War is an end in itself, and it matters little who is chosen as the enemy of the year
By Butler Shaffer
By Butler Shaffer
What the government is good at is collecting taxes, taking away your freedoms and killing people. It’s not good at much else.
- Tom Clancy
In the science of chaos, “attractors” are
operational principles around which turbulence and apparent chaos are
harmonized. What the limited nature of our prior experiences dismisses as
randomness or disorder, the study of chaos and complexity is revealing as
deeper patterns of regularity. Attractors help to identify the dynamics by
which complex systems organize themselves. Thus, it could be said that an
earthquake fault line serves as an “attractor” for geologic forces in plate
tectonics, just as river systems are attractors for water engaging in its
ongoing relations with the forces of gravity. At a social level, an estate sale
can be seen as an attractor for antique dealers; dumpsites as attractors for
abandoned property; or hospitals as attractors for diseases. In marketplace
economics, the pricing system is an attractor for buyers and sellers seeking to
exchange property claims.
The study of chaos is helping us
understand why all political
systems are disruptive and destructive of life processes. Through this new
science, we are discovering – contrary to Plato’s hubristic assumptions – that
complex systems produce behavior that is bothdetermined and
yet unpredictable. Left to the
playing out of the forces operating within and upon it, a complex system will
spontaneously generate consequences that are implicit – albeit unpredictable –
within it.
But we know that many people do not like a
world that is unpredictable and indifferent to their particular interests.
Thus, a business owner who is unable to effectively compete for customers in a
free market, may seek to disrupt the order that does not accommodate his whims.
He might begin by pursuing voluntary agreements
with his competitors to reduce the pace with which they pursue their respective
interests, a strategy that is rarely successful. When the voluntary approach
doesn’t satisfy all industry members, he and many of his business rivals turn
to the state to compel, by force, results unobtainable in the marketplace. My
book, In Restraint of Trade: The Business Campaign Against
Competition, 1918-1938, documents this politicization of the business system.
The state is almost universally defined as a system that enjoys a legal monopoly
on the use of violence within a given territory. Despite all of the
media hype, government schools conditioning, and other institutional propaganda
to paint political systems as noble, morally principled agencies devoted to
serving the general welfare, the state is capable of doing no more than this: compelling people – through violence
and the threat of violence – to do what they do not choose to do, or to refrain
from doing what they do choose to do. Like the subjugated and
exploited proletariat of Animal
Farm, increasing numbers of men and women read those opening words to
the preamble of the Constitution – “We the People” – and discover the identity
of “the people” who control and benefit from the system that was created.
If the state is defined in terms of its
enjoying a monopoly on the use of violence, what is the character of people who
would be attracted to the use of its violent tools and practices? What sort of
people would be attracted to careers that gave them the arbitrary power to
force others to their will; work premised on the imperative of obedience? It is
almost amusing to see legislators conducting hearings on the problem of
bullying in schools: I often wonder whether these politicians are projecting
their own “dark side” forces onto others; using playground ruffians as
scapegoats for the more widespread bullying that is the
raison d’etre of politics. Or might these solons
simply be trying to eliminate competition,
in much the same way that local governments war with the street-gangs that
violently dominate urban neighborhoods, a role to be monopolized by the state’s
police system?
There is a continuum running between
“sociopathic” and “psychopathic” behavior separating degrees of antisocial
conduct. A Post Office mail clerk, or a receptionist at a DMV office, may not
exhibit such traits. But what about state officials whose functions are to enforcesome governmental edict
or program? The man or woman who is prepared to initiate an act of punishment
to compel obedience to a governmental mandate easily segues into the SWAT team
member or police brute or one who tortures another. It is the appetite for
ultimate power over others that drives such people. We have now reached that
most vicious end-point on the continuum, the war system, where the
indiscriminate killing of innocent people – many of them children – becomes
justified by the psychopathic war-lovers on no more compelling ground than that
they have the power to inflict death on a massive scale.
During World War II, allied forces engaged
in war crimes every bit as vicious as those perpetrated by the defeated
enemies. The Nazi psychopaths who ran death camps were matched by the allied
officials who bombed such non-military cities as Dresden and Hamburg, and
vaporized tens of thousands of civilians along with some U.S. military
prisoners of war, in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The nuclear bombing of these
Japanese cities was done primarily to impress the Soviet Union, while erstwhile
beautiful cities such as Dresden were leveled because, in the words of one RAF
official, “we didn’t have any other cities left to bomb.” The RAF Bomber
Command chief, Arthur “Bomber” Harris, said, thirty years later, that he would
do the same thing again if presented with the same choices. Such is the mindset
of the psychopath!
Sean Hannity and many of his neocon
brethren embrace the same reasoning as Bomber Harris. With increasing numbers
of decent, intelligent Americans able to see the planned war on Syria as being
based on the same kinds of lies and forgeries that led to the unprovoked
war on Iraq, the war-lovers are trying a different tack. If people are not
prepared to “lob a few missiles into Syria,” Hannity argued, an attack on Iran would
be an even better action to take. His position – and that of so many other
neocons – comes down to little more than this: if the boobeoisie is not buying
into our plot against Syria, then let us go attack someone else before any opposition arises. War is an end in
itself, and it matters little who is chosen as the enemy of the year! If you
have any doubts as to this, watch the wonderful anti-war film Wag the Dog.
If, as Randolph Bourne advised, “war is
the health of the state,” those who are attracted to the exercise of violence
over others can delude themselves to be health-care practitioners for a system
at war with life itself.
No more than we would expect Mother
Theresa to operate a brothel can we imagine advocates of peace and liberty to
be welcomed into the management of the state. This is why Ron Paul was so
persona non grata to members of the political elite. He wanted to reduce –
perhaps even eliminate – the violent nature of the American nation-state. He
was almost booed off the stage at a Republican gathering for suggesting that
this country employ the “Golden Rule” as the basis for a foreign policy! He
wanted to minimize that which attracts the sociopaths and psychopaths to the
state: the opportunity to use ever-increasing levels of destructive violence
against their fellow humans.
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