Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Deep

A while ago, Fallows wrote about the Deep State, the post-war apparatus that persists across presidential administrations and legislative sessions.  This week, Bacevich.

Before the Good War gave way to the Cold War and then to the open-ended Global War on Terror, the nation’s capital was a third-rate Southern city charged with printing currency and issuing Social Security checks. Several decades of war and quasi-war transformed it into today’s center of the universe. Washington demanded deference, and Americans fell into the habit of offering it. In matters of national security, they became if not obedient, at least compliant, taking cues from authorities who operated behind a wall of secrecy and claimed expertise in anticipating and deflecting threats.

One characteristic of the Deep State participants, by the way, is they hate democracy.