Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
The World Left After 2011
By any definition, 2011 was a good year for the world left – however narrowly or broadly one defines the world left. The basic reason was the negative economic conditions from which most of the world was suffering. Unemployment was high and becoming higher. Most governments were faced with high debt levels and reduced income. Their response was to try to impose austerity measures on their populations while at the same time they were trying to protect their banks.
"To transform the world," writes Wallerstein, "The world left will need a degree of political unity it does not yet have. Indeed, there are profound disagreements about both long-range objectives and short-range tactics. It is not that these issues are not being debated. To the contrary, they are being debated heatedly, and little progress is occurring to overcome the divisions." (Creative Commons | Flickr | Sierra the Kid)
The result was a worldwide revolt of what the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movements called “the 99%.” The revolt was against the excessive polarization of wealth, the corrupt governments, and the essentially undemocratic nature of these governments whether or not they had multiparty systems.
It is not that the OWS, the Arab Spring, or the indignados achieved everything they hoped for. It is that they managed to change world discourse, moving it away from the ideological mantras of neo-liberalism to themes like inequality, injustice, and decolonization. For the first time in a long time, ordinary people were discussing the very nature of the system in which they lived; they were no longer taking it for granted.
The question now for the world left is how it can move forward and translate this initial discursive success into political transformation. The problem can be posed quite simply. Even if, in economic terms, there exists a clear and growing cleavage between a very small group (the 1%) and a very large one (the 99%), it does not follow that this is the political division. Worldwide, right-of-center forces still command something like half of the world’s populations, or at least of those who are politically active in any way.
To transform the world therefore, the world left will need a degree of political unity it does not yet have. Indeed, there are profound disagreements about both long-range objectives and short-range tactics. It is not that these issues are not being debated. To the contrary, they are being debated heatedly, and little progress is occurring to overcome the divisions.
These divisions are not new. That doesn’t make them the easier to resolve. There are two major ones. The first has to do with elections. There are not two, but three, positions concerning elections. There is one group that is deeply suspicious of elections, arguing that participating in them is not only politically ineffectual but reinforces the legitimacy of the existing world-system.
The others think it’s crucial to take part in the electoral process. But this group is divided in two. On the one hand, there are those who claim to be pragmatic. They want to work from within – within the major left-of-center party when there is a functioning multi-party system, or within the de facto single party when parliamentary alternance is not permitted.
And of course there are those who decry this policy of choosing the so-called lesser evil. They insist that there is no significant difference between the principal alternative parties and support voting for some party that is “genuinely” on the left.
We are all familiar with this debate and we have all heard the arguments over and over. However, it is clear, at least to me, that if there isn’t some coming together of the three groups concerning electoral tactics, the world left does not have much of a chance of prevailing either in the short or the longer run.
I believe there is a mode of reconciliation. It is to make a distinction between short-term tactics and longer-term strategy. I very much agree with those who argue that obtaining state power is irrelevant to, and possibly endangers the possibility of, the longer-term transformation of the world-system. As a strategy of transformation, it has been tried many times and it has failed.
It does not follow from this that short-run electoral participation is a waste of time. The fact is that a very large part of the 99% are suffering acutely in the short-run. And it is this short-run suffering that is their principal concern. They are trying to survive, and to aid their families and friends to survive. If we think of governments not as potential agents of social transformation but as structures that can affect short-term suffering by their immediate policy decisions, then the world left is obligated to do what it can to get decisions from them that will minimize the pain.
Working to minimize the pain requires electoral participation. And what of the debate between the proponents of the lesser evil and the proponents of supporting genuinely left parties? This becomes a decision of local tactics, which vary enormously according to many factors: size of country, formal political structure, demographics of country, geopolitical location, political history. There is no standard answer, nor can there be. Nor is the answer of 2012 necessarily going to hold for 2014 or 2016. It is not, for me at least, a debate of principle but rather of an evolving tactical situation in each country.
The second basic debate that consumes the world left is that between what I call “developmentalism” and what may be called the priority of civilizational change. We can observe this debate in many parts of the world. One sees it in Latin America in the ongoing and quite angry debates between left governments and movements of indigenous peoples – for example, in Bolivia, in Ecuador, in Venezuela. One sees it in North America and in Europe in debates between environmentalists/Greens and the trade-unions which give priority to retaining and expanding available employment.
On the one side the “developmentalist” option, whether put forward by left governments or by trade-unions is that without such economic growth, there is no way to rectify the economic imbalances of the present-day world, whether we are talking about the polarization within countries or the polarization between countries. This group accuses their opponents of supporting, at least objectively and possibly subjectively, the interests of right-wing forces.
The proponents of the anti-developmentalist option say that the concentration on the priority of economic growth is wrong on two grounds. It is a policy that simply continues the worst features of the capitalist system. And it is a policy that causes irreparable damage – ecological and social damage.
This division is even more passionate, if that is possible, than the one about electoral participation. The only way to resolve it is by compromises, on a case-by-case basis. To make this possible, both groups need to accept the good faith left credentials of the other. It will not be easy.
Can these divisions on the left be overcome in the next five to ten years? I am not sure. But if they are not, I do not believe the world left can win the battle of the next twenty to forty years over what kind of successor system we shall have as the capitalist system collapses definitively.
- Posted in


30 Comments so far
Show AllYour option of not voting means things will get worse until rebellion. That will involve weapons and much death and destruction. I think it will end with dictatorship and a VASTLY worse system than presently tolerated. I believe 'allergies' will be the least of everyone's worries. Right-wing authoritarians will eat the left for lunch.
If voting is such a useless exercise, I would like to know why the Republicans spend so much time and effort to prevent those people who have been marginalized, such as the poor, the young, minorities, etc... from voting.
I would say that voting is an important part of democracy, but participation and activism is as important. It is through activities such as working on voter registration and education that people become aware of the issues, their stakes in the issues, and their democratic rights. Democracy begins when people demand their rights.
Let's start with reality, shall we?:
Crossing the Rubicon - by Michael Ruppert
The New Pearl Harbor Revisited - by David Ray Griffin
911truth.org
Collapsenet.com
If you're truly into 'reality,' then try this: http://kikoshouse.blogspot.com/2011/07/ten-years-after-911-attacks-greatest.html
Greg R.,
I did. So, what else is new?
While Ruppert and Griffin are interesting, they are certainly not the last word on the subject (or even the middle word).
Greg R.,
I would agree. As a baby step ----- Not the "last" but perhaps a "middle" step as we descend the depth hierarchy might be found at Disclosureproject.org.
The author is an intellectual and spiritual retard and is also quite blind. Many of us can see that the only division in the left is between those who can live with the "lesser evils" and those who cannot or won't. One group not only can settle for the lesser evil in an election but is timid enough to accept a situation of lesser evil in their lives and the lives of their fellow human beings.
They have a built in excuse and self delusion and that is that rebellion wil result in more pain and deaths and more evil. History has proved that this is the only way forward. They are actually saying that without open rebellion there is no blood and deaths? As for blood and death within the lesser evil global situation this weakling probably not only did not see them in the developed world but is also self-denyingly oblivious to the global blood baths around the world, the direct consequences of maintaining this evil or lesser evil global capitalist system, imposed by our 1% with the collaborations of the 1% in other countries. Just to name a few, down the years we had blood baths in Mexico, US supported tyrannies in South America, Indonesia, Africa, Asia and the lattest on the list Iraq, Libyia, Syria, Bahrain, Aghanistan,
For the other group of leftists, lesser evil people and system and situation is just not tolerable. They want real change. This is when idiots like the author go hide under the table of their lesser evil masters.
Like Shakespeare, I propose we kill all the lawyers first. If any of the politicians left are not lawyers, we tackle them next. Same for the lobbyists. As for the banksters, I propose throw them all in dark and wet dungeons and chain them to the walls, a-la-Edmond Dantes and bring school children on tours on a regular basis so they can learn from an early age to keep their greed on check. Only after we do that, will we be able to start working on a new, different and more humane system of governance and socio-economics. Anyone that pays attention will see that the same scum managed to rise to the top from the bottom of the pond, no matter where/when/how they're sunk to the bottom.
I find your comment to be offensive. Lawyers protected myself and my siblings from a pack of evil connivers.
Great ideas, Reverend.....if you like fascism. Killing groups of people, "dark and wet dungeons".....Good Grief !!!! Nothing like the comments on CD.
such a brilliant article...what a woeful response.
Truely spoken.
for the voters ... is a vote for Ron Paul right or left?
Extreme right.
Extreme wrong, there is no left left.
A vote for Ron Paul is an attempt to apply a tourniquet to a case of extreme hemorrhaging.
The tourniquet is not the answer in the long term, but sometimes it prevents you from ending up as a cadaver in the short term.
It's an attempt, probably futile, to stop Amerika from becoming a military empire with a de facto police state at home in the immediate future.
Obama is fully on board if you are following his actions. The other Republican candidates are also on board and apparently feel the President is lollygagging when it comes to implementing more wars abroad and more repression at home.
If you haven't figured out for whom the Patriot Act and the NDAA is aimed then I have a hint: it isn't to keep you safe from Ibn Khaldun.
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/01/02/final-curtain-obama-signs-indefinite-detention-of-citizens-into-law-as-final-act-of-2011/
The Neanderthal Ron Paul is evidently the only major candidate concerned with the evisceration of the Bill of Rights, the elimination of habeas corpus, the endless expansion of executive powers -- now inclusive of eternal detention and assassination of citizens-- and a state of permanent war.
"I very much agree with those who argue that obtaining state power is irrelevant to, and possibly endangers the possibility of, the longer-term transformation of the world-system. As a strategy of transformation, it has been tried many times and it has failed."
and with one sentence wallerstein dismisses either massive non violent uprisings or outright rebellion. no explanation, except that in his mind it has failed in the past.
the author fails to acknowledge how the inherent barriers to social change in the staus quo (influence of corporate money and fraudulent elections) will be overcome. he skirts past the question and suggests that we all should learn how to compromise. why does wallerstein believe that the corporations are willing to compromise ? how do you negotiate w/ your executioner ?
and what exactly does the working class retain to bargain with ? (our votes in a corrupt system). the working class can also w/hold it's labor and take to the streets. granted there will be greater police oppression and rightwing backlash, but there cannot be meaningful political change through the ballot-box in a corrupt political culture (the author never addresses structural barriers to change existing w/in the status quo). there also are time limits to the crises. peak oil and global warming require attention now - we don't have a generation to gradually reform american politics to meet the tasks at hand.
looking at reform (short term tactics) while imagining that the world can withstand more sustained gradual economic growth (at the expense of our environment) is a pipe dream, relative to our situation today.
...peace...
Although I acknowledge that it is becoming more and more difficult, particularly in the West, corporations do compromise regularly, if there is sufficient legal or political pressure to do so. How do you think all the worker's rights that do exist have been won? What about the benefits directly related to collective bargaining by unions, where they indeed exist? Why do you think workers in countries such as Germany are so uninterested in rebellion? Because they have managed to get significant compromises, through the state, from the corporations. Finally, corporations do not execute people; they need people to work for them, which is very different. How do Indian IT workers can get away demanding more and more pay from the outsourcing companies? Because they know they are needed and can get better deals. Whatever position you take about reform vs. rebellion, try to base it on facts.
lgsantiago,
I think you are missing the boat here, primarily by not penetrating deep enough into what is so. Invitations:
1) Check out Mussolini's definition of fascism.
2) Check out 9/11.org, Fromthewilderness.com, and Collapsenet.com
3) Check out the disclosurproject.org and .paradigmresearchgroup.org
and while you're at it, you might want to do some research on HAARP.
Things have proceeded Much further (and are wilder) than most Progressive folks have even imagined.
I think the divisions on the left are more serious even than Wallerstein's article would have us believe. Just look at the comments here and to most other articles on CD. The differences over elections and the "developmentalist" option are one thing. Wallerstein is called an "emotional retard" by one poster because he even brings up the possibility of voting. (By the way, I'm on the other side of the issue; I'm a revolutionary and think elections are a waste of time.) If there's one thing Wallerstein is not, it's a retard, whatever you may think about his politics. Though I may disagree with him, he's a socialist, an anti-imperalist, and an anti-capitalist, and he's devoted much of his career to figuring out what's wrong and what is the way ahead. So let's take seriously what he says. And be civil, for crying out loud. The same goes for Democracy Now!. I have problems with lots of their coverage too, but, hey, don't boycott them because they don't agree with you on everything.
Anyway at least most of us would agree that the debates over elections and developmentalism matter. What is even more disturbing is how some people on the "left" get so attached to smaller issues or to particular people that anyone who disagrees with them is treated as an idiot or a collaborator. The most obvious are those who elevate September 11, 2001 to the status of political deal-breaker, as though knowing the "truth" about this event would magically solve everything. I frankly don't know what happened that day, and, though it would be interesting to know for sure, why be divided over this?? I'm talking about people on both "sides" of this issue, people who refuse to have anything to do with those on the other side. Like the recent poster who said that Chomsky was just a shill for the US government because he believes that planes brought down the Twin Towers. Hunh? Besides the obvious benefits to the ruling class from the 9/11 attacks (justification for wars in the Middle East, restrictions on civil liberties in the US), they've had another amazing windfall: how they've divided the left. In my conspiracy theory moments, I sometimes wonder if this "debate" is all a setup.
(OK, here come the attacks on me! I'm sure I'm an idiot and a collaborator, at least.)
Posted by abiyot, Jan 2 2012 - 10:45pm
"If there's one thing Wallerstein is not, it's a retard, whatever you may think about his politics."
Very true, abiyot. Wallerstein's "metropolitan centers" and their "peripheries" as a world system helps immensely in understanding how and why established imperialist countries have managed to continue their grip on the rest of the world. We can disagree with him on the specifics of any subject, but to deny his formidable intellect would merely reflect on our own inadequacies.
Basically I did not make it to past the third paragraph because I am not sure what time this author is speaking from. Everything for some unknown reason is in the past tense...
CalmApparatus --
You will be excited to know that the first part of the essay is a summary of 2011 -- hence the past tense -- but that the author is primarily dealing with the future of the left throughout the rest of the piece.
You will experience many extraordinary uses of the present and even future tense should you choose to read the entire essay.
To review the larger perspective of the elite and their continuing world conquest, take 59 minutes and watch: Argentina's Economic Collapse.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4353655982817317115
It was the same bankers, the same Wall Street firms, the same oily process of thievery. It is a must see film to find our where the USA is at the moment, and in fact, the same "bait and switch" Obama type savior who did them in. Totally a traitor to the global elite and sold them all out.
timothy, I watched the entire video, and it was frightening to realize how many steps we've already taken down that road to complete insolvency, where the nation is so eager for any relief that it's leadership will sell to any bidder. The IMF and World Bank and others have been destroying whole cultures around the globe under the guise of aid, and it['s only a matter of time before the mega banks do the same here in the U.S. Oh wait... they've already snookered the ppublic into handing over USD700 billion, while they turn around and foreclose on American's homes, kicking families out into the streets. What will be next?