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Lessons of the Obama Debacle
The problem with us progressives at this time of crisis is not that we lack an alternative paradigm to pit against the discredited neoliberal paradigm. No, the elements of the alternative based on the values of democracy, justice, equality, and environmental sustainability are there and have been there for sometime, the product of collective intellectual and activist work over the last few decades.
The key problem is the failure of progressives to translate their vision and values into a program that is convincing and connects with the people trapped in the terrible existential conditions created by the global financial crisis. This fluid process is preeminently political. It requires translating a strategic perspective into a tactical program that takes advantage of the opportunities, ambiguities, and contradictions of the present moment to construct a critical mass for progressive change from diverse class and social forces.
We must look at the political experience of the global progressive movement in order to understand why our side has been derailed and how we can fight back to political relevance. The experience of the Obama presidency is rich in this regard. In the U.S. political context, Obama is a social democrat, and the broad left supported his candidacy. Although he was no anti-capitalist, still we expected that he would initiate a program of recovery and reform similar in ambition to Roosevelt’s New Deal. The electoral base that brought him to power, which cut across class, color, gender, and generational lines -- was full of potential. Obama’s ability to bring this base together on a message of change achieved what was then thought impossible—the election of an Afro-American as president of the United States—and showed how smart political leadership can shape social and political structures.
Two years after his spectacular electoral victory, President Obama and the Democrats face a rout in the U.S. polls in early November. Indeed, Obama and his party are like a rabbit on the railroad track that is hypnotized by the light of an oncoming train. Whereas Obama seemed to do all the right things in his quest for the presidency, he seemed to make all the wrong moves as chief executive.
His prioritizing of health care reform, a massively complex task, has been identified as a key blunder. This decision certainly contributed to the debacle. But other important factors related mainly to his handling of the economic crisis, a primary concern of the electorate, were perhaps more critical.
Six Reasons behind the Debacle
Obama’s first mistake was to take responsibility for the economic crisis. In his quixotic quest for a bipartisan solution, he made George W. Bush’s problem his own. Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan never made this mistake. They took no responsibility for the economic problems of the 1970s, heaping the blame entirely on their liberal predecessors and eschewing any bipartisan alliance with those they considered their ideological enemies. Roosevelt, too, slammed – and slammed hard –his ideological foes, those he termed “economic royalists.”
Insofar as Obama and his lieutenants identified villains, this was Wall Street. Yet saying the financial elite brought on the crisis, while bailing out key Wall Street financial institutions such as Citigroup and AIG on the grounds that they were “too big to fail,” involved Obama in a terrible contradiction. The least that he could have done was to remove the existing boards and top managers of these organizations as a condition for government funds. Instead, unlike the case of General Motors, the top dogs stayed on board and continued to collect sky-high bonuses to boot.
The strong sense of disconnect between word and deed was exacerbated rather than alleviated by the Democrats’ financial reform. The measure did not have the minimum conditions for a reform with real teeth: the banning of derivatives, a Glass-Steagall provision preventing commercial banks from doubling as investment banks; the imposition of a financial transactions tax or Tobin tax; and a strong lid on executive pay, bonuses, and stock options.
Third, Obama had a tremendous opportunity to educate and mobilize people against the neoliberal or market fundamentalist approach that deregulated the financial sector and caused the crisis. Although Obama did allude to unregulated financial markets as the key problem during the campaign, he refrained from demonizing neoliberalism after he took office, thus presenting an ideological vacuum that the resurgent neoliberals did not hesitate to fill. No doubt he failed to launch a full-scale ideological offensive because his key lieutenants for economic policy, National Economic Council head Larry Summers and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, had not broken with neoliberal thinking.
Fourth, the stimulus package of $787 billion was simply too small to bring down or hold the line on unemployment. Here, Obama cannot say he lacked good advice. Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate, and a whole host of Keynesian economists were telling him this from the very start. For comparison, the Chinese stimulus package of $580 billion was much bigger relative to the size of the economy than the Obama package. For the White House now to say that the employment situation would now be worse had it not been for the stimulus is, to say the least, politically naïve. People operate not with wishful counterfactual scenarios but with the facts on the ground, and the facts have been rising unemployment with no relief in sight.
Politics in a time of crisis is not for the fainthearted. The middle-of-the road approach represented by the size of the stimulus was the wrong response to a crisis that called for a political gamble: the deployment of the massive fiscal firepower of the government against the predictable howls of anger from the right.
Fifth, Obama and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke deployed mainly Keynesian technocratic tools—deficit spending and monetary easing—to deal with the consequences of the massive failure of market fundamentalism. During a normal downturn these countercyclical tools may suffice to reverse the downturn. But standard Keynesianism could address such a serious collapse only in a very limited way. Besides, people were looking not only for relief in the short term but for a new direction that would enable them to master their fears and insecurities and give them reason to hope.
In other words, Obama failed to locate his Keynesian technocratic initiatives within a larger political and economic agenda that could have fired up a fairly large section of American society. Such a larger agenda could have had three pillars: the democratization of economic decision-making, from the enterprise level to the heights of macro-policymaking; an income and asset redistribution strategy that went beyond increasing taxes on the top two percent of the population; and the promotion of a more cooperative rather than competitive approach to production, distribution, and the management of resources. This agenda of social transformation, which was not too left, could have been accommodated within a classical social democratic framework. People were simply looking for an alternative to the Brave New Dog-Eat-Dog World that neo-liberalism had bequeathed them. Instead, Obama offered a bloodless technocratic approach to cure a political and ideological debacle.
Related to this absence of a program of transformation was the sixth reason for the Obama debacle: his failure to mobilize the grassroots base that brought him to power. This base was diverse in terms of class, generation, and ethnicity. But it was united by palpable enthusiasm, which was so evident in Washington, DC, and the rest of the country on Inauguration Day in 2009. With his preference for a technocratic approach and a bipartisan solution to the crisis, Obama allowed this base to wither away instead of exploiting the explosive momentum it possessed in the aftermath of the elections.
At the eleventh hour, Obama and the Democrats are talking about firing up and resurrecting this base. But the dispirited and skeptical troops that have long been disbanded and left by the wayside rightfully ask: around what?
The Right Makes the Right Moves
In contrast to Obama, the right wing understood the demands and dynamics of politics at a time of crisis, as opposed to politics in normal times. While Obama persisted in his quest for bipartisanship, the Republicans adopted a posture of hard-line opposition to practically all of his initiatives.
Unlike Obama and the Democrats, the right posed the conflict in stark political and ideological terms: between left and right, between “socialism” and “freedom,” between the oppressive state and the liberating market. The Republican opposition used all the catchwords and mantras they could dredge up from bourgeois U.S. ideology.
Finally, in contrast to Obama’s neglect of the Democratic base, the right eschewed Republican interest-group politics. Fox News, Sarah Palin, and the tea party movement stirred up the right-wing base to challenge the Republican Party elite and drive a no-compromise, take-no-prisoners politics. To understand what has happened to the Republican Party in the last few weeks with the string of tea party successes in the primaries, historian Arno Mayer’s distinction among conservatives, reactionaries, and counterrevolutionaries is useful. In Mayer’s terms, the counterrevolutionaries, with their populist, anti-insider, and grassroots-driven politics are displacing the conservative elites that have long held sway in the Republican Party.
With their anti-spending platform, the Republicans and tea partiers that might capture the House and the Senate in November will probably bring about a worse situation than today. As such, Obama and the Democrats might repeat Bill Clinton’s political trajectory when he scored a victory at the polls in 1996 because the Republicans led by Newt Gingrich overreached politically after their triumph in the midterm elections of 1994. But this is a desperate illusion. The current counterrevolutionaries and their backers are skilled in the politics of blame, and they will likely be successful in painting the worsening situation as a result of Obama’s “socialist policies,” not of drastic cuts in government spending.
Lessons for the Left
The problem lies not so much in our lack of a strategic alternative as in our failure to translate our strategic vision or paradigm into a credible and viable political program. Politics in a period of crisis is different from politics in a period of normality, being more fluid and marked by the volatility of class, political, and intellectual attachments. We should remember that politics is the art of creating and sustaining a political movement from diverse class and social forces through a flexible but principled political program that can adapt to changing circumstances.
Finally, there is no such thing as an objectively determined situation. The art of politics is using the contradictions, spaces, and ambiguities of the current moment to shape structures and institutions and create a critical mass for change. Class, economic, and political structures may condition political outcomes; they do not determine them. Who will ultimately emerge the victor from this period of prolonged capitalist crisis will depend on smart and skilled political leadership.
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274 Comments so far
Show All"RichM and Sioux Rose were the first ones to launch fusillades of personal abuse at me"
I read the posts very carefully and no they didn't. Look, you went on the aggressive when you had no business doing so.
"(For example, RichM TWICE initiated attacks on me with this kind of foul language: "this guy "CharlesNelsonReilly" is a joke, a liar & a fraud" and "your infantile & vicious smear campaign against the WSWS & SEP. Your criticism is stupid, boring, & utterly without merit or foundation," to cite only two of many choice specimens from his spree of malice. Even Tom Larsen, a neutral party, rebuked RichM for his ferocious abuse. And I owe HIM an apology? Surely you're inebriated or having a good joke on us all.)"
He did not initiate this on you. You pushed him into it with what your wrote and after you personally attacked him, he had to retaliate. Listen, maybe you had some good points but you posted with a rough and aggressive tone when you could have saved yourself the trouble.
"Get a clue, parson, or you'll soon find yourself defrocked on grounds of flagrant hypocrisy and double standards."
I've seen that on other sites. Since Huffpost censors, why not take your anger over to Alternet so we can have some more true progressive outlets to look to. RichM is not who you should be attacking. You should be hammering the status quo Obama cults over there trying to quell progressive dissent instead of hurting true progressives here.
"In EVERY CASE in this thread RichM and Sioux Rose initiated personal attacks on me with no prior post from me remotely directed to them"
.....and that makes you sad. Do you need a hug?
This insideous mole trolling as CharlesNelsonReilly employs the very same Stalinist trog tactics he appears to rail against regarding wsws.ord and SEP. He accuses anyone not in lockstep with his unfounded assertions as being a member of the SEP Central Committee.
These are the classic tactics of the petite tyrant who wishes to scare the timid and uncertain into submission.
As I stated in a previous post, I fully suspect he (CNR) is employed by one of the myriad surveillance agencies to tailgate anyone with a true 'left' orientation and to throw a monkeywrench into the works... aka a Trojan Horse.
He doth protest too vehemently to be anything but a mole.
RE: He doth protest too vehemently to be anything but a mole.
I'm sorry Mr. Zucker, but you and RichM are throwing around a lot of epithets (and ad hominems) without much substance. As much as I disagree with Charles Nelson Reilly's style (as well as yours), I find his case to be better argued.
(and that ladies and gentleman is why the left is fucked)
Maybe it's just semantics, but I do not agree with your castigation of "progressives." Maybe it's because I am aware of the history of the term: Robert LaFollette who opposed WWI to the end was one of them. I would abandon "liberal" since "liberal Democrats" are largely responsible for the fix we are in. Don't think your espousal of "socialist" is going to get any traction here anytime soon. In fact, when I go online to learn about socialist party ideas, I get the same threadbare cliches that were bouncing around during the Cold War. Can't socialists change the language they use when they talk about social problems? That doesn't mean to change ideas--just to get away from the class warfare descriptions, the placing of blue collar workers on a pedestal, the denigration of white collar types by neglect if not by open condemnation. "Progressive" is as good a descriptor as any for someone who would try to narrow the gap between rich and poor, re-regulate corporations, and provide for the least of us in the United States. I am not ashamed to be called a progressive.
"progressive" is acceptable. While I'm not a fan of the "progressive" label -- as it means almost anything you'd like it to mean -- saying you are a "socialist democrat" to a new acquaintance is about as effective as greeting them with a kick in the shin.
So Progressive it is.
We've had our disagreements, but on this issue, I'm in agreement ....
"In other words, Obama failed to locate his Keynesian technocratic initiatives within a larger political and economic agenda that could have fired up a fairly large section of American society."
Mother of God.
The entire article is pap and shite wrapped in pseudo-intellectual academese.
Bello, your words frighten me more than any bugfuck lunacy from the Tea Party...
Obama performed precisely as he was told to do. And well motherfucking paid to do.
And I select and employ phrases like "bugfuck lunacy" and "well motherfucking paid" because those terms actually convey--through prude-jostling profanity and a bit of hyperbole--meaning. I choose those phrases because they elucidate the point conveyed, ie, you are either insane or a propogandist motherfucker.
I also choose them because though I often refrain, the time of being polite to you and others like you has passed.
Try not to whine.
Yes, reading Bello was like watching Colmes on FOX in the Bush days. Bello is selling the same BS framework that FOX promotes. Progressives have no problem transforming their vision into a program. The problem is that the progressive vision that gets so called liberal candidates elected to office is then scrapped in favor of a corporate program. The "Six Reasons behind the Debacle" assumes that the Democrats are trying. The only difference between the Democrats and Republicans is that the Democrats play sheepish about serving corporate interests while the Republicans tout that as their virtue.
"The only difference between the Democrats and Republicans is that the Democrats play sheepish about serving corporate interests while the Republicans tout that as their virtue."
How dare you criticize the poor bunnies, trapped and hypnotized on the railroad tracks and facing an oncoming train.
The Democrats want to lose. They know what they're paid to do. If they win, the dupopoly dies. Better to go back to pretending to be an opposition party. Having the majority makes this impossible.
This statement in the analysis cuts exactly to the core:
"In his quixotic quest for a bipartisan solution, he made George W. Bush’s problem his own."
IMO by sucking up to the conservative right in the name of bipartisanship, Obama empowered them far beyond their damaged credibility after GW Bush would have otherwise allowed. Obama did make te economic crisis his own far sooner than would have happened had he followed the advice I gave four days after hge was elected:
http://www.quixote-quest.org/resources/national_international/Obama_go_slow_111008.html
" Monday, November 10, 2008
I rarely take issue with Paul Krugman's wisdom, but in this instance I would advise Obama to delay pressing on some of his more basic changes until the American middle class has had a chance to feel the bite of the recession. A few months of suffering will give us courage and motivation to squelch the right wing obstructionism - which is bound to come and has, in fact, already started. Otherwise, comprehensive changes will become watered down and will end up looking ineffective.
Hopefully the pain will come swiftly and, if so, even by 1/20/09 a large majority will agree that Obama was elected with a mandate for making major changes. Paul Krugman already holds this view, but if Obama wants to be President of all the people (or anyway all who are sentient) as he now indicates, and wants to make major changes, not just tinker around the edges, there needs to be a period of several months of real middle class suffering to build concensus. It is unfortunate that those not yet raised into the middle class will endure by far the worst suffering. It will be up to Obama to reward them suitably. "
Instead, Obama wanted to be KING of all the people - even his implacable enemies. He hurried to take charge (and responsibility) and followed the advice of his neoliberal generals Geitner, Summers and Bernake. Obama is basically a cautious politician. Only by being so could a black man have become so politically successful on the national stage in early 21st Century America. His campaign rhetoric suggested courage and revolutionary vision, but when it came time to lead the charge for basic change, the political animal was cautious and begged for bipartisanship even in the face of Republican rejection.
"In his quixotic quest for a bipartisan solution . . . "
This so-called quest was and is, in reality, a deliberate monkey wrench to make sure nothing progressive was ever even attempted. Obama and the Democrats: Nothing to see here. Move along.
MORDECHAI: Exactly!
Anyone who still wants to give Obama the benefit of the doubt loses on the sheer witness of probability! He played to the same dance steps on EVERY issue significant to our times! He's not deviated once.
Why didn't he hold Bush/Cheney accountable for the war based on premeditated & false evidence?
Why didn't he see that JUSTICE was done for those caught in the anti-terrorism drift nets?
Why didn't he show the world a moral example in making sure that torture would never again take place on our watch?
Why didn't he put into place the same Glass-Steagall Act that managed to keep the economy from producing an outright depression for decades?
The answer to each is sinister. Not only has a Democratic face now been placed on these atrocious policies, they've become a seamless part of the fabric of American political life.
I believe this is the most chilling aspect of the "Obama" recipe. It has granted legitimacy to those things no sane, moral, or lawful society should EVER countenance.
And the band plays on.
And those trained on sports/team affilitations no longer SEE a problem, because it is "their team" at bat.
The only thing I can think of that's worse is the fate of those Haitian women trying to protect their bodies from predators with the aid of plastic sheeting.
Life has become a tragedy for so many... while both U.S. teams play for the same owners as they drive the world to hell.
(I say world because the US is responsible for spreading so much pain around. Part is the ecologically reprobate behaviors consigning yet more populations to climate-hell. Another part is the derivative/swap "product" devised by the Wall Street alchemists. We see how other national economies are responding to that counterfeit. And then the make-war ethos with its footprint/bases in over 100 lands, added to its reluctance to not "try out" new weaponry on living bodies. What a score card! And no one at bat seems to notice the price in continuing on this tragic course.)
Sioux-Rose. You are too kind to the US. Love your post.
Sioux-Rose. You are too kind to the US. Love your post.
The price is noticed, I am sure, to quote Jello Biafra, "When it comes to their money, your money is no object."
The foundation for the quest for a bipartisan solution is the notion that we should shoot for a blend of Socialism and Capitalism, that we can simultaneously advance the interests of both the wealthy and the workers. That view is widely held beyond the Obama administration, and that makes what we are seeing with the Obama administration inevitable.
"The foundation for the quest for a bipartisan solution is the notion that we should shoot for a blend of Socialism and Capitalism, that we can simultaneously advance the interests of both the wealthy and the workers. That view is widely held beyond the Obama administration, and that makes what we are seeing with the Obama administration inevitable."
No, TA, the "quest for bipartisanship" supposedly sought by Obama was between Dems and Reps. So which one of these parties are you suggesting represents "Socialism"?
Frank pretty well sums up my thinking. If this is an example of "Progressive" thinking, then we might as well become a right-wing "fascist" state. Isn't that what we've been doing to other states for years now? Politics is cutthroat and progressives just don't have the will. So sit back, like all the other Americans, and watch your Empire crumble.
It is extraordinary that Americans would elect a half African with a Muslim name as the President of the United States. Almost inconceivable if you considered it at any point in American history--especially after 2001 and the global war on Muslims.
How ironic then that he turns out not to be Eugene Debs or Marcus Garvey (as the right would have it)--or even a watered down FDR-- but a 'centrist' corporate hack with a flair for rhetoric.
Bello is a clever fellow and always worth a respectful read. His analysis of the political right in this essay is particularly astute. Even his recommendations for the progressive left are helpful here. However, he runs astray because he assumes that Obama represented something that he did not:
"In the U.S. political context, Obama is a social democrat, and the broad left supported his candidacy. Although he was no anti-capitalist, still we expected that he would initiate a program of recovery and reform similar in ambition to Roosevelt’s New Deal."
Obama has mainly served as a Trojan Horse for a Bush third term in all essential respects. The one campaign promise he kept was to expand the war in Afghanistan. Bello is oddly silent on the wars....
Another irony is that the political right and the ideology of market fundamentalism will benefit from the immiseration of the American public.
Bello at least gets this right:
"The current counterrevolutionaries and their backers are skilled in the politics of blame, and they will likely be successful in painting the worsening situation as a result of Obama’s “socialist policies,” not of drastic cuts in government spending."
A reactionary movement that gains momentum as the quality of life deteriorates is one of the classic hallmarks of fascism. I suppose it will be grim entertainment to watch the ruling kleptocracy push forward loonier and loonier reactionaries as the antidote to our malaise.
As H.L. Mencken once observed: "No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public."
And to keep up with the times: "No one ever went unelected underestimating the intelligence of the American voter."
So much for hope.
As H.L. Mencken once observed: "No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public."
And to keep up with the times: "No one ever went unelected underestimating the intelligence of the American voter."
So much for hope.
Or as Paul Craig Roberts recently stated, The majority of Americans are "too gullible, too uneducated and too jingoistic" to preserve their own freedom.
That's it. The problem is the mentality of the people of the USA. To be fair, this is true in most countries although Americans are particularly bad.I agree it is because they are gullible, uneducated and too jingoistic. I would add too religious.
Your post brings up an important point about the Tea Party movement: what does it mean? We read constantly about what IT thinks it means (and why what it thinks is wrong), but not enough about what it really means. I also believe reactionary fascism is typically how things 'go wrong' on ground fertilized by years of impoverishment and selfishness. The right also is aware of this, which is why Obama and progressives are constantly referred to by the right as fascist. So now we have a significant growth in mass movements aligned with rightward principles, armed to the teeth, and ready for battle. In actual (as opposed to Faux News fantasy) terms, it seems to 'fit the bill'. Does it? What does it mean?
Some of us are just looking for the proper jumping off point. Obama did bring hope. Now that hope has gone, should we be going too? I've no intention of standing around as someone sticks a Juden sticker on my back. And although its doubtful it'll ever get that bad, the histories of Chile, Argentina, etc don't exactly recommend living through such times. If Americans refuse to repair their sinking ship, I'm swimming for land.
Bello has completely misunderstood who Obama is and who he works for to assume every move Obama has made has been a 'mistake.' Absent from this article is any discussion of the ruling class in this country--Obama's employer. The article is full of delusions that Obama has 'choices' that have nothing to do with the ruling class.
Exactly
This article is complete bullshit. The problems with progressives is that there are almost none of them in the government. The Democrats are just as bribed and bought off as the Republicans so present no resistance to ongoing disastrous policies. As soon as Americans become smart enough to realize that there is no moral high ground between these two groups of criminals, we might get some change. A first step toward change would be to vote out career politicians from both parties, and elect people who agree to term limits.
You said: As soon as Americans become smart enough. Well, that's the main problem isn't it? Around when do you expect this to happen?
"Maybe if we twy haaarder, Obama will be the heeero we voted for"
Not bloody likely, since he is bought and paid for by the financial elites. Hell, I think they cloned him in a lab somewhere with the worst parts of Zbigniew Brzezinski, Milton Friedman and Booker T Washington. An all-around slimy creep phony fraud shyster suck-up of the first order.
And Walden Bello is just another flack for phony democrat "two-party" propaganda.
"Hell, I think they cloned him in a lab somewhere with the worst parts of Zbigniew Brzezinski, Milton Friedman and Booker T Washington. An all-around slimy creep phony fraud shyster suck-up of the first order."
Add Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and G. W. Bush in there for good measure. Obama's a Dr. Feelgood, if one gets the drift.
In a word, failure.
And it is actually worse than the author's assessment. Obama and crowd not only played patticake with the Right, it insulted and marginalized the Left when the Left actually represents mainstream views on all issues from Gay marriage to the Environment.
It is not the Left who needs a clue.
Progressives would do well to first realize they have no political power. Its a hard thing to admit, but its a good place to start.
Ties to the democratic party need to be severed. No matter how small, something new and uncontaminated must arise to replace it.
I Agree.
The evolution of Obama's message to the left:
1)I am the messiah! I will bring you change you can believe in!
2)Quit whining that I didn't bring you the change I promised.
3)The corporate interest and fake bipartianism are more important than your "hippy" issues.
3)Get out and vote Democrat, or its YOUR fault if we lose, hippy whiners!
NOT my idea of a successful strategy...
Way too many words but the important word left out is the reason for the Debacle.
WAR!
If we don't confront the war economy and mind set we are trapped in as ignored by this report, the debacle will grow.
Telling other nations what to do under bombs and bullets and invasion and occupation for our supposed security, traps us in a global cycle of deadly chaos while this country does not have the ability do anything the USA demands of the nations it invades.
This report is basically in denial of the root of the growing debacle.
The root is radical, and it is now not progressive but radical to end the racket of the war machine.
My proof is compare the National Debt and Unemployment before Bush's 9/11 debacle and now.
Progress has been made. Stop acting so despondent. The idea that Obama lacked "vision" is stupid. His vision of the US becoming a green tech exporting powerhouse takes more than 1.5 years to happen. The right wing is going to destroy this country, and the left wing is going to let it happen out of spite.
Oh dear - one of those "Let's all be positive. Chin up. For King and Country" types. Why don't you read just one of Glenn Greenwald's columns? Go on. Just one.
I have great respect for Walden Bello. He is no dummy, and everything he stated in his essay is true. He just didn't cover all the issues that we would like to hear.
I reject so many posts that say his essay was all BS. He wrote an essay that is limited in scope. He did not write a book.
But certainly many of the CD posts to the Bello essay were excellent. Walden Bellow got an earful. He deserves to hear the volume of anti-capitalistic rhetoric by CD posters.
Walden Bellow is not naive. He is one of the most articulate spokesman for the anti-corporate global justice movement. He will appreciate the depth of the anti-capitalistic rhetoric on CD. I am sure he would agree with many of these posts.
I wish to say as well, the criticism of his essay was from some of the most astute posters on CD.
I look to Walden Bello's next essay that may respond to many of these postings.
Somebody tell Bello we are great apes risen to our limit. The Peter Principle is beginning to apply to our species. H. sapiens do not inhabit Earth, we infest it. We failed to heed Issac Asimov's desperate plea 25 years ago for Zero Population Growth.
Capitalism is anathema to The Golden Rule, period. It expresses the genes of psychopathy, which have survived so well in the Darwinian evolution of DNA material. It maniacally scoops STUFF, and the 200 ova with which each female is born (nookie). Without combat from government on behalf of the species, we get stratification which approximates layers of servitude. Among many horrors, this institutionalizes sexual abuse that ultimately slides downhill to our helpless children.
Economics is the biggest red herring ever to rise out of the ocean and breathe air. It is something out of a Japanese horror film. There is no =there= there. We cannot and must not order human affairs by it. Sadly, most human affairs are ordered by the discoveries of Dr. Stanley Milgram on =obedience to authority= done while Bello was at Princeton.
My dinner's ready, I must be go.
Trylon
I hope you enjoyed your dinner as much as I enjoyed your comment.
Trylon: I agree with all you said.
I think you will appreciate the following essay and am posting it for the benefit of all 200 some posters on this thread. It is a favorite 1996 essay by Bishan Singh.
ECONOMICS WITHOUT ETHICS: THE CRISIS OF SPIRITUALITY
by Bishan Singh
I was struck in a recent international meeting of activist scientists and intellectuals that some of the Westerners present seemed fearful that if they were identified by their colleagues as spiritual persons their opinions would be dismissed as unscientific. Yet in other settings it was evident that some of them are deeply spiritual persons.
Coming from Asia, where spirituality is a way of life, I found this contradiction troubling. After a period of reflection I realized that far more than a personal dilemma was involved. I had witnessed the manifestation of a deeply-rooted social dilemma-the clash between two distinct approaches to the way we organize our resources to meet our needs and develop our civilization. One is the humanistic approach, which is life-centered. The other is the materialistic approach, which is money-centered.
Economics-the way we organize and use our resources-determines the kind of civilization we build. It is the bedrock upon which institutions, knowledge systems, technologies, and livelihood practices unfold. Since resources, particularly natural ones, are both critical in ensuring our livelihoods and are also finite in supply, questions relating to the allocation of these resources are of an inherently ethical nature. In other words, ethics is the soul of economics. An economics without ethics, inevitably becomes an economics of greed and avarice.
Unfortunately, in their effort to "elevate" economics into a science, economists have adopted, like other sciences, a reductionist approach that divorces it from ethics. This ethically deprived economics became the foundation of a materialist civilization of infinite growth fueled by the money culture-the dominant capital-centered approach to development. It makes for an interesting relationship. The more "developed" the economy, by prevailing economistic definitions, the greater the loss of spiritual and ethical consciousness.
Removing ethics from economics also removes social responsibility and critical awareness. We are left only with consumption and materialism. It is like disconnecting the functional relationship of the heart (the subjective) from the head (the objective). It has caused the left brain (objective) to dominate the right brain (subjective).
This turns people into one dimensional beings whose sole purpose is to work to consume in support of the wealth creation process. This is what is happening to all of us. The process of wealth creation needs both fodder and energy to keep the juggernaut in motion. People can be made fodder by addicting them to consumption. Once addicted, they will work to provide the energy for the process.
The only power that can check this process is a heightened spiritual sense of what is right and wrong flowing from the individual's innate feeling of unity with "existence," encompassing humanity, nature, and divinity. All this propels us to act in a humane way with a deep sense of responsibility for our actions and of stewardship toward the needs and rights of others. Spirituality is the enemy of the capital-centered economy. Where materialism has advanced, spirituality has declined. And where spirituality is high the capital-centered economy has had difficulty gaining a foothold.
By working to convert all values into monetary values, economists make money the be-all and end-all of human enterprises and endeavor. Materialism becomes the living culture, money-making the religion, money the god, banks the temples, and economists the oracles.
Any God before this god, any Religion before this religion, any Culture before this culture, and any Spirit before this spirit is the enemy. Spirituality is anathema to materialism. In a perverse inversion of reality, to modern materialists spirituality becomes the evil enemy to be destroyed. Thus framed, the modern economy calls on us to engage ourselves in a negative spiritual practice that deprives our lives of meaning and alienates us from our sense of spiritual connection.
This gives great significance to the efforts of communities all over the world that are struggling to restore ethics to their economic practice, to become critically aware and socially responsible for the ways in which they organize, use, consume, and manage their resources. They are advancing the practice of voluntary simplicity, creating livelihoods for the unemployed, adopting alternative ways of producing and distributing goods and services to reduce resource use, recycling waste into reusable resources, undertaking sustainable agricultural practices, and providing credit for the poor.
The courageous visionaries, social activists, community leaders, and concerned individuals engaged in this historic process are demonstrating the possibility of creating economic cultures in which our economic lives become a part of our ethical and spiritual practice. In our present context, it is a profoundly revolutionary act.
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Bishan Singh is a contributing editor of the PCDForum, president of MINSOC, and Senior Advisor for Participation, Information and Training, FARM Programme, FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, Maliwan Mansion, 39 Phra Atit Road, Bangkok 10200, Thailand, Fax (662) 2803240. This column was prepared and distributed by the PCDForum based on his article in the Fall 1995 Balaton Bulletin.
People-Centered Development Forum columns and articles may be reproduced and distributed freely without prior permission.
Thank you, Stephen (below).
Two Ideas Submitted - to No Avail
I do not believe I have told this story yet on Common Dreams. Many years ago I played Tourist in Manhattan and took a guided tour of the United Nations Headquarters. We walked for 45 minutes in a queue of 25 or so people. At the conclusion of the tour we sat in nice theater seats and the guide answered some questions. She then said that the U.N. was pleased to receive Suggestions, submitted on forms she was holding. Only one suggestion was permitted per form - did anybody want one? I held up two fingers. She smiled and gave me two forms. I got out my Parker T_ball Jotter.
1. The United Nations needs an earthen HEARTH of the kind our different and shared forebears used across our history. The international fire should be perpetual, 365-24 consuming wood from each nation. Each member nation should submit cubic meters of common soil, to be blended and pounded into the base material. Once constructed, no shoes should be permitted on the base. Members need to connect to the earth as animals do. In addition to a cozy place for diplomacy, the Hearth should be a place for performance and jamming on folk instruments of all nations. Ideally, an aviary full of the world's birds would encircle - so the birds could enjoy human music and we theirs.
2. A job requirement for posts in the upper levels of the United Nations should be training to competence in MIDWIFERY, and actual experience delivering babies. Representatives to the United Nations should spend a few hours a month in NYC area hospitals on obstetric wards, keeping their skills current. Persons trying to determine the fate of this world, and our species, MUST have brought new life into it, held it, welcomed it, celebrated first breath, celebrated SPIRIT.
--Trylon
Great ideas ......
It is a good essay, very well written. As with others, I felt the explanations excellent, but the scope too limited. Why, for example, have Republicans done 'everything right' in paving the discontent toward this election, while Democrats have done 'everything wrong' at the same time? Is it the touted Republican competitive spirit? If so, where was that can-do spirit during eight years of GW Bush?
I think what we're seeing here is the power of money at work, possibly (according to most of the posters on CD) on both the winning and losing sides (ie Obama wants to lose). And that is also what we saw during GW Bush's reign. This power has its limits: I'm not sure it saw the derivatives crash coming, but it knows its target (the people) very well. Its about consolidation of power, and that is what has happened. Even the economic downturn was possibly a minor consideration: real wealth is relative, and the poor have fared far worse in this downturn than the rich have (accelerating a 30 year trend).
The only people I know who like Obama are people who would never admit that they actually once voted for Reagan and Bush. Or people who are so depressed about their choice they can hardly discuss politics now.
The writing was on the wall that Obama lies when he refused to hold the communications companies accountable for spying on Americans without a warrant - And this was after he said he would hold lawbreakers accountable - and that was BEFORE the election.
Obama also said the same platitudes about upholding the law regarding the United States use of Torture.
The problem is that Democrats and Progressives are classic
"True Believers". They fall prey to cleaver marketing and once they have their minds made up about the “product” they stick to it.
When you buy things on credit, the money is created out of thin air (until the bank repossess or forecloses, or unless you pay it back by working.) The true believers, who still insist the Emperor’s Armani suit looks great, are propping up an economy that is really 13 trillion in debt. This is getting more and more like the Nazi era. Everyday people are too enmeshed in it to stop it.
Everyone is so afraid of the fascist Republicans they vote against their interests.
All the fascists involved with the corporate government that really controls Obama (and the rest of the country and economy) know this. And Obama chose them as his advisors!
The only way to really protest is with a general strike and boycott of corporate products and oil, but the funds have been cut to education, so nobody knows what that means! The best hedge against fascism is self sufficiency. Begin with killing your television.
Obama a social democrat! Now that's funny...and stupid!
You said it.
So what exactly is the point of your pseudo-achemedise rant?
'Illusion' is the American coin of the realm - this is not an 'Eureka' moment. If virtually everyone stayed home and did not vote, still, either Obama or McCain would be playing poster-boy for the corporacy (no other option was available). Do you really believe it would be much different either way? It would likely have been better if McCain were 'selected' since a large portion of the populace would not have willingly succumed to the narcotic of 'Hopium'... but that was an integral part of the plan.
One thing I will agree with you on is that the ruling elite are certainly "hellbent on self-destruction". It really isn't thier innate desire to self-destruct, but given all the input variables of climate change/global warming/peak oil/ eco disaster/endstage Capitalism/nonstop disinformation/abject corruption/perpetual war for perpetual peace/entrenched oligarchy... there are few options available to the elite other than implosion.
No one but a complete dissembling fool would provide a link to a Lyndon LaRouche website to support their claim.
Do you have any alien abduction links you can provide while you're on a roll? Do you often quote Ramtha to make your point?
LaRouche is the ONLY person in the entire political spectrum who can make Bush-the-Lesser appear SANE.
What else do you have rattling around in your dittybag? ...Sasquatch? ...planet Nibiru?
You and your game have become tedious.
Great post!
I am not member of the ISO, but one of the things I learned from them is that a person's political consciousness is always in development. They (the ISO) accept you where you're at - and work with you from there. They are trying to build a revolutionary movement - not a monastery. This, to me, makes a lot of sense. And if they are not talking about theory all the time, that makes sense to me too. It's worth noting that I participated in a "fundamentals of Marxism" series (organized by the ISO) where we read and discussed Marx's "The German Ideology", "Class Struggles in France 1848-1850", "The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte" and "The Civil War in France: the Paris Commune". Reading Marx and Engels directly, well, there's no substitute; it's essential - even for anarchists!
It is clear to me that you have a lot of knowledge. And, I would bet, that knowledge was hard won. Share that knowledge with us in the spirit of "accepting us where we are at." Thanks.