The Terminal Decline of The USA
By Finian Cunningham
Information Clearing House
Monday, July 27, 2020
President Trump’s U-turn admission on the coronavirus pandemic,
acknowledging that it’s going to get worse before it gets better,
could be applied to the general condition of American politics.
It can only get worse under present circumstances.
That’s because there is no way to solve deep-seated problems
in the US system under the prevailing bipartisan framework.
It is delusional for Democrats to blame Trump and the Republicans
for all the woes of the nation.
The notion that America can be returned to some kind of presumed
normality if Joe Biden is elected to the White House in November is
a fantasy.
Likewise it is delusional for Republicans to scapegoat Democrats
for tearing up the social fabric.
Trump and fellow Republicans in Congress and in rightwing media
are casting all the upheaval of protests and street violence on,
“radical left Democrats”.
That’s just a preposterous denial of how deeply entrenched
problems are in the US, from poverty, police brutality and
racial discrimination.
For the US system is fundamentally broken.
That is the legacy of the two-party system, both of which
are dominated by, and servile to, the corporate power of
Wall Street, big business and the military-industrial complex.
Right and Left are superficial meaningless American political
adjectives.
They are both centrally corporate vehicles.
The two parties, Republican and Democrat, are just two sides
of the same coin.
That coin is corporate power.
The US is not a democracy in practice.
The voting cycle is just a chimera of “democratic rights” amidst
a plutocracy.
The idea of voting out one party to be replaced by the other in
order to manifest meaningful change is simply wishful thinking.
Both parties whether they control the executive in the White House
or the legislative branch in Congress have presided over endless
overseas wars and foreign aggressions, while domestically both
parties have overseen massive, relentless impoverishment of the
majority of working Americans for the obscene enrichment of a
ruling elite.
That is the essential function of American capitalism
and its imperialist bullying.
And neither of the two parties have shown any will or cognizance
of opposing that fundamental function.
Barack Obama, the Democrat who extolled, “hope and change”
brought nothing of the sort.
He oversaw more wars and more bombings and killings in foreign
countries.
Donald Trump, the Republican maverick, promised to, “drain
the swamp” and end, “endless wars”.
He has done nothing of the sort.
Nothing changes in the two-party system that defines American
politics because the duopoly is designed to ensure that there is
precisely no change.
American corporate capitalism and its oligarchy is an entity
wired for war.
The intrinsic injustice of the system, from its genocidal foundations
to the contemporary drive for global dominance, necessitates that
violence and war are constant concomitants.
Republicans or Democrats don’t change that endemic condition.
They merely deliver it with different accentuations.
Take the present reckless escalation of tensions with China by the
Trump administration.
There seems little doubt that Washington is seeking to corral China
for its global ambitions under a range of pretexts, from the corona
pandemic to allegations of espionage, which also serves to distract
the US public from its massive internal failings as a fractured
society.
But Democrat rival Joe Biden is not offering anything different.
He is engaging in mindless provocations with China too, trying to
outdo Trump as to who can sound more bellicose towards Beijing.
Biden is also posing as the would-be new sheriff in the White House,
vowing to get tough on Russia over alleged meddling in US politics.
The posturing is an empty, futile fabrication.
Meanwhile Trump asserts that, “no-one is tougher on Russia”
than him.
And so down the proverbial rabbit hole we go, never emerging.
Both parties play the foreign bogeyman game as a way to justify
American imperialism in the service of corporate capitalism.
That’s why nothing ever changes for the benefit and progress of
ordinary Americans, or indeed for the rest of the world which has
to endure US aggression over and over.
What needs to change is the entire paradigm of American politics.
The two-party system is obsolete.
The nation needs to organize political representation to defend
and progress the interests of the majority working people.
That requires a head-on challenge to the vested corporate powers
of Wall Street, big business and its media and the military-industrial
complex.
In short, American capitalism has to be reckoned with.
Can it be reformed root and branch?
Or does it need to be abolished, supplanted altogether
by genuine democracy?
That’s up to the American people organized for their rights
to determine.
But one thing is certain.
There are no answers for progress under the present corrupt
duopoly.
As it is, America is in terminal decline.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/55387.htm
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