Section 1 : Setting
the Stage
Chapter One
The United
States in 1995:
Setting the
Stage for Fascism
Author's Note
The story of
fascism in the old United States in my view begins with the accession to the
Presidency of Carnathon Pine, The Last Republican, in the year
2001. And thus the drama as we
will see it in some detail begins in earnest in the next Chapter,
constructed around that personage's Inaugural Address. However, before dramas can proceed,
the stage must be set.
For this book,
I have chosen to do that with an essay written by our friend Dino Louis in
1995. As you can see, Louis was
never short on opinion and interpretation of facts. The bare facts he occasionally cites throughout the essay
were taken primarily from a feature article that appeared in the then
leading weekly printed newsmagazine Time early in that year (Hull, et al). I hope, dear reader, that you will find
this essay helpful in understanding from whence fascism arose in our national
ancestor.
Is the Stage
Being Set for Fascism?
by Dino Louis, 1995
Politics Now
A spectre is
haunting the United States of America. But it is not the spectre of communism. It is the spectre of fascism.
Elections '94.
The Republicans win. The message is clear. Grinchism, developed by Newt Gingrich and his fellows as a
meaner, harsher version of Reaganite‑Bushism, is triumphant. The people have spoken. They and the Grinchites have clearly
identified what's wrong with the country: government is too big, taxes are too
high, the "undeserving poor" are "stealing bread from
our table," people "different from us" have set out to destroy
"our nation."
And on the
"moral" side? Well, that
slasher of national domestic spending Rep. John Kasich of Ohio, tells us
(Nelson):
"The
American people in their guts, mothers and fathers across this country, know
that over the last couple of decades we have removed the speed limits from the
highways, the lines on the highways, the yes and the no, the black and the
white and the rights and the wrongs. And Americans are beginning to say that . . . culture has slipped and
it's time once more to assert that Judeo-Christian tradition of rights and
wrongs and values that guides our nation in the 21st Century."
The proposed
solutions to these problems? Shrink government. Cut taxes. Slash government spending, especially on the poor. End tolerance, reinvigorate
prejudice. On the
"moral" side? Follow the
Christian Coalition (Nelson) and outlaw freedom‑of‑choice
in the outcome of pregnancy, require voluntary school prayer, make divorce more
difficult (except for the leading Republican Presidential candidates),
prohibit pornography (except for aspiring Republican Supreme Court
nominees), ban sex education and contraception. And oh yes, above all free the "free market."
The
"mainstream" Democratic response, enunciated by the Democratic
Leadership Council and more or less followed along by the President? "Yes, for the most part, on the
economic side, at least, you're right. Although we may disagree on some details of both problem analysis
and program prescription, you are basically right. And we can be even more
Republican than the Republicans. Just let us show you how."
But pause for
a moment. Did "the
people" as a whole really speak in the 1994 election? Well, no. The message of Reaction was supported by less than 20%
of the eligible electorate. Not
voting in droves were those who potentially benefit most from government
intervention in the economy, and government protection of their rights in
the society. It seems safe to
assume that they didn't vote because even the Clinton Administration, with
its emphasis on deficit cutting not growth stimulation, on being liked not
aggressively protecting rights, did not seem to give them anything much to
vote for in either intervention or protection.
And then
consider, have the Grinchites identified the real problems the country
faces? Well, no. Since Clinton was elected in 1992 the
basic problem list has remained unchanged (Thurow): a declining industrial
base; the export of manufacturing jobs, to be replaced, if at all, by lower
paying service jobs; a continually deteriorating national infrastructure;
serious problems in health services, education, and environmental
protection and preservation; the ever-increasing gap between the have‑a‑lots
and everyone else.
It is these
problems, not some sudden changes in "Americans' morality,"
that are putting tremendous pressure on the American family, as Thurow has
pointed out (1995):
"Falling
real wages have put the traditional American family into play, as the one‑earner
middle‑class family becomes extinct. . . . Thirty‑two percent
of all men between 25 and 34 years of age earn less than the amount necessary
to keep a family of four above the poverty line. Mothers have to work longer hours
if the family is to have its old standard of living.
"Children
exist, but no one takes care of them. Parents are spending 40 percent less time with their children than
they did 30 years ago. More than
two million children under the age of 13 have no adult supervision before or
after school. Paying for day care
would use up all or most of a mother's wages.
" . . .
Men have a strong economic incentive to bail out of family
responsibilities since when they do so their real standard of living rises
73 percent—although that of the family left behind falls 42 percent."
Added to these
real economic and economy‑based family pressures are resurgent racism and
homophobia, the atmosphere of hate fed by a talk radio culture dominated by the
Right Wing, and the new national chauvinism reflected in California's
"Proposition 187."
Will the DLC‑lead
me‑tooism effectively respond to this crisis? Well, no. It
won't win elections. That was
proven in 1994, when almost every me‑too Democrat running in a closely
contested election lost. As [post‑World
War II President] Harry Truman once said, when someone wants to vote for a
Republican, he'll pick the real thing over a pale imitation every
time. But even more importantly,
the DLC/ Grinchite program simply cannot solve the basic problems the
country faces because it doesn't face them. It deals with side issues like term limits and
"shrinking government." It is an agenda of distraction, not focus.
Big problems
require big solutions. It's not
the size of government that's
the problem. It's what government does with its size. It's not the number of terms of office that lead to a
"non‑responsive Congress," "devoted to the 'Special
Interests'." It's corporate
campaign financing and the hidden system of lobbying. It's not the tax burden (one of the lowest in the industrialized
world) that's the problem. It's
what the tax revenues are spent on. It's not the poor that are dragging the country down. AFDC could be eliminated tomorrow
and the total Federal saving would amount to less than 10% of the current
deficit, less than 1% of the Federal budget. It's the declining industrial base, declining per capita
income, and increasing true unemployment.
And the whole
so‑called "moral" agenda, the fake "Contract on the American
Family" of the Christian Coalition, could be enacted tomorrow and the
economic problems that are the real factors making life ever‑tougher for
evermore Americans would remain absolutely untouched. Much less personal freedom. No fewer, actually more, personal
and family problems.
Atomization is Taking Over
The country
thus seems to be falling apart. But at a time when people really need to pull together, under a constant
barrage of Republican propaganda about "individual
responsibility" and the ability of the "free market" to solve
every conceivable problem, the people are pulling apart too. "Many Americans have stocked up on
guns and walled in their communities," Time tells us in it's own "State of the
Union" message (Hull, et al). "More than 700,000 children are educated at home." "Self‑reliance" is
spreading, and "in many cases Americans are acting out of long‑term
necessity, unable to depend on a life‑long job or the pension that
accompanies it."
"Many
American families and businesses are being forced to privatize security
and sanitation by default. Community
associations, ranging from small condominiums to sprawling planned communities,
have grown from 10,000 in 1970 to 150,000 in 1993 and now include 1 out of
every 8 Americans." "Privatization of local services is, however, a lot less liberating
for the millions of Americans who can't afford it."
The True Economic Perspective
In the face of
all this, what is happening to wealth in America? Well, family income has gone up steadily since the
Nixon years, but per
capita income has declined. Why has
the former risen while the latter has fallen? As pointed out above, two-parent employment, for the most part. Just one of the major family stressors that have arisen over
the last 20 years. And while per
capita income has declined, the concentration of wealth has increased.
Time again: "Over the
past 20 years the very rich have improved their lot in life by getting
richer. Half a million U.S.
households (one‑half of 1% of the population) now owns 39% of all assets
(stocks, bonds, cash, life‑insurance policies, paintings, jewelry,
etc.). This makes the U.S. No. 1
among prosperous nations in the inequality of income. . . . During the
Reagan years . . . the nation's net worth increased from $13.5 trillion to
$20.2 trillion . . . between 1983
and 1989, $3.9 trillion of the reward was captured by the top one‑half on
1%." That's almost 60% of the increase in wealth going to that top 0.5%.
Or as Thurow
put it (1995):
"The tide
rose (the real per
capita gross domestic product went up 29 percent between 1973 and 1993), but 80
percent of the boats sank. Among
men, the top 20 percent of the labor force has been winning all of the
country's wage increases for more than two decades. . . .
"With the
death of Communism and, later, market socialism as economic alternatives,
capitalists have been able to employ more ruthless approaches to getting
profits without worrying about political pressure. 'Survival of the fittest' capitalism is
on the march. What economists
call 'efficiency wages' (a company paying higher salaries than
the minimum it needs to pay, so that it gets a skilled, cooperative, loyal work
force) are disappearing to be replaced by a different form of
motivation—the fear of losing one's job [and one's health insurance]."
I just wonder
if Reagan's tax cuts for the wealthy and borrow‑to‑spend policies
had anything to do with all these developments.
Some Social Issues
Let's take a
look at some social problems, like crime for instance. The crime rate has actually been falling
a bit over the last couple of years, while the nation rose to first place among
developed nations for proportion of its citizens incarcerated. But crime overall has risen dramatically
during the period since the 1970s when all those prisons have been
built. Why? They are irrelevant. There is an arrest in only about a fifth of
all crimes, with only half of those leading to convictions in serious
cases, and fewer than 50% of those leading to jail time (Lacayo).
Even while
crime has been decreasing slightly in recent years, the fear of crime has risen
markedly. Part of this is
real. Murder is still a relatively
rare event in this country, with a rate that has remained more or less
unchanged since the 70s. But the
proportion of murders committed by strangers has risen dramatically, while
the homicide‑solution rate dropped from 91% in 1965 to 66% in 1993.
And youth
violence has increased markedly. What might the reasons be? Not enough prisons? Not
long enough sentences? Well, the
Director of the FBI, Louis Freeh, "recommends focusing on the increasing
number of children brought up in 'no parent' homes." Dare I say there
is some relationship between the latter and declining per-capita‑income/ rising‑two‑parent‑employment,
and rising one‑parent working/no‑affordable‑day‑care‑available
for their pre‑school children?
However, at
least part of the increasing fear of crime is definitely the work of
politicians in both parties. For
them a focus on crime and "being tough" on it wins elections (even if
the advocated measures affect the crime rate not more than minimally). And
then there are the media (primarily in the hands of major corporations
like General Electric and major private right‑wingers like Rupert
Murdoch) for whom presenting crime, real, fictional, semi‑real, and
semi‑fictional, in gorier and gorier detail, up‑close and personal,
makes money. Finally there are the
demons of right‑wing talk radio, who especially like to color crime black
and brown.
What about
education? Well, while, for
example, our 13 year‑olds rank 14th among the children of the developed
countries in math performance, and does anyone know where Belgium is,
it's estimated that less than half of the average of $5300.00 spent per pupil
in this country goes to support classroom work. As to health care, costs continue to skyrocket, quality
declines, health care corporation profits rise, and the critically‑required
comprehensive reform is once again a dream that does not become reality, just
as it has every time it's been seriously proposed by a national leader,
beginning with Teddy Roosevelt in his 1912 Bull Moose campaign.
In response to
this situation, Americans turn to God, in massive numbers. 95% profess to be believers,
distributed among about 1600 denominations (44% of them non‑Christian). 40% of Americans profess to attend
a religious institution regularly. With churches hardly hard to find, there is hardly "Christian
persecution" going on, despite what the Religious Right would have us
believe.
Democracy in Decline
In the face of
all this, it seems that our democratic structures are beginning to
crumble. According to John Gray, a
fellow of Jesus College, Oxford University (England) (1995):
"In the United
States the end of the cold war has intensified a mood
of political cynicism. American
public opinion expects little from its democratic institutions, and if the
experience of the last decade or so is any guide, even its modest expectations
are likely to be disappointed. . . .
"The mobility
of capital has contributed significantly to the decline of the middle class and
its distinctive culture. . . . This may prove [to be] of decisive importance for democracy in the
United States and in other Western democracies—namely the proletarianization,
through rising debt, falling incomes and unrelenting job insecurity,
of the traditional middle classes. The U.S. undoubtedly leads the field in replicating in a Western
industrial economy the middle‑class impotence that is an endemic
feature of many third world countries in Latin America and elsewhere. . . .
"In a
worst‑case scenario, we may even glimpse a sort of Colombianization of
the United States, in which failing political institutions, become
increasingly marginal in an ungovernable, criminalized and endemically violent
society."
I could not
have made the point better myself. But in the midst of all this, what does the winning party in the last
election offer us? Why nothing
other than the "Contract On," sorry, I mean the "Contract For America," alluded to above. Relevant to the problem list? Right up there with what we need? Problem‑solutions provided by the
Party of Business? Not quite!
For proof of
that statement, here's the "Contract" in a nutshell (Kelly): a
balanced federal budget by the year 2002; term limits for members of Congress;
"tough" welfare‑"reform;" cut crime‑prevention,
increase incarceration; carry out death sentences quicker; permit the use of
improperly seized evidence; restrict the use of U.S. troops in United
Nations operations; prevent the use of money saved from military‑spending
cuts for national domestic programs; cut the capital‑gains tax;
raise the Social Security earnings limit; enact a 'loser pays' provision
for civil litigation; cut Congressional staffing by a third and the number of
Congressional committees; require Congress to apply to itself
the laws it passes; require a three‑fifths majority for tax hikes; and
submit proposed Federal environmental regulations to risk‑assessment
and cost‑benefit analysis.
Like the
Christian Coalition's "Contract on the American Family" of which this
"contract" was a precursor, what a prescription of irrelevance. Just put the real problem‑list
against the "solution list" contained in either "Contract." Nothing on what really ails the
country. Nothing on jobs, export
of, and insecurity in. Nothing on
the crumbling infrastructure. Nothing on health, nothing on education,
nothing on the environment (except to make it easier for companies to
poison it). Lots of focus on welfare,
only a small chunk of Federal spending, but great politics because it's
painted black (even though two thirds of recipients aren't). The crime proposals focus on measures
that just don't work and take money away from ones that either do or at least
might. Balanced budget and term
limits? How are they going to
affect everyday life?
More tax cuts
for the rich? In the 80s, cuts for
them didn't lead to investment
and jobs here at home—just to speculation, sometimes huge financial
losses, export of capital, and that widening gap between rich and poor. Then there's the proposal for
"reform" of the civil litigation system to address a problem that
just doesn't exist: an "avalanche of tort litigation" against companies. In fact, the major increase in civil cases is in contract actions between companies (Kelder)—and so forth. And the Democrats right now have
nothing much better.
And then
there's the "moral" agenda, as noted not exactly designed to touch the
declining industrial base and declining per capita incomes; the export of manufacturing jobs, to be
replaced, if at all, by a less than equal number of lower paying service jobs;
and a continually deteriorating national infrastructure.
John Gray, in
that last sentence I quoted from him, is right. And that "Colombian" state, that unstable,
violent, insecure state, in a domestic environment of increasing
racism and xenophobia, is a prescription for future, massive "civil
unrest," followed by the imposition of a violent, oppressive, authoritarian
governing structure to control it.
A spectre is
haunting the United States of America. But it is not the spectre of communism. It is the spectre of fascism. Is anyone out there watching or listening? And if they are, are they seeing or
hearing anything?
References:
Gray, J., "Does
Democracy Have a Future?" The New York Times Book Re-view, January 22,
1995, p. 1.
Hull, J.D., et al,
"The State of the Union," Time, January 30, 1995,
p. 53.
Kelder, G., "What
Speaker Newt's 'Contract on America' and Tort 'Reform' Mean for the Tobacco
Control Movement," Tobacco on Trial, November/December,
1994, p. 3.
Kelly, M., "You
Say You Want a Revolution," The New Yorker, November 21,
1994, p. 56.
Lacayo, R.,
"Lock 'Em Up!," Time, February 7, 1994.
Nelson, L‑E.,
"Contract Words, Deeds Divorced," Newsday, May 18, 1995, p. A
19.
Thurow, L.C.,
"Companies Merge; Families Break Up," New York Times, September 3, 1995, News of the Week in Review.
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