Image on left by TOM MIHALEK/AFP, on right STILL FROM WRECKING BALL
he United States, locked in the kind of twilight disconnect that
grips dying empires, is a country entranced by illusions. It spends its
emotional and intellectual energy on the trivial and the absurd. It is
captivated by the hollow stagecraft of celebrity culture as the walls
crumble. This celebrity culture giddily licenses a dark voyeurism into
other people’s humiliation, pain, weakness and betrayal. Day after day,
one lurid saga after another, whether it is Michael Jackson, Britney
Spears [or Miley Cyrus], enthralls the country … despite bank collapses,
wars, mounting poverty or the criminality of its financial class.
The virtues that sustain a nation-state and build community, from
honesty to self-sacrifice to transparency to sharing, are ridiculed each
night on television as rubes stupid enough to cling to this antiquated
behavior are voted off reality shows. Fellow competitors for prize money
and a chance for fleeting fame, cheered on by millions of viewers,
elect to “disappear” the unwanted. In the final credits of the reality
show America’s Next Top Model, a picture of the woman expelled during
the episode vanishes from the group portrait on the screen. Those cast
aside become, at least to the television audience, nonpersons.
Celebrities that can no longer generate publicity, good or bad, vanish.
Life, these shows persistently teach, is a brutal world of unadulterated
competition and a constant quest for notoriety and attention.
Our culture of flagrant self-exaltation, hardwired in the American
character, permits the humiliation of all those who oppose us. We
believe, after all, that because we have the capacity to wage war we
have a right to wage war. Those who lose deserve to be erased. Those who
fail, those who are deemed ugly, ignorant or poor, should be belittled
and mocked. Human beings are used and discarded like Styrofoam boxes
that held junk food. And the numbers of superfluous human beings are
swelling the unemployment offices, the prisons and the soup kitchens.
It is the cult of self that is killing the United States.
This cult has within it the classic traits of psychopaths: superficial
charm, grandiosity and self-importance; a need for constant stimulation;
a penchant for lying, deception and manipulation; and the incapacity
for remorse or guilt. Michael Jackson, from his phony marriages to the
portraits of himself dressed as royalty to his insatiable hunger for new
toys to his questionable relationships with young boys, had all these
qualities. And this is also the ethic promoted by corporations. It is
the ethic of unfettered capitalism. It is the misguided belief that
personal style and personal advancement, mistaken for individualism, are
the same as democratic equality. It is the nationwide celebration of
image over substance, of illusion over truth. And it is why investment
bankers blink in confusion when questioned about the morality of the
billions in profits they made by selling worthless toxic assets to
investors.
We have a right, in the cult of the self, to get whatever we desire.
We can do anything, even belittle and destroy those around us, including
our friends, to make money, to be happy and to become famous. Once fame
and wealth are achieved, they become their own justification, their own
morality. How one gets there is irrelevant. It is this perverted ethic
that gave us investment houses like Goldman Sachs … that willfully
trashed the global economy and stole money from tens of millions of
small shareholders who had bought stock in these corporations for
retirement or college. The heads of these corporations, like the winners
on a reality television program who lied and manipulated others to
succeed, walked away with hundreds of millions of dollars in bonuses and
compensation. The ethic of Wall Street is the ethic of celebrity. It is
fused into one bizarre, perverted belief system and it has banished the
possibility of the country returning to a reality-based world or
avoiding internal collapse. A society that cannot distinguish reality
from illusion dies.
The tantalizing illusions offered by our consumer culture, however,
are vanishing for most citizens as we head toward collapse. The ability
of the corporate state to pacify the country by extending credit and
providing cheap manufactured goods to the masses is gone. The jobs we
are shedding are not coming back, as the White House economist Lawrence
Summers tacitly acknowledges when he talks of a “jobless recovery.” The
belief that democracy lies in the choice between competing brands and
the accumulation of vast sums of personal wealth at the expense of
others is exposed as a fraud. Freedom can no longer be conflated with
the free market. The travails of the poor are rapidly becoming the
travails of the middle class, especially as unemployment insurance runs
out. And class warfare, once buried under the happy illusion that we
were all going to enter an age of prosperity with unfettered capitalism,
is returning with a vengeance.
America is sinking under trillions in debt it can never repay
and stays afloat by frantically selling about $2 billion in Treasury
bonds a day to the Chinese. It saw 2.8 million people lose their homes
in 2009 to foreclosure or bank repossessions – nearly 8,000 people a day
– and stands idle as they are joined by another 2.4 million people this
year. It refuses to prosecute the Bush administration for obvious war
crimes, including the use of torture, and sees no reason to dismantle
Bush’s secrecy laws or restore habeas corpus. Its infrastructure is
crumbling. Deficits are pushing individual states to bankruptcy and
forcing the closure of everything from schools to parks. The wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, which have squandered trillions of dollars, appear
endless. There are 50 million Americans in real poverty and tens of
millions of Americans in a category called “near poverty.” One in eight
Americans – and one in four children – depend on food stamps to eat. And
yet, in the midst of it all, we continue to be a country consumed by
happy talk and happy thoughts. We continue to embrace the illusion of
inevitable progress, personal success and rising prosperity. Reality is
not considered an impediment to desire.
When a culture lives within an illusion it perpetuates a state of
permanent infantilism or childishness. As the gap widens between the
illusion and reality, as we suddenly grasp that it is our home being
foreclosed or our job that is not coming back, we react like children.
We scream and yell for a savior, someone who promises us revenge, moral
renewal and new glory. It is not a new story. A furious and sustained
backlash by a betrayed and angry populace, one unprepared
intellectually, emotionally and psychologically for collapse, will sweep
aside the Democrats and most of the Republicans and will usher America
into a new dark age. It was the economic collapse in Yugoslavia that
gave us Slobodan Milosevic. It was the Weimar Republic that vomited up
Adolf Hitler. And it was the breakdown in Tsarist Russia that opened the
door for Lenin and the Bolsheviks. A cabal of proto-fascist misfits,
from Christian demagogues to loudmouth talk show hosts, whom we naïvely
dismiss as buffoons, will find a following with promises of revenge and
moral renewal. And as in all totalitarian societies, those who do not
pay fealty to the illusions imposed by the state become the outcasts,
the persecuted.
The decline of American empire began long ago before
the current economic meltdown or the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. It
began before the first Gulf War or Ronald Reagan. It began when we
shifted, in the words of Harvard historian Charles Maier, from an
“empire of production” to an “empire of consumption.” By the end of the
Vietnam War, when the costs of the war ate away at Lyndon Johnson’s
Great Society and domestic oil production began its steady, inexorable
decline, we saw our country transformed from one that primarily produced
to one that primarily consumed. We started borrowing to maintain a
level of consumption as well as an empire we could no longer afford. We
began to use force, especially in the Middle East, to feed our
insatiable thirst for cheap oil. We substituted the illusion of growth
and prosperity for real growth and prosperity. The bill is now due.
America’s most dangerous enemies are not Islamic radicals but those who
sold us the perverted ideology of free-market capitalism and
globalization. They have dynamited the very foundations of our society.
In the 17th century these speculators would have been hung. Today they run the government and consume billions in taxpayer subsidies.
As the pressure mounts, as the despair and desperation reach into
larger and larger segments of the populace, the mechanisms of corporate
and government control are being bolstered to prevent civil unrest and
instability. The emergence of the corporate state always means the
emergence of the security state. This is why the Bush White House pushed
through the Patriot Act (and its renewal), the suspension of habeas
corpus, the practice of “extraordinary rendition,” warrantless
wiretapping on American citizens and the refusal to ensure free and fair
elections with verifiable ballot-counting. The motive behind these
measures is not to fight terrorism or to bolster national security. It
is to seize and maintain internal control. It is about controlling us.
And yet, even in the face of catastrophe, mass culture continues to
assure us that if we close our eyes, if we visualize what we want, if we
have faith in ourselves, if we tell God that we believe in miracles, if
we tap into our inner strength, if we grasp that we are truly
exceptional, if we focus on happiness, our lives will be harmonious and
complete. This cultural retreat into illusion, whether peddled by
positive psychologists, by Hollywood or by Christian preachers, is
magical thinking. It turns worthless mortgages and debt into wealth. It
turns the destruction of our manufacturing base into an opportunity for
growth. It turns alienation and anxiety into a cheerful conformity. It
turns a nation that wages illegal wars and administers offshore penal
colonies where it openly practices torture into the greatest democracy
on earth. And it keeps us from fighting back.
Resistance movements will have to look now at the long night of
slavery, the decades of oppression in the Soviet Union and the curse of
fascism for models. The goal will no longer be the possibility of
reforming the system but of protecting truth, civility and culture from
mass contamination. It will require the kind of schizophrenic lifestyle
that characterizes all totalitarian societies. Our private and public
demeanors will often have to stand in stark contrast. Acts of defiance
will often be subtle and nuanced. They will be carried out not for short
term gain but the assertion of our integrity. Rebellion will have an
ultimate if not easily definable purpose. The more we retreat from the
culture at large the more room we will have to carve out lives of
meaning, the more we will be able to wall off the flood of illusions
disseminated by mass culture and the more we will retain sanity in an
insane world. The goal will become the ability to endure.
Chris Hedges, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for the New York Times , is the author of several books including the best sellers War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning and Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle .
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