Journalist Chris Hedges is one of my favourite rabble-rousers. This article is re-printed from Truthdig.
By Chris Hedges
By Chris Hedges
CHRIS HEDGES |
Neither believes the current economic system is sustainable.
And each calls for mass movements willing to carry out repeated acts of civil
disobedience to disrupt and delegitimize corporate power.
“If you continue to go down the wrong road, at a certain
point something happens,” Saul said during our meeting Wednesday in Toronto,
where he lives. “At a certain point when the financial system is wrong it falls
apart. And it did. And it will fall apart again.”
“The collapse started in 1973,” Saul continued. “There were
a series of sequential collapses afterwards. The fascinating thing is that
between 1850 and 1970 we put in place all sorts of mechanisms to stop collapses
which we can call liberalism, social democracy or Red Toryism.
It was an understanding that we can’t have boom-and-bust cycles. We can’t have
poverty-stricken people. We can’t have starvation.”
Perhaps people ‘won’t take it anymore’
“The reason today’s collapses are not leading to what
happened in the 18th century and the 19th century is because all these safety
nets, although under attack, are still in place. But each time we have a
collapse we come out of it stripping more of the protection away. At a certain
point we will find ourselves back in the pre-protection period. At that point
we will get a collapse that will be incredibly dramatic. I have no idea what it
will look like. A revolution from the left? A revolution from the right? Is it
violence followed by state violence? Is it the collapse of the last meaningful
edges of democracy? Is it a sudden decision by a critical mass of people that
they are not going to take it anymore?”
This devolution of the economic system has
been accompanied by corporations’ seizure of nearly all forms of political and
social power. The corporate elite, through a puppet political class and
compliant intellectuals, pundits and press, still employs the language of a
capitalist democracy. But what has arisen is a new kind of control, inverted
totalitarianism, which Wolin brilliantly dissects in his
book “Democracy Incorporated.”
Inverted totalitarianism does not replicate past
totalitarian structures, such as fascism and communism. It is therefore harder
to immediately identify and understand. There is no blustering demagogue. There
is no triumphant revolutionary party. There are no ideologically drenched and
emotional mass political rallies. The old symbols, the old iconography and the
old language of democracy are held up as virtuous. The old systems of
governance—electoral politics, an independent judiciary, a free press and the
Constitution—appear to be venerated. But, similar to what happened during the
late Roman Empire, all the institutions that make democracy possible have been
hollowed out and rendered impotent and ineffectual.
The corporate state controls elections
The corporate state, Wolin told me at his Oregon home, is
“legitimated by elections it controls.” It exploits laws that once protected
democracy to extinguish democracy; one example is allowing unlimited corporate
campaign contributions in the name of our First Amendment right to free speech
and our right to petition the government as citizens. “It perpetuates politics
all the time,” Wolin said, “but a politics that is not political.” The endless
election cycles, he said, are an example of politics without politics, driven
not by substantive issues but manufactured political personalities and opinion
polls. There is no national institution in the United States “that can be
described as democratic,” he said.
The mechanisms that once allowed the citizen to be a
participant in power—from participating in elections to enjoying the rights of
dissent and privacy—have been nullified. Money has replaced the vote, Wolin
said, and corporations have garnered total power without using the cruder forms
of traditional totalitarian control: concentration camps, enforced ideological
conformity and the physical suppression of dissent. They will avoid such
measures “as long as that dissent remains ineffectual,” he said. “The
government does not need to stamp out dissent. The uniformity of imposed public
opinion through the corporate media does a very effective job.”
The state has obliterated privacy through mass surveillance,
a fundamental precondition for totalitarian rule, and in ways that are patently
unconstitutional has stripped citizens of the rights to a living wage, benefits
and job security. And it has destroyed institutions, such as labor unions, that
once protected workers from corporate abuse.
Inverted totalitarianism, Wolin has written, is “only in
part a state-centered phenomenon.” It also represents “the political coming of
age of corporate power and the political demobilization of the citizenry.”
Corporate power works in secret. It is unseen by the public
and largely anonymous. Politicians and citizens alike often seem blissfully
unaware of the consequences of inverted totalitarianism, Wolin said in the
interview. And because it is a new form of totalitarianism we do not recognize
the radical change that has gradually taken place. Our failure to grasp the new
configuration of power has permitted the corporate state to rob us through
judicial fiat, a process that culminates in a disempowered population and
omnipotent corporate rulers. Inverted totalitarianism, Wolin said, “projects
power upwards.” It is “the antithesis of constitutional power.”
Democracy not working
“Democracy has been turned upside down,” Wolin said. “It is
supposed to be a government for the people, by the people. But it has become an
organized form of government dominated by groups that are only vaguely, if at
all, responsible or responsive to popular needs and popular demands. At the
same time, it retains a patina of democracy. We still have elections. They are
relatively free. We have a relatively free media. But what is missing is a
crucial, continuous opposition that has a coherent position, that is not just
saying no, no, no, that has an alternative and ongoing critique of what is
wrong and what needs to be remedied.”
Wolin and Saul, echoing Karl Marx, view unfettered and
unregulated capitalism as a revolutionary force that has within it the seeds of
its own self-annihilation. It is and always has been deeply antagonistic to
participatory democracy, they said. Democratic states must heavily regulate and
control capitalism, for once capitalism is freed from outside restraint it
seeks to snuff out democratic institutions and abolish democratic rights that
are seen—often correctly—as an impediment to maximizing profit. The more
ruthless and pronounced global corporate capitalism becomes, the greater the
loss of democratic space.
“Capitalism is destructive because it has to
eliminate customs, mores, political values, even institutions that present any
kind of credible threat to the autonomy of the economy,” Wolin said. “That is
where the battle lies. Capitalism wants an autonomous economy. It wants a
political order subservient to the needs of the economy. The [capitalist’s]
notion of an economy, while broadly based in the sense of a relatively free
entrance and property that is relatively widely dispersed, is as elitist as any
aristocratic system.”
Wolin and Saul said they expect the state, especially in an
age of terminal economic decline, to employ more violent and draconian forms of
control to keep restive populations in check. This coercion, they said, will
fuel discontent and unrest, which will further increase state repression.
The West has military tools
“People with power use the tools they have,” Saul said. “As
the West has gradually lost its economic tool it has turned to what remains,
which are military tools and violence. The West still has the most weaponry.
Even if they are doing very badly economically in a global sense, they can use
the weaponry to replace the economics or replace competition.”
“They decided that capitalism and the market was about the
right to have the cheapest possible goods,” Saul said. “That is what
competition meant. This is a lie. No capitalist philosopher ever said that. As
you bring the prices down below the capacity to produce them in a middle-class
country you commit suicide. As you commit suicide you have to ask, ‘How do we
run this place?’ And you have to run it using these other methods—bread and
circuses, armies, police and prisons.”
“The reform class, those who believe that reform is
possible, those who believe in humanism, justice and inclusion, has become
incredibly lazy over the last 30 or 40 years,” Saul said. “The last hurrah was
really in the 1970s. Since then they think that getting a tenured position at
Harvard and waiting to get a job in Washington is actually an action, as
opposed to passivity.”
“One of the things we have seen over the last 30 or 40 years
is a gradual silencing of people who are doctors or scientists,” Saul said.
“They are silenced by the managerial methodology of contracts. You sign an
employment contract that says everything you know belongs to the people who
hired you. You are not allowed to speak out. Take that [right] away and you
have a gigantic educated group who has a great deal to say and do, but they are
tied up. They don’t know how to untie themselves. They come out with their
Ph.D. They are deeply in debt. The only way they can get a job is to give up
their intellectual freedom. They are prisoners.”
Working outside the system
Resistance, Wolin and Saul agreed, will begin locally, with
communities organizing to form autonomous groups that practice direct democracy
outside the formal power structures, including the two main political parties.
These groups will have to address issues such as food security, education,
local governance, economic cooperation and consumption. And they will have to
sever themselves, as much as possible, from the corporate economy.
“Richard Rorty talked about how you take power,” Saul said.
“You go out and win the school board elections. You hold the school board. You
reform the schools. Then you win the towns. And you stay there. And you hold it
for 30 to 40 years. And gradually you bring in reforms that improve things. It
isn’t about three years in Washington on a contract. There has to be a critical
mass of leaders willing to ruin their lives as part of a large group that
figures out how to get power and hold power at all of these levels, gradually
putting reforms in place.”
I asked them if a professional revolutionary class,
revolutionists dedicated solely to overthrowing the corporate state, was a
prerequisite. Would we have to model any credible opposition after Vladimir
Lenin’s disciplined and rigidly controlled Bolsheviks or Machiavelli’s
republican conspirators? Wolin and Saul, while deeply critical of Lenin’s
ideology of state capitalism and state terror, agreed that creating a class
devoted full time to radical change was essential to fomenting change.
There must be people, they said, willing to dedicate their
lives to confronting the corporate state outside traditional institutions and
parties. Revolt, for a few, must become a vocation. The alliance between mass
movements and a professional revolutionary class, they said, offers the best
chance for an overthrow of corporate power.
“It is extremely important that people are willing to go
into the streets,” Saul said. “Democracy has always been about the willingness
of people to go into the streets. When the Occupy movement started I was
pessimistic. I felt it could only go a certain distance. But the fact that a
critical mass of people was willing to go into the streets and stay there,
without being organized by a political party or a union, was a real statement.
If you look at that, at what is happening in Canada, at the movements in
Europe, the hundreds of thousands of people in Spain in the streets, you are
seeing for the first time since the 19th century or early 20th century people
coming into the streets in large numbers without a real political structure.
“These movements aren’t going to take power. But they are a
sign that power and the respect for power is falling apart. What happens next?
It could be dribbled away. But I think there is the possibility of a new
generation coming in and saying we won’t accept this. That is how you get
change. A new generation comes along and says no, no, no. They build their
lives on the basis of that no.”
Skilled organizers needed
But none of these mass mobilizations, Saul and Wolin
emphasized, will work unless there is a core of professional organizers.
“Anarchy is a beautiful idea, but someone has to run the
stuff,” Saul said. “It has to be run over a long period of time. Look at the
rise and fall of the Chinese empires. For thousands of years it has been about
the rise and fall of the water systems. Somebody has to run the water system.
Somebody [in modern times] has to keep the electricity going. Somebody has to
make the hospitals work.”
“You need a professional or elite class devoted to profound
change,” Saul said. “If you want to get power you have to be able to hold it.
And you have to be able to hold it long enough to change the direction. The
neoconservatives understood this. They have always been Bolsheviks. They are
the Bolsheviks of the right. Their methodology is the methodology of the
Bolsheviks. They took over political parties by internal coups d’état. They
worked out, scientifically, what things they needed to do and in what order to
change the structures of power. They have done it stage by stage. And we are
living the result of that. The liberals sat around writing incomprehensible
laws and boring policy papers. They were unwilling to engage in the real fight
that was won by a minute group of extremists.”
“You have to understand power to reform things,” Saul said.
“If you don’t understand power you get blown away by the guy who does. We are
missing people who believe in justice and at the same time understand how tough
power and politics are, how to make real choices. And these choices are often
quite ugly.”
Acclaimed U.S. journalist,
author, radical and Pulitzer Prize winner Chris Hedges is one of the great
moral voices of our age. He has the rare combination of decades of experience
reporting from conflict zones in Central America, the Middle East, Africa, and
the Balkans and the erudition one would expect from a student of Christian
ethics and the classics at Harvard University.
This article is reprinted
from Truthdig, where his columns appear every
Monday.
Hedges prizes the
truth over news and facts. “Because the press is not concerned with
distinguishing truth from news, because it lacks a moral compass, it has become
nothing more than courtiers to the elite, shameless hedonists of power and
absurd court propagandists,” he says. Hedges insists that unless we begin to
stand fast around moral imperatives, ones we cannot abandon and must be willing
to fight the formal systems of power to advance, we will be complicit in our
self-annihilation.
Pretty scarey
ReplyDeleteGreat work Nick . . . . . be well. People need to see this type of journalism.
ReplyDeleteIf I had the skill to write the truth this brilliantly I would want everyone to read it. I would put it on YouTube and offer it to every group that has any inkling that democracy has been destroyed while we watched the puppet masters play with us. When will the people realize, the Emperor is wearing no clothes!
ReplyDelete