Democracy in America Is a Useful Fiction

Published on Monday, January 25, 2010 by TruthDig.com

Democracy in America Is a Useful Fiction

by Chris Hedges

Corporate forces, long before the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, carried out a coup d’état in slow motion. The coup is over. We lost. The ruling is one more judicial effort to streamline mechanisms for corporate control. It exposes the myth of a functioning democracy and the triumph of corporate power. But it does not significantly alter the political landscape. The corporate state is firmly cemented in place.

The fiction of democracy remains useful, not only for corporations, but for our bankrupt liberal class. If the fiction is seriously challenged, liberals will be forced to consider actual resistance, which will be neither pleasant nor easy. As long as a democratic facade exists, liberals can engage in an empty moral posturing that requires little sacrifice or commitment. They can be the self-appointed scolds of the Democratic Party, acting as if they are part of the debate and feel vindicated by their cries of protest.

Much of the outrage expressed about the court’s ruling is the outrage of those who prefer this choreographed charade. As long as the charade is played, they do not have to consider how to combat what the political philosopher Sheldon Wolin calls our system of “inverted totalitarianism.”

Inverted totalitarianism represents “the political coming of age of corporate power and the political demobilization of the citizenry,” Wolin writes in “Democracy Incorporated.” Inverted totalitarianism differs from classical forms of totalitarianism, which revolve around a demagogue or charismatic leader, and finds its expression in the anonymity of the corporate state. The corporate forces behind inverted totalitarianism do not, as classical totalitarian movements do, boast of replacing decaying structures with a new, revolutionary structure. They purport to honor electoral politics, freedom and the Constitution. But they so corrupt and manipulate the levers of power as to make democracy impossible.

Inverted totalitarianism is not conceptualized as an ideology or objectified in public policy. It is furthered by “power-holders and citizens who often seem unaware of the deeper consequences of their actions or inactions,” Wolin writes. But it is as dangerous as classical forms of totalitarianism. In a system of inverted totalitarianism, as this court ruling illustrates, it is not necessary to rewrite the Constitution, as fascist and communist regimes do. It is enough to exploit legitimate power by means of judicial and legislative interpretation. This exploitation ensures that huge corporate campaign contributions are protected speech under the First Amendment. It ensures that heavily financed and organized lobbying by large corporations is interpreted as an application of the people’s right to petition the government. The court again ratified the concept that corporations are persons, except in those cases where the “persons” agree to a “settlement.” Those within corporations who commit crimes can avoid going to prison by paying large sums of money to the government while, according to this twisted judicial reasoning, not “admitting any wrongdoing.” There is a word for this. It is called corruption.

Corporations have 35,000 lobbyists in Washington and thousands more in state capitals that dole out corporate money to shape and write legislation. They use their political action committees to solicit employees and shareholders for donations to fund pliable candidates. The financial sector, for example, spent more than $5 billion on political campaigns, influence peddling and lobbying during the past decade, which resulted in sweeping deregulation, the gouging of consumers, our global financial meltdown and the subsequent looting of the U.S. Treasury. The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America spent $26 million last year and drug companies such as Pfizer, Amgen and Eli Lilly kicked in tens of millions more to buy off the two parties. These corporations have made sure our so-called health reform bill will force us to buy their predatory and defective products. The oil and gas industry, the coal industry, defense contractors and telecommunications companies have thwarted the drive for sustainable energy and orchestrated the steady erosion of civil liberties. Politicians do corporate bidding and stage hollow acts of political theater to keep the fiction of the democratic state alive.

There is no national institution left that can accurately be described as democratic. Citizens, rather than participate in power, are allowed to have virtual opinions to preordained questions, a kind of participatory fascism as meaningless as voting on “American Idol.” Mass emotions are directed toward the raging culture wars. This allows us to take emotional stands on issues that are inconsequential to the power elite.

Our transformation into an empire, as happened in ancient Athens and Rome, has seen the tyranny we practice abroad become the tyranny we practice at home. We, like all empires, have been eviscerated by our own expansionism. We utilize weapons of horrific destructive power, subsidize their development with billions in taxpayer dollars, and are the world’s largest arms dealer. And the Constitution, as Wolin notes, is “conscripted to serve as power’s apprentice rather than its conscience.”

“Inverted totalitarianism reverses things,” Wolin writes. “It is politics all of the time but a politics largely untempered by the political. Party squabbles are occasionally on public display, and there is a frantic and continuous politics among factions of the party, interest groups, competing corporate powers, and rival media concerns. And there is, of course, the culminating moment of national elections when the attention of the nation is required to make a choice of personalities rather than a choice between alternatives. What is absent is the political, the commitment to finding where the common good lies amidst the welter of well-financed, highly organized, single-minded interests rabidly seeking governmental favors and overwhelming the practices of representative government and public administration by a sea of cash.” 

Hollywood, the news industry and television, all corporate controlled, have become instruments of inverted totalitarianism. They censor or ridicule those who critique or challenge corporate structures and assumptions. They saturate the airwaves with manufactured controversy, whether it is Tiger Woods or the dispute between Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien. They manipulate images to make us confuse how we are made to feel with knowledge, which is how Barack Obama became president. And the draconian internal control employed by the Department of Homeland Security, the military and the police over any form of popular dissent, coupled with the corporate media’s censorship, does for inverted totalitarianism what thugs and bonfires of books do in classical totalitarian regimes.

“It seems a replay of historical experience that the bias displayed by today’s media should be aimed consistently at the shredded remains of liberalism,” Wolin writes. “Recall that an element common to most 20th century totalitarianism, whether Fascist or Stalinist, was hostility towards the left. In the United States, the left is assumed to consist solely of liberals, occasionally of ‘the left wing of the Democratic Party,’ never of democrats.”

Liberals, socialists, trade unionists, independent journalists and intellectuals, many of whom were once important voices in our society, have been silenced or targeted for elimination within corporate-controlled academia, the media and government. Wolin, who taught at Berkeley and later at Princeton, is arguably the country’s foremost political philosopher. And yet his book was virtually ignored. This is also why Ralph Nader, Dennis Kucinich and Cynthia McKinney, along with intellectuals like Noam Chomsky, are not given a part in our national discourse.

The uniformity of opinion is reinforced by the skillfully orchestrated mass emotions of nationalism and patriotism, which paints all dissidents as “soft” or “unpatriotic.” The “patriotic” citizen, plagued by fear of job losses and possible terrorist attacks, unfailingly supports widespread surveillance and the militarized state. This means no questioning of the $1 trillion in defense-related spending. It means that the military and intelligence agencies are held above government, as if somehow they are not part of government. The most powerful instruments of state power and control are effectively removed from public discussion. We, as imperial citizens, are taught to be contemptuous of government bureaucracy, yet we stand like sheep before Homeland Security agents in airports and are mute when Congress permits our private correspondence and conversations to be monitored and archived. We endure more state control than at any time in American history. 

The civic, patriotic and political language we use to describe ourselves remains unchanged. We pay fealty to the same national symbols and iconography. We find our collective identity in the same national myths. We continue to deify the Founding Fathers. But the America we celebrate is an illusion. It does not exist. Our government and judiciary have no real sovereignty. Our press provides diversion, not information. Our organs of security and power keep us as domesticated and as fearful as most Iraqis. Capitalism, as Karl Marx understood, when it emasculates government, becomes a revolutionary force. And this revolutionary force, best described as inverted totalitarianism, is plunging us into a state of neo-feudalism, perpetual war and severe repression. The Supreme Court decision is part of our transformation by the corporate state from citizens to prisoners.

© 2010 TruthDig.com

Chris Hedges writes a regular column for Truthdig.com. Hedges graduated from Harvard Divinity School and was for nearly two decades a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. He is the author of many books, including: War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning, What Every Person Should Know About War, and American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America.  His most recent book is Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle

Advertisement

3 Comments »

  1. 1
    chrisy58 Says:

    I thought this comment on Common Dreams was very good and I wanted to post it here.

    Ephraim January 25th, 2010 10:11 am
    Hedges is right as rain once again. It seems clear beyond further argument that we must find an effective way, or ways, to confront, challenge, and eradicate corporatism, or we will remain forever its slave and prisoner. For some 50 years we have allowed this monster to slowly gather into itself nearly all the wealth and power this society holds, and most especially through our acquiescence to Globalization, as if that would really benefit ordinary citizens, not just corporate power.

    They duped the vast majority into believing this gargantuan lie, unless we are finally content to be nothing more than consumers of the products they hawk in a media saturated culture, where the culture itself is now nothing more than round-the-clock spectacle for advertising and consuming. We’ve managed to strangle and toxify the world with the waste attendant on all this maniacal consumption, while the corporate elite continue consolidating its power and seizing of all wealth.

    When their habitual crimes and theft result in bankrupting the very system they plunder without remorse or pause, our lickspittle government bails them out with our tax dollars. Or what’s left after funnelling most of it to militarism. This is not a sustainable situation, as we see every day. How long the collapse will take, nobody knows. Inverted totalitarianism has many tricks and schemes to keep it on indefinite life support, sucking all the vitality out of this already demented society, so that in time we become not only willing prisoners and slaves but unconsciously so, which is all engineered into the corporate design. Denial that all this has already happened is as epidemic and ubiquitous as TV advertising. We either overthrow this madness or accept our fully assimilated status as helpless captives of “the Borg.” If “freedom is participation in power,” as *metal* keeps reminding us, then there could not be a less free people anywhere. Unless we’ve finally decided that power doesn’t mean anything besides consuming products.

  2. 2
    chrisy58 Says:

    Here is another comment I wanted to post here in regards to the article.

    Radical Pantheist January 25th, 2010 9:12 am
    The US government has been illegitimate since the assassination of JFK. The only appropriate response to this situation is for the American people to abandon their left/right divide (as Hedges notes, the polarization, controversies and culture wars are encouraged by the power elite) and find our common ground. We all want small government; we need to decentralize (as Wolin suggests in his concluding chapter of “Democracy Inc.”).

    In order to do that, we’ll also have to abandon our inappropriate reverence for the oldest written constitution in the world, and construct a government more suited to the needs of the people. Wolin also goes into some depth about how the US Constitution was deliberately constructed to keep an aristocracy in power. It is steeped in monarchist values.

    I discussed these ideas, and came to the same conclusions as Hedges, last May, in my article, “Constitution 2.0,” which is still at the top of my blog-in-hiatus, Radical Pantheist.

  3. 3
    chrisy58 Says:

    I am going to post my thoughts on the article both here and on Common Dreams.

    I believe there is much truth in Chris Hedges’s article. For years I have felt this country was at a crossroads and if the people continued to ignore what was going on that we would loose. The Corporations would win and we the people would find that our Democratic Republic would become nothing but a charade.

    I think that is one reason why I would get frustrated with the NSDAR, because we the daughters of the Founding Fathers were part of that charade of pretending that everything was peachy keen and kept silent. I didn’t want to just do nothing, which to me is the same as surrendering. I wanted to and still want to FIGHT!!!!!!!!!!

    If we the Daughters of the American Revolution won’t fight to save this nation that was founded by our ancestors than who will? If we the Daughters of the American Revolution lie to ourselves and by our silence allow our Constitution to be destroyed than we have FAILED OUR ANCESTORS WHO BY THEIR BLOOD, SWEAT AND TEARS CREATED THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. If we the Daughters of the American Revolution make excuses on why we can’t fight those who by their actions and vision seek to destroy this nation that we take an oath to defend from all enemies foreign and domestic; than we have surrendered and become part of the enemy.

    I am no longer NSDAR, but I am still a Daughter of the American Revolution. I may start my own group for Daughters who want to FIGHT THE ENEMY and not just pretend and play along with the charade. The NSDAR still does good work and helps the veterans in this country. For many years I was a proud member, but I can’t pretend that everything is ok. I want to rock the boat and fight!!!!!!!

    I also agree with the comment that with the murder of President John F. Kennedy our government was taken over by a coup. The American people didn’t realize what was happening and so the charade has been able to continue all these years. Like all things in life, the truth always comes out at some point. I believe Americans are waking up to the truth now. I would hope they would see just what has happen to this government that has become so corrupted that it does the bidding of Corporate America and not the American people.

    John F. Kennedy was the first President I remember. I was five years old. He planted his seed inside this small child’s heart. I loved him like many other Americans. In my mind I thought a President being like a Father who loves us, who protects us, and fights for us. I think that I am the woman today because of the seed he planted bore fruit. I know that he loved this country and that he fought to save this country. I want to fight like he did and would fight. I hope others who remember him will pick up his sword and fight as he would want us to.

    Yes, we might loose this fight against those who by their actions and vision are seeking to destroy this nation; but if we don’t at least try than we are loosers. What have we got to loose if we fight and are defeated? We would be right where we are now when Americans don’t seem willing to fight but just pretend that this charade is real.

    The question for me is do I love America enough to fight even though it means I might die? The answer to me is YES. When I was in a DAR meeting and looking at the flag with my hand over my heart and repeated the American creed I meant every word from the bottom of my heart. That is why I fight!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    The Supreme Court Ruling is a shot fired and the question is Will we Progressives who say we love America FIGHT to save this nation? Will we do what our ancestors did in risking their life and fortune in the fight? Or will we take the easy way out and make excuses why we can’t pick up the sword of President Kennedy and fight as he would want us to fight to save this nation that he loved so much?

    For me the answer is YES and has been yes for a long time. I hope other Americans who say they love this nation will also pick up the sword and fight. We don’t have time to make excuses on why we can’t pick up the sword and fight. Our children and future generations of Americans need us to pick up that sword and start fighting now.

    I hope that we still have Americans who are willing to fight for the good of this nation against those who by their actions and vision seek to destroy the very foundation this great country was built on.

    Chrisy


RSS Feed for this entry

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.