Every movement has its wackos, its "extremists,"
who take the original premise of an idea to its furthest, kookiest
application. Usually they are harmless, due to their small numbers
and the obvious nuttiness of their ideas. In times of crisis,
however, when people are looking for simple answers and, above
all, safety these ideological entrepreneurs of the fringe have the
potential to make many more sales than usual. And then, watch
out
I draw your attention to this phenomenon because we very rarely
get a glimpse of the pure, undiluted craziness of the
War Party. Observed through the veil of euphemism,
doubletalk,
and outright
lies, their bombast always falls short of the full-tilt
moonbattiness that we can see, quite clearly, lighting up their
eyes. When the president's men talk about the "unitary
presidency," when the editor of National Review "jokes"
about nuking Mecca, when the more unhinged neocons darkly imply
that critics of the war and the Dear
Leader should be jailed, they always qualify it, mask it,
and sweeten the bitter pill of what Lew Rockwell calls "red-state
fascism." But sometimes they let the mask slip
One such very instructive instance was the publication of an
article by the Family Security Foundation a neocon propaganda
outfit associated with the well-known Center for Security Policy
written by one Philip Atkinson, entitled "Conquering
the Drawbacks of Democracy," which bemoans the fact that Bush
didn't take "the wisest course" in Iraq, which "would have been for
President Bush to use his nuclear weapons to slaughter Iraqis until
they complied with his demands, or until they were all dead."
This statement, alone, should be enough to make the gauge in our
crazy-ometer go, uh, crazy, but Atkinson is
just getting started. The problem, says this self-proclaimed
"philosopher," is that Democracy (he insists on capitalizing the
word) is a fatally flawed system, because it elevates the "popular"
policy over the "wise" course, i.e., nuking
Iraq. Ah, but there is a solution to Bush's conundrum
According to Atkinson, Bush can follow in the supposed footsteps
of Julius Caesar "by ordering his army to empty Iraq of Arabs and
repopulate the country with Americans." Atkinson seems to be
laboring under the delusion that the Roman caesar committed genocide
in Gaul, although where he gets this is beyond
me, but that is neither here nor there. The punch line of what
one might have suspected is an extended joke is this:
"He could then follow Caesar's example and use his newfound
popularity with the military to wield military power to become the
first permanent president of America, and end the civil chaos caused
by the continually squabbling Congress and the out-of-control
Supreme Court."
Oh, but why stop there? This is the mark of the true nutball, who
cannot avoid the "logic" of his craziness and must follow it
wherever it leads:
"President Bush can fail in his duty to himself, his country,
and his God, by becoming 'ex-president' Bush or he can become
'President-for-Life' Bush: the conqueror of Iraq, who brings sense
to the Congress and sanity to the Supreme Court. Then who would be
able to stop Bush from emulating Augustus Caesar and becoming ruler
of the world? For only an America united under one ruler has the
power to save humanity from the threat of a new Dark Age wrought by
terrorists armed with nuclear weapons."
Notice the rationalization, coming in at the end: our
"president-for-life" must seize total power because of a potentially
overwhelming threat, one that requires the suspension of the normal
rules and customs
of a liberal society and imposes its own ruthless logic on our
institutions. We find ourselves transformed, quite beyond our power
to stop it, from a republic into an empire:
the choice, in effect, has already been made for us. That is, unless
we want to commit suicide, which is supposedly the only alternative
to hailing Bush as the ancient Romans once hailed Caesar. As
Atkinson explains:
"The simple truth that modern weapons now mean a nation must
practice genocide or commit suicide. Israel provides the perfect
example. If the Israelis do not raze Iran, the Iranians will fulfill
their boast and wipe Israel off the face of the earth. Yet Israel is
not popular, and so is denied permission to defend itself."
What "modernity" means to Atkinson and at least some
of his fellow neocons is that technological advances have given us
permission to commit genocide. It apparently also means we must
revert to the absolutism of the ancients.
Now, a lot of crazy sh*t gets posted on the Internet every single
day, and to take even half of it seriously would be a major
time-waster, but Atkinson's brand of kookiness deserves to be noted
on account of the organization that sponsored it, published it, and
then quickly pulled the piece off its Web site when an uproar
ensued. The group is the Family Security Foundation, which runs the
Family
Security Matters Web site, and whose head honcho, Carol
Taber, is touted as a "security expert" by Fox News.
Taber was trotted
out during the last presidential election as the living
embodiment of a new voter demographic, the "security moms," whose
only thought is the safety and security of their children and whose
fear of terrorism leads them to support every jot and tittle of
Bush's war-crazed foreign
policy especially the war in Iraq.
The group's Web site, which gave blogger/policy wonk Steve
Clemons "the over-the-top creeps," also features such neocon
standbys as Michelle "Intern
All Muslims" Malkin, terrorism "expert" Steve
Emerson, and Ben
Shapiro, among many others. The Family Security Foundation's
board of directors is a veritable who's who of third-and-fourth
level neocon shills, with a few first-tier types, such as Frank
Gaffney, standing out. Indeed, the whole Family Security Matters
operation is described by the liberal watchdog group Media Matters
as a "front group" for Gaffney's Center for
Security Policy (CSP), the hardest of the hard-line neocon
propaganda outfits. Media Matters notes that the two groups shared a
phone line: calls to FSM were answered by CSP. (The number has since
been changed.)
Aside from longtime head honcho Gaffney, CSP members and
supporters include Richard
Perle, former CIA chief R. James "World
War IV" Woolsey, current Deputy National Security Adviser
Jack Dyer
Crouch II, former undersecretary for defense policy Douglas J.
Feith, and former secretary of the U.S. Air Force James
G. Roche. CSP is funded to the tune of millions
of dollars per year by the big neocon foundations and the
"defense" industry. Gaffney's group is the veritable voice of the military-industrial
complex.
More than that, however, the link between the two groups is
ideological, as well as a matter of cross-pollinated boards
of directors and "advisers" (Gaffney and James T. DeGraffenreid
serve as CSP officials and advisers to FSM). CSP pushes the same
propaganda of fear that underlies Carol Taber's "security moms"
pitch.
In Philip Atkinson's ravings, we have the pure distillation of
the politics of
fear that have been given ample expression by this president and
his media Praetorian Guard. The only difference is that Atkinson
comes out of the closet, so to speak, and plainly says what the
others strongly
imply: that the only good Arab is a dead Arab, that President
Bush ought to silence his opponents at gunpoint, and that any and
all opposition to this administration's "wise" policies is not only
"treason" it's "suicide."
We must ditch our old republic and adopt an authoritarian mode of
government; we must invade, conquer, and relentlessly destroy the
Arab world; Israel's interests in the Middle East and ours are
identical. Where have we heard all this before?
In fairness, Atkinson's article was pulled by the FSM staff, but
one has to wonder why: was it because Atkinson was too honest and
plainspoken in detailing the neocon program for America?
Taber and her fellow "security moms" are seemingly complacent in
their belief that Americans especially women will gladly
surrender their liberty for a modicum of "security." If I were them,
however, I wouldn't bet on it: the first hint that Clueless George
is about to declare himself "president-for-life" would have the
American people up in arms, with women whom I doubt want their
children to grow up under a dictatorship taking the lead.
The Family Security Matters crowd is at the outer limits of neocon kookery,
but, I submit, they are indicative of an emerging trend: as the
War Party suffers more losses, it tends to get a little crazy,
and this outburst isn't an isolated one by any means. More and
more, we'll be seeing the mask slip, little by little, until the
true faces of the cretins who want to destroy our republic are
revealed in all their ugliness.