Big Brother Doesn’t Practice Fraternal Love
By Jason Miller
“Non-violence is a weapon of the strong.”
- ---Mahatma Gandhi
"It is with regret that I pronounce the fatal
truth: Louis ought to perish rather than a hundred
thousand virtuous citizens; Louis must die that the
country may live.” ---Maximilien Robespierre
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10/26/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- October 17, 2006 is a
watershed date in the epic struggle between oppressors and
oppressed. Events of that day undoubtedly prompted Marx and
Engels to awaken from their eternal slumber and spin violently
in their graves. A mere swish of the pen by a conscienceless
swine effectively transferred absolute power into the hands of a
relative handful of rich and powerful individuals and
corporations.
Happy birthday, Big Brother!
Over two centuries ago, 25,000 intrepid souls sacrificed their
lives to free the American Colonies from the clutches of a
ruthless empire and to found a nation based on democratic
principles. Tragically, on 10/17 the tattered remains of freedom
for which American Revolutionary soldiers spilled crimson rivers
were reduced to mere abstractions by a miniscule volume of ink.
How ironic that in a nation obsessed with beating ploughshares
into swords, a pen was the weapon used to finalize the
subjugation of the masses.
Lamentably, the American Revolution was not a final triumph for
human rights and democracy. Gaining independence from Great
Britain was merely one victory in the perpetual war between
humanity’s “haves” and “have-nots”.
While many of America’s revolutionaries believed they were
fighting for their natural rights, there were moneyed men
amongst them who simply wanted to reap the material bounty of
the Colonies without paying tribute to the British Empire.
Contrary to the great American myths, all of the founding
fathers were not created equal. Men like Thomas Paine, the
intellectual catalyst of the American Revolution, argued for the
abolition of slavery, social justice, democratic principles, and
human rights. Others, such as John Adams and Alexander Hamilton,
harbored contempt for populist notions and pressed for a
government dominated by pecunious individuals.
Intense debate coupled with significant compromise eventually
resulted in the ratification of the US Constitution. To minimize
the diminution of their affluence and dominance, America’s
aristocracy insisted on the Electoral College, the recognition
of the legality of chattel slavery, and the limitation of
suffrage to white propertied males, who comprised a mere 10% of
the population. As a means to appease the masses, they
reluctantly agreed to include the Bill of Rights.
Faced with annoying constraints like the separation of powers,
an independent judiciary, and the Bill of Rights, and bearing
the burden of preserving the illusions of liberty and equality
that kept the “mob” at bay, the ruling elite struggled to find
ways to consolidate and enhance their power.
As the mercantilism that had made the American Colonies so
indispensable to Britain slowly developed into Capitalism, the
plutocracy rushed to embrace and nurture a system that afforded
them the means to manipulate and exploit their “subjects”.
Propitiously, Capitalism thrived and enabled the elite to
leverage their power. Throughout the history of the United
States, a seemingly perpetual torrent of fortuitousness has
rained down upon the monetarily well-endowed.
Treated as animals, Black American slaves provided the labor
that contributed mightily to the exponential growth of a rapidly
emerging economic juggernaut. Yet even when the abolition of
slavery deprived the blue bloods of four million unpaid
laborers, the pecuniary gods continued to smile upon them.
The advent of the Industrial Revolution spawned large scale
mechanization, the urbanization of a once largely agrarian
society, the rise of the corporation to the status of legal
personhood, and a serious decline in the number of skilled
artisans and self-sufficient farmers. Rife with opportunities to
exploit the working class, the United States continued its
ascent to economic supremacy.
Rewarding the pathologically greedy and selfish, Capitalism in
the United States thrived like a tape worm in glutton’s
intestines as it morphed into a bloated and grotesque
perversion.
Mirthless human beings living on slave wages toiled in filthy,
perilous environments until their health was wrecked and ruined.
Robber barons amassed outrageous fortunes on the backs of
dehumanized and broken men, women and children. Transcending the
political freedoms they had begrudgingly given “We the People”
in the Constitution, the power elite imposed a post-Feudal form
of economic serfdom.
Bleak visages of children whose impoverishment forced them to
abandon school and seek employment in textile mills and coal
mines revealed the truly merciless and despotic nature of
Capitalism in the United States. Morally bankrupt men had raised
Adam Smith’s brainchild to be a merciless and brutish soul
crusher.
Consider this excerpt from progressive reformer John Spargo’s
The Bitter Cry of the Children he wrote in 1906:
The coal is hard, and accidents to the hands, such as cut,
broken, or crushed fingers, are common among the boys. Sometimes
there is a worse accident: a terrified shriek is heard, and a
boy is mangled and torn in the machinery, or disappears in the
chute to be picked out later smothered and dead. Clouds of dust
fill the breakers and are inhaled by the boys, laying the
foundations for asthma and miners' consumption.
I once stood in a breaker for half an hour and tried to do the
work a twelve-year-old boy was doing day after day, for ten
hours at a stretch, for sixty cents a day. The gloom of the
breaker appalled me. Outside the sun shone brightly, the air was
pellucid [clear], and the birds sang in chorus with the trees
and the rivers. Within the breaker there was blackness, clouds
of deadly dust enfolded everything, the harsh, grinding roar of
the machinery and the ceaseless rushing of coal through the
chutes filled the ears. I tried to pick out the pieces of slate
from the hurrying stream of coal, often missing them; my hands
were bruised and cut in a few minutes; I was covered from head
to foot with coal dust, and for many hours afterwards I was
expectorating some of the small particles of anthracite I had
swallowed.
Even as early as 1795, Thomas Paine witnessed economic forces of
inequality and oppression savaging the humanitarian principles
woven into the Declaration of Independence and US Constitution.
Principles for which so many had sacrificed so much.
Paine wrote of the abuse of economic power prior to the
maturation of rapacious Capitalism. “Agrarian Justice”, his
final pamphlet of wide acclaim, included his observations on the
gross injustice of people suffering the affliction of poverty in
a society with ample resources to provide for all of its
members:
…On one side, the spectator is dazzled by splendid appearances;
on the other, he is shocked by extremes of wretchedness; both of
which it has erected. The most affluent and the most miserable
of the human race are to be found in the countries that are
called civilized.
Paine decried the brutality of governments that caused or
allowed its citizens to experience indigence:
Despotic government supports itself by abject civilization, in
which debasement of the human mind, and wretchedness in the mass
of the people, are the chief criterions. Such governments
consider man merely as an animal; that the exercise of
intellectual faculty is not his privilege; that he has nothing
to do with the laws but to obey them; and they politically
depend more upon breaking the spirit of the people by poverty,
than they fear enraging it by desperation.
Exposing the sophistry that persists to this day, Paine advanced
a convincing argument against the contention by predacious
capitalists that those possessing wealth are somehow exempt from
the interdependence to which “ordinary” mortals owe their very
survival:
Personal property is the effect of society; and it is as
impossible for an individual to acquire personal property
without the aid of society, as it is for him to make land
originally.
Separate an individual from society, and give him an island or a
continent to possess, and he cannot acquire personal property.
He cannot be rich. So inseparably are the means connected with
the end, in all cases, that where the former do not exist the
latter cannot be obtained. All accumulation, therefore, of
personal property, beyond what a man's own hands produce, is
derived to him by living in society; and he owes on every
principle of justice, of gratitude, and of civilization, a part
of that accumulation back again to society from whence the whole
came.
Asserting a just society’s obligation to lift (or to provide the
means to lift themselves) the less fortunate from their wretched
conditions, Paine wrote:
It is not charity but a right, not bounty but justice, that I am
pleading for. The present state of civilization is as odious as
it is unjust. It is absolutely the opposite of what it should
be, and it is necessary that a revolution should be made in it.
The contrast of affluence and wretchedness continually meeting
and offending the eye, is like dead and living bodies chained
together.
Paine may have been offended by the “contrast of affluence and
wretchedness”. But gross inequalities obviously didn’t bother
the wealthy elites, in Paine’s time or as Capitalism eclipsed
Mercantilism. Federal laws eventually eradicated many severe
abuses like the child labor Spargo described. And publicly
funded programs like Social Security have helped to alleviate
destitution. Yet were it not for wars, powerful social
movements, economic depressions, fears of widespread social
unrest, and the vexing Constitutional rights afforded to “We the
People”, those wielding the punishing cudgel of economic
domination would have maintained the status quo.
Each time the opulent surrendered a degree of power or afforded
additional rights to the underclass, they became increasingly
restless and insecure. They realized that exploitative
Capitalism, their principal mechanism for exerting and
maintaining their dominance, was under siege.
Marx and Engel’s Manifesto calling for the abolition of private
property and a revolution of the working class scared the hell
out of the Bourgeoisie. To counter the “Red Menace” in the
United States, they waged war on organized labor, initiated the
Palmer Raids, so demonized Socialists that their political
influence was virtually extinguished, and imprisoned or ruined
thousands of suspected Communists during the McCarthy Era.
Reactionary forces wielding powerful tools of psychological
manipulation have trained most US Americans to reflexively
reject virtually any publicly funded programs that would be
socially beneficial, idealize material success, and embrace
grossly exorbitant military spending as “necessary”.
Endless rhetoric and propaganda, the Cold War, free trade, and a
multitude of murderous military interventions resulting in the
deaths of millions of innocent human beings have kept the world
safe for the “democracy” that serves as cover for remorseless
seekers of profit at the expense of others.
Having suffered years of pained silence under the yoke of
neoliberal economic policies emanating from the United States,
the presence or action of the US military, and ruthless
dictators supported by the “leader of the free world”,
individuals and factions in the Developing World are finally
resisting.
Some are employing asymmetric warfare to counter the
overwhelming military power of a bellicose nation that invades
nations preemptively and dismissively refers to murdered
civilians as “collateral damage”. Others, like Hugo Chavez, are
empowering and uplifting their poor, terminating the
exploitation of their resources by multinational corporations,
and forging alliances with other nations to challenge the regime
in Washington.
Not surprisingly, those who rule by virtue of the size of their
bank accounts have reacted to the latest threat to their
stranglehold on power in a manner reminiscent of their attacks
on Communism. The “War on Terror” has already claimed hundreds
of thousands of victims and billions of dollars worth of
civilian infrastructure. And on 10/17, the Bush Regime
celebrated its crowning victory.
Mass hysteria generated by an Orwellian onslaught of propaganda
paved the way for the passage of the Military Commissions Act of
2006. When Bush signed the Torture Bill into law, America’s de
facto noblesse realized their dream. They finally attained the
means to eliminate the perpetual tension between a political
system “marred” by democratic components and the tyrannic
natures of their brand of Capitalism.
It took 230 years, but an authoritarian regime predominated by
the patrician class and corporations has finally seized the
means to exercise absolute political power. Their “War on
Terror” enabled them to slay their most persistent adversary.
The Constitutional Rights of their own people.
The Bush Regime can now truthfully crow about a “mission
accomplished”.
Yet like the victors in the American Revolution, they may have
won the battle, but the war is far from over. Men like Thomas
Paine, Thomas Jefferson, and Benjamin Franklin are long
deceased, but the immortal words born of their dedication to
freedom from oppression are trumpeting a clarion call to the
world:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with
certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty
and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights,
Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers
from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of
Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of
the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new
Government, laying its foundation on such principles and
organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most
likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
Whether the People follow the example of Gandhi or Robespierre,
a revolution is imperative and inevitable.
Liberté, égalité, fraternité, ou la mort!
Jason Miller is a wage slave of the American Empire who has
freed himself intellectually and spiritually. He writes
prolifically, his essays have appeared widely on the Internet,
and he volunteers at a homeless shelter. He welcomes
constructive correspondence at willpowerful@hotmail.com or via
his blog, Thomas Paine's Corner, at
http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/.
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