Does
Merika Have a Culture?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
Recently
by Paul Craig Roberts: Can
Americans Be Unplugged?
The culture
of the United States is said to be a youth culture, which is defined
in terms of entertainment: sex, rock music or its current equivalent,
violent video games, sports, and TV reality shows. This culture
has transformed the country and appears on the verge of transforming
the rest of the world. There are even indications that secularized
Arab and Iranian youth can’t wait to be liberated and to partake
of this culture of porn-rock.
America’s former
culture – accountable government, rule of law and presumption of
innocence, respect for others and for principles, and manners –
has gone by the wayside. Many Americans, especially younger ones,
are not aware of what they have lost, because they don’t know what
they had.
This was brought
home to me yet again by some reader responses to my recent columns
in which I pointed out that Strauss-Kahn, the IMF director (now
former) accused of sexually assaulting a hotel maid, was denied
the presumption of innocence. I pointed out that the legal principle
of innocent until proven guilty was violated by the police and media,
and that Strauss-Kahn was convicted in the media not only prior
to trial but also prior to his indictment.
From readers’
responses I learned that there are people who do not know that a
suspect is innocent until proven guilty by evidence in a public
trial. As one wrote, "if he wasn’t guilty, he wouldn’t be charged."
Some thought that by "presumption of innocence" I was
saying that Strauss-Kahn was innocent. I was accused of being a
woman-hater and received feminist lectures. Some American women
are more familiar with feminist mantras than they are with the legal
principles that are the foundation of our society.
Many males
also confused my defense of the presumption of innocence with a
defense of Strauss-Kahn, or if they knew about "innocent until
proven guilty," didn’t care. Right-wingers wanted Strauss-Kahn
out of the picture because he was the socialist party candidate
likely to defeat the American puppet, Sarkozy, in the French presidential
election. With Sarkozy, Washington finally has a French president
who has abandoned all interest in an independent or semi-independent
French foreign policy. Didn’t I realize that if we lost Sarkozy,
the French might revert to not going along with our invasions, as
they refused to do when we had to get Saddam Hussein? With Sarkozy,
the French are doing our bidding in Libya. Why in the world did
I think Strauss-Kahn and some silly doctrine like the presumption
of innocence were more important than French support for our wars?
Many left-wingers
were just as indifferent to a legal principle that protects the
innocent. They wanted Strauss-Kahn’s blood, because he is a rich
member of the establishment and as IMF director had made the poor
in Greece, Ireland, and Spain pay for the mistakes of the rich.
What did I mean, "presumption of innocence"? How could
any member of the ruling establishment be innocent? One left-winger
even wrote that I had "reverted to type," and that my
babbling about presumption of innocence proved that I was still
a Reaganite defending the rich from the consequences of their crimes.
It
evidently did not cause the feminist, the right-wing or the left-wing
to wonder that if such a powerful member of the establishment, as
they regard Strauss-Kahn to be, can be denied the presumption of
innocence, what would be their fate?
Independent
thought is not a concept with which very many Americans are familiar
or comfortable. Most want to have their emotions stroked, to be
told what they want to hear. They already know what they think.
A writer’s job is to validate it, and if the writer doesn’t, he
is, depending on the ideology of the reader, a misogynist, a pinko-liberal
commie, or an operative for the fascist establishment. All will
agree that he is a no good SOB.
As I wrote
a while back, respect for truth has fallen and taken everything
down with it.
May
25, 2011
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail], a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House.
Copyright
© 2011 Paul
Craig Roberts
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