Chalmers Johnson's book needs to be taught to every school child, and required reading for all adults. Watching the MSM, one gets the impression that Terry McAuliffe, not Johnson, has written the seminal text of our times. I take that as a sign....a bad sign. Another bad sign is how even in this forum the talk is often "all about the money," or those who are raking it in, and not the republic. Our democracy, a fragile construct, is being willing bought, sold and stolen right before our eyes. It has become a badge of honor if a candidate can sell themselves for $xxx,xxx,xxx number of dollars, rather than the quality of their ideas. The best government money can buy is not hiding what is going on.
I don't know about begging for a military coup. I think America is begging for a corporate-theocracy. And I believe it has already happened. The people in charge of country, and unfortunately the ones on the horizon waiting to take charge, no longer believe in democracy.
From Lewis Lapham's book, Gag Rule:
...the senior statesmen seated on the dais could be counted on to say---always with a note of regret, of course, and wishing they didn't have to be so blunt---that America wasn't likely to come to is senses unless or until something really awful happened. The citizenry was drifting into moral relativeness and cultural decline...
Because the gentlemen on the dais had served the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush as secretaries of defense or state, sometimes as chiefs of naval operations or directors of the Central Intelligence Agency, their geopolitics were understood to bear the stamps of selfless patriotism...The high-end intellectuals in the room (sometimes Richard Perle, often William Bennett accompanied by a smirk of columnists from the Weekly Standard never tired of telling the travelers from New York (over coffee between the morning's first and second power points; while investigating the poached salmon before the luncheon speech) that the ideas of government made to the measure of a provincial democratic republic (America in 1941) could no longer accommodate the interests of a global nation-state that deserved to wear the crown and name of empire (America, circa 1995). (138-9)
And then there is this sad thought:
Daniel Webster on the occasion of the one hundredth anniversary of George Washington’s birthday.
Other misfortunes may be borne or their effects overcome. If disastrous war should sweep our commerce from the ocean, another generation my renew it. If it exhaust our Treasury, future industry may replenish it. If it desolate and lay waste our fields, still, under a new cultivation, they will grow green again and ripen to future harvests. It were but a trifle even if the walls of yonder Capitol were to crumble, if its lofty pillars would fall, and its gorgeous decorations be all covered by the dust of the valley. All these might be rebuilt. But who shall reconstruct the fabric of demolished government? Who shall rear again the well-proportioned columns of constitutional liberty? Who shall frame together the skillful architecture which unites national sovereignty with State rights, individual security, and public prosperity? No. If these columns fall, they will be raised not again. Like the Colosseum and the Parthenon, they will be destined to a mournful, a melancholy immortality. Bitterer tears, however, will flow over them than were shed over the monuments of Roman or Grecian art. For they will be the remnants of more glorious edifice than Greece or Rome ever saw: the edifice of constitutional American liberty.
I will continue to fight the fight because one should never give up hope; nevertheless, I am not optimistic.