Thursday, July 20, 2017

The Future is Ours To Create







The Future is Ours to Create

 

 

 

What is the greatest challenge to democracy in the early 21st century?

  • The overwhelming power of the capitalist elite (economically, culturally, legislatively, politically, judicially) to craft domestic laws and the rules for a global economy?*

  • Naive ideas about democracy, power, and participation in a complex society where concentrated wealth must be wisely managed?

Perhaps they're equally dangerous? Perhaps one is the result of the other? Perhaps they are mutually reinforcing phenomena?

 

Certainly, naiveté and lack of information prevent far too many of us from being aware of the very shallow roots of institutional democracy which, despite the checkered example of Ancient Athens, reach back only as far as circa 1789.  On the other hand, we all share a deep-seated resistance to domination. This may even be “hard-wired” by evolution into our species. But on Tevye’s other other hand . . . our species seems (almost) disturbingly adaptable to all types of harsh conditions - including those imposed by the most ruthless of our “brothers and sisters” who will ceaselessly seek to test all limits - including those of mutual decency. But, then again, the milk of human kindness and the thrill of solidarity (especially when infused with music) count among the most rapturous of all human experiences (excluding, perhaps, chocolate and sex). And yet, we are also so very prone to fine distinctions leading to intense jealousies and resentments even among those who are most similar to each other and who largely share the same interests. Finally, do all these questions lose any possible salience for someone - once he is no longer tempted to wonder how it would be:

 

If I were a rich man, yaha diah dia dia dumb”?

 

Complexity, scale, and the ever-important need to avoid overly concentrated power, all militate for a pluralist menagerie of robust institutions including those somewhat like modern corporations. Historical naiveté also plays a huge role here. Western corporate forms can be traced back to medieval towns, universities, and construction projects. But this institutionalized quest for profit is a modern innovation not really much older than the institutional roots of modern democracy. Joint-stock companies originally had a "built-in" limited liability. Then after the Tulip Bubble (1637) and The South Sea Bubble (1720), the early modern ruling class was shocked into a chronic allergy to corporations, speculations, and insider trading. Both sentiments and laws regarding corporate charters earnestly sought to ensure corporations would only be established to serve some well-defined public interest. This was accompanied by reasonable allowances for certain ventures to be able to reclaim legitimate investments in roads, bridges, canals, etc. along with a fair profit - with the expectation that they should then be dissolved. A similar philosophy guided the establishment of early copyright and patent laws.

 

Anyone with a sense of history should be passionately alarmed by the ongoing radical growth in corporate power and greed. They should “literally” feel the shocking danger of this - as if it were freezing their very blood. The obscenities of corporate personhood, immortality, along with razor-sharp allegiance to short term stockholder benefits began in earnest only in the late 19th century but, as if on a well-greased sled on a very steep slope, these perils are only accelerating. As it crashes forward, this juggernaut accretes ever-increasing powers over public functions and human needs.

 

As this is being written, the advisors surrounding the president* of the United States are seriously considering privatizing US military operations even more radically than allowed for under current patterns of profitable corporate contracts. The benefits and dangers of allowing corporations to profit directly from the carnage and destruction of war are certainly being discussed with due lamentations and foreboding.  And no doubt(?) there will be widespread public concern about the prospect of rapacious corporations equipping themselves with feudal armies capable of overseas(?) regime change. How much attention should be given to the possibility of this proposal is, at least in part, motivated by the difficulty of recruiting US citizens to risk their lives in uncertain foreign adventures with doubtful motivations?**

 

In the meantime, corporations already have an overweening degree of control over who has access to medicines, therapies, and all forms of healthcare. Their self-interested influence over our educational systems extends well beyond textbooks and prepackaged curricula. Increasingly they are owning hospitals, running jails, and providing security forces that rampage in the public streets.

 

And the profit motive routinely routs much-needed campaigns to control poisons (like tobacco) and environmental contaminants (like excess greenhouse gasses).

 

Civic control over corporations and their weaponized concentrated wealth will be critical not only for democracy but for the future of humanity.  

 

Eventually Cassandra was proven right.

 

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* When is da powitical pawties gonna GIVE us choices we wike?

**Shouldn’t that be considered a form of us “voting with our feet”?



                                                                                        Return to Democracy: A Bloody Slideshow


Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Contemporary Dilemmas in Democracy


(Section 11)

Contemporary Dilemmas in Democracy  

 

 

It’s probably accurate, but perhaps irrelevant, to assert that today’s true conservatives are those sneeringly called “liberals”.  Or perhaps they’re called “progressives” “pinkos”, or “lefties”.  Or maybe that’s what they call themselves.  At this point in history though, it might be valid to say even those with substantial questions regarding the legitimacy and viability of capitalism are actually more conservative than radical.

 

Any differences between Liberalism and Conservatism of their “Classic” varieties are now largely beside the point. But the original distinction concerned the relative emphasis placed on “freedom” (Classical Liberals) v. institutional and traditional “authority”.  What’s called modern (or “Movement”) Conservatism today ostensibly prioritizes “freedom”, but the most charitable evaluation of its intents (and actual impacts) is that it’s quite radical.  (An uncharitable, but not unfounded, evaluation would argue the label has been totally hijacked by ungrounded opportunists, and the “ideology” has descended into self-centered incoherence, if not self-destructive madness, with a disturbing affinity towards some soul crushing 21st century manifestation of fascism).

 

Classical Conservatism and Classical Liberalism both largely predate capitalism (and modern approximations of democracy).  But capitalism has been the primary shaping (and sometimes distorting) force for both outlooks.  As early as the Progressive Era in the US and the rise of Democratic Socialism in Europe, the primary effect of reformism has been to preserve the fundamentals of capitalism.  This is despite any stated intentions, genuine or not.

 

The conservative bent of 20th century progressive reformism is nothing to be ashamed of.  The chaos and terror of the 1789 French Revolution and the 1871 Paris Commune are stark examples of the need for caution.  The brutality of the never ending pogroms to suppress the US Labor movement and the degrading misery of the worldwide Great Depression have left scars that tear and burn, still dimly glowing in the skin of our collective psyche.  The revanchist ferocity capitalists are able to marshal when threatened gave humanity The Holocaust, a nuclear world war, and continues to wreak terror and torture against the defenseless peoples of the world.

 

But neither fear nor respect for eveready violence completely explains the need for cautious conservatism in efforts to mitigate the injustices and lethalities of capitalism.  The collective imagination of our species is limited. This is despite (or probably because of) our capacity to adapt to all types of harsh environments whether they be the climatic extremes of the tropics and the poles - or the cultural impositions of chattel slavery, wage slavery, peonage, poverty, or work camps. (US History curricula euphemistically refer to the slave labor camps in the Antebellum American South as “plantations”, but the instruments of terror and torture are still extant and available for anyone’s tender minded inspection.)

 

In the 19th century, wage labor was a shocking and degrading descent in status and dignity for (mostly white) self-employed farmers left with no other resort.  This harsh change of circumstances continued as farmers were displaced from their lands all through the 20th century.  But it isn’t entirely unreasonable to argue that this was (and is) “a price of progress”.  More importantly, waged or salaried employment, especially for Westerners in the post-World War II “sweet spot” was an exhilarating step up in both material conditions and opportunities for advancement.  Who can blame “snowflakes” for wanting to preserve some semblance of stability and hope even as they grapple haplessly with global forces that increasingly link their prospects with those of workers in almost every corner of the planet?

 

Sadly, the immense pressures on middle class westerners are prompting some to drop all semblances of decency as they gird themselves to defend their “positions” of relative status. But all they can do is whip themselves up into atavistic frenzies that forebode no quarter for anyone. And there is no reason to doubt this trend will accelerate, creating greater fears and divisions, as more of us become aware of our increasing vulnerability to (and superfluousness) for the dominant economic system.  But others, as always, determinedly flail at mobilizing resources to pry fibers of hope from the fraying juggernaut of capitalism.  And this continues while most of us sleepwalk zombie-like through the ever unfolding nightmare of history.

 

It’s important to reemphasize that, as a system of oppression and exploitation, capitalism was surely a step above previous systems based on peonage and slavery - at least in the global North.  And it’s not impossible some new moderation may be imposed and accepted before there are even more cataclysmic developments (whether political, economic, or environmental).  If the conservative wisdom of progressive reformers manages to accomplish this without sacrificing the safety and dignity of people in the global South, they will have earned laurels ever green.  They will also have proved a model of liberalism, New Dealism, and Social Democracy to be built upon by future generations with more stomach for democracy.

 

But there are other possible futures.




Sunday, July 16, 2017

The Contaminated Progressive Reaction/ Response

Return to Democracy






Gabriel Kolko not unjustifiably understood the Progressive Movement in the United States (c 1890-1917) as a “Triumph of Conservatism”.   But intentions can be considered separately from results, and the motivations of Progressives (past and present) are complex and not monolithic.

Progressivism, as distinguished from Populism, is generally a middle class phenomenon.  And the middle class, with all its anxieties, does tend to be beset by certain senses of responsibility, varying degrees of affluence, and uncertain levels of “achievement” in “higher” education.  The idea of “responsibility” is crucial because members of the middle class are encultured to feel its weight no matter how helpless they may feel themselves to be in actually exercising it - and no matter how they may flagrantly flout, glibly fend off, surreptitiously evade, or complacently ignore the naggings of its pressures.

Middle class “responsibility” encompasses a wide range of considerations.  Certainly there are professional and social pressures to maintain at least some appearance of probity, sobriety, and stability which may become especially acute when considering the prospects for our offspring.  But these may also become enmeshed with what might be termed a “social consciousness”.  

This *can* happen due to influences from a liberal education that actually “took”.  It may be supported by a certain measure of leisure for reading and contemplation.  And it might be reinforced by some hard earned understandings based on grueling experiences in how modern institutions actually work - and fail to work to achieve their ostensible purposes.  A “social conscience” can also be bolstered by anxious concerns regarding the futures to which children and grandchildren might be condemned.  Even then there’s always some amount of status seeking (and appearance keeping) within any self styled group identity. (But that’s not always a “bad” thing.)

No matter the level of “social consciousness”, there’s often legitimate worry about the disruptive tendencies of both the “lower orders” and the plutocratic elite.  Continuously dashed between Scylla and Charybdis, some in the middle classes feel driven to support various manifestations of authoritarianism if others are drawn to reformist “do goodism” (a term not intended to be purely derisive).

It’s not totally disingenuous for reactionaries to deride the naïveté of progressive “snowflakes”. But dulled anomie or enthusiasm for repression can also emerge from naïvetés too much brutalized by acutely perceived indifference - or sadism - in their formative environments.  

Is it unfair to claim the gross measures of the naïveté displayed by ordinary citizens with progressive tendencies are flavored by imagination, idealism, and compassion which subsume many elements of fear?  And is it unjustified to suggest that a naive embrace of authoritarianism represents the potency of fear to wither the compassionate or hopeful aspects of imagination?  And is not any descent into anomie a self annihilating surrender to similar types of dread?

Classical Conservatism lies somewhere between liberal progressivism and reactionary authoritarianism.  But sober conservatives do share principle motivations with honest reformers.  They differ mainly over methods for best preserving imperfect institutions.  These institutions constantly need guarding against creeping careerism, opportunism, and the mindless inefficiencies of obsolete practices. But they also need to be preserved from the grasping perversions of plutocrats.

How wise is it to demand well meaning improvements for removing inefficiencies, correcting injustices, and adapting to rapidly changing times?  Can desired reforms be actuated without generating unfortunate unintended consequences?  Neither conservatives nor progressives are immune to special pleading.  

Conservatives may be more interested in protecting their own situations while progressives may also be seeking better positions for themselves.  The key (“sincere”) difference lies with contrasting faith in the need for planned, concerted actions to ameliorate injustices and inefficiencies v. faith in organic evolution towards whatever asymptotic limits exist for human perfection. At the level of sincerity this difference might be relatively superficial, but human perversity has a dismal propensity to make sincerity difficult to distinguish from its many less well meaning counterfeits. And the heat of argumentation can make any one of us more or less prone to undermine our own credibility through intemperate claims or invective.

Interesting speculation can be found to describe inherent and formative differences between ordinary “liberals” and “conservatives”.  One line of reasoning proposes “disgust” (or fear of contamination/infection) is relatively stronger in conservatives, and could be related to claims progressives are more “creative” and “open to experience”.  

Maybe.  

But however much could be learned through pursuing valid lines of research into such questions, there are also important political and economic distinctions that might be considered.  These involve the apparent gulfs between the leaderships and popular bases of both factions.  Elite theory proposes these differences (in times of political stability, at least) dramatically dwarf the disagreements between the respective leaderships themselves. The same can be said about the *fundamental* differences between (even the “politicized”) factions of their grassroots support - who often share many significant interests and sentiments generally obscured by unreflective antagonisms.

We are now enduring a time when political stability appears gravely threatened.  Is it a cause or a symptom of this turbulence that comity in Congress is, once again*, evaporating (along with shared social and workaday collegiality)?  What about funding sources?  How much do the funding strategies of the Koch brothers (and their plutocratic ilk) represent a dangerous departure from the relative even handedness of corporate “investment” in the legislative sausage factory during the decades following the last world war?

There are even more fundamental questions.  These relate, in part, to “Casino Capitalism” or the diversion of once productive resources to the vagaries and speculations of complex (and non productive) financial instruments.

  • Is wealth inequality a natural outgrowth of state capitalism as suggested by Thomas Picketty?  
  • To what extent are globalization and automation behind the stagnant incomes of a majority of waged and salaried workers?   
  • To what extent are these factors generating the growing number of the dispossessed and the economically superfluous in developed economies?  
  • To what extent is Casino Capitalism causing increases driving up the numbers of discouraged workers no longer counted as part of the labor force.  
  • To what extent is this same Casino Capitalism behind the stagnation of wages and salaries even as per worker productivity increases?
  • To what extent is Casino Capitalism supported by government “too big to fail” bail out policies which transfer all the downside risks for the growing financial sector to struggling taxpayers?

There are a number of other questions, perhaps less argumentative than the above, but the answers to all of the above questions pale in significance compared to the following:

To what extent can government address the suffering and desperation caused by the increasing loss of income and dignity to an ever growing number of people - no matter what the causes?

To what extent SHOULD government spend taxpayers money to ensure the maximum possible number of people are able to live with some measure of security and dignity - or at least attempt to guarantee equal opportunities to lawfully attain sustaining levels of self worth and hope?

And lastly:

Does there now exist a consensus answer to the above two questions?
or if not:
Could such a consensus be achieved without cataclysmic disruption?

As to whether government (formalized collective action) should provide a basic safety net along with equal opportunity to all, the popular consensus has always been fairly clear. This consensus becomes overwhelming once certain elements are assured such measures will be extended only to “good” people, where “good” is naively(?) intended to mean “honest, peaceful, and hardworking” more than it might possibly refer to religiosity - or skin color.

At the level of elected officials and their backers in the plutocracy, it is less clear if any consensus exists.  The “movement conservatives” now in power bear little resemblance to “classical conservatives.”  Instead they are shills for neoliberal Disaster Capitalists who are often brazenly open about their preference for a “Politics of Abandonment” where those left behind are simply left to fend desperately for themselves.  But the upper tiered insiders who might be called “liberal” or “moderate” do not offer much of an alternative.

The “progressive” elite who currently form a “loyal opposition” at best wring their hands.  They seem indebted (if not committed) to kleptocratic donors whose interests they apparently prioritize over common needs and concerns.  Whatever worries they may have about the likelihood of current instabilities to spiral out of control and threaten civil society and/or democracy, they are not expressing them publicly.   At best, they seem oblivious.

Unfortunately, there are reasons to suspect the above characterization of the progressive elite might be overly charitable.  The transition from New Deal liberalism to predatory Neoliberalism which took place during the 1970s is, superficially, most evident in the Democratic Party.

The history of elite progressivism is actually a troublesome one, as has often been highlighted by leftists. This goes much further back than concerns raised by 1960s student activism against the Vietnam War and for Civil Rights.  But who listens to leftist students?  On the other hand when other, less protected, elements make the same points, there can be a very decisive reaction (R.I.P Dr. Martin Luther King).  

Decades before the 60s, though, the labor movement was induced to purge itself of leftist elements who could have criticized the progressive wing of the “establishment”.  This purge, starting in the late 40s, accompanied a willed amnesia of America’s recent labor history. It was also subsumed into the too often enthusiastic support of the most vile malignities of US foreign policy with some US labor unions participating quite shamelessly.

Going back to the early 1870s and not ending until the late 1930s, US corporations, backed by the full ferocity of local, state, and federal governments, waged a ruthlessly bloody war against organized labor - and workers frequently did their best to give as good as they got.  Racism and fear of the constantly “revolting” lower orders sparked the “eminently reasonable” Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. to endorse the idea of “clear and present danger” along with the practice of eugenics the NAZIs were so enamored of.

Progressivism, Social Democracy, and Liberalism can be excused and/or condemned for its acquiesce to the inequities and iniquities of predatory State Capitalism.  The most naive among us flail between the realism of Alexander Hamilton and the cant of Thomas Jefferson.  The former strove mightily to forge a union including commoners of some means and grandees whose wealth was based on commerce or slavery.   The latter penned inspirations to far future generations while warming his toes near slave stoked fires.  We continue to flail in noble hope that we may actually be finding our way.


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*this happened most dramatically in the past as the Union neared dissolution and Civil War.

On Common Discourse



Building understanding within and between various groups depends on certain skills and “habits of mind” requiring much time and practice to develop. Certainly necessary are a willingness to learn, the ability to listen, and some facility in reassuring others that their points of view have been heard and their experiences and intelligence are honored. But just as important are abilities to effectively marshal facts and present reasoned cases in ways tailored to the backgrounds and sensibilities of others. Effective argumentation also includes the capacity to respectfully subject the opinions and reasoning of others to critical analysis - which necessitates accepting the same conditions for one’s own faulty logic, informational lacunae, and prejudices.

But common and public discourse in the United States provides few models for the types of discussion that build community while also clarifying legitimate differences of opinion and interests. The reasons for this are myriad.

First, past experience and intense affiliations may even preclude a basic willingness to engage in serious, respectful debate. These experiences may include fury at being shown up by misleading and faulty arguments presented in glib, dismissive or domineering manners. These experiences can serve to reinforce pervasive and deep rooted feelings of frustrated helplessness and battered self esteem. Partisan and social affiliations generally have an acutely negative impact on open mindedness.


But there is always hope.


Noam Chomsky frequently invokes an era (the 1930s and earlier) when unschooled working class individuals were often more educated and articulate than aristocrats - or managers.

Unfortunately, that era also coincided (in the US) with incredibly bloody violence directed against workers who attempted to organize and participate in labor actions. To be fair, workers often did their best to fight back with their own lethal ferocity, but they were up against the full fury of corporate power with its private armies, labor spies, and beer soaked thugs. And of course the firepower of the US Army along with National Guard and local police was frequently and ruthlessly unleashed against upstart elements of the working class.

Between 1871 and 1937 there were on average two major massacres per decade. (This is a conservative characterization.) After that corporate power, supported by government, used more sophisticated methods to divide, distract, and demoralize the population. (Anybody who earns their living by working instead of passively "owning" is a member of the working class.) These methods include the sophisticated propaganda of the sports/entertainment/advertising industries for the "lower orders" along with the subtler selective coverage and snide vacancies of the "middlebrow" press. The public education systems continue to "level" their products to give vastly different types of education (outlooks and skills) to teens on multi tiered career "tracks".

In my experience which reaches back only to the 1970s, I see no decline in the quality of people's discussion skills. Those, along with the public discourse that might serve as a model, remain at the same abysmal level I have always experienced.

But maybe the people I have associated with have always been but a "special kind of stupid".



The thesis here is that people's discussion skills (along with information levels and capacity for critical thinking which underlie meaningful discourse) are being intentionally stunted to prevent meaningful solidarity - which is the fellow feeling that engenders mutual support among humans with a common interest.

Unfortunately, despite any mewling protests to the contrary, major cultural institutions (mostly schools) in the US do very little to promote meaningful or useful discourse. They are too busy inoculating their “products” against appeals to solidarity and preparing them for compliant roles in what is obscenely referred to as “the labor force”.