Why Democracies
evolve into Dictatorships
By James Cooke
08/18/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- It took only six years with Bush Jr. as
President to give birth to a new generation of radical political
activists, journalists, and commentators, whose main concerns are
subjecting the insane policies of the President to exposure and
condemnation; this, it seems, constitutes the foundation for nearly
the entire realm of real political opposition in the U.S. The
strategy here is limited to educating people about the destructive
policies of the Republicans and hoping that in response, a protest
or political movement will evolve powerful enough to either reform
or displace those in power. Education of course, is absolutely
crucial in transforming any dissident organization into an entity
capable of action and results. However, by focusing only on the
policies of the Republicans, without explaining the larger framework
from whence they came, political education is greatly hindered,
limiting the potential for effective action.
Undoubtedly, the neo-conservative movement is treated with mystical
awe by those responsible for criticizing it. Liberal commentators
continue to respond with hysterics or dumfoundedness at the ability
of Conservatives to destroy civil liberties while thus far waging
three preemptive wars (yes Lebanon is a U.S. war). It should have
been clear by now— with the media and Democrats suppressing or
supporting the most blatant atrocities engineered by the
Republicans— that larger forces are at play.
Historically speaking, the transition from democracy to dictatorship
has appeared in various forms, including military coup, civil war,
election tampering and ‘emergency’ situations requiring ‘special’
powers— with Bush’s growing authority fitting into the latter two
categories. Although dictatorial forms differ radically in their
appearance, at bottom there remain essential common features.
A dictatorship cannot be formed from the heavens; there must be in
every instance a background of interests and groups that aide the
regime by finances, apologetics, or aggressive support. These
interests too have a historical background, originating from their
position as beneficiaries of the economic arrangement of society.
Dictatorship has been, with few exceptions, performed in the service
of a minority; these dictatorships have always represented the
interests of the financial elite. By limiting the definition thusly,
we are able to make connections with the fascists of Italy, Japan,
and Germany, to the century-old dictatorships of the neo-colonial
world.
It is in the interests of any ruling class to maintain government
control by Democratic means, since the effort in maintaining order
is less taxing, and the ease of channeling discontent through
compromise and concession is increased. It must be asked then: why
do these groups, who already contain tremendous wealth and prestige,
trouble themselves by resorting to the barbaric and complicated
policies that are implied by dictatorship, rather than keeping the
less-conflicted relationships that are found under a more democratic
government? We must dismiss the shallow answers of ‘greed’ or
‘insanity’ out of hand, especially when there are much more sensible
answers.
To the dismay of the ruling classes, the social conditions of
society change in a way they have no control over. As corporations
follow the rules of profit-making, they inadvertently create at the
same time an ever-widening polarization of wealth. As the rich get
richer, and the poor poorer, social conditions gradually change,
until the exploited classes suddenly start making demands, or begin
acts of ‘anarchy’,i.e., strikes, protests, factory occupations, and
rebellion. Social inequality in the U.S. has had staggering
increases in the last 10 years, to the point where there are now
(realistically) 45 million people living in poverty, 2 million in
prison, and with the processes of a profit-based globalization and
harsher criminal penalties in place, the numbers will inevitably
rise.
A dictatorship is thus the necessary evil born out of the natural
processes of capitalism. Heightened executive powers are needed to
suppress civil unrest, create social stability, and insure the
industries essential to the ‘nations’ economy are not disrupted by
strikes; destroying civil liberties that allow protest,
organization, and freedom of expression are timeless policies in
combating a disgruntled populace.
Explaining dictatorship as a result of social inequality is
especially relevant to third-world nations, where ‘order’ is needed
to ensure that the countries are ‘stable’ enough to be used as a
source for markets and raw-materials for their colonial masters;
however, this explanation cannot be applied across the board.
For industrialized nations, the causes of dictatorship become more
complex. In addition to social polarization, 1st world nations are
also involved in constant economic and regional expansion— a
phenomenon easily traced to the interests of the capitalists pulling
the strings. A government is only as powerful as the corporate might
behind it; the interdependence of nation-state and corporate
interests is revealed by the fact that both are ruled by the same
laws of the market, meaning, that at bottom, each are governed by
the processes of either expansion and growth, or stagnation and
decline. In the same way that stagnation in the corporate world
equals recession or depression, so too are these principles
reflected by the mediators of financial interests— the nation-state.
For a country to be in decline means that its global influence is
waning; it has lost influence over foreign nations, preventing the
exploitation of raw materials and favored market access for
manufactured goods, or rather, the country in question is unable to
supply the basis for the corporations within its boundaries to
dominate globally— thus, the goals of the nation-state and the
corporation cannot be separated.
The activities of the present-day United States are a case in point.
The U.S. has been compensating for its declining economic position
with military adventurism to control the vast oil reserves of the
Middle East. Proof of this assertion can be candidly found in the
writings of the now-infamous Project for a New American Century (PNAC).
In their ’Statement of Principles’, it says:
”We are in danger of squandering the opportunity and failing the
challenge. We are living off the capital -- both the military
investments and the foreign policy achievements -- built up by past
administrations. Cuts in foreign affairs and defense spending,
inattention to the tools of statecraft, and inconstant leadership
are making it increasingly difficult to sustain American influence
around the world. And the promise of short-term commercial benefits
threatens to override strategic considerations”
Advocating this perspective gave the Neo-cons immense credibility
within the world of big-business, who responded with record-setting
campaign contributions and— in an important first step in destroying
Democracy in the U.S— managed to get Bush ‘appointed’ President by
the Supreme Court.
The aggressive foreign policy of the Republicans, which has found
unanimous reception throughout most sections of the ruling-elite,
has created immense dissatisfaction and opposition from the majority
of the population. To deal with this hostility, the repressive
measures detailed in the Patriot Act and illegal NSA spying program
have been used to monitor, intimidate and quell protest.
Much of the same measures used to deal with third-world resistance
are used likewise to handle the political opposition in the United
States. Aside from having a virtual monopoly on Democracy by
disallowing third-party candidates from the ballot, there are other
clever tactics being employed.
The Orwellian ‘War on Terror’ has proven to be the most effective
strategy that both parties continue to use in order to install fear,
destroy civil liberties, and promote war. The government has
effectively applied the especially-vague term ‘terrorist’ to apply
to political opposition groups. Organizations like Green Peace, Food
Not Bombs, and Independent Media have been— in different localities—
placed on the ‘terror watch list’. This is not some random mistake,
but a deliberate attempt at intimidation, revealing— aside from
preemptive war— one half of the motive for the ‘war on terror’. The
new ambiguous war-slogan has reached such ridiculous proportions
that environmental protest-groups are called ‘eco-terrorists’, while
drug traffickers are ‘narco-terrorists’— the potential for the
euphemism is seemingly unlimited. In fact, the situation has
deteriorated to such an extent that we are told that any criticism
of the government’s policies is equal to helping the ‘Islamic
fascists’.
Behind the conservative shift of nearly every industrial country in
the world is the worsening profit-crises suffered by their
respective corporate managers. Since the short-lived ‘tech boom’,
there has only been desperateness and uneasiness voiced by
international commerce, who has successfully been treading water by
forcing slave-wages on the emerging economies of China and India,
and thus creating the need to reduce wages and benefits everywhere.
Once again, the profit-crisis is yet another inherent feature in the
processes of capitalism, which creates ‘lack of demand’ –or excess
supply— by constantly lowering the wages of workers to increase
profit, while continuing to flood the markets of the world with
products. This process takes on an especially-dangerous character
when the competing industrial nations are facing the same problem,
while trying to increase their positions by acquiring— by any means
necessary— the worlds last remaining key-resources and markets.
Society is not, nor has it ever been, an independent arbiter of
interests. Corporate profit rates— depending heavily on the
impoverishment of their workers— are often used to measure the
economic health of a nation. In times of economic growth and social
stability, Democracy seems like a fine thing, even if there are
broad layers of society who suffer from generational poverty or the
horrors of homelessness. Although the world—and especially the
United States— experienced unprecedented growth after World War II,
these conditions have reached their natural limit. The conditions
that created the foundation for class and international peace have
turned into their opposite.
Exposing the policies that are destroying our freedoms while yelling
‘this cant be happening’ can raise political consciousness to a
considerable extent, but it cannot direct discontent towards a
sustainable solution. Impeaching Bush or defeating reactionary
congressmen will not alter the current course of events undertaken
by the bi-partisan agreement on militarism and war. It also seems
incredibly naïve to think that the Democrats— many of whom are
Ivy-league graduates and multi-millionaire businessmen— are ignorant
of the motives of their so-called rivals; the Democrats are not
simply ‘uninformed’ about the nature and basis of imperialism, nor
can they be persuaded to take a radical path— the party itself is
based solidly on the same corporate foundations as their nominal
oppossition. This demands an independent strategy. Any course, if it
is to be effective, must be based on the interests of the majority
of the population, in stark contrast with the minority who benefit
from the profit-system. The interests of the wage-earner, in
comparison to that of the stock-holder, are elaborated and promoted
by the program of international socialism.
James Cooke -
jc26cooke@yahoo.com
First published at Sociast Perspectives - a weekly blog dedicated to
current events, history, and political theory from a socialist
viewpoint.
http://socialistperspectives.blogspot.com
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