Authors: Mike Lofgren
and unequal justice,
147
,
149
â52
Sverin, Eduardo,
124
Syrian civil war:
and Benghazi consulate attack,
224
and double-down strategy,
217
,
254
,
256
â58
and military-domestic trade-offs,
32
,
208
Obama's ambivalence about,
85
public opinion on,
237
â38
and Qatar,
113
â14
See also
ISIS
Target hacking (2013),
91
,
170
â71,
174
tax policy:
corporate inversion,
165
,
274
,
276
and corporate personhood doctrine,
276
â77
and offshore tax avoidance,
162
,
165
reform proposals for,
273
â74,
277
and Silicon Valley,
162
and wars,
115
and wealthy elites,
124
,
126
â27,
132
and anti-intellectualism,
264
backlash populist movements,
235
â36
coalition possibility with Left,
232
â35
on health care policy,
234
and lobbyists,
231
â32
obstructionist function of,
222
â28,
233
and “real Americans” image,
219
,
220
,
221
,
223
,
235
and Republican Party establishment,
225
â26
and voting restrictions,
219
â21
Telecommunications Act (1996),
37
think tanks.
See
foundations
Thomas, Clarence,
150
torture:
and classification policies,
240
â42
and Deep State development,
61
â62
and executive power,
80
Feinstein speech,
238
â40
and ideology,
184
Obama on,
242
â43
public opinion on,
202
as war crime,
239
n
trade deficits,
110
â11
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP),
65
â66
transportation infrastructure,
32
,
193
,
206
â8
Treasury Department,
34
,
118
,
130
Ukraine crisis:
and ambassadors,
194
â95
and blowback,
43
and defense contractors,
104
and double-down strategy,
253
â55
generals' role in,
100
and intelligence ineffectiveness,
92
and nuclear policy,
84
Obama's ambivalence about,
85
and personnel continuity,
185
n
unequal justice,
140
â54
and environmental issues,
144
â45
and neoliberal corporate consensus,
152
â54
for “outlaws,”
146
â47
and state secrets privilege,
147
â49
Supreme Court as enabler of,
147
,
149
â52
and unequal prosecution,
143
â46
and wealthy elites,
151
â52
and whistle-blowing,
197
â98
See also
“no fault” concept
United States v. Reynolds,
147
USA PATRIOT Act,
61
See also
domestic surveillance
U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
164
,
227
Vietnam War:
and Deep State development,
51
â52
and double-down strategy,
99
,
253
and economic inequality,
114
and ethnic enclaves,
27
and executive power,
73
and “no fault” concept,
180
n
precision bombing in,
121
Rumsfeld on,
179
and trade deficits,
110
voting manipulation,
65
,
219
â21,
231
Walgreens,
274
Walker, Scott,
211
â12
Wall Street:
bailout of,
134
â37,
182
,
208
â9,
221
â22,
251
and change possibilities,
268
concentration of,
136
congressional attitudes toward,
36
n
as Deep State component,
34
,
35
,
36
deregulation of,
57
â58,
71
,
77
â78,
118
â19,
181
,
182
,
269
and double-down strategy,
251
â52
and economic inequality,
215
New Deal's taming of,
131
â32
See also
cash nexus; financial crisis (2008); neoliberal corporate consensus
Wall Streetâdriven foreign policy,
56
â57,
107
â22
dollar recycling,
109
â13,
213
,
269
economic warfare,
116
â22
and financial crisis (2008),
136
and human rights,
112
â14
ineffectiveness of,
119
â20
in Latin America,
129
and military spending,
107
â8,
115
â16
“Walmart effect,”
111
Wal-Mart v. Dukes,
152
war on terrorism,
61
â62,
80
,
83
â84,
96
,
105
â6
See also
domestic surveillance; national security policy; torture
War Powers Resolution,
155
Warsaw Pact collapse.
See
cold war, end of
Washington, D.C., area.
See
D.C. area
Washington consensus.
See
neoliberal corporate consensus
Washington Post,
13
n,
35
,
86
,
121
,
212
â14
Washington Times,
11
Way the World Works, The
(Wanniski),
54
wealthy elites,
123
â33
contempt for working people among,
126
â27
and D.C. area neighborhoods,
12
â15,
16
â17
fear of revolution among,
87
,
139
and irrational cultural forces,
260
and New Deal,
131
â32
sanctification of,
127
â28,
130
,
219
secession of,
123
,
124
â26,
255
â56
support for Tea Party,
234
â35
and unequal justice,
151
â52
See also
cash nexus
White, Mary Jo,
142
â43
Will, George,
223
Wilson, Woodrow,
130
*
The more flamboyantly antielitist among them will pronounce it “Warshington.”
*
On one occasion during the late 1980s, I happened to be in the headquarters of the CIA and noticed a poster on the wall announcing that Katherine Graham would be the speaker at an event for employees in the CIA's auditorium. A pillar of the so-called adversarial press being invited to a secure facility to address members of the intelligence community is something that ideologues of both political parties may have a hard time assimilating into their worldview, but it explains why Beltway insiders regard the
Post
as “the CIA paper.” In fact, many members of the “Georgetown Set” were CIA officials like Frank Wisner or James Angleton.
*
Satirist Tom Lehrer immortalized von Braun, the developer of the Nazis' V-2 rocket, thus:
Some have harsh words for this man of renown,
But some think our attitude
Should be one of gratitude;
Like the widows and cripples of old London town
Who owe their large pensions to Wernher von Braun.
*
Lobbyists naturally base their low calling on high principles: lobbying, they claim, is the constitutionally guaranteed right of a citizen to petition for redress of grievances.
*
The Capitol Hill Club has always managed to maintain an ambiance about thirty years behind whatever the present date is, perhaps in keeping with Republican social policy. In the early 1980s, it looked like a social club from the Eisenhower era, complete with funeral-home furniture and matriarchal women with corsages and big hats.
*
The attitude of some members of Congress toward Wall Street was memorably expressed by Representative Spencer Bachus (R-AL), the incoming chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, in 2010: “In Washington, the view is that the banks are to be regulated, and my view is that Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks.”
*
The Panopticon was English philosopher Jeremy Bentham's design for a circular prison that would permit a single watchman to observe all of the inmates without their being able to know whether they were being watched or not. Ironically, Bentham, a philosopher of the utilitarian school, was a forerunner of the modern libertarian ideology that is so much in vogue among Silicon Valley tech moguls. Libertarian or not, Bentham said the Panopticon's purpose was to be “a mill for grinding rogues honest.”
*
What is old is often new again. In early 2014, French economist Thomas Piketty ignited a firestorm and a bestselling sensation with a book containing the revolutionary observation, backed by reams of data, that the rich tend to get richer and everyone else, not so much.
*
Twenty-five years ago the sociologist Robert Nisbet described this phenomenon as “the attribute of No Fault. . . . Presidents, secretaries, and generals and admirals in America seemingly subscribe to the doctrine that no fault ever attaches to policy and operations. This No Fault conviction prevents them from taking too seriously such notorious foul-ups as Desert One, Grenada, Lebanon, and now the Persian Gulf.” To Nisbet's somewhat dated list we might add 9/11, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, and Syria.
*
When the public-interest journalism site
ProPublica
asked the Department of Defense for a list of terrorist groups affiliated with al-Qaeda, a Pentagon official responded that disclosing such a list could cause “serious damage to national security.” Apparently, the great strategists at the DOD think letting terrorist groups know that we know they exist would shake the security of our country to its foundations.
*
Actually, more money was spent to develop and produce the B-29 bomber than on the atomic bomb. But since the B-29 was necessary to deliver the bomb over long distances, the two projects should be considered related efforts. Together, the bomb and its delivery vehicle dwarfed all other projects in cost.
*
The “bomber gap” arose because during the 1955 May Day parade, the Kremlin leadership ordered its entire inventory of ten jet bombers to fly over Red Square several times in a large aerial circle. Western military attachés in attendance were deceived by this elementary trick into believing they saw a large fleet of bombersâpossibly because they wanted to believe it. On the strength of this ruse, U.S. intelligence projected an eventual eight hundred Soviet jet bombers.
*
The seeming contradiction of conservative politicians embracing something called neoliberal economics is explained by the fact that “liberal” and “conservative” have vastly different definitions in Europe and America.