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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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consumer culture." Fukuyama, it turns out, is a resident of the privileged enclave for<br />

imperial functionaries that is northeast Virginia, and so has little understanding of the<br />

scope of US domestic poverty and immiseration: "This is not to say that there are not rich<br />

people and poor people in the United States, or that the gap between them has not grown<br />

in recent years. But the root causes of economic inequality have less to do with the<br />

underlying legal and social strcutures of our society, which remain fundamentally<br />

egalitarian and moderately redistributionist, as with the cultural and social characteristics<br />

of the groups that make it up, which are in turn the historical legacy of premodern<br />

conditions. Thus black poverty in the United States, for example, is not the inherent<br />

product of liberalism, but is rather the 'legacy of slavery and racism' which persisted long<br />

after the formal abolition fo slavery." For Fukuyama, writing at a moment when<br />

American class divisions were more pronounced that at any time in human memory, "the<br />

egalitarianism of modern America represents the essential achievement of the classless<br />

society envisoned by Marx." As a purveyor of official doctrine for the <strong>Bush</strong> regime,<br />

Fukuyama is bound to ignore twenty years of increasing poverty and declining standards<br />

of living for all Americans which has caused an even greater retrogression for the black<br />

population; there is no way that this can be chalked up to the heritage of slavery.<br />

It is not far from the End of History to <strong>Bush</strong>'s later slogans of the New World Order and<br />

the imperial Pax Universalis. It is ironic but lawful that <strong>Bush</strong> should have chosen a neo-<br />

Hegelian as apologist for his regime. Hegel was the arch-obscurantist, philosophical<br />

dictator, and saboteur of the natural sciences; he was the ideologue of Metternich's Holy<br />

Alliance system of police states in the post-1815 oligarchic restoration in Europe imposed<br />

by the Congress of Vienna. When we mention Metternich we have at once brought<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s old patron Kissinger into play, since Metternich is well known as his ego ideal.<br />

Hegel deified the bureaucratic-authoritarian state machinery of which he was a part as the<br />

final embodiment of rationality in human affairs, beyond which it was impossible to go.<br />

Hegel told intellectuals to be reconciled with the world they found around them, and<br />

pronounced philosophy incapable of producing ideas for the reform of the world. As<br />

Hegel put it in the famous preface to the Philosophy of Right: "Wenn die Philosophie ihr<br />

Grau in Grau mahlt, dann ist eine Gestalt des Lebens alt geworden, und mit Grau in Grau<br />

laesst sie sich nicht verjuengen, sondern nur erkennen; die Eule der Minerva beginnt erst<br />

mit der einbrechenden Daemmerung ihren Flug." References to Hegel's owl of Minerva<br />

have been a staple of Washington coktail-party chatter during the <strong>Bush</strong> years. As<br />

Fukuyama put it: "<strong>The</strong> end of history will be a very sad time....<strong>The</strong>re will be neither art<br />

nor philosophy, just the perpetual caretaking of the museum of human history....Perhaps<br />

this very prospect of centuries of boredom at the end of history will serve to get history<br />

started over again." [fn 3]<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> regime thus took shape as a bureaucratic-authoritarian stewardship of the<br />

financial interests of Wall Street and the City of London. Many saw in the <strong>Bush</strong> team the<br />

patrician financiers of the Rockefeller Administration that never was. <strong>The</strong> groups in<br />

society were to be served were so narrowly restricted that the <strong>Bush</strong> administration often<br />

looked like a government that had totally separated itself from the underlying society and<br />

had constituted itself to govern in the interests of the bureaucracy itself. Since <strong>Bush</strong> was<br />

irrevocably committed to carrying forward the policies that had been consolidated and

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