“A novel form of government” is the phrase Hannah Arendt uses to describe totaltitarianism epitomized in the Soviet Union beginning with Lenin and reaching its apogee under Stalin. Totalitarianism is a new government idea under the sun, having its origins in the 20th C. During the Cold War, the United States positioned itself on the world stage as the arch-enemy of totaltitarianism.
Totalitarianism, as Arendt, the descripting political philosopher who defined it says, is a political institution that gains power by destroying all legal, social, and political traditions in a country.
Totalitarianism adapts an ideology of process (a never ending theoretical phenomenon) as its guiding principle rather than rules of law (a fixed set of guidelines based on known human behavior). On the surface, the Bush Administration’s ideology, or “ism,” appears to be Terrorism. As long as Bush and his henchmen can assert that terrorism is still threatening us, there can be no end to the so-called war against it.
My, how the times have changed. The Soviet Union is no more, and in the 21st C., we have met the New Enemy. It is us.
How did the USA become a modern near-totalitarian state? By a single act of terror on 9/11 that created the conditions for creeping authoritarianism. Where some saw tragedy, others saw opportunity.
As Jack M. Balkin (Knight Professor of Constitutional Law and the First Amendment Director, The Information Society Project at Yale Law School) characterizes the immediate aftermath of that date in his essay “Beware of Creeping Authoritarianism,” December 4, 2001:
(All emphasis mine)
In times of fear, authoritarian impulses are less constrained and people feel less able to complain about them. After all, no one wants to be thought unpatriotic when the country is in such grave danger. And when there is no check on government officials certain of their own rectitude, the temptation for them to act unilaterally and arbitrarily becomes irresistible.
Balkin describes how the post-9/11 political atmosphere is akin to the Cold War era.
Little by little, the basic elements of procedural fairness that keep democratic governments from acting arbitrarily are being chipped away. No apology is offered for these actions. Those who seize power always feel perfectly entitled to it. Instead, they blame their critics for failing to recognize the seriousness of the situation or for being soft on terrorism — in the past other critics were blamed for being soft on communism.
Similarly Arnedt schools us to understand that arbitrary power, unrestricted by law, wielded in the interest of the ruler and hostile to the interests of the ruled uses fear as its main tool to subjugate its citizens, and seeks to operate in secrecy. These are the hallmarks of tyranny.
Thus we have come to the present un-pretty paradox. A president who declares himself fully justified in using illegal electronic surveillance on the citizens of the country whose Constitution he supposedly upholds and at the same time seeks renewal of the infamous Patriot Act. On the one hand the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
. . .actually authorizes some forms of surveillance without FISA court approval order for up to one year, but such surveillance is subject to specific statutory limits, the most of important of which is that there must be “no substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party.”
<snip>
FISA further specifically makes it a crime to “engage in electronic surveillance under color of law except as authorized by statute.” Balkinization Blog
Unfortunately,
. . .the NSA is intercepting communications involving “U.S. persons” — citizens and lawful permanent resident aliens — without any judicial warrant or any approval from the FISA court. That is expressly prohibited by FISA (50 USC 1802(a)(1)(B)).
On the other hand, Bush scolds Congress for failing to reenact the Patriot Act, which he doesn’t seem to need anyway since he has the authority to do whatever nearly everything in the Patriot Act under Article II of the Constitution. Plus
Congress has already (in the Authorization to Use Military Force [in Iraq], AUMF) authorized the President not only to do whatever it takes to defeat Al Qaeda, but also to ignore any preexisitng legal restrictions.
So, why do Bush even need the Patriot Act?
Further, Professor Balkin rightly asks, “Why didn’t the NSA simply get approval from the FISA Court — which would have made these interceptions entirely legal?”
The press and the blogosphere have their theories. Kevin Bass, a FISA expert says
. . .the administration might have thought it did not have enough evidence to obtain a warrant. Bass, a Washington lawyer who worked on intelligence matters during the Carter administration, speculated that U.S. authorities might have seized a computer or a phone that was used by an Al Qaeda operative.
“The scuttlebutt is they were then using all the links or phone numbers they found,” Bass said. “It certainly sounds reasonable to say, ‘We are targeting people with links to Al Qaeda,’ but it may be just a list of phone numbers,” he said. “That probably wouldn’t satisfy the FISA court.” LA Times
John Aravosis & friends at Americablog posit another theory. The Bush Administration
. . .may be targeting US journalists and that may be why Bush never got it cleared by the court and is worried about it coming forward now.
President Bush himself offers us a hypothetical scenario that he wants to “save us from.”
“We know that a two-minute phone conversation between somebody linked to al Qaeda here and an operative overseas could lead directly to the loss of thousands of lives.” CNN
But I say it is a political move by the Bush Administration to replace what used to be this country’s representative democracy with a version of neocon totalitarianism, or at the very least, tyranny. It is a straightforward naked grab at Power for the sake of Power in order to perpetuate the self. A kind of DNA Imperative of the Far Right. It is an attempt to replace the idea of Constitutional government with the ideology of patriarchal Judeo-Christian Theocracy.
Having created a miasma of fear, having flogged it to death with color-coded terror alerts and oft-repeated references to 9/11, having disregarded law, having arrogance in abundance, President Bush executes audacious power grab after audacious power grab. In doing so he demonstrates his contempt for the Law, the Constitution, Congess, the American people, and world opinion.
[Crossposted at Daily Kos]
Does anyone remember this from last year? I’m not sure if they’re still there or not.
Not shocking…go back a bit more than a half century and you’ll find that our government had no problems hiring on former Nazis. Bad guys who know a thing or two about spying and torture come in handy when the time comes to suppress dissent at home.
In the old days, it was called “The Divine Right of Kings.”
And Bush has revealed that God speaks through him.
What it resembles is the metamorphosis of the Roman Republic into a dictatorship. There was still a senate — but it was fairly pointless. All the power was with the emporer. (Although after a few really bad emporers, the army decided that it was going to pick the emporers.)
While Hannah Arendt’s book “The Origins of Totalitarianism” is probably still the definitive work on the subject of modern totalitarianism, (i.e. the Soviet Union, Mussolini’s fascist Italy and Nazi Germany, for instance) this “Father Knows Best” authoritarian rubric has been actively destroying civilizations and cultures for millennia.
The Bush regime and it’s extremist minions are firmly, unequivocally in this authoritarian camp. They exist on the continuum of tyranny, and are anti-democratic in every respect despite their overblown and hollow rhetoric to the contrary.
Even the so-called “Straussian” teachings so favored by the neoconservatives play into this scheme. The Strauss dogma, like any cult, indoctrinates it’s acolytes to believe that they are endowed with special talents and special rights, and that the masses, the “outsiders”, in typical cult parlance, are simply not capable of understanding the real issues and so it’s “up to us” to lead them along, and if we have to mislead them in the process, it’s always justified, because we are the rightful leaders by virtue of our own specialness and because we annoint ourselves.
And sociopaths like this never get it. They never admit they were wrong. They never admit any transgression because their self-delusion prevents the very possibility of such a thing as a mistake or a trespass.
Look at the mass murderer Pinochet. Even now, in his addled and aged state he still believes Chile owes him a debt of gratitude! Hitler right up until the end believed his plan failed not because it was flawed but because the German people let him down.
Pick any empire of man in human history and you will see the sickness of this totalitarian brutality at that empire’s core; the arrogant disdain for the rights of others and the completelack of respect for anyone not obedient to their demands.
This is the essence of the Bush regime. Bush himself is too much the imbecile to grasp these elements himself, but clearly the Cheney gang embodies the worst aspects of the totalitarian mindset on every level.
While it’s true that the neoconservative ideology evolved basically out of Leninist and Trotskyite leftist doctrine, it mutated to the right yet retained the essential authoritarian addiction, and this addiction to power is almost primordial in nature, tracing all the way back as far as recorded history.
Great comment.
Do you think GWB will crack and shatter if he loses his supporting cast or do you think he would become more the Saddam type, finding more strength with all actions justified in his own mind?
It sure is a sight to see someone challenge his authority.
I made my birthday prediction back in October right here on BooTrib that I believed Bush would wind up having a complete mental/ emotional breakdown and not be able to finish out his term.
I still see this as a near certainty as he’s slipping further and further away from reality and into an insular coccoon where his own pathology simply accelerates and thereby intensifies it’s destructive impact on his psyche.
Also I don’t see any of his band of handlers, (his supporting cast, as you call them), really being too concerned about him now like they were back when he still had elections to be victorious in. Cheney now is free to concentrate on making sure there’s no chance of peace or stability breaking out by accident in the Middle East, and the rest of the Bush enablers are all shifting their attention to their “life after Bush” career moves. (I suspect many of the Bush cast will be seeking to take over the psychological autonomy of the other major Repub candidate moron in DC, George Allen, in the hopes of getting a new ride in the White house on a different horse.)
As we see his people spending less time programming him to not make a fool of himself, he’ll be making more and more public blunders and the anger he’ll feel at being ridiculed will help drive him over the edge. His so-called religion also isn’t functioning as the “anger management” tool it once was either, so his fall will be even more precipitous once the final slide from sanity begins.
Warning! I don’t think I have much company in this viewpoint, so please don’t think this represents common wisdom (yet).
I agree with most of that but I think we see a 6-8 month delay in what happens behind the scenes. July and August probably held a major milestone for our country when we finally get to the truth. I think Fitzgerald and DoJ have had the cabal smothered since last Spring with investigations. Cheney and Rove disappearing left GWB more on his own and he finally woke up a little but it’s too little, too late.
It seems now that he’s trying to justify actions he took partially on bad advice. I think he feels betrayed by several that are wrapped up in the major, unprecedented corruption and the trouble it brings. He doesn’t like getting caught and he never seemed to be too fond of working a lot. Now that both are happening he’s sincerely annoyed at the worls for imposing the hassle of the law on his extrajudicial judgement. He looks like he feels he doesn’t have to put up with our shit. Too bad.
I figure he’ll keep squeezing tighter to hold onto control and any challenge will bring more restrictions. From just a few slightly tough press conferences it seems like he would never submit to impeachment. I don’t know what we would do first, but as you described, he would lose the last bit of a tenuous grasp of reality.
I always thought that Carlyle guy or those burger builders would be ready to set in with plan-B or call up the bullpen. I wouldn’t be shocked to see something between 30-50 Republicans forced out of office all tolled and a couple handfulls of Democrats with them. Even the ones that might survive by pleading out and cooperating (close to GWB) will be damaged beyond quick repair…some corporations too.
I think we’ll finally see some real reform and a few locks on that revolving door policy for at least a few years. Of course, none of it may happen but it’s fun to speculate. Hell, it might take all 3 years to get there.
I think if Fitzgerald does finally indict Rove that it will take theefforts of all Bush’s mommies, (Rice, Hughes, Miers, Laura, and the real mommy Barbara to keep him from firing Fitz out of pique. (Someone might have to administer a very strong sedative too.)
I think plan B, to the extent it exists, is Cheney officially at the helm and most of the existing White House staff shown out the door.
I’m not sure who the “Carlyle” guy you’re referring to is, but make no mistake about it, the Carlyle group is no friend of Cheney and his neocons, not on any level. They’ve been battling forcontrol of the empty head of Bush since the beginning and the neocons still run the show.
I have to disagree with the assessment of the influence of the Carlyle Group throughout the past 2 terms. Also, Dr. Rice and Karen Hughes could likely be at as high a risk as any in the inevestigations.
I think the trend towards a dictatorial regime goes way back–long before 9/11. Really, when the Fairness Doctrine went out the window, we saw the untrammeled rise of a right-wing Noise Machine. The rise of Rush Limbaugh and Fox “News”, for example, begin when the Fairness Doctrine was repealed in 1987.
The repeal of the Fairness Doctrine was later compounded with the odious Telecommunications Act of 1996, which Clinton never should have signed into law. This law basically allowed media companies to get bigger and bigger, and is increasingly used to crush smaller, dissenting media outlets–all in the name of “deregulation” and “competition”.
From Wikipedia:
The Fairness Doctrine was a policy enforced in the United States by the Federal Communications Commission that required broadcast licensees to present controversial issues of public importance, and to present such issues in a fair and balanced manner.
The Doctrine was enforced throughout the entire history of the FCC (and its precursor, the Federal Radio Commission) until 1987, when the FCC repealed it in the Syracuse Peace Conference decision in 1987. The Republican-controlled commission claimed the doctrine had grown to inhibit rather than enhance debate and suggested that, due to the many media voices in the marketplace at the time, the doctrine was probably unconstitutional. Others, noting the subsequent rise of right-wing radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh, suggest the repeal was more likely motivated by a desire to get partisans on the air.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_doctrine
Also, failure to limit campaign spending has led Congress to become increasingly corrupt and tied to corporate and other big money interests–it’s expensive to win and hold a Congressional seat, which means ordinary citizens are either excluded from Congress or else have to sell their souls (both literally and figuratively) in many cases just to be “representatives of the people”.
There have been big terrorist attacks in other countries, especially in Europe, and those countries have not become dictatorships nor trended towards authoritarianism. The differences are that you don’t have to have millions of dollars to win political office there, and there are many different voices in the media.
Excellent comment.
I think it proves once again that all we’re doing here is recreational discussion. It’s too late to make any changes.
I wouldn’t say that. Control is still not absolute–if it were, do you think that any criticism of Bush would be allowed in the media?
The Fairness Doctrine can be restored.
The media conglomerates can be broken up into smaller pieces.
Liberals can pool their money and buy some radio and television stations, dammit!
If we have to do it to get around the Supreme Court, we can amend the Constitution to allow limits on campaign spending if the SC continues to insist on the flase “money equals speech” theory, which reminds me of the old saying, “Freedom of the press is for people who own one.”
Part of effective control is to let us think we are actively making changes in speaking out and dissent.
I would say it looks more like the NYTimes has been owned by the WH for a while now.
Yes, the infiltration of the mainstream media is extremely discouraging.
However, if there was a total corruption, we wouldn’t know about the New York Times being corrupt.
No system of propaganda is total nor perfect. But we definitely can’t rely on the “old guard”–the left has to create its own information sources that are not Democratic, not Republican, just….truthful.
We don’t know that the Times is totally corrupt but it sure looks like they’re pursuing a different level of integrity. Fox is way to one side and has inside tracks to the WH but that enhances their profit margin and isn’t corruption.
How is it possible to have a story of this importance and no other news source found it for a year?
Do you honestly believe that?