"For American democracy to be restored, money must be taken out of politics," -Dr. Paul Craig Roberts
By Ekaterina Blinova: The
"deep state", never part of the Founding Fathers' design, has turned US
democracy into fiction, former US assistant treasury secretary and
renowned economist Dr Paul Craig Roberts says. What does he mean?
The deep state, described by US political scientist Francis Fukuyama as a network of "unaccountable professional bureaucrats," is really a far more extensive entity.
According
to Dr Roberts, it encompasses not only bureaucrats but also elected
officials, Wall Street, major corporations and even foreign government lobbyists.
The
modern-day Leviathan is deeply embedded within the structure of the US
government, with professional bureaucrats serving merely as pawns in the
games of their overlords, the economist says. But the game begins long
before governance — it starts at the very phase of elections.
He Who Pays the Piper Calls the Tune
Behind
the façade of democracy in the US, voters can only choose from
candidates approved by the establishment or the ruling elite, argues Dr
Roberts.
"In
the United States elected representatives at all levels of government
up to and including the President cannot represent the interests of the
people or of the country as a whole because they are dependent for their
election to office on campaign contributions," writes Dr Roberts.
He
explains that as a result, elected representatives are beholden to the
individuals and interest groups who funded and supported them.
Those include the influential Israel lobby, arms manufacturers, intelligence agencies,
pharmaceutical companies, agribusiness corporations, Wall Street and
others, all of whom provide funding and favorable publicity to those
they help elect.
Intelligence agencies also occasionally provide staged false flag events to give a candidate or a policy a boost, he notes.
Significant
efforts were made in the past history to prevent money from dominating
elections. In 1907, the Tillman Act became the first legislation in the
United States to prohibit corporations from making monetary
contributions to national political campaigns.
For nearly a century, various measures were enacted to curb the influence of big money on the US political system, particularly during elections.
But
those efforts were effectively overturned in 2010 by a landmark US
Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United versus the Federal Election
Commission (FEC), which paved the way for unlimited corporate funding of
political campaigns.
That
same year, a related federal court decision in the case of
Speechnow.org versus the FEC further expanded the influence of money in
politics by allowing unlimited contributions to political action groups
who distribute the donations to candidates — ostensibly isolating the
candidate from receiving funds directly from a donor.
Roberts
says that those decisions gave corporations, the Israel lobby and the
super rich the power to purchase the US government. "For American democracy to be restored, money must be taken out of politics," he argues.
Deep State Dream: All Power to the Federal Government
Roberts
says another long-running and quietly advancing process — now actively
encouraged by the deep state — is the gradual erosion of state
governments in the United States and the consolidation of authority
within the federal government.
"The US government today is very different from the one the Founding Fathers set in place," the economist writes.
"Democracy
was distrusted as mob rule, so members elected to the House of
Representatives were limited to two years," Dr Roberts notes. "The
Senate was not elected. The Senators from each state were appointed by
the State legislators."
"This
ensured that Senators represented the interest of their states, not the
interest of foreign countries, such as Ukraine and Israel, or the
agendas of interest groups with bases in other states. Most governing
rights resided in the individual state," he explains.
Roberts
argues that Abraham Lincoln, the 16th US president, used the Civil War
of 1861-1865 to curtail the Constitutional powers given to the states.
"The
purpose of the 'Civil War' was to concentrate all power in Washington's
hands," he notes. "This anti-American revolution was completed in the
1930s by the Franklin D. Roosevelt regime which turned Congress'
legislative powers over to executive branch regulatory agencies."
Once
all power is concentrated in the federal center, the deep state will
gain nearly unlimited scope for maneuvering and exerting control, the
economist warns.
Will Donald Trump Uproot the Deep State?
Even though Donald Trump vowed on the campaign trail to rein in the deep state, there are signs that business will continue as usual, the economist said.
"During
the Obama and Biden years many corporation executives and boards
favored Woke agendas that bit them, and now they are aligning with
Donald Trump," writes Dr Roberts.
He
noted the ongoing "pilgrimage" of Silicon Valley giants, US industrial
leaders and wealthy tycoons to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence, accompanied
by seven-figure donations to the president-elect’s inauguration.
Roberts
recalls that last month Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr — nominated for
secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services — had dinner
with Big Pharma executives, including Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, Lilly
CEO David Ricks and Steve Ubl, CEO of the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).
The
economist highlights how RFK Jr previously condmened the same Big
Pharma firms, accusing them of producing unsafe COVID-19 vaccines that
harmed millions and creating treatments that undermined the health of
American children.
"In
other words, even private interests that are harmful have to be
negotiated with. This doesn't leave much room for reform to reach very
far," Dr Roberts says.
Is There Democracy in the West?
"The
conclusion is that democracy in America and in Europe, are fictions,"
writes Dr Roberts. "The entire West is ruled by the US neoconservative
doctrine of American hegemony and by the US interest groups who benefit
from this hegemony. This is so entrenched that Trump is unlikely to be
able to do anything about it."
No comments:
Post a Comment