America's Ruling Clique
Neoconservatives derive much of their political strength from the portrayal of big government as
the enemy of the people: a belief that plays only too well
in America. Big government is indeed the enemy of the people
when it does not serve the people’s interests, or when it
betrays them.
Where the neoconservatives and the chicken hawks have been
spectacularly successful is in the field of perception
management. The super rich—or the ruling clique—constitutes
no more than 0.1 percent of the US population. Yet they
control the mainstream media, every branch government, the
electoral process and the country’s major financial
institutions.
Thus, 99.9 percent of the people are being manipulated and
cannibalized by a tiny but powerful minority. It is the
interests of this powerful minority that are served by
government and it is their interests that are defined as the
national interest or as national security; and it is hardly
benign. Robbing the poor to pay the rich causes irreparable
harm to the victim.
There is a continual conflict between the super rich and the
remaining 99.9 percent of the people in this nation. Not
only is democracy subverted when a tiny minority rules over
a large majority, the majority is diminished and betrayed,
and social and economic servitude is instituted. The
relationship is not only adversarial; it is fundamentally
unequal and unjust. You have a situation where a large
majority suffers all of the hardships and makes all of the
sacrifices but the small minority reaps the reward, without
incurring any risk themselves. One should never call this
intolerable and immoral situation a democracy.
Through subversion, coercion, and intense perception
management the ownership class always gets what it wants,
and almost always at the expense of the working class. We
pay the price and someone else reaps the financial reward.
Consider, for example, the invasion and occupation of Iraq
by the United States military and who has benefited
financially. The military, comprised almost entirely of
working class women and men, is being used to secure Iraq’s
nationalized oil fields and turning them over to private
firms and foreign investors. Those firms have profited from
the theft of Iraqi oil by the United States armed forces
without running any risks themselves.
The armed forces ran the risks for them, and turned the
profits over to private oil companies who subsequently
realized record profits. The entire country has been
similarly privatized by a host of corporate predators. War
is a form of corporate welfare cloaked in patriotic
language. One need only follow the money to understand what
it is really about.
Similarly, George Bush is not fighting a war against
terrorism as he purports: he is committing unconscionable
acts of terrorism against innocent people, and his cohorts
in congress are providing him the funds to do so. It is not
Islamic terrorists that are spying on law-abiding citizens
and intercepting their emails or tapping their phone lines;
it is the United States government, authorized by Bush.
The president behaves like a fascist dictator because he is
a fascist dictator representing the interests of the ruling
clique, while masquerading as a protectorate of the people
and the national interest. Never lose sight of the fact that
Bush is an emissary for the ruling class to which he belongs
and it is on their behalf that he is acting, not ours.
Consider also the fact that thousands of no bid contracts
were awarded to private corporations with connections to the
Bush White House—such as Halliburton, Bechtel, and
Blackwater during the occupation of Iraq. Thus, it is
evident that terms such as free trade and free markets are
not only misleading, they are disingenuous and fraudulent.
Not only is the ruling clique stealing the wealth of other
nations through overt militarism, they are simultaneously
bankrupting our nation’s economy. Their intent is to
privatize government in hopes of changing it from a service
oriented entity into a for profit body. Their goal is to
eliminate all social spending in order to further facilitate
the ruling clique’s personal wealth creation, and to finance
future military invasions; to impose capitalism on the world
by means of brute force and coercion.
If they are successful, those with enough money to buy
services that are now provided by the government will
continue to enjoy those services. Those who cannot afford to
pay: the poor, the elderly, the sick or injured, the
unemployed and uneducated, will just have to suffer and die.
They will be forced to subsist on whatever they can beg,
barrow, or steal and slip into the realm of non-persons. It
is worth noting that the infrastructure for delivering those
goods and services were created with public funds. As
always, we are talking about socializing costs and
privatizing profits.
Paradoxically, neoconservatives and their media cohorts have
succeeded in persuading working class people of modest
incomes, conservative and liberal alike, into supporting a
wide range of policies that are detrimental to their class,
especially those with the lowest incomes.
That is the role that neoconservative icons like Rush
Limbaugh plays in the corporate propaganda apparatus. While
actually part of the ruling clique, Limbaugh has persuaded
his followers that he and his economic brethren are on their
side. In reality, Limbaugh and his class are preying upon
the fears and prejudices of his followers while accruing
tremendous personal wealth from their support, much like
George Bush. Such is the power of disinformation, fear, and
propaganda.
Limbaugh’s mindless blathering is like the kiss of Judas. He
and his kind are impervious to scientific fact and without
empathy for the people they so ruthlessly exploit.
Leaving no economic stone unturned, the ruling clique is
even privatizing the military. The average soldier assigned
the rank of private first class receives a yearly salary of
about $40,000; whereas a mercenary working for Blackwater—a
private defense contractor—doing the same job in the same
place, earns about $400,000. The mercenary soldier costs tax
payers ten times more than the government soldier for the
same services and is not accountable to anyone.
The privatization of the military began under former
Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, and it continues to
this day. Private contractors have such close ties with
government these days that it is difficult to tell where the
private sector ends and government begins. There are
revolving doors that continuously sweep corporate executives
into government and government officials into corporate
board rooms. That is how fortunes are made in Washington:
through crony capitalism and theft.
Rumsfeld, a man who sanctions torture, has long deified
Milton Friedman, of the Chicago School of Economics; and it
is Friedman’s economic and social theories that are being
put into practice. Lest anyone think that the disciples of
capitalism are limited to the neocons, they aren’t. Every
contending presidential candidate is a Friedman disciple.
The president, his entire cabinet, and virtually every
member of congress are disciples of Milton Friedman; and
that is why voting does not often significantly change
policies: the ideology behind them remains the same,
regardless of who is in power.
That is where this country is heading but most Americans are
sitting on their hands and allowing it to happen. The people
need to know what is being done to them and who is
responsible. We the people must organize and mobilize to
protect ourselves from the ruling cabal or we will be
forever cannibalized by them.
Like it or not, we are all in this together and long term
survival will depend upon our ability to organize and to
cooperate with one another. It will require long term
economic boycotts, strikes, work slow downs, dramatically
curtailed consumption, civil disobedience, sustained
protests, self-education and personal sacrifice. The key is
to get organized as quickly as possible.
Charles Sullivan is a nature photographer, free-lance
writer, and activist residing in the Ridge and Valley
Province of West Virginia. He welcomes your comments at
csullivan@phreego.com.