by Jason Hirthler / January 12th, 2014
The American propaganda machine rolls on, superior to the paltry
efforts of past American, British, and German public relations
machinery. Then, it was enough to sketch terrifying cartoons of Huns or
Jews or other ethnicities and fulminate nonsensically about racial
purity. No more. We have evolved. Now the deception of the tirelessly
distracted masses requires dissimulations of far greater sophistication.
Take, for instance, the recent news that, once again, for the umpteenth month in a row, the unemployment rate has
dropped. This happy turn of events was accompanied by the heart-warming news that President Obama has
launched
“Promise Zones” in five cities that his economic policies have helped
“fast track” to destitution. Thus, a cursory glance at the headlines—all
anyone has time for these days, right?—is enough to instill the
garden-variety commuter with enough cautious optimism to plough through
another day of alienating work. One imagines the
Man in the Grey Flannel Suit cruising down the pavements of Manhattan, stupendous grin across his face,
Times
tucked under his arm, chest swollen with American pride. Or—perhaps
I’ve mistakenly lifted a phenotype from another time. Perhaps today we
should substitute the
Man in the Coarse Cotton Hoodie, striding broadly down the gum-spackled sidewalks of Gotham, a crumpled
Post beneath his elbow, a suspicious glare scanning the street for crazies. Nevertheless…
Water cooler chatter notes the rising employment numbers, then quickly turns to important development on
The Walking Dead,
before the drones dispatch themselves back to their cubicles to eyeball
the Excel grids surging across their monitors. Alas, all is seemingly
well in America, if not ideal.
Meanwhile, Obama progressives and White House inner circle
congratulate each other on another PR coup, snowing the public for one
more week. (One thought does occur: that the administration believes its
own rhetoric, a chilling notion, but one not without its theoretical
basis: evolutionary biologists have posited that the best liars are
those who believe their own lies. It makes them more convincing
since—according to their inner voice—there’s nothing to hide.)
A deeper dive, or even a shallow dive, into the nuance of the
unemployment numbers reveal what authors like Paul Craig Roberts have
been railing about for years—that the figures are a sham. The 6.7%
unemployment ignores long-term unemployed, who comprise an
ever-expanding percentage of the population. Nor does the unemployment
number recognize the underemployed—both underpaid and part-timers. You
know these people. They serve up your McWhoppers with an absent look in
their eyes; they ask if you’re a Barnes & Noble member and if you’d
like to become one; they sullenly drag your discount DVD purchase across
the face of the scanner at Best Buy. They work fewer hours than they
need and earn fewer dollars than they should. They are the mass
underclass, and the administration’s monthly jobs report shoves them
aside. Job creation is mostly seasonal, part-time, or low-wage. Third
World jobs, in other words. None of these facts would bolster the
optimism of our disaffected youth, aimless middle-agers or frightened
retirees. Better to stick to the saccharine fibbery that produces
happier outlooks.
You are likewise saddened to find that the “Promise Zones” too are a
canard. Lifted from the Clinton playbook, it seems—recall the Economic
Empowerment Zones that set a lovely precedent of urban tax shelters for
booming businesses—on closer inspection we discover that Promise Zones
are intended to help children escape the curse of their ZIP codes by
dint “of her work ethic and the scope of her dreams.” (Note the use of
the female gender, doubtless designed by some diligent PR flack to
“optimize” empathy.) How will the industrious Obama administration help
“her” do this? Not, of course, by offering anything useful, like money.
God, no. Remember, Obama is a “free-market guy.” Better to “aid in
cutting through red tape” that will help immiserated communities access
existing resources. One could be forgiven for asking if the lack of
existing resources wasn’t part of the problem in the first place. But no
matter. This is a forgotten detail of an otherwise hopeful, gracious,
and sympathetic act of government, notably its Democrat wing.
One other piece of news fairly startles the jaundiced reader; namely,
that the administration has actually assembled a group to recommend
ways to regulate the National Security Agency (NSA). And that the
President is actually mulling over their proposals. Given the efficiency
of the White House dissimulation engine, it’s fair to withhold final
judgment on this story. It is a standard political technique to organize
committees to simulate progress, to erect a hologram of reform that
looks good but is nothing more than a rhetorical cipher. And perhaps
part of the subterfuge is to generate the appearance of partisan and
interagency gridlock, such that the proposals will never be implemented,
and the President can throw his hands in the air and decry the feckless
partisanship of Democratic governance. To that end, new FBI chief James
B. Comey publically
vented
his displeasure with one of the review group’s better ideas: to require
court review of “National Security Letters” (N.S.L.s) before they were
sent to companies demanding that they hand over all customer data.
“What worries me about their suggestion that we impose a judicial
procedure on N.S.L.’s is that it would actually make it harder for us to
do national security investigations than bank fraud investigations,”
Mr. Comey said. He noted that the N.S.L.s are “a very important tool
that is essential to the work we do.” Comey adds this last fatuity while
providing neither evidence as to how it secures the populace nor how
mass privacy invasions meet the probable cause criterion of the Fourth
Amendment.
Democratic Representative Adam Schiff chimed in with the idea that
the crucial question, “is if the program has some value, how is that
weighed against the cost of collecting millions and millions of domestic
call records of the American people?”
Note how Schiff cleverly smuggles in the same assumption that Comey
bluntly stated—that the program is useful. This claim was denied by the
review group itself when it quite openly announced that the NSA’s bulk
data collection, “was not essential to preventing attacks and could
readily have been obtained in a timely manner” using more traditional—
and legal—methods.
The note of disagreement—or partisanship, in the idiom of the
beltway—will likely lead to the ever-prudent and conciliatory Commander
in Chief rejecting this useful level of review. He is presumed to be
favoring a couple of toothless “proposals” that will cost millions and
change nothing, except perhaps the perception that he has moved to
address the public’s outrage over illegal spying. The two programs to
which the President has evidently given “penetrating and searching
thought” (of the kind no mere citizen might be capable) include
assembling all telecommunications data in a single silo not owned by the
federal government, as well as appointing a kind of Roman tribune, or
“public advocate” whose express mandate would be to argue against the
government when it assails telecom companies with its histrionic
N.S.L.s. Neither appears, on the face of it, to offer much in the way of
resistance. It’s quite likely national security agencies, now numbering
in the dozens, will simply steamroll past the bootless civil liberty
complaints of the tribune straight into the data mines of AT&T,
Verizon, and the rest. What good is it to store the data elsewhere than
on government property when they can access it any time they like on any
pretext they like?
This too fails the legitimacy test. Obama’s review board, like his
Promise Zones and BLS reports, are transparent attempts to mollify
public fears and assuage popular anger. None have as their object the
needs of the majority. But rather like a father patronizing a child with
slapdash answers to ontologically astute questions (“Why do we exist,
Dad?”), the White House continues to siphon off what’s left of the Bill
of Rights and the government’s mandate as guarantor of our “liberty” and
“pursuit of happiness.” And therein lies the obvious contempt with
which elite Americans perceive their lessers.
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