As the US heads off to the polls to decide their next President
Henry Giroux writes on the ritualistic pageantry of the US elections:
As Hurricane Sandy swept through the Eastern Seaboard of the United
States, there was and is much concern in the mainstream press about how
it will affect the upcoming presidential elections. The implication
being that a natural disaster may undermine the electoral process and
distort what for many is the most significant expression of democracy in
American politics. Unfortunately, the problems facing the upcoming
election speak less to the effects of a natural disaster than to a
serious political crisis. The equation of the electoral process with the highest measure of democracy rests on two mistaken assumptions.
The first assumption is that these elections actually provide a real
set of choices for the American public. Nothing could be further from
the truth. In reality, the choice is between Mitt Romney who is the
titular head of a Republican party that is now largely controlled by a
range of extremists. This cast of rouges includes ultra-conservative
advocates of market fundamentalism and extreme religious zealots along
with a mix of right-wing billionaires - all of whom are intent on
destroying any vestige of the welfare state while quashing gay rights,
attacking women’s rights, and suppressing voter registration turnout. On
the other hand, Barack Obama is a conservative centrist who has
repeatedly compromised his liberal policies on domestic issues while
legitimating a range of foreign and domestic policies that have shredded
civil liberties, expanded the permanent warfare state and increased the
domestic reach of the punitive surveillance state.
The second assumption that undermines the electoral process and the
coming election as the highest expression of American democracy is that
the process is now entirely controlled and corrupted by the power of big
money. As Eliot Weinberger recently wrote in the London Review of
Books, “Obama and Romney are each spending about a billion dollars to
get elected—four times what Bush and Gore spent in 2000. When one adds
the unregulated PACs and Congressional and gubernatorial races, the cost
of this year’s election is around $6 billion."
Under such circumstances, politics dissolves into pathology as those
who are able to dominate politics and policy-making do so largely
because of their disproportionate control of the nation's income and
wealth and the benefits they gain from the systemic reproduction of an
iniquitous social order. In other words, electoral politics is rigged
and any notion of politics that is willing to invest in such ritualistic
pageantry adds to the current dysfunctional nature of American society
while reinforcing a profound failure of political imagination.
Elections in the United States are now characterized by the politics
of a moral coma and corrupted by the pathological lies used to justify
the rule of big money.
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