The media is affecting shock-horror that the American people are beginning to figure out that even their limited form of democracy is a sham and that the Deep State controls both of their political alternatives. And they should, since it was the media’s job to conceal that fact from everyone.
On Monday, the Monmouth University Polling Institute released the results of a survey that found that “a large bipartisan majority… feel that national policy is being manipulated or directed by a ‘Deep State’ of unelected government officials….
According to the survey:”…6-in-10 Americans (60{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53}) feel that unelected or appointed government officials have too much influence in determining federal policy. Just 26{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53} say the right balance of power exists between elected and unelected officials in determining policy. Democrats (59{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53}), Republicans (59{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53}) and independents (62{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53}) agree that appointed officials hold too much sway in the federal government. (“Public Troubled by ‘Deep State”, Monmouth.edu)
The survey appears to confirm that democracy in the United States is largely a sham. Our elected representatives are not the agents of political change, but cogs in a vast bureaucratic machine that operates mainly in the interests of the behemoth corporations and banks. Surprisingly, most Americans have not been taken in by the media’s promotional hoopla about elections and democracy. They have a fairly-decent grasp of how the system works and who ultimately benefits from it. Check it out:
“Few Americans (13{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53}) are very familiar with the term “Deep State;” another 24{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53} are somewhat familiar, while 63{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53} say they are not familiar with this term. However, when the term is described as a group of unelected government and military officials who secretly manipulate or direct national policy, nearly 3-in-4 (74{e1e765f6645cfe4995202f72094ad9c88a5cb669127c8020c4b88ace2386bb53}) say they believe this type of apparatus exists in Washington.…Only 1-in-5 say it does not exist.” Belief in the probable existence of a Deep State comes from more than 7-in-10 Americans in each partisan group…”
So while the cable news channels dismiss anyone who believes in the “Deep State” as a conspiracy theorist, it’s clear that the majority of people think that’s how the system really works, that is, “a group of unelected government and military officials…secretly manipulate or direct national policy.”
It’s impossible to overstate the significance of the survey. The data suggest that representative democracy is a largely a fraud, that congressmen and senators are mostly sock-puppets who do the bidding of wealthy powerbrokers, and that the entire system is impervious to the will of the people. These are pretty damning results and a clear indication of how corrupt the system really is.
I’ve known about the Deep State for about 30 years. It used to be that no one believed me, or at least would not admit to believing me, which was one factor in my decision to get out of Dodge. I decided that I would rather live where the corruption was out in the open and well known to everyone than where it was secret, systemic, and operating with complete impunity in the dark. The gap between reality and superficiality was simply more than I could stand to be around, and I suspected that things were eventually going to get pretty damn ugly once hundreds of millions of people discovered that not only their government, but their very way of life, was a sham.
Of course, people have turned out to be both more resilient and more complacent than I ever would have imagined. But it is certainly interesting to have observed one “conspiracy theory” after another go from being mocked to tacitly admitted to common knowledge. I can still remember when believe in the surveillance state and its infrastructure was enough to cause people to label you paranoid.
What the American people will do with this knowledge is still unknown. But whether they choose to stand up for their violated rights or choose technoslavery, at least they will be making an informed decision now.