By Doug Casey
I'm going to argue that the US government, in
particular, is being overrun by the wrong kind of person. It's a trend that's
been in motion for many years but has now reached a point of no return. In other
words, a type of moral rot has become so prevalent that it's institutional in
nature. There is not going to be, therefore, any serious change in the
direction in which the US is headed until a genuine crisis topples the existing
order. Until then, the trend will accelerate.
The reason is that a certain class of people –
sociopaths – are now fully in control of major American institutions. Their
beliefs and attitudes are insinuated throughout the economic, political,
intellectual and psychological/spiritual fabric of the US.
What does this mean to the individual? It depends on your character. Are you the kind of person who supports "my country right or wrong," as did most Germans in the 1930s and 1940s, or the kind who dodges the duty to be a helpmate to murderers? The type of passenger who goes down with the ship or the type who puts on his vest and looks for a life boat? The type of individual who supports the merchants who offer the fairest deal or the type who is gulled by splashy TV commercials?
What the ascendancy of sociopaths means isn't an
academic question. Throughout history, the question has been a matter of life
and death. That's one reason America grew; every American (or any ex-colonial)
has forebears who confronted the issue and decided to uproot themselves to go
somewhere with better prospects. The losers were those who delayed thinking
about the question until the last minute.
I have often described myself, and those I prefer to
associate with, as gamma rats. You may recall the ethologist's characterization
of the social interaction of rats as being between a few alpha rats and many
beta rats, the alpha rats being dominant and the beta rats submissive. In
addition, a small percentage are gamma rats that stake out prime territory and
mates, like the alphas, but are not interested in dominating the betas. The
people most inclined to leave for the wide world outside and seek fortune
elsewhere are typically gamma personalities.
You may be thinking that what happened in places like
Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, Mao's China, Pol Pot's Cambodia and scores of
other countries in recent history could not, for some reason, happen in the US.
Actually, there's no reason it won't at this point. All the institutions that
made America exceptional – including a belief in capitalism, individualism,
self-reliance and the restraints of the Constitution – are now only historical
artifacts.
On the other hand, the distribution of sociopaths is
completely uniform across both space and time. Per capita, there were no more
evil people in Stalin's Russia, Hitler's Germany, Mao's China, Amin's Uganda,
Ceausescu's Romania or Pol Pot's Cambodia than there are today in the US. All
you need is favorable conditions for them to bloom, much as mushrooms do after
a rainstorm.
Conditions for them in the US are becoming quite
favorable. Have you ever wondered where the 50,000 people employed by the TSA
to inspect and degrade you came from? Most of them are middle-aged. Did they
have jobs before they started doing something that any normal person would
consider demeaning? Most did, but they were attracted to – not repelled by – a
job where they wear a costume and abuse their fellow citizens all day.
Few of them can imagine that they're shepherding in a
police state as they play their roles in security theater. (A reinforced door
on the pilots' cabin is probably all that's actually needed, although the most
effective solution would be to hold each airline responsible for its own
security and for the harm done if it fails to protect passengers and third
parties.) But the 50,000 newly employed are exactly the same type of people who
joined the Gestapo – eager to help in the project of controlling everyone.
Nobody was drafted into the Gestapo.
What's going on here is an instance of Pareto's Law.
That's the 80-20 rule that tells us, for example, that 80% of your sales come
from 20% of your salesmen or that 20% of the population are responsible for 80%
of the crime.
As I see it, 80% of people are basically decent; their
basic instincts are to live by the Boy Scout virtues. 20% of people, however,
are what you might call potential trouble sources, inclined toward doing the
wrong thing when the opportunity presents itself. They might now be shoe
clerks, mailmen or waitresses – they seem perfectly benign in normal times.
They play baseball on weekends and pet the family dog. However, given the
chance, they will sign up for the Gestapo, the Stasi, the KGB, the TSA,
Homeland Security or whatever. Many are well intentioned but likely to favor
force as the solution to any problem.
But it doesn't end there, because 20% of that 20% are
really bad actors. They are drawn to government and other positions where they
can work their will on other people and, because they're enthusiastic about
government, they rise to leadership positions. They remake the culture of the
organizations they run in their own image. Gradually, non-sociopaths can no longer
stand being there. They leave. Soon the whole barrel is full of bad apples.
That's what's happening today in the US.
It's a pity that Bush, when he was in office, made
such a big deal of evil. He discredited the concept. He made Boobus
americanus think it only existed in a distant axis, in places like
North Korea, Iraq and Iran – which were and still are irrelevant backwaters and
arbitrarily chosen enemies. Bush trivialized the concept of evil and made it
seem banal because he was such a fool. All the while real evil, very immediate
and powerful, was growing right around him, and he lacked the awareness to see
he was fertilizing it by turning the US into a national security state after
9/11.
Now, I believe, it's out of control. The US is already
in a truly major depression and on the edge of financial chaos and a currency
meltdown. The sociopaths in government will react by redoubling the pace toward
a police state domestically and starting a major war abroad. To me, this is
completely predictable. It's what sociopaths do.
There are seven characteristics I can think of that
define a sociopath, although I'm sure the list could be extended.
1. Sociopaths completely lack a conscience or any
capacity for real regret about hurting people. Although they pretend the opposite.
2. Sociopaths put their own desires and wants on a
totally different level from those of other people. Their wants are
incommensurate. They truly believe their ends justify their means. Although they pretend
the opposite.
3. Sociopaths consider themselves superior to everyone
else, because they aren't burdened by the emotions and ethics others have –
they're above all that. They're arrogant. Although they pretend
the opposite.
4. Sociopaths never accept the slightest responsibility
for anything that goes wrong, even though they're responsible for almost
everything that goes wrong. You'll never hear a sincere apology from
them.
5.
Sociopaths have
a lopsided notion of property rights. What's theirs is theirs, and what's yours
is theirs too. They therefore defend currency inflation and taxation as good
things.
6. Sociopaths usually pick the wrong target to attack. If
they lose their wallet, they kick the dog. If 16 Saudis fly planes into buildings,
they attack Afghanistan.
7.
Sociopaths
traffic in disturbing news, they love to pass on destructive rumors and they'll
falsify information to damage others.
The fact that they're chronic, extremely convincing
and even enthusiastic liars, who often believe their own lies, means they
aren't easy to spot, because normal people naturally assume another person is
telling the truth. They rarely have handlebar mustaches or chortle like Snidely
Whiplash. Instead, they cultivate a social veneer or a mask of sanity that
diverts suspicion. You can rely on them to be "politically correct"
in public. How could a congressman or senator who avidly supports charities
possibly be a bad guy? They're expert at using facades to disguise reality, and
they feel no guilt about it.
Political elites are primarily, and sometimes
exclusively, composed of sociopaths. It's not just that they aren't normal
human beings. They're barely even human, a separate subspecies, differentiated
by their psychological qualities. A normal human can mate with them spiritually
and psychologically about as fruitfully as a modern human could mate physically
with a Neanderthal; it can be done, but the results won't be good.
It's a serious problem when a society becomes highly
politicized, as is now the case in the US and Europe. In normal times, a
sociopath stays under the radar. Perhaps he'll commit a common crime when he
thinks he can get away with it, but social mores keep him reined in. However,
once the government changes its emphasis from protecting citizens from force to
initiating force with laws and taxes, those social mores break down. Peer
pressure, social approbation and moral opprobrium, the forces that keep a
healthy society orderly, are replaced by regulations enforced by cops and
funded by taxes. Sociopaths sense this, start coming out of the woodwork and
are drawn to the State and its bureaucracies and regulatory agencies, where
they can get licensed and paid to do what they've always wanted to do.
It's very simple, really. There are two ways people
can relate to each other: voluntarily or coercively. The government is pure
coercion, and sociopaths are drawn to its power and force.
The majority of Americans will accept the situation
for two reasons: One, they have no philosophical anchor to keep them from being
washed up onto the rocks. They no longer have any real core beliefs, and most
of their opinions – e.g., "We need national health care," "Our
brave troops should fight evil over there so we don't have to fight it over
here," "The rich should pay their fair share" – are reactive and
comforting. The whole point of spin doctors is to produce comforting sound
bites that elude testing against reality. And, two, they've become too pampered
and comfortable, a nation of overfed losers, mooches and coasters who like the
status quo without wondering how long it can possibly last.
It's nonsensical to blather about the Land of the Free
and Home of the Brave when reality TV and Walmart riots are
much closer to the truth. The majority of Americans are, of course, where the
rot originates – the presidential candidates are spending millions taking their
pulse in surveys and polls and then regurgitating to them what they seem to
want to hear. Once a country buys into the idea that an above-average,
privileged lifestyle is everyone's minimum due, when the fortunate few can lobby
for special deals to rake something off the table as they squeeze wealth out of
others by force, that country is on the decline. Lobbying and taxation rather
than production and innovation have never been able to sustain prosperity. The
wealth being squeezed took centuries to produce, but it is not inexhaustible.
In that light, it was interesting to hear Mitt Romney,
the presumptive Republican nominee, speak about the lower, middle
and upper classes recently. Romney is an empty suit, only marginally better than
the last Republican nominee, the hostile and mildly demented John
McCain. In any event, Romney is right about the poor, in a way – there is a
"safety net," now holding 50 million people on Medicaid and 46
million on food stamps, among many other supposed benefits. And he's right
about the rich; there's no need to worry about them at the moment – at least
until the revolution starts. He claims to worry about the middle class, not
that his worries will do anything to help them. But he's right that the middle
class is where the problem lies. It's just a different kind of problem than he
thinks.
People generally fall into an economic class because
of their psychology and their values. Each of the three classes has a
characteristic psychological profile. For the lower class, it's apathy. They
have nothing, they're ground down and they don't really care. They're not in
the game, and they aren't going to do anything; they're resigned to their fate.
For the upper class, it's greed and arrogance. They have everything, and they
think they deserve it – whether they do or not. The middle class – at least in
today's world – is run by fear. Fear that they're only a paycheck away from
falling into the lower class. Fear that they can't pay their debts or borrow
more. Fear that they don't have a realistic prospect of improving themselves.
The problem is that fear is a negative, dangerous and
potentially explosive emotion. It can easily morph into anger and violence.
Exactly where it will lead is unpredictable, but it's not a good place. One
thing that exacerbates the situation is that all three classes now rely on the
government, albeit in different ways. Bankruptcy of the government will affect
them all drastically.
With sociopaths in charge, we could very well see the
Milgram experiment reenacted on a national scale. In the experiment, you may
recall, researchers asked members of the public to torture subjects (who,
unbeknownst to the people being recruited, were paid actors) with electric
shocks, all the way up to what they believed were lethal doses. Most of them
did as asked, after being assured that it was "alright" and
"necessary" by men in authority. The men in authority today are
mostly sociopaths.
WHAT TO DO
One practical issue worth thinking about is how you,
as someone with libertarian values, will manage in a future increasingly
controlled by sociopaths. My guess is poorly, unless you take action to
insulate yourself. That's because of the way almost all creatures are
programmed by nature. There's one imperative common to all of them: Survive!
People obviously want to do that as individuals. And as families. In fact, they
want all the groups that they're members of to survive, simply because
(everything else being equal) it should help them to survive as individuals. So
individual Marines want the Marine Corps to survive. Individual Rotarians want
the Rotary Club to prosper. Individual Catholics leap to the defense of the
Church of Rome.
That's why individual Germans during World War II
were, as has been asserted, "willing executioners" – they were
supporting the Reich for the same reasons the Marines, the Rotarians and the
Catholics support their groups. Except more so, because the Reich was under
attack from all sides. So of course they followed orders and turned in their
neighbors who seemed less than enthusiastic. Failing to support the Reich –
even if they knew it had some rather unsavory aspects – seemed an invitation to
invading armies to come and rape their daughters, steal their property and
probably kill them. So of course the Germans closed ranks around their leaders,
even though everyone at the top was a sociopath. You can expect Americans to do
the same.
Americans have done so before, when the country was
far less degraded. During the War Between the States, even saying something
against the war was a criminal offense. The same was true during World War I.
In World War II, the Japanese were all put in concentration camps on
groundless, racially based suspicions of disloyalty. During the early years of
the Cold War, McCarthyism was rampant. The examples are legion among humans,
and the US was never an exception. It's even true among chickens. If a bird has
a feather out of place, the others will peck at it, eventually killing it. That
out-of-place feather is deemed a badge of otherness announcing that its owner
isn't part of the group. Chicken Autre must die.
Libertarians, who tend to be more intelligent, better
informed and very definitely more independent than average, are going to be in
a touchy situation as the crisis deepens. Most aren't going to buy into the
groupthink that inevitably accompanies war and other major crises. As such,
they'll be seen as unreliable, even traitors. As Bush said, "If you're not
with us, you're against us." And, he might have added, "the
Constitution be damned." But of course that document is no longer even
given lip service; it's now a completely dead letter.
It's very hard for an individualist to keep his mouth
shut when he sees these things going on. But he'd better keep quiet, as even HL
Mencken wisely did during both world wars. In today's world, just keeping quiet
won't be enough; the national security state has an extensive, and growing,
file on everybody. They believe they know exactly what your beliefs, desires,
fears and associations are, or may be. What we're now facing is likely to be
more dangerous than past crises. If you're wise, you'll relocate someplace
where you're something of an outsider and, by virtue of that fact, are allowed
a measure of eccentric opinion. That's why I spend an increasing amount of time
in Latin America. In truth, however, security is going to be hard
to find anywhere in the years to come. The most you can hope for is to tilt the
odds in your favor.
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