As I’ve said before — The Left-Right Paradigm Is False (Link)(Link), and that it is simply a political straw man being used to opiate the majority of voters into thinking the politicians they support have some political philosophy that aligns with their own.
Barry Ritholtz eloquently argues that the real political battle is Corporatism vs. The Individual. I happen to agree with him, and I also think that the majority of American Citizens instinctively understand the truth in what he is saying. This issue is the elephant in the room. And the first political party or movement that successfully articulates a position in defense of and in support of the individual will be certainly garner the support of the majority of voters in this country.
Mr. Ritholtz article reprinted below*:
The Left Right Paradigm is Over: Its You vs. Corporations
Posted By Barry Ritholtz On September 27, 2010 @ 9:30 am on www.ritholtz.com
Every generation or so, a major secular shift takes place that shakes up the existing paradigm. It happens in industry, finance, literature, sports, manufacturing, technology, entertainment, travel, communication, etc.
I would like to discuss the paradigm shift that is occurring in politics.
For a long time, American politics has been defined by a Left/Right dynamic. It was Liberals versus Conservatives on a variety of issues. Pro-Life versus Pro-Choice, Tax Cuts vs. More Spending, Pro-War vs Peaceniks, Environmental Protections vs. Economic Growth, Pro-Union vs. Union-Free, Gay Marriage vs. Family Values, School Choice vs. Public Schools, Regulation vs. Free Markets.
The new dynamic, however, has moved past the old Left Right paradigm. We now live in an era defined by increasing Corporate influence and authority over the individual. These two “interest groups” – I can barely suppress snorting derisively over that phrase – have been on a headlong collision course for decades, which came to a head with the financial collapse and bailouts. Where there is massive concentrations of wealth and influence, there will be abuse of power. The Individual has been supplanted in the political process nearly entirely by corporate money, legislative influence, campaign contributions, even free speech rights.
This may not be a brilliant insight, but it is surely an overlooked one. It is now an Individual vs. Corporate debate – and the Humans are losing.
Consider:
• Many of the regulations that govern energy and banking sector were written by Corporations;
• The biggest influence on legislative votes is often Corporate Lobbying;
• Corporate ability to extend copyright far beyond what original protections amounts to a taking of public works for private corporate usage;
• PAC and campaign finance by Corporations has supplanted individual donations to elections;
• The individuals’ right to seek redress in court has been under attack for decades, limiting their options.
• DRM and content protection undercuts the individual’s ability to use purchased content as they see fit;
• Patent protections are continually weakened. Deep pocketed corporations can usurp inventions almost at will;
• The Supreme Court has ruled that Corporations have Free Speech rights equivalent to people; (So much for original intent!)
None of these are Democrat/Republican [1] conflicts, but rather, are corporate vs. individual issues.
For those of you who are stuck in the old Left/Right debate, you are missing the bigger picture. Consider this about the Bailouts: It was a right-winger who bailed out all of the big banks, Fannie Mae, and AIG in the first place; then his left winger successor continued to pour more money into the fire pit.
What difference did the Left/Right dynamic make? Almost none whatsoever.
How about government spending? The past two presidents are regarded as representative of the Left Right paradigm – yet they each spent excessively, sponsored unfunded tax cuts, plowed money into military adventures and ran enormous deficits. Does Left Right really make a difference when it comes to deficits and fiscal responsibility? (Apparently not).
What does it mean when we can no longer distinguish between the actions of the left and the right? If that dynamic no longer accurately distinguishes what occurs, why are so many of our policy debates framed in Left/Right terms?
In many ways, American society is increasingly less married to this dynamic: Party Affiliation continues to fall, approval of Congress is at record lows, and voter participation hovers at very low rates.
There is some pushback already taking place against the concentration of corporate power: Mainstream corporate media has been increasingly replaced with user created content – YouTube and Blogs are increasingly important to news consumers (especially younger users). Independent voters are an increasingly larger share of the US electorate. And I suspect that much of the pushback against the Elizabeth Warren’s concept of a Financial Consumer Protection Agency plays directly into this Corporate vs. Individual fight.
But the battle lines between the two groups have barely been drawn. I expect this fight will define American politics over the next decade.
Keynes vs Hayek? Friedman vs Krugman? Those are the wrong intellectual debates. Its you vs. Tony Hayward, BP CEO, You vs. Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman Sachs CEO. And you are losing . . .
~~~
This short commentary was conceived not to be an exhaustive research, but rather, to stimulate debate. There are many more examples and discussions we can have about this, and I hope readers do so in comments.
But my bottom line is this: If you see the world in terms of Left & Right, you really aren’t seeing the world at all . . .
[*Ed. note: Ritholtz article reprinted here in full with permission.]



9 Comments




People are starting to talk about this fact. I think it is mainly because in the past they have never had to. The majority of people have had no interest in the politics of this country. As long as there were good jobs available and an easy path towards a material richness; the average individual has not cared.
I love the individual vs corporatism framing of the idea. That is the best way to express the idea to everyone. Lets toss the liberal and conservative labels out the window because they do not mean anything substantial anymore.
The corporatism and individual labels are more closely aligned with the federalist and democratic republican labels of the 1790′s.
It’s classic class warfare. The ruling class vs. the working class. Traditionally, that would be right and left, respectively. What it’s not about is Democrats vs. Republicans. They are both tools of the ruling class.
good post- that has been my reality from before Obama
Obama is not a Socialist he is a Corporatist
Bush is not a convervative he is a Corporatist
Clinton was not a “Middle of the Road” Democract just a Corporatist
Bush one-Corporatist Reagan the anti-christ Corporatist and most over rated President ever
Yep.
Yup. And these problems with corporations and politicians being in bed together aren’t new, they’re as old as the Republic.
Our revolution was about the English royals and politicans being in bed with the East India Company.
And Abraham Lincoln saw the problem rearing it’s ugly head here in America:
– U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, Nov. 21, 1864
(letter to Col. William F. Elkins)
Ref: The Lincoln Encyclopedia, Archer H. Shaw (Macmillan, 1950, NY)
And this one really hits home:
speech to Illinois legislature, Jan. 1837.
See Vol. 1, p. 24 of Lincoln’s Complete Works,
ed. by Nicolay and Hay, 1905)
And Lincoln was right, horrible corruption between corporations and politicians reached new heights in the eras between the Civil War and the New Deal(Robber Baron era and Gilded Age). And as we peel away all the old New Deal reforms, the old problems come right back to the surface.
The New Deal style reforms might not be the only solution to these problems but one things for sure: The current status quo is entirely unacceptable.
We need a better definition of Corporatism, the old Fascist = Corporatism model put forth by Benito Mussolini doesn’t seem to fit the US model very well.
Yes, indeed.
Republicans and Democrats are Tweedledum and Tweedledee because they are different sides of the same coin. There is little difference between them because they seek to please the ruling class and be financially rewarded in return.
They do not care about the working class, except around election time when they practice the dark arts of criminality — deception, obfuscation, and manipulation — to win votes.
We the People and our interests are of no concern to them. No one represents us and national elections are farcical and clattering displays of cacophony like wind chimes made of tin cans in which the various candidates differentiate themselves from each other by the passion of their contempt for the left.
“It doesn’t take a weatherman to tell which way the wind blows.”
Voting. Is. A. Waste. Of. Time.
Yeah, it’s not really national, it’s global. It feels pretty fascist at the national level but it’s really Imperial in nature. Imperial Corporatism?
And the players aren’t just American Oligarchs. How ever little American Oligarchs may actually care about the US public, you can bet that foreign Oligarchs probably have even less reason to care.
You’re not going to like this, but here goes…
This whole mess is a rehash of the worldwide anti-monarchial revolution that took place during the last three centuries.
On the one side, the People, composed of equal (by definition) human beings who share certain rights and obligations, but most especially, their mortality (and, I guess, hope and goodwill for the children and their future). On the other, some self-aggrandizing social network with much more centralized money-, guns- and power-grabbing tentacles, virtual immortality, and a divine indifference to the future of the People, compared to its raw greed in the short term.
The argument between People Power versus Organized (Crime) Tyranny is merely being re-rehashed under a different guise. Humanity versus stupid greed. The mammalian versus the reptilian mind.
And if you don’t think this is a Left/Right thing, it is because you, as a typical American, have never seen, read or heard from a real American Leftist in your life. Thanks to Gestapo-like tactics and systematic media strangulation for an entire century, America can boast of a rather large party of Constitutional Conservative Centrists (whining hand-wringers all, while they sell the farm away to) a Right, a far Right and a nut-job element panting for the Apocalypse and/or a Thousand Year Reich swathed in Red, White and Blue – but no organized Left whatsoever.
This political amputation and its effects on amputee American politics, the article you have posted above only tends to worsen. Congratulations.