"The truth is that there is
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 country, isn't there?"--V for Vendetta
             
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            'Vendetta,' Violence, and the State
            by Anthony Gregory
            by Anthony Gregory

                     

            It's interesting how much focus has been placed on whether V, the 
title character in the new movie V for Vendetta, is portrayed in such a way as 
to cast a favorable light on terrorism. The more astute reviewers have 
discussed the movie's blurring of the line between freedom fighters and 
terrorists. But the most important questions raised in the film, while they do 
indeed center around terrorism, concern not so much the nature of V but rather 
that of the main instigator of terrorism, both in the film and real life - the 
state.

            The ethical issues surrounding V's violence - which is directed at 
the state orchestrators of a harrowing past atrocity, as well as the 
totalitarian state itself, its régime, its top officials, and its symbols - are 
not unimportant. The cruelty of V is not a light matter. But his rampage is, 
for the most part, focused. He does at times, strictly speaking, aggress 
against the plot's heroine - criminality that she later forgives. He mostly 
attacks aggressors and those who get in his way.

            V's violence, however, pales in comparison, and is secondary, to 
that of the state, and perhaps it is not so much the alleged glorification of 
his, but rather the portrayal of the state's, that irks so many people so much 
about this movie.

            In aggrandizement and protection of its power, the state in 
Vendetta has taken the church under its fold, making it an arm of the 
government and thus corrupting it completely. It divides and conquers, making 
the people more afraid of peaceful differences among one another than of the 
coercive institution that threatens them all. It explores the wretched avenues 
of biological warfare, tests demonic weapons on its own subjects, and 
scapegoats others for whatever goes wrong. It forbids unapproved religious 
texts and anything else seen as challenging its authority. It targets civilians 
while disingenuously accusing the vigilante of doing so. It murders, rapes, and 
spies on its citizens without relent.

            Any serious dissent from or ridicule of the state is forbidden: the 
government kills a TV personality for his controversial comedy bit that 
lambasts the régime's chancellor. (Anti-authoritarians should be glad that 
Hollywood, although restrained somewhat by law and regulation, remains mostly 
dominated by private enterprise. Only an uncensored market can allow dissent to 
come through, as it does in this gloriously un-PC, anti-establishment film. One 
wonders how much some might actually favor censoring movies this radical in our 
own time and country.) 

            The state in Vendetta uses its puppet media to bombard the public 
with lies, disinformation, and dishonest good news of progress or inflated 
warnings of perennial threats and worldly strife, depending on its tactical 
needs of the day. It demonizes the enemy, foreigners, and minorities, rules by 
force and relies on fear.

            It is a crude and secular theocracy, a corporatist managerial 
dictatorship in which the majority of people are still allowed to live normal 
lives - albeit amidst economic turmoil caused by the state's policies - as they 
raise their families, go to work, drink in bars, and drown any potentially 
dissident thoughts in the distracting drone of state-approved television. 

            If the film's detractor's don't see any parallels between the 
dramatized political crisis and that of real life, why do they worry that the 
movie provides a cover or excuse for terrorism as it is defined in the real 
world? Were the current situation so tyrannical and desperate as in the movie, 
would any and all violence against the present state be viewed as terrorism? 
(Notably, few people seem to similarly see terrorism in the brutalities of 
other comic book heroes who lash out mercilessly against common, rather than 
political, thugs.)

            I cannot endorse all of V's violent methods. But that is not really 
the point. As for blowing up empty government buildings, while it may sometimes 
be arguably defensible in the context of a just revolution, such destruction 
rarely achieves any improvement. The right to revolution against tyranny, 
however, is itself an idea at least as old as the United States.

            The movie is about such ideas. V considers himself the 
personification of the idea of retributive justice. He characterizes himself as 
an "equal and opposing reaction" to the "monstrous" state violence that created 
him, a monster. To dislike his methods, one must also dislike the brutality 
that spawned his reactive violence. A difference between him and the state is 
that the latter practices much more expansive violence against countless 
innocent people. V's retaliatory violence is met and overshadowed by the 
state's own, which is far more encompassing. Another difference is that the 
state's violence enjoys legal privilege; it is obscured and enabled by the 
concept, held by most its subjects, that the state should be allowed to do what 
private actors are not. 

            And that's the real important point to be found in the movie. When 
a single man does something criminal, he is generally perceived as an 
anti-social element. When the state practices criminality on a much grander 
scale, it is considered security. The double standard, taken to an extreme, is 
the ideology of totalitarianism, the ideology adopted tacitly by the populace 
in the film. 

            In response to the statist ideology, V offers his proposed 
corrective: "People should not be afraid of their governments, governments 
should by afraid of their people." Coming from a masked avenger intent on 
blowing up Parliament, this might sound like extremism. But it's not too far 
from that adage attributed to Thomas Jefferson, who purportedly said, "When 
governments fear the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the 
government, there is tyranny." The quotation, often invoked by conservatives, 
at least when the Democrats are in power, continues into the more radical: "The 
strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, 
as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government." Was 
Thomas Jefferson defending terrorism?

            Actually, the American Revolution, widely seen as a just overthrow 
of a state, was far more violent against the innocent and guilty than the 
revolution portrayed in Vendetta. The belligerent detonation of Parliament is 
merely "symbolic," as V calls it, of a quieter revolution in social conscience. 
Ultimately, it is not V's onslaught that unravels the government. What really 
do the state in are its own precarious foundation and the refusal of people to 
follow its orders. The mass resistance at the end is non-violent - thousands of 
denizens refuse to back down as they walk right past the hundreds of troops 
armed with battle rifles. The military refuses to fire on the people, and lets 
the outnumbering masses through peacefully. The high-ranking detective charged 
with apprehending V also refuses to keep playing the game, once he learns the 
truth about the institution he works for. As in the demise of the Soviet Union, 
non-compliance and lost faith in the régime are what kill the state in Vendetta.

            Thus does a total state meet its maker, having spent massive 
resources and dedicated legions of people to catch the uncatchable one-man 
insurgency. The incompetence and inner conflict of bureaucracy come through 
elegantly in the film. Its curfews, its NSA-style surveillance of every home, 
its mass arrests do nothing to defeat its elusive and ubiquitous adversary. 
Instead, both the state and the reactive belligerent it incited fall in 
concert, as freedom becomes reclaimed by the people. 

            In the end we see that only fear and passive acquiescence have 
allowed the oppression to persist. When the people finally realize they far 
outnumber the state's minions and can stand up to repression, they do so and 
the despotic charade crumbles. What must happen first is that they must admit 
to themselves that something has gone terribly wrong with their country. Once 
they all see the tyranny for what it is and are willing to confront it, it 
doesn't stand a chance.

            When we consider the movie's treatment of government, and for a 
second look beyond the rogue antics of the horrifying hero it has begotten, 
then we can perhaps see why some people hate the movie so much. We wouldn't 
want people to understand the immorality and transience of the state, now would 
we? If we would, we can only cheer on the popularity of the film, for rarely 
has the corrupt essence of the state been so compellingly vivified on the 
silver screen. 

            March 20, 2006

            Anthony Gregory [send him mail] is a writer and musician who lives 
in Berkeley, California. He is a research analyst at the Independent Institute. 
See his webpage for more articles and personal information.

            Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com

            Anthony Gregory Archives 
           
     
        
     
        
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