Empire or Democracy: Are We Ready
for the Fall?
By John W. Whitehead
June 16, 2008
“There was once an ancient city. The
ancient city fell.”
—Virgil, The Aeneid
Increasingly, parallels are being drawn between the Roman
Empire and the current American Empire. Yet while some may
look to Rome as an inspiration, others believe it casts a
dark shadow over us and our supposedly imperial
aspirations.
Indeed, the comparisons to the Roman Empire are rarely
favorable. For example, Cullen Murphy, author of
Are
We Rome? (2007), argues that the most alarming
parallels are “the blinding, insular culture of our
capitals; the debilitating effect of corruption; the
paradoxical issue of borders; and the weakening of the
body politic through various forms of
‘privatization.’” Murphy sees the eventual decline
of the American Empire as inevitable, describing three
possible scenarios for the future: there is the
“Fortress America” scenario, where everything revolves
around national security and the power of the president
expands to near dictatorial strength; the “city-state
scenario,” where the central authority weakens and
city-states emerge; and finally the “boardroom
scenario,” where corporations privatize all crucial
functions of the government and essentially rule—what is
commonly called fascism.
David Walker, former comptroller of the United States, has
also drawn daunting comparisons between America and Rome.
Walker believes that the American economy is standing on a
“burning platform” of “unsustainable policies and
practices with fiscal deficits, chronic healthcare
underfunding, immigration and overseas military
commitments.” Today, America is in a “$53 trillion
hole,” which translates to $455,000 per household.
Undeniably, spending is out of control. This irresponsible
spending has resulted in the devaluing of the dollar and
untold damage to the economy. As acclaimed historian
Chalmers Johnson points out, America’s misguided
economic policy, with its emphasis on frequent wars and
military spending, has led to the decline of vital
domestic areas, including the education system,
manufacturing capabilities and health care. At the same
time, the Department of Defense’s planned spending for
2008 is “larger than all other nations’ military
budgets combined and will exceed $1 trillion for the first
time.”
With more than 500,000 military service people stationed
abroad in more than 130 countries, America has become what
Johnson describes as a foreign imperialist. This poses its
own dangers, such as massive standing armies, an almost
constant state of war, an increasing dependence on the
“military-industrial” complex, the dramatic economic
drain of military spending and an excessive military
budget. If left unchecked, these will lead to the eventual
decline of democracy. And as resources are drained,
the republican nature of American government will break
down, and the principles inherent in a democratic society
will necessarily be compromised by what is needed to
sustain such a militaristic empire.
The breakdown is already underway. Until recently, David
Walker served as the head of the Government Accountability
Office, Congress’ chief investigative and audit arm
which investigates waste and fraud in government programs
and also details the long-term budget problems facing the
government. Walker warns that “declining moral values
and political civility at home, an over-confident and
over-extended military in foreign lands and fiscal
irresponsibility by the central government” all helped
to contribute to Rome’s downfall and are prevalent in
America today.
One of the worst contributors to today’s problems is
what Walker calls “a leadership deficit” where
today’s leaders are shirking their responsibilities.
They are concentrating on providing political quick fixes
for the present, while giving little thought to how to
create a better tomorrow. And with such irresponsible
spending, America is “mortgaging the future of our
country, our kids and our grandkids” and leaving a
legacy of a future of “lower standards of living and
with some major, major financial burdens.”
Moreover, we face “a growing intellectual bankruptcy
that is one of the symptoms of a dying culture,” writes
author Chris Hedges. “In ancient Rome, as the republic
disintegrated and the Caesars were deified, as the Roman
Senate became little more than an echo chamber of the
emperor, the population’s attention was diverted by a
series of frontier wars and violent and elaborate
spectacles in the arena. The excitement of entertainment
consumed ancient Rome’s emotional and intellectual life.
It poisoned civic and political discourse. Social critics
no longer had a forum in which to speak. They were
answered with ridicule and rage. It was not the
prerogative of the citizen to think.”
But we are
not Rome—at least, not yet, and it
is still our prerogative to think and to act. In this
regard, we have been woefully negligent. One of the most
untenable political positions for a nation is in its
attempts at preserving a domestic democracy while
promoting a foreign empire. Additionally, vast resources
are required to maintain an empire, as we are learning the
hard way, to the detriment of our domestic economy.
“We the people” have not held our government
accountable and have been content to lose ourselves in
television, the Internet, cell phones and the
technological gadgets that distract us from reality. We
have, in the words of author Nicholas von Hoffman, become
“bobbleheads in bubbleland.”
Clearly, America is at a crossroads. Thus, we have a
decision to make: Do we want a democracy or do we want an
empire, because as history has shown, it’s not possible
to have both.
WC: 866