War = Tyranny
Butler Shaffer on the secret of state growth.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/shaffer/shaffer192.html



Why Do They Just Giggle?
by Butler Shaffer


No one is sadder than the man who laughs too much.
~ Jean Paul Richter


It is a curious thing to watch videos of Peter Schiff's appearances on 
television interview programs. Going back from one to three years, Schiff 
predicts the adverse consequences that are likely to occur as a result of 
government economic policies. Some of the economists and investment advisors 
on the same shows mount no more of a response to his prognostications than 
to giggle. Even after Schiff's predictions were proven correct, more recent 
programs generate the same guffawing when he foresees more adverse 
consequences.

Why is this so? Why would a man who has anticipated so much of the economic 
dysfunction in the world - and who has provided sound, economic analysis to 
explain his thinking - be openly laughed at by others who, on some of these 
same programs, were advising investments in the banking industry? What is 
even worse, why does so much invective get heaped upon Schiff for being 
accurate? Furthermore, how do these other investment advisors manage to stay 
in business, after their advice has been shown to have been so fundamentally 
unsound?

I encounter this same syndrome from a number of my colleagues and students. 
I recall one conversation with a colleague following the atrocities 
inflicted by the federal government upon the Branch Davidians. After 
explaining both the legal and moral wrongdoing in this attack to this man, 
his response was to do no more than laugh. "Is giggling all that your years 
of formal education have prepared you to do?," I asked.


In more recent discussions of the destructive nature of governmental 
regulation of the marketplace, or the evil nature of the war system, or of 
efforts by statists to bring virtually all forms of human activity under 
political control in order to "save the planet," I am greeted with the same 
snickering. It is not just that such people have a different perspective on 
these issues, and endeavor to debate me on them. We could then have the kind 
of intelligent inquiry that might lead both of us to consider the other's 
positions. Rather, their all-too-common response is to employ laughter in 
the way that a small child does to ward off fear.

"The people who promote these governmental programs," I go on, "are 
destroying the world in which your children and grandchildren will live. Why 
do you giggle about this?"

The answer, I suspect, is to be found in our conditioned practice of 
identifying our sense of being with institutions. (I dealt with this topic 
in my first book, Calculated Chaos: Institutional Threats to Peace and Human 
Survival.) Through schools, churches, the media, corporations, our parents, 
and various other influences in our development, we train ourselves to look 
for meaning in our lives not within ourselves, but in external organized 
systems that have a vested interest in having us elevate their purposes 
above our own. It is this practice that is the midwife to all forms of 
collectivism.


An institution is an organization that has become an end in itself, a 
condition that can arise only through our thinking; only by regarding the 
collective as of greater significance than ourselves. We do this through 
learning to identify ourselves through what Fritz Perls called "ego 
boundaries," which may embrace our nationality, race, gender, ideology, or 
other belief systems. By so identifying our sense of purpose and meaning in 
these abstractions, we set ourselves up to be dominated by the institutions 
which, we are told, represent such groupings. Whatever individuality we 
might otherwise have becomes subservient to - and subsumed by - the 
institutions that thus become our collective identity.

The principal beneficiary of such thinking has been the nation-state. 
Through years of careful conditioning - conducted through such agencies as 
the government schools and the entertainment industry - we have been taught 
to regard the state not only as the fundamental organizing principle, but 
the raison d'etre for both human beings and society. We learned to recite 
our daily catechism of purpose to our lives in the form of a "pledge of 
allegiance" to a flag that was the omnipresent and dominant symbol of the 
state in our classroom. (Have you ever dissected the literal meaning of this 
pledge; that you are vowing to become and remain subservient to state 
authority?)

The media and the rest of the entertainment industry join forces with the 
schools to provide us a consistent indoctrination in the centrality of 
statism. We learn to regard obedience to constituted authority as our 
greatest virtue; to replace morality with legality as our personal standard 
of conduct. War films - starring the likes of John Wayne, who managed to 
keep himself out of World War II - brainwash us to believe that dying for 
the glory of the state is our glory; the concrete meaning of the U.S. Army's 
advertisement to "be all you can be, in the Army."

The sadness as well as the unmitigated evil of such practices are reflected 
in the faces of World War II military veterans, who are trotted out for 
every holiday - each of which has been converted into an excuse for more 
war-celebration and John Wayne flicks - to speak of the sacrifices they and 
others made. To such men - identifiable with their "U.S.S. Missouri" 
baseball caps, or their "5th Army" shoulder patches - any suggestion that 
this war was carefully contrived by political and corporate interests, and 
that FDR manipulated the attack on Pearl Harbor, is met with rage, and 
understandably so. Having been conditioned to identify themselves with the 
state, to see their very sense of being tied up with obedience and service 
to the state, the slightest hint that political forces had conspired to 
exploit them does more than question the integrity of the state: more 
importantly, it creates uncertainties as to one's own moral stature.


Imagine that, from the early 1940s to the present, you have thought of 
yourself primarily as a victorious warrior on behalf of the United States of 
America, with which you have identified your life. A few times each year, 
you are invited to don your old army or navy uniform - with your numerous 
medals - and to go out to a cemetery or auditorium to celebrate the 
"glorious" history of which you have been a part. Tom Brokaw feeds your ego 
by labeling you "America's greatest generation." Historians then begin to 
present evidence of the contrived and corrupt nature of this war that is, in 
the most literal sense, your war; the expression of meaning to your life.

For you to question not only the legitimacy of World War II, but of the 
entire war system with which you have come to associate yourself, would be 
destructive of what you have become. If, in elevating the state above 
yourself, in creating the state as your super-ego, you were to be open to 
the challenges raised by the war critics, the entire meaning to your life 
might be jeopardized. If your state can engage in evil - be it in promoting 
wars, engaging in torture, or bombing civilian populations in such places as 
Hamburg, Dresden, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki - then such evil unavoidably 
stains your very soul. Your 80+ years of being a war hero evaporates, and 
rather than seeing the virtue of spending the remainder of your life with a 
transformed consciousness, you react with anger or, in the case of those 
with more tangential attachments to the state, bouts of giggling.

To wholly reform the existential base of one's thinking can be a very 
troublesome undertaking, rendered more so by Heisenberg's "uncertainty 
principle," which reminds us that the one conducting the change is the one 
to be changed. I find my students more willing to engage in this process 
than are many of my colleagues: my students have less baggage to sort 
through, and will at least listen to the questions I raise. Rather than 
undergo such a challenging task, many of my colleagues endeavor to laugh the 
questions away.

Irecall how, during the Vietnam War years, a number of fathers expressed 
contempt for their sons who chose to go to Canada or Sweden rather than 
participate in this war. I recall asking one such parent whether he really 
loved the political system more than he did his own son. At the time, I had 
less of an understanding of the psychological factors at work in the minds 
of those who identify themselves with the state. Today, however, I would 
have to acknowledge that, yes, such fathers did love the state more than 
they did their own children or grandchildren. And why not? Such adults have 
learned to love the state more than they do themselves; why would we expect 
them to be more caring for their offspring than they have been for 
themselves?

There is much encouragement in the fact that so many veterans of the Vietnam 
and Iraq wars have become vocal critics of such atrocities. I suspect that, 
in years to come - with a depleted supply of World War II vets - on Memorial 
Day, July 4th, Flag Day, and other militaristic celebrations, there will be 
fewer veterans prepared to don their costumes and join with the 
politicians - most of whom manage to keep themselves out of the sound of 
gunshots - to reinforce the patriotic fervor upon which the state depends 
for its survival.

On a sadder note, at a time when more soldiers are committing suicide than 
are dying in battle, it is well to remember that, no matter how thoroughly 
indoctrinated the belief in the superiority of an abstraction, there remains 
within each of us a powerful life-force that can never be fully repressed. 
What Gandhi called Satyagraha - a "Truth-force" or "Soul-force" - remains 
deep within us as, perhaps, the greatest power at work upon each of us. The 
state - and the civilization it is helping to bring down - will continue to 
fight this life-force in every conceivable manner, not simply in the war 
system, but in efforts to regulate even the most miniscule details of life's 
expressions.

When the minds and the spirits of men and women combine to address, with 
intelligence, what we have done to ourselves - and are doing to our children 
and grandchildren - we may be able to walk away from our roles as 
servo-mechanisms to state and corporate power interests, and to discover how 
to live according to that life-force within each of us. To those unable or 
unwilling to confront the wickedness implicit in their robotic existences, 
there will be nothing but unfocused anger and giggling to accompany their 
trip into the awaiting black-hole.


June 23, 2009


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