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Anis Shivani

Anis Shivani

Posted: June 7, 2010 02:23 PM

Why America Suffers From One Catastrophe After Another and Why It Will Keep Happening

What's Your Reaction:

9/11. Enron. Katrina. Wall Street. The BP spill. There seems no end to it, and the reactions are always parallel. Obama is no different in how he excuses and explains away catastrophes. It was completely unprecedented. Now is not the time to fix blame. We must make sure that nothing like this ever happens again.

The problem is that no catastrophe repeats itself exactly. It's always something new. The next disaster won't be an oil spill. We will have promised to fortify our resources against that particular disaster and then something "unprecedented" will strike in a different realm. Perhaps a nuclear meltdown, erasing another great American city. The pattern of excuses will be the same afterward.

It all began with the Florida election theft in 2000 (all of the now-familiar excuses were first used in full force, in total conjugation, for this first disaster). It gave a signal to everyone managing and regulating and overseeing any kind of operation, public or private, that henceforth it was the day of the jackals, that accountability and honesty and certitude were out the door.

It's a very postmodern series of disasters we're living through, and I see no end in sight.

At no point has the circuit been broken. Obama, if he'd prosecuted officials in the previous administration for war crimes, would have slowed down the flow of disasters. How is BP connected to torture? In every way imaginable. Once this administration took charge, it refused to send any signals that those who committed crimes against the people would be brought to justice. Nothing has changed after the BP spill. Obama's lackadaisical attitude, until he was forced to put on an act he clearly doesn't believe in, told everyone that this too--destroying the Gulf waters for generations--is okay, that even this doesn't rise to the magnitude where things should fundamentally change. He may now say some of the right things, but the message has already gone out that you can get away with it.

In a way, we love disaster. We desperately need it in order to function as a coherent society. We have completely run out of intellectual steam, and need a terrorist attack, an environmental calamity, or economic ruin simply to go on. Our response to disaster is to desire it even more desperately by taking precisely those steps which will ensure a recurrence on an even greater scale. We have done it in response to every one of the great disasters of the 2000s.

What we need is nimble, flexible, adaptable, humanly scaled, spontaneous, and imaginative. What we get is big, rigid, sclerotic, dull, inhuman, reactive, slow, brutal, repressive, and turgid. The creation of the Department of Homeland Security after 9/11--Joseph Lieberman's great legacy--was a terrible idea. Such a conglomeration of conflicting missions and philosophies was never meant to work. This is something Obama should have sought to dismantle, back into its constituent units. As long as DHS is in existence, it will respond in the same plodding manner--always too little too late--to every disaster that comes along. We needed to have made the elements of DHS even smaller after 9/11. Instead we went the opposite way.

After both Katrina and the BP spill, well-meaning individuals with resources who wanted to help were turned away; this should be a very significant clue to why these disasters occur in the first place, and what the system wants to get out of these events.

After every half-imagined terrorist attempt, there is yet another compounding of the intelligence bureaucracy, yet more layers hiding themselves from the others. The process seems meant to guarantee failure.

No heads rolled after 9/11. The same has been true after each of the other disasters. Banks should have been allowed to go bankrupt after the financial collapse. They are bankrupt in reality, but this fact hasn't been acknowledged. In such an open culture of deceit, why do we expect BP not to cut corners, or to be afraid of being brought to account should its recklessness go awry? Nobody has been held responsible for the eight years of war crimes under the Bush administration. Everyone knows that you can get away with whatever you want, and if you mess up on your watch, it's all right. You're certainly not going to jail.

The two illegal wars started by Bush were and are being continued. When illegality at that level--trillions of dollars, hundreds of thousands dead in the attacked countries, thousands of American soldiers dead--goes on at the highest levels, what does it matter if Wall Street or BP look for some short cuts, some illegitimate profits?

Who is going to jail, who is paying the price for all these years of disasters? The poor, the immigrants, the innocent workers--they're losing their health, security, and guarantees of due process and constitutional rights. After every disaster they suffer more than ever before. It's a perverse situation. We've created a system where we give more power to the wrongdoers after every disaster.

We're always told that each of these disasters was unforeseeable. That's just completely wrong, because it turns out that each of the disasters was preventable. But the system has become so bloated, so grotesquely large, so redundantly overlapping and inefficient that the right hand doesn't know what the left is doing, and moreover, we don't want it any other way. We want these shielding armors, because there is no more philosophy of common public good. Bureaucracies have become fiefdoms. It's a terrifyingly postmodern feudalism.

Throughout the last decade, we wanted desperately to be terrorized, to be attacked. As for the "homeland"--apart from the anomalous 9/11 attack--we could never manage to invite the terrorists to do the dirty deed to us. We tried desperately, we went to unnecessary wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, we incited more than a billion Muslims to come after us, but there was so much goodwill among Muslims in this country that they weren't willing to do us harm. In the last year, there have been a couple of instances of Muslims losing it--they're more appropriately called madmen than terrorists, judging by their behavior and mentality. But nearly every ballyhooed arrest and prosecution of "terrorists" during the last decade was a case of informants inflaming ridiculous madmen to dream up impossible deeds. In other words, self-created imminent disaster publicity. The kind of publicity empire thrives on in its last days, lacking all intellectual justification for the grotesquely excess power it has accumulated.

So the question can legitimately be asked, Are we really interested in preventing a serious terrorist attack?

Bureaucracies swing into action, the presidential phalanx seeks the limelight, and every crisis/disaster/emergency becomes an opportunity for the government to seize more power, to blame and suppress more people, to redistribute further wealth and power upward toward those people who already have more than enough of it.

Was New Orleans rebuilt? Did we ever resolve the basic grievances of the Muslim world? Has Wall Street been put on notice? Has the oil industry got the message? Of course not, because there is absolutely nothing in the system to allow for any of these corrections.

And so, get ready for a continued series of calamities, until all the power simply drains out and there is nothing left to throw around anymore.

The administration's non-response to the Arizona immigration law is another example of the same principle. The administration never showed the slightest support for Luis Gutierrez's humane immigration legislation (judging by the way he's bucking the system, it should only be a matter of time before the poor congressman announces he has to resign to spend more time with his family). And because they never signaled that they would go after the Arizona law to strike it down as unconstitutional (and haven't to this day), it opens the floodgates for many other states to pull off similar lawless capers. It invites states, localities, police chiefs, Homeland Security folks, and TSA officials to try to get away with all sorts of short-cuts against constitutionality.

It is a huge, unmistakable signal that lawlessness is all right. It goes back to Florida, the original sin, it really does, and there's no putting this Humpty Dumpty back together again. The entire liberal establishment sat back and let the stolen election happen. After that, all certainty was off the books. Again, the system desires this chaos, it thrives and profits from it, it doesn't want reality, humanity, flexibility.

These disasters are merely the exclamatory end points of this particular bloated empire. Get ready for the next "completely unprecedented," even larger one.

 
 
 
 
 
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HamletsMill
All Myth is Astronomy
12:11 AM on 06/25/2010
This is a terrific article! Absolutely spot on! But it was all said at 24 frames a second 32 years ago in 1978 in the Great Prophetic Dream of the Judgment of the Nation that came out of the 1960's and the spiritual revelations of the catastrophe of the Vietnam War.

"And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people..."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vw-Tyr6Rb6I

"And he will destroy in this mountain the face of the covering cast over all people, and the vail that is spread over all nations."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4onhv63jom8

There will be many Stanly's now in the Archetypal traps without their boots ready. De Niro delivered the cosmic lines superbly!
09:48 AM on 06/09/2010
Question Mr. Shavani,

Are you trying to say that our government has become to big?
09:06 AM on 06/09/2010
I thought the Enron scandal was a crime committed from 1998- 2001 and was prosecuted in the Pr Bush years the actual crimes were committed while Pr Clinton was in office.
01:31 AM on 06/09/2010
The response at newsbusters completely distorts my argument, unfairly selecting bits and pieces from here and there to make it sound like I'm going after Bush only. In fact, I hold Obama equally, if not more, culpable, and blame the disasters on the compulsions of the system itself: what empire needs to do, envelop itself into disasters, to keep itself going as a semi-viable enterprise. To suggest that I'm just blaming it all on Bush is worse than a gross simplification/distortion of my argument, it's a negation of it. I am extremely critical of Obama in this piece.
10:05 AM on 06/09/2010
Did you know that a bunch of new organizations (including the NYT) recounted the votes after the election was over and they found that Bush really won the election ?

It appeared to me that the Democrats wanted to keep recounting forever changing the interpretation of disputed ballots until their guy was elected.
01:29 AM on 06/09/2010
What is unconstitutional about the new law in Arizona?

The federal law allows police to stop people and request ID and
immigration status already and has been found constitutional
by the Supreme Court.

The new Arizona law is more restrictive then the constitutional
federal law so why is it unconstitutional?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
"I drank what?"- Last words of Socrates
10:53 AM on 06/08/2010
I don't agree with the author 100% but he has scored a really solid 80% with me. The empire needs to be scaled back and that would provide funds for a lot of what this nation needs. Why do we really need military bases in almost every nation in the world?
Why can this administraition not prosecute the kakistocracy that was in office before? Or reign in the banks and oil companies?
Incoming in Obama wanted bi-partisanship and I suppose that is why he left so many republicans in places where they could continue to do damage. The MMS is a prime example of why they needed to approach the leftover goverment with a big broom rather than a fossil-dusting brush.
We will keep having catastrophies until the Bush cronies are booted from their comfy, corporate padded jobs and people who give a hang replace them.
08:25 PM on 06/07/2010
To make matters worse the Florida Election also ushered in electronic voting machines.

Can we really trust our votes are being counted anymore?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dwight Hales
08:04 PM on 06/07/2010
"Ain't no goin' back when the foot of pride come down... ain't NO goin' back..."
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anachoret
Bake the hall in the candle of her brain
04:41 PM on 06/07/2010
I think the Brooks Brothers riot was the moment when people realized that certain people can do whatever they want.

There were people who had set out to put a stop to the counting of votes, in a national election for the highest office in the free world. And they did it. They coordinated it right down to the uniforms that would be most likely to get them into building, and they executed their plan to interfere with and completely derail the will of the voters election of the President of the United States.
Quite a feat, and I don't even recall people ASKING if what they did was legal... America just watched it like an episode of "Reality" TV.
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dakotawoman
I dreamed I saw Joe Hill. . .old time Progressive
03:52 PM on 06/07/2010
Isn't there a German word describing that vicarious pity/relief we all get when we observe someone else suffering while we are still safe? Schadenfreude or something like that?

Schadenfreude might explain our horrified obsession with national tragedy THAT IS HAPPENING TO ANOTHER PART OF THE NATION, anyway.

And I totally agree that allowing the law & system to be so completely subverted by the Bush presidency coup enacted by the SCOTUS, right in front of our eyes with no consequences, is a major cause of the gridlock, in the political arena anyway.

It's not the only reason, I think. The dismantling of the New Deal by Reagan and the hijacking of the Republican party by extreme right wing religionists also set the stage. Heck, some of it might go back to Kennedy's assassination, for all we know. But, yeah, the spectacle of criminals so blatantly breaking all codes of ethics, if not actual law, and then shrugging it off or worse justifying it as the right thing to do or even WORSE apologizing and then doing it again, over and over and over, and our justice system more and more and more helpless to address the wrong of it.....?!!!!!!!!!

I mourn for the dream I had of what America could be, even if she never really was that. The dream version was so glorious and occasionally was even real.

Ah, the Glory that was Rome. Oh, the Beauty that was America.
03:32 PM on 06/07/2010
The rather quick unravelling of the American Republic is in its 9th year. This column pretty much sums up the collapse of the rule of law and good government. It has been building for years, but Florida opened the flood gates for the final act.
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03:29 PM on 06/07/2010
There are a lot of valuable things to ponder in this article, but in the ADHD world of Huffington Post, I guess I'm one of the few who has read this. I think, in this postmodern media DE-contextualized world, we have become a society in which disasters help us mark and keep track of time in our world. The changes in a globalized society have nearly eliminated our ability to keep track of time in relation to the long term experience of life through our 9-5 or 8-4:30 work schedules. Too many factories closing, work schedules going to revolving day, swing, night shifts in teh 24-7 production of those remaining, a lack of full-time jobs in education, work at home/flex-time schedules, etc. have pretty much obliterated that and we're supposed to celebrate the "new freedom" of this arrangement. Consumerism has demolished the marking of ritual time, as each next holiday has now been laden with the expectation of some kind of gift giving, card sending, flower-buying, e-card greeting or other commodified accoutrement we are expected to produce, taking more time out of our lives as one holiday collapses into the next. Disasters, better yet, mega-disasters seem to shake us awake for a few days at least and we can locate ourselves in time this way. Real change seems out of reach and thus futile to purse. We will need a revolution inside and out to change this.
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NickHP
engineer, human, humane
03:24 PM on 06/07/2010
Wonderful, clear, expansive and depressing. Hard to believe Bill Clinton represented the golden years of the American Empire, with little HOPE of renewal.
03:09 PM on 06/07/2010
With Bush and the botched and bought elections of 2000 and 2004, I became despondent and utterly flabbergasted at the total lack of outrage and demands for accountability for an injust war and loss of so many young lives.. But he was a rather stupid marionet.

I was thrilled when Obama won. But once again I have become despondent and utterly flabbergasted. Despondent that a smart man from whom I expected so much more than from his moronic predecessor, appears to turn out to be just another politician. And flabbergasted because within a year and a half the public, brainwashed by more morons (i.e. the Palin and the Tea Baggers) appears to blithely blame eight years of deregulated Bush governmental crimes on the current president, who, and this is the truly incredible part, does nothing to defend himself or ascertain that the fascist rulers of the previous regime are held accountable.

Who, one wonders, is really running the show in Washington D.C. now or ever? Your conclusions that big business always appears to get away with everything, seems to be the frightening answer.

Why vote at all? Tomorrow or in the fall?
04:15 AM on 07/01/2010
In my opinion Corporate Power owns the minds and wallets of most citizens of most democracies, politicians included. Corporate power has been able to use the freedom of democracy for their own agenda because they take 'care' of the polititicans.