National Self-Perception

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas

“This above all: to thine own self be true.”

Bill Shakespeare had a talent for phrasing basic truths well, and this quote is no exception. (Even if you lie to others, don’t lie to yourself, or you’re in real trouble.)

Much has been said about the American self-image, going back to its inception as an upstart nation that imagined it could succeed as a republic, as Athens had failed to do.

And, indeed, the US encountered the same basic problem as Athens: having once created a republic – a nation in which the rights of the individual are foremost. Maintaining that condition is not only a constant battle, but extremely unlikely over time.

As a form of governance, a republic serves its people well; however, since it doesn’t provide its leaders with much in the way of aggrandizement or profit, its leaders are likely to do all they can to degrade the republic into a democracy. Once having accomplished that, they’re likely to do all they can to degrade it to tyranny.

As Thomas Jefferson said, “History hath shewn that, even under the best forms, those entrusted with power have, in time and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny.”

He anticipated that, given enough time, the nascent United States would devolve into a tyrannical oligarchy. It has now had that time and has become a tyrannical oligarchy.

It must be said that the US still displays the accoutrements of a proud republic, but, at this point, it’s for show only. The inner workings of the US are not that of a republic, nor even a democracy. The US is quasi-capitalist/quasi socialist amalgam that’s run by a corporatist oligarchy. Whilst it still has an elected president and congress, those individuals are, at this point, cardboard cutouts who are only allowed to pursue their personal pet projects if they fit in with the unelected Deep State that’s truly in charge.

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It’s important to mention that the challenge to the republic began in George Washington’s first cabinet, through regular squabbling between the three cabinet members. But, although the deterioration continued for another hundred years, the US did not abandon its principle to stay out of world affairs for its first hundred years. That occurred by 1900, under the voracious nationalist appetite of one Teddy Roosevelt. The US government began its foray into empire and never looked back.

Through two world wars, the US wisely held back as European nations beat each other to pieces. Instead, they supplied the combatants with armaments and charged them in gold. In each war, by the time the US jumped in to win the day, their troops were fresh, their armaments were substantial and much of the wealth of Europe had been transferred to them, assuring that they’d prevail at the end of the war. Consequently, they ended the war the richest nation on earth, whilst the other nations lay in ruins, both physically and economically.

And so began the next era, one in which Americans saw themselves as the “winners” of the wars, as well as the king of the mountain.

By 1958, Eugene Burdick and William Lederer had written their novel, “the Ugly American,” which accurately presented American diplomats as presumptuous and arrogant. Although Messrs. Burdick and Lederer were both American, they were highly objective, and made the effort to see the US and its government as outsiders saw them.

Since that time, the US government has, if anything, expanded upon its presumption and arrogance, declaring in no uncertain terms that it regards itself as the world’s policeman and will enforce its power wherever it sees fit, globally.

In recent decades, it’s demonstrated that conviction, by invading numerous far-flung nations, often for flimsy reasons and, indeed, sometimes for reasons that later proved erroneous. Tellingly, even when the US has been caught destroying a country for a trumped up reason, the US offered no apology, but continued its aggression.

Americans themselves appear to be of mixed opinion on this behavior. Some Americans recognize the presumptuous and arrogant manner of their leaders and decry such behavior and even fear where it may ultimately lead the US. Yet, others parrot their government’s position that a bit of milk may need to be spilt if the US is to “make the world safe for democracy.” (They often proudly take this stance, even though invading a country halfway round the world, destroying its cities, killing its people and destroying its economy, only to install a puppet government, can hardly be called democracy.)

But, how does the world outside the US see the US? Well, many assume all Americans resemble their leaders – dangerous sociopaths, who represent a threat to the rest of the world. Others are more objective and recognize that the American people and the American leadership are not one and the same. This latter group tend to have greater sympathy for Americans themselves, whilst remaining guarded about their leaders.

However, generally speaking, the world at large observes US national behavior and sees the US as a whole as a potential (if not current) threat.

Americans who might nod their heads at this statement are likely to think in terms of the Middle Eastern and Asian countries and they would be correct. However, it goes further than this.

As the “world’s policeman,” the US government frequently decides to punish nations that fail to kowtow to it by applying economic sanctions. The US then advises its allies that they will be expected to do the same.

It is at this point that those who had thought themselves allies of the US say, “Hang on, it may not cost you anything to apply these sanctions, but it costs us a great deal.”

As Thomas Jefferson said, “History hath shewn that, even under the best forms, those entrusted with power have, in time and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny.”

As an example, when the US applied sanctions to Russia, then required those sanctions to be supported by countries in the EU, Europe said, “But we get most of our gas from Russia. If we support US sanctions, they may understandably cut off our gas. Unless the US can replace that gas, our people will freeze this winter.”

However, as the world’s policemen, the reaction by the US has been less than concerned and the US has remained insistent, causing Europeans to meet with Russia to explain that they want no part of the sanctions.

Further, the US government is becoming increasingly pointed in its threats of warfare to those perceived adversaries that they’ve not yet invaded – a development that’s increased the nail-biting by both the governments and peoples of US allies.

So, what are we to make of all this?

Well, such developments are nothing new historically. Throughout the ages, whenever an empire has become like the pawn in the photo above and has come to see itself as a king, arrogance and presumption have tended to have become the rule.

As tensions build, old allies attempt to hold their positions, but, when the volcano eventually does blow, they tend to head for the hills. It’s for this reason that, if and when an empire makes the fatal mistake of seeing itself as omnipotent, it learns (the hard way) that, first, it’s not as strong as it presumes and, second, that its allies were not prepared to be sacrificed for the sake of the self-proclaimed king.

It’s for this reason that, as Doug Casey has said, “Countries fall from grace with amazing speed.” This can also be said for empires, and the US presently displays all the behavior of an empire that’s teetering on the brink of its own fall from grace.

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9 Comments
pyrrhus
pyrrhus
December 9, 2018 10:51 am

Amazingly ….not one mention of 3d world immigration..And as to the US “wisely” holding back from two World Wars, nothing could be further from the truth. The US government was bankrupt after both wars, and entered a massive depression that almost bankrupted Ford Motor after WW1, from which it was rescued by the terrific President Harding…While inflation in 1946 reached 20%…

Mangledman
Mangledman
December 9, 2018 10:58 am

Well said.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
December 9, 2018 11:33 am

Yes but not just the USA but every country that bit the Apple of Rothschild Central Banking Fiat Currency that allowed the NWO Elite Oligarchs to print money and buy all the Levers of Power and take over. TPTB have a unquenchable lust for money and power, and a Genocidal Satanic Agenda. They were going to Climax their NWO under Harpy but We The People rebelled at the polls and elected Trump. The Deep State tried a Coup and to stir their Useful Idiots into a Revolution but that failed. A Western Counter Revolution has started. Either we finish them and “drive a wooden stake into their hearts” or they will enslave us.

mark
mark
  robert h siddell jr
December 9, 2018 2:41 pm

Robert,

Succinct and right on!

1000+

KaD
KaD
December 9, 2018 1:00 pm
Diogenes’ Dung
Diogenes’ Dung
December 9, 2018 1:35 pm

America used to be a country that beckoned the imagination. One could be anything. America no longer offers that opportunity because it’s foundation, the family, has been broken. Any Empire that has destroyed its foundation is on course to destroy much of the world.

“What do you want to be when you grow up?”

It was a common question when I was a lad, sixty years ago. I expect that hasn’t changed, but I don’t know. There are no young children in my life. I’m not familiar with the world they will grow up in even though I live in it.

A preschooler today lives in a screen of varying sizes that offer a much wider palate of emotional colors, on demand, than I ever knew when I was a lad. Growing up in a military family, there wasn’t much tolerance for emotional demonstration from boys. Military bearing must be manly. Crying, pouting or complaining showed weakness, permitted only from babies or girls. The welts from a belt were also badges of honor if endured silently. The welts would be multiplied if one cried. The whole point, aside from instilling iron discipline and a resolute ability to endure, was obedience.

Now, our youth are encouraged to indulge in every emotion, with special emphasis on the unfairness of their victimization. Obedience is gone. Parents must beg, bribe, and reward good behavior. When they get it. My choices as a lad, when facing punishment for misconduct, uncompleted chores, or a bad attitude, were a whipping or “restriction” – confinement to my room. I always chose the whipping and usually got both. Nothing compelled me toward good behavior more than the desire to roam free on my bicycle. But that was long before bicycle helmets became a must-have safety rule.

Today, using the biblical rod, or any type of corporal punishment with your child, invites government intervention. It routinely places parents behind bars and their child in a stranger’s “care”. It doesn’t matter if the little brat just used a slingshot to put a stone in a sibling’s ear, swatting their bottom makes you a criminal. Allowing your six-year old to roam freely on their bicycle, with or without a helmet, invites the same government-engineered “in the best interest of the child” outcome. Because the government knows best what is required to keep your child safe.

Almost every pre-school boy of my era would answer, when asked about their adult aspirations, with a dangerous profession that offered a chance to be a hero; Fighter Pilot, Fireman, Policeman, or, if they still admired their father, whatever he did that was heroic. Boys never factored how safe their preferred destiny would be. We rarely considered safety, especially while playing. We were always a scuffed-up bunch. Girls too, who regularly dominated their age groups in roughhousing, but maybe that was just in the military. Girls mostly said they wanted to work in a caring, nurturing profession, nursing or teaching, but just wanting to be a “home-maker”, or “house-wife” wasn’t considered a lack of ambition sixty years ago.

Families were central to life then, and a woman is always the center of a family where one exists.

Not so much anymore; today, women must be everything or they are nothing. They must star in social circles, dazzle in the professional arena, hypnotize men with a wink, raise “World-Leader” children, and be able to Kung Fu King Kong while breast-feeding.

Seriously, the only thing holding women back today are the men who haven’t already been pussy-whipped.

Today, the young men with established, professional careers that earn enough to own a home and raise children comfortably are an ever-dwindling small fraction of giant “one-earner” middle class I grew up in. Most of us had stay-at-home mothers, and dad returning home from work was a big event. The thunder of little feet stampeding toward the front door.

Today, it’s a big event if dad comes home at all.

Today, there’s really no reason for anybody to grow up, and everybody has a reason to destroy something.

meg
meg
  Diogenes’ Dung
December 9, 2018 5:26 pm

Good points.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Diogenes’ Dung
December 9, 2018 6:50 pm

Sad but true…

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
December 9, 2018 3:50 pm

Maintaining the perception is the primary role of the Government Monopoly School system, the globalist-controlled mainstream media, and the leadership of the two worthless major parties. That is why nothing ever gets better in this country. The narrative is controlled at all levels. Anyone (like Ron Paul for instance) who speaks the truth (like about how 9-11 might have been blowback for 100 years of tyranny in the middle east), gets immediately shut down by the status quo candidates that have been inserted into the campaign to dilute any possible messages of truth. That the 9-11 commission even stated as much, becomes irrelevant as the flag-waving crowds boo the truth-teller, lest they be forced to confront reality, or the role THEY themselves played in supporting the policies.

Nobody ever says America is a free country. What is said is that we are still the freest. Like saying that the dollar is still the strongest, while all fiat currencies plummet in their purchasing power. Its all about perception.

Until Americans are willing to say what needs to be said, are willing to face the true consequences of the votes they have been casting or the parties they have been supporting, nothing will ever change.

“None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.”
— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe