Conspiracy vs Conspiracy in American History
By Morris Berman.

The American “disease” of cultural arrogance, exceptionalism, Manifest
Destiny, capitalist individualism, and human supremacy over nature was
already clear and dominant in John Winthrop and among the English
Puritan colony he headed. The colony’s land was taken from Native
Americans with Winthrop’s excuse that the natives hadn’t “subdued” the
land and thus had no “civil right” to it. And it was Winthrop who,
waxing Biblical, proclaimed the new arrivals to be “as a city upon a
hill, the eyes of all people are upon us…” once of the most celebrated
instances of religious chauvinism in modern history.

The notion that the parliamentary democracy of the industrial nations
is a sham, and that the real power lies not in the hands of the people
(or their elected representatives) but in the hands of a small, ruling
elite is a view most closely associated with Karl Marx. This is one
meaning of the word “conspiracy”: the ruling class knows what its
interests are, and it acts to protect them. In this sense of the term,
conspiracy is equivalent to elite theory, because the implication is
that the ruling class acts with a unified consciousness. Indeed, Marx
argued that the emergence of conflicts within the ranks of the elite
was a sign that the system was ripe for revolutionary overthrow.

Elite theory, then, holds that the people (or masses) are under the
illusion that through their vote they control the direction of the
ship of state, whereas the real captains of the ship–the captains of
industry, the eminences grises–are not themselves on the ballot. The
public does not get to vote for them, but rather for their paid
representatives. Thus the post-election euphoria in the United States
over Barack Obama is nothing more than a bubble, an illusion, because
the lion’s share of the $750 million he collected in campaign
contributions (according to the Australian journalist John Pilger)
came from Goldman Sachs, UBS AG, Lehman Brothers, J.P. Morgan Chase,
Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, and the huge hedge fund
Citadel Investment Group. These corporations, it hardly need be said,
do not have the welfare of the American people as their top priority;
and it is also the case that having invested in a president, they
expect a return on that investment once he takes office. And if
history is any guide here, they are going to get it. It is for this
reason that what we have in the United States, according to Harvard
political scientist Michael Sandel, is a “procedural democracy”: the
form, the appearance, is democratic, but the actual content, the
result, is not. As the eminent sociologist C. Wright Mills put it in
1956,

“In so far as the structural clue to the power elite today lies in
the
political order, that clue is the decline of politics as genuine and
public debate of alternative decisions….America is now in considerable
part more a formal political democracy than a democratic social
structure, and even the formal political mechanics are weak.”

C. Wright Mills, perhaps the finest American sociologist in the
history of the profession. Much of his inspiration came from Marxism,
which he utilized eclectically. Mills was concerned with the
responsibilities of intellectuals in post-World War II society, and
advocated public, political engagement over disinterested observation.

While it is undoubtedly true that elites occasionally act in a
deliberate and concerted way, it was Mills in particular who pointed
out that the reality was significantly more nuanced than this. For the
most part, it is not that the rich or super-rich get together in some
corporate boardroom and ask themselves, “Now how can we best screw the
workers and the middle class?” No, said Mills, what in fact happens is
that they socialize together, in an informal sort of way, and
recognize their class affiliations:

“Members of the several higher circles know one another as personal
friends and even as neighbors; they mingle with one another on the
golf course, in the gentlemen’s clubs, at resorts, on transcontinental
airplanes, and on ocean liners. They meet at the estates of mutual
friends, face each other in front of the TV camera, or serve on the
same
philanthropic committee; and many are sure to cross one another’s path
in the columns of newspapers, if not in the exact cafés from which
many
of these columns originate….The conception of the power elite,
accordingly, does not rest upon the assumption that American history
since the origins of World War II must be understood as a secret
plot,
or as a great and co-ordinated conspiracy of the members of this
elite.
The conception rests upon quite impersonal grounds.”

We are not, in short, talking about some sort of organized
brotherhood, some quasi-Masonic financial clique, as it were. However–
and this is the crucial point–in terms of concrete outcome, we might
as well be. Mills goes on:

“But, once the conjunction of structural trends and of the personal
will
to utilize it gave rise to the power elite, then plans and programs
did
occur to its members and indeed it is not possible to interpret many
events and official policies…without reference to the power elite.”

Mills’ work falls more into the category of social criticism than of
social science per se; he was not big on facts and figures. But in the
fifty-plus years since he wrote the above words, his profile of
American democracy as illusory has been fleshed out by numerous
sociologists and political scientists armed with reams of data. The
most recent work in this genre, Superclass, by David Rothkopf,
identifies a global elite of roughly 6,000 individuals who are running
the show, worldwide, and the top fifty financial institutions that
control nearly $50 trillion in assets. Plot or no plot, the results
are the same.

This, then, is elite theory, or what I call conspiracy with a small
“c”. And it is a real fact of political life, no question about it.
But what may be even more significant than this are what I call
Conspiracies with a capital “C”, by which I mean the unconscious
mythologies, or isms, that govern American life. This was the thing
that Marx, and Mills, both missed (though the Italian sociologist
Antonio Gramsci did come close to it with his notion of “hegemony,” or
the symbolic control of society): the elites aren’t doing anything
that the masses don’t already agree with; which is why, certainly, in
the United States, socialism never really had a chance. When Henry
Wriston, who was president of the Council on Foreign Relations during
1951-64, wrote that U.S. foreign policy “is the expression of the will
of the people,” he knew what he was talking about. As many observers
(even American ones) have pointed out, what the American people–less
than 5% of the world’s population–want is an indulgent and wasteful
lifestyle, in which they consume 25% of the world’s energy. Thus in
the presidential debates of October 2008, Barack Obama referred to the
25% figure, and then talked about ways of ensuring that that rate of
consumption continue unchecked. He did not, as did Jimmy Carter more
than thirty years ago, argue that growth was not necessarily a
positive thing, that Americans needed to burn less energy, and that
the American military–the guarantor of that profligate lifestyle–had
to be scaled down accordingly. Indeed, within two years of taking
office, Mr. Carter was popularly regarded as something of a joke, and
by 1980 Ronald Reagan, who told the American people they could have it
all, was elected by a landslide. (Significantly, the first thing he
did upon moving into the White House was to have the solar panels that
Mr. Carter had installed on the roof removed.) So while it is true
that elites run the show, they nevertheless govern with the
(misguided) consent of the people. As the nineteenth-century Sioux
holy man, Chief Sitting Bull, was supposed to have said, “possessions
are a disease with them.” But his was hardly the majority view–not
then, not now.

What, then, are the major Conspiracies, or isms, of American life? I
think we can identify four, in particular.

1. The notion of Americans as the “chosen people,” and of the nation
as a “city on a hill.” This latter phrase–quoted by both Barack Obama
and Sarah Palin in the 2008 presidential campaign–goes back to the
first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, John Winthrop, as he
was sailing from England to America on the Arabella in 1630:

“We shall find that the God of Israel is among us….He shall
make us a praise and glory….For we must Consider that we
shall be as a City upon a Hill. The eyes of all people are upon us.”

The idea is that it would be America’s unique mission to bring
democracy to all the peoples of the earth, inasmuch as the American
way of life was (obviously) the best. (Iraq is merely the latest
manifestation of this way of thinking.) In fact, the Puritans took the
Jews of the Old Testament as their model, in which the exodus from
Egypt, and invasion of Canaan, was regarded as the paradigm for the
establishment of the Colonies. Cotton Mather even referred to the
Massachusetts Bay Colony as “our American Jerusalem.” The notion that
the story of the United States is the primary manifestation of God’s
will on earth has an enormous hold on the American psyche. “American
exceptionalism,” Alexis de Tocqueville called it; it is with us to
this day.

2. Along with this we have Ism No. 2: the existence, in the United
States, of a “civil religion.” This was first pointed out by the
sociologist Robert Bellah in 1967, the fact that despite the presence
of Catholicism, Judaism, and numerous Protestant sects in America, the
real religion of the American people was America itself. To be an
American is regarded (unconsciously, by Americans) as an ideological/
religious commitment, not an accident of birth. This is why critics of
the US are immediately labeled “un-American,” and are practically
regarded as traitors. (Quite ridiculous, when you think about it: can
you imagine a Swedish critic of Sweden, for example, being attacked as
“un-Swedish”?) The historian Sidney Mead pegged it correctly when he
called America “the nation with the soul of a church,” while another
historian, Richard Hofstadter, declared that “It has been our fate as
a nation not to have ideologies, but to be one.” As Graham Greene
portrayed it in The Quiet American, this is not a position that
encourages self-reflection.

3. The third unconscious mythology is the one identified by Frederick
Jackson Turner in 1893: the existence of a supposedly endless
frontier, into which the American people would expand geographically.
Eventually, it became an economic frontier, and finally an imperial one
—Manifest Destiny gone global. This lay at the heart of the Carter-
Reagan debate, for the notion of limits to growth is almost a form of
heresy in an American context. The American Dream envisions a world
without limits, in which the goal, as the gangster (played by Edward
G. Robinson) tells Humphrey Bogart in Key Largo, is simply “more”. De
Tocqueville had already, in the 1830s, commented on the great
“restlessness” of the American people; and more than a century later,
the British journalist Alistair Cooke remarked that what were regarded
as luxuries throughout most of the world, were regarded as necessities
in the United States. If Americans never had much of an interest in
socialism, they probably had even less interest in buddhism, the
occasional Zen center notwithstanding. It was not for nothing that the
historian William Leach entitled his study of late-nineteenth-century
American expansionism, Land of Desire.

4. Finally, we have a national character based on extreme individualism
—Emerson’s “Self-Reliance.” As the historian Joyce Appleby describes
it, this originated in the shift in the definition of the word
“virtue” that took place in the Colonies in the 1790s. Previous to
that time, the word had a European (or even classical) definition,
namely “the capacity of some men to rise above private interests and
devote themselves to the public good.” By 1800, the definition had
undergone a complete inversion: “virtue” now meant the capacity to
look out for oneself in an opportunistic environment. Whereas the
former definition was adhered to by the Federalists, the Jeffersonian
Republicans actively promoted the latter definition, as part of the
new nation’s break with England and all things European. Life was not
to be about service to the community, but rather about competition and
the acquisition of goods. This is summarized in the popular American
expression, “There is no free lunch.” The “self-made man” is expected
to make it on his own.

There have been very few dissenters to this fourth ism; in many ways,
American history can be seen as the story of a nation consistently
choosing individual solutions over collective ones. One American who
did dissent, however, was Bill Wilson, the founder of Alcoholics
Anonymous. In Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions he wrote: “The
philosophy of self-sufficiency is not paying off. Plainly enough, it
is a bone-crushing juggernaut whose final achievement is ruin.”

And “ruin” is the operative word here. While there is certainly an
upside to these four isms–the sunny side of technological innovation
and the Yankee “can-do” mentality, for example–in the long run these
unconscious mythologies, in dialectical fashion, began to turn against
those caught up in their magic spell. It surely cannot be an accident
that 25% of all the world’s prisoners are incarcerated in American
jails (1% of the entire US adult population); that two-thirds of the
world’s consumption of antidepressants occurs in the United States;
that 24% of the American population say that it’s OK to use violence
in the pursuit of one’s goals, 44% support the torture of alleged or
suspected terrorists, and 39% want Muslims in the US to be required to
carry a religious ID on them at all times (why not just make it a
yellow star, and be done with it?); that the country has the greatest
percentage of single-person dwellings in the world, the highest
homicide rate, the largest military budget (by several orders of
magnitude), and the greatest number of square feet of shopping malls
on the surface of the planet. The data on ignorance, which I have
documented elsewhere, are breathtaking, and Robert Putnam’s
description (in Bowling Alone) of the collapse of community, trust,
and friendship is one of the saddest things I have ever read.
Dialectically, and ironically, American “success” became American
ruin; the crash of October 2008 was merely the tip of the iceberg.

The power of isms, certainly in the American case, derives from the
fact that they are unconscious, embedded deep in the psyche. They
constitute Conspiracies in that those who hold them are like
marionettes on strings, screaming “Obama!” (for example) without
realizing that the new president can no more buck the elites running
the country than he can dismantle the mythologies that drive its
citizens–himself included. As for the individual, so for the nation:
the only hope is to see ourselves as we are seen, from the outside, as
it were. And therein lies the paradox. For the four Conspiracies close
in on themselves, forming a kind of mirror-lined glass sphere that
does not permit any dissonant information to enter. Sandel, Mills,
Rothkopf, Bellah, Mead, Leach, Appleby, Putnam–America’s finest,
really–will never become household words, and if they did, it would
probably be as objects of contempt. For this is finally the most
terrifying thing about isms or Conspiracies: we do not choose them;
rather, it is they that choose us.

http://www.bestcyrano.org/avenger212/?p=466

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