Friday, October 9, 2009

The Immanent Death Of An Empire

The Independent recently published an article/interview featuring Gore Vidal, in which Vidal discusses the inescapable and immediate future of the United States, as he sees it, which is rapid decline. Vidal's points here are damn near irrefutable, as are many other similar arguments that are grounded in a good sense of history and a sober assessment of current world affairs. I'll excerpt some of the piece here, and also post a link to the full article at the bottom. This is a very interesting look back on the life of an incredibly interesting man. In case any of you don't know who Gore Vidal is, he is an American author and essayist. And:

"If anyone incarnates the American century that has ended, it is him. He was America's greatest essayist, one of its best-selling novelists and the wit at every party. He holidayed with the Kennedys, cruised for men with Tennessee Williams, was urged to run for Congress by Eleanor Roosevelt, co-wrote some of the most iconic Hollywood films, damned US foreign policy from within, sued Truman Capote, got fellated by Jack Kerouac, watched his cousin Al Gore get elected President and still lose the White House, and – finally, bizarrely – befriended and championed the Oklahoma bomber, Timothy McVeigh."

"Yet now, he says, it is clear the American experiment has been "a failure". It was all for nothing. Soon the country will be ranked "somewhere between Brazil and Argentina, where it belongs." The Empire will collapse militarily in Afghanistan; the nation will collapse internally when Obama is broken "by the madhouse" and the Chinese call in the country's debts. A ruined United States will then be "the Yellow Man's Burden", and 'they'll have us running the coolie cars, or whatever it is they have in the way of transport'."

"'I was like everyone else when Obama was elected – optimistic. Everything we had been saying about racial integration was vindicated,' he says, "but he's incompetent. He will be defeated for re-election. It's a pity because he's the first intellectual president we've had in many years, but he can't hack it. He's not up to it. He's overwhelmed. And who wouldn't be? The United States is a madhouse. The country should be put away – and we're being told to go away. Nothing makes any sense." The President "wants to be liked by everybody, and he thought all he had to do was talk reason. But remember – the Republican Party is not a political party. It's a mindset, like Hitler Youth. It's full of hatred. You're not going to get them aboard. Don't even try. The only way to handle them is to terrify them. He's too delicate for that.'

"When he compares Obama to his old friend Jack Kennedy, he shakes his head. "He's twice the intellectual that Jack was, but Jack knew the great world. Remember he spent a long time in the navy, losing ships. This kid [Obama] has never heard a gun fired in anger. He's absolutely bowled over by generals, who tell him lies and he believes them. He hasn't done anything. If you were faced with great problems in chemistry – to find the perfect gas, to gas a population – you won't know for a long time whether it works. You have to go by what people tell you. He's like that. He's not ready for prime time and he's getting a lot of prime time on his plate at once.'"

"'Benjamin Franklin saw all this coming," he says. "I quote him because most Americans don't even know who he was now. In Philadelphia in 1781, when the constitution was being put together, he was an observer. He didn't want to have any part of it, and as he was leaving the Constitution Hall in Philadelphia a couple of old ladies said, 'Ah, Mr Franklin, what is going to happen?' He told them: 'Well, you're going to get a Republic, if you can keep it. But every constitution of this sort has failed since the beginning of time due to the corruption of the people.'"

"So the American people are corrupt? Americans weren't good enough for America? "'Precisely. They were only good enough to be a restive colonial power – or the dregs of one.'"

"But there is, he says with sudden perkiness, some "good news. Afghanistan will be terminal for the American empire, yes. Which is a happy way of looking at it. We'll be out of the empire game, rapidly. But it's too late for the country and the constitution." He raises his drink, and smiles ironically. "To a better republic," he says, and drinks in one long gulp."


Full Article


2 comments:

  1. The idea of the US empire collapsing is a fascinating idea to me because it's shared by so many people, although for COMPLETELY separate reasons.

    Historically no empire has ever sustained itself, but then again, were living in a world that's infinitely more complex than it ever has been before. Predicting the longterm future is futile!

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  2. i like that post about the clock with the cuckoo who comes out every millennium or whatever

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