'Bread and circuses' could strike down America like it did Rome, by John
M. DeMaggio, 11/24/17, The Hill
The use of propaganda for diversion to an altered state of
reality that is defined by the politicians and the political parties is not
new. We even observe this concept of diversion in antiquity.
Will Luden in “Bread and Circuses for the Masses – Not Just
Ancient Rome” describes the Roman government
policy as “Emperors, in the later stages of the Empire, used both free bread
(and other food) and free entertainment to placate the larger number of people
who were otherwise poorly served by their government.”
Jose Azel’s definition in “The Politics of Bread and Circuses” provides an
easily understood and concise description.
“Bread and Circus” are “political strategies
calculated to appease a population and divert attention from controversial or
failed policies with populist welfare programs…” He further explains, “public
support is thus created not through exceptional public service and effective
public policy, but through diversion, and patronage.”
The Oxford Reference provides the following definition:
“A term referring to the potential of spectator sports and mass
spectacle to divert populations or factions of a population away from the
weightier business of politics and society.”
Can we find similarities between our current government’s
actions and those of this Roman political policy of “Bread and Circus” during
the waning years of the Roman Empire? In a column for Bloomberg, Alice
Schroeder provides a list of specific
conditions that existed during the decline and fall of the Roman Empire.
Let us compare this list to current events: “Rome in the first two centuries AD faced a yawning gulf between rich and
poor.” Do we not face an ever increasing gap between the
rich and the poor?
Greg Rob reports in The Market Watch “Fresh research from the U.S. central bank shows the gap
in income and wealth between the richest and the poorest households, already at
historically high levels, continues to widen.” “The mighty
empire built on tribute reached its geographic limits.”
Is not American influence declining while our military forces
are thinly stretched? CNN reflected the Pentagon’s
concerns when it reported that “The extended deployment of military cargo jets
and Navy ships to help with Hurricane Maria and Hurricane Irma relief efforts
is causing military planners to scramble and recalculate future deployments all
the way from Afghanistan to the Korean Peninsula, according to several defense
officials familiar with discussions underway inside the Defense Department.”
“Its
economy created few exportable goods.” Are our manufacturing capabilities
systematically transferred to foreign shores? In Dec 2016, Jard Berstein
and Dean Baker, wrote in The Atlantic:
“Trump’s intention in reducing the deficit is to boost factory jobs, since America’s trade imbalance exists almost exclusively in
manufactured goods.”
“Slaves
acquired by conquest built most of its bridges, roads and aqueducts and took
jobs in farming, mining and construction.”
Are we not leaving the construction industry, the farming jobs
and “those which no American wants to do” to a new class of effective slaves
called the illegal alien? Bloomberg Businessweek reported “Dirty jobs are available,
Americans won’t fill them”
“As
this cheaper labor replaced Roman citizens, idle, unemployed, hungry people filled
the capital.”
Do we not have the idle and unemployed filling our urban
centers? “The rising numbers of homeless people have pushed abject poverty
into the open like never before and have overwhelmed cities and
nonprofits” according to ABC News’ report “Homeless Explosion
on West Coast Pushing Cities to Their Limits.”
“The
Caesars created make-work and part-time jobs, subsidized housing and doled out
grain.”
Do we not subsidize housing and provide food assistance to the idle and
unemployed? Lydia DePillis reported for CNN Money: ”In
October, the unemployment rate also reached its lowest rate since 2001, and the
number of people working part-time because they can’t find full-time jobs is
back to its pre-recession level.”
“The
emperors added holidays until, eventually, the Romans spent half their days
attending gladiator games, public executions and chariot races.” Do we not have the
government spending funds on baseball and football stadiums? How many
governments run lotteries festering the hopes of the masses for a quick path to
riches? “All together, the federal government has subsidized newly
constructed or majorly renovated professional sports stadiums to the tune of
$3.2 billion federal taxpayer dollars since 2000,” according to Brookings.
And the Megamillions website stated the reasons for changing the rules of the game are “To
accommodate public demand for more frequent large jackpots and bigger
lower-tier prizes.” “Disgusted, the satirist (and
ancient Roman Poet) Juvenal accused his fellow citizens of selling out for
bribes of ‘bread and circuses.’”
This is just a sample of evidence to support the elements in
Alice Schroeder’s list. Would Juvenal view the current state of politics,
politicians and government within today’s American society with a jaundiced eye
mirrored in Rome’s policy of “Bread and Circus?”
John M. DeMaggio is a retired special agent in charge, and a retired captain in
the U.S. Navy. The above is the opinion of the author and is not meant to
reflect the opinion of the U.S. Navy or the U.S. government.
http://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/361674-bread-and-circuses-could-strike-down-america-like-rome
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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