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The U.S. is an oligarchy masquerading as a democracy

TaiShang

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The U.S. is an oligarchy masquerading as a democracy


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Oligarchy is a form of government in which only a small group of people hold all the power. /Getty

Editor's note: Maitreya Bhakal is an Indian commentator who writes about China, India, U.S. and global issues. The article reflects the author's opinions, and not necessarily the views of CGTN.

The architects of the imperialist, settler-colonial state known as the U.S. (a nation so artificial that they couldn't even find a name for it, so they simply made one up from a collective common noun) were no fans of direct democracy. It was deemed particularly vulnerable to demagogues – men of "factious tempers" and "sinister designs," as James Madison put it, which ironically is a perfect description of most U.S. presidents.

U.S. pundits often call Donald Trump "unfit to govern." This is largely accurate, but it falsely assumes that other modern presidents were fully fit to govern – leaders that have ordered mass murders of millions of civilians and the destruction of whole nations.

What are words worth


The U.S. system is based on a social contract between the people and the regime. The tradeoff is simple: You more or less have the right to free speech. Criticize us as much as you want, we will let you speak and shout - but that's it. Nothing will change. The policies you want removed will continue to exist. In other words, Americans have the right to ask for change, but not the right to receive it.

Few issues illustrate this better than police violence. Police kill a civilian. People get angry. They protest, they march, they sign petitions – they fully exercise their guaranteed freedom of speech.
And the next week, the police kill another civilian.

The opposite of democracy


When it was first formulated, the U.S.' constitutional design was ahead of its time. It was essentially a republican system created to overcome the shortcomings of direct democracy, which was rightly considered impossible in a country as large as the United States. Of course, it's easy to make your country large when you slaughter the native population and steal their lands.

Yet, 233 years later, the U.S. constitution sounds increasingly outdated. Two of the last three U.S. presidents lost the popular vote. Wyoming, a state of half a million people, sends the same number of senators to the "democratic" Senate as California, a state of 40 million.

This undemocratic system is specifically designed to resist modification. Any change in the electoral college would require a constitutional amendment. This could be easily blocked by Senators of low-population states, who would obviously resist any attempt to decrease their power.

An oligarchy, not a democracy

Study after study reveal that the average U.S. voter has negligible impact on policy. A small group of unelected elites rule the country and exercise exclusive and comprehensive control over policy making.

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Mark Meadows (3rd R), the White House chief of staff, hands a note to U.S. President Donald Trump, during a meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 3, 2020. /Getty

U.S. pundits love discussing whether becoming president despite losing the popular vote is a feature or a bug of the U.S. political system. That misses the point. It doesn't really matter to the establishment who is president. The economic elites remain the same, corporations who purchase lawmakers remain the same, and the violent police state and war machine remain the same.

But elections do serve an important purpose in America, they have illusionary value – they make people believe they have a choice. Elections and "free speech" provide a mechanism for public venting. Every few years, the voting population is shepherded to "elect" their representatives in a meaningless yet overwhelming exercise in mass delusion. When Americans vote and protest, they feel cleansed and purified, proud that they've fulfilled their duty by exercising their rights. Voting is a psychological exercise, not a political one.

The purpose of a democracy is to give voters what they want and need. Yet, few policies that U.S. voters actually want are granted to them by those they "elect." Public opinion polls make clear that the positions of most voters on key issues – from free college to universal healthcare to gun control – are not even remotely reflected in policy decisions.

Choices without consequences

In theory, the U.S. has two major parties. In practice, they are two branches of the same party. Their stances on policies that affect core material conditions of the American people are similar. Even on the handful of issues where they ostensibly disagree, the disagreement is more performative than substantial. Opposition is heavily controlled and managed. This brilliantly contrived system gives the outward impression of public choice, while still preserving the same power structures regardless of who is in power.

So where does the "Land of the Free" go from here? Every generation needs a new revolution, said Thomas Jefferson once. Yet, the U.S. system will survive. As long as the population is kept in check by the world's most sophisticated propaganda system and occasionally allowed to let off steam, America's oligarchic rulers have little to fear.

 
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According to Noam Chomsky and Jimmy Carter, the modern United States resembles a plutocracy though with democratic forms.[6][7] A former chairman of the Federal Reserve, Paul Volcker, also believed the US to be developing into a plutocracy



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Noam Chomsky have condemned plutocrats for ignoring their social responsibilities, using their power to serve their own purposes and thereby increasing poverty and nurturing class conflict, corrupting societies with greed and hedonism.[4][5]
 
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No shit. It’s actually more of a plutocracy. Anybody with half a brain can see it.
 
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Who woke Captain Obvious so early this morning?
 
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No shit. It’s actually more of a plutocracy. Anybody with half a brain can see it.

Unfortunately this is true pretty much everywhere in one way or another. Either some party/man comes to power and lines their pockets with the country's wealth and basically controls the government for as long as they want (eg many third world countries and Putin/Xi and their Parties) or established rich people influence the current government (Billionaire money donors in the US and South America) or actually get themselves elected (Trump)
 
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Few issues illustrate this better than police violence. Police kill a civilian. People get angry. They protest, they march, they sign petitions – they fully exercise their guaranteed freedom of speech.
And the next week, the police kill another civilian.
Small correction that makes a big difference

The U.S. regime shoots civilians ever single day. The state controlled media only reports cases, mostly those with too much evidence of abuse to cover up, every few weeks or months in national media to give the illusion that there is a free press willing to address the issue and that these cases happen only once every few months and periodically let the population throw a tantrum after some controlled march and protest that leads to nothing as he described.
Inbetween that they pump out two dozen articles per week of invented and exaggerated abuse in foreign countries to give the same people the illusion that no matter what abuse they experience its at least better than "the others".
 
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The U.S. regime shoots civilians ever single day.

That is generally true. Usually because the civilian also has a weapon

The state controlled media only reports cases, mostly those with too much evidence of abuse to cover up,

Not quite true. The civilian press is constantly listening to police and medical chatter. That's how a dozen different newstation reporting crews arrive on scenes trying to get the cameras rolling live...certainly nobody is calling them up inviting them over. It will then be shown on live tv. There's no way they can predict how it will end when it is LIVE.

This is from a news helicopter not a police helicopter

It's harder to hide things when it's on tv.
 
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Small correction that makes a big difference

The U.S. regime shoots civilians ever single day. The state controlled media only reports cases, mostly those with too much evidence of abuse to cover up, every few weeks or months in national media to give the illusion that there is a free press willing to address the issue and that these cases happen only once every few months and periodically let the population throw a tantrum after some controlled march and protest that leads to nothing as he described.
Inbetween that they pump out two dozen articles per week of invented and exaggerated abuse in foreign countries to give the same people the illusion that no matter what abuse they experience its at least better than "the others".

The greatest success of the US regime has been that in convinced people that change is not possible and this is normal.

This could not have been done without the help of regime-embedded media.

***


Could you ever have imagined, with only days until the next American president's inauguration, all that's been talked about is impeaching the current one or forcing him out of office?

We knew that something was off with the U.S., but perhaps not this far off. What transpired over the past week – the Capitol Riot, the talk of using the 25th amendment, the impeachment at the twilight of a presidency – is unheard of.

So what went wrong? Nationalism? Inequality? Partisanship? Or just that Donald Trump is an outlier?

When he won the presidency in 2016, many attributed his win to breaking identity politics. Hillary Clinton focused on building a coalition of different groups of people, Trump went with economic nationalism that resonated with all groups. He projected an image that he was the fix to all problems, and that under him gridlock in Washington would end and he would force change.

Now consider this. America has more COVID-19 infections and deaths than any other country. There are more than 22 million Americans infected. Close to 380,000 have died. Four million Americans have been out of work for at least six months.

And what have Trump and other leaders been doing? One side basically instigated an insurrection and the other is trying to hold it accountable, but doesn't wanna go too far too soon, worried about hindering the incoming administration's agenda.

Some are brooding. They've bet on the wrong horse for four years and are scared that their 2024 presidential dreams are toast. And of course, a selected few are still poking China as if the U.S. doesn't have enough problems already.

They all think they are doing something important – saving the institutions, saving democracy, saving the country. But in fact, they saved anything but their citizens.

This sickness, that government stops tending to their citizens, has been going on for decades.
You see the pictures. Roads are potholed, bridges have cracks in them, infrastructure that was built a century ago looks no different today than it did then.

Almost every recent president promised to reverse this decay. Almost every session of Congress did. Trump did. And nothing happened.

Even for issues that politicians tried to tackle, people were not happy. Barack Obama jammed through a healthcare bill that half the country hated because they think he didn't respect their choices. Race relations are getting worse. Socio-economic status is hardening. The wealthiest people in America grow richer faster than the rest of the population.

Governments have to take care of everyone. Americans have warned their politicians, with Occupy Wall Street, the growing extreme political positions, hatred towards compromise, disappointments in the bureaucracy. Donald Trump is the product of this. Many believed that he would be different, and yet they got a politician who only looked to his own interest.

When politicians grow aloof, people get angry at the system. You can wage as many wars and blame other countries for your problems as much as you want. It won't make a difference. Politics and governance are twins. You can't have one but not the other. Politics has grown prominent; governance is the casualty.

The world needs America, I can't deny it. So for the sake of yourself and everyone, look inside and start to really put your people first.
 
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