Chomsky on the History Of US Propaganda
From
a vital speech made by Noam Chomsky, on March 17, 1991 in Kentfield,
CA. It was originally supposed to touch on the issue of the Gulf War,
but as you will see, his message permeates much more.
For
scrutinizing Chomsky's conclusions and the sources cited, you'll find
them footnoted in his books (ie. NECESSARY ILLUSIONS, Thought Control
in Democratic Societies). Any good public library--especially
college ones--are bound to have many of his books.
The
topic that was announced, "Disinformation and the Gulf War,"
is actually a bit narrower than what I would like to talk about. I
will get to that in a moment. But I'd like to suggest a somewhat broader
context for looking at that particular issue. The context actually
has to do with what kind of a world and what kind of a society we
want to live in, and in particular in what sense of democracy do we
want this to be a democratic society. In opening that question for
a little bit of discussion, let me begin by counter-posing two different
conceptions of democracy. One conception of democracy has it that
a democratic society is one in which the public has the means to participate
in some meaningful way in the management of their own affairs and
the means of information are open and free. If you look up democracy
in the dictionary you'll get a definition something like that.
An
alternative conception of democracy is that the public must be barred
from managing their own affairs and the means of information must
be kept narrowly and rigidly controlled. That may sound like an odd
conception of democracy, but it's important to understand that it
is the prevailing conception. In fact, it has long been, not just
in operation, but even in theory. There's a long history that goes
back to the earliest modern democratic revolutions in seventeenth
century England which largely expresses this point of view. I'm just
going to keep to the modern period and say a few words about how that
notion of democracy develops and why and how the problem of media
and disinformation enters within that context.
EARLY
HISTORY OF PROPAGANDA
Let's
begin with the first modern government propaganda operation. That
was under the Woodrow Wilson Administration. Woodrow Wilson was elected
President in 1916 on the platform "Peace Without Victory."
That was right in the middle of the First World War. The population
was extremely pacifistic and saw no reason to become involved in a
European war. The Wilson Administration was actually committed to
war and had to do something about it. They established a government
propaganda commission, called the Creel Commission, which succeeded,
within six months, in turning a pacifist population into a hysterical,
war-mongering population which wanted to destroy everything German,
tear the Germans limb from limb, go to war and save the world.
"...there's
a logic behind it. There's even a kind of compelling moral principle
behind it. The compelling moral principle is that the mass of the
public is just too stupid to be able to understand things."
That
was a major achievement, and it led to a further achievement. Right
at that time and after the war the same techniques were used to whip
up a hysterical Red Scare, as it was called, which succeeded pretty
much in destroying unions and eliminating such dangerous problems
as freedom of the press and freedom of political thought. There was
very strong support from the media, from the business establishment,
which in fact organized--pushed much of this work-- and it was in
general a great success.
Among
those who participated actively and enthusiastically were the progressive
intellectuals, people of the John Dewey circle, who took great pride,
as you can see from their own writings at the time, in having shown
that what they called the "more intelligent members of the community"
--namely themselves-- were able to drive a reluctant population into
a war by terrifying them and eliciting jingoist fanaticism. The means
that were used were extensive. For example, there was a good deal
of fabrication of atrocities by the Huns; Belgian babies with their
arms torn off, all sorts of awful things that you still read in history
books. They were all invented by the British propaganda ministry,
whose own commitment at the time, as they put it in their secret deliberations,
was "to control the thought of all the world." But more
crucially they wanted to control the thought of the more intelligent
members of the community in the U.S., who would then disseminate the
propaganda that they were concocting and convert the pacifistic country
to wartime hysteria. That worked. It worked very well. And it taught
a lesson: State propaganda, when supported by the educated classes
and when no deviation is permitted from it, can have a big effect.
It was a lesson learned by Hitler and many others, and it has been
pursued to this day.
SPECTATOR
DEMOCRACY
Another
group that was impressed by these successes were liberal Democratic
theorists and leading media figures, like, for example, Walter Lippmann,
who was the dean of American journalists, a major foreign and domestic
policy critic and also a major theorist of liberal democracy. If you
take a look at his collected essays, you'll see that they're subtitled
something like "A Progressive Theory of Liberal Democratic Thought."
Lippmann was involved in these propaganda commissions and recognized
their achievements. He argued that what he called a "revolution
in the art of democracy," could be used to manufacture consent,
that is, to bring about agreement on the part of the public for things
that they didn't want by the new techniques of propaganda. He also
thought that this was a good idea, in fact necessary. It was necessary
because, as he put it, "the common interests elude public opinion
entirely" and can only be understood and managed by a specialized
class of responsible men who are smart enough to figure things out.
This
theory asserts that only a small elite, the intellectual community
that the Deweyites were talking about, can understand the common interests,
what all of us care about, and that these things "elude the general
public." This is a view that goes back hundreds of years. It's
also a typical Leninist view. In fact, it has very close resemblance
to the Leninist conception that a vanguard of revolutionary intellectuals
take state power, using popular revolutions as the force that brings
them to state power, and then drive the stupid masses towards a future
that they're too dumb and incompetent to envision themselves.
"This
point of view has been developed by lots of other people. In fact,
it's pretty conventional...the guru of George Kennan and the Kennedy
intellectuals and others, put it that "rationality is a very
narrowly restricted skill." Only a small number of people have
it. Most people are guided by just emotion and impulse."
The
liberal democratic theory and Marxism-Leninism are very close in their
common ideological assumptions. I think that's one reason why people
have found it so easy over the years to drift from one position to
another without any particular sense of change. It's just a matter
of assessing where power is. Maybe there will be a popular revolution,
and that will put us into state power; or maybe there won't be, in
which case we'll just work for the people with real power: the business
community. But we'll do the same thing: We'll drive the stupid masses
towards a world that they're too dumb to understand for themselves.
Lippmann
backed this up by a pretty elaborated theory of progressive democracy.
He argued that in a properly-functioning democracy there are classes
of citizens. There is first of all the class of citizens who have
to take some active role in running general affairs. That's the specialized
class. They are the people who analyze, execute, make decisions, and
run things in the political, economic, and ideological systems. That's
a small percentage of the population. Naturally, anyone who puts these
ideas forth is always part of that small group, and they're talking
about what to do about those others.
Those
others, who are out of the small group, the big majority of the population,
they are what Lippmann called "the bewildered herd." We
have to protect ourselves from the trampling and rage of the bewildered
herd.
Now
there are two functions in a democracy: The specialized class, the
responsible men, carry out the executive function, which means they
do the thinking and planning and understand the common interests.
Then, there is the bewildered herd, and they have a function in democracy
too. Their function in a democracy, he said, is to be spectators,
not participants in action. But they have more of a function than
that, because it's a democracy. Occasionally they are allowed to lend
their weight to one or another member of the specialized class. In
other words, they're allowed to say, "We want you to be our leader"
or "We want you to be our leader." That's because it's a
democracy and not a totalitarian state. That's called an election.
But once they've lent their weight to one or another member of the
specialized class they're supposed to sink back and become spectators
of action, but not participants. That's a properly functioning democracy.
And
there's a logic behind it. There's even a kind of compelling moral
principle behind it. The compelling moral principle is that the mass
of the public is just too stupid to be able to understand things.
If they try to participate in managing their own affairs, they're
just going to cause trouble. Therefore it would be immoral and improper
to permit them to do this. We have to tame the bewildered herd, not
allow the bewildered herd to rage and trample and destroy things.
It's pretty much the same logic that says that it would be improper
to let a three-year-old run across the street.
You
don't give a three-year-old that kind of freedom because the three-year-old
doesn't know how to handle that freedom. Correspondingly, you don't
allow the bewildered herd to become participants in action. They'll
just cause trouble.
So
we need something to tame the bewildered herd, and that something
is this new revolution in the art of democracy: the manufacture of
consent. The media, the schools, and popular culture have to be divided.
For the political class and the decision makers have to give them
some tolerable sense of reality, although they also have to instill
the proper beliefs.
Just
remember, there is an unstated premise here. The unstate premise --and
even the responsible men have to disguise this from themselves-- has
to do with the question of how they get into the position where they
have the authority to make decisions.
The
way they do that, of course, is by serving people with real power.
The people with real power are the ones who own the society, which
is a pretty narrow group. If the specialized class can come along
and say, I can serve your interests, then they'll be part of the executive
group.
You've
got to keep that quiet. That means they have to have instilled in
them the beliefs and doctrines that will serve the interests of private
power. Unless they can master that skill, they're not part of the
specialized class. So we have one kind of educational system directed
to responsible men, the specialized class. They have to be deeply
indoctrinated in the values and interests of private power and the
state-corporate nexus that represents it. If they can get through
that, then they can be part of the specialized class.
The
rest of the bewildered herd just has to be basically distracted. Turn
their attention to something else. Keep them out of trouble. Make
sure that they remain at most spectators of action, occasionally lending
their weight to one or another of the real leaders, who they may select
among.
This
point of view has been developed by lots of other people. In fact,
it's pretty conventional. For example, a leading contemporary theologian
and foreign policy critic Reinhold Niebuhr, sometimes called "the
theologian of the establishment," the guru of George Kennan and
the Kennedy intellectuals and others, put it that "rationality
is a very narrowly restricted skill." Only a small number of
people have it. Most people are guided by just emotion and impulse.
Those
of us who have rationality have to create necessary illusions and
emotionally potent over-simplifications to keep the naive simpletons
more or less on course. This became a substantial part of contemporary
political science.
In
the 1920's and early 1930's, Harold Lasswell, the founder of the modern
field of communications and one of the leading American political
scientists, explained that we should not succumb to "democratic
dogmatisms" about men being the best judges of their own interests.
Because their not. We're the best judges of the public interests.
Therefore, just out of ordinary morality, we have to make sure that
they don't have the opportunity to act on the basis of their misjudgments.
In
what is nowadays called a totalitarian state, then a military state,
it's easy. You just hold a bludgeon over their heads, and if they
get out of line you smash them over the head. But as society has become
more free and democratic, you lose that capacity. Therefore you have
to turn to the techniques of propaganda. The logic is clear. Propaganda
is to a democracy what the bludgeon is to a totalitarian state. That's
wise and good because, again, the common interests elude the bewildered
herd. They can't figure them out.
PUBLIC
RELATIONS
The
U.S. pioneered the public relations industry. It's commitment was
"to control the public mind," as it's leaders put it. They
learned a lot from the successes of the Creel Commission and the successes
in creating the Red Scare and its aftermath. The public relations
industry underwent a huge expansion at the time. It succeeded for
some time in creating almost total subordination of the public to
business rule through the 1920's. This was so extreme that Congressional
committees began to investigate it as we moved into the 1930's. That's
where a lot of our information comes from.
Public
relations is a huge industry. They're spending by now something on
the order of a billion dollars a year. All along its commitment was
to controlling the public mind. In the 1930's, the big problems arose
again, as they had during the First World War.
"We're
now talking about the business community, which spends lots and lots
of money, attention, and thought into how to deal with these problems
through the public relations industry and other organizations, like
the National Association of Manufacturers and the Business Roundtable,
and so on. They immediately set to work to try to find a way to counter
these democratic deviations."
There
was a huge depression and substantial labor organizing. In fact, in
1935 labor won its first major legislative victory, namely the right
to organize, with the Wagner Act. That raised two serious problems.
For one thing, democracy was misfunctioning. The bewildered herd was
actually winning legislative victories, and it's not supposed to work
that way. The other problem was that it was becoming possible for
people to organize. People have to be atomized and segregated and
alone. They're not supposed to organize, because then they might be
something beyond spectators of action. They might actually be participants
if many people with limited resources could get together to enter
the political arena.
That's
really threatening. A major response was taken on the part of business
to ensure that this would be the last legislative victory for labor
and that it would be the beginning of the end of this democratic deviation
of popular organization.
It
worked. That was the last legislative victory for labor. From that
point on--although the number of people in the unions increased for
a while during the Second World War, after which it started dropping--the
capacity to act through the unions began to steadily drop. It wasn't
by accident. We're now talking about the business community, which
spends lots and lots of money, attention, and thought into how to
deal with these problems through the public relations industry and
other organizations, like the National Association of Manufacturers
and the Business Roundtable, and so on. They immediately set to work
to try to find a way to counter these democratic deviations.
The
first trial was one year later, in 1936. There was a major strike,
the Bethlehem Steel strike in western Pennsylvania and Johnstown,
in the Mohawk Valley. Business tried out a new technique of labor
destruction, which worked very well. Not through goon squads and breaking
knees. That wasn't working very well any more; but through the more
subtle and effective means of propaganda.
The
idea was to figure out ways to turn the public against the strikers,
to present the strikers as disruptive, harmful to the public and against
the common interests. The common interests are those of "us,"
the businessman, the worker, the housewife. That's all "us."
We want to be together and have things like harmony and Americanism
and working together. Then there's those bad strikers out there who
are disruptive and causing trouble and breaking harmony and violating
Americanism. We've got to stop them so we can all live together.
The
corporate executive and the guy who cleans the floors all have the
same interests. We can all work together and work for Americanism
in harmony, liking each other. That was essentially the message. A
huge amount of effort was put into presenting it. This is, after all,
the business community, so they control the media and have massive
resources.
And
it worked, very effectively. In fact, it was later called the "Mohawk
Valley formula" and applied over and over again to break strikes.
They were called "scientific methos of strike-breaking,"
and worked very effectively by mobilizing community opinion in favor
of vapid, empty concepts like Americanism. Who can be against that?
Or, to bring it up to date, "Support our troops." Who can
be against that? Or yellow ribbons. Who can be against that? Anything
that's totally vacuous.
"A major
response was taken on the part of business to ensure that this would
be the last legislative victory for labor and that it would be the
beginning of the end of this democratic deviation of popular organization."
In
fact, what does it mean if somebody asks you, Do you support the people
in Iowa? Can you say, Yes, I support them, or No, I don't support
them? It's not even a question. It doesn't mean anything. That's the
point. The point of public relations slogans like "Support our
troops" is that they don't mean anything. They mean as much as
whether you support the people in Iowa.
Of
course, there was an issue. The issue was, Do you support our policy?
But you don't want people to think about the issue. That's the whole
point of good propaganda. You want to create a slogan that nobody's
going to be against, and everybody's going to be for, because nobody
knows what it means, because it doesn't mean anything, but its crucial
value is that it diverts your attention from a question that does
mean something: Do you support our policy? That's the one you're not
allowed to talk about.
So
you have people arguing about support for the troops? Of course I
don't not support them. Then you've won. That's like Americanism and
harmony. We're all together, empty slogans, let's join in, let's make
sure we don't have these bad people around to disrupt our harmony
with their talk about class struggle, rights and that sort of business.
That's
all very effective. It runs right up to today. And of course it is
carefully thought out. The people in the public relations industry
aren't there for the fun of it. They're doing work. They're trying
to instill the right values. In fact, they have a conception of what
democracy ought to be: It ought to be a system in which the specialized
class is trained to work in the service of the masters, the people
who own the society.
The
rest of the population ought to be deprived of any form of organization,
because organization just causes trouble. They ought to be sitting
alone in front of the TV and having drilled into their heads the message,
which says, the only value in life is to have more commodities or
live like that rich middle class family you're watching and to have
nice values like harmony and Americanism. That's all there is in life.
You
may think in your own head that there's got to be something more in
life than this, but since you're watching the tube alone you assume,
I must be crazy, because that's all that's going on over there. And
since there is no organization permitted --that's absolutely crucial--
you never have a way of finding out whether you are crazy, and you
just assume it, because it's the natural thing to assume.
You've
got to keep them pretty scared, because unless they're properly scared
and frightened of all kinds of devils that are going to destroy them
from outside or inside or somewhere, they may start to think, which
is very dangerous, because they're not competent to think. Therefore
it's important to distract them and marginalize them.
That's
one conception of democracy. In fact, going back to the business community,
the last legal victory for labor really was 1935, the Wagner Act.
After the war came, the unions declined as did a very rich working
class culture that was associated with the unions. That was destroyed.
We
moved to a business-run society at a remarkable level. This is the
only state-capitalist industrial society which doesn't have even the
normal social contract that you find in comparable societies. Outside
of South Africa, I guess, this is the only industrial society that
doesn't have national health care. There's no general commitment to
even minimal standards of survival for the parts of the population
who can't follow those rules and gain things for themselves individually.
Unions
are virtually nonexistent. Other forms of popular structure are virtually
nonexistent. There are no political parties or organizations. It's
a long way towards the ideal, at least structurally. The media are
a corporate monopoly. They have the same point of view. The two parties
are two factions of the business party. Most of the population doesn't
even bother voting because it looks meaningless. They're marginalized
and properly distracted. At least that's the goal.
The
leading figure in the public relations industry, Edward Bernays, actually
came out of the Creel Commission. He was part of it, learned his lessons
there and went on to develop what's called the "engineering of
consent," which he described as "the essence of democracy."
The people who are able to engineer consent are the ones who have
the resources and the power to do it --the business community-- and
that's who you work for.
ENGINEERING
OPINION
It
is also necessary to whip up the population in support of foreign
adventures. Usually the population is pacifist, just like they were
during the First World War. The public sees no reason to get involved
in foreign adventures, killing, and torture. So you have to whip them
up. And to whip them up you have to frighten them.
Bernays
himself had an important achievement in this respect. he was the person
who ran the public relations campaign for the United Fruit Company
in 1954, when the U.S. moved in to overthrow the capitalist-democratic
government of Guatemala and installed a murderous death-squad society,
which remains that way to the present day with constant infusions
of U.S. aid to prevent the democratic deviations that might take place
there.
It's
necessary to constantly ram through domestic programs which the public
is opposed to, because there is no reason for the public to be in
favor of domestic programs that are harmful to them. This, too, takes
extensive propaganda.
We've
seen a lot of this in the last ten years. The Reagan programs were
overwhelmingly unpopular. Even the people who voted for Reagan, by
about three to two, hoped that his policies would not be enacted.
If you take particular programs, like armaments, cutting back on social
spending, etc., almost every one of them was overwhelmingly opposed
by the public.
But
as long as people are marginalized and distracted and have no way
to organize or articulate their sentiments, or even know that others
have these sentiments, people who said that they prefer social spending
to military spending, who gave that answer on polls, as people overwhelmingly
did, assumed that they were the only people with that crazy idea in
their heads. They never heard it from anywhere else.
Nobody's
supposed to think that. Therefore, if you do think it and you answer
it in a poll, you just assume that you're sort of weird. Since there's
no way to get together with other people who share or reinforce that
view and help your articulate it, you feel like an oddity, and oddball.
So you just stay on the side and you don't pay any attention to what's
going on. You look at something else, like the Superbowl.
To
a certain extent, then, that ideal was achieved, but never completely.
There are institutions which it has as yet been impossible to destroy.
The churches, for example, still exist. A large part of the dissident
activity in the U.S. comes out of the churches, for the simple reason
that they're there. So when you go to a European country and give
a political talk, it may very likely be in the union hall. Here that
won't happen, because unions first of all barely exist, and if they
do exist they're not political organizations. But the churches do
exist, and therefore you often give a talk in a church. Central American
solidarity work mostly grew out of the churches, mainly because they
exist.
The
bewildered herd never gets properly tamed, so this is a constant battle.
In the 1930's they arose again and were put down. In the 1960's there
was another wave of dissidence.
There
was a name for that. It was called
by the specialized class "the crisis of democracy." Democracy
was regarded as entering into a crisis in the 1960's. The crisis was
that large segments of the population were becoming organized and
active and trying to participate in the political arena. Here we come
back to these two conceptions of democracy. By the dictionary definition,
that's an advance in democracy. By the prevailing definition, that's
a problem, a crisis that has to be overcome.
The
population has to be driven back to the apathy, obedience and passivity
that is their proper state. We therefore have to do something to overcome
the crisis. Efforts were made to achieve that. It hasn't worked. The
crisis of democracy is still alive and well, fortunately, but not
very effective in changing policy; but it is effective in changing
opinion, contrary to what a lot of people believe.
Great
efforts were made after the 1960's to try to reverse and overcome
this malady. One aspect of the malady actually got a technical name.
It was called the "Vietnam Syndrome." The Vietnam Syndrome,
a term that began to come up around 1970, has actually been defined
on occasion. The Reaganite intellectual Norman Podhoretz defined it
as "the sickly inhibitions against the use of military force."
There
were these sickly inhibitions against violence on the part of a large
part of the public. People just didn't understand why we should go
around torturing people and killing people and carpet bombing them.
It's very dangerous for a population to be overcome by these sickly
inhibitions, as Goebbels understood, because then there's a limit
on foreign adventures.
It's
necessary, as the Washington Post put it the other day, rather proudly,
to "instill in people respect for the martial virtues."
That's important. If you want to have a violent society that uses
force around the world to achieve the ends of its own domestic elite,
it's necessary to have a proper appreciation of the martial virtues
and none of these sickly inhibitions about using violence. So that's
the Vietnam Syndrome. It's necessary to overcome that one.
REPRESENTATION
AS REALITY
It's
also necessary to completely falsify history. That's another way to
overcome these sickly inhibitions, to make it look as if when we attack
and destroy somebody we're really protecting and defending ourselves
against major aggressors and monsters and so on. There has been a
huge effort since the Vietnam War to reconstruct the history of that.
Too many people began to understand what was really going on. Including
plenty of soldiers and a lot of young people who were involved with
the peace movement and others. That was bad. It was necessary to rearrange
those bad thoughts and to restore some form of sanity, namely, a recognition
that whatever we do is noble and right. If we're bombing South Vietnam,
that's because we're defending South Vietnam against somebody, namely
the South Vietnamese, since nobody else was there.
It's
what the Kennedy intellectuals called "defense against internal
aggression in South Vietnam." That was the phrase that Adlai
Stevenson used. It was necessary to make that the official and well
understood picture. That's worked pretty well. When you have total
control over the media and the educational system and scholarship
is conforminist, you can get that across.
One
indication of it was revealed in a study done at the University of
Massachusetts on attitudes towards the Gulf crisis --a study of beliefs
and attitudes in television watching. One of the questions asked in
that study was, "How many Vietnamese casualties would you estimate
that there were during the Vietnam War?" The average response
on the part of Americans today is about 100,000. The official figure
is about two million. The actual figure is probably three to four
million.
The
people who conducted the study raised an appropriate question: "What
would we think about German political culture if when you asked people
today how many Jews died in the Holocaust they estimated about 300,00?
What would that tell us about German political culture?" They
leave the question unanswered, but you can pursue it. What does it
tell us about our culture? It tells us quite a bit.
It
is necessary to overcome the sickly inhibitions against the use of
military force and other democratic deviations. On this particular
case it worked. This is true on every topic. Pick the topic you like:
the Middle East, international terrorism, Central America, whatever
it is --the picture of the world that's presented to the public has
only the remotest relation to reality.
The
truth of the matter is buried under edifice after edifice of lies.
It's all been a marvellous success from this point of view in deterring
the threat of democracy, achieved under conditions of freedom, which
is extremely interesting. It's not like a totalitarian state, where
it's done by force. These achievements are under conditions of freedom.
If we want to understand our own society, we'll have to think about
these facts. They are important facts, important for those who care
about what kind of society we live in.
DISSIDENT
CULTURE
Despite
all of this, the dissident culture survived. It's grown quite a lot
since the 1960's. In the 1960's the dissident culture first of all
was extremely slow
By
the 1970's that had changed considerably. Major popular movements
had developed: The environmental movement and others. In the 1980's
there was an even greater expansion to the solidarity movements, which
is something very new and important in the history of at least American,
and maybe even world dissidence.
These
were movements that not only protested but actually involved themselves,
often intimately, in the lives of suffering people elsewhere. They
learned a great deal from it and had quite a civilizing effect on
mainstream America.
All
of this made a very large difference. Anyone who has been involved
in this kind of activity for many years must be aware of this. I know
myself that the kind of talks I give today in the most reactionary
parts of the country --central Georgia, eastern Kentucky, etc. --are
talks of the kind that I couldn't have given at the peak of the peace
movement to the most active peace movement audience. Now you can give
them anywhere. People may agree or not agree, but at least they understand
what you're talking about and there's some sort of common ground that
you can pursue.
These
are all signs of a civilizing effect, despite all the propaganda,
despite all the efforts to control thought and manufacture consent.
Nevertheless, people are acquiring an ability and a willingness to
think things through. Skepticism about power has grown, and attitudes
have changed on many many issues. It's kind of slow, even glacial,
but perceptible and important. Whether it's fast enough to make a
significant difference in what happens in the world is another question.
Just
take one familiar example of it: The famous gender gap. In the 1960's
attitudes of men and women were approximately the same on such matters
as the "martial virtues" and the sickly inhibitions against
the use of military force. Nobody, neither men nor women, were suffering
from those sickly inhibitions in the early 1960's. The responses were
the same. Everybody thought that the use of violence to suppress people
out there was just right.
Over
the years it's changed. The sickly inhibitions have increased all
across the board. But meanwhile a gap has been growing, and by now
it's a very substantial gap. According to polls, it's something like
25%. What has happened? What has happened is that there is some form
of at least semi-organized popular movement that women are involved
in --the feminist movement. Organization has its effects. It means
that you discover that you're not alone. Others have the same thoughts
that you do. You can reinforce your thoughts and learn more about
what you think and believe.
These
are very informal movements, not like membership organizations, just
a mood that involves interactions among people. It has a very noticeable
effect. That's the danger of democracy: If organizations can develop,
if people are no longer just glued to the tube, you may have all these
funny thoughts arising in their heads, like sickly inhibitions against
the use of military force. That has to be overcome, but it hasn't
been overcome.
PARADE
OF ENEMIES
Instead
of talking about the last war, let me talk about the next war, because
sometimes it's useful to be prepared instead of just reacting. There
is a very characteristic development going on in the U.S. now. It's
not the first country in the world that's done this. There are growing
domestic social and economic problems, in fact, maybe catastrophes.
Nobody in power has any intention of doing anything about them. If
you look at the domestic programs of the administrations of the past
ten years --I include here the democratic opposition-- there's really
no serious proposal about what to do about the severe problems of
health, education, homelessness, joblessness, crime, soaring criminal
population, jails, deterioration in the inner cities--the whole raft
of problems. You all know about them, and they're all getting worse.
Just
in the two years that George Bush has been in office [as of 1991]
three million more children crossed the poverty line, the debt is
zooming, educational standards are declining, real wages are now back
to the level of about the late 1950s for most of the population, and
nobody's doing anything about it.
In
such circumstances you've got to divert the bewildered herd, because
if they start noticing this they may not like it, since they're the
ones suffering from it. Just having them watch the Superbowl and the
sitcoms may not be enough. You have to whip them up into fear of enemies.
In
the 1930s Hitler whipped them up into fear of the Jews and Gypsies.
You had to crush them to defend yourselves. We have our ways, too.
Over the last ten years, every year or two, some major monster is
constructed that we have to defend ourselves against.
There
used to be one that was always available: The Russians. You could
always defend yourself against the Russians. But they're losing their
attractiveness as an enemy, and it's getting harder and harder to
use that one, so some new ones have to be conjured up.
In
fact, people have quite unfairly criticized George Bush for being
unable to express or articulate what's really driving us now. That's
very unfair. Prior to the mid 1980s, when you were asleep you would
just play the record: The Russians are coming. But he lost
that one and he's got to make up new ones, just like the Reaganite
public relations apparatus did in the 1980s. So it was international
terrorists and narco-traffickers and crazed Arabs and Saddam Hussein,
the new Hitler, is going to conquer the world. They've got to keep
coming up one after another. You frighten the population, terrorize
them, intimidated them so that they're too afraid to travel and cower
in fear. Then you have a magnificent victory over Grenada, Panama,
or some other defenseless Third World army that you can pulverize
before you even bother to look at them--which is just what happened.
That gives relief. We were saved at the last minute.
That's
one of the ways in which you can keep the bewildered herd from paying
attention to what's really going on around them, keep them diverted
and controlled. The next one that's coming along, most likely, will
be Cuba. That's going to require a continuation of the illegal economic
warfare, probably a continuation of the extraordinary international
terrorism.
The
most major international terrorism organized yet has been the Kennedy
administration’s Operation Mongoose, then the things that followed
along, against Cuba. There's been nothing remotely comparable to it
except perhaps the war against Nicaragua, if you call that terrorism.
The
World Court classified it as something more like aggression. There's
always an ideological offensive that builds up a chimerical monster,
then campaigns to have it crushed. You can't go in if they can fight
back. That's much too dangerous. But if you can assure that they will
be crushed, maybe we'll knock that one off and heave another sigh
of relief.
This
has been going on for quite a while. In May 1986, the memoirs of the
released Cuban prisoner, Armando Vallardares, came out. They quickly
became a media sensation. I'll give you a couple of quotes. The media
described his revelations as
"the
definitive account of the vast system of torture and prison by which
Castro punishes and obliterates political opposition. It was an inspiring
and unforgettable account of the bestial prisons, inhuman torture,
[and] record of state violence under yet another of this century's
mass murderers, who we learn, at last, from this book has created
a new despotism that has institutionalized torture as a mechanism
of social control in the hell that was the Cuba that Valladares lived
in."
That's
the Washington Post and New York Times in repeated reviews.
Castro was described as
"a
dictatorial goon. His atrocities were revealed in this book so conclusively
that only the most light-headed and cold-blooded Western intellectual
will come to the tyrant's defense."--Washington Post
Remember,
this is the account of what happened to one man. Let's say it's all
true. Let's raise no questions about what happened to the one man
who says he was tortured. At a White House ceremony marking Human
Rights Day, he was singled out by Ronald Reagan for his courage in
enduring the horrors and sadism of this bloody Cuban tyrant. He was
then appointed the U.S. representative at the UN Human Rights Commission,
where he has been able to perform signal services defending the Salvadoran
and Guatemalan governments against charges that they conduct atrocities
so massive that they make anything he suffered look pretty minor.
That's the way things stand.
SELECTIVE
PERCEPTION
That
was May 1986. It was interesting, and it tells you something about
the manufacture of consent. The same month, the surviving members
of the Human Rights Group of El Salvador --the leaders had been killed--
were arrested and tortured, including Herbert Anaya, who was the director.
They were sent to a prison --La Esperanza (hope) Prison. While they
were in prison they continued their human rights work. They were lawyers,
[and] they continued taking affidavits. There were 432 prisoners in
that prison. They got signed affidavits from 430 of them in which
they described, under oath, the torture that they had received: Electrical
torture and other atrocities, including, in one case, torture by a
North American U.S. major in uniform, who is described in some detail.
This
is an unusually explicit and comprehensive testimony, probably unique
in its detail about what's going on in a torture chamber. This 160-page
report of the prisoners' sworn testimony was sneaked out of prison,
along with a videotape which was taken showing people testifying in
prison about their torture. It was distributed by the Marin County
Interfaith Task Force.
The
national press refused to cover it. The TV stations refused to run
it. There was an article in the local
Marin County Newspaper, the San Francisco Examiner, and I think
that's all. No one else would touch it. This was at a time when there
were more than a few "light-headed and cold-blooded Western intellectuals"
who were singing the praises of Jose Napolean Duarte and of Ronald
Reagan.
Anaya
was not the subject of any tributes. He didn't get on Human Rights
Day. He wasn't appointed to anything. He was released in a prisoner
exchange and then assassinated, apparently by the U.S.-backed security
forces. Very little information about that ever appeared. The media
never asked whether exposure of the atrocities--instead of sitting
on them and silencing them--might have saved his life.
This
tells you something about the way a well-functioning system of consent
manufacturing works. In comparison with the revelations of Herbert
Anaya in El Salvador, Valladare's memoirs are not even a pea next
to the mountain. But you've got your job to do. That takes us towards
the next war. I expect we're going to hear more and more of this,
until the next operation takes place.
A few
remarks about the last one. Let's finally turn to that. Let me begin
with this University of Massachusetts study that I mentioned before.
It has some interesting conclusions. In the study people were asked
whether they thought that the U.S. should intervene with force to
reverse illegal occupation or serious human rights abuses. By about
two to one, people in the U.S. thought we should. We should use force
in the case of illegal occupation of land and severe human rights
abuses.
If
the U.S. was to follow that advice, we would bomb El Salvador, Guatemala,
Indonesia, Damascus, Tel Aviv, Capetown, Turkey, Washington, and whole
list of other states. These are all cases of illegal occupation and
aggression and severe human rights abuses. If you know the
facts about that range of examples, which we don't have the time to
run through, you'll know very well that Saddam Hussein's aggression
and atrocities fall well within the range; [But] they're not the most
extreme. Why doesn't anybody come to that conclusion?
The
reason is that nobody knows. In a well-functioning propaganda system,
nobody would know what I'm talking about when I list that range of
examples. If you bother to look, you find that those examples are
quite appropriate.
Take
one that was ominously close to being perceived right through this
period. In February, right in the middle of the bombing campaign,
the government of Lebanon requested Israel to observe UN Security
Resolution 425, which called on it to withdraw immediately and unconditionally
from Lebanon. That resolution dates from March 1978. There have since
been two subsequent resolutions calling for immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of Israel from Lebanon. Of course it doesn't observe them
because the U.S. backs it in maintaining that occupation.
Meanwhile
southern Lebanon is terrorized. There are big torture chambers with
horrifying things going on. It's used as a base for attacking other
parts of Lebanon. In the course of these thirteen years Lebanon was
invaded, the city of Beirut was bombed, about 20,000 people were killed,
about 80% of them civilians; hospitals were destroyed, and more terror,
looting, and robbery was inflicted. All fine; the U.S. backed it.
That's one case.
You
didn't see anything in the [U.S.] media about it or any discussion
about whether Israel and the U.S. should observe UN Security Council
Resolution 425 or any of the other resolutions, nor did anyone call
for the bombing of Tel Aviv, although by the principles upheld by
two-thirds of the population, we should. After all, that’s illegal
occupation and severe human rights abuses. That's just one case. There
are much worse ones. The Indonesian invasion of East Timor knocked
off about 200,000 people. They all look minor by that one. That was
strongly backed by the U.S. and is still going on with major U.S.
diplomatic and military support. We can go on and on.
THE
GULF WAR
That
tells you how a well-functioning propaganda system works. People can
believe that when we use force against Iraq and Kuwait it's because
we really observe the principle that illegal occupation and human
rights abuses should be met by force. They don't see what it would
mean if those principles were applied to U.S. behavior. That's a success
of propaganda of quite a spectacular type.
Let's
take a look at another case. If you look closely at the coverage of
the war [against Iraq] since August [1990], you'll notice that there
a couple of striking voices missing. For example, there is an Iraqi
democratic opposition, in fact, a very courageous and quite substantial
Iraqi democratic opposition. They of course function in exile because
they couldn't survive in Iraq. They are in Europe primarily. They
are bankers, engineers, architects--people like that. They are articulate,
they have voices, and they speak.
Last
February [1990], when Saddam Hussein was still George Bush's favorite
friend and trading partner, they actually came to Washington, according
to Iraqi democratic opposition sources, with a plea for some kind
of support for a demand of theirs calling for a parliamentary democracy
in Iraq. They were totally rebuffed, because the U.S. had no interest
in it. There was no reaction to this in the public record.
Since
August [1990] it became a little harder to ignore their existence.
In August we suddenly turned against Saddam Hussein after having favored
him for many years. Here was an Iraqi democratic opposition [that]
ought to have some thoughts about the matter. They would be happy
to see Saddam Hussein drawn and quartered. He killed their brothers,
tortured their sisters, and drove them out of the country. They have
been fighting against his tyranny throughout the whole time that Ronald
Reagan and George Bush were cherishing him. What about their voices?
Take
a look at the national media and see how much you can find about the
Iraqi democratic opposition from August [1990] through March [1991].
You can't find a word. It's not that they're inarticulate. They have
statements, proposals, calls and demands. If you look at them, you
find that they're indistinguishable from those of the American peace
movement. They're against Saddam Hussein and they're against the war
against Iraq. They don't want their country destroyed. What they want
is a peaceful resolution, and they knew perfectly well that it was
achievable.
That's
the wrong view and therefore they're out. We don't hear a word about
the Iraqi democratic opposition. If you want to find out about them,
pick up the German press, or the British press. They don't say much
about them, but they're less controlled than we are and they say something.
This
is a spectacular achievement of propaganda. First, that the voices
of the Iraqi democrats are completely excluded, and second, that nobody
notices it. That's interesting too. It takes a really deeply indoctrinated
population not to notice that we're not hearing the voices of the
Iraqi democratic opposition and not asking the question Why
and finding out the obvious answer: Because the Iraqi democrats have
their own thoughts, They agree with the international peace movement
and therefore they're out.
Let's
take the question of the reasons for the war. Reasons were offered
for the war. The reasons are: Aggressors cannot be rewarded and
aggression must be reversed by the quick resort to violence. That
was the reason for the war. There was basically no other reason advanced.
Can
that possibly be the reason for the war? Does the U.S. uphold those
principles, that aggressors cannot be rewarded and that aggression
must be reversed by a quick resort to violence? I won't insult your
intelligence by running through the facts, but the fact is those arguments
could be refuted in two minutes by a literate teenager. However, they
never were refuted.
Take
a look at the media, the liberal commentators and critics, the people
who testified in Congress and see whether anybody questioned the assumption
that the U.S. stands up to those principles. Has the U.S. opposed
its own aggression in Panama and insisted on bombing Washington to
reverse it? When the South African occupation of Namibia was declared
illegal in 1969, did the U.S. impose sanctions on food and medicine?
Did it go to war? Did it bomb Capetown? No, it carried out twenty
years of "quiet diplomacy."
It
wasn't very pretty during those years. In the years of the Reagan-Bush
administration alone, about a million-and-a-half people were killed
by South Africa just in the surrounding countries. Forget what was
happening in South Africa and Namibia. Somehow that didn't sear our
sensitive souls. We continued with "quiet diplomacy" and
ended up with ample reward for the aggressors. They were given a major
port in Namibia and plenty of advantages that took into account their
security concerns.
Where
is this principle that we uphold? Again, it's child's play to demonstrate
that those couldn't possibly have been the reasons for going to war,
because we don't uphold these principles. But nobody did it --that's
what's important. And nobody bothered to point out the conclusion
that follows: No reason was given for going to war; none. No reason
was given for going to war that could not be refuted by a literate
teenager in about two minutes. That again is the hallmark of a totalitarian
culture. It ought to frighten us, that we are so deeply totalitarian
that we can be driven to war without any reason being given for it
and without anybody noticing it or caring. It's a striking fact.
Right
before the bombing started, in mid-January, a major Washington
Post-ABC poll revealed something interesting. People were asked,
"If Iraq would agree to withdraw from Kuwait in return for Security
Council consideration of the problem of Arab-Israeli conflict, would
you be in favor of that?" About two-thirds of the population
was in favor of that. So was the whole world, including the Iraqi
democratic opposition. So it was reported that two-thirds of the American
population were in favor of that.
Presumably,
the people who were in favor of that thought they were the only ones
in the world to think so. Certainly nobody in the press had said that
it would be a good idea. The orders from Washington have been, we're
supposed to be against "linkage," that is, diplomacy, and
therefore everybody goose-stepped on command and everybody was against
diplomacy.
Try
to find commentary in the press--you can find a column by Alex Cockburn
in the Los Angeles Times [also writes in The Nation
and England's New Statesman], who argued that it would be a
good idea.
The
people who were answering that question thought, I'm alone, but that's
what I think. Suppose they knew that they weren't alone, that other
people thought it, like the Iraqi democratic opposition. Suppose that
they knew that this was not hypothetical, that in fact Iraq had made
exactly such an offer.
It
had been released by high U.S. officials just eight to ten days earlier.
On January 2, these officials had released an Iraqi offer to withdraw
totally from Kuwait in return for consideration by the Security Council
of the Arab-Israeli conflict and the problem of weapons of mass destruction.
The U.S. had been
refusing to negotiate this issue since well before the invasion of
Kuwait. Suppose that people had known that the offer was actually
on the table and that it was widely supported and that in fact it's
exactly the kind of thing that any rational person would do if they
were interested in peace, as we do in other cases, in rare cases that
we do want to reverse aggression.
Suppose
that it had been known. You can make your own guesses, but I would
assume that the two-thirds of the population would probably have risen
to 98% of the population. Here you have the great successes of propaganda.
Probably not one person who answered the poll knew any of the things
I've just mentioned. The people thought they were alone. Therefore
it was possible to proceed with the war policy without opposition.
There was a good
deal of discussion about whether sanctions would work. You have the
head of the CIA come up and you discuss whether sanctions would work.
However, there was no discussion of a much more obvious question:
Had sanctions already worked?
The
answer is yes, apparently they had--probably by late August, very
likely by late December. It was very hard to think up any other reason
for the Iraqi offers of withdrawal, which were authenticated or in
some cases released by high U.S. officials, who described them as
serious and negotiable.
So the real question
is: Had sanctions already worked? Was there a way out? Was there
a way out right now in terms quite acceptable to the general population,
the world at large and the Iraqi democratic opposition?
These
questions were not discussed, and it's crucial for a well-functioning
propaganda system that they not be discussed. That enables
the Chairman of the Republican National Committee to say...that if
any Democrat had been in office, Kuwait would not be liberated today.
He can say that and no Democrat would get up and say that if he were
President it would have been liberated not only today but six months
ago, because there were opportunities then that he would have pursued
and Kuwait would have been liberated without killing tens of thousands
of people and without causing an environmental
catastrophe.
No
Democrat would say that because no Democrat took that position. Henry
Gonzalez and Barbara Boxer took that position, but the number of people
who took it is so marginal that it's virtually nonexistent. Given
the fact that no Democratic politician would say that, Clayton Yeutter
is free to make his statements.
When Scud missiles
hit Israel, nobody in the press applauded. Again, that's an interesting
fact about a well-functioning propaganda system. We might ask, why
not? After all, Saddam Hussein's arguments were as good as George
Bush's arguments.
What
were they, after all? Let's just take Lebanon. Saddam Hussein says
that he can't stand annexation. He can't stand aggression. Israel
has been occupying southern Lebanon for thirteen years in violation
of Security Council resolutions that it refuses to abide by. In the
course of that period it attacked all of Lebanon, still [1991] bombs
most of Lebanon at will. he can't stand it.
He might have
read the Amnesty International report on Israeli atrocities in the
West Bank. His heart is bleeding. he can't stand it. Sanctions can't
work because the U.S. vetoes them. Negotiations can't work because
the U.S. blocks them. What's left but force? He's been waiting for
years. Thirteen years in the case of the West Bank.
You've
heard that argument before. The only difference between that argument
and the one you heard is that Saddam Hussein could truly say sanctions
and negotiations can't work because the U.S. blocks them; but George
Bush couldn't say that, because sanctions apparently had worked, and
there was every reason to believe that negotiations could work--except
that he adamantly refused to pursue them, saying explicitly, there
will be no negotiations right through.
Did you find anybody
in the press who pointed that out? No. It's a triviality. It's something
that, again, a literate teenager could figure out in a minute. But
nobody pointed it out, no commentator, no editorial writer. That,
again, is the sign of a very well-run totalitarian culture. It shows
that the manufacture of consent is working.
Last
comment about this. We could give many examples, you could make them
up as you go along. Take the idea that Saddam Hussein is a monster
about to conquer the world--widely believed, in the U.S., and not
unrealistically. It was drilled into people's heads over and over
again: He's about to take everything. We've got to stop him now.
How did he get
that powerful? This is a small, Third World country without an industrial
base. For eight years Iraq had been fighting Iran. That's post-revolutionary
Iran. It had decimated its officer corps and most of its military
force.
Iraq
had a little bit of support in that war. It was backed by the Soviet
Union, the U.S., Europe, the major Arab countries, and the Arab oil
producers.
It
couldn't defeat Iran. But all of a sudden it's ready to conquer the
world. Did you find anybody who pointed that out?
The fact of the
matter is, this was a Third World country with a peasant army. It
is now being conceded that there was a ton of disinformation about
the fortifications, the chemical weapons, etc. But did you find anybody
who pointed it out? Virtually nobody.
That's
typical. Notice that this was done one year after exactly the same
thing was done with Manuel Noriega. Manuel Noriega is a minor thug
by comparison with George Bush's friend Saddam Hussein or George Bush
himself, for that matter. In comparison with them, Manuel Noriega
is a pretty minor thug. Bad, but not a world class thug of the kind
we like. He was turned into a creature larger than life. He was going
to destroy us, leading the narco-traffickers. We had to quickly move
in and smash him, killing a couple hundred or maybe thousand people,
restoring to power the tiny, maybe eight percent white oligarchy,
and putting U.S. military officers in control at every level of the
political system.
We
had to do all those things because, after all, we had to save ourselves
or we were going to be destroyed by this monster.
One year later the same thing was done by Saddam Hussein. Did anybody
point it out? Did anybody point out what had happened and why? You'll
have to look pretty far for that.
Notice
that this is not all that different from what the Creel Commission
did in 1916-17, when within six months it had turned a pacifistic
population into raving hysterics who wanted to destroy everything
German to save ourselves from Huns who were tearing the arms off Belgian
babes. The techniques are maybe more sophisticated, with television
and lots of money going into it, but it's pretty traditional.
I think
the issue, to come back to my original comment, is not simply disinformation
and the Gulf crisis. The issue is much broader.It's whether we want
to live in a free society or whether we want to live under what amounts
to a form of self-imposed totalitarianism, with the bewildered herd
marginalized, directed elsewhere, terrified, screaming patriotic slogans,
fearing for their lives and admiring with awe the leader who saved
them from destruction while the educated masses goose-step on command,
repeat the slogans they're supposed to repeat, the society deteriorates
at home, we end up serving as a mercenary enforcer state, hoping that
others are going to pay us to smash up the world.
Those
are the choices. That's the choice that you have to face. The answer
to those questions is very much in the hands of people exactly like
you and me.