Of Surpluses and Survival
Do we have enough left to invest for the common good?
In a broad sense, life is capitalism: having a surplus that can be invested forward to make life better is what has created life on earth, human beings, human communities and human civilization. Until there was a surplus beyond what was needed for mere survival there could be no progress, no moving out to new fields or forests, no risking today's rations for a bigger harvest tomorrow.
It's biological: a surplus of individual cells or organisms means there will be some survivors of change. Until there are enough individuals for some to be wasted as resources change, for some to be risked for innovation, and some to be lost in lotteries of mutation or predation, change leads to extinction.
Even the storage of body fat is a kind of capitalism. Subsistence hunter-gatherers survived lean times because they could overeat when the hunting was good and store the surplus as body fat. The agricultural revolution grew when we learned to create "capital" of grain -- grow and store a surplus to feed the population during seasons of scarcity and provide seed for the next planting.
The capital of human knowledge and skills, captured in writing and counting, provided another kind of surplus for human progress. Human societies developed a system of portable, fungible surplus: money and credit. And participatory democracy created a rich surplus of knowledge for solving human problems.
But the joker in the pack today is the surplus of people. Biologically they are there in all their numbers and diversity so that there will be some survivors to start over when populations are decimated by crop failure, disease, natural disaster, climate change, or wars.
Culturally, there are too many people because breeding surplus individuals (warriors, laborers despised /expendable classes) by encouraging pregnancy, protecting mothers, and nurturing children has survival value. Our present dilemma is partly that our cultural capital, with its emphasis on the value of human life, has put us on a collision course with the practical economics of both biological and capitalistic systems. When we cannot feed all the people, what happens? Or when a few wealthy corporations will feed only those who can pay, what do poor people do?
We are rapidly learning that free market capitalism is not working toward a better tomorrow for all the human family. But we are a long way from knowing how to manage the cannibalistic capitalism of biology, let alone the myths and metaphors we take for reality.
We propagate elaborate myths to glorify warriors who sacrifice their lives to the dreams of power of our leaders. We fabricate fables to justify slavery, racism, homophobia and to deny global warming. We argue that the poor deserve to be hungry, and that fighting terrorism justifies killing children. We even work to tweak the Constitution and laws to make sure some lives are wasted to enhance the survival of the rest of us.
We seem determined learn the hard way whether the costs in energy consumption and CO2 emissions of nuclear power generation are tolerable and the risks acceptable. We repeatedly test the proposition that investing in war and the destruction of human lives, homes, factories, roads, bridges, water supplies, farmland creates a better future for everyone.
We're basically tinkerers, good at getting along with kin and neighbors and making small systems work, locally and temporarily, whenever we have a little surplus capital -- financial, cultural, social, political, technical or informational -- to work with. Our penchant for grand schemes has almost done us in before, because almost any grand scheme, practical or fantastical, will go -- somewhere. Hardly any have gone where they were expected to go.
There never before has been a test of grand schemes on the scale provided by the Bush Imperium. We don't know yet whether the lemmings are heading over the cliff or toward the bean-fields. Those of us watching from the hillsides aren't even sure what to wish for, let alone what we might do, ought to do, or even could do, to get a better outcome for the lemmings, for ourselves, for the Earth.
Here in Portage County most of us have enough surplus to look up from personal survival to the common good for our communities and our nation. We are watching the presidential and congressional contenders hoping they will hear our concerns.
Some of us believe the costs and risks of bombing Iran are well worth the projected outcome. Others are convinced that any attack on Iran will lead to World War III or a nuclear holocaust. Depressingly, many believe that there will be an attack on Iran before the election, and that there is nothing We-the-People can do about it.
Worse, many don't really believe we can pull ourselves out of this one and cope with the next Big One -- whether it's Bush spending our remaining surpluses on war, or Mother Nature thwacking us with earthquakes, cyclones, peak oil or global warming.
* * *
The cartoon character Dilbert recently commented that a class he took on being 'less useless' made him recognize that though his job was a waste of time, he was powerless to do anything about it. "Now," Dilbert concluded, "my helplessness makes my uselessness seem unimportant."
Human helplessness trumps human uselessness? Is that all that remains of the great capital of democracy?
Before joining Senator Glenn's Washington staff in 1985, Caroline Arnold founded a successful small business and served three terms on the Kent (OH) Board of Education. In retirement she is active with civic and environmental organizations in Kent.
Copyright Record Publishing Co, LLC. 1995-2008
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21 Comments so far
Show All"Better government of the community,"
Is the real answer.
"Those who can not pay for food will starve" is already here."
Not here. There is no reason for anyone at anytime to go hungry in Texas. If you can't afford food there are many resourses. Capitalism is not a charity, but it should and always was a good citizen within the community till controls began to be dismantled 15 years ago.
"Those who can not pay for food will starve" is already here. I wish it were a "straw man" argument. What does one think privatization of the water supplies in the U.S. will do. Capitalism is not a charity. Better government of the community,not just business profiteering is one answer. I only wonder if control by the uber rich can be modified with our dumbed down, populace. People who spend all of their energy trying to eat don't have much extra left for fighting for community. Critical thinking should be encouraged but it has not been by the present administration or big corporate think tanks and media. Will the down trodden realize this at some point? Will it too late? We'll see.
"knowing how to manage the cannibalistic capitalism."
Strictly an opinion not based in fact.
"When we cannot feed all the people, what happens? Or when a few wealthy corporations will feed only those who can pay, what do poor people do?"
Strawman question. Could happen, about the year 3000 I guess.
"(warriors, laborers despised /expendable classes)"
Despised by whom? A point of view opinion.
"There never before has been a test of grand schemes on the scale provided by the Bush Imperium. We don't know yet whether the lemmings are heading over the cliff or toward the bean-fields"
What grand schemes? GWB is the least creative, smallest thinker we've had in years.
"We fabricate fables to justify slavery, racism, homophobia and to deny global warming. We argue that the poor deserve to be hungry, and that fighting terrorism justifies killing children"
Who is fabricating these fables? Justify slavery? Who when, where? Deny global warming? A theory tharts not yet proven, just belief to sustain it. I don't see anyone arguing that the poor deserve to be hungry. Who said fighting "terroism" justifies killing children? I've never heard anyone say that.
Just more strawman statements. Stateed as fact, but strictly opinion.
"Human helplessness trumps human uselessness? Is that all that remains of the great capital of democracy?"
A conclusion thats not a conclusion, but a continuing argument in support of her hypothesis.
To me the whole article was based on point of view presented as mostly fact when it wasn't.
Sorry to take so long. I suspect you will disagree with me.
.
It will be interesting to see what happens as competing systems (like our ecological balance and limited world resources) clash with capitalism on a grand scale and we get to witness it all in this lifetime.
I am one of those who doesn't quite share some of the bleaker pessimism often displayed on this website's threads. And be forewarned if you are going to link to that James Kuntsler site and you have never encountered him before:
While Mr. Kuntsler's wit might keep you amused, his dooomsday cynicism for America is not to be outdone. Norman Vincent Peale he is not. Over the past decade some of his more ominous Chicken Little predictions (New Year's Eve/Y2K global systems failure and Dow permanent drop below 4,000 to point out two) have been dead wrong.
A true ship of fools, we play our silly games while the idiots who run the show take us down. God gave us a garden and we insist upon turning it into a toilet! Personally, I think god was drunk when he decided which group of apes to put in charge of the place. We are probably too stupid to save this mess, but just smart enough to stay in denial until we can get that final harpoon into the beast. "Have a nice day!"
USAn,
Great suggestion.
I agree entirely about the need to teach Marx. I do disagree with his prognosis (it may have been possible in his day, but no longer) but I emphatically agree with his critique of capitalism.
It took me a while to figure out what the author was trying to get at here, mainly because of all the mixed metaphors and what I find to be sloppy thinking.
I think the simile 'life is capitalism' is patently false. Capitalism never created a surplus, only nature is capable of creating a surplus. All capitalism does is determine how this surplus gets distributed. And as we can plainly see, under capitalism it gets distributed very unequally.
And then the surplus concept is applied to knowledge, going even further astray. This seems to be bound up with the idea that there is "progress," another idea for which I find empirical evidence lacking. Change, yes. Progress, no. For a species that has been busily decimating it's environment - the one absolute requirement for survival - to consider itself as enlightened or of having made "progress" is laughable.
My sense is that many people in the US are struggling with the same contradictions that the author is trying to work through, and hopefully this will lead to more mature views than "me me me."
Ultimately though, I suspect that most people will not want to examine and change their ways willingly and so Mother Nature will herself restore the balance we upset. This will be a very hard pill to swallow for folks who believe in the great supremacy of humans. I have come to believe that in many significant ways, certainly at the global level, we are no different than yeast in a petri dish, and will follow the same trajectory.
If anyone wants evidence of our collective stupidity as a species, here is a link to Jim Kunstler's most recent rant on the impending financial implosion:
June 30, 2008
Worse Than Grandma's Depression
http://www.kunstler.com/
ladybug June 30th, 2008 4:42 pm
Elaborate Thomas
I'll post tomorrow, sorry to take so long to answer you.
Thanks for your patience ladybug.....I'm sure you will find any flaws in my thinking.
I really wish our schools would provide students with at least an introduction to Marxian philsophy. One can disagree with Marx's prognosis, or suggested treatments, but his diagnosis of Capitalism in absolutely correct.
Capitalism of any kind, free-market or otherwise, is inherently destructive because it requires the endless expansion new markets, new products and new resources, and endlessly more intensive exploitation of labor. Then just like Voltaire's Pangloss, it offers us the circular reasoning that things could not be any other way - it's creations are the most efficient possible - because capitalism is the most efficient possible, because caitalism is by definition the most efficient system.
But how can you expand markets if the system is doing the things the most efficiently (We are talking about the global system - not individual enterprises) Actually it is designed to be the most inefficient possible means of sustaining humanity.
Whilst I believe that there are too many people on the planet, at least for the number aspiring to the Way of the West, the author makes it less than clear why, or even whether, she thinks so. What is the optimum number? Any why are we here anyway? Even the religious nutters do not have an answer for that one except that it is all part of god's mysterious and unknowable plan (which they never fail to interpret for you…)
As for trying to suggest that 'free market capitalism' is not working -- how would we know? It has never existed, probably could exist only in theory, and certainly does not exist now. You think 'they' want competition?
Ms. Arnold is no biologist.
She is more like a some kind of social Darwinist. "Cannibalistic capitalism of biology"? What a dark view of things! Then again, Capitalism is predicated on a dark, brutish view of human nature - specially manufactured to justify their system...
What or who is the ... We.
For example there is the 'We' - our government but is that Bush/Cheney (or more likely Cheney/Bush) or is it 'We the people'? When Bush lies us into a war which millions of Americans protested against... who is the 'we' that invaded Iraq.
WE is too inclusive a term for ...um... us. Sigh.
If America is referenced as if it were a single individual as in headlines which could read 'Americans invade Iraq' or 'Americans protest Iraq invasion', ... who are we?
The word 'we' when used to describe America as a country or people becomes 'us and them' no matter which side says it.
That is the problem with the word 'we' when used as a singular definition for Americans or even humanity on a larger scale.
'WE' would that be us or them?
In a sense we can't both be 'we'...can we?
Capitalism needs regulation that chops up the capital into tiny pieces and creates a real market system not the phony fascist economy we have put in place chiefly since 1970. The economy must serve the people.
We have done a miraculous thing. We have created a new gilded age as oppressive as the first yet with technology that could allow the masses to live in safety and peace. It take a special kind of educated moron class of leadership and very cruelly sheared, panicked sheep to maintain it.
I learned from a Bush conservative friend that all the programs meant to help the elderly, and the poor, was socialism - aka Communism, and also how they'd do anything to keep socialism out of our society.
I'd always thought they were just programs to help people who weren't able to help themselves.
Now I know the Bush faithful have just given socialism another name, and make it available to those who need it the least.
Nietzsche says - "It is not democracy but capitalism that brought us to this precipice. Capitalism is no more compatible with democracy than was Communism."
In all things there must be a balance. Capitalism would be fine, if it was balanced with Socialism, so that all citizens would benefit. What we currently have is pure Capitalism that has been given the benefits of the Socialism that was stripped from the people.
Elaborate Thomas
Frankly. I find this hypothesis silly. You can't mix facts and opinions together in this manner.
Empire Fire and Frost
Are there fall colors in the fall of empire?
How do you harvest awe?
Will the pennant bleed?
Does the shock of frost spike the colors in the fall?
Color code the bounty
Color code the bounty of debt
for a fall with new seasons of hope
like empire pie on a rope
to follow the spring with showers of
'Don't bring it on'
Empire fire and frost
the fall won't be a loss
Seems we've finally reached a point that societies before us finally reached. Perhaps not with the same type of situation exactly, but close enough.
Question is - will we be able to change, or end up like all the rest who seemed to have simply vanished.
It is not democracy but capitalism that brought us to this precipice. Capitalism is no more compatible with democracy than was Communism.
Like Communism, Capitalism contained from its inception the seeds of its own destruction. Those seeds have been allowed to grow into a cancer. It is doubtful that the patient will recover.