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BP and the ‘Little Eichmanns’
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/bp_and_the_little_eichmanns_20100517/
Posted on May 17, 2010

By Chris Hedges

Cultures that do not recognize that human life and the natural 
world have a sacred dimension, an intrinsic value beyond monetary 
value, cannibalize themselves until they die. They ruthlessly 
exploit the natural world and the members of their society in the 
name of progress until exhaustion or collapse, blind to the fury 
of their own self-destruction. The oil pouring into the Gulf of 
Mexico, estimated to be perhaps as much as 100,000 barrels a day, 
is part of our foolish death march. It is one more blow delivered 
by the corporate state, the trade of life for gold. But this time 
collapse, when it comes, will not be confined to the geography of 
a decayed civilization. It will be global.

Those who carry out this global genocide—men like BP’s Chief 
Executive Tony Hayward, who assures us that “The Gulf of Mexico is 
a very big ocean. The amount of oil and dispersant we are putting 
into it is tiny in relation to the total water volume’’—are, to 
steal a line from Ward Churchill, “little Eichmanns.” They serve 
Thanatos, the forces of death, the dark instinct Sigmund Freud 
identified within human beings that propels us to annihilate all 
living things, including ourselves. These deformed individuals 
lack the capacity for empathy. They are at once banal and 
dangerous. They possess the peculiar ability to organize vast, 
destructive bureaucracies and yet remain blind to the 
ramifications. The death they dispense, whether in the pollutants 
and carcinogens that have made cancer an epidemic, the dead zone 
rapidly being created in the Gulf of Mexico, the melting polar ice 
caps or the deaths last year of 45,000 Americans who could not 
afford proper medical care, is part of the cold and rational 
exchange of life for money.

The corporations, and those who run them, consume, pollute, 
oppress and kill. The little Eichmanns who manage them reside in a 
parallel universe of staggering wealth, luxury and splendid 
isolation that rivals that of the closed court of Versailles. The 
elite, sheltered and enriched, continue to prosper even as the 
rest of us and the natural world start to die. They are numb. They 
will drain the last drop of profit from us until there is nothing 
left. And our business schools and elite universities churn out 
tens of thousands of these deaf, dumb and blind systems managers 
who are endowed with sophisticated skills of management and the 
incapacity for common sense, compassion or remorse. These 
technocrats mistake the art of manipulation with knowledge.

“The longer one listened to him, the more obvious it became that 
his inability to speak was closely connected with an inability to 
think, namely, to think from the standpoint of somebody else,” 
Hannah Arendt wrote of “Eichmann in Jerusalem.” “No communication 
was possible with him, not because he lied but because he was 
surrounded by the most reliable of all safeguards against words 
and the presence of others, and hence against reality as such.”

Our ruling class of technocrats, as John Ralston Saul points out, 
is effectively illiterate. “One of the reasons that he is unable 
to recognize the necessary relationship between power and morality 
is that moral traditions are the product of civilization and he 
has little knowledge of his own civilization,” Saul writes of the 
technocrat. Saul calls these technocrats “hedonists of power,” and 
warns that their “obsession with structures and their inability or 
unwillingness to link these to the public good make this power an 
abstract force—a force that works, more often than not, at 
cross-purposes to the real needs of a painfully real world.”

BP, which made $6.1 billion in profits in the first quarter of 
this year, never obtained permits from the National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration. The protection of the ecosystem did 
not matter. But BP is hardly alone. Drilling with utter disregard 
to the ecosystem is common practice among oil companies, according 
to a report in The New York Times. Our corporate state has gutted 
environmental regulation as tenaciously as it has gutted financial 
regulation and habeas corpus. Corporations make no distinction 
between our personal impoverishment and the impoverishment of the 
ecosystem that sustains the human species. And the abuse, of us 
and the natural world, is as rampant under Barack Obama as it was 
under George W. Bush. The branded figure who sits in the White 
House is a puppet, a face used to mask an insidious system under 
which we as citizens have been disempowered and under which we 
become, along with the natural world, collateral damage. As Karl 
Marx understood, unfettered capitalism is a revolutionary force. 
And this force is consuming us.

Karl Polanyi in his book “The Great Transformation,” written in 
1944, laid out the devastating consequences—the depressions, wars 
and totalitarianism—that grow out of a so-called self-regulated 
free market. He grasped that “fascism, like socialism, was rooted 
in a market society that refused to function.” He warned that a 
financial system always devolved, without heavy government 
control, into a Mafia capitalism—and a Mafia political 
system—which is a good description of our corporate government. 
Polanyi warned that when nature and human beings are objects whose 
worth is determined by the market, then human beings and nature 
are destroyed. Speculative excesses and growing inequality, he 
wrote, always dynamite the foundation for a continued prosperity 
and ensure “the demolition of society.”

“In disposing of a man’s labor power the system would, 
incidentally, dispose of the physical, psychological, and moral 
entity ‘man’ attached to that tag,” Polanyi wrote. “Robbed of the 
protective covering of cultural institutions, human beings would 
perish from the effects of social exposure; they would die as 
victims of acute social dislocation through vice, perversion, 
crime, and starvation. Nature would be reduced to its elements, 
neighborhoods and landscapes defiled, rivers polluted, military 
safety jeopardized, the power to produce food and raw materials 
destroyed. Finally, the market administration of purchasing power 
would periodically liquidate business enterprise, for shortages 
and surfeits of money would prove as disastrous to business as 
floods and droughts in primitive society. Undoubtedly, labor, 
land, and money markets are essential to a market economy. But no 
society could stand the effects of such a system of crude fictions 
even for the shortest stretch of time unless its human and natural 
substance as well as its business organizations was protected 
against the ravages of this satanic mill.”

The corporate state is a runaway freight train. It shreds the 
Kyoto Accords in Copenhagen. It plunders the U.S. Treasury so 
speculators can continue to gamble with billions in taxpayer 
subsidies in our perverted system of casino capitalism. It 
disenfranchises our working class, decimates our manufacturing 
sector and denies us funds to sustain our infrastructure, our 
public schools and our social services. It poisons the planet. We 
are losing, every year across the globe, an area of farmland 
greater than Scotland to erosion and urban sprawl. There are an 
estimated 25,000 people who die every day somewhere in the world 
because of contaminated water. And some 20 million children are 
mentally impaired each year by malnourishment.

America is dying in the manner in which all imperial projects die. 
Joseph Tainter, in his book “The Collapse of Complex Societies,” 
argues that the costs of running and defending an empire 
eventually become so burdensome, and the elite becomes so 
calcified, that it becomes more efficient to dismantle the 
imperial superstructures and return to local forms of 
organization. At that point the great monuments to empire, from 
the Sumer and Mayan temples to the Roman bath complexes, are 
abandoned, fall into disuse and are overgrown. But this time 
around, Tainter warns, because we have nowhere left to migrate and 
expand, “world civilization will disintegrate as a whole.” This 
time around we will take the planet down with us.

“We in the lucky countries of the West now regard our two-century 
bubble of freedom and affluence as normal and inevitable; it has 
even been called the ‘end’ of history, in both a temporal and 
teleological sense,” writes Ronald Wright in “A Short History of 
Progress.” “Yet this new order is an anomaly: the opposite of what 
usually happens as civilizations grow. Our age was bankrolled by 
the seizing of half the planet, extended by taking over most of 
the remaining half, and has been sustained by spending down new 
forms of natural capital, especially fossil fuels. In the New 
World, the West hit the biggest bonanza of all time. And there 
won’t be another like it—not unless we find the civilized Martians 
of H.G. Wells, complete with the vulnerability to our germs that 
undid them in his War of the Worlds.”

The moral and physical contamination is matched by a cultural 
contamination. Our political and civil discourse has become 
gibberish. It is dominated by elaborate spectacles, celebrity 
gossip, the lies of advertising and scandal. The tawdry and the 
salacious occupy our time and energy. We do not see the walls 
falling around us. We invest our intellectual and emotional energy 
in the inane and the absurd, the empty amusements that preoccupy a 
degenerate culture, so that when the final collapse arrives we can 
be herded, uncomprehending and fearful, into the inferno.

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