June 28, 2006
The High Price of American Gullibility
By Paul Craig Roberts
What explains the gullibility of
Americans, a gullibility that has mired the US in
disastrous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and which
promises war with Iran, North Korea and a variety of
other targets if neoconservatives continue to have their
way?
Part of the explanation is that
millions of conservatives are thrilled at the
opportunity to display their patriotism and to show
their support for their country. Bush’s rhetoric is
perfectly designed to appeal to this desire. "You are
with us or against us" elicits a blind and
unquestioning response from people determined to wear
their patriotism on their sleeves. "You are with us
or against us" vaccinates Americans against factual
reality and guarantees public acceptance of
administration propaganda.
Another part of the explanation is
that emotional appeals have grown the stronger as the
ability of educated people to differentiate fact from
rhetoric declines. The Bush administration blamed 9/11
on foreign intelligence failures; yet, the
administration has convinced about half of the public
that mass surveillance of American citizens is the
solution!
Many Americans have turned a blind
eye to the administration’s illegal and unconstitutional
spying on the grounds that, as they themselves are doing
nothing wrong, they have nothing to fear. If this is the
case, why did our Founding Fathers bother to write the
Constitution? If the executive branch can be trusted not
to abuse power, why did Congress pass legislation
establishing a panel of federal judges (ignored by the
Bush administration) to oversee surveillance? If
President Bush can decide that he can ignore statutory
law, how does he differ from a dictator? If Bush can
determine law, what is the role of Congress and the
courts? If "national security" is a justification
for elevating the power of the executive, where is his
incentive to find peaceful solutions?
Emotional appeals to fear and to
patriotism have led close to half of the population to
accept unaccountable government in the name of "the
war on terrorism." What a contradiction it is that
so many Americans have been convinced that safety lies
in their sacrifice of their civil liberties and
accountable government.
If so many Americans cannot discern
that they have acquiesced to conditions from which
tyranny can arise, how can they understand that it is
statistically impossible for the NSA’s mass surveillance
of Americans to detect terrorists?
Floyd Rudmin, a professor at a
Norwegian university, writing in CounterPunch (May
24, 2006) applies the mathematics of conditional
probability, known as Bayes’ Theorem, to demonstrate
that the NSA’s surveillance cannot successfully detect
terrorists unless both the percentage of terrorists in
the population and the accuracy rate of their
identification are far higher than they are. He
correctly concludes that "NSA’s surveillance system
is useless for finding terrorists."
The surveillance is, however,
useful for monitoring political opposition and stymieing
the activities of those who do not believe the
government’s propaganda.
Another reason for the gullibility
of Americans is their lack of alternative information to
government propaganda. The independence of print and TV
media disappeared in the media consolidations of the
1990s. Today a handful of large corporations own the
traditional media. The wealth of these corporations
consists of broadcast licenses, which the companies hold
at the government’s discretion. Newspapers are run by
corporate executives, whose eyes are on advertising
revenue and who shun contentious reporting. The result
is that the traditional media are essentially echo
chambers for government propaganda.
The Internet and the foreign news
media accessible through the Internet are the sources of
alternative information. Many Americans have not learned
to use and to rely on the Internet for information.
Many Americans find the
government’s message much more reassuring than the
actual facts. The government’s message is: "America
is virtuous. Virtuous America was attacked by evil
terrorists. America is protecting itself by going to war
and overthrowing regimes that sponsor or give shelter to
terrorists, erecting in their place democracies loyal to
America."
Sugar-coated propaganda doesn’t
present Americans with the emotional and mental stress
associated with the hard facts.
In National Socialist Germany, by
the time propaganda lost its grip, Germans were in the
hands of a police state. It was too late to take
corrective measures. Not even the military could correct
the disastrous policies of the executive. In the end,
Germany was destroyed. Does a similar fate await
Americans?
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.