America
– the Most Frightened Nation on Earth
Finian
Cunningham
20
May, 2016
America is
exceptional alright. It is the most frightened nation on Earth,
subjected to hysterical propaganda over decades warning about foreign
enemies and ideologies. No wonder its supposed democratic freedom is
in so appallingly bad shape, when the preponderant population is
imprisoned by their rulers in a virtual cage of fear.
Paradoxically,
though, the dissonance of supposed freedom could not be more abysmal.
At a press conference at the Cannes film festival last week American
screen actor George Clooney digressed from his latest movie to talk
about Republican presidential contender Donald Trump. Clooney, who is
well known for his liberal brand of US politics and a big supporter
of Democrat candidate Hillary Clinton, predicted that
rightwing business tycoon Trump would not win the forthcoming
November presidential contest.
Clooney
dismissed Trump as a demagogue sowing fear and divisive tensions
along racial and xenophobic lines. Which is fair enough. Of interest
here is not so much the actor’s views on Trump’s chances of
political success. Rather, it is Clooney’s premise that Americans
would not succumb to reactionary fear peddling.
Seated
at the press conference alongside his American co-star Julia Roberts
and film director Jody Foster, Clooney told his Cannes
audience: «Fear
is not going to drive our country… we’re not afraid of anything».
Well,
sorry George, but you are dead wrong on that score. Fear is the
paramount emotional driver in American politics since at least the
Second World War, and probably decades before that too.
Contrary
to Clooney’s bravado, Americans are very, very afraid.
The
biggest bogeyman for the US public was the Soviet Union, whose
specter dominated American politics for nearly 50 years. This specter
has been conjured up again through casting Russia and its President
Vladimir Putin as intent on «resurrecting the Soviet Union».
It
was Hillary Clinton – Clooney’s political champion – who made
the ridiculous and historically illiterate charge that
Putin is the «new Hitler». Many other senior US political figures
and Western news media have since stampeded like a herd in likewise
demonizing the Russian leader.
The
unquestioned consensus in Washington, from President Barack Obama to
his foreign secretary John Kerry, and from senior Congressional
figures to the Pentagon chiefs, is that Russia is an existential
threat to global security.
America’s
new NATO military chief General Curtis Scaparrotti has warned that
the US-led alliance must be prepared to go to war against Russia at
any moment due to alleged Russian aggression towards Eastern Europe
and the Baltic states.
The
Cold War has thus been rehabilitated a quarter of a century since the
Soviet Union dissolved. As in former times, fear is once again
fueling American politics. Consistently, there is negligible
objective basis for this mass phenomenon. Russia today is not a
threat to the US or its NATO allies, just as the Soviet Union was not
a threat.
Bombastic
claims about Russian «annexation» and «invasion» of Ukraine are
factually tenuous, spurious or devoid. The claims don’t stand up to
scrutiny. But that’s hardly the point. The point is that the false
narrative – propaganda – of alleged Russian malevolence is
amplified and repeated over and over again in Western «independent»
media, not unlike the Big Lie technique of Nazi spinmeister Josef
Goebbels.
US
and Western allies, with the help of pliable news media, in effect
are able to construct their own false «reality». It is not
objective reality. It is a subjective, delusional «reality» one in
which Western nations are portrayed to be under threat from a
stalking, salivating enemy in the form of Russia.
Fear
is a powerful lever for control over populations, as English author
George Orwell keenly perceived. Get the public to fear for their
lives from an external enemy, and they will be easily manipulated
into accepting authority, no matter how draconian and illegitimate
that authority is. Fear is the key to surrendering democratic rights
and submitting to a cage.
From
the end of the Second World War in 1945, the West immediately needed
the Cold War with the Soviet Union as a bulwark against more
progressive, democratic development within their own countries.
American writer David Talbot in his book, The
Devil’s Chessboard,
clearly depicts how Wall Street, the Pentagon and ideologically
inclined politicians were able to construct the monstrous
military-industrial complex and its gargantuan consumption of
economic resources for the enrichment of an elite ruling class –
based on Cold War angst and trepidation about the «evil Soviet
Union».
When
a minority of skeptical, more independently intelligent politicians,
authors or artists questioned the Cold War assertions they were
peremptorily ostracized as «Reds», «traitors» or indeed
assassinated by the military-industrial complex, as David Talbot
convincingly argues in the case of President John F Kennedy.
This
perverse distortion and waste of US economic resources – a $600
billion military
budget year
after year overshadowing all other social needs – is engineered
precisely through fear. American military might must be supreme and
sacrosanct in order to «defend» or «protect» US vital interests
and those of its allies from «existential threats». Russia, and to
a lesser extent China, continues to be designated in the role of
global threat.
To
this end, Americans have been subjected to a relentless psychological
program – euphemistically referred to as «news» – for the past
seven decades. Europeans too. Perhaps in the whole of Europe the
British media is the most toxic and reactionary when it comes to
demonizing Russia.
The
manipulation of the Western public mind is flagrant. The claims
against Russia are preposterous, but astoundingly the manipulation,
to a degree, succeeds.
However,
the domination through fear is not as omnipotent as it once was.
During the former Cold War, the Western public were far more
susceptible to the depiction of «evil» Soviet menace.
This
is no longer the case. Western media have long been discredited over
fabricating lies, such as the pretext for the Bush-Blair war on Iraq
and other criminal US-led regime-change operations, including Libya,
Syria and Ukraine. Today, Western citizens have more access to
alternative information sources, including Russian mass media and
critical internet news outlets within their own countries. The Big
Lie technique, while still potent, is not quite as effective as it
was in former times.
This
new historical development in public awareness is reflected in the
growing, popular discontent across Europe towards governments that
are seen to be slavishly toeing Washington’s policy of aggression
against Russia. Citizens are angrily questioning why they are made to
accept economic austerity while US-led sanctions against Russia are
hitting their jobs, businesses and export revenues. Citizens are
rightly furious that they are told there are no financial resources
for public services and infrastructure, while billions of dollars are
pumped into NATO forces to recklessly provoke tensions with Russia.
Of
course, the anomalies in Western government priorities with regard to
meeting public needs are ludicrous, unjustifiable and unsustainable.
And the only way that Western rulers can get away with such absurd
denial of democratic realities is to play the fear factor. Nowhere
has the fear factor been played more than in the US – ironically,
the nation which proclaims from the rooftops to be exceptional, free
and democratic.
George
Clooney would do better to stick to the silver screen where his
heroics and valor shine larger than life – in fiction. «The
American people are not afraid of anything», he
claimed in real life. George, with respect, your people are the most
scared on the planet; and the brainwashing system is so good, that
you and they don’t even know that. Indeed, haven’t even an
inkling of the gross manipulation
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