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grasswire

(50,130 posts)
Sat Jan 10, 2015, 10:57 PM Jan 2015

Must read: What Would Today’s American Insecurity Look Like to Someone From 1963 - Moyers

http://billmoyers.com/2015/01/09/self-perpetuating-machine-american-insecurity/


One small excerpt from an EXCELLENT read by Tom Englehart.

The National Security State as a Self-Perpetuating Machine

So far, America’s future, looked at from more than half a century ago, has been little short of phantasmagoric. To sum up: in an almost enemy-less world in which the American economic system was triumphant and the US possessed by far the strongest military on the planet, nothing seems to have gone as planned or faintly right. And yet, you wouldn’t want to leave that observer from 1963 with the wrong impression. However much the national security state may have seemed like an amalgam of the Three Stooges on a global stage, not everything worked out badly.
America’s New War in the Middle East

In fact, in these years the national security state triumphed in the nation’s capital in a way that the US military and allied intelligence outfits were incapable of doing anywhere else on Earth. Fifty-three years after the world might have ended, on a planet lacking a Soviet-like power — though the US was by now involved in “Cold War 2.0” in eastern Ukraine on the border of the rump energy state the Soviet Union left behind — the worlds of national security and surveillance had grown to a size that beggared their own enormous selves in the Cold War era. They had been engorged by literally trillions of taxpayer dollars. A new domestic version of the Pentagon called the Department of Homeland Security had been set up in 2002. An “intelligence community” made up of 17 major agencies and outfits, bolstered by hundreds of thousands of private security contractors, had expanded endlessly and in the process created a global surveillance state that went beyond the wildest imaginings of the totalitarian powers of the 20th century.

In the process, the national security state enveloped itself in a penumbra of secrecy that left the American people theoretically “safe” and remarkably ignorant of what was being done in their name. Its officials increasingly existed in a crime-free zone, beyond the reach of accountability, the law, courts, or jail. Homeland security and intelligence complexes grew up around the national security state in the way that the military-industrial complex had once grown up around the Pentagon and similarly engorged themselves. In these years, Washington filled with newly constructed billion-dollar intelligence headquarters and building complexes dedicated to secret work — and that only begins to tell the tale of how 21st-century “security” triumphed.

This vast investment of American treasure has been used to construct an edifice dedicated in a passionate way to dealing with a single danger to Americans, one that would have been unknown in 1963: Islamic terrorism. Despite the several thousand Americans who died on September 11, 2001, the dangers of terrorism rate above shark attacks but not much else in American life. Even more remarkably, the national security state has been built on a foundation of almost total failure. Think of failure, in fact, as the spark that repeatedly sets the further expansion of its apparatus in motion, funds it, and allows it to thrive.
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Must read: What Would Today’s American Insecurity Look Like to Someone From 1963 - Moyers (Original Post) grasswire Jan 2015 OP
quote grasswire Jan 2015 #1
Bookmarked for after work. silverweb Jan 2015 #2
K&R! This thread should have hundreds of recommendations! Enthusiast Jan 2015 #3
Brilliant malaise Jan 2015 #4

grasswire

(50,130 posts)
1. quote
Sat Jan 10, 2015, 10:58 PM
Jan 2015

"Official Washington has, that is, invented a system so dumb, so extreme, so fundamentalist and so deeply entrenched in our world that changing it will surely prove a stunningly difficult task."

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
3. K&R! This thread should have hundreds of recommendations!
Sun Jan 11, 2015, 01:51 AM
Jan 2015

Why it doesn't have hundreds of recommendations is illustrative of the problem.

The people have not yet recognized the problem.

Oh, they will recognize it.

But I fear it will be far too late.

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