Is America
Fascist?
By Sherwood
Ross
October 20,
2008 "Information
Clearinghouse"
If it hasn’t
gone the way
of
Mussolini’s
Italy and
Hitler’s
Germany,
it’s sure
teetering on
the brink.
America is a
nation in
deepening
crisis, a
nation whose
leaders
repeatedly
plunge their
citizens
into, and
make them
pay for,
serial wars
abroad,
while
stealing
their
liberties at
home. USA
has become a
country that
trashes its
citizens(New
Orleans),
tortures its
enemies(Abu
Ghraib),
threatens
other
nations with
nuclear
fire(Iran),
flouts
international
treaties(UN
Charter re
Iraq), and
spies
on(FISA),
and
intimidates,
its
critics(No
Fly).
Americans
that can
clearly see
the
totalitarian
machinations
of Vladimir
Putin in
Russia and
Hu Jintao in
China are
blind to the
fascism
threatening
to envelop
them as
well.
Webster’s
defines
fascism as
“a
totalitarian
governmental
system led
by a
dictator and
emphasizing
an
aggressive
nationalism,
militarism,
and often
racism.” A
comparison
of 20th
century
fascist and
communist
regimes with
President
Bush’s USA
indicates
the
machinery
for a
full-blown
totalitarian
takeover is
now in
place, even
if no coup
has
occurred. As
Naomi Wolf
writes in
“The End of
America”(Chelsea
Green)the
2007 Defense
Authorization
Bill’s
Section 333
allows the
president
“to declare
martial law
and take
charge of
the National
Guard troops
without the
permission
of a
governor
when ‘public
order’ has
been lost…”
and to “send
the guard
into our
streets
during a
public
health
emergency,
terrorist
attack or
‘other
condition.’”
The enabling
crowbar was
the Military
Commissions
Act of 2006.
It gives the
president
authority to
set up his
own system
for bringing
alien
combatants
to trial
while
denying them
protection
of the
Geneva
Conventions.
“The
president
and his
lawyers now
claim the
authority to
designate
any American
citizen he
chooses as
being an
‘enemy
combatant,’”
Wolf writes
of power
usurpation
that
characterized
the
post-World
War One
epoch in
Europe and
Asia.
Thus,
Congress has
empowered
Bush just as
Germany’s
Reichstag
empowered
Hitler, Wolf
writes,
recalling
Hitler’s
boast,
“Democracy
will be
overthrown
with the
tools of
democracy.”
Hitler’s
Interior
Minister
issued
Clause 2
that gave
police the
power to
hold people
in custody
indefinitely
and without
a court
order,
powers the
U.S.
Congress
today has
conferred
upon “The
Decider” in
the White
House.
Mussolini’s
used the
less
grandiose
“Il Duce” or
“The
Leader.”
According to
Michael
Ratner,
director of
the Center
For
Constitutional
Rights, New
York, “the
president
can…designate
people enemy
combatants
and detain
them for
whatever
reason he
wants…there
are no
charges and
prisoners
have no
lawyers, no
family
visits, no
court
reviews, no
rights to
anything,
and no right
to release
until the
mythical end
to the ‘war
on terror.’”
Wolf writes
that
dictators
justify
their
usurpation
of domestic
liberties by
raising the
alarm of
“terrorist”
threats.
Stalin, for
example,
used this
very term in
1934 when he
warned his
public of a
world-wide
conspiracy
by
capitalists
to overthrow
the Soviet
state. If
there have
been no mass
arrests of
native-born
Americans it
is only
because the
president
has not
chosen to
exercise
this
authority.
If you think
it can’t
happen to
you, recall
that in
September of
2003 the
Army
arrested
36-year-old
American-born
Muslim
chaplain
James Yee, a
West Point
graduate,
allegedly
for
“espionage
and possibly
treason”---but
more likely
for calling
for better
conditions
for Gitmo
inmates.
Wolf wrote:
“He was
blindfolded;
his ears
were
blocked; he
was manacled
and then put
into
solitary
confinement
for 76 days;
forbidden
mail,
television,
or anything
to read
except the
Koran. His
family was
not allowed
to visit
him. …His
lawyers were
told he
would face
execution. (But)Within
six months,
the U.S.
government
had dropped
all criminal
charges
against
Yee.” Yes,
just as it
has dropped
charges
against
hundreds of
Guantanamo
prisoners
earlier, men
labeled by
former
Defense
Secretary
Rumsfeld as
“the worst
of the
worst” but
against the
overwhelming
majority of
whom the
Bush regime
apparently
had no case
whatever!
The
treatment
Yee got is
typical of
those who
run afoul of
the Bush
regime:
torture
first, trial
after…if
there is a
trial. And
since his
release, Yee
has been
denied his
free speech
right to
discuss his
ordeal---gagged
by the
Pentagon.
Perhaps most
incredible,
even if a
Guantanamo
prisoner
should be
found
innocent,
the Pentagon
says he
might not be
released
anyway. This
echoes
Stalin’s
practice of
re-arresting
Gulag
prisoners
after they
had done
their time.
At one
point,
Stalin had
eight
million
souls behind
bars, even
exceeding
President
Bush,
currently
the world’s
Incarcerator-In-Chief.
Author Wolf
says another
danger flag
is the
creation of
paramilitary
groups,
“aggressive
men who have
no clear,
accountable
relationship
to the
government
or the party
seeking
power…”
Mussolini
had the
blackshirts;
Hitler the
brownshirts;
but whatever
their dress,
they were
thugs. Wolf
says that
Moycock,
N.C.-based
Blackwater
Worldwide
stands ready
“to deploy
its
unaccountable
private army
(35,000 men)
in the
U.S.---in
the
aftermath of
natural
disasters,
and also in
cases of
‘national
emergency.’”
With at
least a half
billion
dollars in
government
contracts,
“Blackwater
is the
world’s
largest
private
security
force, works
closely with
Halliburton,
and is
available
for action
outside the
scrutiny of
Congress,”
Wolf writes.
The outfit
raked in $73
million for
patrolling
the streets
of New
Orleans
after
Hurricane
Katrina. And
Blackwater
subcontractor
Red Tactica,
recruits
former
Chilean
commandos,”
men
described by
one Chilean
sociologist
that are
“valued for
their
expertise in
kidnapping,
torturing
and killing
defenseless
civilians,”
Wolf wrote.
Besides
creating
such
“security”
forces,
dictators
create
secret
prisons, as
Bush has
done,
ranging from
prison ships
in the
Indian Ocean
to dungeons
in Poland,
where they
can hide
them from
Red Cross
scrutiny, as
the CIA has
done. “We
should worry
about the
men held at
Guantanamo
because
history
shows that
stripping
prisoners of
their rights
is
intoxicating
not only to
leaders but
to
functionaries
at every
level of
society,”
Wolf writes.
“Gitmo” is
also an
interrogation
camp, an
operation
“that is
completely
and flatly
illegal” and
outlawed by
the Geneva
Conventions
in 1949, she
points out.
Stalin also
employed
torture and
in 1937
actually
legalized
its use in
Soviet
prisons.
When he
received his
infamous
“albums”
with the
names of
those to be
executed and
imprisoned,
next to some
names he
often wrote:
“Beat! Beat!
Beat!” And
only months
after taking
power,
Hitler
“established
a network of
illegitimate
prisons
where
torture took
place” and
where guards
could murder
inmates with
“no chance
of being
punished,”
Wolf said.
And like
Stalin, The
Decider has
signaled his
henchmen
beatings are
now the
American
Way.
Dictators
hold power
by
instilling
fear in
their
citizens.
Since 2000,
Wolf writes
there has
been “a
sharp
increase in
U.S. citizen
groups that
are being
harassed and
infiltrated
by police
and federal
agents,
often in
illegal
ways.” She
pointed to a
2006 ACLU
report that
California
police had
infiltrated
antiwar
protests,
political
rallies, and
other
constitutionally
protected
gatherings
and were
secretly
investigating
them, even
though the
California
state
constitution
forbids
this. And
prior to the
2004
Republican
convention
in New York,
police
department
detectives
infiltrated
groups
planning
peaceful
demonstrations.
At the
Federal
level,
Bush’s
apparatchiks
are
compiling
dossiers on
law-abiding
citizens.
The Defense
Department’s
Talon
program has
created a
database
about
peaceful
antiwar and
other groups
and
activists.
As Jen
Nessel of
the Center
for
Constitutional
Rights says,
“We have
absolutely
moved over
into a
preventive
detention
model---you
look like
you could do
something
bad, you
might do
something
bad, so
we’re going
to hold
you.”
Bush regime
actions’
today recall
how the
Gestapo,
NKVD,
Stasi(East
German
secret
police) and
Red China’s
Politburo
“all
requisitioned
private data
such as
medical,
banking, and
library
records,”
Wolf writes,
because
access to
such private
data “breaks
down
citizens’
sense of
being able
to act
freely
against
those in
power.” And
although the
Department
of Homeland
Security’s
TIPS scheme
to get
letter
carriers and
meter
readers,
etc., to
report
suspicious
activities
was met with
derision and
never
funded, the
ACLU noted
it was
merely
absorbed in
the
Pentagon’s
“black
budget.”
Privacy in
America
today as
guaranteed
by the
Constitution
is fast
becoming a
memory. The
New York
Times
reported the
government
in 2005 was
monitoring
your e-mail
and
telephone
talk without
legal
warrants and
the
following
year the
newspaper
disclosed
U.S.
treasury
officials,
with CIA
help, “were
reviewing
millions of
private bank
transactions
without
individual
court-ordered
warrants or
subpoenas,”
Wolf pointed
out.
One method
of
intimidation
is to limit
a citizen’s
right to
travel
freely. The
Bush regime
has created
“watch”(75,000
names) and
“no
fly”(45,000
names) lists
that
restrict
individuals’
air
travel--and
those
searched
and/or
stopped from
flying can
complain all
they like
because it
won’t do
them any
good. Robert
Johnson, an
American
citizen,
Wolf
reports,
described
the
humiliation
factor of
being strip
searched
when he
attempted to
board an
airplane: “I
had to take
off my
pants. I had
to take off
my sneakers,
then I had
to take off
my socks. I
was treated
like a
criminal.”
This has now
become a
commonplace
ordeal for
thousands of
Americans.
Even at the
height of
World War
Two, such
invasions of
personal
rights would
have been
unthinkable.
Going back
to Webster’s
definition
of fascism,
USA today is
the world’s
runaway
leader in
“militarism.”
Forty-three
percent of
all U.S. tax
dollars in
2007 went to
feed the war
machine, as
the Pentagon
believes
security
depends on
operating
more than
700 military
bases in 130
countries
overseas in
addition to
1,000 at
home. Bush
has
escalated
its budget
so that USA
now spends
nearly as
much on arms
as all the
rest of the
world
combined.
Uncle Sam is
also the No.
1 private
arms peddler
to the
world. By
contrast,
Iran,
portrayed by
the White
House as a
menace to
the Middle
East, has an
annual
military
budget that
is 1/100th
of the
Pentagon’s
outlay.
Perhaps it
would be a
good
exercise for
Americans to
read how
Hitler
emphasized
nationalism
and
militarism.
As he wrote
in “Mein
Kampf”:
“Instead of
everlasting
struggle the
world
preaches
cowardly
pacifism,
and
everlasting
peace…There
is only one
right in
this world
and this
right is
one’s own
strength.”
As for
“reconciliation,
understanding,
world peace,
the League
of Nations,
and
international
solidarity---we
destroy
these
ideas.”
Hitler
called for
delivering
Germans
“from the
hopeless
confusion of
international
convictions”
and
educating
them
“consciously
and
systematically
to fanatical
nationalism.”
Armed with
such views
the fascist
state thinks
nothing of
starting an
aggressive
war based on
lies. In
1939, Hitler
claimed he
was attacked
by Poland,
igniting
World War
Two. Bush
claimed that
Iraq had
nuclear and
biological
weapons to
destroy
America
when, in
fact, it was
the United
States that
possessed
those very
weapons and
it was Iraq
that had
none.
Bush
nonetheless
started a
seemingly
endless war
that has by
some
estimates to
date killed
more than 1
million
Iraqis,
wounded
perhaps 2
million
more, forced
a like
number from
their homes,
ravished
their
country and
its economy,
touched off
a civil war,
forced 1
million
Iraqis into
foreign
exile, and
killed and
wounded
35,000
American
troops.
Former UN
Secretary-General
Kofi Annan
called the
Iraq war
“illegal”
but Bush,
like Hitler,
cares
nothing for
international
treaties,
even if
those the
U.S. has
signed under
our
Constitution
are the
supreme law
of the land.
He has made
a mockery to
the
anti-nuclear
treaty,
causing
former
President
Carter to
charge his
own country
has become
the leader
in nuclear
proliferation.
What’s more,
Bush has
spent about
$50 billion
on germ
warfare
“defense”
with no
known
significant
foreign
threat to
USA.
Americans
may think
that
Webster’s
view that
fascism is
often
accompanied
by racism
doesn’t fit
them.
Indeed,
USA’s
strides to
eliminate
racism based
on color in
the last
century are
a societal
marvel. But
racism
against
African
Americans
has largely
been
replaced
with the
foolhardy
notion that
Americans
are better
than
everybody
else in the
world and
have the
authority to
set right
any ruler
they believe
is in error.
This view of
their own
superiority
echoes
Hitler’s
“master
race” view
of the
German
people or
the Tokyo
militarists’
view in 1940
that a
superior
Japan was
destined to
rule “the
eight
corners of
the world.”
In this
sense,
America is
very
“racist”
indeed and
the
“aggressive
nationalism”
highlighted
by Webster’s
is apparent
in the
rhetoric of
its public
officials
and the
conduct of
its foreign
affairs.
Yet another
characteristic
of the
fascist
state is its
leader’s use
of arbitrary
power. Note
how Bush
evades the
will of
Congress by
tacking on
“signing
statements”
to laws he
doesn’t
like, thus
refusing to
enforce
them,
putting
himself
above the
will of
Congress and
the American
people. Note
how his
aides refuse
to respond
to
Congressional
subpoenas to
testify. Yet
another
example is
how the
Justice
Department’s
own internal
investigators
found Bush’s
appointees
filled
nonpolitical
posts with
party hacks
and then
lied about
what they
had done.
“Civil
Service Laws
Were
Breached in
Filling
Nonpolitical
Jobs” said a
New York
Times
reported
July 29th.
It should be
remembered
Hitler
followed a
like policy
when he
purged Jews
from their
government
posts. When
tyrants
rule, merit
is ever
subservient
to loyalty.
Of course,
Bush has not
flung
thousands of
Americans
into prison
to torture
and murder
them as
Hitler,
Mussolini,
and Stalin
did, but he
has the
power to do
so, making
the latter
half of 2008
a time of
danger for
Americans.
Wolf writes,
“At a point
in both
Mussolini’s
and Hitler’s
takeovers,
citizens
witnessed a
stunning
series of
quickly
escalating
pronunciamentos
or faits
accomplis.
After each
leader made
his bids for
power beyond
what the
Italian
parliament
and the
German
Reichstag
allowed him,
each
abruptly
started to
claim all
kinds of new
rights that
were
extra-parliamentary;
the right
unilaterally
to go to
war, to
annex
territory,
to veto
existing
laws, or to
overrule the
judiciary,”
etc.
To repeat
the
question,
“Is America
fascist?”
the answer
is that the
machinery is
in place for
a
totalitarian
takeover at
the
direction of
a tyrant.
While it is
true that
the U.S. is
not a
one-party
state (some
will dispute
this owing
to the many
similarities
of the two
major
parties)
like fascist
Italy and
Germany, and
it does have
free
elections,
for the
first time
in its
history in
2000 and
2004 an
ominous
cloud of
doubt has
hung over
the
authenticity
of the
popular vote
and a vast
segment of
the voting
public today
does not
trust the
election
machinery to
record their
vote as they
intend.
There are no
mass arrests
and
executions
in the
thousands
and millions
that
typified the
regimes of
Hitler and
Stalin
(Stalin had
681,000
people
executed in
1937-8
“Great
Terror”
alone); free
speech still
exists
(under
Stalin, a
person could
be
imprisoned
for making a
Stalin
joke); and
the
government
has not put
its leaden
hand on
business as
Putin has
done
although
crony
capitalism
in the
selection of
defense
contractors
is rampant.
These vital
distinctions
set America
apart from
the
totalitarian
society.
Yet, with
each passing
day in its
“War on
Terror” the
Bush regime
tightens its
hold on the
machinery to
establish
totalitarian
rule here.
Of course,
fascism
might not
reincarnate
itself in
America
along the
lines of its
20th century
model in
Europe. What
if some
clever
tyrant in
the White
House,
having the
backing of
the
military,
got USA to
invade and
loot another
country
without
arresting
and/or
killing vast
numbers of
his own
people who
opposed his
war? What if
he just
ignored
their
protests and
then, when
his term of
office
ended,
enjoyed a
blissful
retirement
at his
ranch?
One final
thought:
Americans
need to keep
in mind that
worse than
anything
President
Bush has
inflicted
upon his own
citizenry is
what his
wars of
aggression
have
inflicted on
innocent
humanity
abroad. A
million dead
Iraqis can’t
give a damn
by what
terminology
you describe
the United
States. If
the American
people allow
their
government
to make
criminal
wars to
deprive
innocent
foreigners
of their
lives and
liberties
they do not
deserve to
enjoy either
at home.
Sherwood
Ross is a
Miami-based
writer who
has worked
as a
reporter for
the Chicago
Daily News,
a columnist
for wire
services, a
news
director for
a large
civil rights
organization,
and as a
publicist
for
colleges,
labor unions
and
entrepreneurial
start-ups.
He has
contributed
speeches to
two
presidential
candidates
and many
Congressional
and other
public
figures. He
has worked
in a press
capacity for
the Mayor of
Chicago and
for the
Nassau
County,
N.Y.,
executive
and has been
a public
relations
consultant
to more than
100 national
magazines
including
The New
Yorker, The
Atlantic,
and Harvard
Business
Review.
Reach him at
sherwoodr1@yahoo.com
The writer
is indebted
to Naomi
Wolf for her
book, “The
End of
America.”
Ms. Wolf is
cofounder of
The Woodhull
Institute
for Ethical
Leadership,
New York, an
organization
that teaches
young women
how to
assume
leadership
roles.