[R-G] [BillTottenWeblog] The danse macabre of US-style democracy
Bill Totten
shimogamo at attglobal.net
Tue Jan 29 15:13:29 MST 2008
Of the presidential candidates I have interviewed, only George C
Wallace, governor of Alabama, spoke the truth
by John Pilger
New Statesman (January 24 2008)
The former president of Tanzania Julius Nyerere once asked, "Why haven't
we all got a vote in the US election? Surely everyone with a TV set has
earned that right just for enduring the merciless bombardment every four
years." Having reported four presidential election campaigns, from the
Kennedys to Nixon, Carter to Reagan, with their Zeppelins of platitudes,
robotic followers and rictal wives, I can sympathise. But what
difference would the vote make? Of the presidential candidates I have
interviewed, only George C Wallace, governor of Alabama, spoke the
truth. "There's not a dime's worth of difference between the Democrats
and Republicans", he said. And he was shot.
What struck me, living and working in the United States, was that
presidential campaigns were a parody, entertaining and often grotesque.
They are a ritual danse macabre of flags, balloons and bullshit,
designed to camouflage a venal system based on money, power, human
division and a culture of permanent war.
Travelling with Robert Kennedy in 1968 was eye-opening for me. To
audiences of the poor, Kennedy would present himself as a saviour. The
words "change" and "hope" were used relentlessly and cynically. For
audiences of fearful whites, he would use racist codes, such as "law and
order". With those opposed to the invasion of Vietnam, he would attack
"putting American boys in the line of fire", but never say when he would
withdraw them. That year (after Kennedy was assassinated), Richard Nixon
used a version of the same, malleable speech to win the presidency.
Thereafter, it was used successfully by Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan,
Bill Clinton and the two Bushes. Carter promised a foreign policy based
on "human rights" - and practised the very opposite. Reagan's "freedom
agenda" was a bloodbath in central America. Clinton "solemnly pledged"
universal health care and tore down the last safety net of the Depression.
Nothing has changed. Barack Obama is a glossy Uncle Tom who would bomb
Pakistan. Hillary Clinton, another bomber, is anti-feminist. John
McCain's one distinction is that he has personally bombed a country.
They all believe the US is not subject to the rules of human behaviour,
because it is "a city upon a hill", regardless that most of humanity
sees it as a monumental bully which, since 1945, has overthrown fifty
governments, many of them democracies, and bombed thirty nations,
destroying millions of lives.
If you wonder why this holocaust is not an "issue" in the current
campaign, you might ask the BBC, or better still Justin Webb, the BBC's
North America editor. In a Radio 4 series last year, Webb displayed the
kind of sycophancy that evokes the 1930s appeaser Geoffrey Dawson, then
editor of the Times. Condoleezza Rice cannot be too mendacious for Webb.
According to Rice, the US is "supporting the democratic aspirations of
all people". For Webb, who believes American patriotism "creates a
feeling of happiness and solidity", the crimes committed in the name of
this patriotism, such as support for war and injustice in the Middle
East for the past 25 years, and in Latin America, are irrelevant.
Indeed, those who resist such an epic assault on democracy are guilty of
"anti-Americanism", says Webb, apparently unaware of the totalitarian
origins of this term of abuse. Journalists in Nazi Berlin would damn
critics of the Reich as "anti-German".
Moreover, his treacle about the "ideals" and "core values" that make up
America's sanctified "set of ideas about human conduct" denies us a true
sense of the destruction of American democracy: the dismantling of the
Bill of Rights, habeas corpus and separation of powers. Here is Webb on
the campaign trail: "[This] is not about mass politics. It is a
celebration of the one-to-one relationship between an individual
American and his or her putative commander-in-chief." He calls this
"dizzying". And Webb on Bush: "Let us not forget that while the
candidates win, lose, win again ... there is a world to be run and
President Bush is still running it". The emphasis in the BBC text
actually links to the White House website.
None of this drivel is journalism. It is anti-journalism, worthy of a
minor courtier of a great power. Webb is not exceptional. His boss Helen
Boaden, director of BBC News, sent this reply to a viewer who had
protested the prevalence of propaganda as the basis of news: "It is
simply a fact that Bush has tried to export democracy [to Iraq] and that
this has been troublesome".
And her source for this "fact"? Quotations from Bush and Blair saying it
is a fact.
http://www.newstatesman.com/200801240023
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