Eric ZUESSE | 23.02.2017
| WORLD
Aristocracy Deceives Public about the Deep State
The «deep state» is the aristocracy and its agents. Wikispooks defines it as follows:
The deep state (loosely synonymous with the shadow government or permanent government) is in contrast to the public structures which appear to be directing individual nation states. The deep state is an intensely secretive, informal, fluid network of deep politicians who conspire to amplify their influence over national governments through a variety of deep state milieux. The term «deep state» derives from the Turkish »derin devlet», which emerged after the 1996 Susurluk incident so dramatically unmasked the Turkish deep state.
Their article is so honest that it continues from there, directly to:
Official Narrative
The official
narrative of deep states used to be that they simply do not exist. This
position was modified in the last few years to the claim that they
don't exist here. In 2013 the New York Times defined the deep state as
«a hard-to-perceive level of government or super-control that exists
regardless of elections and that may thwart popular movements or radical
change. Some have said that Egypt is being manipulated by its deep
state». [1] Since the Times (like the rest of
the commercially-controlled media) is more or less under the control
of the deep state, such a mention is very interesting.
However, one of the deep state’s many agents, Marc Ambinder, came out with a book in 2013, Deep
State: Inside the Government Secrecy Industry, much praised by others
of the deep state's agents, such as Martha Raddatz, Jeremy Scahill, and
Peter Bergen; and it pretends that the ‘deep state’ is only within the
official government, not above it and controlling it — not what has been
called by some «the money power,» and by others «the aristocracy» (or
the «oligarchy» as
it was termed — though even that, only indirectly — by the only people
who have scientifically established that it exists in America and
controls this country: to acknowledge publicly that the U.S. is
controlled by an «aristocracy» is prohibited in scholarly publications;
it’s too ‘radical’ a truth to allow in print; it is samizdat).
On its third page, Ambinder’s piece of propaganda make clear what he means by ‘deep state’:
This
book is about government secrets — how they are created, why they get
leaked, and what the government is currently hiding. We will delve into
the key elements of the American secrecy apparatus, based on research
and unprecedented access to lawmakers, intelligence agency heads, White
House officials, and program managers. …
That piece of trash failed even to discuss George W. Bush’s lies in
which Bush stated during 2002 and 2003 that he possessed conclusive
proof that Saddam Hussein was reconstituting his WMD (weapons of mass
destruction) program — what America’s aristocratically controlled ‘news’
media attributed instead to ‘failures of intelligence’ by the Bush
Administration — which had supposedly caused the Bush regime to invade
Iraq in 2003. That was supposedly an enormous ‘failure of intelligence’,
but Ambinder’s book ignored it entirely — and yet there are still
suckers who buy that and the aristocracy’s other propaganda (and so who
misunderstand even such a basic concept as «the deep state» or
«the aristocracy»).
One
of the biggest indicators that one is reading propaganda from the deep
state is that the government’s lies are not being called »lies» (unless
the deep state is losing control over the government, which rarely
happens). Instead, they are called by such phrases as ‘failures of
intelligence’. But what about when the people who control the
government misrepresent what their ‘intelligence’ actually shows and
doesn’t show? Lying is attributed, in the ‘news’ media, only to
the aristocracy’s enemies. After all: the aristocracy’s enemies can be
acknowledged to exist, even if the existence of
an aristocracy isn’t being acknowledged.
Another mouthpiece of the deep state is (like virtually all magazines) The Nation magazine, which headlined on 17 February 2017, «What Is the Deep State? Even
if we assume the concept is valid, surely it’s not useful to think of
the competing interests it represents as monolithic.» Their
propagandist, Greg Grandin, asked «What is the ‘deep state’?» and he
ignored what wikispooks said, and he asserted, instead, «The problem
with the phrase ‘deep state’ is that it is used to suggest that
dishonorable individuals are subverting the virtuous state for their
private ambitions.» Aside from propagandist Grandin’s having merely
assumed there ‘the virtuous state’, which might not even exist at all,
in this country, or perhaps in any other, he was trying to, as he said,
get «beyond the binds of conspiracy theory,» as if any hierarchical
social structure, corporate or otherwise, doesn’t necessarily and
routinely function by means of conspiracies — some of which are nothing
more than entirely acceptable competitive strategies, often entirely
legal. He wants to get beyond accepting that reality? Why would anyone
wish to read such absurd, anti-factual, writings as that? Why would
anyone hire such deceptive writers as that? Perhaps the answer to the
latter question (which raises the problem here to being one about
the aristocracy, since this is about the ‘news’ media, which in every
aristocratically controlled country are controlled by its aristocracy)
is that only writers such as that will pump their propaganda, and will
hide such realities as are here being discussed (and, via links,
documented).
Nothing
that’s alleged here is denying that there are divisions within
the aristocracy (or «deep state»). Nothing is alleging that
the aristocracy are «monolithic.» It’s instead asserting that, to the
extent the aristocracy are united around a particular objective, that
given objective will likely become instituted, both legally and
otherwise, by the government — and that, otherwise, it simply won’t be
instituted at all. This is what the
only scientific analysis that has ever been done of whether or not the
U.S. is controlled by an aristocracy found definitely to be the case in
the U.S.
(And, of course, that’s also the reason why this momentous study was ignored by America’s ‘news’ media, except for the
first news-report on it, mine at the obscure site Common Dreams, which
had 414 reader-comments within just its first four months, and then the UPI’s report on it,
which, like mine, was widely distributed to the major ‘news’ media and
rejected by them all — UPI’s report was published only by UPI itself,
and elicited only two reader-comments there. Then came the New Yorker’s pooh-poohing the study,
by alleging «the politicians all know this, and we know it, too. The
only debate is about how far this process has gone, and whether we
should refer to it as oligarchy or as something else.» Their
propagandist ignored the researchers’ having noted, in their paper, that
though their findings were extremely inconsistent with America’s being a
democracy, the problem was almost certainly being understated in their
findings: «The failure of theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy
is all the more striking because it goes against the likely effects of
the limitations of our data,» and, especially, «our ‘affluent’ proxy is
admittedly imperfect,» and so, «interest groups and economic elites
actually wield more policy influence than our estimates indicate.»
In
fact, their «elite» had consisted not of the top 0.1% as compared to
the bottom 50%, but instead of the top 10% as compared to the bottom
50%, and all empirical evidence shows that the more narrowly one defines
«the aristocracy,» the more lopsidedly dominant is the ‘elite’s
relative impact upon public policies. Then, a month after the
press-release on their study was issued, the co-authors were so
disappointed with the paltry coverage of it that had occurred in
America’s ‘news’ media, so that they submitted, to the Washington Post, a
reply to their study’s academic critics, «Critics argued with our analysis of U.S. political inequality. Here are 5 ways they’re wrong.» It
was promptly published online-only, as obscurely as possible, so that
there are also — as of the present date — only two reader-comments to
that public exposure. This is typical news-suppression in America:
essentially total suppression of samizdat information — not merely suppression
of the officially top-secret information, such as propagandists like
Ambinder focus upon. It’s deeper than the state: it is the deep state,
including far more than just the official government.)
Another
matter that America’s press has covered-up is the extreme extent to
which the only scientific analysis of whether America is a democracy or
instead an aristocracy, had found it to be an aristocracy; so, here in
closing will be directly quoted the least-obscurantist statement of this
fact, in the study itself:
The
picture changes markedly when all three independent variables are
included in the multivariate Model 4 and are tested against each other.
The estimated impact of average citizens’ preferences drops
precipitously, to a non-significant, near-zero level. Clearly the median
citizen or «median voter» at the heart of theories of Majoritarian
Electoral Democracy does not do well when put up against economic elites
and organized interest groups. The chief predictions of pure theories
of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy can be decisively rejected. Not only
do ordinary citizens not have uniquely substantial power over policy
decisions; they have little or no independent influence on policy at
all.
By contrast, economic elites are estimated to have a quite substantial, highly significant, independent impact on policy.
They
weren’t allowed to say «aristocracy», nor even directly to say
«oligarchy», but they were allowed to say this. So: now, you’ve seen it.
But the secret is still a secret; what’s samizdat, stays samizdat (so
long as the government isn’t overthrown and replaced — and maybe even
after the existing regime does become replaced).
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