It’s Time to Flee the Country
When I was a graduate student at Berkeley in the mid-1950s, my teachers included many brilliant refugees from Hitler’s Germany. Sometimes, when we got to know them personally, we would ask them when they had bailed out. In some cases it was quite late. My professor Reinhard Bendix was a student at the University of Chicago in 1938 when his parents told him not to come home. Others left even later, some first heading to Cuba and others leaving only when it was almost too late.
My wife and I used to puzzle over these decisions (my wife herself had survived four years of Nazi occupation in Holland), and we toyed with constructing what we called a “Fascistograph”—a sort of checklist of social and political phenomena that might tell someone when to leave. I wish we had pursued our intellectual game more seriously, because I have the feeling that such a checklist might come in handy right now.
I see very little hope for America regardless of who is elected in November. All the candidates remaining in the race have said they will not “cut and run” in Iraq and Afghanistan. One may speculate that once in office, one or another candidate may be more flexible, but this is actually unlikely. The Republicans have swallowed both wars hook, line, and sinker, and the Democrats know that if they propose any sort of pullout they will be labeled “defeatists” and blamed for the miserable outcome. And, as many pundits have pointed out, the outcome is bound to be miserable either now or later. More civilians will be killed; more regions, tribes, or towns will turn to their own leaders—instead of to the elected national officials—for protection; more weapons will fuel whatever hatreds are being nursed against others in the region and most certainly against the United States. Isn’t it ironic that we came to Iraq to “free” its people from a Sunni minority dictatorship, and we’re now arming these same Sunnis against a Shiite majority? Isn’t it ironic that the hated Taliban did a much better job of controlling the cultivation of opium poppies than the government we put in place in Kabul?
“The disasters we’ve visited on the people of the Middle East are something for which we’re ultimately responsible.”
The disasters we’ve visited on the people of the Middle East are something for which we’re ultimately responsible, much as blame for the Holocaust belongs to the Nazi regime and the Rape of Nanking to the wartime Japanese government. But I fear much worse is to come domestically. The lies of the Bush government that got us into these two wars, and the propaganda and public misinformation that continue to keep us there have had a corrosive effect on public trust. Many people no longer believe anything the government or the media tells them. So far this cynicism has not penetrated deeply into the ranks of the armed services. But I suspect that before long it will. As the wars drag on and the deployments stretch out, as the casualties continue with no end in sight, and as it becomes clear how poorly these casualties are cared for once they come home, our military—including the National Guard—will become demoralized and very angry. They should be angry for being used as they are; we should be angry for them.
In addition to our moral bankruptcy, there is fiscal bankruptcy. The Bush government talks about the burst housing bubble but says nothing about the obscene military budgets that are driving our entire economy deeper into debt. It will probably take a major financial crisis on par with the Great Depression to reorient our economy in a more productive direction. Unfortunately, I don’t hear any viable candidate talking like FDR.
In short, I think our ship of state is heading for a mammoth iceberg. Just as many people in 1930s Germany were, I’m too old to leave and will probably go down with the ship. But if I were younger, I would be thinking of bailing out. Vote, if you must, in November, but don’t expect that things will change much, let alone get better.
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Love it, but...
as much as i love to see others realise these great points, i feel fleeing the country is the easy way out. we need to stand up for our rights, fight the oppressive laws and push for secession in our given areas throughout the country.
Posted on April 11, 2008 — by flaherty
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2 votes
Broken Heart
I am a young American, and after traveling abroad I just could not bring myself to go "back home." Not only to the politics disgust me in my beloved America. Yes, I have fled--but I am also left with a deep sense of sorrow because, like the comment before mine, I don't want to give up on the US. I want to continue fighting (from overseas) for freedom and realization of all the wrong directions our country is headed in. My relationship with the US is something hard to describe and difficult to understand... but I think all us "ex-patriots" should not give up our home-land, our love. We need to keep demonstrating and fighting and supporting independent media; can the same system set up hunderds of years ago not also be our saving grace in these days?
...and about the Nazi reign--I live in Berlin now. The similarities between the Nazi party and the Bush administration are horrifying. I wish more countries would step in and save us from our madness.
Posted on April 13, 2008 — by naviphifer
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How to leave?
I am starting to feel my instincts direct me to leave this country. I've had a feeling for the past year inside of me that things are bad, getting worse. I am typically an idealist and a bit romantic, so I most certainly trust these unnatural feelings I have right now. Avi, how did you make it on your own outside of the US? I am an 18 year old college student with unsupportive parents. I have no idea what I would do. I'm starting to think that is what I should worry about secondly though.
Posted on April 13, 2008 — by Franswahili
2 comments
1 vote
Withhold your taxes and crack a history book
“God grants liberty only to those who love it, and are always ready to guard and defend it.”
-Daniel Webster
I wish Chalmers was broadcast all over the US so all those who want to get out could and be provided with safe passage to the nearest utopia, a place where it is no longer necessary to vigilantly safeguard one's freedom. This would weed out those who don't deserve to inherit the great contributions to human history that are our founding documents.
It's disheartening to see that the significance of this nation's origin and indeed the moral and philosophical principles labored over for hundreds of years infused into the words declaring our freedoms have been lost on our own.
You don't like what the government is doing? Withhold your taxes. Don't create protest art. Withhold your income tax. Have some courage, stand up to the government you own. If what this government does so eats on your soul then withhold the power you grant every year in the form of income tax.
Since the creation of this nation it has been a great fight to preserve our Constitution from the well intentioned and malevolent alike. If you don't understand the significance of your own history then you never had anything to fight for to begin with.
"It does not take a majority to prevail... but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of freedom in the minds of men."
-Samuel Adams
Posted on April 14, 2008 — by acc
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the bomb has long ago dropped in our homeland...
i was sittin at the rack at my usual stink hole (dirt bar) sipping a dollar beer (can't afford anything else) and speaking rather deeply with an elder of mine. as we took our terns spitting comments about the complex layers of pain the united states is, and will be going through for manymanymany years, we sank deeper and deeper into a trench of depression. to think that
ONE human could - over the ruling course of however many years he's been in charge - change the condition of the world in such a fashion that he has is absolutely mind imploding. think of the layers...
i want to leave. I'll be 29 in a couple days. I'm a survivalist, not a politician. i'm moving to Norway where my roots are, marrying an absolute drop-dead-stunner-of-a-woman, and continue doing what i enjoy as a living: living (and welding of coarse).
Posted on April 15, 2008 — by foss
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3 votes
Genocide in the U.S.? Maybe I missed something.
In the comparisons between Nazi Germany and the U.S. today, no one mentions the huge difference separating the two that render this comparison absurd: the government in Nazi Germany carried out a genocide within their own borders, against their own people, which, in turn, was the cause of a mass exodus out of the country. Is the United States killing untold numbers of innocents worldwide every day? Yes. Is the United States currently killing, or about to start killing, its own citizens within its own borders? No.
And if you do take your dollars and "flee" the country, you might notice that in your new home, people actually take to the streets and do not relent until their demands have been met, unlike here, where we (I am including myself) are too self-absorbed to really do anything other than worry about "me". It's so easy to collect your money, move from the country that you've never tried to change, to another country, where you can drink your beer and shake your head sadly with a local over the U.S. You will be just as inconsequential there.
Posted on April 15, 2008 — by Julieta
1 comment
2 votes
Fierce Pragmatism?
I tried to forget about this article, but it has occupied my mind for the best part of yesterday and this morning. So I feel compelled to comment – again. I don’t know why this piece so gets under my skin. Yes, it’s a provocation, the point is to provoke and I’ve been provoked.
I’m wondering where is the fierce pragmatism? Is it pragmatic to present these assertions without justifying the claims made in the piece? It has become popular to draw parallels and even equate the US government, specifically the present administration, to the Third Reich. It must be emotionally gratifying for some to make this equation but it seems to be a shallow comparison given the very different complex histories of both regions. To imply that Americans are living under a government fast becoming a fascist dictatorship with violent utopian ideals bent on using systematic annihilation towards that goal is no light assertion. A more apt comparison might to be the apex and decline of British colonial power, of any great power, possibly the Greeks or Romans, at times brutal, but significantly different from the Third Reich. The US is acting as global hegemonic power in decline, which does not parallel Hitler’s Germany. The dysfunction characterizing both regimes and their destruction of human life is markedly different. A comparison to the Third Reich demands an intellectually rigorous argument, one with a detailed historical comparison. Justify, prove, reason, argue your point. (or provide links to other articles/books that do)
Even if the premise is assumed true; what is moral bankruptcy if not fleeing the scene of the crime?
I’ve heard a sentiment similar to what Johnson describes expressed frequently among the left. It appears that the people who live in areas some might arrogantly consider intellectual voids between the coasts are the people who embody the independent spirit needed to check government power. They abhor growing centralized power and the idea of taxing the product of their own efforts to be ladled out by the vacuous beings in Congress, a practice they understand to be feeding a beast that must be kept down to size. These people would never flee, they would grind their heels in, and they would protect their homes, their families, their friends, their livelihoods, their way of life. Fleeing would not even occur to them. Urban twitters, the romantics, the idealists would be duped into giving it away.
A word about idealism: When I think of the dangers of straying too far into an idealist or romantic mindset beyond the disappointment awaiting such a person around every corner, I think of Milton’s Paradise Lost where all seek the Garden of Eden. Satan is looking for Eden to destroy it. He finds his way with the help of an angel who has no imagination for evil.
Of course, one must come to their own conclusions about a life philosophy, a framework of principled reason within which to perceive and act upon reality, but my experience with idealism, with romanticism, is that it robs some significance from the achievements throughout human history. The conquering of tyranny, the recognition of human rights, the implementation of a structure through which justice can be served; through the lens of idealism this history seems inevitable, so obvious, to be expected, because according to this thought man is good and is driven to pursue the highest goals.
But man is not infallible and based on our current record of history, is definitely not inherently good or driven to aspire to either of these ideals but motivated by often selfish and destructive behavior. We have the capacity for good, for compassion and empathy and great reason and logic, all those lofty ideals, but it is anything but inevitable that man will act on such principle. Be in awe when we do.
The ideas that came from Hammurabi, from the Greeks, from the religious prophets, the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, are truly triumphs over a nature that is not reasonable. These were precious momentous moments of clarity when man acted against his very nature. One’s appreciation for these moments, for the minds having contributed to the creation of these moments and the desire to protect and if necessary fight to preserve the expression of these ideas grows with such a sobering view of human nature. The idea of fleeing becomes absurd.
The corruption and cronyism infesting our state and federal governments in both parties is degrading to the citizenry but I am too sentimental about our history and the courage and intelligence of the framers and their supporters to believe fleeing is the answer. This is our shadow and it will follow us wherever we may go.
Posted on April 15, 2008 — by acc
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Hey buddy can you spare 168 Billion?
You nailed it. I suggested people let uncle Sam give them a slice of the good life and spend their rebate check on airfare to Dubai!
We are in the biggest bubble in the history of the world and they are trying to just move the paper economy from one bubble to the next. When they want you to “spend” the rebate and not “save” it, that is a huge clue how much hot air is in the system.
The reality, we are broke. The United States is broke. Well “we still have more ink in the printer” broke. A 3.1 trillion dollar budget for 2008, who are we kidding? That is 10k per man, woman and child! So my friends in Washington have budgeted $60,000 for my family of six this year as my proportional share of this year’s federal budget. I don’t want to sound ungrateful but “what do I get for my 60k and do I need to pay it this year?”
You see giving rebates are much easier pills to swallow politically than having the guts to bite the bullet and take out a machete to the entire system. We can at least get really good at giving great rebates! You know “vote for us, we know how you love rebates and we bring em to ya big and fast, like In-N-Out Burger without all the mess!”
Thanks Chalmers, I will get your book and think your have some great content for my readers.
[url=http://www.goodmagazine.com]GOOD Magazine[/http://franchisewhale.com/2008/02/hey-buddy-can-you-spare-168-billion.html]
Posted on April 19, 2008 — by Franchise_Whale
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Not the time to bail out...
Thanks to the hard work of strategic and persistent people there is finally the possibility of real change in America. I say this from the UK, having left North America 15 years ago when I perceived it was a sinking ship that I could not support. Now at last, things have changed, there is groundswell of awareness sweeping the country and it is up to those who can see it to do something about it. As the the world's superpower- your political action in the United States has implications for all of us, regardless where we live. Use your political leverage where it counts - to sort out affairs in your own country. There are many people now who are fighting noble causes in America and you should join them.
Posted on April 20, 2008 — by JODYb
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that's the whole reason America is over there
I don't see what's so bad about this. "...more regions, tribes, or towns will turn to their own leaders—instead of to the elected national officials—for protection..."
it's either this, or a strong federal government wielding control over a gigantic swatch of jerrymandered lands. i think we all know about the British and their "let's just draw some arbitrary lines" fiasco. i think we know how that worked out for the Kurds in "northern Iraq" and for Kuwait.
i think we also know what a strong federal government means for individual liberty and the growth of fascism.
so, really, what's wrong with this?
seems to me that acceptance that a strong federal government needed to be installed -- and now propped up -- is what is keeping the US in Iraq.
Posted on April 22, 2008 — by justinhahn
0 comments
1 vote
Not Genocide YET
It's not genocide yet, Julieta. But the Nazis didn't start out with genocide. They started out oppressing minority groups. Not unlike the armored assault on the FLDS Ranch where 400 plus children were taken into custody and are interred until further notice.
Posted on April 24, 2008 — by gwenny
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Thanks, and I agree
First off, I would like to thank you for stopping by my Blog;
http://bustednuckles.wordpress.com/
I have no idea how you got there but I have to agree with this post.
Unfortunately, I am also just there, at an age where I feel that getting out would be a waste of time and effort but that I still have enough energy to try and open some eyes as to just how far down the road to Hell this country has gone in eight short years.
1930's Germany is going to look like an ice cream party when it comes to the level of government control this place is going to have in ten years.
It doesn't matter what party controls the Whitehouse, the Oligarchy is in control.
Posted on May 3, 2008 — by Bustednuckles
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You are so WRONG it's sickening.
Chalmers Johnson article (It's Time to Flee) is ridiculous on a variety of points. Comparing America's actions in the Middle East with Nazi Germany's execution of the Holocaust is one of them. Paper never refused ink, but come on - the Holocaust? Are you for-fucking-real? Is the fact that the Middle East has ALWAYS had problems unifying, and ALWAYS been regional, tribal and ethnic in its perceptions something you completely miss? Kind of like, uh, der, the PRESIDENT and his band of MORONS!?!
Another serious indictment is that "America" is to blame for the recent wars which have led to the fiscal incompetence of the Bush administration, and here Johnson uses "we". Do we blame the current generation of Germans for the Holocaust? Or even those Germans in their 90s? Short of bashing a whole generation, I ask of Johnson - do the Vietnamese still blame your generation, or our country, for the devastation of that little ugly American nightmare? I think they've gotten over it; will the Middle East? They don't get over anything - it's a cultural perception. A rape sparks a village-against-village dispute that lasts hundreds of years in that culture. "We" didn't create that.
Posted on May 6, 2008 — by enrg
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Leaving gets you nowhere
I'm equally as upset, frustrated and disheartened as everyone else is who has commented here. And I agree with most of what this article has to say, except for one thing - I will not leave America.
Leaving America strips you of any choice of action. We no longer have a clear cut leave and be 'safe' option like people once did. Globalism has taken care of that. It doesn't matter where you go or where you run to, the actions of the United States will inevitably catch up to you. The only thing leaving does is prevents you from actually being pro-active in changing the situation.
I'm living abroad right now and I'm going back in a few months. Why? Because I'm helpless here. I feel the effects of the United States' actions even living in a remote rural town in China. I'm sick of being asked questions about my country and what we're doing even though I don't live there anymore. People still expect me to do something because I was born there. And you know what? I agree with them and at least in the States I can work towards something.
So please don't leave. The only thing you're doing is depriving the country of people who care and want things to be better.
Posted on May 9, 2008 — by guavamama
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Fight or Flight??
My answer...Fight...but how...I just am not sure.
Throughout this primary election it seems like our country's politics has turned into some sort of circus where the mass media do whatever they can to boost their ratings and pimp their advertisers. No longer is the American public truly informed with what is important. Instead we are constantly bombarded with trivial coverage of why one district in Lake County Illinois didn't turn their election results in in time for the evening news casts...Who cares! Tell me something important! Tell me what Obama, McCain, or Clinton plan to do about our economy or the war in Iraq. Hold them accountable so we can make informed decisions.
This dismal state of our country provides us all with an intricate two-fold problem. On one hand, we have this almost mythical idea of America's greatness that seems to be funneling down the drain. On the other, we have a culture that is not well equipped to stand up and challenge the status quo. Too many people are simply left ignorant to the intricate problems of our world.
Now notice how I said 'world' in that last sentence and not 'America'. People have got to start understanding that the ripples of our country's actions thousands of miles away have repercusions - albeit undesireable ones - in our own backyards. People wonder why so many people despise America and are willing to strap themselves with explosives in suicide bombs; yet, if my family was mercilessly killed by American bombs or ruthless US backed dictatorships I might be on the same boat...or plane.
With that said, I feel that our country is approaching its terminal phase of existence. Unless drastic changes in our politics occur we may all be left to fight for ther America that we once loved - even if it was just a myth...
Posted on May 19, 2008 — by Skitman
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Good Riddance
I fought so that people like you can make decisions like this.
You are no better than the politicians you whine about.
In it for yourselves.
See ya.
Posted on June 2, 2008 — by ProudAmericanVeteran
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