LvMIC:
As the American presidential election tightens in its final month,
the series of debates between the contenders is now underway. In the
first round, it was Republican hopeful Mitt Romney who came out on top
of sitting President Obama who appeared uncharacteristically lacking of
his signature poise. On the broad issue of domestic policy, Romney
appeared to have Obama beat when it came to fiscal know-how. This
triumph lead to the former Massachusetts governor surging in the polls
after weeks of trailing an incumbent whose economic record is, by any
measure, less than stellar. This has not put Romney ahead nationally
however as Obama has kept his lead in important battleground states.
The media establishment is enthralled by this development. What
looked like a slam dunk for the President is tightening up to become an
actual contest. Following the first debate in Denver, there was near
unanimous agreement by mainstream commentators on the importance of the
night. Political debates are said to be a crucial for democracies.
Potential voters who would otherwise be too busy with their lives for
political affairs tune in for an hour to become “learned” on pressing
issues which should concern them. Come Election Day, the good and noble
citizen then casts his ballot for the ruler of his choice; thus
fulfilling his civic duty.
Of course this line of reasoning is pure propaganda spread by those
industries closely affiliated with the state. Political debates are not
forums for highbrow discussion on matters of philosophy and economics.
They are chock-full of simplistic analysis, catchy phrases, and petty
nationalism.
When it comes to elections, the professional commentariat will often
squeal like lost children over the dimness of the electorate and its
inability to make rational choices. Likewise, they vigorously
promulgate the importance of political debates so voters watch and are
then able to make an “informed” selection. But informing and
rationality are never the final products of debates because they are not
meant to be. The debate between who is best qualified to hold the
reigns of state power is just an illusion for the purposes of
justification.
When it comes down to it, democracy and its variants are games where
the players attempt to live fast and hard at the expense of one another.
Debates end up being nothing more than beauty pageants for
sociopaths. Each candidate is dolled up as an anorexic model would be
and desperately tries to corral the audience into a fit of animalistic
exuberance. Aspiring politicians want to appear as healthy in mind and
body while their motivations are as unclean as a sewer on the inside.
By evoking visions of national glory, the crowd becomes unthinking
and grasps onto buzzwords as if they come straight from the mouth of
God. The competing sides become so convinced of their hatred toward one
another, they don’t feel the strings being pulled at their back. These
eager voters want their free cell phones, subsidized health care, food
stamps, Social Security checks, and a feeling of belonging within a
nation of cadgers. The more these gifts are delivered, the better
chances the candidate has in achieving electoral victory.
What ultimately drives the electorate is not reason or virtue.
It is a piteous feeling of meagerness. A meagerness gripped by
politicians who use their rhetorical gifts to tell the people that they
lack the capacity to make decisions for themselves. Instilling a sense
of infantilism turns the independent into the subordinate. It results
in state supremacy over liberty.
The truth about government is that when a politician takes to the
podium to address the crowd, behind him always stands a specter of his
cronies. It is they who actually wield the power of public office.
Whether they are bureaucratic regulators or well-connected heads of
corporations, the goal of extortion is the same. The empty suit who
speaks to the crowd is only doing their bidding. On virtually every
issue, there is a consensus between the two sides that the people shall
be plundered. The difference is to what degree.
Those who endeavor for public office may be subject to idolatry but they are no Isaiah.
They don’t speak truth in dire hope of awakening a few who are
intellectually attuned to what is a humane and free life. Politicians
simply wish to gather as many votes as possible by making as many
promises as possible. Those in society who are not weak-minded enough
to be overcome by empty vows and refuse to compromise their moral
character are not the target of platitudes. Pandering to bitter
feelings of envy is the easiest way to amass a following that is willing
to embrace coercion for a few crumbs off the state’s dinner plate. As
the old Bible proverb goes, “A sound heart is life to the body. But
envy is rottenness to the bones.”
Political debates inspire nothing but the ravenous desires of man to
convince him to surrender his dignity over to the ruling class. Being
promised something for nothing always ignites the emotions of the
gullible masses. It is how the officers of the state maintain their
authority.
There exists a great myth out there which holds that it is necessary
and proper to be an active participant in the democratic process. It is
often said that one’s civic duty stems from judging candidate for
public office on the merits of their character and the robustness of
their policy proposals. In reality, it is the lowliest form of
disrespect toward one’s self and others to take seriously the tenets of
democracy or any form of state-rule. As H.L Mencken wrote, “Democracy,
too, is a religion. It is the worship of jackals by jackasses.”
Rather than be guided by ethical reasoning, lawmaking under the state
relies on thuggish force. The crowd watches on eager to believe in
their own ineptness as individuals. They are told to believe the
political class brings prosperity through theft, freedom through mass
murder, and safety through violence. Campaign slogans are marching
orders for the naïve to serfdom. In the end it is irrelevant who wins a
debate and final election. The state is always the true winner.

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