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Fear, Loathing & the Crisis of Confidence

By David Sirota, Creators Syndicate. Posted December 21, 2007.


The 'paranoid style' in American politics is grounded in a profound disconnect between ordinary Americans and the political class.
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Also by David Sirota

Acknowledging the Race Chasm
The pervasive racism that taints our political discourse will persist until we recognize and reject it.
May 9, 2008

Potomac Fever
Washington has been debilitated by a horrible disease -- one that inhibits emotions like compassion and integrity.
May 2, 2008

The Real Elitists Work in Mainstream Media
The media elite pretend there are not two Americas but only one: theirs.
Apr 24, 2008

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Just a few weeks ago, Scripps Howard News Service and Ohio University released a little-noticed study showing that one-third of Americans now "believe in a broad smorgasbord of conspiracy theories" revolving around government complicity in everything from the 9/11 attacks to the Kennedy assassination. The same survey last year found that "anger against the federal government is at record levels."

It would be easy to chalk up these troubling findings to the unending propaganda of fear. America has been experiencing the searing blast of politicized terror warnings and breaking news graphics for the better part of six years now, and populations living under such constant government and media shock treatment can go a wee bit berserk.

But while many of these conspiracy theories are offensive and factually unsupported, the underlying paranoia and loathing are not surprising, and the feelings are not motivated merely by a fear of the next bogeyman around the corner. The sentiments are symptoms of a deep crisis of confidence in our public institutions -- a crisis that is a predictable reaction to a government that now all but admits it breaks laws, hides information and disregards the public.

We have seen troops sent to war based on manipulated intelligence. We have discovered phones wiretapped without warrants. Just last week, we found out the CIA destroyed tapes of potentially illegal torture sessions. So many scandals now plague the government, it is hard to remember them all. And they have all happened with almost no consequences for the perpetrators.

Nonetheless, every era has its sensational scandals, and so it is probably the mundane that has heated the public's low-grade disgust into a simmering boil. After all, what we see our government and our representatives quietly do every day tells us far more than even the headline-grabbing controversies.

Industries essentially bribe politicians with campaign contributions. Government employees regularly move into six-figure jobs lobbying for the industries they once regulated. Presidential candidates of both parties take time off from their small-town stump speeches about the middle class to hold big corporate fundraisers in New York penthouses and D.C. law firms. All of it is legal and treated as ho-hum by the media.

Then there is the bureaucracy, the faceless monolith whose civil service protections and multiyear appointment terms were supposed to prevent it from becoming what it is today: an increasingly important cog in the corrupt machine.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) provides perhaps the most pristine example of all. In October, the General Accounting Office (GAO) reported that this faceless alphabet-soup agency tasked with regulating the media business now regularly leaks secret information to lobbyists before that information is released to the public. The behavior undoubtedly feeds into the world of "political intelligence" -- a burgeoning cottage industry in Washington whereby well-heeled lobbyists gather inside government information for their corporate clients.

A federal agency that even mildly cared about trying to serve the public or follow the law would react to the GAO's damning report by at least pretending to change. Instead, the FCC dug in.

When lobbyists recently pushed the government to relax ownership regulations and allow for further media consolidation, FCC chairman Kevin Martin provided just one week's notice for a required public hearing on the issue. Officially, the FCC held the hearing to consider public input about the proposed rule change. But Martin later told Congress that before the hearing ever happened he was already putting the finishing touches on his New York Times op-ed formally endorsing the media consolidation plan. And surprise! This week, the FCC officially ratified Martin's deregulation scheme, making it the law of the land.

Like so much of our government's behavior these days, it was kabuki theater at its most obscene -- an obscure yet powerful agency getting caught leaking profit-making secrets to lobbyists, and then telling the public its hearings are all a put-on, taking place well after the corrupt deals have already been cut.

In Scripps Howard's report on its poll findings, some experts expressed astonishment at the anger being expressed by the country. But really, we should be baffled if public opinion were any different. Considering what's going on, is anyone actually stunned that America is enraged? Is anyone really confused about why so many believe the government conspires against the public?

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See more stories tagged with: election08, conspiracism

David Sirota is a nationally syndicated weekly newspaper columnist for Creators Syndicate. He is the New York Times bestselling author of Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government and How We Take It Back (Crown 2006). He is also a senior fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network. His second book, The Uprising, is due in the Spring of 2008.

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I think it's coming...
Posted by: QuestionAuthority on Dec 21, 2007 3:57 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My father, a former Republican now in his early 80's, predicted that the US would go into another Civil War. He told me this about 15 years ago. I think he's right.

If you add up the distrust of the people for the Federal government, the amorality of those in power, the rising belief in conspiracy theories in the US, the power of the evangelicals in the political and military processes, the financial messes like the current mortgage debacle that threaten to ruin the economy for all but the very richest...

I think fascism is coming closer all the time, perhaps in 2008. Just what will the Democrats and independent voters in the US will do if Dubya decides that he isn't giving up his throne if a Democrat wins?

Upton Sinclair was right when he said that fascism, if it comes to the US, will come carrying a cross and wrapped in the flag.

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» RE: I think it's coming... Posted by: Doubtom
A small quibble
Posted by: skylark on Dec 21, 2007 4:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is not the "bureaucrats" at these agencies that are the problem. It is the political appointees the bureaucrats have to work for. Because someone chauffered a candidate through Iowa they, or a friend, get to be undersecretary of a department they never heard of. Think of Joseph Albaugh and Mike Brown at FEMA, as an example. Meanwhile, the FEMA bureaucrats were in the Super Dome or trying to get things there while working under the constraints of the political hacks above them by virtue of political appointees.And this interference extends even to whom an agency can buy from. It has to be a major supporter of the Administration.

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No surprise people believe the government is conspiring against them
Posted by: smadaj on Dec 21, 2007 5:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Plenty of people are paying attention to all of the laws that have been passed over the past seven years - laws that strip citizens of virtually all of their constitutional rights. However, not enough people are putting all of the puzzle pieces together. Among those who are, some are outspoken, others say nothing. If the tides continue to turn in the direction they've been going, speaking out could land one in prison, stripped of their citizenship, not allowed their right to habeas corpus, tortured, denied council, denied a trial - or given a mock trial in which they are not told the charges or the evidence, and then killed. At this point, these things are no longer a possibility in the future, the new laws allow this NOW. The president of the United States, or his minions, can declare ANYONE an "enemy combatant" for any reason - or no reason - and then that's it. That person loses everything. Totally legally. The U.S. doesn't even need to ship those they arrest (abduct) to other countries - In January, 2006, Halliburton was paid $385 million to complete a system of secret prisons within the U.S. that are to be run by the NSA, (and the intelligence community IS allowed to torture), not by the U.S. prison system. Each prison will be - or already is - equipped to handle up to five thousand prisoners indefinitely. Sure there are a lot of "conspiracy theories" but some of those "theories" are correct.

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It may be atavistic fear rather than greed that drives the rich to grab all they can
Posted by: Suzon on Dec 22, 2007 3:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The legacy of the Norman-English empire created by William the Conquerer (and alive and well in the White House today) is a long history of losers suffering terrible penalties--boiling in oil, not just loss of land and starvation. Hanging, drawing and quartering while the victim was alive wasn't abolished until the 19th century!

The powerful were willing to "do whatever it takes" because they themselves had devised such cruel punishments for losers. In our dog-eat-dog world, even the big dogs have to be afraid. The rich are worried that they will get the punishment that they deserve so they are driven to greater extremes of power grabbing and repression.

The way out of this is to increase everyone's sense of security through building a more egalitarian society.

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Just because you're paranoid ...
Posted by: spaghetti happens on Dec 22, 2007 6:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sirota's comments express the old truism that just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you. We have good reason to fear this monstrosity of a government: Any organization run by frauds, torturers, thieves, and charlatans cannot by definition be guided by anything remotely approaching the public interest. That they are cheered on and enabled by a Congress and media Fourth Estate who seem to enjoy being used and abused is the true tragedy of this age.

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Speaking of paranoia and fear
Posted by: setterwoman on Dec 22, 2007 7:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a bit off topic, but every time I hear a news person speak about the fear of terrorism, I've wondered how many Americans are afraid of another attack. Although I think it's likely, considering the U.S. actions in other countries, I wonder if this is just an administration/media card or if it's real. Living 100 miles from any city of any size, it isn't a personal fear, but it could be for others, especially for those who directly witnessed the WTC attacks.

Seems to me we should be more afraid of our own government than any terrorist attack. Have any polls been done to assess those concerns?

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» To Setterwoman Posted by: Ellie1
» RE: To Setterwoman Posted by: setterwoman
» RE: To Setterwoman, Ellie1 Posted by: madmax427
» RE: Speaking of paranoia and fear Posted by: naturelover
» RE: Speaking of paranoia and fear Posted by: Patriot of the USA
One problem with this
Posted by: xenocyd on Dec 22, 2007 8:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a complaint here that there is corruption in government. This is incorrect.

Government IS corruption.

-

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» Would anarchy be preferable? Posted by: Geolager
Old news. The news is that we're not doing anything about it.
Posted by: Sojourner on Dec 22, 2007 8:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All the chicanery by the GOP was grossly evident in the 2004 elections. Yet we chose to keep the chief pirate and his first mate to captain our ship.

Yeah, yeah. I know about Ohio. But Bush might have won several other states he conceded that were close. The American electorate loves having a pirate in charge.

He's our boy. We hired him. His credentials were there to be seen all along. We are f***ed up, fellow Americans.

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When will the lid blow off?
Posted by: monkeywrench on Dec 22, 2007 10:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fact that some "experts" are astonished at the anger of the public against our supposed "leaders" shows how out of touch are these experts, and how much malfeasance is now accepted by them as business as usual.

Frankly, I'm surprised that the population isn't MORE angry, or more demonstrative; I'm surprised there have not been million-person marches on Washington by veterans, blacks, private healthcare policy-holders, Katrina/Rita victims, sub-prime mortgage victims, 9/11 families and those who demand the truth, constitutionalists, the ripped-off middle class, and on and on and on.

During the Vietnam era, we marched in the streets and in Washington against an immoral war carried out for an ideaology many believed in, at a time when worry about the destruction of our basic democratic system was not much more than speculation. Compare that time to today, where we put up with a more destructive war based on nothing more than greed, by a government that is a de facto dictatorship. If today's mega-outrages were occurring back then, the mass rioting would never have stopped.

We nearly impeached a president then; drove him from office and sent many in his administration to prison for far less than what Bush and his criminal cabal have committed. A record number of Reagan's cronies went to prison for their crimes – and yet, apparently, NO ONE in the Bush administration will even be prosecuted, let alone pay for their crimes. Congress has abandoned us, the courts have abandoned us, the system itself has abandoned us; but all is quiet on the domestic front. Living as I did through the 60's and 70's, it is nearly incomprehensible that americans today are so complacent in the face of so many threats to our democracy by our own government.

Are we a slowly simmering pot which will eventually exhaust its steam and dry up – or a pressure cooker, sealed temporarily by fear, that will soon explode? The jury is out.

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» RE: When will the lid blow off? Posted by: Chloe2005
» RE: When will the lid blow off? Posted by: Cooltruth
Couple this with RWA in HOAs
Posted by: DaBear on Dec 22, 2007 4:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And we have a powder keg ready to go off on every level of Amerikaan life from the bottom (neighborhoods under RWA HOA control, local codes that violate human decency and ability to freely associate, maintain fiscal security, etc.) to the top (Feds and States).

Add the alchemy of 'Merkaan fascism and mebbe it all comes crashes.... before 2012.... I bet a beer on it.

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follow the cash
Posted by: wittler youth on Dec 22, 2007 6:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
im just kicking my self for not buying 5.000$ worth of ureros back in 2000 when they were 84 cents to the dollar..

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» RE: follow the cash Posted by: Doubtom
» paper Posted by: mont
November Rebellion
Posted by: lc on Dec 23, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Psst! Pass it on. The Rebellion starts in front of every courthouse within days after the Election when people, even Christians, can no longer take it. To paraphrase that old movie quote:
"We are mad as hell and we aren't going to take it any longer."
Take this election and shove it.
Up in Riot Smoke for 2008
Cheers,
IM
Belteshazzsar

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Spot on
Posted by: gloryoski on Dec 23, 2007 6:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is it exactly. I also despair because almost all the dem candidates pay lip service to what a critical election this is (and it is!) but seem to be engaging more than usual in attempts to obfuscate their real legislative records and custom-spin their various proposals (for example, health care) depending on the audience to which they are addressing themselves. I find myself inclined to support Edwards for the nomination, because he at least flat out admits that he made serious mistakes as a senator (the Iraq vote, and, less prominently, laws to make bankruptcy more difficult for ordinary people). A willingness to admit the huge, numerous mistakes one has made, however, is not the most glowing recommendation a job candidate could present. And it worries me because we don't have a whole lot of free mistakes left to concede to the less intentionally evil elements in our government.

I also don't know how much good vigilance will do at this point, given that, as Sirota writes, nobody pays any attention to even the "squeaky" citizen anymore, but I don't see any other solution. I sure do wish we could all get together and make one big squeak that they would have to hear.

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» Squeak at your own peril Posted by: Geolager
When we tire
Posted by: fred_53_99 on Dec 24, 2007 5:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This nightmare will end when we are tired of being afraid. When we tire of having the worst in us pandered to. When we are bettter educated. When we regain our courage. In short maybe never . Democracy will not die in the world. America will serve as an example of what not to do. Bin Laden has won ; our fear and ingorance will destroy us. But then remember whats really important homos can't get married.

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Sirotta article unethical
Posted by: robchapman on Dec 24, 2007 8:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I could walk around my town and complain about the mail delivery, garbage pick ups, snow plowing, the school's deficiencies, the lack of effective policing and any number of other governmental activities.

But so what? What does my complaining have to do with the quality of government in my town?

Articles like Sirotta's are just the same. It is easy to complain.

Instead of writing about the global failure of gov't, Sirotta could do us a service as a journalist and report on a particular instance or issue, explain how the govt failed and what others are offering as a remedy.

An article like that would actually qualify as ethical journalism. Sirotta's kvetching in this article falls far short even of that.

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» Books and 700-word columns Posted by: Joshua Holland
When will they revolt
Posted by: robchapman on Dec 24, 2007 8:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I teach political science and American History in a community college.

Every semester we discuss the civil rights movement and the civil disobedience of the sixties.

Every semester, I ask the kids what they think of the rebelliousness of the sixties student movements.

Every semester the kids answer back that the society was so much less restrictive then.

During the past thirty years, the instruments of repression have grown enormously.

We have inordinately numerous prisons and strict enforcement of nuisance crimes.

We have a record keeping system that assures that everyone is under the eye of government at all times- now it is not FBI agents hiding in the bushes, but school, health, credit and banking records that document and track our every move.

We proudly proclaim our self image of fierce independence with NRA bumper stickers, but we refuse to personally confront the stupidity and arrogance of the military the way draftee citizen soldiers did thirty years ago.

All in all we have allowed freedom and liberty to die in this country in exactly the way a sheep becomes lost from the flock. On little bite and one little step at a time.

We can only regain our freedom by looking realistically at our situation and protecting our privacy, our freedom and our integrity by demanding accountability from our officials.

It cannot be done by remote control, it requires physical presence and moral engagement.

Democracy can't work unless you work it.

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another cog in the corrupt machine
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Dec 27, 2007 10:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the fda and its legal branch the dea...
on the big agra/big pharma payroll; proteciting their interests...

allowing big pharma to create illnesses or to expand the definitions of illnesses (see premenstrual dysphoric disorder/serafem and bipolar disorder/abilify)in order to sell pills that kill (how many have been pulled in the last 10 years??)

allowing big agra to force growers to grow frankenfood...(monsanto)

fda approving splenda despite major criticism...

and that's only the examples i can think of on the spur of the moment...

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marching hordes
Posted by: mont on Dec 28, 2007 2:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do not look for the marching hordes of protesters until the economic reality is bleak and "Bushvilles" become a reality. Last great depression had farms to absorb jobless but now those farms are gone, gone, gone. The government is already bankrupt. So protest on! Remember the WW1 vets and their "Bonus" march in 1930 (?) met by army on horseback with drawn sabres.

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» RE: marching hordes Posted by: Dianka
now versus then
Posted by: mwildfire on Dec 29, 2007 6:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are two huge differences between the 60s and 70s and now that account for the passivity of today's youth: all males were subject to to the draft, whereas today only the poor and clueless need be PERSONALLY concerned with stopping the very similar Iraq war--and perhaps even more importantly, our generation was raised with all manner of pretty lies about how we were the greatest and freest country in the world and we believed in equality and everyone had a chance to make it if they studied and worked hard, and so forth. Most of us BELIEVED all that so when we found out that there were different realities, why we marched right out there to do something about it. Today's youth have been steeped since birth in a culture of cynicism, a nearly universal belief that government is corrupt, that the rich have inordinate power, that the FBI will skulk around and spy on dissidents, and that it doesn't do any good to protest. They also live in economically leaner times, and the culture of consumption has been strengthened, so they have much more anxiety about jobs and careers than we did.
But I also want to express annoyance with that odd mental twitch Sirota expresses, as it seems all media people, even left-wingers, do: the assumption that anyone who believes in "conspiracy theories" is "paranoid." Of course JFK was killed by a lone gunman and 9/11 was the work solely of Al Qaeda--OUR government could never engage in massively criminal plotting, however much they might benefit, because...well, because they're just too edthical, I guess.

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Crisis of Confidence
Posted by: Dianka on Dec 30, 2007 6:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This nation's founders left a vitally important message for all future generations, and it is something that every American should know:
We were told that if our government should ever stop governing according to the will of the people, the people have a patriotic duty to remove those politicians and/or parties, by whatever means necessary. We have been warned repeatedly, throughout US history, by academics, politicians and presidents, not to allow corporations/the rich to obtain excessive power. Above all, we were warned to never lose sight of the "common good"; it's a hard concept to remember in our "survival-of-the-fittest/to hell with the useless poor" nation.

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