Sunday, August 13, 2017

Trump’s Unintended Consequences: The Unmasking of the Deep State

Via Wes

Trump’s Unintended Consequences: The Unmasking of the Deep State

The term “Deep State” unleashes many paranoid fantasies.  Movies and spy stories abound about the existence of dark, nefarious forces from our government aligned against us.  But as Joseph Heller once wrote, “Just because you’re paranoid, doesn’t mean they aren’t after you.”  One of the more disturbing revelations after Trump’s win was finding that these dark forces not only exist, but are powerful and seemingly out of control.

“Deep State” is hard to define, because it is composed of overlapping groups and individuals with complex and differing agendas.  It’s an amalgam of people, agencies, and bureaucrats that changes.  The current leakers are part of it.  For now, let’s say it’s a mostly unelected, mostly leftist group within our government that wants to govern us against the will of America’s founding principles. 

These people want the final say over our Republic.  They want to rule, and they form part of a powerful alliance against the current administration and its voters.  The one thing we can be thankful for is that they are showing themselves to us in a way that should anger Americans of all political persuasions.  In the end, that’s what we might hope for.

“Big Brother” was the term Orwell used for the totalitarian presence of 1984.  We are not there. 

Maybe not even close.  But the problem of the Deep State is that there seem to be those who want the kind of power Orwell described, the kind of power the Soviets had, or the East Germans.  It’s likely that many Deep-Staters don’t even realize just how power-mad they have become.

Here is a small list with their fingerprints on it:

2 comments:

  1. Great article.

    I think Assange tweeted earlier (can't find it now) how those working in, say, security benefit from increased terrorism.

    And some in Russia benefit from Russia conflicting with the US - and vice versa. That conflict makes Putin popular, creates unity within Russia, allows for greater police powers, etc. And the same in the US.

    Or, to give my own random example: Those in the civil rights industry benefit from there being ethnic conflict which creates a need for the civil rights industry. If we all got along well, there'd be no need for the NAACP, so those people would have to get real jobs.

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