To review: the controversy which had arisen before the State of the Union speech was about Obama’s consideration of a "spending freeze" to apply to certain portions of the budget. I suppose there was an attempt in there to balance it out, in terms of a jobs program and a student aid program.
Now, the standard rhetorical template for criticism of Obama seems to be lodged in a comparison between Obama and some past President. For some critics, he’s FDR; for others, Hoover. The critical question with both comparisons seems to be one of whether Obama can resuscitate the economy using a Keynesian stimulus, as FDR did, or is Obama another Hoover, bailing out the banks while letting the economy sink. Of course, declaring a budget freeze is a Hoover thing to do, whereas the jobs program and the student aid program are FDR moves. The question we ought to be asking, however, is one of whether or not we ought to trust the capitalist economy at all.
The alternative, a post-capitalist economy, is not obvious. As science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson points out, this is because our model of "business as usual" is based upon the short term, in which we imagine the continuance of the current system. However, problems such as abrupt climate change require us to imagine the medium term, in which the continuance of the system runs up against a rather onerous greenhouse effect. We thus need, for this reason and for others, to be thinking of ways in which we might "end the multigenerational Ponzi scheme."
The past is prologue: how we got to this point
The fundamental momentum of history from the mid-1970s onward is captured in Harry Shutt’s 1998 classic, The Trouble With Capitalism. Once upon a time, the reigning truth of capitalist economy was captured by classical economics, in which it was imagined that "economic stimulus" would lead to inflation. The result of classical economy was the "boom-bust cycle," in which periods of growth alternated with periods of economic contraction, because for the existing system to continue there had to be periods of saving as well as periods of spending.
What changed all this was the adoption, by the government, of Keynesian guarantees for the capitalist economy during the second Roosevelt‘s administration (1933-1945). The boom-bust cycle was replaced by a system in which government "pump-priming" was to result in steady economic growth. This worked sporadically until the spending boom of the 1950s and 1960s, when it resulted in the most robust period of economic growth in America’s history.
Of course, this was only to last so long as well. Eventually American corporations, having gotten fat off of the boom period’s profits, would find themselves making products that consumers weren’t buying — but this was during the pivotal period of the 1970s. The economy of the ’70s was characterized by a vast surplus of capital, both in terms of investment funds and actual physical businesses, in comparison with the actual need for business. Inventories were high and sales were low.
So in order to insure the survival of all this surplus capital, the business elites created a new economy in which governments around the world would assure their profitability while jettisoning everything else. This economy was based upon dollar hegemony, and its fundamental trope was "privatization" — privatization of entire economies into corporate hands. This was done mainly through international trade agreements conducted under the slogan of "free trade" and with the assistance of international banks (the "World Bank/ International Monetary Fund") and the World Trade Organization.
Thus the past thirty years have seen the political transformation of the Federal government into a facilitator for the maintenance of the rate of profit. (This might have been bearable had the rest of the world received sufficient attention as well.) As profits through the manufacture of real goods and services slowly declined, however, profits through speculation increased, so the financial "environment" had to be greased for speculators.
As for corporate profit, its fundamental nature was altered so that the foundation of corporate profit was no longer in the manufacture of commodities, but rather in the gaming of the financial system through "bubbles," bouts of asset inflation, and through dependence upon government largess. Shutt’s conclusion about this late form of "development" is ominous:
Indeed it ought scarcely to be a matter of dispute that unless there is a sustained revival of growth rates to levels consistent with both a reversal of the upward spiral of debt and the satisfaction of the financial market’s voracious demand for higher profits, than a cataclysmic collapse of the market values of financial assets and securities will be unavoidable. (183)
Yet all of what the government has done with bank bailouts has been to reinforce those asset values in the absence of such growth rates. Thus the final crash has still not yet happened; corporate dominance of government forestalls it yet.
The recent Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. FEC has revealed how far the process of corporate dominance of government has proceeded. Corporations can, in essence, now buy as much government policy as they so desire. As massacio pointed out over at Firedoglake, the Supreme Court has reinforced "corporatism," the principle of corporate domination over economic and political affairs.
You thus have an endless loop in which government passes legislation profitable to corporations, who use a small portion of the money they get to buy the services of politicians, who then pass more legislation. How are you going to keep political action from becoming just another commodity? Citizens United v. FEC merely re-asserted what we already knew from reading Open Secrets — our politicians are on the take, and that it is easier to take gobs of political money and fool the public than it is to refuse the money and campaign honestly. You say you’re going to pass laws restricting campaign finance, enough to keep money influence out of politics? How are you going to buy the politicians who will do that?
Thus politicians today are further constrained by their immersion in an economic reality which makes them guardians of the "neoliberal state." Kees van der Pijl describes how this happened on a global level in his piece "The Aesthetics of Empire and the Defeat of the Left." Here’s how he describes it:
As a cadre entrusted with the day-to-day management of politics and administration, the ‘political class’ of each state is an internally cohesive force, and the particular sources of the entitlement to occupy state management posts such as the class struggle of the labour movement, have increasingly been left behind by that part of the cadre which entered politics as representatives of the working class aspirations for socialism.
Here is what van der Pijl is saying. Never mind that you may have been a socialist (or whatever) when you were running for office — when you get into public office you discover that you have to work with other politicians in the job of maintaining the neoliberal state. (This, then, is what the rhetoric of "bipartisanship" is all about.) And this neoliberal state, as we can see, is pervaded through and through with corporate interests.
The neoliberal state, however, acts as the guardian of an unstable economic order. We have now entered what John McMurtry called the "cancer stage of capitalism." It’s not as if the corporations are evil — let’s put that up front. The corporations are there to make a profit, and while profit might have been a smart path for them under the earlier dispensation, after World War II and before Reagan, now it just looks parasitical. Today, profit is too tied in with malignancy. Stan Cox’s Sick Planet describes how this works — since capitalist business operates to separate people from their money, it must cater to those who have money (whether they need anything or not), rather than that larger population that genuinely needs something. So parasitical businesses win the day. And, mind you, there’s nothing really wrong with parasites — it’s just that at some point they kill off the host organism. Thus there is something really unsettling about "business as usual" in this era.
Elishastephens reflects upon how this works for the health insurance business in his most recent diary. As an for-profit insurer, your primary job is to separate your clients from their money, and so you want to sell policies full of co-pays, limits, and deductibles, while maximizing your opportunities to deny claims. "Health insurance reform," moreover, will not stop insurers from doing what they would normally do, then, if the penalties for noncompliance are insufficient to deter insurers, or unenforceable. The bottom line is that when you get sick the insurers are hoping to hasten your death, because only your death will limit their payouts and thus save them money.
For the ideologues of capitalism, the corporatist, or neoliberal, reality is not "pure capitalism," as if there were something "pure" about the capitalist system. They associate "capitalism" with "freedom," as in the "free market" (in which participation is in fact both expensive and mandatory, and which grants us a rather low exchange-value as workers unless we have money or property to begin with). The ideologues of capitalism assume that the ingenuity of "capitalist" invention will save us from whatever disaster happens to be occurring at the moment. (The idea that we might get "ingenuity" from some other social order is never even considered by such people.)
There is, however, no quick technical fix for abrupt climate change, and no assurance that capitalist society would be willing to use such a quick technical fix were such a thing in fact available. Remember, world society has had the technical quick fixes to end world hunger for quite some time, yet the world still contains about a billion malnourished people.
What’s to do about it?
This is not 1932 anymore — nor is it 1950 or any previous year. It’s 2010 — pretty late in the game. Thus comparisons of Barack Obama with Hoover or FDR seem to forget which year it is. We need a transition to a different world, not a Keynesian stimulus or a set of half-measures.
Moreover, we are not going to get back to any revival of Roosevelt, Truman, Kennedy, or Johnson under current conditions, not under the government we have now, and not even with a different government. The conditions just aren’t there anymore. We no longer live in an expanding nation-state trying to win the Cold War against the USSR.
Any "more and better Democrats" we care to elect will have to reflect upon this fact: the challenges of this era are ecological challenges. They involve reducing, not increasing, the impact of human society upon planet Earth, so that we don’t kill it off — so that future generations can enjoy what Earth has to offer.
The challenges of this era are also, fundamentally, educational challenges. The most important thing to know about the idea of an ecologically-sustainable world society is that it will require that we all be smarter. Not smarter in terms of having more facts in our heads, or in terms of "performance" and "achievement," the buzzwords of the test-prep fanatics, but smarter in terms of being more aware of our interconnectedness with the natural world. The "throw-away" society was an attempt, begun in earnest in the 1950s, to boost economic growth by detaching the consumer society from processes of interaction with the natural world. We need to go "back to nature," instead, in a way which will not amount to mere "green consumerism."
Now this is not a routine call for "socialism" along the lines of what you might read, say, here. We can look at the rhetoric of "socialist" demands to see what the problem is. The demands made in this sample "socialist" article are fair enough, if rather typical:
We need a society that guarantees everyone a job with a pension, housing, free universal health care, free high quality education through college, paid vacation, paid maternity leave and childcare. We deserve the right to live in peace without having to go to war to kill or die for corporate interests.
This looks like something we should all want — however, there is little point in demanding "socialism" as such because there are too many unanswered questions about how we are going to get the social order which will provide such amenities for everyone. The word "revolution" does not make this problem any easier. This is the fundamental problem to be solved — developing a workable post-capitalist order in piecemeal, trial-and-error fashion.
How we create this order will depend upon where we are. Fundamentally, its first prerequisite revolves around the idea of shelter — creating shelter from the requirement that we all participate in a "free market" in which we aren’t worth very much. That’s the prerequisite we’ll need in order to engage alternatives to capitalist ways of doing business.
Conclusion
I’d like to conclude by making a rhetorical point about the State of the Union address. Whereas the President’s speech seemed (to me at last) to be rhetorically based upon the principle of "something for everyone," the Republican response to the State of the Union address contained some rather specific ideological content, as follows:
Here at home government must help foster a society in which all our people can use their God-given talents in liberty to pursue the American Dream. Republicans know that government cannot guarantee individual outcomes, but we strongly believe that it must guarantee equality of opportunity for all.
That opportunity exists best in a democracy which promotes free enterprise, economic growth, strong families, and individual achievement.
Free enterprise, economic growth. Well, that’s how we got to the corporate governance which rules us today. It’s what will get us the further disaster where we’re headed, too, unless we can create an alternative.



33 Comments

I know, this diary is a mess. But it has good qualities!
Actually, I find it very thought provoking. Thanks for taking the time to put your thoughts down.
Do not be so modest, it is excellent.
What struck me most was the following:
This is pure Zapatismo, indigenous communities trying to shelter themselves from the capitalist order under which they are disposable. It is also the Bolivarian alternative, countries trying to shelter themselves from American hegemony. It is the Iranian oil burse seeking shelter from dollar hegemony. It is Brazil producing generic AIDS drugs sheltering itself from inhumane patent laws. It is Argentina declaring a moratorium to shelter itself from usury. Finally, it is the Afghan father sheltering his son with his own body from the bomb spitting drones.
In short, it is the world-wide anti-imperialist movement. Meanwhile, Obama proposes to freeze all spending with the exception of defense and security spending, and we all know what that means: empire.
It’s the neoliberal state entering its most pernicious stage.
Anyway, thanks.
You’re welcome!
It really does have a few good qualities ;-) Recommended.
I see you aren’t going to let Obama’s call for “free enterprise and economic growth” pass:
Heh.
cassiodorus, I thought this was a great one. But I was sorry it stopped here:
I really wanted to read more about the idea of “shelter” and alternatives to participating in the “free market.”
The Capialistic system is the the wise, smart, and good business people survive and make it big, and those who can’t make it fail.
We haven’t had a true capitaistic system for some time because long before the Bank bailout we decided that business’s should not have to rise and fall one their worth, or wisdom.
Instead they should be allowed to make it on whatever they wanted to do, and not worry about things like right and wrong, legal or illegal, who or what they hurt, and what they do might cause.
We allowed business’s to pollute, ravage our land, forests, steal our minerals, metals, ore’s, and fossel fuels, and much more all so they could make profits by suppling things that were needed. The super fund sights we are paying to clean up are just a sample of it.
We have let Wall Street convice us that they are part of the free market system, when they are the true robber barons of our Country. They made the conversion from making money by doing something to earn it, to making money from money. This has been the downfall of our Country, and is what facilitated all the crisis’s, recessions and black fridays we experienced.
We let the insurance industry convince us we needed them, and thus them being profitable was much more important than them paying claims on what they insured. Insurance was supposed to be a gamble for the companies, not a guaranteed profit maker with no accounability, responsability, or liability.
We look up to the big, rich and powerful, and money interests, and do consider then to big to fail, but also to big to question.
We have become a Country that admires greed, dishonesty, and illegality if it is in the making of money.
Throw out the money changers. Hum! Wasn’t it Jesus who said that?
This is actually the Republican call. Remember, Obama is trying to be all things to enough people.
Well, Lgid, we’ll need some sort of distribution ethic, something that works. Now there’s the idea of a gift economy, I suppose. The Zapatistas have a system of democratic distribution, but they’re quite specific to one locality — the eastern half of the state of Chiapas. Perhaps that’s the way to go for some people.
How were any of those things “ours”? Don’t you believers in “true capitalism” believe in the sanctity of private property?
You evidently don’t relize that when you buy property You own the mineral rights under it.
Most of these companies don’t buy the land, they lease it, or get the rights granted by the Government. Those minerals are ours as Government property. Seldom do they pay even a pittence to what it’s worth for it, so basically they are stealing from all of us.
Ofcourse if You are a true Capitalist, You think God gave You those minerals, and even the Government should not be allowed to keep You from profiting on what’s there for the taking.
Just like the true capitalists think our rivers are free sewers, oceans free dumps, forest free wood. Yes true capitolists think ripping off mountain tops for coal, mining under towns, ripping the earth to pieces for anything that’s there, is just good business sense.
True capitolists could give a shit about the sanctity of private property, a shit about public property, and a shit about what anyone thinks.
The earth and anything on it really belongs to no man, even true capitolists. Yet man is the most vile creature on it, because He doesn’t care as long as He can profit from it.
Actually, that is not so. The Courts years ago ruled on cases where someone bought a home and it turned out that the local Big Mining Co. (and this is so for any mined item from coal to gold) had purchased the mineral rights for what was under the home. At best, the mining cos. could be forced to mine from an angle but it has been known for them to force the homeowner and family out of the home for a pittance.
The devil is always in the details.
Actually, the Zapatistas’ notion of the commons is well rooted in indigenous Mesoamerican culture and is the basis of indigenous communities spread throughout Mexico and Central America. Needless to say, it is this culture that first colonialism, then the “modern” state, and now the neoliberal state has sought to destroy.
I am sure variations of this culture – basically solidarity – exist all over the world grounded in local traditions, religion, and customs.
The actual Zapatista territory is limited to the eastern half of Chiapas — the rest of Mexico is ruled by “mal gobierno.” Understand that I’d be fine if that were changed.
And this John Holloway stuff about “changing the world without taking power” is a significant misreading of the idea of power. Changing the world IS taking power.
“True capitalism” or “pure capitalism” is a fantasy, as “capitalism” is itself merely a pretext for class domination. Whether “true capitalism” is a good fantasy or a bad one is irrelevant to me — I don’t buy into the terminology. The fact that we identify a specific trait to distinguish “capitalism” from other forms of class domination (i.e. that capitalist exploitation is an appropriation of the surplus from wage labor) does not itself make capitalist exploitation into any sort of absolute principle which be “purified.”
So there can be no “pure capitalist” world in which exploitation will operate purely through appropriation of the surplus from wage labor. Exploitation through brute force doesn’t go away under capitalism, and the capitalists don’t really care about production anyway, as their primary motive is the making of money.
If you don’t like reading that, well, you can have a productive Dungeons & Dragons discussion with someone else, or you can stay here and argue fantasy with me. But I won’t argue fantasy back.
Great diary. Has to be long and detailed. Firs because so few of us know the history. And most significantly as you are proposing a future, (or describing the inevitable) that requires a radical radical turnover of human perceptions that have been operating in some areas of the world since written language.
The question in Darwinian terms is who will be most able to adapt? It’s the environment stupid.
Thanks so much for this.
“whether Obama can resuscitate the economy using a Keynesian stimulus, as FDR did”
CORRECTION: FDR used a war to resuscitate the economy. World War II.
Thank you!
But that’s not what wars in our era are for. And there was some improvement after FDR’s ’30s programs.
Great ideas here and thanks for the diary. I am working on a “capitalist” diary too but got sidetracked. “Avatar” may be just a movie, but it has touched a lot of people so far with its timeless themes nature versus technology and the theme of connectiveness to mother earth. Go Blue People. Go Nav’i.
This concept of shelter is interesting. I’d like to know more.
2nd episode of “Caprica” tonight everybody. The prequel to Battlestar Gallactica. It’s already creepy.
Congratulatons
As you are determined to believe the lies of reconstructured history you are indeed deserving of the Darwin award.
I think we should start with the process, more or less, that one can see in the operation of a Food Not Bombs local; insuring through direct action that basic necessities are satisfied.
In the case You state, you mentioned the little item that the coal co. bought the mineral rights. Evidently before the property was bought.
You see the law and the courts almost always rule for the big money interests over say a home owner. Yet we fools still thinks we have law in these United States.
The devil is in the details, but influenced details by the big money interests.
There is a large dissonance between corporatism and capitalism. If Adam Smith were alive, I have a feeling he’d be railing against the notion that a corporate entity or body would have much to do with capitalism. Corporatism doesn’t rely on ingenuity or self-reliance to accomplish goals, nor is the goal of the capitalist simply to acquire profit. I think to truly understand the issue and the problem, the concept of capitalism has to be divorced from corporatism, just as the concept of socialism rightfully should be divorced from communism.
By berating capitolism as the problem, You are saying You don’t want hard working small businessmen to be able to make a living and maybe get rich from their efforts.
It is not Capitolism that is the problem, but a Government who thinks Capitolism is best served when anything goes.
All the problems with our Capitolistic System is that money rules over Law, right and wrong, and buys our Government.
The people You and Your forefathers voted into office, are the ones who let everything in our country run amuck. Through that same voting the judges were elected or appointed that have disgraced our law.
It is not the systems but the people who fail to control them that are the problem, and the love of money.
I’m kind of curious, how do people succeed at controlling the system? What’s the end goal? What results from having the system under control? How do you get people to get hold of the system?
Also, the word is ‘capitalism’. Capitol would be like the Capitol Building in Washington, DC. Unless the typo was intentional and you’re perhaps trying to stealth criticize the government?
In respect you I fear are missing the main point. (Or maybe just don’t want to talk about it.)
Using my words, capitalism is obsolete.
That said, just what percentage of small businessmen in this country in the past 30 years have become wealthy at the level of those serving in the banking and insurance industries and other large monopolies?
As long as the GOP is able to sell to small business the impossible dream that capitalism as it is manipulated today is friendly to them they will do it. And PT Barnum in his grave is jealous.
In Adam Smith’s day, corporations were special privileges granted by the state; therefore he was against them.
What are you talking about?
Yeah, that’ll work.
As far as controlling the system You don’t vote in the two parties assholes for fifty years. You hold the people You vote for to account and if they don’t vote the way You would like let them know.
We the people are so stupid we can’t understand what the Constitution laid out for us. It said we would send our representative to Washington for a short time to represent us. Thus giving us a Government of the people, by the people, and for the people.
We let the politicians convince us and themselves we send them to Washington to decide for us. This is not representation when they do what they think, and care not what we think.
The people still don’t get the difference between a representative, and someone we trust to decide everything for us, whether we like it or not.
You control the system by voting for good people, not affiliated with either party. Letting them know your likes and dislikes on their votes, and fire their asses if they don’t do what you like.
There is no hope for this Country, because people think if they vote that is all the effort they need to control our Government. It’s just so easy to let their guy or girl do as He or she thinks. They can’t see that everything from taxes to crisis’s are because they let these people decide everything.
The Capitolism is exactly what we have, because we have let the Capitol give every crook a free hand.
Like I said in the essay I wrote (see above):
In short, the “solution” of throwing people out of office by “holding them to account” is insufficient, because in throwing them out you replace them with other people who are likely to do the same thing as the last ones you threw out.
You really do need to pursue an economic as well as a political initiative — that’s why this is a specifically anticapitalist diary.
Keep chipping away, as we must.
It is so difficult to suspend the personifying (anthropomorphizing) of abstractions and processes. Our lizard brains tell us “it has to be an evil or good person.” Or in the case of lizards — “a really big sucker of a lizard.” (g)