-Caveat Lector-

Eye on the Empire
by Alan Bock
Antiwar.com
June 13, 2001
The State�s Dark Underside

Various loyal acolytes including CNN, most of the newspapers and the
major networks worked diligently to make the killing of Timothy
McVeigh into something of a solemn religious event that bolstered the
power and dignity of the State and the Empire it fitfully tries to run. But
I�m not sure it worked as it might have been intended to work �
especially since so many loyal acolytes of  the state religion are
ambivalent at best about the death penalty � and  it might have
backfired, in any number of ways.

The  wall-to-wall coverage of every conceivable detail of the death of the
most prodigious  mass murderer and certified Enemy of the State in
recent times became ludicrous  to most Americans long before
McVeigh was strapped to a gurney and prepared  for lethal injections.
But most of the courtier press, although populated by  people who have
serious doubts about the legitimacy of the death penalty as  a general
policy � after all, no civilized European country uses it anymore  �
relished this death, savored this death, rubbed Americans� noses in this
death, and talked about it in terms of justice and closure rather than
barbarism.

EMPIRE  GOING WOBBLY?

I suspect that Timothy McVeigh was so easily turned into a symbol of
the possibility  that the death penalty might sometimes be just because
he struck at the State  during a time when the State was feeling a bit
shaky about its support in the  general populace. He had to be
demonized and he had be killed � in part  because the government
might not like further investigations into still-open  questions like who
knew about Timothy and his plans and when did they know it.

The  mainstream and courtier media couldn�t understand all the fuss
over Ruby Ridge  and Waco, of course. After all, it was just the
government keeping a firm disciplinary  hand on unpleasant people who
had unpleasant ideas and prejudices that would   be laughed down in
polite company. If some of the government agents got a bit  trigger-
happy or overbearing and some people died in the process, well that�s
  just part of keeping order in a country that still contains some
unfortunately  backward and retrograde people and beliefs.

Keeping  the hoi-polloi under control was viewed in most establishment
circles as commendable  � remember that Janet Reno was viewed as
an outsider in Washington until  she performed the marvelous trick of
taking responsibility without accountability  for the holocaust and
slaughter at Waco. That was a trick official Washington  could
appreciate and embrace, and it took Janet to its bosom from that
moment  on. The potentially troublesome outsider became the
courageous woman of integrity  capable of tough decisions.

But  establishment circles were dimly aware that not all Americans
shared this enlightened  view of the proper way to handle unacceptable
religious cultists. Not only did  a few fringey types form or join self-
styled militia groups, but millions of  otherwise ordinary Americans out
in flyover country had serious questions about  the way the government
handled the siege it had started and provoked at Waco.  People were
actually questioning the legitimacy of the American State and the
empire over which it presided.

FORTUITOUS  BOMBING

In  such circumstances the bombing of the empire�s Murrah building in
the provincial  outpost of Oklahoma City (and from my eight years spent
in the Imperial City  I can tell you most people there view Oklahoma as
a provincial outpost) was  both tragedy and blessing. The bomber didn�t
just strike against fellow citizens more or less at random, but at a
symbol of imperial rule. And it turned out  that he had similar feelings
about Waco and some tenuous affiliation with the  troublesome militia
movement. The fact that the militias he had visited considered  him too
kooky and far-out to embrace only delayed for a few moments the full-
court press against the right wing and anybody who had ever spoken
out in criticism  of the U.S. government as a precursor to and possibly
an inciter of mass murder.

President  Clinton played the whole tragedy beautifully, of course, using
it to reinforce  loyalty to the central state and suspicion of anybody who
didn�t embrace it  in all its power and glory. That was one of the many
political tasks at which  he excelled. Since the Oklahoma City bombing
the militia movement has virtually disappeared from the American
landscape. Timothy McVeigh (and whoever else may  or may not have
been involved in his nefarious plans and deeds) in one step  made
doubts about overweening federal power at least somewhat disreputable.

So  the death of Timothy McVeigh became fairly inevitable and was
conflated into  an occasion of reinforcing state worship. The state had
sustained an attack  on its very self, on a concrete manifestation of its
power and control, had  found the perpetrator and determined to make
him pay the ultimate price. The  site of the attack had already become
something of a shrine, filled with the  most ironically appropriate tribute
to government power one could imagine �  ugly, stylized empty chairs
that no human being could possible find comfortable.   And those who
make their living encouraging worship of state power swallowed  their
ordinary ambivalence about the death penalty and participated in the
orgy  of overblown coverage of this exercise of the ultimate imperial
prerogative.

UNCERTAIN  BATTLE TRUMPETS?

But  even though almost no media outlet demurred from the excess,
there was a certain  edgy discomfort about much of the coverage, and
not just because of widespread  ambivalence about the death penalty.
There are legitimate questions about just  who might have known about
or encouraged Timothy McVeigh before the bombing,  about whether
other bombs or explosions were involved (for a sampling of reasonably
  legitimate concerns see WorldNetDaily�s  coverage). The best likely
source (perhaps someday) of answers to those questions died on
Monday.

The  courtier press wasn�t particularly interested in seeking out answers
to uncomfortable  questions, but it was dimly aware they were extant.
The fact that a certain  number of viewers and readers would know that
the cheerleading about justice  by lethal injection masked journalistic
dereliction was the uninvited and unwelcome  guest � never
acknowledged but still lurking in the shadows.

Then  there is the fact that while the death penalty is still popular in the
United  States, this culture has really become shaky and wimpy about
it. Time was that  executions were held in public, a graphic reminder of
the state�s power to mete  out the ultimate punishment to traitors and
other evildoers great and small. Executions were a public spectacle and
insofar as they were supposed to serve  as a deterrent and a reminder
of just how seriously the State took certain crimes,   they almost had to
be public spectacles.

But  our culture of official death is a bit queasy about actually seeing
the death  most members of society endorse and approve. We want
criminals executed but  we want it to be in a humane manner without
suffering, and we don�t want to  have to see it. We want to mete out
suffering and death on the malefactors unlucky  enough to live in Kosovo
and Serbia, but we want to do it cleanly, surgically,  from 15,000 feet,
so there are no discernible human fingerprints and little  actually visible
human suffering.

The  Empire wants to hang onto and expand its power, of course. But
even the minions  and acolytes of the Empire shrink a bit from staring
the full implications of  their lust for power � the blood that must
necessarily be shed by enemies  and those who are inconvenient � in
the face. They know blood and brutality  are necessary, but they want
to pretend that it really isn�t as brutal as it  is.

EMPIRE  IN TROUBLE?

Perhaps  it is because the denizens prefer to pretend about the true
nature of power.  Or perhaps it is, as I have  discussed in a previous
column, that the United States, as Swarthmore and  American
Enterprise Institute political scientist James Kurth has put it, is   an
"adolescent empire" lacking in maturity and hard-nosed realism.   But
while the coverage of the symbolic death of the Enemy of the State was
unquestionably  overdone, it lacked conviction, resonance, real belief.
Most  Americans, as I have argued repeatedly, have no interest at all in
being the  center of an empire, the policeman of the world, the universal
righter of wrongs  and abuses by the benighted of the planet. But most
of those who support the  idea of making sure that the sole superpower
accepts and embraces its "responsibilities"  to the "word community"
shrink from facing the full implications of  exercising imperial power. It
means killing, maiming and brutalizing those who  get in the empire�s
way, but Americans would prefer to believe that the suffering  is minimal
and those made to suffer are ultimately grateful for the opportunity   to
suffer for the sake of inevitable progress.

Timothy  McVeigh participated in dehumanizing himself to the point that
his death didn�t  seem like a real death of a real person. But the killing
still made a lot of  Americans uncomfortable. In a sense, the
overcoverage reflected that discomfort.  The newsies sort of knew that
they had to celebrate the power that this death  symbolized. But they
weren�t quite sure they really believed in it, so they  scheduled another
show to allow the proper talking heads to agonize incomprehensibly
while missing the point completely.

It�s  too early to tell if this means that those who run the American
empire have  lost faith in it at some level, even as those who ran the
Soviet empire lost  faith and confidence even in make-believe
communism some 15 or 20 years before  the empire physically
collapsed. But I suspect that Joe  Farah is correct that the execution of
Timothy McVeigh will come back to  haunt the powers that be before
long. There are too many loose ends, too many  inconvenient facts, too
many ways for people to discover the facts the courtier  press chooses
to ignore.

We  might not be ready to join the Munchkins in singing "Ding Dong,
the Witch  is Dead" just yet. But the foundations � first of all the utterly
essential foundation of belief � may be crumbling.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--

Best Wishes


The covert operators that I ran with would blow up a 747 with 300 people
to kill one person.  They are total sociopaths with no conscience
whatsoever.   - Former Pentagon CID Investigator Gene Wheaton

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to