Elections In The USA: Justice And The Perversion
of Justice
By James Petras
10/10/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- In a month in which the US Congress voted
to legalize torture, discard the US Constitution by abolishing
habeas corpus and increase the military budget to prolong the
daily slaughter of hundreds of Iraqis and Afghanis, the big
controversy among the mass media and elected officials is the
sexual overtures of a Republican Congressman to adolescent boys
employed by Congress.
Millions of fundamentalist Christians, who blindly supported the
Republican Congress’ deadly War on Terror are in revolt against
their Party because of its tolerance toward a single pervert --
overlooking the torture at Abu Ghraib, Israel’s massive bombing
of Lebanon and the Bush Administration’s criminal abandonment of
the hundreds of thousands of poor (mostly black) citizens in New
Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
Why do US Congress members and the mass media go into a
political feeding frenzy over personal sexual transgressions
like Congressman Foley’s nasty e-mail flirtations with teenage
boys or former President Clinton’s office adventures in
extramarital sex with a White House intern and not over issues
of great consequence for peace or war, democracy or
authoritarianism, torture or human rights?
Superficial commentators trot out our Anglo-American “Puritan
heritage”: a pseudo-explanation, which overlooks the US
democratic-constitutional heritage, our recent history of
opposing the Vietnam War, and our signing of the United Nation
Charter on Human Rights. Since there are numerous historical
pasts, there is no single “heritage” that dominates others,
especially when the so-called “Puritan” past is overlain with a
highly sexualized mass culture over the last 50 years.
We should leave aside dubious psycho-cultural explanations
because they fail to explain political behavior. Specifically,
even if “Puritan morality” were such a dominant aspect of US
political life, it cannot explain why one should focus only on
sexual misdeeds of individual politicians and not the immorality
of the widespread, systematic use of sexual torture practiced by
US interrogators in Iraq, Afghanistan and at the Guantanamo
prison camp and specifically approved by the Bush
Administration.
To understand the perversity of US politics, where great crimes
are approved by Congress and the President and minor sexual
misdemeanors become an obsession, one has to turn away from the
amorphous notion of the “US public” and examine what the mass
media and opinion leaders find acceptable as the basis for
electoral competition.
The political elite of both parties and the leadership and
minority in Congress do not differ on substantive questions of
war and peace: both supported the 2003 invasion and occupation
of Iraq from the beginning and have just approved over $400
billion in war spending for 2006-2007. Both parties, Congress
and the President supported Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, its
deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure and the
dropping of one million cluster bomblets as well as the blockade
and rape of Gaza. Both parties supported the extension of the
Patriot Act, which suspends the democratic guarantees and
personal freedoms protected under the Bill of Rights and
Constitution. Neither Congress nor the White House differ in
opposing a National Health Policy, since both parties receive
millions in election financing from the big pharmaceutical and
private health insurance companies and their lobbies. Since
there is a consensus between the two official parties on the
issues of war, authoritarianism and big business, the political
parties can compete only on “personality” and issues of private
morality. The parties justify their separate existence and
compete for office by avoiding the issues which antagonize the
economic elites, the civilian militarists and the powerful
pro-Israel lobbies and focus on “antagonizing” … other
politicians, which is considered “fair game” in the highly
constricted US political system.
In the first week of October, 30 US soldiers were killed in Iraq
and scores were wounded, 580 Iraqi civilians were murdered, 20
Lebanese civilians were killed or wounded by leftover Israeli
cluster bombs, tens of thousands of US telephones, faxes and
e-mails were intercepted without judicial order, thousands of
Argentine rightists marched in Buenos Aires in defense of the
former military dictators, thousands of peaceful striking school
teachers in Oaxaca, Mexico were threatened with massive military
repression, 13 Bolivian miners and Indian peasants were killed
by the government and its supporters in a possible lead up to a
civil war, and a beloved bishop in the Philippines was killed by
death squads for his human rights work joining the hundreds of
murdered and disappeared activists there… and yet none of these
reports appear anywhere in the major US television and radio
programs and are barely mentioned by the principal newspapers.
Instead we hear and read daily and even hourly reports revealing
the lewd e-mails of Republican Congressman Foley with the
Democratic Party leadership issuing press releases and
denunciations and calls for investigations and resignations.
“Corruption, depravity, perversion”, the Democrats tell us, “in
high places is unacceptable”. And the Republicans, so bold in
defense of torture and secret abductions, and so audacious in
signing hundreds of millions of dollars in additional military
aid to Israel … are shirking, cowering, stuttering and
stammering that they have “cleaned house” with the resignation
of their Congressional pervert; they need to press on with the
“war against international and domestic terror” unmolested.
What is essential in perpetuating the charade of basically a
“one party” system, dedicated to defending imperial wars abroad
and overseeing decay and authoritarianism at home, is the
illusion of “party competition.” To maintain this illusion of
choice in the face of a wide elite consensus, a “sideshow” is
needed; preferably a show in which the minor perverts of one
party can be paraded and denounced by the puffed-up moralists of
the opposing party. Without this show of moral indignation and a
dose of salacious titillation, voter abstention might even
exceed the usual 65% for US Congressional elections.
James Petras, a former Professor of Sociology at Binghamton
University, New York, owns a 50-year membership in the class
struggle, is an adviser to the landless and jobless in Brazil
and Argentina, and is co-author of Globalization Unmasked (Zed
Books). His latest book is The Power of Israel in the United
States (Clarity Press, 2006). He can be reached at:
jpetras@binghamton.edu.
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