The evolution of evil
By Joel S. Hirschhorn
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Feb 4, 2008, 01:47
Perhaps a global political apocalypse has already arrived.
Activists and dissidents should understand that evil forces
and tyrannical governments have evolved. Just as human knowledge and science
expand, so do the strategies and instruments used by rulers, elites and
plutocrats. By learning from history and using new technology, they have
smarter tools of tyranny. The best ones prevent uprisings, revolutions and political
reforms. Rather than violently destroy rebellious movements, they let them
survive as marginalized and ineffective efforts that divert and sap the energy
of nonconformist and rebellious thinkers. Real revolution remains an
energy-draining dream, as evil forces thrive.
Most corrupt and legally sanctioned forms of tyranny hide in
plain sight as democracies with free elections. The toughest lesson is that ALL
elections are distractions. Nothing conceals tyranny better than elections. Few
Americans accept that their government has become a two-party plutocracy run by
a rich and powerful ruling class. The steady erosion of the rule of law is
masked by everyday consumer freedoms. Because people want to be happy and
hopeful, we have an epidemic of denial, especially in the present presidential
campaign. But to believe that any change-selling politician or shift in party
control will overturn the ruling class is the epitome of self-delusion and
false hope. In the end, such wishful thinking perpetuates plutocracy. Proof is
that plutocracy has flourished despite repeated change agents, promises of
reform and partisan shifts.
The tools of real rebellion are weak. Activists and
dissidents look back and see successful rebellions and revolutions and think
that when today’s victims of tyranny experience enough pain and see enough
political stink they too will revolt. This is wrong. They think that the
Internet spreads information and inspiration to the masses, motivating them to
revolt. This is wrong. They await catastrophic economic or environmental
collapse to spur rebellion. This too is wrong.
Why are these beliefs wrong? Power elites have an arsenal of
weapons to control and manipulate social, political and economic systems
globally: corruption of public officials that make elections a sham; corporate
mainstream media that turn news into propaganda; manipulation of financial
markets that create fear for the public and profits for the privileged; false
free trade globalization that destroys the middle class; rising economic
inequality that keep the masses time-poor and financially insecure; intense
marketing of pharmaceuticals that keep people passive; and addictive
consumerism, entertainment and gambling that keep people distracted and
pacified.
The biggest challenge for dissidents and rebels is to avoid
feel-good therapeutic activism having virtually no chance of removing evil and
tyranny. Idealism without practicality tactics without lofty goals, and
symbolic protests pose no threat to power elites. Anger and outrage require
great strategic thinking from leaders seeking revolution, not mere change. And
social entrepreneurs that use business and management skills to tackle genuine
social problems do nothing to achieve political reforms. To the extent they
achieve results, they end up removing interest in overthrowing political
establishments that have allowed the problems to fester.
What is the new tool of tyranny? Technological connectivity
achieved through advanced communications and computer systems, especially the
rise of wireless connectivity. The global message to the masses is simple: Buy
electronic products to stay plugged in. Connectivity may give pleasure, but it
gives even more power to elites, rulers and plutocrats. It allows them to
coordinate their efforts through invisible cabals, to closely monitor
everything that ordinary people and dissidents do, and to cooperatively and
clandestinely adjust social, financial and political systems to maintain
stability and dominance.
In this dystopian world, all systems are integrated to serve
upper class elites and the corporate state, not ordinary people. When ordinary
people spend their money to be more shackled to connectivity products, they
become unwitting victims of largely invisible governmental and corporate
oppressive forces. They are oblivious that their technological seduction
exacerbates their political and economic exploitation. Though some 70 percent
believe the country is on the wrong track, they fail to see the deeper causes
of the trend. And if Americans were really happy and content with their
consumer culture, then why are they stuffing themselves with so many
antidepressants, sleeping pills and totally unhealthy foods? In truth, the vast
majority of people are in denial about the rotten system they are trapped in
(a.k.a. The Matrix). They are manipulated to keep hope alive through voting,
despite the inability of past elections to stop the slide into economic
serfdom.
Increasingly, the little-discussed phenomenon of economic
apartheid ensures that elites live their lavish lives safely in physically
separated ways. Concurrently, economic inequality rises, as the rich extract
unusually high fractions of global wealth. When the rich get richer, the
powerful get stronger. Does some economic prosperity trickles down to the
poorest people? Perversely, the middle class is moved into the lower class. In
this new physics of evil, wealth transfer is not from the rich to the poor, but
from the middle class in wealthier countries to the poor in developing nations,
where a few new billionaires join the global plutocracy.
Some data on economic inequality: The after-tax income of
the top 1 percent of Americans rose 228 percent from 1979 through 2005, while
middle class income remained flat over the last four decades. The richest 0.01
percent of earners made 5.1 percent of all income in 2005, up more than 300
percent from just 1.2 percent in 1960. Bad economic times like the present just
exacerbate inequality. Even as most Wall Street companies lost billions in the subprime
mortgage debacle after they had already made billions, they gave obscene
bonuses to their employees: the average topped $180,000 for 2007, tripling the
$61,000 in 2002. Scholars used to predict that high levels of economic
inequality like we have today would lead to rebellion. But there are now
insufficient tools and paths for rebellion, because the plutocracy has
eliminated them. Instead, citizens are offered elections whose outcomes can be
controlled and subverted by the ruling class.
The New World Order is getting what it wants: a stable
two-class system, with the lower class serving the elitist upper class. The
paradox is that along with rising economic inequality and apartheid is mounting
consumerism and materialism that is used to pacify, distract and control the
masses. That’s where easy credit and cheap products from low-wage nations are
critical. The poor can have cell phones, 24-7 Internet access and increasingly
cars, while the bejeweled upper class travel in private jets and yachts, vacation
on private islands, and have several gated mansions maintained by servants and
guarded by private police. We have a technologically advanced form of medieval
society. It is working in the US and China and most other places. Elections
just mask economic tyranny and slavery.
The ruling class knows how to maintain stability. Keep the
masses distracted, fearful, brainwashed, insecure, and dependent on government
and business sectors for survival. Train people to see themselves as relatively
free consumers. Maintain the myth that ordinary people can become wealthy and
join the ruling class, which theoretically is not impossible, but of no
statistical significance for the masses.
There are no easy paths to restore power to the people. But
here are three strategies worth considering. First, the real power of the
masses is as consumers, not as voters, workers, activists, or Internet users.
Weakened unions, globalization, technology, and illegal immigration have sapped
the power of workers. National economies, especially the US, depend on
consumers. Suspensions in discretionary consumer spending used as a political
weapon could force reforms. But curbing personal spending and saving money has
become a rare form of civil disobedience. Consumers buy stuff when they want
it, not when they can afford it. Rulers have replaced chains with debt and no
political leader in a very long time has championed economic rebellion.
Second, because they are more a tool of tyranny than
rebellion, the masses should stop giving credibility and legitimacy to faux
democracies by boycotting elections. Plutocrats cleverly equate patriotism and
good citizenship with voting while at the same time ensuring that no genuine
change agents can succeed even if elected. All election results can be
subverted by the forces of corruption. Those promising change, like Barack
Obama, do not pose a lethal threat to forces of evil and corruption. Sadly,
refusing to vote in corrupt political systems is another worthy but unpopular
form of civil disobedience. The compulsion to vote is a political narcotic that
sustains democratic tyranny.
Third, people must seek forms of direct democracy that give
them political power. National ballot measures and initiatives are needed to
make laws, impose spending mandates and recall elected officials. A most
important tool is constitutional conventions outside the control of status quo
preservationists to obtain systemic reforms that governments will never
provide, as explained for the US at www.foavc.org. No greater example
of ruling class power exists than the absence of massive public demands for
using what the Founders gave Americans in Article V: the convention option to
circumvent and fix the federal government that – amazingly – has never been
used, and that no presidential candidate has supported, including
constitutional champion Ron Raul.
Joel
S. Hirschhorn can be reached through www.delusionaldemocracy.com; he is a co-founder of Friends
of the Article V Convention at www.foavc.org.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor