[Donald Trump’s regime is rapidly reconfiguring the United States into
an authoritarian state. All forms of dissent will soon be
criminalized. Civil liberties will no longer exist. Corporate
exploitation, through the abolition of regulations and laws, will be
unimpeded. Global warming will accelerate. A repugnant nationalism,
amplified by government propaganda, will promote bigotry and racism.
Hate crimes will explode. New wars will be launched or expanded.
And, as this happens, those Americans who remain passive will be complicit.]

http://www.commondreams.org/views/2017/02/06/make-america-ungovernable

Published on
Monday, February 06, 2017
by Truthdig

Make America Ungovernable
by Chris Hedges

U.S. Veterans joined the Standing Rock Sioux encampment protesting the
Dakota Access Pipeline. (Photo: Joe Brusky/Overpass Light Brigade)

***Donald Trump’s regime is rapidly reconfiguring the United States
into an authoritarian state. All forms of dissent will soon be
criminalized. Civil liberties will no longer exist. Corporate
exploitation, through the abolition of regulations and laws, will be
unimpeded. Global warming will accelerate. A repugnant nationalism,
amplified by government propaganda, will promote bigotry and racism.
Hate crimes will explode. New wars will be launched or expanded.***
[Emphasis added.]

***And, as this happens, those Americans who remain passive will be
complicit.*** [Emphasis added.]

“We don’t have much time,” Kali Akuno, the co-director of Cooperation
Jackson and an organizer with the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, told
me when I reached him by phone in Jackson, Miss. “We are talking two
to three months before this whole [reactionary] initiative is firmly
consolidated. And that’s with massive resistance.”

Flurries of executive orders and memorandums are being issued to
demolish the anemic remnants of our bankrupt democracy. Those being
placed in power—such as Betsy DeVos, who if confirmed as secretary of
education will defund our system of public education and expand
schools run by the Christian right, and Scott Pruitt, who if confirmed
as head of the Environmental Protection Agency will dismantle it—are
agents of destruction. In the eyes of the Christian fascists,
generals, billionaires and conspiracy theorists around Trump, the
laws, the courts and legislative bodies exist only to silence
opponents and swell corporate profits. It is impossible to know how
long this transformation will take—it may be longer than the two or
three months Akuno fears—but unless we mobilize quickly to stop the
Trump regime the end result is certain.

“The forces around Trump have a plan to roll this [attack on
democracy] out,” said Akuno, who was the coordinator of special
projects and external funding for the late Mayor Chokwe Lumumba in
Jackson. “They have a strategy. They have a timeline. They know whom
they need to divide and whom they need to recruit. They are
consolidating their base. Those who try and chalk this up to Trump’s
pathology miss the intentionality, the strategic aims and the
objectives. We will do ourselves a great disservice if we
underestimate this regime and where it is going.”

Stephen Bannon, the president’s chief counselor, was behind the ban on
Muslims entering the United States from seven Muslim-majority
countries—a ban you can expect to see extended if the Trump
administration is successful in removing a stay issued by a district
court. He was behind the order to the Department of Homeland Security
to draw up lists of Muslim organizations and individuals in the United
States that, in the language of the executive action, have been
“radicalized” and have “provided material support to terrorism-related
organizations in countries that pose a threat to the United States.”
Such lists will be used to criminalize Muslim leaders and the
institutions and organizations they built. Then, once the Muslims are
dealt with domestically, there will be new Homeland Security lists
that will allow the government to target the press, activists, labor
leaders, dissident intellectuals and the left. It is the beginning of
a fascist version of Leon Trotsky’s “permanent revolution.”

“Lenin wanted to destroy the state, and that’s my goal too,” Bannon
told writer Ronald Radosh in 2013. “I want to bring everything
crashing down, and destroy all of today’s establishment.”

The Trump regime’s demented project of social engineering, which will
come wrapped in a Christianized fascism, can be implemented only if it
quickly seizes control of the bureaucratic mechanisms, an action that
Max Weber pointed out is the prerequisite for exercising power in
industrial and technocratic societies. Once what the historian
Guglielmo Ferrero calls the “silken threads” of habit, tradition and
legality are gone, the “iron chains” of dictatorship will impose
social cohesion.

“This problem is not going to be solved in the 2018 elections,” warned
Akuno, the author of the organizing handbook “Let Your Motto Be
Resistance” and the former executive director of the New Orleans-based
People’s Hurricane Relief Fund. “That hope is an illusion. The
democratic apparatus will be completely gutted by then. We have to
look beyond Trump. We have to look at the consolidation on the state
level of these reactionary forces. They are near the threshold of
being able to call for a constitutional convention because of the
number of governorships and state legislatures where they hold both
chambers. They can totally reorder the Constitution, if they even
continue to abide by it, which they may not. We are facing a serious
crisis. I don’t think people grasp the depth of this because they are
focused on the president and not the broader strategy of these
reactionary forces.”

“We have to encourage a broad noncompliance strategy of
ungovernablity,” Akuno said. “Not complying. Not consenting. We have
to struggle on every front. We have to expect that the courts will not
protect us. We are going to get less and less protection from the
police. The slightest act of civil disobedience will mean jail. We
have to mentally prepare for that. We have to build serious
organizations, drawing upon the examples of forces that fought
authoritarian regimes in Latin America and Europe. Either we submit to
not having any protection as workers, women, queers, blacks, Latinos
or indigenous or we fight back. These forces [arrayed against us] are
not willing to compromise. I hope it does not come to violence, but we
know the proclivities of the society and the forces that run it.”

If nonviolent protest is met with violence, we must never respond with
violence. The use of violence, including property destruction, and
taunting the police are gifts to the security and surveillance state.
It allows the state to demonize and isolate a mass movement. It drives
away the bulk of the population. Violence against the state is used by
the authorities to justify greater forms of control and repression.
The corporate state understands and welcomes the language of force.
This is a game the government will always win and we will always lose.
If we are perceived as a flag-burning, rock-throwing, angry mob that
embraces violence, we will be easily crushed.

We can succeed only if we win the hearts and minds of the wider public
and ultimately many of those within the structures of power, including
the police. When violence is used against nonviolent protesters
demanding basic forms of justice it exposes the weakness of the state.
It delegitimizes those in power. It prompts a passive population to
respond with active support for the protesters. It creates internal
divisions within the structures of power that, as I witnessed during
the revolutions in Eastern Europe, paralyze and defeat those in
authority. Martin Luther King Jr. held marches in Birmingham, Ala.,
rather than Albany, Ga., because he knew Birmingham Public Safety
Commissioner “Bull” Connor would overreact and discredit the city’s
racist structures.

The Trump regime is populated with blind fanatics. They believe in one
truth, which is whatever they proclaim at the moment (any such
declaration may contradict what they said a few hours before). They
are possessed with one idea—conflict. They venerate a demented
hypermasculinity that includes a sacralization of violence, misogyny,
a disdain for empathy, and the self-appointed right to engage in bouts
of frenzied rage. These characteristics, they believe, are a sign of
masculinity. The highest aesthetic is militarism, violence and war.
Without conflict, without enemies real or imagined, their ideological
structures and racism collapse into a heap of contradictions and
absurdities. They will attempt to thwart nonviolent, nationwide
resistance with force. And they will attempt to stoke counterviolence,
including through the use of agents provocateurs, as a response. If we
speak back to them in the language of violence, we will fail. We will
be transformed into the monsters we seek to defeat.

Bannon and his followers on the “alt-right,” self-declared
intellectuals, ferret out facts and formulas that buttress their
peculiar worldview and discard truths that contradict their messianic
delusions. They mouth a few clichés and quote a few philosophers to
justify bigotry, chauvinism and governmental repression. It is
propaganda masquerading as ideology. These pseudo-intellectuals are
singularly incurious. They are linguistically, culturally and
historically illiterate about the Muslim world, and about most other
foreign cultures, yet blithely write off one-fifth of the world’s
population—Muslims—as irredeemable.

The inability of white supremacists like Trump and Bannon to recognize
the humanity of others springs from their spiritual impoverishment.
They mistake bigotry for honesty and ignorance for innocence. They
cannot separate fantasy from reality. Such people are, as author James
Baldwin said, “moral monsters.”

Evil, for them, is embodied in the dehumanized other. Once the human
personification of evil is eradicated, evil itself is supposed to
disappear. Except, of course, that as soon as one group of human
beings is annihilated, another human embodiment of evil rises to take
its place. The Nazis began with Jews. Our fanatics are beginning with
Muslims. History has shown where they will go from here.

“The nationalist is by definition an ignoramus,” the Yugoslav writer
Danilo Kis said. “Nationalism is the line of least resistance, the
easy way. The nationalist is untroubled, he knows or thinks he knows
what his values are, his, that’s to say national, that’s to say the
values of the nation he belongs to, ethical and political; he is not
interested in others, they are no concern of his, hell—it’s other
people (other nations, another tribe). They don’t even need
investigating. The nationalist sees other people in his own images—as
nationalists.”

Like all utopian dreamers they believe their authoritarianism is being
implemented for our benefit. They are like Cardinal Robert Bellarmine,
who oversaw the burning of Giordano Bruno at the stake and who argued
that eradicating heretics does them a favor because it saves them from
their own damnation. It is impossible to have a rational dialogue with
people who view reality through the binary lens of black and white—us
and them. They do not recognize the right of dissent. Dissent is at
best obstruction and probably treason. Fanatics, in power, always
become inquisitors.

The acts of resistance—including the massive street protests the day
after the inauguration and later the demonstrations that grew out of
the ban on Muslims, the Department of Energy’s refusal to give the
Trump administration a list of employees that worked on climate
change, acting Attorney General Sally Yates’ refusal to enforce the
travel ban and hundreds of State Department staff members’ signing of
a memo opposing the immigration restrictions—terrify those around
Trump. These reactionaries do not trust the old elites and their
bureaucrats and courtiers, including the press, which Bannon has
called “the opposition party.”

Akuno, who supports the appeal for nationwide general strikes,
cautioned that such a call might be premature “because unions don’t
know if a general strike is called how many members would comply,
given how many voted for Trump.” He also noted that because the Trump
regime is carrying out assaults on so many fronts, resistance will tax
the resources of the left.

“This shotgun assault effectively divides the left,” he said. “Do I
defend Chicago if, as Trump says, he puts tanks in the streets or do I
go to Standing Rock if I am black? These are the kinds of choices we
will be forced to make.”

“We are going to have to bring this society to a standstill,” he said.
“We are going to have to disrupt the flow of commerce. We are going to
have to disrupt the nodal points of distribution. We will not only
have to figure out how to get on the highways, but disrupt Amazon.com
and UPS. We have to get workers there, even though they are not
unionized, to see these acts as in their long-term interests. And we
have to build strong, fortified bases locally and link them together.”

Trump loyalists are counting on enough support from the police, the
military, private contractors and the organs of internal security such
as Homeland Security and the FBI, along with newly empowered white
vigilante groups, to physically crush those who defy them. They will
attempt to use fear and even terror to paralyze the population into
acquiescence.

“It is not accidental that the Trump regime immediately went after the
water protectors at Standing Rock,” Akuno said. “Standing Rock forced
the wider society to look at itself, its history and its origins. It
raised serious questions. Do we want human civilization to survive?
Are we willing to destroy ourselves for short-term profit? Standing
Rock exposed the U.S. colonial project and challenged capitalist
logic. It showed us that we have to make a choice between oil and
water. It asked us which will take priority for human beings.”

We have the power to make the country ungovernable. But we do not have
much time. The regime will make it harder and harder to organize, get
into the streets and carry out the nationwide strikes, including
within the federal bureaucracy. Resistance alone, however, is not
enough. It must be accompanied by an alternative vision of a socialist
and anti-capitalist society. It must reject the Democratic Party’s
attempt to ride anti-Trump sentiment back into power. The enemy is, in
the end, not Trump or Bannon, but the corporate state. If we do not
dismantle corporate power we will never stop fascism’s seduction of
the white working class and unemployed.

“The evil which you fear becomes a certainty by what you do,” Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe wrote in his play “Egmont.”

Now is the time not to cooperate. Now is the time to shut down the
systems of power. Now is the time to resist. It is our last chance.
The fanatics are moving with lightning speed. So should we.

© 2017 TruthDig

Chris Hedges writes a regular column for Truthdig.com. Hedges
graduated from Harvard Divinity School and was for nearly two decades
a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. He is the author of
many books, including: War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning, What
Every Person Should Know About War, and American Fascists: The
Christian Right and the War on America.  His most recent book is
Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle.



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