-Caveat Lector-

Escaping the Matrix
What if consensus reality is a fabricated illusion? Are you ready for the red
pill?

By Richard K. Moore
(Whole Earth Summer 2000)




Richard K. Moore is an expatriate software programmer from Silicon Valley who
has lived for the past six years in rural Ireland. However, capitalizing on
one of the better side effects of globalization, he and Canadian collaborator
Jan Slakov have coordinated Internet discussions about new economic and
political paradigms among hundreds of people worldwide, via e-mail lists and
the Citizens for a Democratic Renaissance Web site. This article is a
distillation of Moore's book-in-progress, which can be found in fuller form
at http://www.cyberjournal.org. Richard can be reached at cyberjournal.org.


The defining dramatic moment in the film The Matrix [Warner Bros., 1999]
occurs just after Morpheus invites Neo to choose between a red pill and a
blue pill. The red pill promises "the truth, nothing more." Neo takes the red
pill and awakes to reality--something utterly different from anything Neo, or
the audience, could have expected. What Neo had assumed to be reality turns
out to be only a collective illusion, fabricated by the Matrix and fed to a
population that is asleep, cocooned in grotesque embryonic pods. In Plato's
famous parable about the shadows on the walls of the cave, true reality is at
least reflected in perceived reality. In the Matrix world, true reality and
perceived reality exist on entirely different planes.


The story is intended as metaphor, and the parallels that drew my attention
had to do with political reality. This article offers a particular
perspective on what's going on in the world--and how things got to be that
way--in this era of globalization. From that red-pill perspective, everyday
media-consensus reality--like the Matrix in the film--is seen to be a
fabricated collective illusion. Like Neo, I didn't know what I was looking
for when my investigation began, but I knew that what I was being told didn't
make sense. I read scores of histories and biographies, observing connections
between them, and began to develop my own theories about roots of various
historical events.


I found myself largely in agreement with writers like Noam Chomsky and
Michael Parenti, but I also perceived important patterns that others seemed
to have missed. When I started tracing historical forces, and began to
interpret present-day events from a historical perspective, I could see the
same old dynamics at work and found a meaning in unfolding events far
different from what official pronouncements proclaimed. Such pronouncements
are, after all, public relations fare, given out by politicians who want to
look good to the voters. Most of us expect rhetoric from politicians, and
take what they say with a grain of salt. But as my own picture of present
reality came into focus, "grain of salt" no longer worked as a metaphor. I
began to see that consensus reality--as generated by official rhetoric and
amplified by mass media--bears very little relationship to actual reality.
"The matrix" was a metaphor I was ready for.


In consensus reality (the blue-pill perspective) "left" and "right" are the
two ends of the political spectrum. Politics is a tug-of-war between
competing factions, carried out by political parties and elected
representatives. Society gets pulled this way and that within the political
spectrum, reflecting the interests of whichever party won the last election.
The left and right are therefore political enemies. Each side is convinced
that it knows how to make society better; each believes the other enjoys
undue influence; and each blames the other for the political stalemate that
apparently prevents society from dealing effectively with its problems.


This perspective on the political process, and on the roles of left and
right, is very far from reality. It is a fabricated collective illusion.
Morpheus tells Neo that the Matrix is "the world that was pulled over your
eyes to hide you from the truth....As long as the Matrix exists, humanity
cannot be free." Consensus political reality is precisely such a matrix.
Later we will take a fresh look at the role of left and right, and at
national politics. But first we must develop our red-pill historical
perspective. I've had to condense the arguments to bare essentials; please
see the annotated sources at the end for more thorough treatments of
particular topics.

Imperialism and the Matrix

>From the time of Columbus to 1945, world affairs were largely dominated by
competition among Western nations (primarily western Europe, later joined by
the United States) seeking to stake out spheres of influence, control sea
lanes, and exploit colonial empires. Each Western power became the core of an
imperialist economy whose periphery was managed for the benefit of the core
nation. Military might determined the scope of an empire; wars were initiated
when a core nation felt it had sufficient power to expand its periphery at
the expense of a competitor. Economies and societies in the periphery were
kept backward--to keep their populations under control, to provide cheap
labor, and to guarantee markets for goods manufactured in the core.
Imperialism robbed the periphery not only of wealth but also of its ability
to develop its own societies, cultures, and economies in a natural way for
local benefit.


The driving force behind Western imperialism has always been the pursuit of
economic gain, ever since Isabella commissioned Columbus on his first
entrepreneurial voyage. The rhetoric of empire concerning wars, however, has
typically been about other things--the White Man's Burden, bringing true
religion to the heathens, Manifest Destiny, defeating the Yellow Peril or the
Hun, seeking lebensraum, or making the world safe for democracy. Any
fabricated motivation for war or empire would do, as long as it appealed to
the collective consciousness of the population at the time. The propaganda
lies of yesterday were recorded and became consensus history--the fabric of
the matrix.


While the costs of territorial empire (fleets, colonial administrations,
etc.) were borne by Western taxpayers generally, the profits of imperialism
were enjoyed primarily by private corporations and investors. Government and
corporate elites were partners in the business of imperialism: Empires gave
government leaders power and prestige, and gave corporate leaders power and
wealth. Corporations ran the real business of empire while government leaders
fabricated noble excuses for the wars that were required to keep that
business going. Matrix reality was about patriotism, national honor, and
heroic causes; true reality was on another plane altogether: that of
economics.


Industrialization, beginning in the late 1700s, created a demand for new
markets and increased raw materials. Both demands spurred accelerated
expansion of empire. Wealthy investors amassed fortunes by setting up
large-scale industrial and trading operations, leading to the emergence of an
influential capitalist elite. Like any other elite, capitalists used their
wealth and influence to further their own interests however they could. And
the interests of capitalism always come down to economic growth; investors
must reap more than they sow or the whole system comes to a grinding halt.


Thus capitalism, industrialization, nationalism, warfare, imperialism--and
the matrix--coevolved. Industrial-ized weapon production provided the muscle
of modern warfare, and capitalism provided the appetite to use that muscle.
Government leaders pursued the policies necessary to expand empire while
creating a rhetorical matrix, around nationalism, to justify those policies.
Capitalist growth depended on empire, which in turn depended on a strong and
stable core nation to defend it. National interests and capitalist interests
were inextricably linked--or so it seemed for more than two centuries.

World War II and the Pax Americana

1945 will be remembered as the year World War II ended and the bond of the
atomic nucleus was broken. But 1945 also marked another momentous
fission--breaking of the bond between national and capitalist interests.
After every previous war, and in many cases after severe devastation,
European nations had always picked themselves back up and resumed their
competition over empire. But after World War II, a Pax Americana was
established. The US began to manage all the Western peripheries on behalf of
capitalism generally, while preventing the communist powers from interfering
in the game. Capitalist powers no longer needed to fight over investment
realms, and competitive imperialism was replaced by collective imperialism.
Opportunities for capital growth were no longer linked to the military power
of nations, apart from the power of America. In his Killing Hope: U.S.
Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, William Blum chronicles
hundreds of significant covert and overt interventions, showing exactly how
the US carried out its imperial management role.


In the postwar years, matrix reality diverged ever further from actual
reality. In the postwar matrix world, imperialism had been abandoned and the
world was being "democratized"; in the real world, imperialism had become
better organized and more efficient. In the matrix world, the US "restored
order," or "came to the assistance" of nations that were being "undermined by
Soviet influence"; in the real world, the periphery was being systematically
suppressed and exploited. In the matrix world, the benefit was going to the
periphery in the form of countless aid programs; in the real world, immense
wealth was being extracted from the periphery.

Glitches in the Matrix, Popular Rebellion, and Neoliberalism

Growing glitches in the matrix weren't noticed by most people in the West,
because the postwar years brought unprecedented levels of Western prosperity
and social progress. The rhetoric claimed progress would come to all, and
Westerners could see it being realized in their own towns and cities. The
West became the collective core of a global empire, and exploitative
development led to prosperity for Western populations, while generating
immense riches for corporations, banks, and wealthy capital investors.


The parallel agenda of Third World exploitation and Western prosperity worked
effectively for the first two postwar decades. But in the 1960s, large
numbers of Westerners, particularly the young and well educated, began to
notice glitches in the matrix. In Vietnam, imperialism was too naked to be
successfully masked as something else. A major split in American public
consciousness occurred as millions of antiwar protestors and civil rights
activists punctured the fabricated consensus of the 1950s and declared the
reality of exploitation and suppression both at home and abroad. The
environmental movement arose, challenging even the exploitation of the
natural world. In Europe, 1968 joined 1848 as a landmark year of popular
protest.


These developments disturbed elite planners. The postwar regime's stability
was being challenged from within the core--and the formula of Western
prosperity no longer guaranteed public passivity. A report published in 1975,
the Report of the Trilateral Task Force on Governability of Democracies,
provides a glimpse into the thinking of elite circles. Alan Wolfe discusses
this report in Holly Sklar's eye-opening Trilateralism. Wolfe focuses
especially on the analysis Harvard professor Samuel P. Huntington presented
in a section of the report entitled "The Crisis of Democracy." Huntington is
an articulate promoter of elite policy shifts, and contributes pivotal
articles to publications such as the Council on Foreign Relations's Foreign
Affairs.


Huntington tells us that democratic societies "cannot work" unless the
citizenry is "passive." The "democratic surge of the 1960s" represented an
"excess of democracy," which must be reduced if governments are to carry out
their traditional domestic and foreign policies. Huntington's notion of
"traditional policies" is expressed in a passage from the report:


To the extent that the United States was governed by anyone during the
decades after World War II, it was governed by the President acting with the
support and cooperation of key individuals and groups in the executive
office, the federal bureaucracy, Congress, and the more important businesses,
banks, law firms, foundations, and media, which constitute the private
sector's "Establishment."


In these few words, Huntington spells out the reality that electoral
democracy has little to do with how America is run, and summarizes the kind
of people who are included within the elite planning community. Who needs
conspiracy theories when elite machinations are clearly described in public
documents like these?


Besides failing to deliver popular passivity, the policy of prosperity for
Western populations had another downside, having to do with Japan's economic
success. Under the Pax Americana umbrella, Japan had been able to
industrialize and become an imperial player--the prohibition on Japanese
rearmament had become irrelevant. With Japan's lower postwar living
standards, Japanese producers could undercut prevailing prices and steal
market share from Western producers. Western capital needed to find a way to
become more competitive on world markets, and Western prosperity was standing
in the way. Elite strategists, as Huntington showed, were fully capable of
understanding these considerations, and the requirements of corporate growth
created a strong motivation to make the needed adjustments--in both reality
and rhetoric.


If popular prosperity could be sacrificed, there were many obvious ways
Western capital could be made more competitive. Production could be moved
overseas to low-wage areas, allowing domestic unemployment to rise. Unions
could be attacked and wages forced down, and people could be pushed into
temporary and part-time jobs without benefits. Regulations governing
corporate behavior could be removed, corporate and capital-gains taxes could
be reduced, and the revenue losses could be taken out of public-service
budgets. Public infrastructures could be privatized, the services reduced to
cut costs, and then they could be milked for easy profits while they
deteriorated from neglect.


These are the very policies and programs launched during the Reagan-Thatcher
years in the US and Britain. They represent a systematic project of
increasing corporate growth at the expense of popular prosperity and welfare.
Such a real agenda would have been unpopular, and a corresponding matrix
reality was fabricated for public consumption. The matrix reality used real
terms like "deregulation," "reduced taxes," and "privatization," but around
them was woven an economic mythology. The old, failed laissez-faire doctrine
of the 1800s was reintroduced with the help of Milton Friedman's Chicago
School of economics, and "less government" became the proud "modern" theme in
America and Britain. Sensible regulations had restored financial stability
after the Great Depression, and had broken up anti-competitive monopolies
such as the Rockefeller trust and AT&T. But in the new matrix reality, all
regulations were considered bureaucratic interference. Reagan and Thatcher
preached the virtues of individualism, and promised to "get government off
people's backs." The implication was that everyday individuals were to get
more money and freedom, but in reality the primary benefits would go to
corporations and wealthy investors.


The academic term for laissez-faire economics is "economic liberalism," and
hence the Reagan-Thatcher revolution has come to be known as the "neoliberal
revolution." It brought a radical change in actual reality by returning to
the economic philosophy that led to sweatshops, corruption, and robber-baron
monopolies in the nineteenth century. It brought an equally radical change in
matrix reality--a complete reversal in the attitude that was projected
regarding government. Government policies had always been criticized in the
media, but the institution of government had always been
respected--reflecting the traditional bond between capitalism and
nationalism. With Reagan, we had a sitting president telling us that
government itself was a bad thing. Many of us may have agreed with him, but
such a sentiment had never before found official favor. Soon, British and
American populations were beginning to applaud the destruction of the very
democratic institutions that provided their only hope of participation in the
political process.

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