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(whether the White House, or the Guantanamo Bay torture dungeon). The U.S. is, also, though, a more difficult country to nazify, because it's so vast (and multi-cultured) --which is why our oligarchs have taken up methods like 'TRADE SECRET,' PROPRIETARY programming code in the voting system, owned and controlled by rightwing Bushite corporations, with virtually no audit/recount controls, and 24/7 fascist propaganda on TV. Maintain the illusion of democracy, present plausible narratives and most people won't rebel, especially if they have to spend thousands of dollars that they likely don't have and take a 6 hour (all day, with to and from airports) flight across this very big country, just to get to a protest in the seat of the malfeasance, Washington DC.
I have little doubt, though, that civil disorder may be part of one of the main fascist scenarios that have been developed to restore the Bush junta, after a period of corporate consolidation of their gains, with Obama. They can thus blame Obama and "the liberals" for all this shit, and Diebold Jeb or Sarah (Hitler II) into the White House in 2012. Riots--food riots, veterans' riots, jobless riots, antiwar riots--would suit this purpose, and, of course, wouldn't--and couldn't--change anything. The only protest that I could imagine that would change anything would be, say, a couple of million people converging on Washington and sitting down in its intersections, and refusing to move, no matter what. That could possibly shake up the government, but it would be VERY hard to organize. And probably the government would just go into its bunkers and wait it out, while the military slowly cuts off deliveries of water and food. Our rulers are better organized than the Bourbons.
I tend to think that peaceful action at the state/local level to rid ourselves of 'TRADE SECRET' voting machines would be more effective, as to revolutionary goals, than almost any physical protest I can imagine.
I do agree with the OP, though, that what the Bushwhacks (and collusive Democrats) have done is exactly what the Bourbons did, as to the rich pissing on the poor, and vast malfeasance. We aren't as desperate (as a whole) as the French poor were, but we could get there. Then what? Hard to say. It's like the analogies to Germany early 1930s. Yes, there are scary parallels, but this is a very different country than that was. We are a lot bigger; our people are more spread out, more diverse. We have a strong tradition of self-rule.
We are more like the Roman Empire, circa 450 AD, which had managed to keep the "bread and circuses" going, AND some public participation modes, as the empire slowly crumbled inward, from its outlying provinces to Rome, and eventually collapsed, leaving Rome in ruins--not from riots but from inner rot (--and to some extent from outside invaders but that not much, really). Our global corporate predator rulers are pretty good as to "bread and circuses." They are pretty good, too, at the illusion of public participation. They haven't been as efficient as Rome at stealing the resources from other people, that they need to keep it all going. Look at South America! They are in outright--highly principled, democratic--rebellion against our corporate oil and other dragons. And our oligarchy's greed for Iran's oil has been stopped by a combination of some faction in our oligarchy that didn't like the cost, or didn't think we could win it, and global political realities (two big nuke powers--Russia and China--against it). Iraq was a mess, and largely undefended, when we invaded. Not so Iran. And South America is united against our oiligarchs stealing their oil and other predations. The pool of exploitable resources to sustain our empire is shrinking.
We won't last as long as Rome, as an empire, in my opinion. But we might--as that reality hits home--restore democracy, given our very strong traditions in that regard. Crystal ball: I don't think we will go the way of either Bourbon France or Hitler's Germany, or Tsarist Russia (we are vast, like Russia, but Russia was completely and totally without any democratic traditions whatsoever, when the peasant/worker revolution occurred, and quickly fell right back into Tsarism, with Stalin). I think we will become a more disorganized group of states, as democracy is gradually restored, from the ground up. I think our democratic ideals will save us, in the end. It was a remarkable idea, America--unique in history--and close to the hearts of our people, and of all people. But it may be a rough ride.
The beautiful irony is that it may be the South Americans who show us the way. (First condition of their on-going, peaceful, democratic revolution: transparent vote counting!)
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