Reimagining Politics Magazine

Reimagining Politics Magazine

Share this post

Reimagining Politics Magazine
Reimagining Politics Magazine
State of the Union – from humility to nuclear hubris
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

State of the Union – from humility to nuclear hubris

Two prophetic warnings ignored, an authoritarian body politic now fatally infected by Covidism and militarism is on the verge of nuclear war

Michael Meurer's avatar
Michael Meurer
Mar 04, 2022
∙ Paid
3

Share this post

Reimagining Politics Magazine
Reimagining Politics Magazine
State of the Union – from humility to nuclear hubris
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
4
Share

“In holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite.” – President Dwight D. Eisenhower, farewell address to the nation, January 17, 1961


Eisenhower’s final public address to the nation six decades ago contained two of the most prescient warnings ever issued by a US president to the citizens he served.

  1. He sounded the alarm about the rise of a “military-industrial complex”

  2. He exhorted Americans to guard against a loss of democratic control to an entrenched “scientific-technological elite”

Eisenhower’s official White House portrait & farewell speech notes, Wikipedia

Both injunctions have proved tragically visionary and predictive. After more than 60 years of intervening history filled with costly, largely pointless and enormously destructive US military adventurism, and the contemporaneous rise of an anti-democratic technocracy that has been on full display during the past two years of the Covid pandemic, they are undeniable.

President Joe Biden’s March 1, State of the Union address (SOTU) made it clear that Eisenhower’s stark warnings have congealed into official policy in today’s US imperium.

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to Reimagining Politics Magazine to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Michael Meurer
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More