F.
Scott Fitzgerald described the Ivy Club at Princeton University
as being "breathlessly aristocratic". That was
in 1920. It was no less aristocratic in 1970 when Philip
Bobbitt was its president. Bobbitt can trace his pedigree
to the early southern colonies in the 1600s and names his
uncle Lyndon Johnson as one of his mentors.
"Public
servant" Bobbitt has served as advisor to presidents
Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton,
George W. Bush and now Barak Obama on the Secretary of State's
Advisory Committee on International Law. He frequents The
White House as if it were his local pub and seems to have
a pass key to all the influential institutions of the government.
He's worked on the charter of the CIA, counseled the Iran-Contra
Committee, was director for Intelligence Programs for the
National Security Council, etc. etc. & etc. When not
whispering in the ears of power, he speaks authoritatively
as a professor of international law at Harvard, Colombia,
Yale, Princeton, Oxford and the University of Texas. His
fan club includes Tony Blair, David Cameron, John Howard
and Henry Kissinger who described him as "the* outstanding
political philosopher of our time." (* Note that Henry
says "the" and not "an".)
You get the picture.
What is the philosophy radiating out of this "outstanding
political philosopher"? His book The Shield of Achilles
(2002) spells out his philosophy candidly.
Bobbitt doesn't believe in peace. The search for peace is
"fruitless." War is inevitable and the wise policy
makers anticipate it and prepare for it so that they can
shape the form it takes. Philip B regards war as a strategic
struggle to legitimize the formation of state authority
and establish its constitutional order. He uses the term
epochal war to designate a greater conflict and exemplifies
this with what he calls The Long War that extended from
1914 to 1990. It consolidated the nation-state.
The Market-State
Now that the nation-state has been established the next epochal
war is under way to see who will dominate the market-state.
Where the nation-state carried the promise of material welfare
for its citizens, the market-state promises opportunities.
(Note that I refrain from using sarcasm about the difference
between material welfare and opportunities.) Bobbitt encourages
leaders to create new forms for the use of force to promote
and defend the market-state. Citizens should be employed
as mercenaries, civil privacy should be abandoned and surveillance
should be increased.
Recognize any of these policies? Bobbitt knew that they
would upset some people. "Unaided by the assurance
that the political process will not be subordinated to the
most powerful market actors, markets can become targets
of the alienated and of those who are disenfranchised by
any shift away from national or ethnic institutions."
Are you feeling alienated by corporate rule ("the most
powerful market actors") or disenfranchised by the
rulers trashing the country's traditions and laws ("shift
away from national or ethnic institutions")? Thank
Bobbitt!
But don't be too hard on Professor Phil. When his book The
Shield of Achilles came out prestigious people and reviewers
calloused their fingertips writing its praises. The entire
intellectual, academic and politic elite shower acclaim
over this apostle of fascism. Yes, fascism. And I'm not
using the word loosely.
The term market-state itself is a basically a declaration
of fascism.
Wiktionary
defines fascism as: a political regime ideologically based
on a relationship between business and the centralized government,
business-and-government control of the market place, repression
of criticism of opposition.
Philip B's market-state goes beyond a mere business-government
relationship. It subordinates the political process "to
the most powerful market actors."
"...the market-state promises a 'virtuous' circle to
those states that copy its form and obey its strictures*.
The privatization of state-owned firms brings immense capital
gains to the state as it liquidates vast monopolies; this
windfall supplements the savings from cuts in welfare programs..."
(*Note the aristocratic expression, "obey its strictures".)
In an interview in 2007 on Global Axess, Bobbitt claimed
the invasion of Iraq was necessary because "we couldn't
predict when Saddam Hussein could acquire nuclear weapons."
This clearly proves that a monument of academic knowledge
can produce ugly twisted reasoning. If the ultimate international
crime, the initiation of war, can be justified with Bobbitt's
argument, there is no such thing as international law. Many
progressive brats of America are fond of complaining about
the stupidity of the "sheeple". The majority of
Americans however know more about the difference between
right and wrong - and crimes of aggression—than American
professors of international law.
Prof. Phil excels in twisted reasoning. "It takes two states
to go to war. /---/ States ... may employ aggression, but
they do not seek war. Rather it is the state against whom*
the aggression has been mounted, typically, that makes the
move to war, which is a legal and strategic act". (*
Note the reference to the state as a person rather than
a thing.)
Phil claims that the Vietnam War was "fought to stop
aggression by going to war."
And speaking of twisted logic and Vietnam, Bobbitt wrote
an eulogy to former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara
in the NY Times (July 7, 2009). How did Professor Phil describe
the man who initiated the bombing campaign that costs three
million Vietnamese lives? He characterize him as "a
man of compassion".
Many people will be surprised to learn that the intellectual
elite of the empire can't tell the difference between good
and evil and worship the prospects of fascism. I suggest
they read Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels. The seldom-mentioned
journey to Laputa (Spanish for whore) describes the illogical
scientific fools of this island in the air. Among other
things, the titled fools believe that they can determine
the guilt of conspiracy suspects (terrorists) by examining
their turds.
And speaking of turds, fascist shit doesn't just happen.
It's dark, hard values are produced by the constipated minds
of the aristocrats of power.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Joel Miller is a Bronx-grown American
who migrated to Sweden after an honorable discharge from
the US Army. He has worked as teacher and lecturer, but
now as a writer and photographer. Click here
to contact Mr. Miller.
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