Chris Hedges - The Coming Collapse // Pratap Bhanu Mehta: Trump’s disruptions may have more significance than who he is
It is impossible for any doomed population
to grasp how fragile the decayed financial, social and political system is on
the eve of implosion.
The Trump
administration did not rise, prima facie, like Venus on a half shell from the
sea. Donald Trump is the result of a long process of political, cultural and
social decay. He is a product of our failed democracy. The longer we perpetuate
the fiction that we live in a functioning democracy, that Trump and the
political mutations around him are somehow an aberrant deviation that can be
vanquished in the next election, the more we will hurtle toward tyranny. The
problem is not Trump. It is a political system, dominated by corporate power
and the mandarins of the two major political parties, in which we don’t count.
We will wrest back political control by dismantling the corporate state, and
this means massive and sustained civil disobedience, like that demonstrated
by teachers around the country this year. If we do not stand up we
will enter a new dark age.
Pratap Bhanu Mehta: Trump’s disruptions may have more significance than who he is
Trump’s disruptions signify three mutually reinforcing trends. First, he has signalled “end of the west” as a coherent ideological and geo-political entity by disrupting the G-7. Second, he is making it clear that America does not want to sustain Pax Americana. It is not willing to pay the price for it in terms of troops or financial commitments. Third, he is... rolling back post-Cold War globalisation. In any other context, these three trends would have warranted more reflection. The starkness with which he pursues them has also exposed the contradictions of dominant liberal approaches to international order...
The Democratic Party,
which helped build our system of inverted
totalitarianism, is once again held up by many on the left as the savior.
Yet the party steadfastly refuses to address the social inequality that led to
the election of Trump and the insurgency by Bernie Sanders. It is deaf, dumb
and blind to the very real economic suffering that plagues over half the
country. It will not fight to pay workers a living wage. It will not defy the
pharmaceutical and insurance industries to provide Medicare for all. It will
not curb the voracious appetite of the military that is disemboweling the
country and promoting the prosecution of futile and costly foreign wars. It
will not restore our lost civil liberties, including the right to privacy,
freedom from government surveillance, and due process. It will not get corporate
and dark
money out of politics. It will not demilitarize our police and reform
a prison system that has 25 percent of the world’s prisoners although the
United States has only 5 percent of the world’s population. It plays to the
margins, especially in election seasons, refusing to address substantive
political and social problems and instead focusing on narrow cultural issues
like gay rights, abortion and gun control in our peculiar species of anti-politics.
This is a doomed
tactic, but one that is understandable. The leadership of the party, the
Clintons, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, Tom Perez, are creations of corporate
America. In an open and democratic political process, one not dominated by
party elites and corporate money, these people would not hold political power.
They know this. They would rather implode the entire system than give up their
positions of privilege. And that, I fear, is what will happen. The idea that
the Democratic Party is in any way a bulwark against despotism defies the last
three decades of its political activity. It is the guarantor of despotism. Trump has tapped into
the hatred that huge segments of the American public have for a political and
economic system that has betrayed them. He may be inept, degenerate, dishonest
and a narcissist, but he adeptly ridicules the system they despise. His cruel
and demeaning taunts directed at government agencies, laws and the established
elites resonate with people for whom these agencies, laws and elites have
become hostile forces. And for many who see no shift in the political landscape
to alleviate their suffering, Trump’s cruelty and invective are at least
cathartic.
Trump, like all
despots, has no ethical core. He chooses his allies and appointees based on
their personal loyalty and fawning obsequiousness to him. He will sell anyone
out. He is corrupt, amassing money for himself—he made $40 million from his
Washington, D.C., hotel alone last year—and his corporate allies. He is
dismantling government institutions that once provided some regulation and
oversight. He is an enemy of the open society. This makes him dangerous. His
turbocharged assault on the last vestiges of democratic institutions and norms
means there will soon be nothing, even in name, to protect us from corporate
totalitarianism.
But the warnings from
the architects of our failed democracy against creeping fascism, Madeleine
Albright among them, are risible. They show how disconnected the elites
have become from the zeitgeist. None of these elites have credibility. They
built the edifice of lies, deceit and corporate pillage that made Trump
possible. And the more Trump demeans these elites, and the more they cry out
like Cassandras, the more he salvages his disastrous presidency and enables the
kleptocrats pillaging the country as it swiftly disintegrates. The press is one of
the principal pillars of Trump’s despotism. It chatters endlessly like
17th-century courtiers at the court of Versailles about the foibles of the
monarch while the peasants lack bread. It drones on and on and on about empty
topics such as Russian meddling and a payoff to a porn actress that have
nothing to do with the daily hell that, for many, defines life in America. It
refuses to critique or investigate the abuses by corporate power, which has
destroyed our democracy and economy and orchestrated the largest transfer of
wealth upward in American history. The corporate press is a decayed relic that,
in exchange for money and access, committed cultural suicide. And when Trump
attacks it over “fake news,” he expresses, once again, the deep hatred of all
those the press ignores.
The press worships the idol of Mammon as slavishly as
Trump does. It loves the reality-show presidency. The press, especially the
cable news shows, keeps the lights on and the cameras rolling so viewers will
be glued to a 21st-century version of “The Cabinet of
Dr. Caligari.” It is good for ratings. It is good for profits. But it
accelerates the decline. All this will soon be
compounded by financial collapse. Wall Street banks have been handed $16
trillion in bailouts and other subsidies by the Federal Reserve and
Congress at nearly zero percent interest since the 2008 financial collapse... read more:
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2018/05/21/coming-collapse?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=email_this&utm_source=email