnt earn so that she can get into university. Corruption
relies on individual initiative. By contrast, in America, corruption
is a class-action industry. Large groups blacks, women, Indians,
unions bribe or intimidate Congress into giving them special
privilege: affirmative action, racial and gender set-asides, casinos,
loans and preferences from the Small Business Administration according
to sex and ethnicity. Corruption, plain and simple. But legal.
Second, unaccountable
and often intrusive police not subject to control by the public.
In America formal police departments rapidly grow more militarized,
jackbooted, swatted-out, and their powers grow. A law-abiding citizen
should never be afraid of the police, and a misbehaving cop should
worry intensely when said law-abiding citizen records his badge
number with intent to call the chief. Those days are over. Today
the cops can bully, threaten, and harass, and there is precious
little you can do about it. The proliferating laws against filming
the police can have only one purpose, to prevent exposure of misbehavior.
Third World.
Any organization
involved in controlling a population is a de factor police outfit,
as are TSA, Homeland Security, the FBI, NSA, ICE, and
so on. Against none of these does the citizen have any recourse.
In principle, yes, but in practice, no. Third World, but far more
efficient.
Third, lack
of constitutional government. This is not the same as the lack of
a constitution. The Soviet Union had an admirable constitution,
and paid no attention to it. America heads rapidly in the same direction.
In America,
the Constitution is largely and increasingly ignored by the government.
Constitutionally the three branches of government are coequal, but
in practice the Supreme Court is of little consequence and Congress
is the action arm of a corporate oligarchy. Constitutionally Congress
must declare war, but now the president sends combat troops wherever
he pleases and Congress reads about it in the Washington Post. The
president can order citizens murdered, ignore habeas corpus, monitor
and store email. The government can search you at will with no pretense
of probable cause. Third World.
Fourth, impunity.
In the bush world, the rich and powerful are never brought to trail
regardless of their crimes. We are there. Wall Street runs a clear
and thoroughly documented scam, the subprime-loan racket, doing
immense damage to the country. How many went to jail? How many were
tried? How many now have high positions in the federal government?
Third World.
Fifth, a yawning
gap between rich and poor. As the American economy declines, the
middle class sags into the lower middle class. The sag takes many
forms. Prices rise but incomes dont. Houses go into foreclosure.
Student loans tied to the houses of parents become backbreaking.
Businesses hire people as individual contractors, with no benefits.
Increasingly the young live with their parents. The ship is taking
water.
Yet the rich
prosper. In America they carefully remain inconspicuous, not flaunting
their money. But they have it. Third World.
Sixth, a controlled
press. Many Americans I suspect will insist that the press is free,
because they are repeatedly told that it is, because they have nothing
to which to compare it, and because the control is most adroitly
managed. But it exists.
In America
control does not work as it did in the USSR, by savagely punishing
the least expression of undesired ideas; this would be obvious and
arouse opposition. American control works on the principle of fooling
enough of the people, enough of the time.
Strictly speaking,
the US does have a free press. You can easily buy the books of David
Duke, Karl Marx, Hitler, or Malcolm X. The trick is that few read.
Television and newspapers rule, and they are owned by large corporations
concerned with furthering the interests of large corporations.
Those interests
are maximizing the viewership for advertising, which is where the
money comes from; keeping the lid on in a country in which various
groups would be at each others throats if demagogues were
allowed to provide the spark; keeping corporations from suffering
any sort of control, and furthering the political agendas of the
media.
Thus you never,
ever, allow serious criticism of Israel, and you never, ever, allow
an articulate Palestinian to offer his views. You do not allow any
coverage of crime by blacks, which might lead to social upheaval.
You do not allow distressing reportage of the wars a little
girl looking in puzzlement at her bowels hanging out thanks to shrapnel.
You do not do any serious investigative reporting of corporate corruption.
And so on. Keep it bland. Keep it reassuring.
Dont
let, say, a cop talk about what really goes on, or a GI to talk
about what soldiers really do in Afghanistan, and dont let
political debates touch on substance. Dont allow, for example,
unrehearsed questions: Mr. Santorum, can you name in order
the countries that border on Iran? Oh no. One mustnt
reveal to the voters that neither they nor the candidates know what
they are talking about. Better to maintain the illusion of Informed
Citizens Engaging in Democracy.
Mexicans know
what kind of government they have. Americans do not.
March
28, 2012
Fred Reed
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well, A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Bem, Curmudgeing
Through Paradise: Reports from a Fractal Dung Beetle, Au
Phuc Dup and Nowhere to Go: The Only Really True Book About Viet
Nam, and A
Grand Adventure: Wisdom's Price-Along with Bits and Pieces about
Mexico. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2012 Fred Reed
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