Totalitarianism for Dummies
The genius of America’s totalitarian
system of government is that it is not totally total, and sometimes not very
totalitarian at all. It is just total enough. Truly total government–“Your
papers, citizen,” stop-and-frisk, permission needed to travel from city to
city–might spark revolt. By contrast, a sufficiency of totalitarianism, but not
an excess, keeps the populace in adequate torpidity. Thus done astutely,
totalitarianism is hardly noticed.
The
founder of this philosophy was that rascal, Abe Lincoln. As we have all heard
in what has become almost a cliche, he said, “You can fool some of the people
all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can’t fool all
of the people all of the time.” He wisely did not add, “…but you can fool
enough of the people enough of the time.”
Lincoln’s
Principle of Sufficiency is the First Pillar of Practical Totalitarianism. The
Second Pillar is reliance on the private sector for effectuation. This gives
the government plausible deniability. For example, Google has all your email
for decades back, This is annoying but not truly alarming. If the federal government
(openly) collected emails, conservatives would shriek about…totalitarianism.
But Google isn’t the government–is it?
The
Third pillar: A press not too noticeably controlled, with enough apparent
difference of opinion to simulate savage debate of ideas–without touching on
any important ones. For example, Rachel Maddow rattles that Trump is a Russian
agent while Rush Limbaugh, the Rachel Maddow of the Right, demurs furiously.
This allows people to be excited and engaged without endangering either Wall Street
or the military budget.
Hermetic
control of information isn’t needed, and would be noticed. Most people get most
of their news from the lobotomy box. Anything that doesn’t appear on the
flickering screen doesn’t exist for most, and these are enough. It is thus
possible to suppress information not by suppressing it, but by ignoring it.
We
have now listed the fundamentals of American government. Now let us examine the
use and intersection of these principles here and abroad.
China
is typically offered as practicing the blackest totalitarianism, the implicit
contrast being with the enlightened democracy enjoyed by Americans. For
example, we are told that In China, everything you say or do is monitored.
Obviously China is a most terrible place. Who could doubt it?
By
contrast, in America, cameras are everywhere, all email is recorded, every bank
transaction, credit-card purchase, who you called by telephone and when, and of
course criminal records. Depending on location, traffic lights photograph your
license number if you run a light (and for all you know, if you don’t),
license-plate readers check for stolen vehicles and (perhaps) delete legal plates.
Cell towers know approximately where you and Google Maps knows to within a few
feet. Locations can be cross-checked with those of other phones to see who you
were with. Now face-recognition comes along.
Since
little of this is directly done by the federal government, we do not live in a
surveillance state. After all, none of the entities involved would share their
information with the feds–would they?
In
China,we are told, there is no freedom of expression. Well, actually there is,
as long as you don’t say the wrong things about the wrong things. In America we
have freedom of speech. It says so in the Constitution.
Well,
we have freedom of speech as long as we don’t say the wrong things about the
wrong things. We all know what we can’t say and who we can’t say it about. In
many places, certainly in the media where you might influence others, you can
lose your job for saying things that upset blacks, Jews, feminists,
homosexuals, LBGQXYZs, Hispanics, or Muslims. In the media you cannot say
anything if favor of the Second Amendment, against abortion, about black crime,
against the military budget or the wars. You cannot doubt accounts of such
events as the Trayvon Martin adventure. On the web, sites can be and
increasingly are “deplatformed” by the social media.
But
as these are not formally part of government, we have freedom of speech. See?
No unelected dictator decides what we are permitted to know or say. Mark
Zuckerberg does.
This
is very different from China in that…in that…wait. I’ll think of something.
Here
we come to the Fourth Pillar of Sufficient Totalitarianism: Repetition,
repetition, repetition. In Mein Kampf
(now removed from Amazon) Adolf said that propaganda should not be entrusted
to.intellectuals They are, he said, easily bored, like sophisticated ideas, and
constantly want to change the message.
Instead,
he said, keep it simple enough for the masses to understand, and say it over
and over and over, and they will come to believe it. More precisely, enough
will come to believe it. The rest don’t matter. This is much cheaper than
kicking in doors at three a.m. and doesn’t arouse potentially dangerous
resentment
RussiaGateRussiaGateRussiaGateChinaDidItChinaDidItChinaDidItIranIsEvilIranIsEvilIranIsEvilGoYoBeginningAndRepeat
We
are told, over and over and over, that America is a democracy and virtually
choking on freedoms. We are told three times in a half hour during the Super
Bowl, that we need to buy a sandwich from Subway. Same principle, exactly. It
works.
Here
we come to the Bicephalous Monoparty, the stage set of American democracy. In
this production, actors called Republicans and Democrats feign combat. It is
like professional wrestling but without the dignity. By Instinct or
prearrangement they avoid mention of things that might produce restiveness
among the electorate: Wall Street, the military budget, corruption, corporate
price-fixing, or Epstein’s ability to hang himself from a bedstead two feet
shorter than himself. It is prettily done. By engaging the glands of the
multitude with shiny political baubles–transgender bathrooms, making America
great again–the avoid endangering larceny as usual.
And
so, unlike China where democracy does not exist and people have no influence,
we have democracy but no influence. This is much slicker.
For
example, if you oppose the interminable wars, what party do you vote for? There
are neither antiwar parties nor serious candidates. Who do you vote for if you
want to cut the goiterous military budget? If you are against torture? If you
oppose a militarily aggressive foreign policy?
Can
you influence what your children are taught in school, what is in their
textbooks? If you are against the ongoing enstupidation of education, or
against the pulling down of statues? Against affirmative action? The list could
go on.
Thank
God we don’t live in China. Their government works, ours doesn’t, but at least
we have our freedoms.
Write
Fred at jet.possum@gmail.com. Put the letters pdq
anywhere in the subject line to avoid autodeletion.
Amazon
review: “Essays on America, life, politics, and just about everything. The
author chronicles among other adventures an aging stripper in Austin, dressed
in a paper-mache horse, who had with her a cobra and a tarantula like a
yak-hair pillow with legs and alternately charmed and terrified a room full of
cowboys sucking down Bud and…. Fred was an apostle of the long-haul thumb
during the Sixties and saw…many things. He tells of standing by the big roads
across the desert, rockin in the wind blast of the heavy rigs roaring by and
the whine of tires and dropping into an arroyo at night with a bottle of cheap
red and watching the stars and perhaps smoking things not approved by the
government. He tells of..well, that’s what the book is for. Join him.”