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Shock and Awe? or Fear and Loathing. Choux 11/23/05
    ""Back in the year 2000, I believed almost without thinking about it that the US was a "superpower", the only "superpower" in the world. Maybe it was true and maybe it wasn't, but there was a lot of money around, Americans were pretty prosperous, and most people around the world had a benign view of the US.
    Maybe the clearest sign of our "superpower" status was that the right wing and the press could beat up on Bill Clinton with absolutely no effect on US power or the perception of US power. Beating up on Bill Clinton was a kind of parlor game that the participants cared about, but was in the end of no international import. The most surprising thing, then, about the last five years is how quickly and absolutely the US has ceased to be a superpower.

    We are a country that can no longer pay our bills, no longer wage an effective military action, and no longer protect our citizens from disaster. And it doesn't matter what fiscal responsibility individuals show, what bravery individual soldiers show, or what generosity individual Americans show. As a nation-as a geopolitical entity-we have been stripped of all of our superpowers and many of our powers, and it has been done quickly and efficiently, in the name of blind patriotism, by Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, and their neocon advisors. The very powers that these people thought they were going to enjoy exercising have slipped out of their grasp. It's laughable now to remember the name of the campaign against Baghdad, "Shock and Awe". No one in Iraq feels any "shock and awe" toward the US presence there any longer. "Fear and Loathing" is more like it.

    Whether or not the administration and the press know that the powers are gone doesn't matter. They are. And they aren't coming back, because the last twenty-five years of Republican free market political devolution have resulted in a completely different country from the one that in the course of the 20th century became a superpower. Bush and Cheney have provided the final, telling blows to American power, but actions of the corporatocracy laid the ground work. There is nothing left in the US of real substance. The only thing that remains is ego, bullying, and public relations. The question thoughtful Americans are going to have to answer eventually is one they should be thinking about
    now-when our superpowers are gone, what are we and what do we want to be?

    As everyone knows, the multinational corporation has jealously preserved its right to pay its workers as little as possible-to put its factories wherever wages were lowest, and to exploit the natural resources of every corner of the globe while paying as little to the locals who ostensibly "owned" them as they could, preferably nothing This is such a precious idea for capitalists that when a company, like Costco, for example, operates on a different, more humane model, they become resentful and vengeful-it is implied that the power of Wall Street will be brought to bear on such a renegade business model-customers and workers must never come before shareholders. Nor must the public safety be considered. All regulations that protect the environment or even those who purchase some item, are to be as much as possible prohibited, or at least flouted with impunity. To these corporate types, the public safety of one's own fellow citizens is as much a matter of indifference as the public safety of people ten thousand miles away.

    What most Americans, indeed, most people, normally think of as desirable, such as stable communities with histories, jobs, and a middle class, is not what the corporations have shown themselves to care about. They do not care about the actual substance of the US, a set of geographical areas with a varied population of human beings. The taxpayers present themselves to the corporation much as consumers do-a bunch of suckers to be fooled and robbed for the sake of shareholder profit. The way you rob customers is by dressing up something cheap and worthless to look desirable. The way you rob taxpayers is by constantly challenging them to defend their patriotism and their religion. The average American has a long history of being reflexively xenophobic, so getting him worked up about enemies from abroad, especially dark-skinned ones, has always been an especially effective way of distracting him while you pick his pocket. But I say, let me be exactly as patriotic as some corporate executive who has outsourced his American workforce to India, bought homes around the world, made sure his children don't have to fight in American wars, and banked his money offshore so that he can avoid paying taxes.

    In exchange for the towns that Big Ag has depopulated, the cities that Big Manufacturing has hollowed out, the healthcare that Big Pharma has helped destroy, the environment that Big Chemical has contaminated, and the public school system that the corporate tax giveaways have hobbled,****** what has the average American gotten? Only the sense of grandiosity and self-righteousness that come from thinking of oneself as part of a "superpower."****** by==Jane Smiley


    Comments...

      Clarification/Follow-up by Choux on 11/23/05 2:00 pm:
      From the Huffington Post blog site; essay section.

      For those who like to get a variety of opinions.

 
Answered By Answered On
purplewings 11/23/05
Hi Choux,

This is the opinion of one person only.

I believe we are still a Superpower, based on our education and economy, as well as our aid to foreign lands and many other assests we possess. I don't see people leaving the US in droves hoping to live in Iraq, Iran, Egypt, Africa, Asia, Australia, or Europe,the Soviet Union, Mexico, etc. etc. But I still see the long lines waiting to get into America. Why do they still want to live here when we are so hated and so Unsuper?

Yes, it's 'shame on our corporations' in my opinion too. Money is their only priority - and in the pockets of the execs. to heck with anyone else. Still, they pay great taxes to our government and provide jobs, even if only trickle down ones to our citizens, so they are necessary.

Our public school system has seen many better days, but at least we still have one, and the majority don't mind paying the taxes needed to keep it up. Ms Smiley should check out some of these other places to find out if they have public schools at all, or if education to the masses is considered a bad thing.

I have a young Canadian friend who visited me a couple of days ago, and as we drove around my area, he got a real sad look on his face and said, "I have always hoped to live my ife in America. It has everything I've ever wanted."

Me too.
"..........Whether or not the administration and the press know that the powers are gone doesn't matter. They are. And they aren't coming back,.."

That's another idiotic thing to state. Is she clairvoyant or something? Of course America will rebuild and work it's way not only back to where it once was, but to an even greater height. Don't ever doubt that.

I don't turn my back on my country because it's struggling, I encourage others, and try to help bring it back to where it could be (and will be) because I love my country.

Loral

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