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Z Magazine, July/August 1991
This essay is an edited version
of the conclusion to Chomsky's Deterring
Democracy, which is itself a compilation of edited versions
of articles that have appeared in Z.
In his study of the Scottish
intellectual tradition, George Davie identifies its central theme as a
recognition of the fundamental role of "natural beliefs or
principles of common sense, such as the belief in an independent
external world, the belief in causality, the belief in ideal standards,
and the belief in the self of conscience as separate from the rest of
one." These principles are sometimes considered to have a
regulative character; though never fully justified, they provide the
foundations for thought and conception. Some held that they contain
"an irreducible element of mystery," Davie points out, while
others hoped to provide a rational foundation for them. On that issue,
the jury is still out.
We can trace such ideas to 17th century
thinkers who reacted to the skeptical crisis of the times by recognizing
that there are no absolutely certain grounds for knowledge, but that we
do, nevertheless, have ways to gain a reliable understanding of the
world and to improve that understanding and apply it -- essentially the
standpoint of the working scientist today. Similarly, in normal life a
reasonable person relies on the natural beliefs of common sense while
recognizing that they may be parochial or misguided, and hoping to
refine or alter them as understanding progresses.
Davie credits David Hume with providing
this particular cast to Scottish philosophy, and more generally, having
taught philosophy the proper questions to ask. One puzzle that Hume
posed is particularly pertinent today. In considering the First
Principles of Government, Hume found "nothing more surprising"
than "to see the easiness with which the many are governed by the
few; and to observe the implicit submission with which men resign their
own sentiments and passions to those of their rulers. When we enquire by
what means this wonder is brought about, we shall find, that as Force is
always on the side of the governed, the governors have nothing to
support them but opinion. 'Tis therefore, on opinion only that
government is founded; and this maxim extends to the most despotic and
most military governments, as well as to the most free and most
popular."
Hume was an astute observer, and his
paradox of government is much to the point. His insight explains why
elites are so dedicated to indoctrination and thought control, a major
and largely neglected theme of modern history. "The public must be
put in its place," Walter Lippmann wrote, so that we may "live
free of the trampling and the roar of a bewildered herd," whose
"function" is to be "interested spectators of
action," not participants. And if the state lacks the force to
coerce and the voice of the people can be heard, it is necessary to
ensure that that voice says the right thing, as respected intellectuals
have been advising for many years.
Hume's observation raises a number of
questions. One dubious feature is the idea that force is on the side of
the governed. Reality is more grim. A good part of human history
supports the contrary thesis put forth a century earlier by advocates of
the rule of Parliament against the King, but more significantly against
the people: that "the power of the Sword is, and ever hath been,
the Foundation of all Titles to Government." Force also has more
subtle modes, including an array of costs well short of overt violence
that attach to refusal to submit. Nevertheless, Hume's paradox is real.
Even despotic rule is commonly founded on a measure of consent, and the
abdication of rights is the hallmark of more free societies -- a fact
that calls for analysis.
The Harsher Side
The harsher side of the truth is
highlighted by the fate of the popular movements of the past decade. In
the Soviet satellites, the governors had ruled by force, not opinion.
When force was withdrawn, the fragile tyrannies quickly collapsed, for
the most part with little bloodshed. These remarkable successes have
elicited some euphoria about the power of "love, tolerance,
nonviolence, the human spirit, and forgiveness," Vaclav Havel's
explanation for the failure of the police and military to crush the
Czech uprising. The thought is comforting, but illusory, as even the
most cursory look at history reveals. The crucial factor is not some
novel form of love and nonviolence; no new ground was broken here.
Rather, it was the withdrawal of Soviet force, and the collapse of the
structures of coercion based upon it. Those who believe otherwise may
turn for guidance to the ghost of Archbishop Romero and countless others
who have tried to confront unyielding terror with the human spirit.
The recent events of Eastern and Central
Europe are a sharp departure from the historical norm. Throughout modern
history, popular forces motivated by radical democratic ideals have
sought to combat autocratic rule. Sometimes they have been able to
expand the realms of freedom and justice before being brought to heel.
Often they are simply crushed. But it is hard to think of another case
when established power simply withdrew in the face of a popular
challenge. No less remarkable is the behavior of the reigning
superpower, which not only did not bar these developments by force as in
the past, but even encouraged them, alongside of significant internal
changes.
The historical norm is illustrated by
the dramatically contrasting case of Central America, where any popular
effort to overthrow the brutal tyrannies of the oligarchy and the
military is met with murderous force, supported or directly organized by
the ruler of the hemisphere. Ten years ago, there were signs of hope for
an end to the dark ages of terror and misery, with the rise of self-help
groups, unions, peasant associations, Christian base communities, and
other popular organizations that might have led the way to democracy and
social reform. This prospect elicited a stern response by the United
States and its clients, generally supported by its European allies, with
a campaign of slaughter, torture, and general barbarism that left
societies "affected by terror and panic," "collective
intimidation and generalized fear" and "internalized
acceptance of the terror," in the words of a Church-based
Salvadoran human rights organization. Early efforts in Nicaragua to
direct resources to the poor majority impelled Washington to economic
and ideological warfare, and outright terror, to punish these
transgressions by destroying the economy and social life.
Enlightened Western opinion regards such
consequences as a success insofar as the challenge to power and
privilege is rebuffed and the targets are properly chosen: killing
prominent priests in public view is not clever, but rural activists and
union leaders are fair game -- and of course peasants, Indians,
students, and other low-life generally. Shortly after the murder of the
Jesuit priests in El Salvador in November 1989, the wires carried a
story by AP correspondent Douglas Grant Mine entitled "Second
Salvador Massacre, but of Common Folk," reporting how soldiers
entered a working class neighborhood, captured six men, lined them up
against a wall and murdered them, adding a 14-year-old boy for good
measure. They "were not priests or human rights campaigners,"
Mine wrote, "so their deaths have gone largely unnoticed" --
as did his story, which was buried.
"The same week the Jesuits were
killed," Central America correspondent Alan Nairn writes, "at
least 28 other civilians were murdered in similar fashion. Among them
were the head of the water works union, the leader of the organization
of university women, nine members of an Indian farming cooperative, ten
university students,.... Moreover, serious investigation of the
Salvadoran murders leads directly to Washington's doorstep." All
"absolutely appropriate," hence unworthy of mention or
concern. So the story continues, week after grisly week.
The comparison between the Soviet and
U.S. domains is a commonplace outside of culturally deprived sectors of
the West, as illustrated in earlier Z articles. Guatemalan
journalist Julio Godoy, who fled when his newspaper, La Epoca,
was blown up by state terrorists (an operation that aroused no interest
in the United States; it was not reported, though well-known), writes
that Eastern Europeans are, "in a way, luckier than Central
Americans": "while the Moscow-imposed government in Prague
would degrade and humiliate reformers, the Washington-made government in
Guatemala would kill them. It still does, in a virtual genocide that has
taken more than 150,000 victims... [in what Amnesty International calls]
a `government program of political murder'." That, he suggested, is
"the main explanation for the fearless character of the students'
recent uprising in Prague: the Czechoslovak Army doesn't shoot to
kill.... In Guatemala, not to mention El Salvador, random terror is used
to keep unions and peasant associations from seeking their own way"
-- and to ensure that the press conforms, or disappears, so that Western
liberals need not fret over censorship in the "fledgling
democracies" they applaud.
Godoy quotes a European diplomat who
says, "as long as the Americans don't change their attitude towards
the region, there's no space here for the truth or for hope."
Surely no space for nonviolence and love.
One will search far to find such truisms
in U.S. commentary, or the West in general, which much prefers largely
meaningless (though self-flattering) comparisons between Eastern and
Western Europe. Nor is the hideous catastrophe of capitalism in the past
years a major theme of contemporary discourse, a catastrophe that is
dramatic in Latin America and other domains of the industrial West, in
the "internal Third World" of the United States, and the
"exported slums" of Europe. Nor are we likely to find much
attention to the fact, hard to ignore, that the economic success stories
typically involve coordination of the state and financial-industrial
conglomerates, another sign of the collapse of capitalism in the past 60
years. It is only the Third World that is to be subjected to the
destructive forces of free market capitalism, so that it can be more
efficiently robbed and exploited by the powerful.
Central America represents the
historical norm, not Eastern Europe. Hume's observation requires this
correction. Recognizing that, it remains true, and important, that
government is typically founded on modes of submission short of force,
even where force is available as a last resort.
The Bewildered Herd And Its Shepherds
In the contemporary period, Hume's
insight has been revived and elaborated, but with a crucial innovation:
control of thought is more important for governments that are
free and popular than for despotic and military states. The logic is
straightforward. A despotic state can control its domestic enemy by
force, but as the state loses this weapon, other devices are required to
prevent the ignorant masses from interfering with public affairs, which
are none of their business. These prominent features of modern political
and intellectual culture merit a closer look.
The problem of "putting the public
in its place" came to the fore with what one historian calls
"the first great outburst of democratic thought in history,"
the English revolution of the 17th century. This awakening of the
general populace raised the problem of how to contain the threat.
The libertarian ideas of the radical
democrats were considered outrageous by respectable people. They favored
universal education, guaranteed health care, and democratization of the
law, which one described as a fox, with poor men the geese: "he
pulls off their feathers and feeds upon them." They developed a
kind of "liberation theology" which, as one critic ominously
observed, preached "seditious doctrine to the people" and
aimed "to raise the rascal multitude...against all men of best
quality in the kingdom, to draw them into associations and combinations
with one another...against all lords, gentry, ministers, lawyers, rich
and peaceable men" (historian Clement Walker). Particularly
frightening were the itinerant workers and preachers calling for freedom
and democracy, the agitators stirring up the rascal multitude, and the
printers putting out pamphlets questioning authority and its mysteries.
"There can be no form of government without its proper
mysteries," Walker warned, mysteries that must be
"concealed" from the common folk: "Ignorance, and
admiration arising from ignorance, are the parents of civil devotion and
obedience," a thought echoed by Dostoevsky's Grand Inquisitor. The
radical democrats had "cast all the mysteries and secrets of
government...before the vulgar (like pearls before swine)," he
continued, and have "made the people thereby so curious and so
arrogant that they will never find humility enough to submit to a civil
rule." It is dangerous, another commentator ominously observed, to
"have a people know their own strength." The rabble did not
want to be ruled by King or Parliament, but "by countrymen like
ourselves, that know our wants." Their pamphlets explained further
that "It will never be a good world while knights and gentlemen
make us laws, that are chosen for fear and do but oppress us, and do not
know the people's sores."
These ideas naturally appalled the men
of best quality. They were willing to grant the people rights, but
within reason, and on the principle that "when we mention the
people, we do not mean the confused promiscuous body of the
people." After the democrats had been defeated, John Locke
commented that "day-labourers and tradesmen, the spinsters and
dairymaids" must be told what to believe: "The greatest part
cannot know and therefore they must believe."
Like John Milton and other civil
libertarians of the period, Locke held a sharply limited conception of
freedom of expression. His Fundamental Constitution of Carolina barred
those who "speak anything in their religious assembly irreverently
or seditiously of the government or governors, or of state
matters." The constitution guaranteed freedom for "speculative
opinions in religion," but not for political opinions. "Locke
would not even have permitted people to discuss public affairs,"
Leonard Levy observes. The constitution provided further that "all
manner of comments and expositions on any part of these constitutions,
or on any part of the common or statute laws of Carolines, are
absolutely prohibited." In drafting reasons for Parliament to
terminate censorship in 1694, Locke offered no defense of freedom of
expression or thought, but only considerations of expediency and harm to
commercial interests. With the threat of democracy overcome and the
libertarian rabble dispersed, censorship was permitted to lapse in
England, because the "opinion-formers...censored themselves.
Nothing got into print which frightened the men of property,"
Christopher Hill comments. In a well-functioning state capitalist
democracy like the United States, what might frighten the men of
property is generally kept far from the public eye -- sometimes, with
quite astonishing success.
Such ideas have ample resonance until
today, including Locke's stern doctrine that the common people should be
denied the right even to discuss public affairs. This doctrine remains a
basic principle of modern democratic states, now implemented by a
variety of means to protect the operations of the state from public
scrutiny: classification of documents on the largely fraudulent pretext
of national security, clandestine operations, and other measures to bar
the rascal multitude from the political arena. Such devices typically
gain new force under the regime of statist reactionaries of the
Reagan-Thatcher variety. The same ideas frame the essential professional
task and responsibility of the intellectual community: to shape the
perceived historical record and the picture of the contemporary world in
the interests of the powerful, thus ensuring that the public keeps to
its place and function, properly bewildered.
In the 1650s, supporters of Parliament
and the army against the people easily proved that the rabble could not
be trusted. This was shown by their lingering monarchist sentiments and
their reluctance to place their affairs in the hands of the gentry and
the army, who were "truly the people," though the people in
their foolishness did not agree. The mass of the people are a
"giddy multitude," "beasts in men's shapes." It is
proper to suppress them, just as it is proper "to save the life of
a lunatique or distracted person even against his will." If the
people are so "depraved and corrupt" as to "confer places
of power and trust upon wicked and undeserving men, they forfeit their
power in this behalf unto those that are good, though but a few."
The good and few may be the gentry or
industrialists, or the vanguard Party and the Central Committee, or the
intellectuals who qualify as "experts" because they articulate
the consensus of the powerful (to paraphrase one of Henry Kissinger's
insights). They manage the business empires, ideological institutions,
and political structures, or serve them at various levels. Their task is
to shepherd the bewildered herd and keep the giddy multitude in a state
of implicit submission, and thus to bar the dread prospect of freedom
and self-determination.
Similar ideas have been forged as the
Spanish explorers set about what Tzvetan Todorov calls "the
greatest genocide in human history" after they "discovered
America" 500 years ago. They justified their acts of terror and
oppression on the grounds that the natives are not "capable of
governing themselves any more than madmen or even wild beasts and
animals, seeing that their food is not any more agreeable and scarcely
better than that of wild beasts" and their stupidity "is much
greater than that of children and madmen in other countries"
(professor and theologian Francisco de Vitoria, "one of the
pinnacles of Spanish humanism in the sixteenth century").
Therefore, intervention is legitimate "in order to exercise the
rights of guardianship," Todorov comments, summarizing de Vitoria's
basic thought.
When English savages took over the task
a few years later, they naturally adopted the same pose while taming the
wolves in the guise of men, as George Washington described the objects
that stood in the way of the advance of civilization and had to be
eliminated for their own good. The English colonists had already handled
the Celtic "wild men" the same way, for example, when Lord
Cumberland, known as "the butcher," laid waste to the Scottish
highlands before moving on to pursue his craft in North America.
One hundred and fifty years later, their
descendants had purged North America of this native blight, reducing the
lunatics from 10 million to 200,000 according to some recent estimates,
and they turned their eyes elsewhere, to civilize the wild beasts in the
Philippines. The Indian fighters to whom President McKinley assigned the
task of "Christianizing" and "uplifting" these
unfortunate creatures rid the liberated islands of hundreds of thousands
of them, accelerating their ascent to heaven. They too were rescuing
"misguided creatures" from their depravity by
"slaughtering the natives in English fashion," as the New York
described their painful responsibility, adding that we must take
"what muddy glory lies in the wholesale killing til they have
learned to respect our arms," then moving on to "the more
difficult task of getting them to respect our intentions."
This is pretty much the course of
history, as the plague of European civilization devastated much of the
world.
On the home front, the continuing
problem was formulated plainly by the 17th century political thinker
Marchamont Nedham. The proposals of the radical democrats, he wrote,
would result in "ignorant Persons, neither of Learning nor Fortune,
being put in Authority." Given their freedom, the
"self-opinionated multitude" would elect "the lowest
of the People" who would occupy themselves with "Milking
and Gelding the Purses of the Rich," taking "the ready Road to
all licentiousness, mischief, mere Anarchy and Confusion." These
sentiments are the common coin of modern political and intellectual
discourse; increasingly so as popular struggles did succeed, over the
centuries, in realizing the proposals of the radical democrats, so that
ever more sophisticated means had to be devised to reduce their
substantive content.
Such problems regularly arise in periods
of turmoil and social conflict. After the American revolution,
rebellious and independent farmers had to be taught by force that the
ideals expressed in the pamphlets of 1776 were not to be taken
seriously. The common people were not to be represented by countrymen
like themselves, that know the people's sores, but by gentry, merchants,
lawyers, and others who hold or serve private power. Jefferson and
Madison believed that power should be in the hands of the "natural
aristocracy," Edmund Morgan comments, "men like
themselves" who would defend property rights against Hamilton's
"paper aristocracy" and from the poor; they "regarded
slaves, paupers, and destitute laborers as an ever-present danger to
liberty as well as property." The reigning doctrine, expressed by
the Founding Fathers, is that "the people who own the country ought
to govern it" (John Jay). The rise of corporations in the 19th
century, and the legal structures devised to grant them dominance over
private and public life, established the victory of the Federalist
opponents of popular democracy in a new and powerful form.
Not infrequently, revolutionary
struggles pit aspirants to power against one another though united in
opposition to radical democratic tendencies among the common people.
Lenin and Trotsky, shortly after seizing state power in 1917, moved to
dismantle organs of popular control, including factory councils and
Soviets, thus proceeding to deter and overcome socialist tendencies. An
orthodox Marxist, Lenin did not regard socialism as a viable option in
this backward and underdeveloped country; until his last days, it
remained for him an "elementary truth of Marxism, that the victory
of socialism requires the joint efforts of workers in a number of
advanced countries," Germany in particular. In what has always
seemed to me his greatest work, George Orwell described a similar
process in Spain, where the Fascists, Communists, and liberal
democracies were united in opposition to the libertarian revolution that
swept over much of the country, turning to the conflict over the spoils
only when popular forces were safely suppressed. There are many
examples, often influenced by great power violence.
This is particularly true in the Third
World. A persistent concern of Western elites is that popular
organizations might lay the basis for meaningful democracy and social
reform, threatening the prerogatives of the privileged. Those who seek
"to raise the rascal multitude" and "draw them into
associations and combinations with one another" against "the
men of best quality" must, therefore, be repressed or eliminated.
It comes as no surprise that Archbishop Romero should be assassinated
shortly after urging President Carter to withhold military aid from the
governing junta, which, he warned, will use it to "sharpen
injustice and repression against the people's organizations"
struggling "for respect for their most basic human rights."
The threat of popular organization to
privilege is real enough in itself. Worse still, "the rot may
spread," in the terminology of political elites; there may be a
demonstration effect of independent development in a form that attends
to the people's sores. Internal documents and even the public record
reveal that a driving concern of U.S. planners has been the fear that
the "virus" might spread, "infecting" regions
beyond.
This concern breaks no new ground.
European statesmen had feared that the American revolution might
"lend new strength to the apostles of sedition" (Metternich),
and might spread "the contagion and the invasion of vicious
principles" such as "the pernicious doctrines of republicanism
and popular selfrule," one of the Czar's diplomats warned. A
century later, the cast of characters was reversed. Woodrow Wilson's
Secretary of State Robert Lansing feared that if the Bolshevik disease
were to spread, it would leave the "ignorant and incapable mass of
humanity dominant in the earth"; the Bolsheviks, he continued, were
appealing "to the proletariat of all countries, to the ignorant and
mentally deficient, who by their numbers are urged to become masters,
...a very real danger in view of the process of social unrest throughout
the world." Again it is democracy that is the awesome threat. When
soldiers and workers councils made a brief appearance in Germany, Wilson
feared that they would inspire dangerous thoughts among "the
American negro [soldiers] returning from abroad." Already, he had
heard, negro laundresses were demanding more than the going wage, saying
that "money is as much mine as it is yours." Businessmen might
have to adjust to having workers on their boards of directors, he
feared, among other disasters, if the Bolshevik virus were not
exterminated.
With these dire consequences in mind,
the Western invasion of the Soviet Union was justified on defensive
grounds, against "the Revolution's challenge...to the very survival
of the capitalist order" (John Lewis Gaddis). And it was only
natural that the defense of the United States should extend from
invasion of the Soviet Union to Wilson's Red Scare at home. As Lansing
explained, force must be used to prevent "the leaders of Bolshevism
and anarchy" from proceeding to "organize or preach against
government in the United States"; the government must not permit
"these fanatics to enjoy the liberty which they now seek to
destroy." The repression launched by the Wilson administration
successfully undermined democratic politics, unions, freedom of the
press, and independent thought, in the interests of corporate power and
the state authorities who represented its interests, all with the
general approval of the media and elites generally, all in self-defense
against the "ignorant and mentally deficient" majority. Much
the same story was re-enacted after World War II, again under the
pretext of a Soviet threat, in reality, to restore submission to the
rulers.
When political life and independent
thought revived in the 1960s, the problem arose again, and the reaction
was the same. The Trilateral Commission, bringing together liberal
elites from Europe, Japan, and the United States, warned of an impending
"crisis of democracy" as segments of the public sought to
enter the political arena. This "excess of democracy" was
posing a threat to the unhampered rule of privileged elites -- what is
called "democracy" in political theology. The problem was the
usual one: the rabble were trying to manage their own affairs, gaining
control over their communities and pressing their political demands.
There were organizing efforts among young people, ethnic minorities,
women, social activists, and others, encouraged by the struggles of
benighted masses elsewhere for freedom and independence. More
"moderation in democracy" would be required, the Commission
concluded, perhaps a return to the days when "Truman had been able
to govern the country with the cooperation of a relatively small number
of Wall Street lawyers and bankers," as the American rapporteur
commented.
The fears expressed by the men of best
quality in the 17th century have become a major theme of intellectual
discourse, corporate practice, and the academic social sciences. They
were expressed by the influential moralist and foreign affairs adviser
Reinhold Niebuhr, who was revered by George Kennan, the Kennedy
intellectuals, and many others. He wrote that "rationality belongs
to the cool observers" while the common person follows not reason
but faith. The cool observers, he explained, must recognize "the
stupidity of the average man," and must provide the "necessary
illusion" and the "emotionally potent
oversimplifications" that will keep the naive simpletons on course.
As in 1650, it remains necessary to protect the "lunatic or
distracted person," the ignorant rabble, from their own
"depraved and corrupt" judgments, just as one does not allow a
child to cross the street without supervision.
In accordance with the prevailing
conceptions, there is no infringement of democracy if a few corporations
control the information system: in fact, that is the essence of
democracy. The leading figure of the public relations industry, Edward
Bernays, explained that "the very essence of the democratic
process" is "the freedom to persuade and suggest," what
he calls "the engineering of consent." If the freedom to
persuade happens to be concentrated in a few hands, we must recognize
that such is the nature of a free society.
Bernays expressed the basic point in a
public relations manual of 1928: "The conscious and intelligent
manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an
important element in democratic society... It is the intelligent
minorities which need to make use of propaganda continuously and
systematically." Given its enormous and decisive power, the highly
class conscious business community of the United States has been able to
put these lessons to effective use. Bernays' advocacy of propaganda is
cited by Thomas McCann, head of public relations for the United Fruit
Company, for which Bernays provided signal service in preparing the
ground for the overthrow of Guatemalan democracy in 1954, a major
triumph of business propaganda with the willing compliance of the media.
The intelligent minorities have long
understood this to be their function. Walter Lippmann described a
"revolution" in "the practice of democracy" as
"the manufacture of consent" has become "a self-conscious
art and a regular organ of popular government." This is a natural
development when public opinion cannot be trusted: "In the absence
of institutions and education by which the environment is so
successfully reported that the realities of public life stand out very
sharply against self-centered opinion, the common interests very largely
elude public opinion entirely, and can be managed only by a specialized
class whose personal interests reach beyond the locality," and are
thus able to perceive "the realities." These are the men of
best quality, who alone are capable of social and economic management.
It follows that two political roles must
be clearly distinguished, Lippmann goes on to explain. First, there is
the role assigned to the specialized class, the "insiders,"
the "responsible men," who have access to information and
understanding. Ideally, they should have a special education for public
office, and should master the criteria for solving the problems of
society: "In the degree to which these criteria can be made exact
and objective, political decision," which is their domain, "is
actually brought into relation with the interests of men." The
"public men" are, furthermore, to "lead opinion" and
take the responsibility for "the formation of a sound public
opinion." "They initiate, they administer, they settle,"
and should be protected from "ignorant and meddlesome
outsiders," the general public, who are incapable of dealing
"with the substance of the problem." The criteria we apply to
government are success in satisfying material and cultural wants, not
whether "it vibrates to the self-centered opinions that happen to
be floating in men's minds." Having mastered the criteria for
political decision, the specialized class, protected from public
meddling, will serve the public interest -- what is called "the
national interest" in the webs of mystification spun by the
academic social sciences and political commentary.
The second role is "the task of the
public," which is much more limited. It is not for the public,
Lippmann observes, to "pass judgment on the intrinsic merits"
of an issue or to offer analysis or solutions, but merely, on occasion,
to place "its force at the disposal" of one or another group
of "responsible men." The public "does not reason,
investigate, invent, persuade, bargain, or settle." Rather,
"the public acts only by aligning itself as the partisan of someone
in a position to act executively," once he has given the matter at
hand sober and disinterested thought. It is for this reason that
"the public must be put in its place." The bewildered herd,
trampling and roaring, "has its function": to be "the
interested spectators of action," not participants. Participation
is the duty of "the responsible man."
These ideas, described by Lippmann's
editors as a progressive "political philosophy for liberal
democracy," have an unmistakeable resemblance to the Leninist
concept of a vanguard party that leads the masses to a better life that
they cannot conceive or construct on their own. In fact, the transition
from one position to the other, from Leninist enthusiasm to
"celebration of America," has proven quite an easy one over
the years. This is not surprising, since the doctrines are similar at
their root. The critical difference lies in an assessment of the
prospects for power: through exploitation of mass popular struggle, or
service to the current masters.
There is, clearly enough, an unspoken
assumption behind the proposals of Lippmann and others: the specialized
class are offered the opportunity to manage public affairs by virtue of
their subordination to those with real power -- in our societies,
dominant business interests -- a crucial fact that is ignored in the
self-praise of the elect.
Lippmann's thinking on these matters
dates from shortly after World War I, when the liberal intellectual
community was much impressed with its success in serving as "the
faithful and helpful interpreters of what seems to be one of the
greatest enterprises ever undertaken by an American president" (New
Republic). The enterprise was Woodrow Wilson's interpretation of
his electoral mandate for "peace without victory" as the
occasion for pursuing victory without peace, with the assistance of the
liberal intellectuals, who later praised themselves for having
"impose[d] their will upon a reluctant or indifferent
majority," with the aid of propaganda fabrications about Hun
atrocities and other such devices. They were serving, often unwittingly,
as instruments of the British Ministry of Information, which secretly
defined its task as "to direct the thought of most of the
world."
Fifteen years later, the influential
political scientist Harold Lasswell explained in the Encyclopaedia
of the Social Sciences that when elites lack the requisite force
to compel obedience, social managers must turn to "a whole new
technique of control, largely through propaganda." He added the
conventional justification: we must recognize the "ignorance and
stupidity [of] ...the masses" and not succumb to "democratic
dogmatisms about men being the best judges of their own interests."
They are not, and we must control them, for their own good. The same
principle guides the business community. Others have developed similar
ideas, and put them into practice in the ideological institutions: the
schools, the universities, the popular media, the elite journals, and so
on. A challenge to these ideas arouses trepidation, sometimes fury, as
when students of the 1960s, instead of simply bowing to authority, began
to ask too many questions and to explore beyond the bounds established
for them. The pretense of manning the ramparts against the onslaught of
the barbarians, now a popular pose, is scarcely more than comical fraud.
The doctrines of Lippmann, Lasswell, and
others are entirely natural in any society in which power is narrowly
concentrated but formal mechanisms exist by which ordinary people may,
in theory, play some role in shaping their own affairs -- a threat that
plainly must be barred.
The techniques of manufacture of consent
are most finely honed in the United States, a more advanced business-run
society than its allies and one that is in important ways more free than
elsewhere, so that the ignorant and stupid masses are more dangerous.
But the same concerns arise in Europe, as in the past, heightened by the
fact that the European varieties of state capitalism have not yet
progressed as far as the United States in eliminating labor unions and
other impediments to rule by men (and occasionally women) of best
quality, thus restricting politics to factions of the business party.
The basic problem, recognized throughout, is that as the state loses the
capacity to control the population by force, privileged sectors must
find other methods to ensure that the rascal multitude is removed from
the public arena. And the insignificant nations must be subjected to the
same practices as the insignificant people. Liberal doves hold that
others should be free and independent, but not free to choose in ways
that we regard as unwise or contrary to our interests, a close
counterpart to the prevailing conception of democracy at home as a form
of population control.
A properly functioning system of
indoctrination has a variety of tasks, some rather delicate. One of its
targets is the stupid and ignorant masses. They must be kept that way,
diverted with emotionally potent oversimplifications, marginalized, and
isolated. Ideally, each person should be alone in front of the TV screen
watching sports, soap operas, or comedies, deprived of organizational
structures that permit individuals lacking resources to discover what
they think and believe in interaction with others, to formulate their
own concerns and programs, and to act to realize them. They can then be
permitted, even encouraged, to ratify the decisions of their betters in
periodic elections. The rascal multitude are the proper targets of the
mass media and a public education system geared to obedience and
training in needed skills, including the skill of repeating patriotic
slogans on timely occasions.
For submissiveness to become a reliable
trait, it must be entrenched in every realm. The public are to be
observers, not participants, consumers of ideology as well as products.
Eduardo Galeano writes that "the majority must resign itself to the
consumption of fantasy. Illusions of wealth are sold to the poor,
illusions of freedom to the oppressed, dreams of victory to the defeated
and of power to the weak." Nothing less will do.
The problem of indoctrination is a bit
different for those expected to take part in serious decision-making and
control: the business, state, and cultural managers, and articulate
sectors generally. They must internalize the values of the system and
share the necessary illusions that permit it to function in the
interests of concentrated power and privilege or at least be cynical
enough to pretend that they do, an art that not many can master. But
they must also have a certain grasp of the realities of the world, or
they will be unable to perform their tasks effectively. The elite media
and educational systems must steer a course through these dilemmas, not
an easy task, one plagued by internal contradictions. It is intriguing
to see how it is faced, but that is beyond the scope of these remarks.
For the home front, a variety of
techniques of manufacture of consent are required, geared to the
intended audience and its ranking on the scale of significance. For
those at the lowest rank, and for the insignificant peoples abroad,
another device is available, what a leading turn-of-the-century American
sociologist, Franklin Henry Giddings, called "consent without
consent": "if in later years, [the colonized] see and admit
that the disputed relation was for the highest interest, it may be
reasonably held that authority has been imposed with the consent of the
governed," as when a parent disciplines an uncomprehending child.
Giddings was referring to the "misguided creatures" that we
were reluctantly slaughtering in the Philippines, for their own good.
But the lesson holds more generally.
As noted, the Bolshevik overtones are
apparent throughout. The systems have crucial differences, but also
striking similarities. Lippmann's "specialized class" and
Bernays' "intelligent minority," which are to manage the
public and their affairs according to liberal democratic theory,
correspond to the Leninist vanguard of revolutionary intellectuals. The
"manufacture of consent" advocated by Lippmann, Bernays,
Niebuhr, Lasswell and others is the Agitprop of their Leninist
counterparts. Following a script outlined by Bakunin over a century ago,
the secular priesthood in both of the major systems of hierarchy and
coercion regard the masses as stupid and incompetent, a bewildered herd
who must be driven to a better world -- one that we, the intelligent
minority, will construct for them, either taking state power ourselves
in the Leninist model, or serving the owners and managers of the state
capitalist systems if it is impossible to exploit popular revolution to
capture the commanding heights.
Much as Bakunin had predicted long
before, the Leninist "Red bureaucracy" moved at once to
dismantle organs of popular control, particularly, any institutional
structures that might provide working people with some influence over
their affairs as producers or citizens.
Not surprisingly, the immediate
destruction of the incipient socialist tendencies that arose during the
ferment of popular struggle in 1917 has been depicted by the world's two
great propaganda systems as a victory for socialism. For the Bolsheviks,
the goal of the farce was to extract what advantage they could from the
moral prestige of socialism; for the West, the purpose was to defame
socialism and entrench the system of ownership and management control
over all aspects of economic, political, and social life. The collapse
of the Leninist system cannot properly be called a victory for
socialism, any more than the collapse of Hitler and Mussolini could be
described in these terms; but as in those earlier cases, it does
eliminate a barrier to the realization of the libertarian socialist
ideals of the popular movements that were crushed in Russia in 1917,
Germany shortly after, Spain in 1936, and elsewhere, often with the
Leninist vanguard leading the way in taming the rascal multitude with
their libertarian socialist and radical democratic aspirations.
Short of Force
Hume posed his paradox for both despotic
and more free societies. The latter case is by far the more important.
As the social world becomes more free and diverse, the task of inducing
submission becomes more complex and the problem of unraveling the
mechanisms of indoctrination, more challenging. But intellectual
interest aside, the case of free societies has greater significance for
us, because here we are talking about ourselves and can act upon what we
learn. It is for just this reason that the dominant culture will always
seek to externalize human concerns, directing them to the inadequacies
and abuses of others. When U.S. plans go awry in some corner of the
Third World, we devote our attention to the defects and special problems
of these cultures and their social disorders -- not our own. Fame,
fortune, and respect await those who reveal the crimes of official
enemies: those who undertake the vastly more important task of raising a
mirror to their own societies can expect quite different treatment.
George Orwell is famous for Animal Farm and 1984,
which focus on the official enemy. Had he addressed the more interesting
and significant question of thought control in relatively free and
democratic societies, it would not have been appreciated, and instead of
wide acclaim, he would have faced silent dismissal or obloquy. Let us
nevertheless turn to the more important and unacceptable questions.
Keeping to governments that are more
free and popular, why do the governed submit when force is on their
side? First, we have to look at a prior question: to what extent is
force on the side of the governed? Here some care is necessary.
Societies are considered free and democratic insofar as the power of the
state to coerce is limited. The United States is unusual in this
respect: Perhaps more than anywhere else in the world, the citizen is
free from state coercion, at least, the citizen who is relatively
privileged and of the right color, a substantial part of the population.
But it is a mere truism that the state
represents only one segment of the nexus of power. Control over
investment, production, commerce, finance, conditions of work, and other
crucial aspects of social policy lies in private hands. Unwillingness to
adapt to this structure of authority and domination carries costs,
ranging from state force to the costs of privation and struggle; even an
individual of independent mind can hardly fail to compare these to the
benefits, however meager, that accrue to submission. Meaningful choices
are thus narrowly limited. Similar factors limit the range of ideas and
opinion in obvious ways. Articulate expression is shaped by the same
private powers that control the economy. It is largely dominated by
major corporations that sell audiences to advertisers and naturally
reflect the interests of the owners and their market. The ability to
articulate and communicate one's views, concerns, and interests -- or
even to discover them -- is thus narrowly constrained as well.
Denial of these truisms about effective
power is at the heart of the structure of necessary illusion. Thus, a
media critic, reviewing a book on the press in the New York Times,
refers without argument to the "traditional Jeffersonian role"
of the press "as counterbalance to government power." The
phrase encapsulates three crucial assumptions, one historical, one
descriptive, one ideological. The historical claim is that Jefferson was
a committed advocate of freedom of the press, which is false. The second
is that the press in fact functions as a counterbalance to government
rather than as a faithful servant, presented here as doctrine, thus
evading any need to face the massive array of detailed documentation
that refutes this dogma. The ideological principle is that Jeffersonian
libertarianism (considered abstractly, apart from its realization in
practice) would demand that the press be a counterbalance to government
power. That is incorrect. The libertarian conception is that the press
should be independent, hence a counterbalance to centralized power of
any form. In Jefferson's day, the powers that loomed large were the
state, the church, and feudal structures. Shortly after, new forms of
centralized power emerged in the world of corporate capitalism. A
Jeffersonian would hold, then, that the press should be a counterbalance
to state or corporate power, and critically to the state-corporate
nexus. But to raise this point carries us into forbidden ground.
Apart from the general constraints on
choice and articulate opinion inherent in the concentration of private
power, it also set narrow limits on the actions of government. The
United States has again been unusual in this respect among the
industrial democracies, though convergence toward the U.S. pattern is
evident elsewhere. The United States is near the limit in its safeguards
for freedom from state coercion, and, also in the poverty of its
political life. There is essentially one political party, the business
party, with two factions. Shifting coalitions of investors account for a
large part of political history. Unions, or other popular organizations
that might offer a way for the general public to play some role in
influencing programs and policy choices, scarcely function apart from
the narrowest realm. The ideological system is bounded by the consensus
of the privileged. Elections are largely a ritual form. In congressional
elections, virtually all incumbents are returned to office, a reflection
of the vacuity of the political system and the choices it offers. There
is scarcely a pretense that substantive issues are at stake in the
presidential campaigns. Articulated programs are hardly more than a
device to garner votes, and candidates adjust their messages to their
audiences as public relations tacticians advise. Political commentators
ponder such questions as whether Reagan will remember his lines, or
whether Mondale looks too gloomy, or whether Dukakis can duck the slime
flung at him by George Bush's speech writers. In the 1984 elections, the
two political factions virtually exchanged traditional policies, the
Republicans presenting themselves as the party of Keynesian growth and
state intervention in the economy, the Democrats as the advocates of
fiscal conservatism; few even noticed. Half the population does not
bother to push the buttons, and those who take the trouble often
consciously vote against their own interest.
The public is granted an opportunity to
ratify decisions made elsewhere, in accord with the prescriptions of
Lippmann and other democratic theorists. It may select among
personalities put forth in a game of symbolic politics that only the
most naive take very seriously. When they do, they are mocked by
sophisticates. Criticism of President Bush's call for "revenue
enhancement" after having won the election by the firm and eloquent
promise not to raise taxes is a "political cheap shot,"
Harvard political scientist and media specialist Marty Linsky comments
under the heading "Campaign pledges -- made to be broken."
When Bush won the election by leading the public in the "read my
lips -- no new taxes" chant, he was merely expressing his
"world view," making "a statement of his hopes."
Those who thought he was promising no new taxes do not understand that
"elections and governing are different ball games, played with
different objectives and rules." "The purpose of elections is
to win," Linsky correctly observes, expressing the cynicism of the
sophisticated; and "the purpose of governing is to do the best for
the country," he adds, parroting the necessary illusions that
respectability demands.
Even when issues arise in the political
system, the concentration of effective power limits the threat. The
question is largely academic in the United States because of the
subordination of the political and ideological system to business
interests, but in democracies to the south, where conflicting ideas and
approaches reach the political arena, the situation is different. As is
again familiar, government policies that private power finds unwelcome
will lead to capital flight, disinvestment, and social decline until
business confidence is restored with the abandonment of the threat to
privilege; these facts of life exert a decisive influence on the
political system (with military force in reserve if matters get out of
hand, supported or applied by the North American enforcer). To put the
basic point crassly, unless the rich and powerful are satisfied,
everyone will suffer, because they control the basic social levers,
determining what will be produced and consumed, and what crumbs will
filter down to their subjects. For the homeless in the streets, then,
the primary objective is to ensure that the rich live happily in their
mansions. This crucial factor, along with simple control over resources,
severely limits the force on the side of the governed and diminishes
Hume's paradox in a well-functioning capitalist democracy in which the
general public is scattered and isolated.
Understanding of these basic conditions
-- tacit or explicit -- has long served as a guide for policy. Once
popular organizations are dispersed or crushed and decision-making power
is firmly in the hands of owners and managers, democratic forms are
quite acceptable, even preferable as a device of legitimation of elite
rule in a business-run "democracy." The pattern was followed
by U.S. planners in reconstructing the industrial societies after World
War II, and is standard in the Third World, though assuring stability of
the desired kind is far more difficult there, except by state terror.
Once a functioning social order is firmly established, an individual who
must find a (relatively isolated) place within it in order to survive
will tend to think its thoughts, adopt its assumptions about the
inevitability of certain forms of authority, and in general, adapt to
its ends. The costs of an alternative path or a challenge to power are
high, the resources are lacking, and the prospects limited. These
factors operate in slave and feudal societies -- where their efficacy
has duly impressed counterinsurgency theorists. In free societies, they
manifest themselves in other ways. If their power to shape behavior
begins to erode, other means must be sought to tame the rascal
multitude.
When force is on the side of the
masters, they may rely on relatively crude means of manufacture of
consent and need not overly concern themselves with the minds of the
herd. Nevertheless, even a violent terror state faces Hume's problem.
The modalities of state terrorism that the United States has devised for
its clients have commonly included at least a gesture towards
"winning hearts and minds," though experts warn against undue
sentimentality on this score, arguing that "all the dilemmas are
practical and as neutral in an ethical sense as the laws of
physics." Nazi Germany shared these concerns, as Albert Speer
discusses in his autobiography, and the same is true of Stalinist
Russia. Discussing this case, Alexander Gerschenkron observes that
"Whatever the strength of the army and the ubiquitousness of the
secret police which such a government may have at its disposal, it would
be naive to believe that those instruments of physical oppression can
suffice. Such a government can maintain itself in power only if it
succeeds in making people believe that it performs an important social
function which could not be discharged in its absence. Industrialization
provided such a function for the Soviet government..., [which] did what
no government relying on the consent of the governed could have done...
But, paradoxical as it may sound, these policies at the same time have
secured some broad acquiescence on the part of the people. If all the
forces of the population can be kept engaged in the processes of
industrialization and if this industrialization can be justified by the
promise of happiness and abundance for future generations and -- much
more importantly -- by the menace of military aggression from beyond the
borders, the dictatorial government will find its power broadly
unchallenged."
The thesis gains support from the rapid
collapse of the Soviet system when its incapacity to move to a more
advanced stage of industrial and technological development became
evident.
The Pragmatic Criterion
It is important to be aware of the
profound commitment of Western opinion to the repression of freedom and
democracy, by violence if necessary. To understand our own cultural
world, we must recognize that advocacy of terror is clear, explicit, and
principled, across the political spectrum. It is superfluous to invoke
the thoughts of Jeane Kirkpatrick, George Will, and the like. But little
changes as we move to "the establishment left," to borrow the
term used by Foreign Policy editor Charles William Maynes
in an ode to the American crusade "to spread the cause of
democracy."
Consider political commentator Michael
Kinsley, who represents "the left" in mainstream commentary
and television debate. When the State Department publicly confirmed U.S.
support for terrorist attacks on agricultural cooperatives in Nicaragua,
Kinsley wrote that we should not be too quick to condemn this official
policy. Such international terrorist operations doubtless cause
"vast civilian suffering," he conceded. But if they succeed
"to undermine morale and confidence in the government," then
they may be "perfectly legitimate." The policy is
"sensible" if "cost-benefit analysis" shows that
"the amount of blood and misery that will be poured in" yields
"democracy," in the conventional sense already discussed.
As a spokesperson for the establishment
left, Kinsley insists that terror must meet the pragmatic criterion;
violence should not be employed for its own sake, merely because we find
it amusing. This more humane conception would readily be accepted by
Saddam Hussein, Abu Nidal, and the Hizbollah kidnappers, who,
presumably, also consider terror pointless unless it is of value for
their ends. These facts help us situate enlightened Western opinion on
the international spectrum.
Such reasoned discussion of the
justification for terror is not at all unusual, which is why it elicits
no reaction in respectable circles just as there is no word of comment
among its left-liberal contributors and readers when the New
Republic, long considered the beacon of American liberalism,
advocates military aid to "Latin-style fascists...regardless of how
many are murdered" because "there are higher American
priorities than Salvadoran human rights."
Appreciation of the "salutary
efficacy" of terror, to borrow John Quincy Adams's phrase, has been
a standard feature of enlightened Western thought. It provides the basic
framework for the propaganda campaign concerning international terrorism
in the 1980s. Naturally, terrorism directed against us and our friends
is bitterly denounced as a reversion to barbarism. But far more extreme
terrorism that we and our agents conduct is considered constructive, or
at worst insignificant, if it meets the pragmatic criterion. Even the
vast campaign of international terrorism launched against Cuba by the
Kennedy administration, far exceeding anything attributed to official
enemies, does not exist in respected academic discourse or the
mainstream media. In his standard and much respected scholarly study of
international terrorism, Walter Laqueur depicts Cuba as a sponsor of the
crime with innuendos but scarcely a pretense of evidence, while the
campaign of international terrorism against Cuba merits literally
not a word; in fact, Cuba is classed among those societies "free
from terror."
The guiding principle is clear and
straightforward: their terror is terror, and the flimsiest
evidence suffices to denounce it and to exact retribution upon civilian
bystanders who happen to be in the way; our terror, even if far
more extreme, is merely statecraft, and therefore does not enter into
the discussion of the plague of the modern age. The practice is
understandable on the principles already discussed.
Huge massacres are treated by much the
same criteria: theirs are crimes, ours statecraft or
understandable error. In a study of U.S. power and ideology a decade
ago, Edward Herman and I reviewed numerous examples of two kinds of
atrocities, "benign and constructive bloodbaths" that are
acceptable or even advantageous to dominant interests, and
"nefarious blood-baths" perpetrated by official enemies. The
reaction follows the same pattern as the treatment of terrorism. The
former are ignored, denied, or sometimes even welcomed; the latter
elicit great outrage and often large-scale deceit and fabrication, if
the available evidence is felt to be inadequate for doctrinal
requirements.
Such devices as mass starvation have
always been considered entirely legitimate, if they meet the pragmatic
criterion. As director of the humanitarian program providing food to
starving Europeans after World War II, Herbert Hoover advised President
Wilson that he was "maintaining a thin line of food" to
guarantee the rule of anti-Bolshevik elements. In response to rumors of
"a serious outbreak on May Day" in Austria, Hoover issued a
public warning that any such action would jeopardize the city's sparse
food supply. Food was withheld from Hungary under the Communist Bela Kun
government, with a promise that it would be supplied if he were removed
in favor of a government acceptable to the U.S. The economic blockade,
along with Rumanian military pressure, forced Kun to relinquish power
and flee to Moscow. Backed by French and British forces, the Rumanian
military joined with Hungarian counter-revolutionaries to administer a
dose of White terror and install a right-wing dictatorship under Admiral
Horthy, who collaborated with Hitler in the next stage of slaying the
Bolshevik beast. The threat of starvation was also used to buy the
critical Italian elections of 1948 and to help impose the rule of U.S.
clients in Nicaragua in l990, among other noteworthy examples.
A review of the debate over Central
America during the past decade reveals the decisive role of the
pragmatic criterion. Guatemala was never an issue, because mass
slaughter and repression appeared to be effective. Early on, the Church
was something of a problem, but, as Kenneth Freed comments in the Los
Angeles Times, when "14 priests and hundreds of church
workers were killed in a military campaign to destroy church support for
social gains such as higher wages and an end to the exploitation of
Indians," the church was intimidated and "virtually fell
silent." "The physical intimidation ceased," the
pragmatic criterion having been satisfied. Terror increased again as the
U.S. nurtured what it likes to call "democracy." "The
victims," a European diplomat observes, "are almost always
people whose views or activities are aimed at helping others to free
themselves of restraints placed by those who hold political or economic
power," such as "a doctor who tries to improve the health of
babies" and is therefore "seen as attacking the established
order." The security forces of the "fledgling democracy,"
and the death squads associated with them, appeared to have the
situation reasonably well in hand, so there was no reason for undue
concern in the United States, and there has been virtually none.
Throughout this grim decade of savagery
and oppression, liberal humanists have presented themselves as critical
of the terror states maintained by U.S. violence in Central America. But
that is only a facade, as we see from the demand, virtually unanimous in
respectable circles, that Nicaragua must be restored to "the
Central American mode" of the death squad regimes, and that the
U.S. and its murderous clients must impose the "regional
standards" of El Salvador and Guatemala on the errant Sandinistas.
Returning to Hume's principles of
government, it is clear that they must be refined. True, when force is
lacking and the standard penalties do not suffice, it is necessary to
resort to the manufacture of consent. The populations of the Western
democracies -- or at least, those in a position to defend themselves --
are off limits. Others are legitimate objects of repression, and in the
Third World, large-scale terror is appropriate, though the liberal
conscience adds the qualification that it must be efficacious. The
statesman, as distinct from the ideological fanatic, will understand
that the means of violence should be employed in a measured and
considered way, just sufficient to achieve the desired ends.
The Range of Means
The pragmatic criterion dictates that
violence is in order only when the rascal multitude cannot be controlled
in other ways. Often, there are other ways. Another RAND corporation
counterinsurgency specialist was impressed by "the relative
docility of poorer peasants and the firm authority of landlords in the
more `feudal' areas... [where] the landlord can exercise considerable
influence over his tenant's behavior and readily discourage conduct
inconsistent with his own interests." It is only when the docility
is shaken, perhaps by meddlesome priests, that firmer measures are
required.
One option short of outright violence is
legal repression. In Costa Rica, the United States was willing to
tolerate social democracy. The primary reason for the benign neglect was
that labor was suppressed and the rights of investors offered every
protection. The founder of Costa Rican democracy, Jose Figueres, was an
avid partisan of U.S. corporations and the CIA, and was regarded by the
State Department as "the best advertising agency that the United
Fruit Company could find in Latin America." But the leading figure
of Central American democracy fell out of favor in the 1980s, and had to
be censored completely out of the Free Press, because of his critical
attitude towards the U.S. war against Nicaragua and Washington's moves
to restore Costa Rica as well to the preferred "Central American
mode." Even the effusive editorial and lengthy obituary in the New
York Times lauding this "fighter for democracy" when he
died in June 1990 were careful to avoid these inconvenient deviations.
In earlier years, when he was better
behaved, Figueres recognized that the Costa Rican Communist Party,
particularly strong among plantation workers, was posing an unacceptable
challenge. He therefore arrested its leaders, declared the party
illegal, and repressed its members. The policy was maintained through
the 1960s, while efforts to establish any working class party were
banned by the state authorities. Figueres explained these actions with
candor: it was "a sign of weakness. I admit it, when one is
relatively weak before the force of the enemy, it is necessary to have
the valor to recognise it." These moves were accepted in the West
as consistent with the liberal concept of democracy, and indeed, were
virtually a precondition for U.S. toleration of "the Costa Rican
exception."
Sometimes, however, legal repression is
not enough; the popular enemy is too powerful. The alarm bells are sure
to ring if they threaten the control of the political system by the
business-landowner elite and military elements properly respectful of
U.S. interests. Signs of such deviation call for stronger measures, as
in Central America through the past decade. The broader framework was
sketched by Father Ignacio Martin-Baro, one of the Jesuit priests
assassinated in November 1989 and a noted Salvadoran social
psychologist, in a talk he delivered in California on "The
Psychological Consequences of Political Terrorism," a few months
before he was murdered. He stressed several relevant points. First, the
most significant form of terrorism, by a large measure, is state
terrorism, that is, "terrorizing the whole population through
systematic actions carried out by the forces of the state." Second,
such terrorism is an essential part of a "government-imposed
socio-political project" designed for the needs of the privileged.
To implement it, the whole population must be "terrorized by an
internalized fear." Third, the sociopolitical project and the state
terrorism that helps implement it are not specific to El Salvador, but
are common features of the Third World domains of the United States. The
reasons are deeply rooted in Western culture, institutions, and policy
planning, and fully in accord with the values of enlightened opinion.
But terror is constrained by the pragmatic criterion. Thus, Martin-Baro
observes, the "massive campaign of political terrorism" in El
Salvador declined when "there was less need for extraordinary
events, because people were so terrorized, paralyzed."
In a paper on mass media and public
opinion in El Salvador which he was to deliver at an International
Congress in December 1989, the month after he was assassinated,
Martin-Baro wrote that the U.S. counterinsurgency project
"emphasized merely the formal dimensions of democracy," and
that the mass media must be understood as a mechanism of
"psychological warfare." The small independent journals in El
Salvador, mainstream and pro-business but still too undisciplined for
the rulers, had been taken care of by the security forces a decade
earlier in the usual efficacious manner -- kidnapping, assassination,
and physical destruction, events considered here too insignificant even
to report. As for public opinion, Martin-Baro's unread paper reports a
study showing that among workers, the lower-middle class, and the poor,
less than 20 percent feel free to express their opinions in public, a
figure that rose to 40 percent for the rich -- another tribute to the
salutary efficacy of terror, and another result that "all Americans
can be proud of," to borrow George Schultz's words of self-praise
for our achievements in El Salvador.
When Antonio Gramsci was imprisoned
after the Fascist takeover of Italy, the government summed up its case
by saying: "We must stop this brain from functioning for twenty
years." Our current favorites leave less to chance: the brains must
be stopped from functioning forever, and we agree that their thoughts
about such matters as state terrorism had best not be heard.
The results of U.S. military training
are evident in abundance in the documentation by human rights groups and
the Salvadoran Church. They are graphically described by Rev. Daniel
Santiago, a Catholic priest working in El Salvador, in the Jesuit
journal America. He reports the story of a peasant woman,
who returned home one day to find her mother, sister, and three children
sitting around a table, the decapitated head of each person placed
carefully on the table in front of the body, the hands arranged on top
"as if each body was stroking its own head." The assassins,
from the Salvadoran National Guard, had found it hard to keep the head
of an 18-month-old baby in place, so they nailed the hands onto it. A
large plastic bowl filled with blood was tastefully displayed in the
center of the table.
Rev. Santiago writes that macabre scenes
of the kind he recounts are designed by the armed forces for the purpose
of intimidation. "People are not just killed by death squads in El
Salvador -- they are decapitated and then their heads are placed on
pikes and used to dot the landscape. Men are not just disemboweled by
the Salvadoran Treasury Police; their severed genitalia are stuffed into
their mouths. Salvadoran women are not just raped by the National Guard;
their wombs are cut from their bodies and used to cover their faces. It
is not enough to kill children; they are dragged over barbed wire until
the flesh falls from their bones while parents are forced to
watch." "The aesthetics of terror in El Salvador is
religious." The intention is to ensure that the individual is
totally subordinated to the interests of the Fatherland, which is why
the death squads are sometimes called the "Army of National
Salvation" by the governing ARENA party, whose members (including
President Cristiani) take a blood oath to the
"leader-for-life," Roberto d'Aubuisson.
It has been a constant lament of U.S.
government officials that the Latin American countries are
insufficiently repressive, too open, too committed to civil liberties,
unwilling to impose sufficient constraints on travel and dissemination
of information, and in general reluctant to adhere to U.S. social and
political standards, thus tolerating conditions in which dissidence can
flourish and can reach a popular audience.
At home, even tiny groups may be subject
to severe repression if their potential outreach is perceived to be too
great. During the campaign waged by the national political police
against The Black Panthers -- including assassination, instigation of
ghetto riots, and a variety of other means -- the FBI estimated the
"hard core members" of the targeted organization at only 800,
but added ominously that "a recent poll indicates that
approximately 25 per cent of the black population has a great respect
for the [Black Panther Party], including 43 per cent of blacks under 21
years of age." The repressive agencies of the state proceeded with
a campaign of violence and disruption to ensure that the Panthers did
not succeed in organizing as a substantial social or political force --
with great success, as the organization was decimated and the remnants
proceeded to self-destruct. FBI operations in the same years targeting
the entire New Left were motivated by similar concerns. The same
internal intelligence document warns that "the movement of
rebellious youth known as the `New Left,' involving and influencing a
substantial number of college students, is having a serious impact on
contemporary society with a potential for serious domestic strife."
The New Left has "revolutionary aims" and an
"identification with Marxism-Leninism." It has attempted
"to infiltrate and radicalize labor," and after failing
"to subvert and control the mass media," has established
"a large network of underground publications which serve the dual
purpose of an internal communication network and an external propaganda
organ." It thus poses a threat to "the civilian sector of our
society," which must be contained by the state security apparatus.
We can learn a good deal by attention to
the range of choices. Keeping just to Latin America, consider the
efforts to eliminate the Allende regime in Chile. There were two
parallel operations. Track II, the hard line, aimed at a military coup.
This was concealed from Ambassador Edward Korry, a Kennedy liberal,
whose task was to implement Track I, the soft line; in Korry's words, to
"do all within our power to condemn Chile and the Chileans to
utmost deprivation and poverty, a policy designed for a long time to
come to accelerate the hard features of a Communist society in
Chile." The soft line was an extension of the long-term CIA effort
to control Chilean democracy. One indication of its level is that in the
1964 election, the CIA spent twice as much per Chilean voter to block
Allende as the total spent per voter by both parties in the U.S.
elections of the same year. Similarly in the case of Cuba, the
Eisenhower administration planned a direct attack while Vice-President
Nixon, keeping to the soft line in a secret discussion of June 1960,
expressed his concern that according to a CIA briefing, "Cuba's
economic situation had not deteriorated significantly since the
overthrow of Batista," then urging specific measures to place
"greater economic pressure on Cuba."
To take another informative case, in
1949 the CIA identified "two areas of instability" in Latin
America: Bolivia and Guatemala. The Eisenhower administration pursued
the hard line to overthrow capitalist democracy in Guatemala but chose
the soft line with regard to a Bolivian revolution that had the support
of the Communist Party and radical tin miners, had led to expropriation,
and had even moved towards "criminal agitation of the Indians of
the farms and mines" and a pro-peace conference, a right-wing
Archbishop warned. The White House concluded that the best plan was to
support the least radical elements, expecting that U.S. pressures,
including domination of the tin market, would serve to control unwanted
developments. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles urged that this
would be the best way to contain the "Communist infection in South
America." Following standard policy guidelines, the U.S. took
control over the Bolivian military, equipping it with modern armaments
and sending hundreds of officers to the "school of coups" in
Panama and elsewhere. Bolivia was soon subject to U.S. influence and
control. By 1953, the National Security Council noted improvement in
"the climate for private investment," including "an
agreement permitting a private American firm to exploit two petroleum
areas."
A military coup took place in 1964. A
1980 coup was carried out with the assistance of Klaus Barbie, who had
been sent to Bolivia when he could no longer be protected in France,
where he had been working under U.S. control to repress the anti-fascist
resistance, as he had done under the Nazis. According to a recent UNICEF
study, one out of three Bolivian infants dies in the first year of life,
so that Bolivia has the slowest rate of population growth in Latin
America along with the highest birth rate. The FAO estimates that the
average Bolivian consumes 78 percent of daily minimum calorie and
protein requirements and that more than half of Bolivian children suffer
from malnutrition. Of the economically active population, 25 percent are
unemployed and another 40 percent work in the "informal
sector" (e.g., smuggling and drugs). The situation in Guatemala we
have already reviewed.
Several points merit attention. First,
the consequences of the hard line in Guatemala and the soft line in
Bolivia were similar. Second, both policy decisions were successful in
their major aim: containing the "Communist virus," the threat
of "ultranationalism." Third, both policies are evidently
regarded as quite proper, as we can see in the case of Bolivia by the
complete lack of interest in what has happened since (apart from
possible costs to the U.S. through the drug racket); and with regard to
Guatemala, by the successful intervention under Kennedy to block a
democratic election, the direct U.S. participation in murderous
counterinsurgency campaigns under Lyndon Johnson, the continuing supply
of arms to Guatemala through the late 1970s (contrary to illusory
claims) and the reliance on our Israeli mercenary state to fill any gaps
when congressional restrictions finally took effect, the enthusiastic
U.S. support for atrocities that go well beyond even the astonishing
Guatemalan norm in the 1980s, and the applause for the "fledgling
democracy" that the ruling military now tolerates as a means to
extort money from Congress. We may say that these are "messy
episodes" and "blundering" (which in fact succeeded in
its major aims), but nothing more (Stephen Kinzer). Fourth, the soft
line and the hard line were adopted by the same people, at the same
time, revealing that the issues are tactical, involving no departure
from shared principle. All of this provides insight into the nature of
policy, and the political culture in which it is formed.
The Untamed Rabble
Hume's paradox of government arises only
if we suppose that a crucial element of essential human nature is what
Bakunin called "an instinct for freedom." It is the failure to
act upon this instinct that Hume found surprising. The same failure
inspired Rousseau's classic lament that people are born free but are
everywhere in chains, seduced by the illusions of the civil society that
is created by the rich to guarantee their plunder. Some may adopt this
assumption as one of the "natural beliefs" that guide their
conduct and their thought. There have been efforts to ground the
instinct for freedom in a substantive theory of human nature. They are
not without interest, but they surely come nowhere near establishing the
case. Like other tenets of common sense, this belief remains a
regulative principle that we adopt, or reject, on faith. Which choice we
make can have large-scale effects for ourselves and others.
Those who adopt the common sense
principle that freedom is our natural right and essential need will
agree with Bertrand Russell that anarchism is "the ultimate ideal
to which society should approximate." Structures of hierarchy and
domination are fundamentally illegitimate. They can be defended only on
grounds of contingent need, an argument that rarely stands up to
analysis. As Russell went on to observe 70 years ago, "the old
bonds of authority" have little intrinsic merit. Reasons are needed
for people to abandon their rights, "and the reasons offered are
counterfeit reasons, convincing only to those who have a selfish
interest in being convinced." "The condition of revolt,"
he went on, "exists in women towards men, in oppressed nations
towards their oppressors, and above all in labour towards capital. It is
a state full of danger, as all past history shows, yet also full of
hope."
Russell traced the habit of submission
in part to coercive educational practices. His views are reminiscent of
17th and 18th century thinkers who held that the mind is not to be
filled with knowledge "from without, like a vessel," but
"to be kindled and awaked." "The growth of knowledge
[resembles] the growth of Fruit; however external causes may in some
degree cooperate, it is the internal vigour, and virtue of the tree,
that must ripen the juices to their just maturity." Similar
conceptions underlie Enlightenment thought on political and intellectual
freedom, and on alienated labor, which turns the worker into an
instrument for other ends instead of a human being fulfilling inner
needs -- a fundamental principle of classical liberal thought, though
long forgotten, because of its revolutionary implications. These ideas
and values retain their power and their pertinence, though they are very
remote from realization, anywhere. As long as this is so, the
libertarian revolutions of the 18th century remain far from consummated,
a vision for the future.
One might take this natural belief to be
confirmed by the fact that despite all efforts to contain them, the
rabble continue to fight for their fundamental human rights. And over
time, some libertarian ideals have been partially realized or have even
become common coin. Many of the outrageous ideas of the 17th century
radical democrats, for example, seem tame enough today, though other
early insights remain beyond our current moral and intellectual reach.
The struggle for freedom of speech is an
interesting case, and a crucial one, since it lies at the heart of a
whole array of freedoms and rights. A central question of the modern era
is when, if ever, the state may act to interdict the content of
communications. As noted earlier, even those regarded as leading
libertarians have adopted restrictive and qualified views on this
matter. One critical element is seditious libel, the idea that the state
can be criminally assaulted by speech, "the hallmark of closed
societies throughout the world," legal historian Harry Kalven
observes. A society that tolerates laws against seditious libel is not
free, whatever its other virtues. In late 17th century England, men were
castrated, disemboweled, quartered, and beheaded for the crime. Through
the 18th century, there was a general consensus that established
authority could be maintained only by silencing subversive discussion,
and "any threat, whether real or imagined, to the good reputation
of the government" must be barred by force (Leonard Levy).
"Private men are not judges of their superiors... [for] This wou'd
confound all government," one editor wrote. Truth was no defense:
true charges are even more criminal than false ones, because they tend
even more to bring authority into disrepute.
Treatment of dissident opinion,
incidentally, follows a similar model in our more libertarian era. False
and ridiculous charges are no real problem: it is the unconscionable
critics who reveal unwanted truths from whom society must be protected.
The doctrine of seditious libel was also
upheld in the American colonies. The intolerance of dissent during the
revolutionary period is notorious. The leading American libertarian,
Thomas Jefferson, agreed that punishment was proper for "a traitor
in thought, but not in deed," and authorized internment of
political suspects. He and the other Founders agreed that
"traitorous or disrespectful words" against the authority of
the national state or any of its component states was criminal.
"During the Revolution," Leonard Levy observes,
"Jefferson, like Washington, the Adamses, and Paine, believed that
there could be no toleration for serious differences of political
opinion on the issue of independence, no acceptable alternative to
complete submission to the patriot cause. Everywhere there was unlimited
liberty to praise it, none to criticize it." At the outset of the
Revolution, the Continental Congress urged the states to enact
legislation to prevent the people from being "deceived and drawn
into erroneous opinion." It was not until the Jeffersonians were
themselves subjected to repressive measures in the late 1790s that they
developed a body of more libertarian thought for self-protection --
reversing course, however, when they gained power themselves.
Until World War I, there was only a
slender basis for freedom of speech in the United States, and it was not
until 1964 that the law of seditious libel was struck down by the
Supreme Court. In 1969, the Court finally protected speech apart from
"incitement to imminent lawless action." Two centuries after
the revolution, the Court at last adopted the position that had been
advocated in 1776 by Jeremy Bentham, who argued that a free government
must permit "malcontents" to "communicate their
sentiments, concert their plans, and practice every mode of opposition
short of actual revolt, before the executive power can be legally
justified in disturbing them." The 1969 Supreme Court decision
formulated a libertarian standard which, I believe, is unique in the
world. In Canada, for example, people are still imprisoned for
promulgating "false news," recognized as a crime in 1275 to
protect the King.
In Europe, the situation is still more
primitive. France is a striking case, because of the dramatic contrast
between the self-congratulatory rhetoric and repressive practice so
common as to pass unnoticed. England has only limited protection for
freedom of speech, and even tolerates such a disgrace as a law of
blasphemy. The reaction to the Salman Rushdie affair, most dramatically
on the part of self-styled "conservatives," was particularly
noteworthy. Rushdie was charged with seditious libel and blasphemy in
the courts, but the High Court ruled that the law of blasphemy extended
only to Christianity, not Islam, and that only verbal attack
"against Her Majesty or Her Majesty's Government or some other
institution of the state" counts as seditious libel. Thus the Court
upheld a fundamental doctrine of the Ayatollah Khomeini, Stalin,
Goebbels, and other opponents of freedom, while recognizing that English
law protects only domestic power from criticism. Doubtless many would
agree with Conor Cruise O'Brien, who, when Minister for Posts and
Telegraphs in Ireland, amended the Broadcasting Authority Act to permit
the Authority to refuse to broadcast any matter that, in the judgment of
the minister, "would tend to undermine the authority of the
state."
We should also bear in mind that the
right to freedom of speech in the United States was not established by
the First Amendment to the Constitution, but only through dedicated
efforts over a long period by the labor movement, the civil rights and
anti-war movements of the 1960s, and other popular forces. James Madison
pointed out that a "parchment barrier" will never suffice to
prevent tyranny. Rights are not established by words, but won and
sustained by struggle.
It is also worth recalling that
victories for freedom of speech are often won in defense of the most
depraved and horrendous views. The 1969 Supreme Court decision was in
defense of the Ku Klux Klan from prosecution after a meeting with hooded
figures, guns, and a burning cross, calling for "burning the
nigger" and "sending the Jews back to Israel." With
regard to freedom of expression there are basically two positions: you
defend it vigorously for views you hate, or you reject it in favor of
Stalinist/Fascist standards.
Whether the instinct for freedom is real
or not, we do not know. If it is, history teaches that it can be dulled,
but has yet to be killed. The courage and dedication of people
struggling for freedom, their willingness to confront extreme state
terror and violence, is often remarkable. There has been a slow growth
of consciousness over many years and goals have been achieved that were
considered utopian or scarcely contemplated in earlier eras. An
inveterate optimist can point to this record and express the hope that
with a new decade, and soon a new century, humanity may be able to
overcome some of its social maladies; others might draw a different
lesson from recent history. It is hard to see rational grounds for
affirming one or the other perspective. As in the case of many of the
natural beliefs that guide our lives, we can do no better than to choose
according to our intuition and hopes.
The consequences of such a choice are
not obscure. By denying the instinct for freedom, we will only prove
that humans are a lethal mutation, an evolutionary dead end: by
nurturing it, if it is real, we may find ways to deal with dreadful
human tragedies and problems that are awesome in scale.
This article was originally published in
Z
Magazine, an independent magazine of critical thinking on political,
cultural, social, and economic life in the U.S. It sees the racial,
gender, class, and political dimensions of personal life as fundmental
to understanding and improving contemporary circumstances; and it aims
to assist activist efforts for a better future.
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