The American elite's unbounded, unquestioned,
indeed unconscious sense of imperial entitlement and dominance -- based
ultimately on war, the threat of war and the profit from war -- is one
of the defining characteristics of our age. And if you would like to
see a glaring example of this attitude in action, look no further than
the front page of Tuesday's New York Times, where one David Sanger gives us his penetrating "news analysis" of the Administration's just-announced $3.8 trillion budget.
Sanger focuses on the huge, continuing deficits that the budget
forecasts over the next decade. Completely ignoring the plain truth
that his own expert source tell him later in the story -- that
"forecasts 10 years out have no credibility" -- Sanger boldly plunges
forward to tell us just what it all means. You will not be surprised to
hear that the upshot of these big deficits is that neither Obama nor
his successors will be able to spend any money on "new domestic
initiatives" for years to come. But let's let Sanger, savant and seer,
tell it in his own words:
In a federal budget filled with
mind-boggling statistics, two numbers stand out as particularly
stunning, for the way they may change American politics and American
power.
The first is the projected deficit in the
coming year, nearly 11 percent of the country's entire economic output.
That is not unprecedented: During the Civil War, World War I and World
War II, the United States ran soaring deficits, but usually with the
expectation that they would come back down once peace was restored and
war spending abated.
But the second number, buried deeper in the
budget's projections, is the one that really commands attention: By
President Obama's own optimistic projections, American deficits will
not return to what are widely considered sustainable levels over the
next 10 years. ...
For Mr. Obama and his successors, the effect
of those projections is clear: Unless miraculous growth, or miraculous
political compromises, creates some unforeseen change over the next
decade, there is virtually no room for new domestic initiatives for Mr.
Obama or his successors. Beyond that lies the possibility that the
United States could begin to suffer the same disease that has afflicted
Japan over the past decade. As debt grew more rapidly than income, that
country's influence around the world eroded.
What is most interesting here, of course, is not Sanger's
noodle-scratching over imaginary numbers projected into an unknowable
future, but his total and apparently completely unconscious adoption of
the mindset of militarist empire. For as he puzzles and puzzles till
his puzzler is sore on how in God's name the United States can possibly
find any money at all to spend on bettering the lives of its citizens
over the next 10 years, it becomes clear that Sanger -- like the rest
of our political and media elite -- literally cannot conceive of an end
to empire. Our elites and their courtiers literally cannot imagine life
without a permanent war for global dominance, fueled by a gargantuan
war machine spread across hundreds and hundreds of bases implanted in
more than 100 countries.
And so this consideration, this possible outcome, does not figure
in Sanger's "analysis" because it cannot: it lies far outside the scope
of his consciousness. The only possible alternative he can conceive to
the empire's bloody and bankrupting business as usual is some kind of
divine intervention, "miraculous growth" or some "miraculous political
compromise."
And make no mistake: the "miraculous political compromise" he is
talking about has nothing to do with ending or even trimming the
empire. A "compromise" on this issue could only be posited if there was
some present conflict over it. But both parties are deeply committed to
increasing spending on the wars and the war machine.
No, by "compromise" Sanger means some sort of "Grand Bargain"
between the parties to cut Social Security and Medicare, along the
lines of the "blue-ribbon panel" of entitlement cutters now
being pushed by the Obama Administration. An effort to impose this kind
of elitist, unaccountable commission failed in the Senate a few weeks
ago -- although the Republicans have proposed such panels before, they
didn't like this one because Obama proposed it -- but the idea will
keep coming back. Sanger and the elite will doubtless get their
"miracle" of slashing the remaining bits of the safety net to shreds in
due time.
For these are the only possibilities for deficit-cutting that
Sanger can even remotely contemplate: some whiz-bang new techno gizmo
-- or maybe some hot new "financial instruments" cooked up by Wall
Street -- that will goose the economy with a bright new bubble ... or
else finally telling our old, sick, vulnerable and unfortunate to just
crawl off and die already. That's it. That's all that our elite can
envision.
Yet the ending of the imperial wars and the dismantling of
America's global military empire -- and its global gulag -- would save
trillions of dollars in the coming years. Not only from direct military
spending, but also from the vastly reduced need for "Homeland security"
funding in a world where the United States was no longer invading
foreign lands, killing their people, supporting their tyrants -- and
inciting revenge and resistance.
This would release a flood of money for any number of "new domestic
initiatives," while also giving scope for deep tax cuts across the
board. Working people would thrive, the poor, the sick and the
vulnerable would be bettered, businesses would grow, opportunity would
expand, the care and education of our children would be greatly
enhanced, our infrastructure could be repaired and strengthened, our
environment better cleansed and cared for. In short, people could keep
more of their own money while government spending could be directed
toward improving the quality of life of all the nation's citizens.
This is no utopian vision. Many problems, much suffering would remain. But it would be a better society
-- more humane, more just, more secure, more peaceful, more prosperous
than it is now. Such an alternative is entirely achievable, by ordinary
humans; it would require no divine miracles, no god-like heroes to
bring it about.
But such a society is precisely what our elites cannot -- or, to be more accurate, will not
-- imagine. Because, yes, it would "erode" their "influence" around the
world to some extent. Although they would still be comfortable, coddled
and privileged, they could no longer merge their individual psyches
with the larger entity of a globe-spanning, death-dealing empire -- a
connection which, although itself a projection of their own brains,
gives them a forever-inflated sense of worth and importance.
And on a more prosaic level, the end of empire would mean an end to
the horrendous economic distortion wrought by our war-profiteering
industries. Other businesses would inevitably come to the fore,
economic activity would be spread more evenly across more sectors. And
so, yes, those who have feasted so gluttonously for so long on blood
money would not be quite as rich as they are now.
A better world -- again, not perfect, by no means perfect, but much better --
is entirely possible. We could easily dismantle the empire --
carefully, safely, with deliberation -- over the next ten years. It is
a reasonable, moderate, serious option. It would not require violent
revolution or vast social upheaval. But our elites do not want this.
They can no longer fathom life without the exercise -- and worship --
of unrestricted power that empire entails. They will not accept -- or
even contemplate -- any alternative to it.
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