A Question of Trust - Page 2

In order to sweeten the pot in return for their cooperation in arming the nation, FDR gave them far more power to control and manipulate the existing laws and the government (and by a happy happenstance, enhance their own profitability) than any group of private individuals had ever had in our history. They have yet to surrender those powers, and in fact have since greatly amplified them.

Senator Harry Truman knew about their power to abuse, as he had been investigating their massive cost-overruns in producing the means of war. They quieted him with the office of the Vice-Presidency. After he rose to assume the presidency upon FDR's demise, they turned him to their dark side through the unimaginable power they gave him in the form of the atomic bomb. He became a very willing acolyte in the advancement of their power.

Dwight Eisenhower was also well aware of their power, which is probably why he waited until he was about to leave office before he raised the alarm in his farewell speech. His attempt to introduce us to a monster he helped to create while commanding the European Theater of Operations failed miserably, as few really understood at the time just what he was afraid of. It was, in fact, already too late to do anything about "the military-industrial complex" and had been since the war was still being waged (in at least two senses of the phrase).

Our trust in the corporate media caused us to be led astray by lots of "explanations" about what Eisenhower meant by his comments. Since he apparently took a vow of silence upon leaving office, he never again raised the subject. No one ever heard directly from him what exactly he was talking about, which left the dispensation of "the truth" to those violently silencing anyone who would later stand up to them and threaten their control over our trust.

As their trust in their own power grew, their trust in us shrank, and We, the People became The Enemy. And, as in any conflict, deception was necessary to keep Us, The Enemy from realizing their goals and thwarting them prior to their self-establishment as the ultimate power of our land. But their defenses were still weak in comparison to the slumbering power of We, the People; much had still to be accomplished before they could rule openly.

Enter from Stage Far Right, Ronald Reagan!

Ronald Reagan's career as a shill for corporatism was and is well-known, so I don't need to go into a great deal of background about his connections to the military-industrial complex member General Electric. He sold us their products, which worked as he advertised (or so we thought), and he earned our trust. He used that trust to rise to power, then abused that trust while ruling under the cover provided for him by his vice-president, George I. As the Democrats had yet to reestablish trust in the electorate, HW was easily able to Willie Horton his challenger to retain power in his hands. But 41 himself lost the trust of We, the People when he broke his Reaganistic vow not to raise taxes.

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Article Author: Realist

You don't have to be Pessimist to become Realist - but it certainly helps!

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  • 1 - Baritone

    Aug 19, 2008 at 2:18 pm

    I don't quite know how to respond to this. I do have a question.

    Who are these corporatists? Exactly who are the power brokers running the show? Or is it all too nebulous to pick them out? I'm not trying to be ironic or a smart ass here. I'm genuinely curious about who these people are. What is their ultimate goal? What or who could stand and oppose them?

    B

  • 2 - bliffle

    Aug 19, 2008 at 2:23 pm

    Good article. It is certainly true that traditional American trust in institutions and people has deteriorated badly in the last 30 years especially. Partly because there seems to be no consequences associated with a betrayed trust. High school students cheat on some tests, and their teacher joins with them to scam some competition!

    All that remains is the presumption of trust: a person offers you a handshake deal and you ask for a written contract, and he replies (with hurt demeanor) "don't you trust me?".

    In fact, the system punishes the trustworthy. The person who follows through on his promises and seeks to meet his obligation is piled on, and possibly defamed (often for being untrustworthy!), for his trouble.

  • 3 - Baronius

    Aug 19, 2008 at 6:36 pm

    Is "corporatism" the right word? Wikipedia says

    Historically, corporatism or corporativism (Italian: corporativismo) refers to a political or economic system in which power is held by civic assemblies that represent economic, industrial, agrarian, social, cultural, and/or professional groups.

    My understanding of corporatism is that it's only been tried in Portugal, and fascist Italy and Germany. You could argue that military contractors have too much influence in the US, but that's hardly corporatism. You'd have to have direct authority of the private sector in the hands of the public, or vice versa.

    There's bound to be some exchange of ideas between the government sector and the private sector, especially in fields like education and defense, where the government is active. And some people with experience in one sector will find jobs in the other. But that's not corporatism either.

  • 4 - Ruvy

    Aug 20, 2008 at 3:07 am

    Baritone,

    Who are these corporatists? Exactly who are the power brokers running the show? Or is it all too nebulous to pick them out?

    Read the book "A Century of War", by George Engdahl. Go to the website of Joel Bainerman (google him up). The two don't exactly match, but they do track a lot of the way.

    I know individuals who can tell you the answsers you seek, but they won't tell you; they don't know you, so they don't trust you.

    So check out these two sources and get back to me....

  • 5 - Silas Kain

    Aug 20, 2008 at 6:39 am

    Interesting read. But have we been sold out for thirty pieces of silver? Or has the new American way of life caused us to be overwhelmed with earning our own pieces of silver that we've forgotten the importance of taking an active role in the political discourse?

    As a child, I remember my parents discussing national matters at the dinner table. NBC Nightly News with Huntley and Brinkley were required watching for all us kids. Even today my 80 year old Irish Catholic mother is concerned about the plight of Ethiopian Jews in being repatriated to Israel! I'm just trying to make a point here. Back in those days a family of four could get away with Dad working 1 or 2 jobs and Mom maybe taking on a part time job. Those days are long gone.

    Families today have day care to pay for. Parents have leased people to serve as their surrogates. How many parents in America today can honestly say that they have a handle on their child's education, development and basic character? Our Presidents are a reflection of our society. The current is a fair imitation of typical America today. The Fundamentalists can sing Bush's praises until Christ comes down on His cloud but it doesn't change the truth. He is by far the worst President to serve in the entire history of this Nation. And that's because we've evolved into a society that is nothing like the forefathers envisioned. Clueless, apathetic, cocky - yep that's George W. Bush. AND, that's 80% of America.

  • 6 - bliffle

    Aug 20, 2008 at 6:56 am

    Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington today filed a complaint against Vern Buchanan (R-FL)

    CREW

    Rep. Buchanan owns several car dealerships in Florida. In September 2005, dealership employees were pressured into contributing to Rep. Buchanan’s congressional campaign and some were reimbursed for making contributions. Former employee Carlo Bell was called into a manager’s office and told that if he was part of the “team” he would make a contribution. Fearing for his job, Bell agreed to make the donation and was handed $1,000 in cash. Bell also saw two other employees, Jack Prater and Jason Martin take cash in return for promising to write checks and FEC reports confirm that both men made $1,000 contributions to the Buchanan campaign.

  • 7 - Ruvy

    Aug 20, 2008 at 7:34 am

    Silas,

    The book "A Century of War", by George Engdahl, explains why it is that parents have to lease out their kids to caretakers instead of actually raising them.

    Interesting to see how your perceptions of the United States economy track with mine.

    A side note: tell your mom that the kessim - religious leaders - of the Ethiopian Jews now living in the country do not want the "Falashmura" as they are called, admitted to our country, as they are not really Jews but Christians. Given that Ethiopia is a Christian country, the Falashmura have no place here. And wish her good health from a writer in the mountains of Samaria.

  • 8 - Lumpy

    Aug 20, 2008 at 10:54 pm

    Amazing. It's like Realist lives in a different universe. Almost as delusional as the conspiracy nuts but with a different agenda.. I, glad I don't live in his world of nindless class envy and oppressive populist collectivism. His conclusion? The only way to be free from oppression is oppression: just by a different set of masters.

  • 9 - Condor

    Aug 21, 2008 at 3:12 pm

    Taken from a Bachavich interview 2008 with Bill Moyers. I’m not in the mood to rewrite it….

    It’s only partial. But the defining answer is “We have met the enemy, and it is us” Not corporatists, not government… but us, the consumers. We are allowing this crap to happen either by consuming, or by voting in the wrongs dolts to do the bidding……

    Quote:

    "The pursuit of freedom, as defined in an age of consumerism, has induced a condition of dependence on imported goods, on imported oil, and on credit. The chief desire of the American people," you write, "is that nothing should disrupt their access to these goods, that oil, and that credit. The chief aim of the U.S. government is to satisfy that desire, which it does in part of through the distribution of largesse here at home, and in part through the pursuit of imperial ambitions abroad." In other words, you're saying that our foreign policy is the result of a dependence on consumer goods and credit.

    Our foreign policy is not something simply concocted by people in Washington D.C. and imposed on us. Our foreign policy is something that is concocted in Washington D.C., but it reflects the perceptions of our political elite about what we want, we the people want. And what we want, by and large - I mean, one could point to many individual exceptions - but, what we want, by and large is, we want this continuing flow of very cheap consumer goods.
    We want to be able to pump gas into our cars regardless of how big they may happen to be, in order to be able to drive wherever we want to be able to drive. And we want to be able to do these things without having to think about whether or not the book's balanced at the end of the month, or the end of the fiscal year. And therefore, we want this unending line of credit.

    Well, I think one of the ways we avoid confronting our refusal to balance the books is to rely increasingly on the projection of American military power around the world to try to maintain this dysfunctional system, or set of arrangements that have evolved over the last 30 or 40 years.
    But, it's not the American people who are deploying around the world. It is a very specific subset of our people, this professional army. We like to call it an all-volunteer force-
    but the truth is, it's a professional army, and when we think about where we send that army, it's really an imperial army. I mean, if as Americans, we could simply step back a little bit, and contemplate the significance of the fact that Americans today are fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, and ask ourselves, how did it come to be that organizing places like Iraq and Afghanistan should have come to seem to be critical to the well-being of the United States of America.
    There was a time, seventy, eighty, a hundred years ago, that we Americans sat here in the western hemisphere, and puzzled over why British imperialists went to places like Iraq and Afghanistan. We viewed that sort of imperial adventurism with disdain. But, it's really become part of what we do. Unless a President could ask fundamental questions about our posture in the world, it becomes impossible then, for any American President to engage the American people in some sort of a conversation about how and whether or not to change the way we live.
    How is Iraq a clear manifestation, as you say, of this, "yawning disparity between what Americans expect, and what they're willing to pay?"
    Let's think about World War Two. A war that President Roosevelt told us was essential to U.S. national security, and was. And President Roosevelt said at the time, because this is an important enterprise, you, the American people, will be called upon to make sacrifices. And indeed, the people of the United States went off to fight that war in large numbers. It was a national effort. None of that's been true with regard to Iraq. I mean, one of the most striking things about the way the Bush Administration has managed the Global War on Terror, which President Bush has compared to World War Two.
    One of the most striking things about it is that there was no effort made to mobilize the country, there was actually no effort even made to expand the size of the armed forces, as a matter of fact. The President said just two weeks or so after 9/11, "Go to Disney World. Go shopping." Well, there's something out of whack here, if indeed the Global War on Terror, and Iraq as a subset of the Global War on Terror is said to be so critically important, on the one hand. And on the other hand, when the country basically goes about its business, as if, really, there were no War on Terror, and no war in Iraq ongoing at all.
    "So it is," you write, "seven years into its confrontation with radical Islam, the United States finds itself with too much war for too few warriors and with no prospect of producing the additional soldiers needed to close the gap." When I hear all this talk about increasing the troops in Afghanistan from two to three battalions, maybe even more, I keep asking myself, where are we going to get those troops?

    Unquote

    There's a lot more to the interview... but just google Andrew Bachevich interview with Bill Moyers... read it, and weep.


  • 10 - Baronius

    Aug 21, 2008 at 6:42 pm

    Condor, I read the interview - you had linked to it previously. I found it unpersuasive. Free trade benefits both parties. If a person or a government is buying things it doesn't need, it should stop. But the ability to buy and sell overseas isn't the problem. And I don't see a way to accept what Bachavich is saying without rejecting free trade.

    I hope that makes sense. The writer was connecting dots (at least half of which I think are wrong) to create a picture that doesn't quite fit together anyway.

  • 11 - Condor

    Aug 21, 2008 at 8:51 pm

    I believe the key to Bachevich's argument is not that free trade stop, but that the U.S. has to start producing goods again, or, level the balance of trade. Currently we are 800 billion in trade deficit. That's not healthy. How do we correct the balance in trade? Tariffs? Insistance? What? To put all the eggs in the offshore industrial basket is asking (and looking) like economic disaster.

  • 12 - bliffle

    Aug 21, 2008 at 11:15 pm

    We don't have to suppress Free Trade but we should control it for best outcome for the USA and it's citizens. We should negotiate tougher.

    The USA has always been a leader in Free Trade, often sacrificing our own interests to provide opportunities for other nations.

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