aljazeera | The massive surveillance apparatus built up over the last 10 years is
the domestic companion of the overseas drone killings. It is one outcome
of this deep decay of the liberal state. While much is not known about
either, we know enough to recognise its potential for enormous abuse.
What is known is that there are at least 10,000 buildings across the US, with a massive concentration in Washington, DC, engaged in ongoing surveillance of all of us residing in the territory of the US. Surveillance and counter-terrorism activities employ about one million professionals with top level secret clearance. One estimate has it that every day over two billion emails are tracked. And on and on along these lines.
The basic logic of such a surveillance system is that for our
security as citizens we are all being surveilled, or potentially so.
That is to say, the logic of the system is that we must all be
considered suspect in a first step in order to ensure our safety. Who,
then, have we the citizens become, or turned into? Are we the new
colonials?
The source of this excess of executive power is a foundational
distortion at the heart of the liberal state. The liberal state was
never meant to bring equality of opportunity and full recognition of all
members of the polity. Inequality was at its core since its beginning -
between owners of the means of production and those who only had their
labour to sell in the market. But even so, the so-called Keynesian
period throughout much of the west engendered a prosperous working class
and an expanding modest middle class. It was a partial democratising of
the economy. In the 1980s, this began to disintegrate.
In the 2000s, just about all liberal democracies were in sharp
decline, with growing inequality, weakened unions, impoverishment of the
modest middle classes, and an enormous capture of the country's profits
by the top layer of firms and households. This is all captured in a
couple of numbers found in the US census: In 1979, the top 1 percent of
earners in New York City received 12 percent of all the compensation to
workers in the city, a reasonable level of inequality in a complex
economy such as is NYC. (This share excludes non-compensation sources of
wealth, such as capital gains, inheritance, etc.) In 2009, the top 1
percent received 44 percent - a level of inequality that cannot be good
for the city's economy.
At its most extreme, this combination of massive surveillance and
savage inequality may be signalling a new phase in the long history of
liberal democracies, one where the executive branch gains power partly
through its increasingly international activities. Over the last 20
years and more, this incipient internationalism has been deployed in
support of developing a global economy and fighting the "War against
Terrorism"; thus the big-bank bailout is not so much a "return of the
strong nationalist state" as some would have it, but rather the use by
the executive branch of national law and national taxpayers' money to
rescue a global financial system.
This is a kind of internationalism. Pity it is being deployed for
this. It is possible that these new international capabilities of the
executive branch might be reoriented to more worthy aims - climate
change, global hunger, global poverty and many others requiring new
types of internationalisms.Fist tap Arnach.
1 comments:
[The Obama administration is drawing up plans to give all U.S. spy agencies full access to a massive database that contains financial data on American citizens and others who bank in the country, according to a Treasury Department document seen by Reuters.]
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/03/13/usa-banks-spying-idINDEE92C0EH20130313
USA = United Spies on Americans. I'm still laughing at the people who voted for Obama thinking that they were preventing a right-wing coup by Romney.
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