Secret govt controls elected officials

Luddly Neddite

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2011
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Vote all you want. The secret government wonā€™t change.

The people we elect arenā€™t the ones calling the shots, says Tufts Universityā€™s Michael Glennon

By Jordan Michael Smith
| October 19, 2014

The voters who put Barack Obama in office expected some big changes. From the NSAā€™s warrantless wiretapping to Guantanamo Bay to the Patriot Act, candidate Obama was a defender of civil liberties and privacy, promising a dramatically different approach from his predecessor.

But six years into his administration, the Obama version of national security looks almost indistinguishable from the one he inherited. Guantanamo Bay remains open. The NSA has, if anything, become more aggressive in monitoring Americans. Drone strikes have escalated. Most recently it was reported that the same president who won a Nobel Prize in part for promoting nuclear disarmament is spending up to $1 trillion modernizing and revitalizing Americaā€™s nuclear weapons.


Why did the face in the Oval Office change but the policies remain the same? Critics tend to focus on Obama himself, a leader who perhaps has shifted with politics to take a harder line. But Tufts University political scientist Michael J. Glennon has a more pessimistic answer: Obama couldnā€™t have changed policies much even if he tried.

Though itā€™s a bedrock American principle that citizens can steer their own government by electing new officials, Glennon suggests that in practice, much of our government no longer works that way. In a new book, ā€œNational Security and Double Government,ā€ he catalogs the ways that the defense and national security apparatus is effectively self-governing, with virtually no accountability, transparency, or checks and balances of any kind. He uses the term ā€œdouble governmentā€: Thereā€™s the one we elect, and then thereā€™s the one behind it, steering huge swaths of policy almost unchecked. Elected officials end up serving as mere cover for the real decisions made by the bureaucracy.


We already know that congress doesn't write our laws and most of us know that elections are decided in back rooms.

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It's not Obama's fault, he tried, but the big meanies wouldn't let him change the system.

These apologias are going to be more common now that the whole nation gets to see the stuttering clusterfuck of a miserable failure that inhabits the White House. Academics are well suited to the job, they're ingenious and terrific wordsmiths and can concoct all sorts of plausible sounding idiocy, see "Race is only a social construction" for example.
 

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