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Kirk Nielsen

Kirk Nielsen is an independent journalist based in Miami Beach. For the past decade, he has tracked presidential and congressional candidates through ...

The Peacemaker and the Pragmatist

Oscar Arias and Bill Clinton on the burning issues of Latin America, from unrest in Honduras to charcoal in Haiti.

Chest Pains in the USA

Our correspondent reluctantly returns to the trenches of the health care cost debate and reports back, with heart.

Canard d’Etat: Honduras and the U.S. Press

Think the fallacies in America’s health care debate are slippery? Try catching the red herring that’s fouling up U.S. press coverage of the Honduran coup.

Why Spy for Cuba?

Analysis: The 2001 trial of five Cubans caught spying in Florida might provide some insight into the case of Kendall and Gwendolyn Myers.

Trading With the Enemy Update

While legislation about improving trade ties to Cuba grabs headlines, a lot is going on under the embargo’s radar, say tipsters at a Miami trade expo.

Fainting in America

Kirk Nielsen takes the pulse of the nation’s emergency health care costs by passing out and getting gouged.

The Winter Reading of Our Discontents

What the vacationing wonk might take to the beach, courtesy of the Miami book fair and the Bush administration.

Socialist, Hell — Make Him a Full-Bore Commie

Why a Cuban Democrat can’t win in South Florida: It’s the Communism, Stupid.

Immigration Pathway Still Looks Uphill

Even with Democrats controlling Congress, ImmigrationPAC’s goal of a pathway to immigration reform faces tough going.

Path to a Pathway

ImmigrationPAC hopes to leverage the Hispanic faith community and help elect federal candidates who support “an earned pathway” to citizenship for undocumented migrants.

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December 24, 2009

Autumn of the Republic?

Three books suggest America has slipped into a polarized state of undermined self-government. None convincingly suggests how we can slip back out.


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Did America slip into a semiliterate, polarized, pre-fascist state over the past decade or so, allowing greedy oligarchs and corporate elites to run the government? Two books I recently read offer reasonably persuasive evidence and arguments that the country did, and a third suggests that dictatorial mindsets could besiege Americans, with an assist from the Internet, if they don’t come to their more deliberative senses. Each of the books offers an informed diagnosis of the dangers that widespread ignorance and ideological polarization pose for American democracy, though none offers a comprehensive treatment for the malaise.

I read the three books in less than two weeks; friends ask how that was possible. The trick is to avoid not only Facebook and Twitter but also: celebrity news, cable news, Oprah, Jerry Springer, American Idol, The Swan, other reality-TV shows, professional wrestling, violent pornography, positive psychology and right-wing Christian fundamentalism.

The latter list includes some of the spectacularly mind-numbing American pursuits that Chris Hedges examines in Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle. Hedges submits that while they mesmerized large portions of the American citizenry, CEOs being paid millions of dollars a year to run companies that feed on taxpayer money usurped our government — with the help of elected officials bought by campaign contributions and tens of thousands of corporate lobbyists who now write many of the nation’s laws.

“Those captivated by the cult of celebrity do not examine voting records or compare verbal claims with written and published facts and reports,” Hedges writes. “The reality of their world is whatever the latest cable news show, political leader, advertiser, or loan officer says is reality. The illiterate, semiliterate, and those who live as though they are illiterate are effectively cut off from the past. They live in an eternal present. They do not understand the predatory loan deals that drive them into foreclosure and bankruptcy. They cannot decipher the fine print on credit card agreements that plunge them into unmanageable debt. They repeat thought-terminating clichés and slogans. They seek refuge in familiar brands and labels. … Life is a state of permanent amnesia, a world in search of new forms of escapism and quick, sensual gratification.”

Of course, they did not get into this clueless state by themselves. They were manipulated by “agents, publicists, marketing departments, promoters, script writers, television and movie producers, advertisers, video technicians, photographers, bodyguards, wardrobe consultants, fitness trainers, pollsters, public announcers, and television news personalities who create the vast stage for illusion,” Hedges continues. “They are the puppet masters. … The techniques of theater have leeched into politics, religion, education, literature, news, commerce, warfare, and crime.”

I know those fools are out there — many millions of them. I might even be one. But what is absolutely maddening about this book is Hedges’ penchant for stating sweeping, generalized claims as absolutes. And yet this master of divinity turned New York Times war correspondent become sociological scholar often bolsters his summations with just enough research, statistical data and anecdotal evidence to make them plausible. The book takes readers to Madison Square Garden for an exegesis of professional wrestling; to the Adult Video News Expo in Las Vegas for lengthy interviews with porn actors and producers and an inflatable doll vendor; and to Claremont Graduate University in California for a seminar on positive psychology, which Hedges terms a “quack science” that “is to the corporate state what eugenics was for the Nazis.”

Book Review

Click here to read more Miller-McCune book reviews.

As a resident of Miami Beach, where the pornographic sensibility is a way of life, I wasn’t shocked to read that annual porn sales in the United States “are estimated at $10 billion or higher” or that DIRECTV distributes “more than 40 million streams of porn into American homes every month.” But I shuddered when Hedges documented not just a growing appetite for violent forms of porn in America but their remarkable visual similarity to photos of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib. “Porn reflects the endemic cruelty of our society,” he writes. “The violence, cruelty, and degradation of porn are expressions of a society that has lost the capacity for empathy. … The Abu Ghraib images that were released, and the hundreds more disturbing images that remain classified, could be stills from porn films.”

Unfortunately, Empire of Illusion won’t enlighten or offend the large swaths of functionally illiterate Americans transfixed by smut, pro wrestling, reality TV or celebrity gossip, because those people won’t read the book. But this scholarly 193-page diatribe, which draws from a 100-author bibliography ranging from the late neo-Marxist Frankfurt School icon Theodor Adorno (The Culture Industry) to Princeton professor emeritus Sheldon Wolin (Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism), would surely madden many proud affiliates and alumni of America’s elite university system.

Hedges, who attended New England prep schools, Colgate and Harvard as a young man, and later taught at Princeton, Columbia and New York University, asserts in Chapter 3, “The Illusion of Wisdom,” that Harvard, Yale, Princeton and most elite schools “do only a mediocre job of teaching students to question and think.” Elite universities are in the business of producing “hordes of competent systems managers” not critical thinkers. Those statements strike me as generally accurate. But I’d expect some fierce academic blowback from this notion: “The elite universities disdain honest intellectual inquiry, which is by its nature distrustful of authority, fiercely independent, and often subversive.” And Hedges suggests that these high-end schools “refuse to question a self-justifying system” in which “organization, technology, self-advancement, and information systems are the only things that matter.”

Hedges not only blames the elite universities for our mortgage-fueled financial crisis but is sure their alumni on Wall Street and in Washington have no capacity to really fix the economic system. “Indeed, they’ll make it worse,” he predicts, exchanging his reportorial register for the absolutist. “They have no concept, thanks to the educations they have received, of how to replace a failed system with a new one.” (He includes George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Obama’s “degree-laden” cabinet members in this group.)

If Hedges knows how to fix the system, he doesn’t tell us in Empire of Illusion. I hope that’ll be the subject of his next book, because in the meantime, “powerful corporate entities, fearful of losing their influence and wealth” are waiting for “a national crisis that will allow them, in the name of national security and moral renewal, to take complete control,” he warns, without citing verifiable evidence for his dire prediction.

What if PBS, Fox and YouTube organized a national debate featuring Chris Hedges, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, his predecessor Hank Paulson, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, Christian Coalition president Roberta Combs and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid? That panel is a little far-fetched, but it’s the sort of cross-ideological forum that Cass Sunstein prescribes in Republic.com 2.0 as a way of preventing the nation from sliding into factional, perhaps even violent strife.

Sunstein is a law professor, author and perennial all-star in the world of public intellectuals; he took leave from Harvard Law School to be administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs at President Obama’s Office of Management and Budget. “The American constitutional order was designed to create a republic, as opposed to a monarch or direct democracy,” he writes. “Representatives would be accountable to the public at large. But there was also supposed to be a large degree of reflection and debate, both within the citizenry and within government itself.”

Of course, the Founding Fathers knew public debate could get ugly. Sunstein notes Alexander Hamilton‘s belief that the “jarring of parties” was a good thing because it would engender deliberation and, over time, a “republic of reasons.”

Are we one today? Not as much as we could be, Sunstein thinks. His fundamental concern in Republic.com 2.0 is the Internet’s potential for impeding deliberation between groups with opposing viewpoints, eventually increasing ideological rigidity and polarization to a point of no return. It’s vastly easier to join like-minded Internet “enclaves” across the world than to drive across town for a meeting in which someone might challenge one’s pre-established beliefs and positions. Sunstein walks readers through behavioral studies finding that when groups of like-minded individuals are isolated from different viewpoints, they tend toward consensus on the most extreme position held within the group.

At worst, Sunstein says, Internet-induced polarization could lead to social instability. “The danger is that through the mechanisms of persuasive arguments, social comparisons, and corroboration, members will move to positions that lack merit,” he writes. “It is impossible to say, in the abstract, that those who sort themselves into enclaves will generally move in a direction that is desirable for society at large or even for its own members. It is easy to think of examples to the contrary, as, for example, Nazism, hate groups, terrorists, and cults of various sorts.”

Clearly, the Internet has potential to create political good. Citizens have access to vast amounts of information and commentary. Even like-minded enclave proliferation can be good: The more there are, the greater the potential for inter-enclave discussion.

But a study of 1,400 liberal and conservative blogs found the vast majority of bloggers link only to like-minded blogs. Worse, another study showed that when “liberal” bloggers comment on “conservative” blog posts, and vice-versa, a plurality of comments simply cast contempt on opposing views. “Only a quarter of cross-ideological posts involve genuine substantive discussion. In this way, real deliberation is often occurring within established points of view, but only infrequently across them,” Sunstein reports.

One cure for Internet-driven polarization lies with “general interest intermediaries.” By that terminology, Sunstein means media outlets like The New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, current affairs magazines, PBS, NPR and old-fashioned network news broadcasts: “People who rely on such intermediaries have a range of chance encounters, involving shared experiences with diverse others, and also exposure to materials and topics that they did not seek out in advance.”

Of course, these are the media that are in decline because of the Internet. Sunstein imagines a greater role for private and public institutions, including the federal government, in ensuring enough general-interest intermediaries exist to make the republic’s communications system “a help rather than a hindrance to democratic self-government” and a counterbalance to the echo chambers of the Web.

For the most part, Thom Hartmann‘s Threshold: Crisis of Western Civilization functions as a general-interest intermediary in book form. Still, readers can be forgiven for wondering, at times, whether they are in a no-conservatives zone. Hartmann is host of the Thom Hartmann Show, a nationally syndicated “progressive” radio talk show.

Just the same, Threshold is so geographically and temporally sprawling that it offers material even progressive readers might not have chosen in advance: a refugee camp in contemporary Darfur in southern Sudan (Lesson: Famine leads to war and more suffering.); ancient New Zealand, where the Maoris exterminated the moa birds, forcing them to become cannibals (Don’t repeat this mistake.); contemporary Denmark, where people happily send 30 to 60 percent of their income to the government in exchange for free health care, free university tuition, yearlong maternity leave, ample unemployment coverage and more (Americans should consider this.); Caral in ancient Peru, where anthropologists have found no evidence of weaponry (“Maybe peace is the natural state of things.”); the Iroquois people, who made certain decisions based on how they would affect tribe members seven generations hence. (If only the rest of us Americans would do that.)

In sum, Threshold is 262 pages of scientific and historical anecdote suggesting that unregulated markets, undemocratic behavior and unecological practices lead to catastrophe. If you haven’t already read a good overview of topsoil depletion, the marine fisheries crisis, rain forest destruction, the democratic behavior of red deer, the 1888 Supreme Court decision that defined corporations as “persons,” the $15 million that 30,000 corporate lobbyists spend weekly when Congress is in session, President Eisenhower’s premonition of a military-industrial complex with “unwarranted influence,” the 2004 computerized voting machines controversy, the $1 trillion in tax dollars the U.S. government spent on war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and not on infrastructure and schools, and the subprime loan/toxic securities debacle — you can find one in Threshold. Hartmann’s common-sense remedies include “recovering a culture of democracy,” “balancing the power of men and women,” “reuniting with nature,” “creating an economy modeled on biology” and “influencing people by helping them rather than bombing them.” His book offers few specifics on how these ends might be accomplished in the real world.

So are we drifting along in a pre-fascist state? Has our democratic system really fallen under the control of corporate America? Hartmann’s take obviously starts and stays (far) to the left of center, and we’ll just have to stay tuned and see whether future events support the dire view he and Hedges have of America’s political direction. Meanwhile, I’ll be on the lookout for a persuasive book telling me how it isn’t exactly so, and why America can escape from the economic and ecological spectacle it has made itself.

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Post your comment here
    POSTED BY: Stein Josh, January 29, 2010 at 4:41 pm

    They have said that when graduates from the elite schools such as Harvard and Stanford enters an industry such as investment banking and venture capital at record levels, that is when the industry will start suffering a collapse as these bright minds keep coming up with innovative financial thinking that bends the rules and too difficult for the common folks to understand. Greed then takes over leading to problems that we have seen today. – homedepot

    POSTED BY: liming liming, January 18, 2010 at 4:40 am

    One of the best Christmas gifts that you can send to lady is ugg ultra short boots chestnut. As we all know bailey button grey uggs are warm,comfortable,and very popular. So you can imagine if you give ugg bags to your girls, how excited she will be.

    POSTED BY: Anonymous User, January 13, 2010 at 4:33 pm

    The purported reasons that this article cites to show that the US has been moving towards totalitarianism in the past 10 years are so partial and blatantly ignorant that I had to laugh to keep me from crying. Our move towards totalitarianism also has to be put in perspective by defining the role of the Western Left, and publications such as the nascent Miller-McCune, to gives us a glimpse of where we are headed. I agree that the West, not just the US, is moving towards totalitarianism. The freedoms that we love are quickly disappearing due to the interference of Government in our way of doing business and the myriad of laws that prevent freedom of expression; i.e., if I criticize Obama is because I must be racist. If I present the Jewish holocaust in the context of the II Bolshevik Revolution is because I am an anti-Semite. Making use of the Hate Laws, which is nothing more than a clever way to subjugate my constitutional rights, I must be punished. What we have today is nothing more than an ideological war between Western values and culture and non-Western values and culture. Unfortunately for the West, its worse enemy is inside – the angry Left, the Liberals (which are nothing more than closet leftists) and their acolytes. How did this people acquire this much power in a representative Republic, which is what the U.S. is? Come in Cultural Relativism, a platform launched by the leftists Jewish academicians escaping Hitler (another Leftist, in case people don’t know it) to protect their interests (read about the School of Frankfurt), back in the early 70s. They advanced this platform, and it was quickly populated by other opportunistic groups. What is their aim? To question the legitimacy of Western style democracies and undermine their ability to command loyalty. How can I defend my Western principles and values when the Left has taught in our public institutions that there are no absolute standards for assessing human values and culture? Values like universal human rights, individualism and liberalism are regarded merely as ethnocentric products of Western history. The scientific knowledge that the West has produced is simply one of many “ways of knowing”. In place of Western universalism, this ideology offers cultural relativism, a concept that regards the West not as the pinnacle of human achievement to date, but as simply one of many equally valid cultural systems.Moreover, how can I defend my Western culture, principles and values when the Left has deprived it of the opportunity to be part of the debate? The West cannot judge other cultures but must condemn its own. Today, we live in an age of barbarism and decadence – from the malicious teachings of the morally bankrupt charlatan, Ward Churchill to Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, John Pilger, Sunera Tobani, the late Susan Sontag, ad nausea. There are barbarians outside the walls who want to destroy us and there is an enemy within in the form of decadent culture, where right or wrong does not matter that the Left is responsible for creating. That’s why the survival of the Republic is questioned. That’s why the Constitution will be under siege in the not too distant future. The rest of us are also responsible for allowing this to happen. We are only getting what we deserve. I accuse our academic left and cultural elite of our decadence through their relentless critique of Western culture and values, which has emboldened our adversaries while at the same time sapped our will to resist.The consequences of this adversary culture are all around us. The way to oppose it, however, is less clear, although I suspect it will generate blood in the not too distant future. The survival of Western principles, which includes free inquiry and free expression – true Western phenomena – now depend entirely on whether we have the intelligence to understand their true value and the will to face down their enemies – not only outside, but also inside. That will be the only way to save the Republic.

    POSTED BY: Herb Ruhs, January 3, 2010 at 1:32 am

    If the Pakistani army is backed into a corner, which seems increasingly likely, they are capable of launching a series of suborbital primitive nuclear explosions to even the odds, and end up freeing us all.

    POSTED BY: Matt Holsen, December 27, 2009 at 9:57 pm

    Hedges wrote a chilling book about war hysteria (“War is a Force that Gives us Meaning”) which I recently re-read. If you’d seen what he’s seen, you would likely also be haunted by the possibility of “… a national crisis that will allow them, in the name of national security and moral renewal, to take complete control… ” He saw exactly that happen in more than one place. For a “persuasive book telling me how it isn’t exactly so…” I’d recommend “The Fourth Turning,” by William Strauss and Neil Howe. It’s a 1997 sequel to their 1991 book, “Generations”. Both books advance a particular theory of history (and spend many tedious pages defending it). Mor einterestingly, both books predicted subsequent developments in the political and social climate startlingly well. Both predicted a major crisis starting about now. They also predict a re-writing of the social contract comparable to that following the great depression, with the pre-crisis right-wing movement wiped away and forgotten, and a strong communitarian ethos taking over. Not entirely good news, though. The cause of this change is a terrifying crisis, possibly involving total war, and the generation that emerges will be characterized not just by communitarian values but by highly conformist ones. A good read (although you might want to skip the long defense, in both books, of their cyclical theory and just read what they predicted.) there’s a decent wikipedia piece on them at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strauss_and_Howe

    POSTED BY: Anonymous User, December 27, 2009 at 5:37 pm

    Three quotes from long ago seem appropriate to the review and the books. =”As a result of the war, corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed. I feel at this moment more anxiety for the safety of my country than ever before, even in the midst of war. God grant that my suspicions may prove groundless.” : U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, Nov. 21, 1864 – (letter to Col. William F. Elkins) – Ref: The Lincoln Encyclopedia, Archer H. Shaw (Macmillan, 1950, NY) =They (corporations) cannot commit treason, nor be outlawed, nor excommunicated, for they have no souls: Lord Edward Coke =criminal, n. A person with predatory instincts who has not sufficient capital to form a corporation: Howard Scott

    POSTED BY: Judith Feldman, December 27, 2009 at 3:46 pm

    Autumn of the Republic?Thursday 24 December 2009by: Kirk Nielsen | Miller-McCune “Meanwhile, I’ll be on the lookout for a persuasive book telling me how it isn’t exactly so, and why America can escape from the economic and ecological spectacle it has made itself.”I recommend “Hoodwinked” by John Perkins (2009) Broadway Bookis

    POSTED BY: Stephen Bonser, December 27, 2009 at 9:26 am

    For a nation to have a healthy body politic, it takes a self-aware public. Jingoism has long been the Achilles heel of the American psyche and unfortunately it has provided fertile ground for the kind of dunderheaded culture that we see all around us. Third rate news reporting, woefully inadequate public education and a political system hijacked by corporate interests and ideologues have all contributed to the toxic mix, the result of which we see today. Every system has a tipping point beyond which the process feeds off itself and accelerates. Clearly for America that turning point has already been reached or at best is not more than a heartbeat away.

    POSTED BY: Anonymous User, December 26, 2009 at 9:04 am

    Yes, of course one must entertain all sides to any questions. I have always heard that it is so and so it must be. That is why I listen every time someone wants to convince me Santa is real and acts according to the legend, and it explains why I must open wide my doors to the Jehovah’s Witnesses and any stray blithering idiot who can figure find my front door. For how would we ever learn were we to discard ignorant drool out of hand?That is why I have a timer in my hand to switch between MSNBC and Faux Noise so I can achieve that elusive and illusory balance we hear is so important. I am in the final analysis aware of the legend of the kingdom in which vast stores of lithium and other substances deletorious to good sense leaked into the community aquifer. The king, of course, had his own purified water supply, yet he ordered the community river be routed for his own use. He realized that the one who keeps his wits in bedlam is by simple definition crazy.

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