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One of the most striking aspects of the slow-motion electoral hijacking by
the Forces of Dubya is that everybody watched, but nobody cared.
Where were the 50 million Gore voters? Where were all the anti-Nader
Democrats that were bleating so loudly that a Bush regime would be an
apocalyptic
nightmare?...More people were enthusiastic about Bush than were enthusiastic
about Gore, and more people by far -- unlike most countries -- didn't even vote.
Ultimately, most Americans don't care passionately about which oligarchs work
overtime to grease the extraction of labor and wealth from us.
Over the past year, everyone has continued to watch. Politics in America no
longer means participatory democracy; it now means television. As Peter
Sellers
(playing Chance the Gardener) memorably responded in Being There -- for
my money one of the best political movies ever made -- we like to watch.
In that same column, I assessed the prospects for the reign of King George II
in part as follows:
We already knew that we were going to get neoliberalism, military
interventions, Star Wars, conservative court appointments, environmental
degradation, stagnant wages, more prisons, and so forth, no matter who won;
the
differences were a matter of degree....Get ready for our bipartisan ruling
classes...to issue one triumphant, snarling "Fuck you" to the world's
poor.
That was harsh, but accurate, both in our government's message and its
bipartisanship. Over the last year, we watched as Bush used his non-mandate
to,
among other things: appoint the most reactionary, corporate-friendly Cabinet
in
modern history; ram through a tax cut package almost entirely dedicated to
further enriching the wealthy; pull the United States out of a stunning
variety
of international agreements, treaties, negotiations and protocols; and
essentially bury anti-trust law and a whole range of environmental
protections.
All of these radical actions were taken with a minimum of fuss from most
Democrats and not much in the way of organized activist opposition. In many
countries where democracy is less taken for granted (and, hopefully, most
countries where it's assumed), the apparent theft of an election would result
in angry denunciations by the political opposition, and/or masses of people
in the capital city. None of that happened in the U.S., a year ago or at any
point
since. And then came September 11.
Since then -- setting aside the notion of opposing a war that is inevitably
going to be widely supported -- we've learned that Al Gore really did get
more votes in Florida last year. And, we've learned that the resulting
government is
detaining people without charges, evidence, or access to lawyers or family,
sometimes solely on the basis of age, gender, ethnicity, and religion;
reserving
the right to wiretap, monitoring e-mail, and even searching and seizing
property, all without meaningful judicial review; and promising to try
"suspected" terrorists in a military court, without recourse to due process.
(Think of how the U.S. would feel if an American, accused of spying, were
tried
in such a manner by China.) Meanwhile, another big fat gift for the rich,
gussied up as "economic stimulus," is being pushed through Congress, with
fasttrack, Social Security privatization, and a corrupt energy policy waiting in the
bipartisan wings.
Where are the torches? Does the shock of recognition that there are
evil
people in the world, some of whom hate the U.S., so rearrange our notion of
democracy that we're willing to walk away from fundamental rights, or basic
understandings about how a representative democracy should work? It's not
like apathy is new. The number of Americans ignoring any given election has
been
enormous for years. The public's willingness to sit on its hands while
atrocity after atrocity meets bipartisan approval has been evident for the
entire last year (if not much longer). But as remarkable circumstances
produce (or provide the justification for) ever more radical action, this is
the time
for more, not less, discussion and representation.
I am less frightened by terrorists, or even by political leaders whose values
I disagree with, than by the apparent political complacency of most
Americans. For whatever reason -- satisfaction, cynicism, helplessness,
apathy, all of the
above -- our ability to chart our own destiny is being taken away from us,
and like the sleeping infant whose parent is carefully prying a favored toy
from her
fingers, we're not even noticing. The resulting nightmare is less “1984”
and more “Brave New World” -- a dystopia that we welcome with open arms.
Instead of learning to love Big Brother, we have a Big Brother
custom-designed so that we'd love him from the outset.
Tomorrow, the Spanish Prime Minister, Jose Maria Aznar, visits the White
House.
Sure to be the top agenda item is Spain's decision last week not to extradite
eight 9-11 terrorist suspects unless the U.S. promises not to try them in
military courts. Here is a country that fancies itself the world's beacon for
freedom and democracy, being lectured on it by the home of Franco and the
Spanish Inquisition.
It all brings to mind a slightly revised version of yet another famed
political
dystopia: Pogo.
We have met the enemy. Whatever.
Reclaim History!
Things that happened on Nov. 27 that you never had to memorize in
school:
1832: South Carolina Convention, outraged by Pres. Jackson's "Tariff
of Abominations," calls for armed resistance, if necessary, against the U.S.
government.
1900: U.S. troops coax information from Filipino town president by
forcing salt water down his throat from 100-gallon tank. Then they burned the
town.
1911: First recorded incident in the U.S. of audience throwing
vegetables
at actors.
1915: England: First convention of No-Conscription Fellowship.
1941: U.S. officials warn that a Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii, might be imminent.
1965: "March on Washington for Peace in Vietnam" draws 15,000-30,000.
1969: Seven hundred U.S. Army medics stationed in Pleiku stage a fast
to
protest the Vietnam War.
1970: FBI head crackpot J. Edgar Hoover warns of terrorist plot by
Catholic priest Berrigan brothers and others.
1976: Twenty thousand rally for peace in Northern Ireland, Trafalgar
Square, London.
1980: U.S. Justice Department moves to drop charges against former FBI
Director L. Patrick Gray III for authorizing his agents to break into homes
without search warrants. According to a Justice Department spokesperson, Gray
was simply ahead of his time.
1988: Activists paint anti-military graffiti on war planes due for
delivery to Turkey. Woensdrecht, The Netherlands.
Geov Parrish is a Seattle-based columnist and reporter for
Seattle Weekly, In These Times and Eat the State! He writes the
weekdaily Straight Shot for WorkingForChange. If you would like to be
alerted as soon as his column is posted, please send a request to editor@newsforchange.com
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