|
The
stockings were hung by the chimney with care,
When Tom Ridge appeared with a pre-Christmas scare!
Just four days before Christmas, Mr. Ridge was
the principal source of network entertainment
as he announced that he was raising the "terror
alert" in America from "yellow" to "orange." The
upcoming holidays might, he supposed, provide
an opportunity for some ill-defined group to attack
some possible targets someplace in the homeland
he imagines it his province to protect. When a
6.5 earthquake hit central California the following
day, I almost expected members of the Busheoisie
to praise Tom for his foresight and for making
us aware of the threat of tectonic terrorism!
There
will be those who will commend Mr. Ridge for keeping
America informed of terrorist threats. But his
words informed us of nothing. To "inform" means
to give shape to, to communicate knowledge. His
words were of no value whatsoever in helping individuals
make plans. Were these uncertain terrorists going
to attack airliners, shopping malls, college bowl
games, concerts, freeways, or amusement parks?
People were advised to "be vigilant," but about
what? His warnings were as irrelevant to the contemplation
of human action as are the pre-holiday predictions
of the numbers of people likely to die in traffic
accidents. His predictions had no more substance
than the psychics who show up in the media this
time of the year to tell us that a "major catastrophe"
will occur, or a "prominent person" will die,
in 2004.
Mr.
Ridge's "alert" was designed for one purpose only:
to keep us terrified so that the state can continue
to manipulate our fears for their purposes. Had
he been candid about the matter, he might have
said: "lest any of you people get caught up in
the 'peace on earth' sentimentality that is going
around this time of year, we want to keep you
in fear of the unknown, so that we can continue
to enlist your energies on behalf of the war system
we have worked so hard to maintain and develop."
Ridge urged people to go ahead with their holiday
plans. He might have added: "but don't enjoy yourselves."
Those
of you who, like myself, were around during World
War II and the early days of the Cold War will
recognize the scare tactics being employed. As
children, living in Nebraska in the 1940's, we
were encouraged to scan the skies with our binoculars
to watch for German or Japanese warplanes. As
an adult, I figured out the logistical absurdity
of the threat of German dive-bombers and fighter
planes traveling from Germany to the middle of
the United States. We were likewise told by Mr.
Ridge's 1950's counterpart, Sen. Joseph McCarthy,
of the threat of "communists" in our schools,
businesses, government, the media, and neighborhoods.
Many movies and television programs helped to
reinforce this state-induced fear of the unknown,
as did rumored threats of poisoned food and water
supplies.
The
dominant fear propagated during the Cold War was
that America had to respond, militarily, to the
"threat" of an international communist conspiracy.
Nowhere was this campaign more energized than
in a quarter-century of vicious warfare in southeast
Asia. I wonder if the families of the nearly 100,000
American soldiers who died on behalf of the "domino
theory" in the Korean and Vietnam wars might have
gagged at the recent sight of President Bush and
his Chinese counterpart exchanging smiles and
agreeing that they were opposed to independence
for Taiwan. If those wars were fought to prevent
Chinese communism from taking over southeast Asia,
would that alleged purpose not have been served
by America's insistence that Taiwan remain free
of Chinese control? I wonder if Bush and his gang
regard the names on the Vietnam War monument as
anything more than a "suckers list" of young Americans
who, not having had the advantages of political
connections, were conscripted to die to protect
the liberties of South Koreans and South Vietnamese
from a prior generation's assemblage of "evildoers"?
We
are held hostage by our own fears, and the more
amorphous the fear-object the more terrified we
become. When fear combines with the unknown, our
imaginations know no restraint. No film presentation
of Dickens' A Christmas Carol, for instance, can
begin to match the fearfulness I experienced in
listening to Lionel Barrymore's radio broadcasts
of that tale. My imagination horrified me much
more than did the special effects images of Marley's
ghost.
As
we listen to the fear-mongering of Messrs. Bush,
Ridge, Ashcroft, Rumsfeld, et al., we need to
recall how, as children, we frightened one another
with ghost stories or tales of murderers or monsters
lurking in the darkened hallways of our homes.
Have we outgrown this vulnerability to fear-objects?
Before answering this question, first assess your
responses to current news stories designed to
mobilize fears and reinforce support for the "big
brothers" who promise you their unspecified "protection"
from the unknown.
Political
systems have always depended upon the dynamics
of fear to mobilize individuals into a servile
herd. From primitive tribesmen who were told of
the dreaded "Nine Bows" across the rivers, to
the modern "terrorists" on the other side of the
planet, the manufacture and management of fear
has always been essential to statist ambitions
for power. It is impossible to watch a television
news report without being reminded of a myriad
of agents in our world who will likely visit great
harm upon us unless we grant the state more power
over our lives. Child abductors, spousal abusers,
obesity, drug usage, terrorists, ozone holes,
money launderers, racists, smokers, cell-phone
users, and "hate groups" (i.e., people who oppose
your political agenda), are among the more prominent
examples.
We
live in an institutionalized world that requires
the submission of individuals to organizational
purposes. Systems that seek to control the behavior
of people must invariably resort to fear as a
way of overcoming individual resistance. We live
in a fear-driven culture: politics feeds on the
fear of others and the fear of punishment; most
school systems emphasize the fear of failure;
organized religions offer fears of eternal punishment;
our economic lives are underlain by a fear of
losing our job or our credit rating; movies and
computer games entertain us with monsters, mass
murderers, and other threats while the fear of
disease, death, the loss of our worldly attachments,
etc., add to this mindset of dread.
Is
it any wonder that, having become preoccupied
with fear, the state would find it so easy to
convince most of us that "terrorists" - the very
embodiment of fear - are the latest specters against
which we require the "protection" of a totalitarian
state?
But
fear-mongering has its limits. Just as having
too much information can saturate our minds and
immobilize us, our psyches can experience an overload
of fear and make us immune to more threats. There
is a lesson to be learned from the study of Zen
Buddhism. It is common for a Zen master to take
a long piece of bamboo - one with a good whipping
action - and surprise his students by hitting
them across the backs of their legs when they
do not expect it. He might hide behind a curtain
or a pillar, or jump up from behind a piece of
furniture, and give them a solid whack. The students
try to anticipate his moves, and become overly
cautious when out walking, but the Zen master
always manages to surprise them. In time, the
students simply give up their fears of being whacked
and go about the business of learning, which is
the purpose of the teacher's exercise.
Should
our minds begin to overload on fear we may, like
the Zen students, no longer find ourselves responsive
to the contrived threats by which we allow others
to control our lives. Should this occur, the future
of the state may be a bleak one, as there are
a number of factors whose conflation is rendering
the political organization of society increasingly
untenable. As the study of chaos informs us, the
assumptions of vertically structured planning
and control upon which state power rests are incompatible
with the dynamics of a complex world. As a consequence
of this, we have been witnessing a movement toward
more decentralized, unstructured, horizontally-based
systems. The growth of private schools and homeschooling;
the increased use of alternative health systems;
the challenge the Internet poses to traditional
institutional sources of information; the spread
of secession movements in many parts of the world;
are some of the more prominent expressions of
the weakening of centrally-structured systems.
One
must appreciate the significance of these decentralizing
forces in driving the state's "war on terror,"
a war that Mr. Bush promises will go on forever.
It is the incipient collapse of state power that
terrorizes the political system. Since the state,
by definition, is the established order, any fundamental
change that would bring about the liberty of men
and women to generate a diversity of organizational
systems, would represent "terror" to itself. It
is the life process itself, as reflected in the
spontaneity and autonomy of individuals, that
is feared not only by the state, but by those
of us who remain conditioned by political thinking.
But
what if, like the Zen students, we can transcend
our fears? Upon what basis would the state be
able to sustain its authority over our lives?
It is rather evident that the state no longer
inspires people with what they like to imagine
are noble purposes of social betterment. In a
world that has become accustomed to the Realpolitik
that awards billions of dollars in favored government
contracts to firms like Halliburton and Bechtel,
while the families of American soldiers in Iraq
must have recourse to charities for their sustenance,
the classic JFK admonition to "ask not" could
no longer be uttered with a straight face.
It
is clear to growing numbers of people that the
political system they have been conditioned to
believe they control is under the control of the
state itself, and that the "democratic process"
is nothing more than an empty ritual by which
voters confirm the establishment's choice of future
leaders. It is not apathy that continues to drive
down voter participation in elections, but a sense
of realism, an unwillingness to participate in
a meaningless charade.
When
the state is seen as ineffectual even for the
accomplishment of its avowed purposes; when it
no longer provides inspiration or even entertainment
value to people; and when it overloads our minds
with endless fears of unspecified dangers about
which we are expected to do no more than remain
obedient to established authority, such influences
may very well coalesce to bring about its collapse.
I suspect that the demise of the state will come
about not by revolution, subversion, or other
violent means, but by a profound sense of boredom
with the system. Like the dinosaurs - whose gigantic
and cumbersome structures rendered them nonresilient
to the kinds of fluctuations with which life must
always contend - the downfall of the state will
likely be the product of its own dead weight upon
the body and soul of humanity.
Topplebush.com
Posted: January 6, 2004
|