In the midst of news of foreign wars, Americans are beginning to wake
up to the real war being waged here at home. It is, however, a confused
awakening.
For example, Americans wonder why the Bush administration seems so
intent on crippling local, state, and federal governments by starving them
of funds and creating huge federal debt that our children will have to
repay.
Many think it's just to fund tax cuts and subsidies for the rich, that
the multimillionaire CEOs who've taken over virtually all senior posts in
the Bush administration are just pigs at the trough, and this is a
spectacular but ordinary form of self-serving corruption. It all seems so
plausible, and there's even a grain of truth to it.
But juicy deals for Bush administration insiders are just a by-product
of the real and deeper war against democracy. The neoconservatives are
perfectly happy for us to think they're just opportunists skirting the
edges of legality and morality, but this is far more dangerous than simple
government corruption.
Indeed, the neo-conservatives claim to be anti-government. As a leading
spokesman for the neo-con agenda, Grover Norquist, told National Public
Radio's Mara Liasson in a May 25, 2001 Morning Edition interview, "I
don't want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size
where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub."
Without a larger view, the issues of domestic spending, oil,
neo-conservative power plays in both major parties, the loss of liberties,
anti-government rhetoric, and war in the Middle East all seem like
separate and unconnected events. They're not.
The "new conservatives" who've seized the Republican Party
and, through the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) are nipping at the
heels of the Democratic Party, are not our parents' conservatives.
Historic conservatives like Barry Goldwater, Harry Truman, and Dwight
Eisenhower would be appalled. Although their philosophical roots go back
to Alexander Hamilton, who openly argued during the Constitutional
Convention that royalty was the best form of government, the neocons have
always been kept to the fringe, nipping at the heels of democracy.
In past times those promoting what is now called the neo-conservative
agenda went by different names.
The Founders of America knew that for 6000 years "civilized"
humans had always been ruled by one of three groups: kings, theocrats, or
feudal lords. Kings held power by threat of violence and continual
warfare; theocrats and popes held power by the people's fear of a god or
gods; and feudal lords held power by wealth and the power that comes from
throwing average people into poverty.
The "new" idea of our Founders in 1776 was to throw off all
three of these historic tyrannies and replace them with a fourth way -
people being ruled by themselves. A government that derived its legitimacy
and continuing existence solely from the approval of its citizens.
Government of, by, and for "We, The People." They called it a
republican democracy.
What we are seeing now in the neoconservative agenda is nothing less
than an attempt to overthrow republican democracy and replace it with a
worldwide feudal state.
The last time this happened, the feudalists took over a monarchy and
then North America. In December 1600, Queen Elizabeth I chartered the East
India company, ultimately leading to a corporate takeover of the Americas
that the colonists ended with the Boston Tea Party and, three years later,
the American Revolution. This corporate-state partnership went on to
conquer India, but eventually faded out as the British Empire faded, and
the British government, along with most of Western Europe, embraced
Jeffersonian forms of democracy.
But it raised its head again in the 20th Century, revived by Franco,
Hitler, and Mussolini. The Italian dictator even used the word
"corporatism" to describe it, and then later renamed it as
"fascism" - a word that was defined in American dictionaries
such as The American Heritage Dictionary (Houghton Mifflin Company) in
1983 as "fas-cism (fash'iz'em) n. A system of
government that exercises a dictatorship of the extreme right, typically
through the merging of state and business leadership, together with
belligerent nationalism."
Since the "Reagan Revolution," two centuries after we rose up
and rebelled against King George III's support of corporate feudalism in
Boston Harbor, this ancient enemy of democracy is again trying to seize
America. Reagan ignored the Sherman Act and other restraints on
corporations, and sold at fire-sale prices the airwaves once held in
common by We, The People. The result was predictable: a merger and
acquisitions frenzy, and the takeover of American media by a handful of
mega-corporations. Bill Clinton then helped export corporatism to the
industrialized world when he pushed GATT/WTO through Congress.
Thus, the war on Iraq was just one front in the larger feudal war
against democracy itself. (And a particularly useful one - it gave the
corporate feudal lords access to oil wealth, and was so effective at
distracting the populace from Bush's outrageous domestic agenda that we
can expect to see another war, somewhere, in November of 2004.)
In 1936 - years before America turned its attention to fighting fascism
in Germany - Franklin D. Roosevelt was concerned about the rise of a
corporate feudalism here in the United States. In a speech in Philadelphia
on June 27th, he said: "Out of this modern civilization economic
royalists carved new dynasties. New kingdoms were built upon concentration
of control over material things. Through new uses of corporations, banks
and securities, new machinery of industry and agriculture, of labor and
capital - all undreamed of by the Fathers - the whole structure of modern
life was impressed into this royal service."
Roosevelt suggested that human nature may play a part in it all, but
that didn't make it tolerable. "It was natural and perhaps
human," he said, "that the privileged princes of these new
economic dynasties, thirsting for power, reached out for control over
government itself."
It was a control the Democratic Party of 1936 found intolerable.
"As a result," Roosevelt said, "the average man once more
confronts the problem that faced the Minute Man."
Republicans of the day lashed out in the press and on radio, charging
that Roosevelt was anti-American, even communist. Without a moment's
hesitation, he threw it back in their faces.
"These economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the
institutions of America," Roosevelt thundered in that 1936 speech.
"What they really complain of is that we seek to take away their
power. Our allegiance to American institutions requires the
overthrow of this kind of power. In vain they seek to hide behind the flag
and the Constitution. In their blindness they forget what the flag and the
Constitution stand for."
Those of us who still believe in republican democracy would have
"We, The People" make the decisions through representatives
we've elected without the feudal influence of corporate money. We realize
that "big government" is, indeed, a menace when it's no longer
responsive to its own people, as happened in Germany and Russia in the
last century - and is happening today in America under the
neoconservatives.
But we also remember the vision of a free and democratic America - a
sacred archetype so powerful that protestors in Tiananmen Square marched
to their deaths carrying a 36-foot-tall paper mache replica of the Statue
Of Liberty while quoting the words of Thomas Jefferson.
Facing the power of The East India Company's corporate feudalism in
1773, the Founders of our nation, unable to get their voices heard in the
halls of the British government or even in many of the newspapers of the
day, turned to two nonviolent and very effective methods to spread the new
meme of democracy.
The first was pamphleteering - and the internet is today's pamphlet.
Millions are using email and pointing to websites to awaken people and
promote democratic change.
The second was creating "committees of correspondence," also
used extensively by the Women's Suffrage movement. These were groups
organized to write letters to the editors of newspapers.
People across American have already begun letter writing, faxing, and
email campaigns, and you can see the results on the editorial pages of our
newspapers and in the reactions of some of our politicians. Other
correspondents are blogging or calling in to talk shows, modern variations
on this theme.
A correspondent in York, New York, who is pamphleteering in email and
encouraging committees of correspondence to write letters to newspaper
editors against the new feudalism's wars on America and overseas, shared
the following quote from Emerson: "One of the illusions [of life] is
that the present hour is not the critical, decisive hour."
Yet this is the critical and decisive hour, and we are not
without voices or tools.
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is an author and talk show
host. www.thomhartmann.com
This article is copyright by Thom Hartmann, but permission is granted for
republication in print, email, blog, or web media so long as this credit
is attached. originally published in commondreams.org