May 16, 2006
Mind Control
As he does so often, WaPo's Gene Robinson reads my mind:
Nation of Fear
By Eugene Robinson
Tuesday, May 16, 2006; A17
There's little comfort in the latest polls on the revelation that the National Security Agency, on orders from George W. Bush, is compiling a permanent record of Americans' telephone calls. True, the new surveys by Newsweek and USA Today-Gallup are more encouraging than the Post-ABC News poll last week in which 63 percent said sure, no problem, go ahead and rummage through my life. But even the new polls say that four out of every 10 citizens are ready to surrender privacy and due process without so much as a whimper of protest.That is just stunning. What the hell is going on?
After all, this is a nation that has always balked at the idea of any kind of national identification card, which other countries don't mind at all. This is a nation that refuses to require meaningful controls on firearms, accepting more than 30,000 deaths a year as the price we have to pay for privacy and freedom. You'd think news that the government is keeping track of all of our phone conversations would spark thundering outrage from sea to shining sea.
But it hasn't, and I think the reason is that the normally sunny, optimistic American mood has been adulterated by alien emotions that we don't handle very well -- fear, insecurity, resentment. It's as if the whole nation needs to be on Xanax. Or already is.
In the past I've noted how Bush regularly stokes and exploits our fears to get Americans to accept the previously unacceptable -- not just intrusive domestic surveillance but also secret CIA prisons, abandonment of due process for terrorism suspects and mistreatment of detainees that international accords describe as torture. The most tragic example, of course, is how he planted and fertilized the idea that the war in Iraq had something to do with Sept. 11, which it did not.
But while Bush takes every advantage of this sour and apprehensive mood, he didn't conjure it out of thin air. And sometimes it spins out of his control -- as evidenced by the immigration debate, in which he is having to scramble to keep the House Republican leadership, running scared in an election year, from insisting on a program of mass deportation that would resemble a latter-day Trail of Tears. The acceptance of domestic electronic surveillance and the fear of an influx of undocumented immigrants seem like disparate issues, but I believe they have the same origin -- a kind of generalized anxiety that stems in part from the Sept. 11 attacks but that has other components as well.
If a psychiatrist were to put the nation on the couch, the shrink's notes would read something like this: "Patient feels vulnerable to attack; cannot remember having experienced similar feeling before. Patient accustomed to being in control; now feels buffeted by outside forces beyond grasp. Patient believes livelihood and prosperity being usurped by others (repeatedly mentions China). Patient seeks scapegoats for personal failings (immigrants, Muslims, civil libertarians). Patient is by far most powerful nation in world, yet feels powerless. Patient is full of unfocused anger."
It's shameful to watch Bush and his minions take advantage of these acute symptoms. And if the immigration issue didn't threaten to disrupt so many people's lives, it would be amusing to witness Bush's attempts to calm the irrational fears he has so often encouraged. It's at least somewhat comforting, in a way, to know that with the president's approval ratings so low and Congress in a state of dysfunction, we may be entering a phase of one-party gridlock in which nothing much gets done -- which means there's a chance that things might not get much worse.
I have to admit that I hardly recognize this country in which I have lived for more than a half of a century. It feels like we have lost our collective mind. This isn't a liberal/conservative thing, it's a mental health thing.
Posted by Melanie at May 16, 2006 12:14 PM"I have to admit that I hardly recognize this country in which I have lived for more than a half of a century. It feels like we have lost our collective mind."
As a summation, I couldn't agree more. There's something entirely diseased about US society now.
As a square peg, I've never exactly fit into it, but now I sit on the outskirts knowing I'll never be able, nor want, to fit in.
I had to send (Western Union) some money to my mortgage company lately. They require cash.
Cash transaction over $1K, so I had to give my social security number and tell them my way I make a living. I managed to stiffle the urge to honestly say "international art smuggler, retired" and went with the also sort of honest "computer programmer". A competent law enforcement professional would probably have detained me for the way I said it, but the guy at the grocery store bank is not one of those.
There used to be a way to handle crap like that: elect some Republicans. It is becoming my tagline: liberals are losing the game, but real conservatives aren't even in the stadium.
Wasn't there a piece a while back about the language that Bush uses? Language carefully chosen to make those that listen feel very powerless and thus very desperate............. and willing to allow the National Security State to co-opt the Republic.


