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United States of America 1900 – Date (III)
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★ United States of America 1900 – Date (III)

Berlin: All attempts at revolution however seductive and romantic would always lead to disaster, and that power always had to be restrained.  ibid.    

 

[Isaiah] Berlins warning would become a prophecy.  Ironically, this corruption of negative liberty would begin with the resurgence of positive liberty.  In the wake of the Soviet disaster, a new and even more extreme version of positive liberty was about to rise up in the Third World.  It would be a revolutionary vision of transforming individuals through violence.  It would spread and begin to destabilise the balance of power in the world.  In response, the followers of negative liberty in the West would decide that they had to confront and roll back this tide.  Out of this would emerge a strange mutant idea.  You would use violent revolutionary techniques to create a world of negative freedom.  ibid.

 

[Jean-Paul] Sartre believed … only through revolutionary violence that individuals in the west could free themselves from the controls of bourgeois society.  ibid.

 

The chaos caused by these revolutions also began to destabilise the balance of power in the world.  And this would inexorably bring them face to face with America and its global battle against communism.  But what this clash was going to lead to was the rise in America of a new militant idea of freedom, and the belief that it was the United States duty to spread this freedom around the world by force if necessary.  ibid.   

 

And then in 1979 the Iranian revolution showed dramatically Americas policy of backing dictators did not work.  The Iranian people rose up and toppled the Shah of Iran.  The Shah had one of the largest military forces in the world given to him by the Americans.  But it proved helpless in the face of the new Islamist ideology of Ayatollah Khomeini.  Many in the West saw Khomeini as the resurgence of a dark almost medieval force.  But this was wrong.  The Iranian revolution was yet again driven by Western ideas of political freedom.  ibid.

 

The other part of Project Democracy was to use military force in secret operations to overthrow foreign regimes that stood in the way of freedom.  The main target was the government of Nicaragua, the Sandinistas.  The Sandinistas were Marxist revolutionaries who had seized power in 1979; but since then they had held elections and had been democratically elected.  The Reagan administration dismissed this though as a sham.  And an operation was set up to enforce the right kind of democracy by overthrowing the Sandinistas if necessary.   ibid. 

 

The Americans started funding and training a counter-revolutionary army called the Contras.  But there was enormous political opposition in the United States.  And to get round it the leaders of Project Democracy set out to frighten the American public.  An agency called The Office of Public Diplomacy was set up that disseminated what was called White Propaganda.  It produced dossiers and fed stories to journalists that proved that Soviet fighter planes had arrived in Nicaragua to attack America.  Another story from intelligence sources said that the Soviets had given stockpiles of chemical weapons to the Sandinistas.  President Reagan appeared on television with maps to show how quickly such a chemical attack could be launched on America itself.  It was only a matter of time.  ibid.   

 

The Neo-Conservatives were beginning to believe that their ideal of freedom was an absolute.  And that this then justified lying and exaggerating in order to enforce that vision.  The end justified the means.  Although they portrayed the Contras as freedom fighters, it was well known that they used murder, assassination and torture.  And also were allegedly using CIA-supplied planes to smuggle cocaine back into the United States.  And to finance the Contras, the Neo-Conservatives were even prepared to deal with Americas enemy – the leaders of the Iranian revolution.  In 1985 those running the Nicaragua operation held a series of secret meetings with Iranian leaders in Europe.  They arranged to sell the Iranians American weapons; in return the Iranians would release American hostages held in Lebanon.  Then the money from these sales would be used by those running Project Democracy to fund the Contras.  The only problem was that this was completely illegal.  And the President knew it.  ibid. 

 

What was beginning to emerge was the problem of spreading freedom around the world.  To do it those leading Project Democracy had turned not just to manipulation and violence but were beginning to undermine the ideals of democracy in America.  The very thing they were trying to create abroad.  It was the corruption of freedom that Isaiah Berlin had warned of.  ibid.

 

In 1989 across eastern Europe the people rose up to overthrow their communist leaders.  It was a remarkable series of revolutions.  All driven by the desire for freedom and the ending of tyranny.  ibid.

   

A form of order and a new kind of democracy in which the market, not politics, gave people what they wanted.  But things didn’t work out how the theory predicted.  ibid.   

 

A new elite was beginning to emerge who snapped up vast sections of Russian industry: they became known as the Oligarchs.  ibid.

 

August 1998: Russia’s economy is out of control tonight and it’s causing an international financial crisis.  Huge queues in Moscow.  There’s a run on the banks.  The Rouble lost nearly half its value.  And prices are soaring.  ibid.  BBC News   

 

Overnight, the Americans destroyed the civil structure of Iraqi society.  But instead of trying to create new institutions ... The country would then be thrown open to international corporations who in return for investing, would take 100% of their profits out of the country untaxed.  Only one of Saddam Hussein’s laws remained: the one that restricted trade unions.  Out of this was supposed to come spontaneous order.  What resulted was chaos.  ibid.  

 

What also resulted was corruption on a huge scale: more than $350 billion has been sent to Iraq for reconstruction.  ibid.  

 

The Americans began to turn to violence and torture to enforce their kind of freedom.  ibid. 

 

Positive liberty is driven by a vision that freedom is for something.  The freedom to do or become something new.  Out of which a better world would come.  Negative liberty has no such vision.  It isnt for anything.  At its heart it has no purpose other than to keep us free from unnecessary constraint or harm.  And in using force to create a world based on negative liberty, the democratic revolutionaries have actually led millions people abroad into a world without purpose or meaning.  This idea of freedom is still portrayed by many politicians and influential commentators as a universal absolute.  They assume it is only a matter of time before it spreads throughout the world.  But this may not be true.  ibid. 

 

The idea of freedom that we live with today is a narrow and limiting one; it was born out of a specific and dangerous time: the Cold War.  It may have had meaning and purpose then as an alternative to communist tyranny but now has become a dangerous trap.  Our government relies on a simplistic economic model of human beings that allows inequality to grow and offers nothing positive in the face of reactionary forces they have helped awake around the world.  ibid. 

 

Isaiah Berlin was wrong: not all attempts to change the world for the better lead to tyranny.  ibid.  

 

 

‘Into the hands of America God has placed the destiny of an afflicted mankind.  God bless America.’  Adam Curtis, HyperNormalisation 2016, Reagan

 

 

He [Clinton] had been persuaded to give away that power to the financial markets with the promise that this time they would create a new kind of stability.  A new kind of democracy free of the corruption of elite politics.  But it was now becoming clear that in reality America’s political power had just been transferred to another elite – the financiers of Wall Street.  And when faced by a crisis, they had simply used that power to rescue themselves.  Adam Curtis, All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace, BBC 2011

 

 

In America the idea of individualism had become central to the politics of the Cold War.  Because it was what defined the United States against the collective ideology of Russia … Out of these fears came a paranoia that was fuelled by groups on the extreme Right like the John Birch Society.  They said that the American government had been taken over by hidden groups controlled by the communists.  Adam Curtis, Can’t Get You Out of My Head I: Bloodshed on Wolf Mountain, BBCiplayer 2021

 

 

Horst Mahler had been born in what was now East Germany.  His father had been a fervent Nazi and an anti-Semite … They knew that many of those in charge of the country had been senior members of the Nazi party.  But no-one talked about it … Horst Mahler and other radicals began to think that the problem was far deeper than just individual Nazis.  That maybe the whole Nazi system had also survived and was hiding behind the facade of modern capitalism.  They argued that the very system of industrial rationality and bureaucratic control that had made the Nazi state so efficient had simply mutated.  It had been taken up by the victors, above all by America, and was now being used to run the new global capitalism and the multinational corporations that were ruthlessly exploiting what was called the Third World.  Anything that stood in the system’s way was bombed or burnt.  Adam Curtis, Can’t Get You Out of My Head II: Shooting and Fucking are the Same Thing

     

The Black Panthers believed that the only way to stop racism in America was for black people to get power.  Simply changing the law was not enough.  The anger and the fear remained hidden away in millions of people’s mind.  The solution was black power, and the first person to articulate this was Stokely Carmichael.  ibid.

 

‘The Panther Party at that time took my rage and channelled it against them, instead of against us.  They educated my mind and gave me direction, and with that direction came hope.’  ibid.  Alice Feye Williams aka Afeni Shakur

 

One morning armed police stormed into Afeni Shakur’s apartment and arrested her.  All the other members of her cell were also arrested.  They were charged with what the government said was a giant plan to destroy those elements of society which the defendants called The Power Structure.  It included attacking police stations and planning to bomb five large department stores and the Bronx botanical gardens.  They became known as the Panther 21.  Their trial was held in a state of paranoia … Three of the founding members of the group had been undercover police officers.  ibid.   

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