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(en) Anarkismo.net: There’s No Hope Above Us, Only Amongst Us by Thomas - Miami Autonomy & Solidarity
Date
Fri, 23 Nov 2012 23:06:27 +0200
The Presidential Election, Neoliberalism, and The Way Forward ---- With the recent
re-election of Barack Obama as President of the United States, many are rejoicing and
breathing a sigh of relief. There’s a widespread belief amongst those who elected him that
he is looking out for us and will fight for us. Unfortunately, besides a few token
gestures that may occur during the next four years, his tenure in office is likely to be
both a disappointment and one in which the interests of the elite classes are served at
the expense of the popular classes. As described below, this has to do with structural,
historical and social factors that have been ensuring, and continue to ensure, that this
is the case regardless of who is in office. However, there is hope; we’re just looking for
it in the wrong places.
With the recent re-election of Barack Obama as President of the United States, many are
rejoicing and breathing a sigh of relief. There’s a widespread belief amongst those who
elected him that he is looking out for us and will fight for us. Unfortunately, besides a
few token gestures that may occur during the next four years, his tenure in office is
likely to be both a disappointment and one in which the interests of the elite classes are
served at the expense of the popular classes. As described below, this has to do with
structural, historical and social factors that have been ensuring, and continue to ensure,
that this is the case regardless of who is in office. However, there is hope; we’re just
looking for it in the wrong places.
The Period We’re In: Neo-liberalism
We can only understand our political and economic situation today by looking at our
history. In the past 30 years, we’ve seen a shift politically in the United States. This
shift is sometimes understood as an outgrowth of the ideas outlined by then, future
Supreme Court Justice, Lewis Powell, in a private memorandum he sent to Eugene Syndor of
the US Chamber of Commerce[i]. This private memorandum laments the role of the left
throughout society- in the media, in the courts, at the university, and so on- and argues
for a deliberate and aggressive attack on this influence in conjunction with its
corresponding replacement with business/ elite interests and ideology. The corresponding
business attack- including the utilization of media, campaign contributions, think tanks-
developed in the 1970’s, became dominant in the 1980’s and continues until today.
At the heart of this offensive, known as neo-liberalism, is an attack on institutions,
services and ideas of the popular classes, while correspondingly emphasizing profit,
privatization, deregulation, and individualism. During the 80’s this included, among other
things, a wide-ranging attack on private sector unions[ii], massive tax cuts for higher
income individuals[iii], and the gutting of social services for the poor and working
families[iv]. However despite President Ronald Regean’s rhetoric about cutting spending
and decreasing the government, he actually increased government spending, replacing social
programs with massive increases in military spending[v]. Reagan’s ideological counterpart
in the UK, Margaret Thatcher famously propagandized that unfortunately for those that
these right-wing reforms hurt, “there is no alternative” (which came to be known as “TINA”
for short).
These ideas and this influence continued and have affected not just Republican
Politicians; but Democrats as well. To name a few examples, Bill Clinton cut welfare
services[vi], ended half-century old financing regulations that were set-up to avoid
2007-2008 style financial meltdowns[vii], and was even considering privatizing social
secruity[viii]. Some more recent examples from our newly re-elected president, Barack
Obama include his abandonment of proposals for universal healthcare or even a “public
option” in favor of a privatized health care program that originated with the right wing
think tank, the Heritage Foundation[ix], support for the necessity of bailing out the
banks[x], and moving forward with an attack on Public Education and teachers through the
market-inspired, Race to The Top Initiative[xi]. This final initiative, as discussed in
the referenced source from the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), may have been only
possible because Obama was – at least perceived as- a popular, progressively-inclined
Democrat. AEI compares this to Nixon being able to go to China when a Democrat never could.
Modes of Attack
Business and moneyed interests have been extremely successful in gutting social services,
attacking unions, freeing capital (while keeping labor restrained) nationally and
internationally, and benefiting themselves at the expense of the majority of us. Their
ongoing class war (as Warren Buffet acknowledged and characterized these efforts[xii]) has
caused historic rates of inequality[xiii] despite a strong base of support for more
egalitarian economics existing in the country. In fact, some polls suggest that 30% of the
overall population of the United States believes not just in a more egalitarian outlook,
but actually prefers socialism to capitalism, and the majority of 18-29 year olds.[xiv]
Below provides some detail as to how elites have been able to bypass the views and
sentiments of large segments of the population as well as why voting for elected
representatives to make decisions on our behalf can’t fundamentally address our issues
within the popular classes.
First, candidates aren’t only disproportionately from the elite classes[xv]; but they also
need money and cooperation from others within the rich and powerful classes to get elected
and get things done both directly and indirectly[xvi]. The 2012 US Presidential Election
cost approximately $5.8 Billion[xvii]. Sure there were a number of individuals giving
small amounts to campaigns; but the elite classes are able to throw their weight around
with vastly larger sums of disposable income. In return for massive financial support,
there is an expectation of policies that help, or at least do not hurt such interests.
Besides the campaign contributions, there are also ongoing and vigorous lobbying efforts
by moneyed interests to ensure politicians support their interests[xviii].
Any efforts by some elected officials to exceed the scope of such powerful interests are
often thwarted by other elected officials who aren’t willing to risk the consequences of
offending elite interests. President Obama even recently acknowledged publicly- after
having one of the strongest mandates for change in decades following the abysmal end to
the Bush reign, two years (2009- 2011) of a Democrat-controlled House of Representatives
and Senate to work with, and still encountering resistance within his own party to even
moderate changes- that: “The most important lesson I’ve learned is that you can’t change
Washington from the inside. You can only change it from the outside.”[xix] Some argue that
electing more progressive Democrats in congress could change that dynamic. But, looking
abroad, the 1973 experience of Salvador Allende in Chile is an example of how the elite
classes have no problem dropping democracy if the popular classes threaten their power
democratically. If this seems too long ago, or too dissimilar a country, more recently we
can look at the response of elite classes in Europe to the situation in Greece and Italy-
some call it a banker’s coup[xx]- when their democratically elected officials weren’t
going far enough in ignoring the interests of the people to impose the demanded austerity
measures of European and international bankers and politicians.
So then how should we understand the relation of the elected politicians to the people
with their constant campaigning, speeches, press conferences and other forms of public
interaction? While internally some elites, such as Citi-Group, talk frankly about the
United States not really being a democratic society; but rather a “plutonomy”[xxi] where
only the rich matter, the elected representatives still seek the support of the people and
need to justify their democratic legitimacy much more than a king would need to justify
that they are serving in the interests of the people they rule. Within the ruling classes,
there are also competing interests and legitimately different ideas about the best way to
relate to the people while maintaining a system which, first and foremost, benefits them
and their class. But this support can be thought of in some ways, as Noam Chomsky famously
called, “manufactured consent”[xxii]. Just as large businesses have or contract public
relations specialists, departments or firms, the government and elite classes
communication is almost completely based on manipulative public relations strategies. They
are supported by ideological think-tanks that are very deliberate and effective in framing
messages, manipulating information, developing policies and propagating memes to build the
popular support that will allow them to carry out their objectives. The Heritage
Foundation, The Cato Institute and the American Enterprise Institute are some of the
better known and more influential business and right wing think-tanks started or
dramatically expanded shortly following the Powell Memorandum and ensuing Neo-liberal
assault. All have contributed in crafting, framing and propagating ideas and messages that
have facilitated in shifting public opinion to allow for political, social and economic
changes that favor the elite classes. Perhaps the most well-known example in the early
neo-liberal period of such an ideological tactic being utilized was the “welfare queen”
meme used by Ronald Regan in his 1976 Presidential campaign and throughout his tenure in
Office, from 1981 to 1989, to attack social services. Such memes are developed, propagated
and then constantly repeated by the media to promote certain ideological positions and set
the framework for enacting policies corresponding to these positions. More recent examples
include: “stop throwing money at the problem” or referring to teachers as lazy and
unaccountable, to attack public education; “death panels” and the “government take-over of
healthcare”, to fight a public option and other minimal healthcare reforms; “punishing
success”, “hurting job-creators” and “the death tax” to refer to taxing the rich and
inheritance taxes; “weapons of mass destruction” and “they hate our freedoms”, to justify
going to war in Iraq and other military engagement. These memes don’t even need to be
cited because they have been propagated so much that it would be unusual for anyone not to
be familiar with them; and of course, this is a key part of the strategy.
With advertizing usually bringing in more than double the revenue of subscriptions[xxiii]
for newspapers, the majority of revenue for cable news[xxiv], and news reporters dependent
upon the powerful for leaks, exclusive coverage or priority on breaking news, the news
media is often shaped and limited by the interests and expectations of businesses and
other elites behind these funding and supply lines. Media is a business, first and
foremost, and despite the honorable efforts of many journalists to create room within
these constraints to prioritize true journalism, with Fox News- perhaps the embodiment of
right wing public relations ideological framing – currently leading the industry, the task
becomes ever harder.
If media is a business, constrained by the force of the profit motive, then what about
other sources of public knowledge such as our schools and universities? Increasingly,
public universities are becoming more privatized; and even the heads of flagship
universities are acknowledging this.[xxv] With public-private “partnerships” come funding
streams for research that often create a conflict of interest for the funders who-
directly or indirectly- pressure researchers to produce results consistent with funders
interests[xxvi]. This private influence has gone hand in hand with the decreased autonomy
and security of researchers and academics, making them even more vulnerable to this
influence, or punishable if they don’t succumb to it.[xxvii]
This is assault is also occurring within the K-12 education system. In addition to
teachers and other public sector workers being amongst the last strongholds of organized
labor in the United States after the neo-liberal offensive has decimated most of organized
labor in the private sector, the educational system is also seen by elite interests as
ripe for profit opportunities[xxviii]. In addition, schools are a key site at which much
of the ideology of the existing society is produced and reproduced. Much is at stake with
regards to who controls and influences such a system. The movement for the privatization
of the k-12 education system has been aided through ideologically-driven, so-called
“documentaries”, such as “Waiting for Superman” and “Won’t Back Down”. These films attempt
to discredit public education and proclaim the virtues of privatized educational models,
such as charter schooling,[xxix] despite ongoing evidence that even by their own
standards, public schools with unionized teachers do no worse or even better than
charters[xxx] even without controlling for the self-selective pool that charters draw
from. Even within the public school system, private interests can drive curriculum and
manipulate “reform” from private textbook companies, to private testing firms, to online
learning companies[xxxi]. President Obama’s Race to the Top Initiative further contributes
to this tendency by pushing market-based “performance-pay” schemes onto cash-strapped
public schools in return for funding[xxxii].
Looking to Each Other For Hope
But there have certainly been gains for the popular classes throughout history. These have
come not from politicians leading, but rather reacting to popular movements that were
forcing change from below. So let’s examine a few of the more dramatic times of reform in
our history: The Civil War was both provoked by the actions of abolitionists- such as John
Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry, the continuing success of the Underground Railroad,
recurrent slave rebellions and militant agitating and organizing in the North- and was
turned from a war to “Save the Union” into a war to end slavery, after slaves engaged in a
massive freeing of themselves[xxxiii]. Contrary to popular belief, the Emancipation
Proclamation, didn’t free the slaves, but was a military tactic only freed slaves that
Lincoln had no control over- those in the still rebelling areas of the Confederacy- while
keeping those he did have control over in bondage.[xxxiv] The 13th Amendment to the US
Constitution, banning slavery, only made legal what millions of slaves had already done in
practice by that point: freeing themselves and consequently crippling the capacity of the
Confederacy.
With regards to the social democratic reforms of the 1930s, Stanford’s Hoover Institute
points out[xxxv] that the New Deal programs were actually an attempt to co-opt strong
popular movements, powerful left radicalism and revolutionary sentiment, in an effort to
save capitalism. Further reforms during this era such as the Wagner Act protecting the
rights of workers to unionize only acknowledged what labor unions had claimed through
their power, strength and struggle through their activity and gains for over a half-century.
Perhaps the most memorable recent period of reform was the Civil Rights/ Black Freedom
movement peaking in the 1950s and 1960s. Again, the law- The Civil Rights Act of 1964- was
a reaction to the movement. Politicians were forced to accept change due to ongoing
pressure from sit-ins, protests, boycotts, community programs, armed self-defense and
widespread activity and militancy of organizers and activists within the movement.
Organized, consistent and militant popular movements have been the clearest way throughout
history to make gains.
But even the methods we have used historically are under attack. Popular movements are
coming under the influence of business and moneyed interests as many groups and activities
have become legal non-profit organizations. With non-profitization, organizers and
movements have had to rely increasingly on the constraining and narrowed-focus of
foundation funding sources, business laws, professionalization cultures and organizer
dependency dynamics. In the past decade, consciousness of these dynamics, and developed
critiques of this situation, have come forth in books such as Incite!’s The Revolution
Will Not Be Funded, where they coined the term, and described the dynamics of, the
Non-profit Industrial Complex[xxxvi].
In addition to constraining popular movements, the elite classes have also attempted to
co-opt their methods. In 2009-2011, the supposedly anti-elite Tea Party “movement” (a
reactionary, and –many argue- fake grassroots tendency with wealthy backers[xxxvii]) were
able to force politicians, or as least provide them with the perception of public
legitimacy, to reject an overwhelmingly popular universal healthcare public
option[xxxviii] and then later focus on perhaps the worst possible plan of action in the
middle of a recession (or “slow-growth”, high-unemployment economy)[xxxix] according to
any legitimate economist: cutting government spending. Fareed Zakaria argues not only do
economists know that cutting spending hurts growth and costs jobs theoretically; but they
know it does in practice. So the European and International elites that are imposing
austerity measures (and by consequence economic recession/depression) on Portugal, Spain,
Italy and Greece know it will harm their economies, witness the economic devastation it
causes, and still continue pushing for it because their priorities aren’t the same as the
popular classes of these countries.[xl] By focusing on, and forcing the issue of, deficit
reduction while the US economy was weak, the Tea Party – and its elite backers- ensured
that they could capitalize on the crisis to cut social programs for the popular classes.
Conclusion
The ongoing assault is widespread, organized and comprehensive; and it moves forward
regardless of who’s in office. Already President Obama and the Democrats facing the
“Fiscal Cliff” (a combination of self-imposed, automatic spending cuts and tax hikes
coming in 2013), have been willing to put social programs such as Medicare on the chopping
block[xli] even though the deficit was largely caused by Bush Era Tax cuts and the weak
economy after a financier-provoked crisis[xlii]. But if there are already signs that Obama
and the Democrats are going to give us another four years of crumbs, if the elite classes
are continuing to wage top-down class war, and if popular movements are even themselves
tempered and controlled, what is the solution? We must stop looking up to find hope and
start looking at each other. We’ll never match the elite classes in money or control of
positions in the hierarchy (without being controlled, corrupted or crushed); but what we
do have are the numbers. We need to fight elite top-down power with popular, bottom-up
power. We have to organize ourselves in our workplaces, neighborhoods, schools and
communities to force change, rather than hoping someone from above will do it for us. As
we advance together, building egalitarian, anti-oppressive and directly-democratic power
from below, we will make gains that force small reforms to make our lives better in the
short-term. In the medium term, we will build our collective capacity, consciousness,
skills and solidarity, enabling us to grow our collective power while we make greater and
greater gains and model the society we want to an ever greater degree. In the long-run, we
need to completely replace the current systems, institutions and cultural modes of
hierarchy, domination, oppression and inequality with directly-democratic decision-making;
egalitarian, needs-based, accountable economics; and anti-oppressive, respectful,
liberatory human relations. Frederick Douglass once said, “Find out just what any people
will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong
which will be imposed upon them.”[xliii]Let’s start by attacking quiet submission, as we
build towards ending all imposition.
[i] http://www.pbs.org/wnet/supremecourt/personality/sources_document13.html
[ii] http://www.baltimoresun.com/bal-bz.unions08jun08,0,1073570.story
[iii] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:US_high-income_effective_tax_rates.png
[iv] http://useconomy.about.com/od/Politics/p/President-Ronald-Reagan-Economic-Policies.htm
[v] http://www.heritage.org/research/commentary/2004/06/defending-the-reagan-deficits
[vi]
http://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/23/us/clinton-signs-bill-cutting-welfare-states-in-new-role.html
[vii] http://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/clinton-wanted-social-security-privatized
[viii] http://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/clinton-wanted-social-security-privatized
[ix]
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/06/28/individual-health-care-insurance-mandate-has-long-checkered-past/
[x]
http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/01/27/obama-bailing-out-the-banks-was-necessary-but-i-hated-it/
[xi]
http://www.aei.org/outlook/education/k-12/system-reform/turning-the-tides-president-obama-and-education-reform/
[xii] http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/26/business/yourmoney/26every.html
[xiii] http://assets.motherjones.com/politics/2011/inequality-p25_averagehouseholdincom.png
[xiv] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/29/young-people-socialism_n_1175218.html
[xv]
http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/12/social-status-of-members-of-congress-shifts-policy-toward-rich/
[xvi] http://elections.nytimes.com/2012/campaign-finance/independent-expenditures/totals
[xvii]
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/onpolitics/post/2012/08/2012-election-total-spending-costliest-obama-romney-/1#.UJlmMIVy9e8
[xviii] http://rt.com/usa/news/lobbying-money-wall-street-987/
[xix]
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/OTUS/obama-change-washington-inside/story?id=17284397#.UJmYwYVy9e8
[xx] http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2099350,00.html
[xxi] http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article37243.html
[xxii] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQhEBCWMe44
[xxiii]
http://stateofthemedia.org/files/2012/03/7-Newspaper-Ad-Revenue-Drops-While-Circulation-Revenue-Remains-Stable.png
[xxiv]
http://stateofthemedia.org/2012/cable-cnn-ends-its-ratings-slide-fox-falls-again/cable-by-the-numbers/
[xxv]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/college-inc/post/head-of-major-university-group-weighs-in-on-u-va/2012/10/25/be27a594-1ea6-11e2-9cd5-b55c38388962_blog.html
[xxvi] http://discovermagazine.com/2007/oct/sciences-worst-enemy-private-funding
[xxvii] http://research.yale.edu/laborculture/documents/gilbert_corporate_W&C.pdf
[xxviii] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/02/private-firms-eyeing-prof_n_1732856.html
[xxix]
http://therealnews.com/t2/component/content/article/170-more-blog-posts-from-david-william/1293-wont-back-down-a-movie-that-is-out-to-undermine-public-education-is-playing-now-at-a-theater-near-you
[xxx]
http://www.chicagoreader.com/gyrobase/chicagos-unionized-public-schools-outperform-charter-schools/Content?oid=7559748&showFullText=true
[xxxi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/11/06/the-tangled-webs-of-private-influence-on-public-school-reform/
[xxxii] http://www2.ed.gov/news/pressreleases/2009/07/07242009.html
[xxxiii]
http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/986716?uid=3739600&uid=2129&uid=2&uid=70&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid=21101280612743
[xxxiv] http://www.nps.gov/ncro/anti/emancipation.html
[xxxv] http://www.hoover.org/publications/hoover-digest/article/7076
[xxxvi] http://www.incite-national.org/index.php?s=89
[xxxvii]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/oct/25/tea-party-koch-brothers
[xxxviii] http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/21/health/policy/21poll.html
[xxxix]
http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21565150-short-term-austerity-aftermath-severe-crisis-may-prove-more-painful
[xl]
http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/2012/05/11/fareeds-take-is-democracy-part-of-europes-economic-problems/
[xli] http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/11/12/democrats-and-the-fiscal-cliff/
[xlii]
http://articles.businessinsider.com/2011-07-11/news/30013193_1_budget-deficit-government-spending-tax-collections
[xliii]
http://www.blackpast.org/?q=1857-frederick-douglass-if-there-no-struggle-there-no-progress
Related Link:
http://miamiautonomyandsolidarity.wordpress.com/2012/11/21/theres-no-hope-above-us-only-amongst-us-the-presidential-election-neoliberalism-and-the-way-forward/
http://www.anarkismo.net/article/24343
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