"Democracy
For the Few"
A Review By Stephen Lendman
07/30/07 "ICH"
-- --
Michael
Parenti
is an internationally known speaker and award winning
author of 20 books and hundreds of articles. He's also a
noted academic having taught at a number of colleges and
universities in the US and abroad.
Parenti is also one of the nation's leading progressive
political analysts and social critics. He strongly opposes
US imperialism, the shredding of our civil liberties,
decline of our social state, and the Bush Doctrine of
preventive wars on the world for predatory capitalism's need
for new markets, resources and cheap exploitable labor.
Parenti's latest book, and subject of this review, is the
newly updated eight edition of one of his most noted and
popular earlier ones - Democracy For the Few. In it, he
shows how democracy in the nation really works. It dispels
the fiction Americans are practically weaned on from birth,
taught in school to the highest levels, and get daily from
the dominant media.
Parenti's view is quite different from the mainstream's
suppression of the "shadier sides of US political life." He
explains "proponents of the existing social order have tried
to transform practically every deficiency in the US
political system into a strength." They want us to believe
"millions of nonvoters are content with present social
conditions, (and) the growing concentration of executive
power is a good thing because the president is
democratically responsive to broad national interests (ones
affecting the public)." They tell us "exclusion of third
parties" makes our system work better, and all state vices
are, in fact, virtues. Those popularly presented views turn
reality on it head in a nation dedicated to wealth and power
interests since inception. It only ever yields a little (and
grudgingly) when forced to by grassroots activism or in
periods of social crisis like The Great Depression to save
what elitists value most - the soul and substance corporate
capitalist America.
Parenti addresses the nature of American capitalism that's
the beating heart of our politico-economic system. He covers
our political institutions, the "foundations and historical
development of American political politics....Who
governs....Who gets what, when, how and why." Central to ask
is cui bono? Who benefits and who doesn't is key to his core
theme showing how power, wealth and class dominate America
and the notion of real democracy is pure illusion. Today,
America the beautiful only exists for the privileged few and
no one else. But it's always been that way in a nation ruled
by rich white, predominantly Christian elitist men from
birth. Parenti deconstructs our system, from its roots, in
19 incisive, thought provoking chapters, encyclopedic in
depth, and up to date to the current age of George Bush
neocon rule.
This review covers them all briefly to convey a full flavor
of his important book, all of which needs to be digested and
understood. It's must reading and should be kept as an
essential reference guide for future examination and
reflection. Knowing its contents is key to arousing enough
public concern for change in our own self-interest. In the
age of George Bush's America, and his coterie of extremist
rogues, the issue is now survival at a time a reckless
leadership threatens everyone with potential nuclear or
ecological Armageddon because of their lust for wealth,
power and empire.
Without public awareness, angst and plain determination not
to take it any more, this agenda will continue with
potential consequences too disturbing to ignore. It doesn't
have to happen if enough people know the danger,
collectively act to defuse it in self-defense, and decide to
make the country work for everyone. Parenti dedicates his
book to them - "To all those who struggle for peace, social
justice, and real democracy. May their numbers continue to
grow."
Partisan Politics Favoring the Privileged
Privilege always counted most from the time the nation was
founded. The prevailing fiction then and now is an
egalitarian country "free from the extremes of want and
wealth that characterized (18th century) Europe" and most
parts of the world today. It was as untrue then as now with
wealthy 18th century colonialists having vast
disproportional land holdings and control of banking,
commerce and industry, such as it was back then.
These "wealthy and powerful 'gentlemen,' our founding
fathers," gathered in 1787 in the same Philadelphia State
House where the Declaration of Independence was signed 11
years earlier. They came to draft a Constitution intended to
last into "remote futurity" for their interests alone.
Democracy for the many was not on the table in 1787.
Yet, they nominally managed to include unimaginable
freedoms, up to that time, in the Bill of Rights ratified in
1791. They gave people the rights of free expression,
religion, peaceable assembly, protection from illegal
searches and seizures, due process and more even though it
only got done through compromise after these ideas were
twice rejected earlier. The delegates finally agreed out of
necessity to get their document ratified and avoid a second
convention some states wanted. To do it, they had to win
over dissenting state representatives who wanted Bill of
Rights protections for their own propertied interests.
They weren't added to the Constitution as a democratic
gesture to "the people" who were nowhere in sight then or
henceforth. As history later showed repeatedly, the entire
Constitution was flawed from the start as governments, then
and later, freely and willfully ignored and set aside these
less than inviolate freedoms as Presidents Adams, Lincoln,
Wilson, Johnson, Nixon, George W. Bush, and many others
easily were able to do and often did.
Overall, "the Constitution was consciously designed as a
conservative document" the way the framers wanted it to be.
They achieved their aims with provisions in it, or omitted
by intent, to "resist the pressure of popular tides" and
protect "a rising bourgeoisie('s)" freedom to "invest,
speculate, trade, and accumulate wealth" the way things work
for capital interests today. It was to codify the law to let
the country be run the way politician, jurist and nation's
first Chief Supreme Court justice, John Jay, said it should
be - for "The people who own the country....to run it
(for their benefit alone)."
Benjamin Franklin was reportedly asked at the end of the
Constitutional Convention whether the 55 attending delegates
created a monarchy or republic. He responded "A republic, if
you can keep it" without acknowledging notions of an
egalitarian nation were stillborn at its birth. It was true
then and now in spite of all the pretense contrived to
portray an idealized society, in fact, always out of reach
for most in it.
This is Parenti's dominant theme - of a government, since
inception, serving the privileged few at the expense of the
neglected or exploited many. That's hardly a textbook
definition of democracy, yet it's the model one we're taught
to believe we have serving everyone equally. Parenti says
his book is intended to show how vital it is for everyone to
critically examine our society as a step toward improving
it. He stresses a nation's greatness is measured by its
freedom from "poverty, racism, sexism, exploitation,
imperialism....environmental devastation," and a fundamental
opposition to war and pursuit of peace everywhere. Benjamin
Franklin also said "There never was a good war or bad
peace," a notion unimaginable to our leaders today.
Wealth and Want in the United States Getting More Extreme
Parenti distinguishes between society's owner and worker
classes with the latter paid much less than the value they
create. He calls corporations "organizational devices" to
exploit labor and accumulate capital with working people
being society's real producers. Publicly owned corporations
are the dominant institution of our time existing for one
purpose only, mandated by law - to maximize the value of
shareholders' equity by increasing sales and profits,
securing new markets, and continuing to grow in size and
dominance or be left behind. Their success is measured by
their concentrated, virtual-monopoly size today. Of the
world's 100 largest economies, 51 are corporations, more
US-based ones than from any other country. Noam Chomsky
calls them "private tyrannies."
They're run by wealthy and powerful figures comprising,
along with other elites, the top 1% of the nation's
affluent. Today they own 40 - 50% of the country's wealth in
the form of stocks, bonds, land, natural resources, business
assets and other investments. In contrast, 90% of American
families have little or no net worth after mortgage and
other debt burdens are taken into account. Parenti stresses
America has the highest level of inequality of all developed
nations, the country is rigidly structured by class, and
most people die in the same class they were born into. It
debunks the notion of "a land of opportunity" for everyone.
It's for CEOs who are practically deified in today's
business press. They're hugely over-paid powerful figures
gaining wealth at the expense of their rank and file. In
1965, they earned, on average, 24 times more than workers,
in 1973 it was 45 times, in 1990 85 times, and in 2004 an
astonishing 431 times as the disparity in wealth continues
growing to levels economist Paul Krugman calls
"unprecedented." In the last generation, worker productivity
grew, but wages didn't keep up with inflation, and essential
benefits declined and are disappearing. Corporations rely on
downsizing and offshoring manufacturing and other
high-paying jobs to cheap labor markets to reduce costs and
raise profits. They maintain lean labor forces, rely heavily
on part-time workers, are hostile to unions, and achieve the
benefits of a huge reserve army of unemployed or
underemployed to contain wage pressures.
Working people suffer the effects. Since 1999, consumer debt
grew at twice the rate of their income, millions live in
poverty, many more millions just above it, far more still
have inadequate or no health insurance or other safety net
protections, and defenseless children and single mothers
(many black and other minorities) suffer most. Parenti sums
up America's dark side, unreported in the mainstream. Our
nation "squanders our national resources, exploits and
underpays our labor, and creates privation and desperate
social needs serving the few" at the expense of the many. It
mocks the notion of a egalitarian democratic society serving
all its people and shames the nation for unjustifyably
claiming it.
Our Plutocratic Culture Defiles Our Nominal Democracy
Parenti stresses America is a plutocracy, run predominantly
by hugely affluent business people in industry and commerce,
the dominant media as well as others in academia,
entertainment, the clergy, and private foundations and
charities. They spread the false gospel that "capitalism
breeds democracy and prosperity" ignoring how democratic
freedoms are incompatible with acquisitive corporate
free-enterprise thriving on the exploitation of the majority
everywhere.
Parenti asks "What about (forgotten) values relating to
justice, health, occupational and consumer safety, regard
for future generations, and accountability in government"
along with concern for the environment, an educated and
informed citizenry, affordable housing, worker rights, and
peace on earth and an end to wars and conflict. In a
"capitalist democracy," we're on our own, able to have
anything if we can pay for it. The result is an enormous
growing disparity between haves and have-nots and an
uncaring government unwilling to help the ones in greatest
need. That's "The Other America" Michael Harrington wrote
about 45 years ago that aroused John Kennedy's concern in
ways unimaginable in today's age of greed and imperial
arrogance.
A Constitution for the Privileged Few Alone
The origins of republican America were addressed above - to
create a nominally democratic government Adam Smith said
should be "instituted for the defense of the rich against
the poor." The nation's founders achieved mightily, handing
down their legacy to succeeding generations of leaders
always mindful of who gave them power and who they had to
serve. At the nation's birth, only adult white male property
owners could vote; blacks were commodities, not people; and
women were childbearing and homemaking appendages of their
husbands.
Religious prerequisites existed until 1810, and all adult
white males couldn't vote until property and tax
requirements were dropped in 1850. States elected senators
until the 17th amendment in 1913 gave citizen voters that
right, and Native Americans had no franchise in their own
land until the 1924 Indian Citizenship Act gave them back
what no one had the right to take away in the first place.
Women's suffrage wasn't achieved until the 19th Amendment
passed in 1920 after nearly 100 years of struggling for it.
The 1865 13th Amendment freed black slaves, the 1870
15th Amendment gave them the right to vote, but it wasn't
until passage of the landmark Civil and Voting Rights Acts
in the mid-1960s, abolishing Southern Jim Crow laws, that
blacks could vote, in fact, like the Constitution said they
could decades earlier. Today those rights are gravely
weakened for all through unfair laws still in force and a
nation growing more repressive and less responsive to the
needs of ordinary working people and the nation's least
advantaged. The limited high-water mark of Lyndon Johnson's
Great Society has steadily eroded since in loss of civil
liberties and essential social benefits.
Rise of the Corporate State that Rules Our Lives and the
World
Parenti explains how, contrary to popular view, the history
of America was marked by "violent class struggles, with the
government" siding with "big business." Native peoples were
slaughtered for their land and resources, large landowners
and corporations exploited slave labor, and limited labor
rights were only won through pain and struggle. Government
always sided with business interests "gorg(ing) themselves
at the public trough, battening on such government handouts
and protections as tariffs, subsidies, land grants, and
government contracts." Along the way, the public got
pathetically little.
Governments also handed down friendly legislation and court
decisions favoring wealth and power over ordinary people
consigned to low wages, few or no benefits, unemployment,
unsafe work conditions, child labor, poverty, and few of the
rights democratic states are supposed to afford but don't in
America. It hardly mattered who was president, Democrat or
Republican, Teddy Roosevelt or Woodrow Wilson, William
Howard Taft or Calvin Coolidge. "Silent Cal" belied his
reticence proclaiming what all presidents swear allegiance
to - that "The business of America is business," and
government officials, chief executives and others in high
places better not forget it.
They never did, even during Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal,
"an era commonly believed to have brought great
transformations on behalf of (what FDR called) 'the
forgotten man.' " Roosevelt was a patrician allied with
business interests trying to save capitalism in America from
meeting the same fate as in Czarist Russia in 1917. That was
job one, and giving a little to save the system was a small
price to pay.
It showed in the National Recovery Act (NRA) benefitting
corporations by restricting production and setting minimum
price requirements. "The federal housing program subsidized
construction firms and loan insurance for mortgage bankers."
Price supports and production cutbacks advantaged corporate
agriculture. Only faced with mass unrest were relief
programs created to relieve human need. So some real
democratic gains were achieved, most notably essential
social welfare legislation. Key but short-lived was the
passage of the landmark Wagner Act in 1935 establishing the
National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB). It gave labor the right to bargain collectively on
equal terms with management for the first time ever, an
achievement the repressive 1947 Taft-Hartley Act began
undoing that's now lost altogether.
Parenti sums up the era as follows: "the New Deal era hardly
adds up to a great triumph for the common people" with
government mostly being responsive to the will and needs of
corporate capitalism. It was true then but far more so now
through "subsidies, services and protections that business
could not provide for itself" and even plenty of them they
can but don't have to because government largess (with our
tax dollars) does it for them.
Politics: Who Gets What? Who's Left Out?
Parenti explains today we have a corporate state writ large
with government taxing the many (the public) to subsidize
the few (the privileged). This practice has been especially
pernicious since WW II when the US emerged as the only
dominant nation left standing. "Moderate" Republican Dwight
Eisenhower gave private corporations the equivalent (in
today's dollars) of $300 billion worth of offshore oil
reserves, public lands and utilities, atomic installations
and much more in what Parenti and others call "socialism for
the rich." The rest of us are on our own, sink or swim,
under free-market capitalism. It's heralded as the American
way.
Today, corporate giants get multi-billions in all kinds of
handouts we pay for. They come in tax breaks, price
supports, loan guarantees (many never repaid), bailouts,
marketing services, export subsidies, R & D grants, free use
of the public broadcasting spectrum, and huge subsidies and
other government-directed benefits proving "big government"
works great and business loves it. The system works by
socializing costs and privatizing profits "in an enormous
upward redistribution of income from the working populace to
the corporate rich."
Even the tax system works to corporate advantage with
corporations today paying, on average, a tiny 7.4% of their
revenues compared to 49% in the 1950s. No need asking who
makes up the difference in revenue lost, but it's even worse
than that. Sixty percent of US corporations pay no income
taxes, and many profitable ones get rebates. That's reality
in today's America with government showering business with a
tsunami of benefits and ordinary working people paying for
them in a huge upward distribution of income now way
exceeding one trillion dollars annually and rising.
The US Global Military Empire Threatens Everyone
The US emerged from WW II as the world's dominant
superpower. Today it's the only one, and it throws its
weight around recklessly proving it. First, it spends more
on the military than all other nations combined. It has many
hundreds of military bases worldwide including many secret
ones that by some unofficial estimates number around 1000
large, medium and smaller ones. In Iraq alone in May, 2005,
the Pentagon acknowledged having 106 bases including
permanent super ones the size of small towns with all their
amenities included.
Further, the US is recklessly embarked on new super-weapons
building programs, including nuclear ones, in defiance of
arms control and reduction and other treaties it renounces
unilaterally. It's aim is "full spectrum dominance" of all
land, surface and sub-surface sea, air, space,
electromagnetic spectrum and information systems with intent
to fight preventive wars of aggression against any potential
challengers to its status as lord and master of the
universe.
Money is no object or restraint toward this aim with the
Pentagon unable to account for multi-billions annually from
waste, fraud and abuse no one in government cares about.
After all, it's taxpayer money payouts to corporate
fraudsters in lieu of funding essential public services and
having regard for environmental protections. It's spent on a
reckless imperial agenda claimed for national security at
home and to spread democracy abroad to nations having none.
In fact, it's what Parenti calls "defending the capitalist
world from social change" - even the peaceful and democratic
kind seen as a threat to corporate interests.
Since WW II, it's been a US-led "global bloodletting"
through wars of aggression, CIA-instigated coups and
political assassinations, and supporting a rogue's gallery
of S.O.B. tyrants as long as they're our S.O.B.s. The list
of them earlier and now is near-endless. They serve the US
empire well and its corporate giants hugely at the expense
of ordinary people everywhere. Parenti rightfully calls
America "the greatest imperialist power in world history."
It's also the greatest of all threats to humanity from
possible nuclear or environmental Armageddon.
Health and Human Services - Victims of Corporate Capitalism
Parenti explains even plutocratic rulers have to make
concessions at times, but for the last generation hard won
earlier gains have eroded. He names some of them:
-- the WIC program aiding women, infants and children;
-- AFDC aid to needy families with dependent children wiped
out by Clinton's welfare reform;
-- SSI supplemental income for the blind, disabled and low
income persons;
-- food stamps;
-- child nutrition help and school lunch program;
-- nursing home assistance for indigent elderly;
-- legal services for the poor;
-- remedial education;
-- maternal and child health care;
- student grants and other aid;
-- drug treatment;
-- Medicare and Medicaid reductions, and much more.
The result is "more hunger, isolation, unattended illness,"
homelessness, untreated illness and more "for those with the
fewest economic resources and the least political clout."
The picture's even bleaker with states and private charities
unable to make up for what Washington eliminates, and rising
costs of essential services like health care means tens of
millions unable to afford what everyone must have. The
plutocrats' solution: privatize everything including the
most successful government poverty-reducing program ever -
Social Security. For now, efforts to do it stalled, but the
scheme won't go away. Wall Street is drooling over the
possibility of getting a huge cut out of what seniors,
"survivors," and the disabled badly need in retirement
and/or supplemental income. The plutocratic sharks will be
back trying again to steal what they haven't gotten so far.
Parenti covers other areas where public need and welfare are
sacrificed to plutocratic greed - occupational safety,
ergonomic standards, untested chemicals and additives in
foods, factory farms polluting ground water, minimum wages
kept low in spite of the recent inadequate increase taking
10 years to get, disappearing low-cost housing, and
education falling victim to reduced funding and efforts to
let private pirates teach our kids wanting only to profit
most by doing the least.
Then, there's what Parenti calls "mess transit." Mass
transit rails efficiency and low fuel consumption got Big
Oil and Big Auto to doom the system, another victim of
plutocratic greed. It got us dirty air, global warming,
42,000 annual needless highway deaths and huge numbers of
accidents and injuries, clogged highways, congested
inner-cities, and an enormous expense to many car owners
struggling to afford what many wouldn't need if efficient
mass transit served them. Parenti's conclusion - "Once again
public service was treated as something to be eliminated
rather than be improved." The public ends up the loser.
The Last Environment Becoming the Lost One
Parenti explains privilege and power give plutocrats the
right to "expropriate and use....whatever natural resources"
they want, "while passing off their diseconomies (or
externalities) onto others." He means maximizing profit and
minimizing costs by dumping huge amounts of deadly toxins on
land, in water, and in the air. Corporate giants are
licensed to strip mine rapaciously, clear-cut forests, turn
rain forests in wastelands, harm natural species and
wildlife, erode topsoil by harmful chemical farming, sell
unsafe and untested foods and drugs, destroy the ozone
layer, increase global warming, and threaten human health
and welfare, all for the sake of greater profits.
For their crimes, "corporate polluters are more often
rewarded than punished" with lucrative contracts to clean up
the mess they made. They gain at public expense twice over.
They're allowed to foul the environment, then get us to pay
the cost "for the private sector's diseconomies." The
alternate approach is obvious but untaken because it's bad
for business. So Parenti concludes "An infinitely expanding
capitalism and fragile, finite ecology are on a calamitous
collision course. Our very survival hangs in the balance."
But for corporate predators, that's someone else's problem
after they're gone.
Unequal before the Law Favoring Elites
Crime in the suites prevails in America because the law is
usually written and enforced "to favor the very rich over
the rest of us." Put another way, the rule of law depends on
who it's intended for or aimed against. Corporate crime is
far more costly in lives and money than crimes on streets.
Even worse, what's uncovered is the tip of the iceberg, and
the worst corporate crimes go unpunished - exploiting people
everywhere for profit, fouling the environment, and
profiting hugely from destructive wars. Then there's growing
mass poverty from neoliberal globalized trade; turning a
blind eye to corporate complicity in drugs trafficking;
money laundering; underpaying employees; union busting;
waste, fraud and abuse on government contracts generally
ignored; insider trading rarely caught or prosecuted, and
more and more.
In contrast, steal a few tomatoes to feed your hungry kids
and face stiff prison terms, and do it three times in states
like California and many others and get life sentences. In
an age of neocon rule, it's hardly surprising the Supreme
Court ruled 5 - 4 in March, 2003 such harsh sentences don't
violate the Constitution's Eight Amendment prohibition
against cruel and unusual punishment. Parenti cites the
cases of a Virginia man sentenced to 10 years imprisonment
for stealing 87 cents and a Houston youth getting an
incredible 50 years for robbing two people of a dollar.
A nation treating its people this way is one gone mad by its
brazen defiance of democratic justice exposed as a pipe
dream for ordinary people and an impossible one for the
least advantaged, people of color and anyone happening to be
Muslim in an age of the concocted "war on terrorism." Then
there's the other phony "war on drugs" that's just an ugly
scheme to fill prison cells, take restless minorities off
the streets so they don't get more restless, and build a
huge criminal justice system as another avenue for profit.
Those homeland wars and the long-standing one on the poor
and least advantaged left the US with the largest prison
population in the world at 2.2 million that's rising by 1000
new inmates weekly.
It's the shame of the nation and was the subtitle this
writer used in 2006 for an in-depth article called "The US
Gulag Prison System" referring to the one at home. Everyone
pays for it including taxpayers and the mothers and children
left behind on their own to fend for themselves. Not the
families of corporate fraudsters, however, whose offending
members rarely serve time if caught, do it in country club
prisons if they do, and get short sentences and affordable
fines made easier by automatic early releases.
Then there are government criminals caught, tried and
convicted. They just enter the presidential commutation and
pardon queue awaiting their turn, like I. Lewis Libby, that
usually comes up before they ever serve a day in
soft-on-crime prisons. In America, it's called justice. In
this review, it's called outrageous.
Political Repression and National Security Under Police
State Rules
Parenti puts it this way: "The corporate-dominated state is
more sincerely dedicated to fighting dissent than fighting
organized crime" including in the suites where the worst of
it's committed. So we have the FBI, CIA, NSA, IRS,
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) and NORTHCOM protecting the rich by coming down hard
on the rest of us if we have "dangerous thoughts" or support
"peace and social justice organizations." Corporations can
fire employees with the "wrong political opinions." Secret
courts can order secret surveillances, render secret
decisions and keep no published records.
We can be wiretapped; illegally searched; have our
possessions seized; and now declared an "enemy combatant,"
denied due process and sacred habeas corpus rights, and "renditioned"
to a torture-prison hellholes for indefinite incarceration
and trial by a military tribunal with no right of appeal or
legitimate access to proper legal help. That's today's
America where anyone disagreeing with George Bush can end up
a political prisoner in a nation claiming to have none.
We've always had them with shameful examples to prove it
like Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) leaders like Big
Bill Haywood who had to leave the country to avoid serving
time, others in the IWW, socialist leader Eugene Debs, and
radicals Sacco and Vanzetti made to pay for crimes they
never committed.
Then there were WW II and Korean War resisters arrested for
their beliefs and 120,000 law-abiding Japanese Americans
sent to US-based concentration camps because of their
ancestry in time of war with the country most were never
born in. There was repressive legislation going back to John
Adams' Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 criminalizing dissent
in his day. There was Woodrow Wilson's Espionage and
Sedition Acts that were just as punitive. There was the 1940
Smith Act making anti-capitalist dissent a crime. There were
jailings of African American leaders in the civil rights
struggles, and today there are mass witch-hunt roundups and
unlawful detentions of Muslims because of their faith and
Latino immigrants persecuted twice over. Destructive trade
agreements like NAFTA destroyed their livelihoods, forcing
them here for work unavailable at home. Then, once here,
they're treated like criminals if caught or ruthlessly
exploited by employers as virtual serfs.
There were Black Panther leaders murdered in their sleep
like Fred Hampton, Jr. in Chicago and others imprisoned on
spurious charges like Geronimo Pratt
(now a free man after being held 20 years in jail unjustly).
There's Mumia Abu-Jamal framed for a murder he didn't
commit, denied due process, confined to prison on death row
for the past 25 years still hoping for a new trial to
vindicate himself. There were American Indian Movement
leaders like Leonard Peltier also framed for a murder he
didn't commit and still incarcerated after 30 years. Add to
these, Puerto Rican nationalists, peace and environmental
activists, and others still fighting for their civil rights
and right to dissent.
In all the above instances, "unworthy" victims paid for the
crimes of their "worthy" victimizers. Parenti documents
these and other examples of a repressive state apparatus
protecting the rich from their exploited victims daring to
resist. He sums it up saying "under the guise of 'fighting
communism, fighting terrorism, protecting US interests,
keeping us safe, or defending democracy, the purveyors of
state power have committed horrendous crimes against the
(innocent) people of this and other countries, violating
human rights and the Constitution....to make the world safe
for profit, privilege, and pillage." It's called
democracy-American-style.
Who Governs? For Whom? Who Has No Say?
Who else? Those controlling society's wealth "exercise
trusteeship over educational institutions, foundations,
think tanks, publications, (and) mass media" as well as
having political and economic power over the nation's
business. The ruling class is comprised mainly of wealthy
white, Judeo-Christian corporate elites whose mission it is
"to secure the interests of the wealthy class."
That means relations with labor are quite the opposite and
quite successful with union membership currently around 12%
overall and only 7.4% in the private sector. That's down
from its post-war 1950s peak of
34.7%. Today, organized labor is at its lowest ebb since the
beginning of the mass unionization struggles of the 1930s
and in the private sector in over 100 years. It's because of
Democrat and Republican hostility to organized labor as well
as corporations threatening plant closures and outsourcing
forcing pay and benefit cuts and unions to lose out overall.
The situation is grim with wealth and power firmly in charge
and ordinary working people losing out. There's no mystery
about how to fix the problem. But it can only happen through
mass collective action by organized people confronting
organized money. There's a lot more of us than them.
It's not easy, however, in an age of glorified globalization
promoting the phony notion it lifts all boats. Ralph Nader
explains the rising tide only lifts all yachts at a time
corporate giants' power is immense. It exceeds the rights of
all sovereign states they operate in making them the ones
that rule the world. They do it with one-sided unfair "free
trade" agreements like NAFTA and DR-CAFTA. They and the
World Trade Organization (WTO) super-state have power to
"overrule or dilute any laws of any nation deemed to burden"
corporate capital. WTO rules deny their sovereignty when it
conflicts with corporate-mandated trade rules written for
them. No sovereign right is sacred and none can interfere
even in cases of harmful products and services member
nations aren't allowed to prohibit. Secret WTO panels alone
have the final say in trade disputes that always side with
business because that's where their ruling members come
from.
Meanwhile, the Constitution is null and void even though its
preamble nominally states power rests with the people, not a
corporate-run trade body making secret rulings putting its
members above the law of the land. Parenti calls this "a
coup d'etat by international finance capital....a logical
extension of imperialism, a victory of empire over republic
(and) corporate capital over democracy" that our own
government does nothing to counteract because it supports
these practices. It's not supposed to be that way, or so we
learned in school. But that's how it is and won't change
until we end "free trade" and replace it with trade that's
"fair" for "the interests of the many rather than the greed
of the few." We have miles to go and haven't even begun the
journey.
The Shame of the Mass Media That's A Mess
Corporate giants rule the nation, the world and the nation's
dominant means of communicating to the people through the
mass media using public airwaves and the large print
publications they control. In that capacity, they're the
nation's thought control police gatekeepers filtering in
information they want reported and suppressing what's
hostile to state and corporate interests. Today, they're
more able than ever to do it. Since 1983, the number of
corporations controlling most newspapers, magazines, book
publishers, movie studios, and electronic media shrunk from
50 to six global media Goliaths - Time Warner, Disney,
General Electric, Viacom, Germany-based Bertelsmann, and
Rupert Murdock's News Corporation. Add to them cable giant
Comcast and it's a not so "magnificent seven."
Their owners decide what's aired and what isn't and news
reporters, commentators and so-called pundits know the
rules. If someone forgets, they'll end up in newspaper
Siberia reporting obits or on TV off-camera at best, not on
it. Those playing by the rules aren't cheated, however, even
though they cheat us. On TV especially, many earn handsome
salaries, good benefits and lucrative speaking engagements
and book deals. Lying for the state and corporate bosses
pays well. It's why the queue is long with many in it
awaiting their chance for a big payday. Those of conscience
and progressive leanings need not apply. Few get space in
print or on-air except as setup patsies matched against
hoards of conservative ideologues preaching wars are good
and corporations free to pillage and plunder will make the
world safe for democracy. Their job is to spread the
"proper" message that excludes lots of ugliness harmful to
ordinary people they ignore.
There is hope, however, and it shows up in alternate media
spaces - on progressive web sites, like the one you're on
now, and on small and independent radio and some TV in
cities throughout the country where this writer airs a
weekly "News and Information Hour" that tells the truth
in-depth with noted guests. They need support and space to
grow, and that's where the listening public comes in. They
and we also need to join the struggle to save the last
frontier of press freedom - to preserve Net Neutrality and
keep this space out of predatory corporate media hands that
want to control. They can't be allowed to get it nor will
they if enough people-power unites to prevent it. At stake
is what remains of a free, open and independent media. We
can't afford to lose it to corporate giants wanting to take
away what belongs to us.
Our Corrupted Electoral Process
It almost understates the problem saying our "electoral
process is in need of serious rescue and repair." In large
measure, it's on life-support barely hanging on and is now
little more than theater in a nominal democracy serving the
privileged alone. They make the rules in a dominant
two-party duopoly, effectively keep out interloper
alternative choices. While differences between both sides
exist, on one issue they're united. They're both committed
to waging imperial wars for predatory corporate capital's
right to exploit workers, gain new markets, control the
world's resources, and rule it without challenge. Unless
that changes, whichever party wins elections won't matter.
Neither one will serve popular interests, only privileged
ones.
Our electoral system is structured to make it near
impossible for both dominant parties to lose to a third
party surprise. We have "winner take all" elections
artificially magnifying major parties' strengths. Whichever
party gets a plurality of votes
(even if not a majority) wins 100% representation so parties
on the short end getting lesser vote totals in congressional
districts get no representation for their supporters. If we
had a proportional representation system, it would be
different as party representation would match the percent of
votes it won.
Redistricting, as a function of decennial reapportionment,
rigs the system as well especially when its most extreme
gerrymandering method is used to maximize party strength in
how district lines are drawn. Then there's the issue of
campaign funding and where most of it comes from. It's not
from the public supporting people-oriented candidates. It's
from powerful corporate donors for candidates supporting
their interests, and the amounts contributed are huge.
They're in unrestricted soft money amounts to parties and
evasions of the $5000 limit per candidate by donating in
names of other family members, relatives, staff, the corner
grocer or anyone else for the multi-millions needed for
federal and many state elections today. All donations come
with strings. We all know what they are and what's expected
of winning candidates.
Then there's the issue of who gets to vote most people
thought was settled long ago, but tell that to adult
citizens in poor black and Latino districts and they'll say
otherwise. Many are peremptorily stricken from the rolls the
way many black voters in Florida were cheated in the 2000
elections. The same thing goes on in many states, it's
illegal, but it happens anyway, and if discovered ex post
facto it's too late to matter - case closed. In addition,
4.5 million Americans can't vote because of past criminal
records, or they're currently in prison.
Then there's the issue of election theft in a nation where
foxes now guard the henhouse under a system of privatized
elections with more than 80% of 2004 votes cast and counted
on corporate-owned electronic voting machines. Three
Republican-supporting large corporations own, program,
operate and count the votes using machines with no paper
ballot receipts. The process makes it impossible to verify
vote totals through recounts that will only produce the
first total gotten, real or corrupted. It also makes a
mockery of free, fair and open elections.
The process now is secretive and unreliable run by private
interests with everything to gain if their candidates win.
Based on clear evidence, that's exactly what's happening and
will continue to until these machines are banned and
independent civil servants run elections free from outside
interference and do it with paper ballots counted by hand
and saved. The way elections are run now, it's easy rigging
the outcomes threatening to make our two-party monopoly "an
even worse one-party tyranny" the way it's been under George
Bush Republican rule with Democrat complicity helping out.
The Best Congress Money Can Buy with Its Members Having
Plenty of Their Own
Parenti explains our founders created a system of checks and
balances by separating government into executive,
legislative and judicial branches, even though the idea
sounded better than it actually was. Today it's barely
noticeable with two branches overtly supporting the chief
executive's right to do as he pleases with no effective
check on his power or lawlessness. One reason is because of
who gets to Congress and the courts. They're mostly
plutocracy members in good standing there to take care of
their own. Half of Senate members are millionaires, and one
critic believes the lower body is more "a House of Lords"
than a House of Representatives.
They're connected in an incestuous relationship with
business and high-powered influence peddling lobbyists
offering "succulent campaign contributions, fat lecture
fees, easy-term loans (sometimes forgotten), pre-paid
vacation jaunts, luxury resorts, four-star restaurants,"
choice seats at major sporting events and other monetary and
other inducements for easily corrupted officials quick to
sell their votes and integrity for the office they want to
win and hold onto. It's all legal so long as explicit
promises aren't made in exchange for money or monetary
favors. Even when they are, few offenders are caught with
exceptions like lobbyist Jack Abramoff and Representative
Duke Cunningham and others long forgotten in the past. The
scoundrels come from Congress, the administration, states,
police and one vice-president.....so far.
Richard Nixon got off by resigning and getting Gerald Ford
to pardon him as part of a shameless deal likely struck in
advance with a willing seeker of the nation's highest
office. So did Ronald Reagan for the Iran-Contra scandal and
his vice-president, GHW Bush. Future judgment awaits the son
for his crimes, far exceeding the father's that alone were
pretty egregious as part of the Bush crime family's way of
operating and, so far, getting off scott free.
It makes it hard imagining legislators will hold him or
others accountable that's made no easier by the way Congress
is structured. It's in about 20 standing committees,
numerous subcommittees and chairmen of each with enough
influence to make or block things from happening unless they
goes against congressional consensus. So deals like NAFTA,
"welfare reform," and the 1996 telecom giveaway were pretty
much baked in the cake, and no committee chairman dared try
blocking them.
Parenti explains how the "legislative labyrinth" affects the
work of Congress, how staggered Senate terms of office blunt
sweeping sentiment changes, and how the very structure of
Congress keeps it conservative and supportive of privilege,
not the electorate. He notes "legislative democracy (is)
under siege," held virtual hostage by "the entire corporate
social order" with its control of the nation's wealth, mass
media, and whole network of powerful figures working for its
interests. Under Republican/Bush neocon rule, it's even
worse today from "reactionary forces within the legislature
itself." Secrecy prevails, public interest is discarded, the
rule of law is what the chief executive says it is, and
free, open and fair elections are an illusion under a system
where wealth and power choose the candidates and often
determine who wins before voters go to the polls.
Hail to the Chief Executive
Along with his other roles as chief executive and commander
in chief, the president is also the lead "promoter and
guardian of global corporate capitalism," not democracy as
we're made to believe. In this capacity, he surrounds
himself with a coterie of corporate leaders and advisors
from industry, Wall Street and other key areas of business
with a dog in the fight to keep the world safe for capital.
Another key presidential role is being the nation's "chief
liar." It involves preaching restraint while supporting
extremes, saying tax cuts benefit ordinary people when
they're earmarked for the rich and corporate giants,
professing to be a peacemaker while preparing for war, and
claiming to be an education president and friend of the
earth while slashing funding for both to give big handouts
to corporate friends who don't care about societal
betterments.
Parenti covers much more in this section including "a loaded
Electoral College" overriding the popular vote when the two
disagree and individual Electors free to vote against the
candidate "to whom they had been pledged." He also notes how
presidents today are "would-be kings." They usurp powers far
beyond what the Constitution allows like taking the nation
to war when its Article I arrogates that authority solely to
Congress. He freely uses executive privilege as well through
executive orders, signing statements, emergency war powers
and more that for George Bush means claiming "unitary
executive" authority
(unmentioned in the Constitution) to ignore the law and do
as he pleases.
Parenti sums it up saying "executive power....advances the
process of 'free-market' capital accumulation." Whoever
occupies the White House, there won't "be much progressive
change from the top....unless there is also mass social
unrest and mobilization for fundamental reforms at the
(grassroots) base. Until then, presidents will pursue their
prerogatives and their (imperial) wars."
Bureaucracy in American Politics
Bureaucracy exists in all parts of society, public and
private, but the government kind we're told is inefficient
and should be minimized. It's so private interests can run
everything because they supposedly do it better. Baloney.
Unmentioned is private interests represent themselves, not
society. That's why we need government in place serving
everyone in ways private business won't because doing it
hurts profits. The record makes the case. HMOs and other
health insurance providers love healthy customers but
discard the seriously ill; privatized, unregulated water and
other utilities gouge their customers as much as they can
get away with; and government-run Social Security is the
most effective of all retirement programs for most people
compared to private pension plan promises made and now
abandoned by growing numbers of companies to save money.
Government also does what private business can't or won't
like running the "much maligned post office" delivering
first class mail anywhere in the country for 41 cents an
ounce. It used to run a more efficient military until it
privatized services in it, including 100,000 hugely overpaid
paramilitary mercenaries, not the 30,000 phony number told
the public. The changes accomplish nothing besides running
up a big bill for taxpayers in a massively bloated and
growing military budget that includes tens of billions off
the books and mostly out of sight.
Much is done secretly with Congress helping administrations
wage illegal wars, practice malfeasance and get away with
all of it untouched because they're all in on the schemes.
It ends up breeding a culture of unaccountability, waste,
corruption, lawlessness, and no one's the wiser unless
something important slips out by mistake. When it comes from
whisleblowers, they're condemned and threatened making
coming forward honorably a risk to their careers or worse in
an atmosphere where dissent means supporting terrorism.
Parenti also explains how watchdog agencies like FDA, FCC,
EPA, OSHA and others protect the industries they're supposed
to monitor and regulate more than ever. So FCC supports
further industry consolidation; EPA ignores dirty air,
polluted groundwater and global warming; and FDA allows
untested drugs and unsafe foods to be sold to consumers.
These and other watchdog agencies promote profits, not the
public interest or safety, and they're staffed by corporate
foxes guarding our henhouse.
Public authority is also placed in private hands with
federal lands, forests, water and other resources given to
corporate interests. Then there's the so-called Federal
Reserve System created in 1913 by Congress through one of
their most outrageous and disastrous pieces of legislation
ever, robbing the public welfare to enrich greedy bankers.
The System is a privately-owned for profit enterprise, not a
government-run one as most people falsely believe. It
illegally gave bankers authority Article I, Section 8 of the
Constitution arrogates soley to Congress - the power to
create and control the nation's money supply they use to
charge government interest on its own money. In its near-94
year existence, this banking cartel pulled off the largest
ever financial heist in world history by far. The Federal
Reserve Act gave private bankers power to transfer wealth
from government to profiteers with the public paying for it
through taxes. In a 2006 article titled "Dirty Secrets of
the Temple," this writer explained how they did it, how the
system works, and the horrific consequences.
In it was mentioned what Parenti covers as well about Jack
Kennedy's displeasure with the scheme that may have cost him
his life. He wanted to end the Federal Reserve System to
eliminate the national debt central bankers create by
printing public money and loaning it to the government. On
June 4, 1963, he issued presidential order EO 11110 giving
the president authority to issue currency and ordered the US
Treasury to print $4 billion worth of silver-backed "United
States (Treasury) Notes" notes for starters replacing
Federal Reserve (banking cartel) ones. Months later he was
dead, and Lyndon Johnson rescinded his order.
Abraham Lincoln met the same fate that may have resulted
from his getting Congress to pass the Legal Tender Act in
1862. It empowered the US Treasury to issue paper money
called "greenbacks" so the government had it own money for
the Civil War and didn't have to pay greedy bankers 24 - 36%
interest they demanded for loans Lincoln needed. Right after
the war ended, Lincoln was assassinated, the so-called
Greenback law was rescinded shortly thereafter, and a new
national banking act was passed making all money
interest-bearing again.
The US "Supremes"
Parenti calls the Supreme Court an "aristocratic branch" of
government as its member are appointed, serve for life and
have great power for good or ill. They're also well paid and
"enjoy expensive gifts and lavish trips paid for by
corporations and other affluent interests" courting
influence and getting it. High Court justices most always
side with corporate America, and their decisions show it.
Today, it's more obvious than ever with Court ideology
conservative to reactionary (no liberals among them) in
support of business and authoritarian government. But even
well into the New Deal era in the 1930s, "the Supreme Court
was the activist bastion of laissez-faire capitalism" that
White House and public pressure finally changed by 1937 to
get the Court to accept New Deal legislation.
Parenti explains how High Courts "opposed restrictions on
capitalist power (overall), but supported restrictions on
the civil liberties of persons who agitated against that
power." In the past and now, "the Court treated the
allegedly pernicious quality of a radical idea as evidence
of its lethal efficacy and as justification for its
suppression." So it was possible to convict communists or
socialists under the Smith Act even though they only
advocated a different economic system, not the forcible
overthrow of the government that would be a crime.
Dissenting ideas and beliefs are lawful under the First
Amendment's right of free expression, but often in the past
and now people exercising their constitutional right pay a
stiff price, and Supreme and other courts go along.
Parenti points out "the threat of revolution in the United
States has never been as real or harmful as the measures
taken to 'protect' us from revolutionary ideas.... The real
danger comes from those at the top who would insulate us
from 'unacceptable' viewpoints. No idea is as dangerous as
the force that seeks to repress it." When the nation's
courts are part of that force, freedom is a nominally
democratic state is on shaky ground.
Parenti explains the High Court reflects "the climate of the
times and....the political composition of the justices"
although most often the Court leans to the right supporting
the corporate state and conservative issues. It reflects its
ideology in its decisions and by the cases it chooses to
hear or not hear.
The Warren Court was an exception ruling for the first time
ever "repeatedly on behalf of the less affluent" on civil
liberties, reapportionment of legislative districts, and
extending the "economic rights of the poor." The Court ended
state prohibitions against interracial marriage and rendered
its landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954
ruling "separate educational facilities are inherently
unequal" that was a first step toward ending racially
separated schools it took until the 1960s to move forward
on.
Parenti continued saying post-Warren Courts reverted to form
leaning "mostly in a rightward direction" on a variety of
crucial issues he lists and discusses like:
-- abortion and gender discrimination making positive and
negative rulings;
-- affirmation action and civil rights making it harder to
prove discrimination;
-- criminal justice weakening Miranda rights, giving child
abusers more rights than their victims, weakening
unreasonable searches and seizures and much more;
-- the death penalty with the High Court reinstating it in
1976 but "pruning" it down thereafter;
-- economic inequality by upholding laws reducing welfare
aid and other rulings against the disadvantaged;
-- the electoral system that was highlighted in Bush v. Gore
ruling against the candidate who won and awarding it (as it
turned out) to the loser;
-- executive power, granting more of it to the president;
-- labor and the corporate economy ruling often for business
and against working Americans;
-- the separation of church and state with the Court
disregarding the First Amendment to rule for religious
organizations' exemptions to taxation and much more in
violation of the Constitution at a time Christian hard right
extremists wield enormous influence over state policy.
Parenti's book was published in March, 2007 before the
current Court's June rulings came down, but he surely would
have commented on them had he known in time. Overall, the
Court affirmed how hard line it is confirming what
progressives feared most about it. Call it a muscular move
to the right on fundamental issues of free expression,
abortion rights and more.
One decision was a 5 - 4 ruling with the Court allowing the
political process to become even more corrupted by corporate
money by allowing ads mentioning specific candidates to
appear in the immediate days before an election. It means
funding an electoral campaign just went up exponentially so
lesser or poorly funded candidates have even less of a
chance to win. In another decision, hypocritically, it
curtailed the free expression rights of public school
children because they said things the Court didn't like.
Even more troubling was the effective gutting of the
landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision affirming
segregated public schools denied "Negro children the equal
protection of the laws guaranteed by the 14th Amendment."
The reactionary Roberts Court disagreed 5 - 4 saying instead
public schools can't seek to achieve or maintain integration
through measures taking explicit account of a student's
race. The decision angered conservative Justice Breyer
enough to emotionally denounce it in a 20 minute statement
from the bench calling it a "radical" step and "It is not
often in the law that so few have so quickly changed so
much." Justice Stevens bristled as well saying it was "a
cruel irony (that the opinion) rewrites the history of one
of this court's most important decisions (and) no member of
(the 1975 Court he joined) would have agreed with (it)."
One other disturbing trend was the Court's placing limits on
plaintiffs' ability to bring suits or appeal them. It
bothered Yale Law School Professor Judith Resnik enough to
label the just-ended term "the year they closed the courts."
Parenti would be bothered, too, although his book stresses
Courts reflect the political climate of the times and notes
justices not only read the Constitution but also newspapers.
When, like today, the Court and president are "militantly
conservative" and Congress is complicit, justices can be
inordinately activist siding against the public interest.
Since they have life tenure, their jobs are secure, and the
dominant media hushes up their abuses. Parenti suggests a
way to "trim judicial adventurism is to end life tenure for
federal judges," including those on the High Court. However,
a constitutional amendment is needed to do it, and that's
extremely hard to get.
Democracy for the Few in America
In our "pluralistic democracy," most government policies
favor the privileged and work against the great majority of
ordinary people. The result is social inequities and
injustices prevail, civil liberties are fast disappearing,
the rich get richer, the middle class is eroding, poverty
and human needs are growing, and our government and dominant
media say we live in the best of all possible countries in
the best of all possible worlds in the USA. The preceding
chapters dispelled that notion in disturbing detail so
there's no confusion how things really are, and rosy
characterizations won't change anything for most of us.
With all its faults, its defenders say "democratic
capitalism" (an oxymoron) evolved through gradual reform.
Though true at times, most often an unempowered unmobilized
public is no match for the power of corporate capital with
government and the military allied with it. Parenti asks:
-- "How can we speak of the US politico-economic system
(reflecting) the democratic will?"
-- What democratic mandate directed government to transfer
wealth from the people to the rich;
-- to lavish huge subsidies on corporate giants;
-- to fight imperial wars for greater corporate
profit-making opportunities;
-- to endanger our environment;
-- to serve the privileged alone at the expense of all
others it shows contempt for;
-- to roll back democracy when there's too much of it so
there's only enough for the privileged few. Unless and until
that changes America the Beautiful will, in fact, be George
Bush's ugly America for most of us.
As Parenti says in summing up, it's "no mystery what needs
to be done to bring us to a more equitable and democratic
society" citing specifics like:
-- aid needy farmers, not rich agribusiness;
-- promote conservation and ecological restoration;
-- promote efficient mass transit, not inefficient polluting
autos, one-fourth of which now are gas-guzzling, hugely
greenhouse gas-emitting, road hogging, behemoth, dangerous
SUVs no one knew they needed until Madison Avenue geniuses
convinced millions they couldn't live without them;
-- reintroduce a fair progressive tax system and eliminate
benefits only the rich get;
-- restore trust-busting and break up the corporate giants;
promote the notion that small and local are good and big and
global bad;
-- abolish the banking cartel-owned Federal Reserve so the
government can print and circulate its own money and not
have to pay private predators interest on it;
-- end powerful monied interests controlling the electoral
process; promote public financing supporting all candidates;
abolish the Electoral College and our winner take all
system; abolish electronic voting and reintroduce paper
ballots counted by hand by civil servants running elections;
grant the District of Columbia statehood and full
representation in Congress.
-- establish a minimum livable wage and guaranteed income
for the indigent;
-- promote full employment and the right to organize and
bargain on equal terms with management;
-- institute abandoned or reduced social services starting
with those most important and for those in greatest need but
made available to everyone;
-- guarantee quality national health and dental care for all
and care for the elderly and indigent;
-- establish free education for everyone to the highest
levels;
-- pay for it by ending imperial wars and promoting peace,
slashing bloated military and homeland security budgets,
closing hundreds of unneeded foreign-based military
installations and most at home, ending expensive weapons
systems development, and cutting the size of the military to
levels needed for homeland defense, not imperial
adventurism.
-- end gender, racial, ethnic and religious discrimination
and criminal justice inequities;
-- abolish the CIA, NSA and other secretive, hugely
expensive, roguish spy agencies operating outside the law no
democratic state should allow; abolish DHS that functions as
a national Gestapo;
-- return the public airwaves to its rightful owner - the
public and open then up fully to all views on all issues
with no corporate or government censorship;
-- enable seniors, the poor and disabled to have a minimum
living income adjusted for inflation with an equitable
Social Security program for everyone paid for by a
progressively fair tax system, not the regressive payroll
tax one now in place letting the rich off the hook by
burdening average and low-wage earners;
-- establish public ownership over the major means of
production in a true social democracy. Market forces only
work for the ones controlling them assuring they benefit by
exploiting most others. That's not a radical idea. It's
plain fact.
Parenti concludes saying "Our goal should be an egalitarian,
communitarian, environmentally conscious, democratic
socialism (or real social democracy), with a variety of
participatory and productive forms, offering both security
and democracy" for everyone, not just the few the way it is
now. "There is nothing sacred about the existing system."
Having failed the many, it should be replaced by an
alternative one that works for everyone.
It can happen with a "fundamental change (to) widespread
organizing not only around particular issues but for a
movement" for sweeping democratic change. Perhaps the time
will come, Parenti says, as it did in the past, "when those
who (today) seem invincible will be shaken from their
pinnacles" and revealed to have feet of clay when disrobed
and exposed to the light of day. We'll all then see they
represented "democracy for the few," not the rest of us, but
their day is past and replaced by a new social order for
everyone. That can happen if enough people believe it and
mobilize effectively to get it. A later Parenti edition
could then be called "The End of Democracy for the Few - How
the Many Triumphed Over the Privileged."
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net .
Also visit his blog site at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Steve
Lendman News and Information Hour on The MicroEffect.com
Saturdays at noon US central time.
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