By Stan Goff
10/18/06 "TruthDig" -- --
When I was 18, before student tracking in the public
schools had been formalized, an informal tracking
system was nevertheless in place: the university track, the
craft track, the poultry worker track, and the prison
track. I was somewhere between the last two. Both my
parents were working in a defense contractor factory, and I
was left adrift in the factory-worker ’burbs to be trained
by television and alcohol. Raised on a curriculum of
McCarthyism, I did the most logical thing I could think of
to avoid both the factory and eventual incarceration with
the ne’er-do-wells with whom I was keeping company. I
joined the Army, and volunteered to fight communists in
Vietnam.
I tried to get out of the
Army once, and it lasted for four years, whereupon I ended
up doing piecework in a sweatshop outside Wilmar, Ark. Back
on that public school track, I suppose, but given that the
U.S. was no longer invading anyone’s country, and that I was
responsible for an infant now, I went back into the Army.
One thing led to another, and as it turned out I was good at
something called special operations, and I ended up making a
career of it. By the time I signed out on terminal leave in
December 1995, I had worked in eight places designated
“armed conflict areas,” where people who were brown and poor
seemed to be the principle targets of these “special”
operations. At some point toward the end, I had decided
that plenty of people could look back and say they wished
they’d lived differently; and I was just one of them; and
that I might salvage something worthwhile from the whole
experience by telling the people who had paid me—people who
pay taxes—what their money was really being spent to do.
Among other activities, I
started writing books.
The Bad Apple
There was nothing more
inflammatory in my first book, about the 1994 invasion and
occupation of Haiti, than my assertion that Special
Operations was a hotbed of racism and reaction.
“Hideous Dream - A Soldier’s Memoir of the US Invasion of
Haiti” (Soft Skull Press, 2000) was my personal account
of that operation, and I was explicit not only about the
significant number of white supremacists in
Special Operations but how the attitudes of these
extremists connected with the less explicit white male
supremacy of white patriarchal American society and defined,
in some respects, the attitude taken by U.S. occupation
forces in Haiti toward the Haitian population.
The resistance to this
allegation was particularly fierce, and not merely from
those inside the Special Operations “community,” whose
outrage was more public-relations stagecraft than anything
else. There was outrage from people who hadn’t a moment of
actual experience in the military at all. This is an
affront to something sacred in the public imaginary of a
thoroughly militarized United States: that we are an
international beacon of civilized virtue, and that our
military is the masculine epitome of that virtue standing
between our suburban security and the dark chaos of the
Outside. Questioning the mystique of the armed forces is
tantamount to lunacy at best and treason at worst.
This is the reason
bad-apple-ism has been the predominant meme of the media
and the Pentagon when they are compelled to discuss the
stories of torture, rape and murder in Iraq and
Afghanistan. “A few bad apples” committed torture. “A few
bad apples” raped prisoners, fellow female soldiers, and
civilians in their homes. The massacre was not descriptive
of the Marine Corps, but the work of “a few bad apples.”
Anyone who wants to be the skunk at this prevarication party
need only ask, “How do these bad apples all seem to
aggregate into the same units?”
One bad apple was dispensed
with on June 11, 2001. That’s when
Timothy McVeigh was given a lethal injection at 7 a.m.
in the death chamber of the U.S. federal penitentiary at
Terre Haute, Ind.
Frugivorous analogies aside,
McVeigh was not the product of a tree or poor storage, but
of a culture. Raised in western New York by a devoutly
Catholic father—an autoworker—after his parents divorced
when he was 10, Tim McVeigh, like many other white youths
who are socially awkward and living in times of economic
insecurity, was already reading survivalist and white
nationalist literature in his teens. The mythic-patriarchal
absolutism of racial ideology mapped perfectly onto the
consciousness of someone raised by a religiously devout
male, and the fact that this ideology responded directly to
the insecurities of economic and gender destabilization
secured McVeigh as an early devotee.
Gore Vidal said that McVeigh
“needed a self-consuming cause to define him[self].” Vidal’s
account,
“The Meaning of Timothy McVeigh,” ominously printed in
Vanity Fair just days before the 9/11 attacks expressed
another “self-consuming cause,” noted that McVeigh took his
cues from the very government he had worked for as a
soldier. Before McVeigh’s attack in Oklahoma City, the most
recent attack by Americans against Americans outside of
warfare was the
FBI-BATF massacre of an obscure religious commune that
was demonized for destruction at Waco, Texas—which McVeigh
memorialized by blowing up the Murrah Building on the Waco
massacre’s second anniversary.
When McVeigh was interviewed
about the “collateral damage” in Oklahoma, he was asked if
he felt remorse. He replied that Truman had never
apologized for Hiroshima or Nagasaki. And the formative
moment in Iraq for Tim McVeigh was the order by Major
General Barry McCaffrey—the sociopath appointed by Bill
Clinton to be the nation’s “drug czar”—to slaughter a
seven-mile line of retreating Iraqi soldiers and civilians
after the cease-fire in Iraq ... now called the
Turkey Shoot.
As the old military motto
says, “Trained by the best, kill like the rest.”
Much has been made of
McVeigh’s affinity for
“The Turner Diaries,” a neo-Nazi novel about a white
nationalist guerrilla war in the U.S., written under
pseudonym by the late
William Pierce. Less often noted was another formative
cultural product for McVey,
“Red Dawn,” a silly film about American teenagers
organizing an armed resistance to the Soviet occupation of
the United States. While “silly” is a descriptive term for
both these cultural products, we cannot assume they are
irrelevant.
Absolute Normal
On April 19, 1995, a fan of
these martial male fantasies detonated 7,000 pounds of
explosives at a federal office building and killed 168 human
beings, in what he described as a defense of the
Constitution of the United States.
Before we judge his claim
too harshly, we should take note that this “defense of the
Constitution” is the core of the
oath taken by every U.S. military member who is now
“serving” in the bloody occupations of Iraq and
Afghanistan. It was the oath I took that led me to burn
down the houses of Vietnamese, and the oath taken by Captain
Medina and Lieutenant Calley before they ordered the
massacre in My Lai, where the body count was three times
that of Timothy McVeigh.
It’s magic, this defense of
a sacralized political document; it changes forms. And
white male supremacy (we always leave out that second
modifier, though it is just as consistently true as the
first) is not simple; therefore it cannot be simply
dismissed.
The reason I bring this up
at all, this old news of white male terrorism in the U.S.,
is anything but academic. The
U.S. military is inducting avowed white supremacists again
after an alleged hiatus ... one begun in response to the
discovery of Timothy McVeigh’s ideological orientations, and
the
murder of a black couple in December that same year by
neo-Nazis in the 82nd Airborne Division.
John Kifner, writing for the
New York Times on July 7th:
A decade after the
Pentagon declared a zero-tolerance policy for racist
hate groups, recruiting shortfalls caused by the war in
Iraq have allowed “large numbers of neo-Nazis and
skinhead extremists” to infiltrate the military,
according to a watchdog organization.
The Southern Poverty Law
Center [SPLC], which tracks racist and right-wing
militia groups, estimated that the numbers could run
into the thousands, citing interviews with Defense
Department investigators and reports and postings on
racist Web sites and magazines.
“We’ve got Aryan Nations
graffiti in Baghdad,” the group quoted a Defense
Department investigator....
This, of course, is
remarkable for its abnormality ... or so some might
have us think.
These explicitly white
supremacist groups, contrasted with the implicitly white
supremacist Republican Party, for example, openly embrace a
vision of fascism, and openly admire fascist leaders. And
while I take issue with those who throw the F-word around as
a mere epithet stripped of any operational meaning, the
alarm sounded by the SPLC about fascists joining the
military under less than perfect oversight to prevent their
entry raises some very interesting issues about our entire
political conjuncture.
I believe the case can be
made that these young men joining the military, embodying a
racial-purity version of military masculinity, are anything
except ab-normal. They are hyper-normal.
A norm, after all, is
defined as a standard or model or pattern regarded as
typical.
We need to first see for how
long white supremacy has been considered ab-normal in
the United States; then we can see how ab-normal it
is right now, and only then begin to focus more tightly on
the question of fascism and fascists joining the military.
What is seldom examined in
public discourse outside the universities and a handful of
anti-racist political formations, is the question of what it
means to be “white.” Thinkers from
Toni Morrison to
Noel Ignatiev to
bell hooks to
Theodore Allen to
Mab Segrest to
David Roediger have studied whiteness
extensively, in its economic, cultural and political
dimensions, and conclude unanimously that there is no
“objective” measure for what it means; but that it is a
social construction linked absolutely to social power.
The insistence on existence of a white race, by racists and
non-racists alike, is symptomatic of a form of mystification
that conceals the concrete relations of power behind a set
of widely accepted abstractions.
White supremacy as a
beliefhas evolved out of the practice of people in
power, who defined themselves as white as a way of
differentiating themselves from those over whom they wielded
that power. Some very well-known American presidents who
made openly white supremacist pronouncements were
Woodrow Wilson,
Theodore Roosevelt, and
Richard Nixon. Of course, until the dismantling of
Jim Crow in the South, white supremacy was a norm,
and before the Civil War, slavery was a norm.
White supremacy was so
normal in 1964 that after the defeat of Goldwater, the
Republican Party adopted thinly veiled
racist appeals to attract white voters who felt betrayed
by the reluctant Democratic Party support for civil rights
legislation. Openly racist public officials like
Jesse Helms,
Strom Thurmond and
Trent Lott, even after their affiliations with white
supremacist organizations were publicized, continued to be
elected. The Republican appeals to white supremacy were
cloaked as opposition to welfare, as “states rights,” and as
concern about “crime.” As late as 1999 the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives blocked a
vote to condemn the
Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist
organization with whom then-Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lott had close ties.
How normed does something
have to be before we can say it is normal?
Naturalizing Privilege
Denial supports this
“non-racist” racism. A
poll by the Washington Post in 2001 showed that half of
all white people believe blacks in the U.S. are just as
economically well-off and secure as whites.
But economic and social
distance between blacks and whites is far from closed,
except in the minds of many white Americans.
Six in 10 whites—61
percent—say the average black has equal or better access
to health care than the average white, according to the
poll.
In fact, blacks are far
more likely to be without health insurance than whites.
In 2000, the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population
Survey found that blacks were nearly twice as likely as
whites to be without health insurance.
The survey in fact notes
that half of whites have convinced themselves that
African-Americans and Euro-Americans are educated equally
well in the U.S. The empirical evidence, of course, points
to a contrary conclusion. This misperception by whites is
based on two things: (1) the need to believe that race as
an issue is “all in the past now” and (2) the association of
middle-class whites with middle-class African-Americans,
which lends anecdotal support to the idea of
equality-achieved, by exclusive exposure to a
non-representative sample of the black population. Half of
all whites believe that African-Americans enjoy economic
parity with whites, another staggeringly wrong impression
(the poverty rate for blacks is double that for whites, as
just one example).
Racial attitudes are
constructed around existing material advantage. This is not
nearly as newsworthy as a Klan rally. It is far more
important, though, as a causative agent for our social
antagonisms. And there is an element of white supremacy in
the mainstream discourse about the Iraq war, for example.
Both liberals and conservatives articulate the notion that
the U.S. has to “stay in Iraq to prevent a catastrophe.”
There is no recognition here of the orientalism (a white
supremacist meme) that assumes the superiority of Western
tutelage and the deviance (violent irrationality) of Arabs
and-or Muslims.
Privilege naturalizes itself. It portrays itself as an
outcome of nature; and we all know that the laws of
nature remain out of critical reach. Alas, that’s just
how it is ... what a pity.
The New Militarization
of American Society
You are what you do.
-- Jean Paul Sartre
Fascism traditionally
employs either a master-race or master-culture narrative.
This narrative is reinforced for troops on the ground in
Iraq by the circumstances. The role of occupier is the role
of dominator, and as the
Stanford Prison Experiment proved dramatically, this
dominator role very quickly translates into the
dehumanization and objectification of the dominated.
On the ground, at the infantry level, wars of domination in
every instance become race wars.
The dustup recently about a
Marine singing a song (which was published on the Internet
as a video), called ”Hadji
Girl,” in which he humorously describes killing Iraqi
children to the raucous applause of his fellow Marines, was
hardly a blip in the corporate media.
In American society right
now, with the immigration hysteria fueled by faux populists
like CNN’s execrable
Lou Dobbs, there is a growing wave of
xenophobia that has begun to legitimate vigilantism,
like that of the
Arizona Minutemen (supported even by the governor of
California); and vigilantism is always a feature of fascism
in periods before it decisively achieves state power. The
lines between the comic-opera militias parked along the
Arizona border, the “libertarian” militias in the Midwest
and the Aryan militias in the Idaho foothills are not
terribly clear. Timothy McVeigh could have easily related
to all of them.
The social currents of
racial/cultural supremacy are there. The vigilantism is
forming. So two aspects of fascism are already falling into
place.
Another aspect, and one that
was formative of Timothy McVeigh, is
economic destabilization. Fascism can be described as a
“middle class” phenomenon. One can look at the
emergence of the three most studied fascist governments,
Mussolini’s Italy, Franco’s Spain and Hitler’s Germany, and
in every case there was a privileged stratum of the working
class that had been the beneficiaries of
metropolitan capitalist development (courtesy of
peripheral colonies) that rubbed shoulders socially with the
professional and managerial sectors. In times of
instability, friction develops between fractions of this
stratum. Insecurity among the lower middle-classes creates
anxiety and anger that can easily be directed by
populist-sounding demagogues (Mussolini and Hitler actually
claimed to be socialist, even as they strengthened the
ruling classes in their own societies during
militarization). Those just above these fractious masses
are caught between their anxiety at the turbulent
resentments of the lower stratum and their fear that they
themselves are only a paycheck away from joining them.
Leftist scholars have documented and explained this class
dimension of fascism at some length.
Columbia University’s
contribution to
Answers-dot-com section on “fascism” notes:
While socialism
(particularly Marxism) came into existence as a clearly
formulated theory or program based on a specific
interpretation of history, fascism introduced no
systematic exposition of its ideology or purpose other
than a negative reaction against socialist and
democratic egalitarianism. The growth of democratic
ideology and popular participation in politics in the
19th cent. was terrifying to some conservative elements
in European society, and fascism grew out of the attempt
to counter it by forming mass parties based largely on
the middle classes and the petty bourgeoisie, exploiting
their fear of political domination by the lower classes.
[In the American South, this dread was aimed at blacks,
and the bogeyman of black rule was repeatedly invoked,
along with the black sexual satyr, to fuel anti-black
pograms.—S.G.] Forerunners of fascism, such as Georges
Boulanger in France and Adolf Stker and Karl Lueger in
Germany and Austria, in their efforts to gain political
power played on people’s fears of revolution with its
subsequent chaos, anarchy, and general insecurity. They
appealed to nationalist sentiments and prejudices,
exploited anti-Semitism, and portrayed themselves as
champions of law, order, Christian morality, and the
sanctity of private property.
In each of the European
cases, the trigger bringing fascist demagogues to power was
a profound economic crisis. This is a tendency buried
within an ever-expanding regime of capital accumulation,
because the “logic of capital” inevitably comes into
conflict with the
“territorial logic of power” (David Harvey,
“The New Imperialism,” Oxford Press, 2003). The
mobility of capital eventually liquidates or abandons all
spaces, including living space, and this throws middle
classes into both economic and psychological disorder. They
can break both ways: embracing a progressive path of “going
through to the other side” of the crisis by creating new
social models, or embracing the (often idealized and
mythical) past.
Giovanni Arrighi, writing in
“Hegemony Unravelling” (New Left Review, March-April
2005), made the point that “[a]s
Karl Polanyi pointed out long ago, with special
reference to the
overaccumulation crisis of the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, devastations of this kind
inevitably call forth the ‘self-protection of society’ in
both progressive and reactionary political form....”
That hasn’t happened in the
United States ... yet. The anxiety has been building, along
with an increasingly precarious social existence in
the ’burbs, where car infrastructure is running into record
oil prices,
pension funds are being wiped out in strategic bankruptcies,
and the
household debt overhang is beginning to resemble a plank
suspended over a canyon with a couple of nails. Not
coincidentally, militarization has been one of the processes
that has postponed the inevitable.
The militarization of
American society has gone on for some time (ever since World
War II, to be exact), but this militarization—an aspect of
fascism as well—has taken on a different character since the
Bush administration lucked into 9/11. Aside from the
Straussian convictions about mythopoetic perception
management (using cheap cinematic conventions), the
practical result of the neocon core advisor group around
this decaying-dynastic White House has been the accelerated
militarization of economic, domestic and foreign policy.
Perception management, after all, including cynical
constructions of the nation as the bulwark of good against
evil, has been in the armamentarium of most governments.
The American economy has
been using the military contracting system during decades of
“deindustrialization” (moving offshore to exploit cheap
labor) to create a
surrogate export market for key industries. The
military has also long been used as a
research and development subsidy vehicle for private
corporations. What the Bush administration has done
that is unique is to prioritize unilateral military action
in foreign policy at the expense of diplomatic maneuvering
and consensus-building among the core capitalist metropoles,
and to centralize population control measures at home under
a more militarized system ... though the
with “tactical” units has been in progress for decades and
the Clinton administration paved the way for the exponential
expansion of the
domestic prison population.
Another unique feature of
the Bush administration’s militarization program has been
the
private contracting of military and paramilitary
operations to an alphabet soup of corporations, some led by
ruling-caste veterans like
Bill Perry and many led by the
sketchiest characters crawling out of the rank and file
of the military itself. In Iraq, mercenaries are now the
third-largest armed contingent on the ground, behind only
the American armed forces and the Kurdish
peshmerga. There are roughly 25,000 of these
“contractors” working in Iraq ... and they are almost
completely immune from any law.
Last year, after a
homemade video “escaped” (a la “Hadji Girl”... these
folks seem to be proud of themselves) showing so-called
security contractors in an SUV driving down an Iraqi highway
with Elvis music blasting as they shot cars off the road for
sport, the blogs began distributing it. In December, the
Washington Post finally ran a story on it. Only then did
the military even comment on the video, which they said they
would investigate. Nothing has come of this alleged
investigation. What did surface, however, once the media
decided it was worth a closer look, is that this kind of
colonial impunity is routinely exercised by contractors, who
are little more than extremely well paid thugs, and is not
covered by either Iraqi law or the U.S. Uniform Code of
Military Justice.
Because the
salaries of these contractors are routinely above
$100,000 a year, with all expenses paid on site, the
military itself, especially Special Operations, has had to
steeply increase reenlistment bonuses (
some as high as $150,000 in a single lump sum), to
partially stem the exodus of Special Ops troops into the
lucrative world of corporate mercenaries.
This is a world unto itself,
a culture obsessed with death, firearms and racial-purity
doctrines. One need only page through the periodicals of
this subculture, the most widely circulated being
Soldier of Fortune magazine, to find these
preoccupations between the articles and ads like a toxic
salad. The glue holding them together is gun culture. Gun
culture is not an obscure fringe, but a very mainstream,
widely popular subculture that taps directly into another
key component of fascism: martial masculinity.
Sex, Race, and Guns
Anson Rabinbach and Jessica Benjamin, writing in
American Imago in 1995 ("In the Aftermath of Nazi Germany:
Alexander Mitscherlich and Psychoanlaysis—Legend and
Legacy"):
The crucial element of
fascism is its explicit sexual language, what
Theweleit calls “the conscious coding” or the
“over-explicitness of the fascist language of symbol.”
This fascist symbolization creates a particular kind of
psychic economy which places sexuality in the service of
destruction. Despite its sexually charged politics,
fascism is an anti-eros, “the core of all fascist
propaganda is a battle against everything that
constitutes enjoyment and pleasure.” ... He shows that
in this world of war the repudiation of one’s own body,
of femininity, becomes a psychic compulsion which
associates masculinity with hardness, destruction, and
self-denial.
Men who are threatened by
women’s decreased dependency and increased organization
often adopt an individual strategy of ”
overconformity,” compulsively acquiring “masculine”
accoutrements, be they giant automobiles, guns or
attack-breed dogs, and just as compulsively behave as if
they are trying out for a role with the World Wrestling
Foundation—affecting a kind of bright-eyed homicidal
aggression as we are further socialized to equate fear with
respect.
Divisions of “male” labor
and divisions of “female” labor respond to changes in the
economic and political terrain. Look at the more
“respectable” masculinity that prioritizes responsibility to
the family—which keeps men who are not in the ruling class
working. Compare that to the fascistic masculinity displayed
by the masculine over-conformers (described above), which
merges easily with the idealization of military masculinity
in times when warfare plays a more central role in
society—for example, during crises of (economic and social)
destabilization. War becomes necessary to “rescue” the
nation. Gun culture is permeated with this thought,
including its sense of embattlement, and its embrace of
mythical frontier masculinity that sacrifices comfort to
overcome dark forces from the Outside.
Economic destabilization is
extremely disruptive of conventional masculinities that
equate the male role with that of a provider (I am not
endorsing “provider masculinity” or any expression of
patriarchy, but comparing them); and create the conditions
for overcompensation in the form of hyper-normal male
identity ... as an armed actor.
The rise of fascistic
masculinity prefigures systemic fascism, often in the form
of vigilantism. Gun culture is steeped in vigilantism, which
is steeped in military lore. Guns in this milieu transcend
their practical uses and take on a powerful symbolic
significance.
In the last decade, the
National Rifle Association (NRA), which has always had
close ties with the military, has been taken over from what
are considered within the organization as “moderates,” that
is, those whose message emphasizes peaceful, law-abiding gun
use, like hunting (which is not peaceful for the game
animals, but that’s another issue).
During my service with 3rd
Special Forces Group in Haiti in 1994, members of the
SFU initiated back-channel communications in support of the
right-wing death squad network, FRAPH.
Two of the favored
preoccupations of Barry, the SFU, Soldier of Fortune, and
the NRA were
Ruby Ridge, where Vicki Harris, the wife of an
ex-Special Forces white supremacist (Randy Weaver), was
killed by an FBI sniper with her baby in her arms, and the
outrage at Waco against the Branch Davidians.
Let me say here, for the
record, that the FBI actions in both these cases were
criminal and inexcusable, and largely provoked by the FBI
itself. But the fact that Weaver was one of the
neo-fascists own, and that Koresh and his acolytes were
white, combined with the stunning abuse of power by the
federal government in both cases, turned these two cases
into a twin cause celebre for the militia-right. I
will also note that I own firearms; I have no problem with
others owning them; and I think much liberal opposition to
firearms is stupid and moralistic and drives many people
into the arms of the lunatic right. I am an advocate of the
right to self-defense. My critique of gun culture is a
critique of those sectors for which guns have been combined
with imaginary enemies and taken on a deeply symbolic value
as tokens of a violent, reactionary masculinity that
fantasizes about armed conflict as a means to actualize its
paranoid male sexual identity.
The problem is that this
reaction is far from ab-normal.
There is a kind of
interlocking directorate between white nationalists, gun
culture, right-wing politicians, mercenary culture (like
Soldier of Fortune), vigilante and militia movements, and
elements within both Special Forces and—now—the privatized
mercenary forces. It is hyper-masculine, racialist,
militaristic and networked.
If one simply pays attention
to cultural production in the United States, especially film
and video games, it is fairly easy to see that the very
memes that are the cells within the body of white
nationalist militarism are ubiquitous within our general
cultural norms. The film genre that most closely
corresponds to a fascist mind-set is the
male revenge fantasy, wherein after some offense is
given that signifies the breakdown of order (usually
resulting in the death or mortal imperilment of idealized
wives or children) in which Enlightenment social conventions
prove inadequate, and the release of irrational male
violence is required to set the world straight again. Any
reader can list these fantasies without a cue. It is one of
the most common film genres in American society.
R. W. Connell wrote in
“Masculinities” (University of California Press, 1995):
In gender terms, fascism
was the naked reassertion of male supremacy in societies
that had been moving toward equality for women. To
accomplish this, fascism promoted new images of
hegemonic masculinity, glorifying irrationality ("the
triumph of the will”, thinking with “the blood") and the
unrestrained violence of the frontline soldier.
Chaotic Dark
Othering
It is in no way aberrant
when the lionized Theodore Roosevelt can be quoted saying:
“the timid man, the lazy man, the man who distrusts his
country, the over-civilized man, [italics mine] who
has lost the great fighting, masterful virtues, the ignorant
man, and the man of dull mind, whose soul is incapable of
feeling the mighty lift that thrills ‘stern men with empires
in their brains’—all these, of course, shrink from seeing
the nation undertake its new duties; shrink from seeing us
build a navy and army adequate to our needs; shrink from
seeing us do our share of the world’s work, by bringing
order out of chaos in the great, fair tropic islands from
which the valor of our soldiers and sailors has driven the
Spanish flag.”
Roosevelt was also a
lifetime member of the NRA, itself founded by Civil War
veterans who were dismayed by the poor marksmanship of
soldiers and decided to prepare the next generation of boys
and men for armed combat.
Roosevelt is often cited as
a conservationist who admired the wilderness. What is less
often noted is that “wilderness” was seen as a place where
men could test themselves against “raw” nature, and that he
referred to said wilderness as “lands we have won from the
Indians.”
Karl Rove claims to be a major fan of Teddy Roosevelt
biographies and quotes Roosevelt often.
The use of mythic male
wartime figures is a common political ploy. Former Attorney
General
John Ashcroft frequently used Lincoln that way to
justify his own attacks on civil liberties, implicitly
comparing the phony war on terror to the American Civil War.
This is not news, but it
does support my general thesis that some key elements of
fascism are already norms for broad sections of American
society.
This should give us a
special sense of concern that the military—under pressure
from a retention and
recruitment crisis—has relaxed the screening process
against white nationalists joining the military precisely to
gain military training and combat experience. This not only
allows more of these dangerous ideologues into the military,
it gives them unprecedented access to other combat veterans,
brutalized into the sociopathy of war and inured to white
supremacy through the inevitable racialization of the
occupied enemy.
What makes this particularly
alarming is that another essential element for the emergence
of fascism is a national enemy. It is not unremarkable that
the very people who question the federal government as an
extension of
ZOG/Illuminati/World-Government have also accepted the
narrative—constructed by that self-same U.S. government for
its own martial purposes—of a highly organized,
technologically advanced terrorist threat: Al Qaeda. This
has replaced the vastly overstated threat of the World
Communist Conspiracy that proved so useful for the post-WWII
American security state. The fact that immigration is now
routinely portrayed as a security issue (letting terrorists
in), at the same time that anti-immigrant vigilantism is
being supported by public figures like CNN’s Lou Dobbs
(arguable already a fascist) and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
, should give all of us pause ... not only because we are
now training future McVeighs but because the immigration
polemics are finding a receptive audience even among
so-called moderates and liberals of the middle-class.
The generalized flexibility
of the term “terrorist” makes it infinitely more useful as a
political instrument than a specific nation or regime, and
so invests the term with a long half-life. The fact that
Al Qaeda is a fiction created by the U.S. government—a
fact well documented by researchers like Jason Burke, author
of “Al Qaeda: Casting a Shadow of Terror” (Penguin Books,
2004), and even the militarily connected Rand Corporation,
which referred to Al Qaeda as “a notion.”
In a stunning bit of
linguistic legerdemain, the actual mass movement of
political Islam has been recoded by the neocons as ...
Islamo-fascism, and among the crypto-libertarians of the
white right, fascist is an epithet reserved now for
liberals.
With the same semantic
abracadabra, the “notion” that is Al Qaeda is transformed by
our cultural paranoia in such a way that every Arab, every
Muslim, every immigrant, every dissident, every person of
color, every (choose your enemy) is a threat; and the world
is divided between Us and the Dark Other with no resolution
except the agonal, and could—with economic dislocation as
the catalyst—tumble us into a paroxysm of white nationalist
hyper-masculinity as prelude to a new, uniquely American ...
what?
My friend,
Steve McClure, a former window dresser and feral scholar
in the darker residential regions of Washington, D.C.
—itself a study in colonization and social contrasts—notes:
I hate the word
fascist. It has been bandied about so much and brings
up images of Storm troopers in grainy newsreels that it
seems devoid of meaning. Furthermore, classical fascism
was possible only in a mass society, organized along
industrial lines, with one-to-many communications.
Classical fascism is a reactionary modernism, a
response to class struggle. Both German and Italian
variants came to power after the defeat of revolutionary
upsurges.
I think our own
situation is very different, and a better term needs to
be found that captures the unique qualities of our
reactionary postmodernism. “Military police state”
doesn’t quite cut it. Fascism implies policing of
thought as well as bodies, today’s reaction is
selective, policing bodies but allowing private speech
and the empty illusions of parliamentary democracy to
stand.
The Civilizing Mission
This trend of ignoring the
backgrounds of military inductees—driven by numerical
necessity—is swelling the ranks of tomorrow’s vigilantes of
reaction. People have the mental habit of assuming that the
powerful control their own outcomes. They don’t. The
militarization of police forces, white flight and urban
abandonment, even the international system of
dollar hegemony that the military backstops ... these
all develop with multiple determinations, more akin to
weather than strategy, with the larger system taking on a
character independent of the agents within it. Changing
outcomes is not the same as controlling them.
My greatest anxiety for my
two grandchildren is not that they will be the victims of a
plot but the inheritors of inertia and a society of “good
Germans,” while society dives into a long period of
unanticipated macho warlordism ... and, oh by the way,
ecocide.
We already have whole
sections of America—in the former enclaves of a now
deracinated working class—where hopelessness exists
alongside police forces that function very like a military
occupation force. Before the war, these occupation
zones—filled with idled, angry, dark-skinned youths—were our
middle-class nightmare, the Dark Chaos that inevitably leads
us back to the patriarchal default, to militarized
masculinity, and to the cultural celebration of
bounty hunting and
sexual revenge in feudal prisons.
Alas, the place-marker of a
war on drugs—that created the largest national prison
population on the planet—couldn’t create the pretext for
bases in Southwest Asia, so the war on terror will have to
do. The recruitment crisis that has opened the door to
neo-Nazi youths entering military service was anything but a
plan. The term before the war that proponents used to
describe its outcome was ”cakewalk."
Now even putative liberals
have copped to their own version of “white man’s burden,”
saying (the rhetorical) we cannot “abandon Iraq,”
lest “we” leave behind a terrible state of disorder. And so
“we” continue down that hoary, blood-drenched path of
“civilizing missions.”
The Bush administration
never tires of telling us how war is necessary to protect
“us” from disorder.
We need to ask
ourselves, however, what sowing the winds of war abroad will
reap at home. They are not Arabs who are painting Aryan
Nations graffiti on the shattered walls of Baghdad.
Copyright © 2006 Truthdig, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
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