The problem with the Soviet analogy, my friend, is that the Soviets locked up their own citizens in Gulags. It was not customary from them to go overseas to do so, although they did so now and then after setting up their imperial satellite system after World War II
(ee.g., Hungary 1956, Czechoslovakia 1968). So far, the neoconservative
modus operandi is to lock up foreigners and leave Americans alone. I emphasize
so far.Another major distinction between the neoconservatives and the Soviets is that propaganda in the Soviet Union (or Nazi Germany, for that matter) was under the direct control of either the state or the Party, whereas propaganda in neoconservative America is privatized. Bush does not need to worry about bad press; he certainly doesn't get as much as he deserves. While this makes the relationship between the neoconservative state and its propaganda arm precarious at times, the effect is much the same. As long as the corporate-owned media don't turn on the neoconservatives, the American public knows only what the neoconservatives want them to know. It isn't as efficient as the totalitarian model, but it still works to the advantage of the ruling elite. Americans believed the lies both prior to the invasion of Iraq (Saddam had a huge biochemical arsenal, Saddam had ties to al Qaida) and many people still believe those lies; many who no longer believe the neocon lies that preceded the war now believe the alibi that the problem was inept intelligence agencies, when in fact the neoconservatives were manufacturing intelligence which both "supported" the lies prior to the war and established the false alibi afterward. Another of people know very well that neoconservatives are lying whenever they move their lips, but don't care; they believe that a world dominated by an American corporate empire would be beneficial to mankind. Examples of this kind of thinking can be seen in some of the posts in the long, year-old
thread (Why the left was wrong) in FA.
In any case, most of the challenge to the American corporate empire comes not from within the US, but from its subjects abroad. They, of course, don't get to vote in US elections, even assuming such are free and fair. For now, Bush and his gang of liars and thieves will be content to lock up those on the front line of opposition. That will also meet minimum opposition, since many of these people really are terrorists who would, if given a chance, hijack a plane and slam it into an office building in the US.
However, locking up every potential terrorist indefinitely in an offshore gulag is a cumbersome process. Sooner or later, the neoconservatives will have to either admit that these terrorists have some legitimate grievances that must be addressed or turn on the intellectuals who give air to those grievances, people such as Arundhati Roy. So far (again), they haven't done that because most Americans have never heard of any best-selling developing-world novelist. However, Ms. Roy and those like her have an international audience. When challenges to the the neoconservative agenda and the US corporate empire move beyond the fruitless acts of terrorism we have seen thus far and become effective worldwide boycotts and divestment campaigns, and are perhaps accompanied with diplomatic sanctions, then the neocons may turn on the leftist intellectuals and subject them to an international version of the Dirty Wars associated with the likes of the Argentine junta or General Pinochet in Chile.
You are right, of course, to point out many of the other signs of the decay of American society. We have a high incarceration rate, much of it related to a war on drugs (which may be seen as a war on an alternate economy that has arisen to challenge an economy that did not adequately provide for all people). The election rigging has become more obvious: GOP "poll watchers" were, in fact, right wing goons whose purpose was to intimidate people who might vote for Bush's opponents; as criminals launder money through dummy businesses, so do the neoconservative launder stolen votes through unaccountable voting machines. And, once again, what do the American people know about this? Only what the GOP's privatized propaganda machine tells them.
There may be other signs yet to come. Bush still wants to push an enhancement of the Patriot Act through congress. Will such an enhancement contain language allowing the President or a cabinet officer to strip an American of his citizenship, as was drafted by Justice Department lawyers two years ago? If such provision becomes law, we can lay aside any remaining claim neoconservative America has to being a democratic state.