Complaining About the Deep State and the Nature of Blogging
I’ve lost my nerve a bit on writing. Not that I’m not doing it. I am, but my blog pieces are getting further and further apart.
Putting something
on my website happens like twice a month now. It’s a serious fall from the previous
10 years or so. The first couple of years I was still finding my footing. I don’t
count 2014 or 2015. They’re both a blip on the radar of a blog that was still
finding an identity. Did it ever find it? I’m sure a clever person could scan it
and find similar points of interest or a singular ‘voice’ as the writers say.
The topics changed quite a bit, or at least I thought. Politics, especially foreign
policy, held my interest so much in the early days that I shared my thoughts.
Like most bloggers most of my opinions were like anyone else’s, off the mark by
a wider margin than I’d like to admit.
That’s hardly the point. It’s really the experience and
accountability I was after.
Know It All
I don’t think you’ll find a persistent arrogant or obtuse
tone throughout. I tried to clean up most of pieces though the editing process.
Smugness is a crutch for young writers fresh off their media studies class. I
won’t deny that I had a touch of that. I will deny that they overwhelmed my
writing as to make it sickening for the reader to consume, like a fountain coke
mixed with too much syrup. There are times when I went too hard I’m sure. But I
always tried to sound reasonable. I hope I do in real life as well. Hopefully I
was smart enough to recognize that not all writing holds up well over the
years. One day’s ‘SOB’ is another day’s ‘Honest Abe’. How many times has public opinion shifted on Kayne West? In the last 5 years or so
the world’s changed a lot and I’m thinking differently about everything.
Know Even Less
I said 5 years because it’s about when Covid hit and we were
never the same. The world didn’t change really, it just got revealed to be
something darker and uglier than I think I understood before. The stolen
election of 2020 was the first pillar of American greatness to fall. Such an
obvious theft should have been a wake up for all Americans. For many it was,
but it’s hard to believe that when your guy won the election. I’m not sure I would’ve
listened either if Trump had won on such shaky grounds. But to me it showed
that the deep state runs the ‘important’ affairs of life. The president doesn’t
(can’t) do much in the way of changing policy. Congress doesn’t either, by the
way. An Executive Order (EO) does not a policy make. Someone needs to put it into practice.
The Constitution was
a brilliant piece of legislation and even worked for a time. We’re off it now,
same as the gold standard. The language persists, we still use phrases like separation
of powers and judicial review. But they’re applied haphazardly if at all.
Know For Sure
We say deep state now because it sounds more sinister. It’s also
a better phrase than bureaucracy because it suggests an entrenched, network of shadowy
figures with malice and greed in their hearts. A bureaucracy is just an inefficient
blob of well-meaning civil servants. It’s the guy at the DMV who didn’t approve
your permit because you didn’t fill out form 1455 correctly. The deep state
includes those people and adds NGOs (Non Governmental Organizations) and private
companies. A lot aren’t even government employees. They contract with certain federal
authorities and pull down millions of dollars through various cut outs. The
exposure of the USAID, via DODGE, and its nefarious dealings is one such
example.
The deep state is an impossible network to quantify but it
does have access to a lot of money. In that way they’re a bit like the KnightsTemplar in the Middle Ages. A group of professional soldiers started a small Christian
army to protected the territory acquired by the Crusaders. They provided safe
passage for traveling Knights who warred against Muslims in the Holy Land. They
set up banking houses and issued legal tender all over Europe so Crusaders didn’t
have to carry large sums of money. They became incredibly wealthy with their
private army and land holdings. Eventually they emerged with their own order,
customs and ceremonies. They were a government unto themselves. What started
out as charity of the church, turned into a group of wealthy mercenaries who
dictated terms to kings and rulers through their banks. Philip IV eventually
had them arrested on charges of blasphemy and sodomy. He pillaged their
holdings and dissolved the order.
Conclusion
It's not a perfect comparison but it works. Like the
knights, the deep state has a vast network that expands to a vast number of
interests. The only way to get at unraveling their influence is to hold individuals
accountable for their crimes. Or at the very least, threaten someone who is
obviously guilty and make them give up names the way the cops do in mob
movies. The lack of any real punishment is why the deep corruption persists. I’m
not suggesting they be held accountable for false crimes the way the Templars were.
But their power should be reined in and their kingdom taken away.
The Knights Templar didn’t lose their power until Jerusalem
fell in the 13th century. Without a controlling army in the Holy
Land, the Templars lost their reason for being. The deep state is full of
little fiefdoms with a ready supply of funding and a legal system that covers their
flank. I had hoped Dodge would be the beginning of the end of their reason for being.
Sadly, it’s going to take more than that. But it will happen.
The lack of real understanding about political issues is why
the blog has changed so much. It’s hard to write about things you don’t fully understand.
I do feel like 'first principles' will focus less on day to day politicking going forward.
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