Posts Tagged ‘politics’

Joel Fitzgibbon on the Australian Labor Party

January 1, 2020

Joel Fitzgibbon has a piece in the Herald today, as part of the debate in the Australian Labor party about what it should do to win back government, after its amazing loss. It does not seem to be particularly well thought out, and is probably based on the massive swing against him in an electorate with a big coal industry, which he has blamed on the party being too green.

He starts by mentioning the difficulty of satisfying traditional voters and the “more recently arrived progressive followers.”

By more recent progressives, he presumably means the people who voted for Whitlam in the early 1970s, or even earlier. These people are not recent. They are not an add on, by any normal measure. That he thinks they are, is rather strange in itself.

He is “against a creep to the left,” a creep which seems improbable, given the party’s steady move to the right from the Hawke and Keating days onwards, and the steady loss of union power.

The centre is now what would have been called centre right in those days. Even the Conservative Menzies would be considered a rabid left-winger if people approached his writings without preconceptions, as he thought that people had a right to social security without harassment.

Fitzgibbon wants to win back blue collar workers, which is fair enough – if he had evidence that Labor lost significant numbers of blue collar voters anywhere other than Queensland, where a union was fighting against them.

Some data on Blue collar workers… Randomly picked, and a little old, so I need something better, but…..

29% of people in the labour force are blue-collar workers. This is not much of a base to base your hopes on, when you have close to 100% of all working age and older people voting.

Blue collar workers are apparently under-represented in social service groups, cultural groups and school groups. So they are probably not party members of union members. So they will be hard to get loyalty from. If they are relatively low wage, they will want some wage security, which is not something he mentions as important.

He thinks it is important to reject the Greens, despite the Greens’ firm alliance with Julia Gillard, and their general alliance with Kevin Rudd. It was not the Greens fault that Rudd was deposed, or that Gillard was deposed. It is not clear, why if climate is a priority, then more intensely separating from the Greens than Labor currently does (which is pretty intensely), should also be a priority, unless Labor had better climate and environmental policies – which I doubt it has.

One way of keeping both blue collar and professional voters might be to be separate from the Greens, but make it clear that the Greens are potential allies, and that Labor will not allow greening to diminish jobs; even though there is actually little evidence that being green would lower either jobs or wages. At the moment, anyone with any concern about environment is not going to give Labor their first preference – especially not given his leader’s ongoing promotion of coal and Fitzgibbon’s next proposals

He seems to think that refusing to support increasing oil, gas and coal mines and exports and incidentally killing water supplies and fertility, is the same as “turning our backs on resources-sector workers”, but it is not. It would be if you did not have plans to replace jobs with equally high paying work, or if you did not realise that mining jobs are in decline in any case. As I’ve said before, there are almost no mining jobs in the mega-Adani mine.

I guess this refusal to go against mining corporations is Labor’s official position but it does not have to be. We do not have to destroy our ecology in order to give people good work, and interestingly the survey above states “blue-collar workers gain less meaning from their work than other people gain from theirs.” So they may not be enamoured of their jobs, just of having work and income. It may not be sensible to defend jobs which are both boring and dangerous.

Again, part of Labor’s problem may be that the workforce does see that Labor abandoned them when it introduced the neoliberal reforms of the 1980s and 90s which may well have led to stagnant wages, house price increases, increasing inequality, cut backs in services and so on. Certainly I could imagine that people might not think Labor had any solutions to these problems. His idea that “Hawke and Keating proved Labor can promote and defend these causes without walking away from our traditional base” is probably delusional.

He then promotes religion: “People of faith worshipping in Eltham expect the same respect and freedoms as those worshipping in Everton.” Strangely the survey quoted above reports blue collar workers are even less religious than most other Australians. So you may put your supposed base off by becoming more overtly religious and granting religious people privileges to interfere in other people’s lives on the grounds of religion – which is what the religious freedom debate seems to be attempting to do.

Finally “Labor has the policy wit to remain a leader on climate change policy while also supporting our coal miners and those who work in the petroleum sector.” Unfortunately this is just an aspiration; he gives no evidence for this assertion, and no inkling of what policies might be involved. He doesn’t even wave his hands about. This is a particular failing given the Black November/December fires, and it puts him on a level with the PM.

Labor needs to show that it understands the ecological precariousness of agriculture and water in this country, and how these are repeatedly threatened by mining, and how Labor is going to act without threatening numbers of jobs or incomes, and by providing new jobs.

Perhaps it could start trying.

Continued in What could the ALP have done better?

Sacrificing Jobs to fight Climate change

December 26, 2019

People who want to do nothing about climate change, often ask how many jobs leftists are prepared to sacrificed to fight climate change. They are presumably trying to imply that fighting climate change will produce even more unemployment and misery amongst working people.

A true and accurate answer is difficult, as it is hard to predict the results of actions in a complex system. However, we can guess that the loss of jobs fighting climate change, is likely to be considerably less than neoliberals worried about during the great neoliberal revolution, or the birth of the computer age, or whatever.

This is because most lefists talk about something called ‘just transition’, in which displaced people like coal miners are helped to find new work, or set up new businesses, and are not left in poverty or whatever, as usually happens when the coal company moves out because they have dug up the coal and destroyed the fields and want to move somewhere more profitable.

People on the left also suspect there may be more jobs in renewables than in fossil fuels, particularly during the layout period, and especially if fossil fuels are brought in from overseas, or if automation continues to increase in mining. So far installing rooftop solar requires people and care, and I don’t see that being ended soon.

It would be nice to see people on the right worried about jobs lost through automation in mining, or automation in offices, through the expansion of decision making programs, or even through their anti-renewable legislation and activities. It might be nice to see them worry about money lost to the workers because people find it hard to negotiate good wages without unions. The proportion of GDP going to the population in general is declining, but that is apparently not a problem.

We might also wonder, how many lives are rightists prepared to sacrifice to preserve fossil fuel company profits? How much displacement of people from their homes will they tolerate through changes in environment or produced by mining? How many deaths would they like through pollution, and poisoning?

It is hard to predict how many people will die from climate change, but it won’t be none, and almost certainly will not be trivial, assuming that you don’t mind some people dying to preserve profits.

Not doing anything, is surely going to create massive misery amongst ordinary people, and may even destroy the economy that we rely on. So, while it is probable that if we do try and solve the problem we won’t develop any worse paid, and more precarious, jobs than most people have now, it is highly probable that people will be much worse off if we do nothing.

Doing nothing is a greater danger than doing something.

The weird thing is that most leftists have some faith in the capacity of capitalism to thrive through creative destruction, and in its ability to adapt to new circumstances, while most rightists just seem to want to preserve established profits, or have massive fear of change…. In general, people on the right don’t even propose solutions to the problem, just hope that it is not real or that it won’t be that bad, and we can keep on destroying things forever to make our money. Sad news, but the Earth is finite, and we are sure not ready to get into the space business yet.

A Second Jeremiad on Neoliberalism and Climate Change

December 17, 2019

As a reminder: Neoliberals are those people who consider the capitalist market the most important thing in life, with the implied consequences that markets always produce the optimum results, wealthy capitalists are obviously the best rulers and the State exists primarily to make and enforce the laws that allow established capitalists to operate profitably.

Neoliberalism corrupts culture, because culture is seen in terms of profit and power, and hence as produced through the falsehoods, advertising, hype, and PR which support profit and power. Only what is profitable and what contributes to plutocracy is valuable and good. Because Climate Change challenges some sources of power and profit, it becomes an unsolvable cultural and social problem, to be ignored, avoided or hidden for as long as possible.

Neoliberal politicians have no place for deep thinking, or hard virtue in facing reality, only thee word slogans, obfuscation and the promotion of established businesses. National pride is used to build racism, and loyalty to the corporate project. Economic theory is used to justify poisoning people and polluting environments, because any regulation of big business is foolishness and anathema. Culture wars are used to entrench their ‘common sense’, and to show that thinking will be excoriated and punished – doubly useful because if scientists or other experts say that neoliberal policies are rubbish and achieve the opposite of what they claim, then they are to be dismissed as part of the culture wars. The objections of others to their fantasies, are branded as politically evil, not attempts at trying to deal with reality, and people on the right know they face punishment should they turn. There is no need for neoliberals to listen to the opposition. Liberty of big business is to be preserved over your ‘accidentally’ dead bodies, and stultified minds.

Neoliberal inability is best demonstrated by climate change and ecological destruction. Rather than face up to the growing problems, to the growing knowledge we have about these problems or even to public demand, they run away.

They are faced with the problem that powerful and wealthy companies make massive profits out of selling fuels which are poisonous, through mining which is ecologically destructive, and through emissions which disrupt the global climate system. As profitable, it is taken for granted that these fuels are good. Challenging those fuels being burnt is evil, because it would threaten profit, or threaten the expansion of “free markets” and corporate domination elsewhere in the world.

There is nothing else to think, or which can be allowed to be thought.

So the problem is politicised. We get neoliberals claiming that climate change is a socialist plot – because people on the left see the potential desctruction of Western civilisation as a problem. We are told that it means the end of capitalism, when it probably means that some businesses have to change their ways of gaining profit, and adapt to reality. We are told that because the left has proposed solutions, the right is justifiably reluctant to propose its own solutions.

Neoliberals both cannot, and have not, proposed any solutions. They have managed to make this lack of thought and action part of their culture, because their culture is not geared to reality, but to maintaining existing profit and power. Neoliberal theory appears to have no way of beginning to think about this problem, other than hoping the market will solve it in time, and bear the cost of developing extensive new technology, even while they continue to pour subsidies into the fossil fuel industry to corrupt the market. This is the simple truth of the matter.

Hence in Australia, the East Coast is burning because of extended drought and high temperature. Sydney’s particulate pollution exceeds the recognized hazardous levels by a factor of 11. The neoliberals made the fires worse by ignoring warnings, cutting back on experienced fire fighting crew, refusing to plan for extended conflagrations, and refusing (and still refusing) to talk with fire chiefs. The Prime Minister refuses to go to the fire fronts, and instead apparently goes on holiday, to a place with breathable air (its secret you see).

[If you are Australian, you know that all previous prime ministers, including the neoliberals, would have been seen at the front, and would have emergency consultations, because it was their duty, even if they did nothing as a result. Now we have a marketing man in charge, and there is no duty. It is a sad day indeed, when one feels nostalgia for Tony Abbott.]

They are full of blame and displacement. The situation has nothing to do with them. They can take no responsibility, perhaps because they model their favoured form of social organization, the corporation, which is designed to avoid personal responsibilities and be potentially immortal.

Neoliberals misdirect as a matter of course. They claim it was the hostility of the greens to preventative burning that caused the fires, when that is not a Greens’ policy, Greens have marginal influence on government action, and in NSW the fire service exceeded government targets for preventative burning in a shorter period of time than expected (because the suitable periods of time are shrinking due to climate change). It was the fault of criminal people lighting fires, but this always happens, it just so happened that the drought and climate change made the consequences of fire-lighting worse. This is not exactly unpredictable. They say we always have fires in Australia. This is true, but these seem to be worse than we have ever had; instead of Black Friday, or Black Saturday, we have Black November and December, and the days of real heat and wind are still to come. Some of them still say climate change is not real, that all climate scientists are deluded – anything but think neoliberals might be the ones with a problem.

We have a country which is imperiled by drought. The drought is the worse I have seen. Even in the areas around Berrima, which are nearly always green the fields are dry and brown. However, in these drought regions some mining companies have unlimited access to water, or expect to be able to continue to take water from farmers and country towns, because they are big business and that is how it works. This is apparently not a problem for neoliberals.

Ecological destruction is not a problem for neoliberals; indeed sometimes it seems a triumph, as if they are transcending reality in their fantasy, and giving mortality and threat the boot, by producing this destruction.

Is this because they think enough wealth (the marker of proficiency and virtue) will save them? And if the rest of the people suffer, then, that is not a problem, as those people have shown they are not virtuous by not being rich enough to survive? Ordinary people are just labour-fodder to them?

Neoliberals seem paralysed by reality, because it goes against their culture of hoping that the market and big business can solve every real problem there is. They live in a world of delusion, of positive thinking, of PR, Hype, and advertising; in other words they live in a culture of lies.

Introduction to Neoliberalism, Plutocracy and Liberty Posts

December 17, 2019

This series of posts investigates some of, what for most supporters of neoliberalism, are its unintended consequences. I am, however, not entirely sure that these unintended consequences were not predictable and were not intended by the power elites.

In particular, this series of posts focus on neoliberalism’s effects on liberty. Neoliberalism has been sold as increasing liberty and destroying the interfering State, but I argue that this is dubious at best, and that neoliberalism promotes the liberty of the power elites through capitalist plutocracy and declining liberty for everyone else.

The arguement proceeds by:

1) Discussing liberty and types of liberty. This is all very basic, but necessary to begin with. The suggestion is that changes which increase the liberty of the power elite and business, will not necessarily enable the liberty of other people. Liberty may need to be enabled to exist, rather than simply come into being through lack of restrictions on the ruling class. Furthermore, some argue that liberty involves self-knowledge and self-control, and that this is hard to gain in capitalism which encourages indulgence and false information, as a normal part of its operation.

2) We then look at Neoliberal ideas of liberty, and the reduction of liberty to action in a free market. The market allocates more freedom to those who are wealthy, and less to those who are not, and therefore boosts the opportunity for rule by wealth, or plutocracy. Capitalist markets make people dependent on jobs and obedience, turn liberty into consumption, and put extraction of profit before everything. Making the market both primary and good suggests that profit should be the main indicator of value, makes the interests of big business overrule all others, and strongly implies that people who demonstrate competence in the market are superior and should rule, which further encourages plutocracy.

3) Neoliberals demand a small weak state but they usually neglect to tell people that they mean a State which is weak at helping ordinary citizens, but strong in defending the power of wealth. They pretend that the State is the only form of oppression, but the weaker the State, the easier it is for big business to have disproportionate influence, and the more oppressed other people can become. Wealth enables plutocrats to buy and control all other sources of power from violence to information.

4) After setting out the problems and apparent dynamics of neoliberalism, I then discuss some suggestions for remedying the problems, including the Convention of the States process, and the people’s recapture of the State to break corporate power.

5) Finally there is a note on social mobility. I describe some of the problems with assuming that social mobility is a solution to plutocracy. Social mobility does not have to threaten plutocracy, if it does not threaten the modes of plutocracratic power – it might just change the personnel, at best, and it might not even do that, because the control of wealth is concentrated in so few hands.

Some Definitions:

Neoliberalism is a movement largely sponsored by the corporate sector through its funded think tanks (from the Mont Pelerin Society to the Cato Instute and IPA), media organisations (like the Murdoch Empire, but nearly all media is corporately owned, and sponsored, and neoliberal in orientation) and university chairs. The team-up between business and academics, just happens to consolidate corporate power and dominance. Neoliberalism involves a lot of talk of “free markets” but in practice involves the cutback of the participatory State that is mildly helpful to everyone, and the promotion of State protection for, and subsidisation of, the established corporate sector. It may actively promote the harm of ordinary people in order to reinforce the power and liberty of wealth.

In other words, neoliberalism seems to aim at making the State a tool of the wealthy ruling class. Those who promote the idea that the State is the sole problem, and the free market the sole solution, seem to act as unwitting supporters of this corporate take over of the State.

In practice, whatever they say to the contrary, neoliberals make profit the only good. If liberty conflicts with profit, then profit will win out. The short truth appears to be that neoliberalism has everything to do with maintaining established power and profit, and nothing to do with liberty or solving real problems.

In general, neoliberal, or other pro-capitalist politicians and theorists, do seem to find it easier to work with self proclaimed authoritarian fascists or religious fundamentalists than they do with democratic socialists, or people opposed to tyranny or oppression. The History of US foreign policy , and business support for Hitler, should pretty much demonstrate that. The tendency of capitalists to try and capture the State to suppress protest against their rule through hardening laws against protest (as is happening in Australia to stop climate change protest) also gives them that affinity. Arms manufacturers support military action, and massive unaccountable military spending, and this activity implies military action or threat of such action. Some argue that the US has engaged in quite a few wars to protect corporate oil supplies and property, not only to project the power of the plutocratic state.

Neoliberalism is often sold as conservatism but, as I have argued previously [1], [2], [3], it is not conservative at all, it aims at a radical transformation of society, and the destruction of all tradition that considers life and virtue is about anything other than profit.

Plutocracy is defined as as rule by wealth, and the direction of all policy to support the wealthy (or wealthy families) and increase their power and wealth, and to suppress, deliberately or otherwise, any other variety of power or counter-power.

Rather than being an accidental feature of capitalism, I would suggest that crony capitalism, attempts at State capture and the imposition of plutocracy are an inevitable feature of that system. I know of no capitalism which is: not full of cronyism and collaboration; does not involve attempts at state capture and buying politicians; setting inheritance rules so that families (like the Bush’s and the Trumps) retain their power for as long as possible; and implementing market regulations that favour their established patterns of behaviour while preventing others from rising to challenge them. This arises because humans “team-up” for the benefit of their identity groups. Neoliberalism encourages team-ups in business, and in the politicians that speak for it, but not elsewhere.

Final Remark

I apologise in advance for the length of these posts and the absence of much empirical documentation. The lack of documentation is excused because it would make these posts about the length of a book. Besides, some highly influential forms of neoliberal economics don’t even give a nod to empiricism in their formulations either, and at least I’m not attempting a general theory of human action.

Next: Casual Remarks on Liberty

A Note on Social Mobility and Neoliberal Plutocracy

December 15, 2019

The Argument

It is a common argument that social mobility, if present, could undermine plutocracy, or any other form of domination. However, social mobility is quite complicated, and that it ‘can‘ undermine some forms of domination, does not mean it always will, or that it can undermine plutocracy in other than rare circumstances; perhaps of the collapse of that plutocracy (say through, ecological change driven by the plutocracy, which is unable to find a way around the problem without facing the possibility of its decline).

By suggesting research questions in this topic, I am not trying to imply that other people have not done the research, simply trying to get a beginning perspective on what we would need to investigate an important issue and come to a conclusion. Other people might well do a better job.

There are at least four patterns of social mobility.

  • a) The regular rise of fortunate and talented individuals from the apparent bottom to the visible top. Modern, post world war II, US examples might inclcude Bill Clinton, or George Soros.
  • b) The regular rise of groups from bottom to visible top. This is usually confined to particular skills and celebrity rather than to power. Modern, post WWII US examples, might include black sports-people, rap stars, or white rock/pop stars. This can pretty much leave the power structures unchanged. To make this clear, we may need to rigorously distinguish between a cultural elite and a power elite, as they are not necessarily the same.
  • c) The abililty of people to rise from the bottom into the realms of real and largely invisible power, to what is in contemporary plutocracy often called the “0.1%” (even though one in a thousand is still a gross magnification of their numbers). As this mode of life is heavily protected, and does not allow much research, this ability to move is hard to measure. Having an income in the top 5% or even 1% may not cut it when there are truly massive imbalances in wealth and power. In contemporary society it is possible to have an income well beyond the dreams of ordinary people, and still not be in the wealth and power elites.
  • d) When the groups forming the elite change and bring new ideas, and abilities to face the problems of society in general. This is what I have called the Toynbee cycle, and usually involves a change in social organisation, technological organisation, or a revolution provoked by the collapse of established social functioning. This kind of dynamics implies that the more that society remains neoliberal in orientation, the less chance there is of this change occuring without collapse.

Merged into this there is what we might call:

  • a) The amount of general mobility. How common is it for people and groups to ascend or descend?
  • b) The degree of mobility. The levels of change (ascent and descent) which can be experienced by people and groups.
  • c) The ways that mobility is socially allocated. Is it commoner in some parts of the hierarchy than others? Do those near the top find it easier to ascend, or those near the bottom? Are people in the lower groups finding life more precarious, or less free, with less opportunities over time?
  • d) Is the difference in peoples’ placement in the hierarchy becoming greater or lesser over time? For instance are the people at the top getting relatively more and more wealthy than those at the bottom, or less and less wealthy with respect to those at the bottom who are ‘catching up’?
  • e) Is the hierarchy intensifying and being reinforced over time, irrespective of the degree and amount of mobility?

Mobility: Normality or Change?

Mobility can either: a) undermine; b) not effect, or; c) reinforce the social hierarchy and/or its patterns, standard ideas, ‘class interests’ and drives.

All societies have some degree of social mobility, even caste and feudal societies, especially at the middle and lower levels of the hierarchy. So the existence of social mobility, in itself, is not necessarily a threat to organisations of power or the team-ups of established wealth. But it could be. We need to find the circumstances in which it does make a challenge.

The patterns of hierarchy can be preserved in many ways, despite mobility. People can move up the hierarchies and then work, or team up and work, to prevent other people rising in similar ways, so there is less threat to them and others in their position from those currently ‘beneath’ them (mobility upwards, implies the possibility of their mobility downwards). People can change their interests, culture etc, to match that already accepted in their new milieu to hide their comparatively ‘common’ beginings. They can sever contacts and loyalties with previous people they knew for the same reasons. They can even attempt to outdo the more established people in their application of existing elite conventions and culture, intensifying the pathologies of the ruling groups. On the other hand, while their rise can appear dramatic, socially mobile people may never penetrate the upper hierarchies which remain largely unchanged, and whose favour they may have to court, if they know its importance, or ever get to meet them.

I’d propose, and its a comparative research project, that the more unified the basis of power the more this preservation happens, because people need to get on in their new class, build new relationships and pass social tests to maintain their new position.

However, when there are varieties of power there can be change. For example, in post Tudor UK you had the intermarriage and combining of the mercantile and aristocratic classes, and royal promotion (later State promotion) of talented outsiders, which changed all classes to a degree, but eventually the power of wealth won out over the power of land ownership, because land could only be owned with wealth – the traditional aristocracy and its values declined.

If social power is based in a single primary factor (such as wealth), then it is probable that the highest families will grossly outweigh the next levels in society, and seek to confine influence to themselves, and confine the sources of power to themselves. If the basis of power is wealth then, if they hire good advisors, they do not even need to know much about the sources of power (land, energy, business, communication media, technological structures etc) they own or control, they just use wealth to accumulate more wealth and more power. Even if they loose half their fortune through bad decisions, they may still control more wealth and property than 99% of the people, and they have connections to help them through ‘hard’ times, by not only giving them new projects, but changing market legislation to give them subsidies or a boost.

Even with high social mobility, if the conventions and interests of the rising factions are the same as the established factions, nothing alters. Communism remains communism, aristocracy remains aristocracy, theocracy remains theocracy, plutocracy remains plutocracy. The systems may even become more intense, as the newcomers demonstrate their firm adherence to the old principles.

Post World War II mobility in the West

After World War II up until the 80s, State provided education was a major path enabling social mobility – people could move from manual labour into admininstrative, scientific, technical, educational and business jobs without necessarily belonging to the old boys network. They still largely depended on jobs, with all the submission that meant, but they were much freer and more prosperous than previously. The UK and US working class Renaissance and political ferment of the late 50s, 60s and early 70s seems to have largely grown out of this availability of education and the resultant weakening of the old class barriers.

This mobility seems to have been seen as a massive threat to, and disrution of, the established capitalist/military arrangement of power and privilege, and had to be stopped. Hence the promotion of the neoliberal counter-revolution and the death of the generally participatory and enabling State. The rising working class may have formed a new cultural or even bureaucratic elite, but they were only precariously a power elite.

The education path now seems to have run out. Graduates no longer automatically get high paid work without class based connections. Money has poured into the Elite schools again, so that members of the elite can keep the educational advantage, and build connections to keep them in employment and power – and the fees have usually risen in an attempt to keep lower-class people without contacts out.

But these patterns of change need empirical investigation.

The research project needed

The big research questions here are:

1) Has social mobility increased or decreased after the 80s in capitalist societies? One theory is that social mobility should increase along with talk of “free markets”, and one is that it should decrease. Personally I would expect that it would either stay much the same or decrease. Certainly what I have read suggests general mobility, and degree of mobility has declined after 1980 in comparison to the post WWII period.

2) What are good rates of social mobility, and what are normal, or poor rates of social mobility? Without this kind of knowledge people can claim their society has a high rate of social mobility when comparitivly it does not. What ‘everyone’ thinks mobility is like, is often different from the reality, especially when it is a selling point used to justify hierarchies and make them seem good.

2a) In relatively egalitarian societies social mobility may not be particularly marked, as the difference between high and low is not that great. Nevertheless, influential people may change and influence not remain stable within groups of families.

It may only be needful for justifiers of the hierarchy to talk of social mobility when people are actively excluded from power, and while power and wealth supposedly express a meritocracy.

3) Are people’s chidren more or less likely to shift upwards, and to what extent?

4) What is the social mobility which is relevant? Mobility downwards and mobility upwards. Is moving upwards within in a quintile social mobility, or moving between quintiles, or are we talking about the likelihood of moving up into the stratospheric wealth realms of the “0.1%” from the middle quintile? If for instance the 01.% remain relatively stable over generations, coming from a specific set of families and they keep acccumulating most of the wealth, can we say there is effective social mobility, even if there is a reasonable rate of crossing from one quintile into a higher one?

There may be little to no circulation of power elites, even if there is circulaton elsewhere in society. People may rise from poverty to hip-hop stardom without vaguely challenging the plutocracy, or even through celebrating signs of wealth as signs of success and virtue. Again what we are measuring needs to be clear.

5) To what extent does social mobiity affect power and the treatment of those who rise? The most visible socially mobile figures of power in the US have been the Clintons and the Obamas and they faced massive attacks, resistance and portrayls of their power and wealth as illegitimate, suggesting the ease of cultivating a succesful political hostility towards social mobility when it crosses established powers of wealth. Whereas the Bushs and Trump seem face relatively little hostility because of their born privilege. Indeed one can be frequently be told that Trump’s wealth is a mark of his intelligence and aptitude, whether it was inherited or not, while the wealth the Clintons earned is evidence of their corruption and evil.

6) Does social mobility, in a particular country or social system, reinforce, challenge, undermine or not affect the patterns of power? And over how long a history are we looking at?

7) Do the ideas and techniques used to rule remain similar, or change radically? Do the “social and cultural patterns of society” stay similar or alter?

To reiterate, whether or not social mobility can undermine plutocracy is a complicated question, and may need considerable research. However, it would seem a priori unlikely.

Its too late to stop climate change

December 12, 2019

It is now probably too late to stop climate change.

It was not too late to stop it 10 years ago. We could have succeeded if there had not been massive political resistance to stopping it. Somewhere between then and now, we probably have passed a tipping point or two. Methane is being released from the seas and the Tundras. Forests, which were supposedly too wet to burn are burning. The Antarctic ice shelf is breaking up. Land ice is melting in Greenland. The Northwest Passage is becoming navigable. Towns and cities are without water supplies.

While we cannot stop change, disruption and chaos, we still have the option of making the results even worse, or holding the worse at bay. We also have the option of preparing for the worse, so we can deal with it as best we may, and diminish the damage. This is the best we can now aim for: mitigation and preparation.

Currently the East Coast of Australia is on fire. One of the reasons for the extent of the Bushfires is because Right Wing governments decided climate change was impossible or would not have an effect for years. They cut back experienced staff, and refused to prepare. They still seem to be holding back on helping firefighters. Even now they are trying to blame the extent and ferocity of the fires on anything other than climate change, and they are still arguing that we should increase emissions because it is profitable.

This is a classic example of how not to face a problem. They have walled themselves up. They cannot admit they were mistaken, and that they need to change. They have either never been able to propose a solution or wanted to propose a solution, and so politicised the problem so as to make doing nothing look righteous.

The Labor opposition is not much better, with their leader explicitly declaring the party in favour of coal exports as they make some money and we might as well make it. Neither of the main parties seems up to the challenge, although at least Labor might admit there is a problem. So, expecting the parties to change in time to stop total disaster, is almost certainly futile.

People who want to survive in a relatively stable society have got to keep fighting for us to prepare for the worse and to diminish the possibility of the worse, and they will have to fight inside and outside the political parties. Otherwise life will become extremely difficult, and keep getting harder and more unpredictable.

We may no longer be able to stop climate change, but we can prepare for it, and try to stop making it even worse. Hence a active climate movement is still necessary, and perhaps more necessary than ever.

Neoliberal liberty and the small State

December 9, 2019

Continued from Neoliberal Liberty and the market

Most human societies have not required States, and according to James Scott that includes some early, fairly large scale, settled agricultural societies. Many of these non-state based socieites seem to actively resist those processes that lead to State formation, such as: a) accumulation of wealth by kinship or position; b) the monopoly of approved violence, or; c) the monopoly of religious positions. Fighting the accumulation of wealth to prevent the State forming, is vitally important as the wealthy can, as I’ve said previously, often buy other forms of power, such as being able to afford military specialists over many generations.

This point about resistance to power is important; these stateless societies are not the kinds of societies praised by neoliberals. They are not capitalist societies. In particular they are not corporate capitalist societies. And, they are not necessarily societies in which everyone is free. Old people often rule over younger people, men over women etc.

However, in all these societies (as is normal), people co-operate, or team-up to expand their, and others, capabilities and survival chances, and (in this case) to prevent the formation of a State, or power elite, or wealth elite.

‘Teaming up’ will always occur. To some extent, corporations and states arise out of this natural trait and, as a result, have many institutional similarities and weaknesses. Humans are both competitive and collaborative creatures, and a society which does not realise this active ‘contradiction’ will probably be suppressive in some way or another. The point is that organisation, and disorganisation, do not necessarily require a State. States may come about when the activities which prevent them from forming are suspended.

My supposition, based on the behaviour of historical States, is that the main need for States arises to protect people from other States, or other large scale organisations. Once military states are established they tend to spread to gain resources to feed their soldiers and support the expansion. Similarly, corporations tend to spread to gain resources, and again historically have used violence to do so if people are not interested in providing resources, buying corporate products, or selling their own labour. As implied elsewhere, crony capitalism and the take-over or an existing State, or generation of a new State, are normal parts of capitalism. Capitalism does not exist without States, so capitalists are never going to completely break up the States they own, so they can keep the laws and threats which enable them to operate.

However, States and corporations are not monolithic bodies but sites of conflict, with competing departments, friction inside deparments, conflicting policies, different linkages to insitutions outside the themselves, different problems of survival, and so on. This factionalism may help liberty, if it stops one faction from exerting complete control. Again, the more the sources of power are kept separate, and wealth is controlled, the greater the chance that one source of power will not dominate.

Neoliberalism and the State

Neoliberalism promotes the idea that the weaker the state the more liberty we get.

There are clearly limits to this after a State has been established. A collapsed state is a weak state, and unlike real stateless societies, the collapsed state tends to involve continual violence. In this situation there may be little constructive liberty. People are reduced to attack and defense, and organisation for attack and defense. Survivial compulsion is dominant over every form of liberty.

The idea of the weak state is a driving idea in communism as well as in neoliberalism. The State is supposed wither away after the revolution. Of course the communist state doesn’t wither away because it is needed to impose order after the revolution and protect the revolution and is easily hijacked by ruthless people who appear dedicated to the revolution. The same seems true of the neoliberal State, it does not dissolve after the revolution, but reinforces the neoliberal takeover, attempts to put down opposition, and is easily hijacked by ruthless people.

I would tend to argue, unless contrary evidence is provided, that the evidence suggests that the neoliberal weak state, is strong when it comes to defending and ‘nannying’ the established corporate sector, while weak when it comes to defending or enabling ordinary people. For example, the neoliberal State would much rather protect established fossil fuel companies, than attempt to do anything about climate change, no matter how costly it is to the general population. In other words the neoliberal weak-State argument seems to be a deceptive rhetoric used to help support plutocracy – or government by the wealthy classes

This is largely a guess, based on observation of what has been happening over the last forty years of ‘small State’ and ‘free market’ talk (and forty years is long enough to assume that we have attained as much of the aims of the movement as is possible or likely). However, the point is that rather than assume a small state is necessarily responsive to voters/locals we have to look at how corporations interact with smaller States. This requires research, which is beyond the scope of this blog.

In neoliberal capitalism, do people get more or less control over their lives as a result of weakening the State? Getting more control over their lives seems unlikely unless the State is particularly bad.

Corporations vs the State

Corporations both need, and support the State, to support their ways of action and accumulation. However, they can easily dominate the State rather than be dominated, especially nowadays.

Modern corporations are motile. The have ‘span’, they have wealth. They may need an area of land, but they rarely need a particular area for ever. They use it for as long as it is profitable, and can move on. They can be multi-sited, officially based elsewhere to transfer revenues and profits out of the places they operate in.

On the other hand ‘States’ are place bound, they are in competition with other states, and they may have less money than corporations.

In this cirumstances there is a definate power imbalance.

Corporations can promise they will set up in the place with the lowest tax rates, lowest restrictions on pollution and so on, setting up a competition between weak States. The people of those States can be bombarded with pro-company propaganda (media disinformation) which does not specifically have to be untrue, but it can leave out harms, and exagerate benefits – just as Adani (with the help of its politicians and the Murdoch Empire) has exaggerated the numbers of jobs and revenue its mines will bring, and downplayed the likely danger to the water table, and other damages to the ecology. Poorer small states are more likely to agree, and thus earn less and become more able to poison their people, or ignore the massive degradation produced by corporate activity. Often if the area is poor, they may consider that the price of pollution is worth the jobs they might get.

They may find they never get those jobs of course, people may be flown in from elsewhere, due to local skill lacks, or the expected lack of imported labours’ ability to unify and challenge the disruption to local lives, their allocated work practices and wages given . The company may also not pay the wages fully and just move out if there is trouble – as stated previously they are motile with no lasting relations to place or the small State’s exercise of power. Or they can destroy the environment, take all the minerals etc. and leave waste and destruction behind. This kind of normal and passing behaviour, with no longer term investment, can produce short term booms which destroy local economies in the longer term, as seems to be recurrent with fracking.

Often small states do not know the consequences of some forms of development, say mining, and it can be difficult to challenge the corporation in courts to get resitution for the destruction. It might well have proven more economic and beneficial to support local companies, but they can have less influence as less wealthy.

Neoliberal Privatisation

A major part of the neoliberal weakening of the State is for the State to hand over common (tax payer owned) property to the private sector, or to contract out state services to the private sector. This is known as privatisation. Experience shows that this almost never delivers better, more liberty respecting services cheaper. It just means that more parts of life get handed over to the control of business, and that the power of business over the lives of people increases.

It has also increased the potential for corruption, and handing of public property to ‘friends’ at knock down prices, also costing government revenue, but giving free revenue to businesses.

Often public needs become controlled by non-local forces, and the State, and the popular voice, has little power to change things, without alienating these powerful forces. Thus when the State privatises water supplies, we gain situations in which rivers run dry because of large private storage, and towns die because they cannot afford the costs of the water (just as people may starve if they cannot grow their own food and cannot pay as much for food as people in some other market). Perhaps the wealthy keeping the water for their own profit or agriculture was the prime requirement of the privatisation. In one circumstance I heard of, the company who bought the water, turned the local reservoir land into housing estates, made a quick profit, and left the area with a water shortage.

Private jails are best served by rescidivism, and returning custom, rather than reform of criminals, and so on.

If you really believed business was more efficient than government, you would rent out poorly performing and unprofitable government ventures to private enterprise, to see if they could provide better services for less cost and make money out of this. However, neoliberals usually sell off, or give away, the profitable arms, or properties, of government, making sure the State debt increases, while allowing the new owners to deliver inferior services, sack staff and massively boost the incomes of their high-level executives. It’s a redistribution of property and income away from the people.

The Useful Function of the State

The State is a site of conflict, and political process. A participatory State has the capacity to include people in the politics of organising themselves and co-operating with others. Without a open State, such processes can only happen at a small scale, and large scale processes will be controlled by the dominant groups.

The theory of the small state also depends upon whether you think of liberty as absence of compulsion, or as being enabled and requiring people to be able to participate in governance with others. In reality the neoliberal state only opposes compulsion for the wealthy, and perhaps those who support them.

As we can see in Australia, the financial industry and building industries can committ massive crimes against its customers, but that is of little concern to the neoliberal State. Corporations are not compelled to be honest, while neoliberals are seeking to make sure that unions can be deregistered for failing to fill in forms absolutely correctly.

The neoliberal State, like the communist State, is in practice only vaguely participatory. It needs to reinforce the dominance to lower the chaos it generates, and lower possible action on behalf of ordinary peoples liberties. You elect representatives and then leave them alone to get on with whatever they choose to do, or choose to sell out to. The small State is to be controlled by the corporate class and their representatives alone, which is why popular participation is discouraged.

Conclusion

In a capitalist system, given that the corporate world remains strong, then it is even easier for them to take over a weakened state and set up stronger plutocracy and reduce liberty to that form of life which is compelled by the market that they largely manufacture the rules of. This may well be why the corporate sector encourages the theory of the small state as liberating. – although they always use the State the strengthen themselves and weaken others, by such acts as increased military spending, suppressing anti-capitalist protests, encouraging pollution, suppressing constraints on corporate power and profit, and making workers weaker by removing non-capitalist enabling support. This take over is relatively easy when they almost completely control the means of information.

Small states may be particularly vulnerable to strong corporate power, because the power differential is higher, and because of the absence of non-pro-corporate ideologies.

I suspect that, in our societies, you have to weaken the corporate sector to if you really want to weaken the State and allow liberty. You may also have to strengthen places of potential opposition against plutocracy.

Continues in: Recapitulations of Neoliberal Liberty and ways to remedy it.

Neoliberal Liberty and the market

December 8, 2019

Complete in itself (I hope) but continuing on from Casual Remarks on Liberty

In the English speaking world, since the late 1970s, both sides of politics seem to have increasingly developed the determination to protect and increase the power of large corporations, establish plutocracy and impinge on the liberty of people in general. The political elite of the Right seems more thorough and overt about this, so I shall primarily discuss Right wing style politics in this and a few subsequent posts. It may need to be said that there are many well intentioned people on both the Right and Left who oppose this move, or who do not appear to have noticed what is happening.

Market Liberty and Hierarchy

The first step taken in the contemporary promotion of plutocracy is the reduction of liberty to action in a market. Liberty of action in a market may indeed be important, but it is not the only factor in making liberty or in guarranteeing the continuance of liberty. Over-emphasis on this factor may be destructive of liberty.

A free market does not mean a free society, it more likely means a “fee society”, in which those with wealth can buy more services, buy more influence, and have much more impact on the market and other people than those who are poor or merely comfortable. These wealthy people also have much more freedom and power to tell others what to do. They become more important, and the market gears itself to serving them and where the greatest profit arises with the least effort. This set up, also means those with wealth can buy privilege as a matter of course; they can purchase access to politicians, lawyers, PR agents, or criminal threat and promote the kind of information, organisation, and distribution of risk, that suits them and not others, and so on.

Where wealth differentials become high enough then the wealthy can buy all forms of power to protect the retention of their wealth, and remove freedom for others from the market and the State. Capitalists suppress unions of workers, but not unions of businesses, (through buying politicians, laws and regulations).

I have previously mentioned the common excuse that the media these people own, can lie to benefit them with impunity, because they own it and have the right to control what it says. Such a position implies they have no resposibility towards truth, only towards ‘selfish’ support of faction and maintaining their power. They are demanding liberty without responsibility.

With, or without, direct control over media, they can support those who work in their favour, and ignore or trouble those who don’t. Society can become snowed by false information, which boosts their power.

While it can sometimes be argued that people have earned this wealth and should be rewarded, it is also common for people to inherit the wealth with little sign of any particular ability. Inherited or not, the wealth was almost always made with the help of others, who did not share in the wealth they produced because of the laws of capitalist privilege. Wealth also gives the ability to network with other wealthy people and team-up for the benefit of that group as opposed to everyone else. This is especially important if the ideology encourages and enforces the idea that less powerful people should act primarily as individuals outside of their place of employment.

The interaction between people with wealth increases their power and impact on others and, in general, power based in wealth appears to deny responsibility towards others (human or otherwise). There are studies which seem to show that wealth encourages behaviour most people would consider immoral, partly because the wealthy can get away with it, and partly because wealth can encourage indifference to, or contempt towards, less wealthy people. This encouraged ‘selfishness’, impacts on the liberty of others.

If it is more profitable to destroy an environment than to preserve it, then it will be destroyed legally. If it is more profitable to poison people than not, then people will be poisoned legally – and enabling free pollution seems to be one of President Trump’s major economic policies (the other being interfering in the free market through tariffs – some say that he gave massive tax concessions to large scale property owners as well). The only thing that is to be protected is the property and liberty of those wealthy enough to defend it in the courts.

For me, the direction of this kind of market liberty was most clearly revealed in conversations with self-proclaimed libertarians who argued that everyone should have the right to sell themselves into slavery. The billionaire with access to all kind of privilege and defense has the same right as the person with no capital, income or shelter and a hungry family to sacrifice their liberty forever in return for a small sum of money and survival. To be concise, in this case, market liberty encourages slavery of the non-privileged.

Reducing liberty to the market, biases liberty towards wealth, and may even remove wealth from those not so fortunate through the conditions of employment and survival.

In actually existing capitalism, it is doubtful that a free market can exist for long. No capitalist wants to keep a market which may unhorse them, when they have the opportunity to team-up to try and use the power of wealth to prevent this from happening.

Liberty vs. Employment

Given that most people can no longer support themselves, by producing their own food, shelter, clothing and so on, then the primary social relationship in the market, is between boss and employee. Employees are expected to be subservient. And although a few employees may be fortunate enough to have the ability to leave what they consider to be oppressive conditions and immediately move into another job without suffering penalty, employees will generally find that employers, as a group, expect obedience. Employers also expect ownership of the results of their employees’ labour and even their employees’ ideas, sometimes even those ideas not generated at work. Some types of work require the employee not to work in the same industry if they leave their job, which further weakens employee power and liberty. In many cases employers attempt to deskill jobs to make employees interchangeable and cheap; this also makes work is largely boring and with little requirement for skill development, and this may well impact on the kind of self-development and understanding needed for real liberty.

Fear of lack of employment in general, and of the consequences arising from standing up to an employer, is likely to be constant, also impinging on employee’s ideas and practices of liberty; their lives become servitude, learning to placate and please their boss. Growing lack of support from the State for periods of unemployment (even hostility to those attempting to find work, as in Australia), and State sponsored hostility to unions (employees organising for group resilience) further weakens the ability of people to freely change employment, or risk challenging their employer. This routine demand for obedience is almost certainly not conducive to a sense of liberty.

One reason for working at a university originally was the amount of freedom you had from this kind of submission. Provided you did your contracted lectures you were free to do whatever you liked, within the criminal law. You could keep your ideas and share and develop them as you chose. With increasing corporatisation (the extension of capitalist modes of organisation to other forms of life) this freedom is completely undermined, by endless paperwork, performance evaluations, demands for results, customer satisfaction surveys, and even university ownership of ideas in scientific disciplines. This extension of corporatisation is all about spreading the demand for worker submission to bosses. In the older days the universities were far less profit oriented, far freer and did not require proportionately much more money from the public.

One of the endless complaints of capitalist colonialists was that the conquered people would not work for wages – they were, in the would-be bosses terms, ‘lazy’. At best people would work until they had earned enough for whatever they wanted, and then they would return to self-sufficiency. This liberty had to be prevented, as you cannot run a capitalist business with that kind of freedom and uncertainty. Hence, land would be taken from conquered people, taxes and punishments applied, to get people to engage in wage labour. In the West the formation processes of capitalism had involved people being thrust of the land, self-sufficiency destroyed, and labour forced into low wages. At least according to some sources, wages were often not enough to survive on, but no matter, there were always more laborers. Wage labour could be cheaper than slavery – as the boss did not have to keep their workers alive.

This is the point of the anarchist demand “No State, No Church, No Boss”. ‘Boss’ is usually translated as ‘Master’, which is what bosses where called in nineteenth century Europe. With most people having to submit to bosses to survive there can be little learning of the paths of liberty.

Free market theory on the other hand demands more power for bosses, with less independence for workers. This is likely to be one reason why neoliberals are so hostile to unions, unemployment benefits and social wages, and completely indifferent to the effects of organisations of employers.

Liberty becomes Consumption

While liberty is reduced to freedom to be bossed, the market further transmutes desires and ambitions into the purchase of commodities, rather than self expression through independent creation. ‘Artists’ are judged solely by their ability to sell their art. Companies promote those artists they think will be successful and make the most profit for them and simply sign and ignore the others, and this is not unreasonable given the logic and compulsion of the market. The history of the recording industry is full of accounts of successful artists getting further into debt slavery because of the perfectly legal machinations, and exploitation, of managers and record companies.

Freedom in the market, for most people, comes down to freedom to buy what they can afford (or to go into debt); often having to choose between different brands of product owned by the same company. While freedom to choose what you can purchase is probably good, it is not the complete basis of liberty.

Profit and Liberty

In a neoliberal State, profit is everything, especially the profit of established and powerful business. This is the case, irrespective of whether every activity is best run with profit as the aim. Profit supposedly marks virtue, talent, hard-work, quality and success.

Eliminating costs is the easiest way of increasing profit, as nothing innovative, new or useful has to be thought up or invented. Employees are a cost and a potential trouble, so they need to be eliminated or further controlled, as much as possible (again liberty of employees is unimportant in market liberty, especially low level employees). Lying and misdirection can quickly boost profit and save costs, so it’s buyer beware and making markets and profit primary, corrupts truth. Cleaning pollution is a cost and so polluting is not a problem, and neoliberals work to increase their ability to freely pollute and freely destroy ecologies (with any burden going to other people). The likely reason the Right cannot even talk about dealing with climate change, is that dealing with it might threaten the profits of some established and powerful corporations. Profit is not only inherently good, but more important than survival. Pollution poisons, or potentially poisons, people, that is simply an unimportant side effect of the free market, to be challenged in courts if at all – after all, to neoliberals, the market solves all problems and being hurt by their activity, is your own fault.

In court, the corporation is usually safe without a strong participatory State responding to people, because ordinary people find it hard to overcome the financial and legal imbalance between them and the offending corporation. The class action has developed in an attempt around this corporate dominance. Mostly this makes profit for the lawyers if successful. However neoliberal politicians try and make class actions harder, so individuals are more vulnerable to corporate abuse. Where I live, if the people have a victory, the neoliberals change the law to make sure it can’t happen again – it is clearly the law that is at fault not the corporation – profit and corporate liberty must be protected, whatever the effects on the liberties of others.

The structure of the corporation with its diffusion of resonsibility, means that it is hard to hold its members responsible for corporate crimes, especially if the crmes were profitable. If the shareholders don’t care, or have benefitted enough, then that is the end of it, or some high level executive might get dismissed with a huge bonus. Of course if the crime diminished corporate profitability and was committed by a low level person, the consequences might be different. The corporation gives liberty without resonsibility to its executives and shareholders, and a massive kick to ordinary people; it is inherently a tool of hierarchy and dominance.

The more power and liberty given to the corporation, the less for everyone else.

Neoliberal markets and the Corruption of Truth

Liberty demands an attention to truth, and accuracy of beliefs. You cannot be completely free, or completely able to adapt to reality, if you are routinely misled. In capitalism misleading advertising, PR, obfuscation, fantasy and product hype are normal and intrinsic parts of the system. The general idea is to gain attention in the profitable way, and to provoke excitement and stability of power, rather than the contemplation of truth.

This disinformation stretches into political behaviour and supposed news which become attempts to persuade people to acquiesce to their subordination, or to be distracted from real problems. We are all told capitalists gain their wealth through their superior talents, or the favour of God, rather than because of their crimes, power or connections, and that leaving everything to the market, (that is, big business) will solve all major problems. We do not have to participate, other than by choosing products out of the range we are presented with, and with the dubious information we are given as part of sales practice.

Through these misinformation actions, capitalists create a fantasy world, which eventually clashes so strongly with reality, that crashes of all kinds happen (economic, political, ecological to name a few). Elections simply become spending and disinformation wars between corporations – it is doubtful they are free in any meaningful sense – successful candidates are more likely to be of some pro-corporate party simply because they will not be continually slurred in the corporately owned media and will receive better financing. In this system, elections change more or less nothing. Trump is just another slightly more erratic neoliberal, which is why he has such solid Republican backing, despite his more morally dubious actions.

Neoliberalism and Fiscal Restraint

Neoliberals constantly call for fiscal restraint from the State. However, after forty years of such demands, I know of no State which is cheaper to run than it was previously. However, nearly all neoliberal States are less helpful to the populace, and more hostile and persecutory to those they are supposed to help. It possibly could be argued that neoliberalism functions by persecuting people it considers weak outsiders, like the unemployed, refugees, despised ethnic groups or disabled people. This helps ordinary people to feel less suppressed by comparison.

The Reagan Revolution made this clear. There were massive cutbacks in social spending accompanied my massive increases in military spending. Neoliberals did not object to this, probably because military spending goes largely to arms manufacturers, and contractors, rather than to ordinary people. In other words it increased private profit, which is their ultimate goal. Reagan also reduced tax intake from the wealthy, on the grounds that they would now generate more income and pay more tax. Not surprisingly while tax cuts for the wealthy are always popular with the wealthy, they rarely to never increase tax revenue. Revenue fell at the same time as expenditure increased, which lead to more calls for cuts on social spending.

If one really wanted to reduce State debt, then clearly it might be possible to consider a process to make certain that corporations paid at least the same levels of tax on their profits that ordinary people do on incomes, rather than much less, zero, or even negative tax. You also would not put masses of effort into chasing small abuses of public funding when you could put the same effort into pursuing large abuses. Lowering tax evasion and avoidance by the wealthy, could then lower everyone’s tax burden, which is supposed to be the aim of the exercise. However, in neoliberalism, it is considered great if the burden of the State is shifted onto the middle class, and that wealthy people get to pay less and less tax so they increase their wealth and power.

During this period, regulations for the populace and the power of the security state have increased, causing impingements on liberty for normal people. Life has been overtaken by neoliberal form filling, as government departments try to make sure they have not helped non-wealthy people by accident, and that everything has been done as cheaply as possible, with the least encouragement of liberty.

Privatisation (especially of profitable services) increased, but it has rarely cost the government less, although they lose power and income, while it boosts the power and influence of business over people.

Neoliberals also tend to support charitable organisations rather than people’s rights to services, probably because charitable organisations, especially religious ones, have a great tendency to interfere in the lives and liberties of those they are charitable towards, while not impinging on the lives of the wealthy. This history of interference was one of the reasons for the workers’ interest in State provided services as a mode of liberty.

Fiscal responsibility for neoliberals comes down to less money spent by the State helping, or enabling, ordinary people, and more money spent on corporate subsidies, time wasting, and defence of corporate power.

Conclusion

To equate market liberty to full liberty is almost comic. It is reductive, deceptive and only enabling of the power of wealth and corporate organisation – which is why market friendly States tend to give subsidies to the already successful and strip them away from the less fortunate. In practice market liberty proposes that the non-wealthy are inferior and only deserve constraint.

The market, left to itself, enables hierarchy, plutocracy, consumption and obedience rather than liberty. This is why the idea is useful for the promotion, and sacralisation, of corporate power.

These comments continue in: Neoliberal Liberty and the Small State

Casual Remarks on Liberty

December 7, 2019

Continued from: Introduction to Neoliberalism and Plutocracy

Liberty is complicated and political. Indeed without politics there is probably no liberty, because somebody is being silenced, deliberately or not.

Liberty is conflictual. It is likely that one group’s ideas of liberty will be in continual contention with other groups who have a different conception of liberty, a different culture or experience, a different sense of what the limits of liberty are, different sense of who should participate in discussion, or who believe in rule by a particular class or ideology.

The Mongol warrior’s idea of liberty is probably not the same as the conquered peasants, and the corporate warrior’s idea is probably not the same as their employees, or disappointed customers.

The liberty of the powerful is often gained at the expense of the less powerful, and the liberty of ordinary people may require the sacrifice (voluntary or otherwise) of the previously accepted liberty of the powerful.

Liberty is probably never gained absolutely but, at best, is being gained and lost in a process of argument and conflict without end.

The mythic origin point of liberty for a nation, usually involves some decisive fight against previously established power relations which are defined as restrictive, and this origin point can be used to hide the ongoing process of gain or loss of liberty – as when people use the American ‘Revolution’ and the ‘founding fathers’ to cover what is happening now.

This blog post will consider: a) the links between liberty and compulsion; b) the relationship between liberty and culture and how culture and continual misinformation can be a constraint on liberty; c) the connection between liberty and responsibility, and; d) the problems of enabling liberty, when in an unequal society, where people will resist an increase in the liberty of those they have previously been superior too. These factors further reinforce the idea that liberty is always political and involves conflict; it is never simple.

Liberty and Compulsion

Liberty is often defined as absence of compulsion, such as compulsion of labour by a particular person, compulsion of tax, compulsion of silence etc. However, this is relative. In every society, there is always some level of compulsion, implicit or explicit.

People often define those compulsions that they like, as not being infringements on liberty. Obedience to the law can be defined as liberty; obedience to a particular interpretation of a religious text can be defined as liberty; obedience to the dictator can be defined as liberty; participation in capitalist markets (and general compulsion of labour) so as to survive, can be defined as liberty or as a non-infringement on liberty. Capitalists tend to support infringements of liberty that stop other people taking their property, or making claims about who really produced the wealth, and so on, as furthering their own liberty.

These favoured, or even reasonable, compulsions are still compulsions – most people are punished directly or indirectly if they don’t participate in, or obey, the compulsions.

Most theorists of liberty argue that liberty does not include the ability to harm other people deliberately, other than in self-defense. But there are many political disputes about what constitutes ‘harm’, what consitutes ‘deliberately’, and what constitutes ‘self-defense,’ and this dispute is necessary to not fall into a mere convention that supports some form of common sense ‘unjust’ rule over others that impinges their liberty.

It seems clear that in modern capitalism the liberty to pollute and poison some people, even kill them, is considered to be fine (or not deliberate) by many polluters, and activity to stop this pollution is considered harmful to that liberty or to some kind of ‘general prosperity’. The French Revolution, dedicated to liberty and fraternity, found it acceptable to kill some people in the name of maintaining that liberty and fraternity, and perhaps that appeared necessary self-defense. Some religious organisations, think the ability to punish people for heresy, or what they define as immorality, is vital to the salvation of their, and others, souls and hence their liberty under God.

Testing these limits, involves politics, and because politics is always about persuading, or compelling, others, for group and individual advantage, or recognition, this process probably cannot stop. This process is often disturbing because it implies that some presently marginalized people may feel the constraints on their liberty, imposed by others, are not beneficial to them.

Without an ability to participate in this process of social governance, then liberty will be lost, as governance will be conducted by those who form the most powerful social groups, institutions and organisations, and who are likely to be more concerned about maintaining their power, prestige and liberties of life, than in the liberties of others.

Liberty, Culture, Education

The culture (common ideas and practices) of a society is also a constraint. Culture shapes what we think, what we perceive as the nature of the world, what we use as common sense and common practice. While it is not an entirely accurate analogy, we can think of culture as part of the programming we receive from life and experience. For example, most people worship the gods of their ancestors, even if in different ways and cherish the media and stories of their childhood.

This apparent naturalness of culture is why eduction in difference is important for liberty, otherwise we will tend to make programmed unfree responses, or programmed reactions to responses (as when someone has a hard fought sense of independence from local culture, by taking onboard a slightly different or more intense form of the culture. They may consider themselves free, but they are still programmed by some tiny variation).

An education in difference not only informs people of their own culture, but of different cultures elsewhere. You cannot really be said to have freely chosen your religion while you are unaware of other religions or other philosophies, you cannot have chosen your economic philosophy if you have not studied the writings of other economists (not just the accounts of other economists by people who believe much the same as you). And so on.

Such education can reveal some of the hidden or unconscious compulsions and commonplaces that may effect your life, although there will still be other such compulsions. And yet many people will object to this, because it challenges their way of seeing the world, and what they define as liberty. Again agreement is probably not possible, and liberty will involve political struggle.

While we all live by borrowing and transforming existing culture (“No man is an island, entire of itself “), if we are not careful it can constrain our liberty, by programming our thought into accepting constraints which are not necessary.

It is a well known assertion of philosophy that liberty depends upon knowledge of one’s self and the social and environmental ecologies one finds oneself within, plus a degree of self mastery. This recognizes that a person is not born totally free, but works within social and other constraints. Freedom comes as a process of critical learning. This traditional position is made more complicated by the more recent hypothesis of unconscious processes and conditioning. Proceeding from this, it follows that as part of the study of liberty, it also becomes necessary to explore the orientations of a society, how its dynamics influence the choices a person has, and how it conditions them to respond, or even to engage in the paths of (self) knowledge and understanding (or not).

It may be that some societies are more strongly oriented to produce addictions, unconscious compulsions and lack of knowledge than others, and this needs to be explored as part of the discussion of liberty. For example capitalism may well encourage self-indulgent consumerism, and the accumulation of what might appear to be pointless items, to keep the economy going and people dependent on employers, rather than for them to function as independent citizens. It also might make it hard to survive for large numbers of people, and keep them so exhausted and unsatisfied by work, that they never gain the time or focus to gain self-knowledge, knowledge of their environment, or any real liberty. I shall argue elsewhere, that misinformation is central to the operation of the capitalist economy, and that this also affects peoples’ capacity for relating to reality and hence for freedom.

Dominant groups can also attempt to control culture so as to control their ‘underlings’ thought and hence control their liberty – they may brand certain innovations as ‘degenerate,’ un-religious, un-patriotic, ‘socialist’ and so on, and try to keep the culture they are familiar with, and which gives them status and the power to try and control the culture and communication of others. So culture can also involve political struggle, and be created in such struggle.

We should, however, not think of culture as entirely restrictive; it also enables the thought, shared meaning, basic ethics and collaborations which make liberty and political action possible. Culture is, in that sense, paradoxical; it is necessary for freedom, and may inhibit freedom.

So in summary of these sections we can suggest that freedom involves the paradox that liberty is probably not possible without some form of compulsion, or restraint, but the compulsion can be more or less pervasive, and more or less subject to participatory argument, or to exploration.

Liberty and Responsibility

There are many sayings connecting liberty to responsibility. But again responsibility for what? One position might be the responsibility for the consequences of one’s actions which in the complex systems of society and ecology will not always have the results one intends, or for making sure people (including oneself) do not impinge unnecessarily upon the liberty of others. Again we might wonder if capitalism encourages dominant groups to take responsibility for their actions, or to excuse their actions by reference to the demands of an impersonal market, or to the corporation which dissolves the personal responsibility and liability of shareholders? In any case these sayings imply a constraint that can be argued about, and is not immediately obvious.

The only person I know who expouses full liberty devoid of restraints and responsibilities, is de Sade. And the world that de Sade describes is probably, for most people, deeply boring; with huge sexual and power compulsions. Indeed most people in de Sade’s worlds have no liberty at all, other than the liberty to work for others, be sexual victims and die painfully. This, he also implies, is the real state of the world.

This may well be true, however most people would probably not describe this as liberty, if they were one of the victims.

For me, de Sade’s visions also suggest the argument that individual liberty cannot exist by itself. Liberty involves groups that support the liberty of others. If groups do not support liberty, then those groups which support either oppression, or their own liberty at the expense of others, will win out and be untrammeled as in de Sade’s worlds.

Seeing people as pure individuals can seem, rather paradoxically, disempowering, as they will engage in the politics of liberty by themselves struggling against those dominators who team-up. The idea of culture, and learning, also implies that individuality generally grows out of a group experience, or the experience of groups, rather than precedes it. For example, as suggested in the culture section of this post, we don’t invent our own languages, we borrow from others, but it becomes our language to a greater or lesser extent through use, experimentation and the responses of others.

Liberty is social and cultural, not just individual.

Liberty, comparison and change

On a lesser level, liberty is often comparative, dending on how people see their power over other people, (and almost nobody would argue that adults should have no power over their children to stop them harming themselves or others). For example, men can complain that their freedom is curtailed if women get more freedom, and previous liberties granted to the men, such as intimidating or fondling women, or screaming at those they see as “bad girls” or “whores” etc, are curtailed. Corporations can complain their liberty is curtailed by taxes or regulations, which may be beneficial to others, or which stop the corporations from shifting costs and pollution onto parts of the populace. Wealthy people can object to any increased freedom of poorer people to organise, or team-up, for better wages, conditions, and access to power. Similarly people can be envious if other despised people are perceived as happy, and try to prevent this.

So some forms of what some people call liberty appear to involve harming others, and the repeal of that harm is also seen as a harm; a non liberty. Again, the point of all this discussion is that liberty is embroiled in argument, conflict and politics as part of its nature. It is not easy to define.

Positive and enabling Liberty

This leads us to another conception of liberty, which adds to the problems and arguments. What we might call ‘positive liberty’

Positive liberty is the liberty that comes from becoming able to do what you would like to do as best you can, within the agreed upon, or argued upon, restraints. It is slightly more than equality of opportunity, because it wants that relative equality to exist.

It is inhibiting of mathematical genius if a person cannot be taught, or learn, maths, because of social prohibitions or just the absence of maths training for people of their class or lack of money. It is inhibiting of artistic genius if the person cannot afford the materials for art, or to receive any basic training or, in both cases, have to spend their life slaving and exhausted to survive. If you are a business genius you may never get going if your society prohibits business, or confines it to a class – as when women had to get the backing of a man to get a bank loan. You may even have to have some training, before you find your areas of competence and enthusiasm. Without that ability to access that education, your self-knowledge and your liberty is curtailed.

While some people are capeable of overcoming what seem like impossible obstaces, through good luck, patronage, ability and work, this is not the case for most people – without some rare fortune, it can be hard to ascend, or find your liberty.

Consequently, there is a level at which liberty may need to be enabled for it to exist. Of course not everyone has equal talent, application or good fortune, so there never are grounds for expecting equal success, but you can diminish extraneous things like the importance of wealth of parents, hostile parents, the class you grew up in, or the deliberate exclusions put in place by professional groups, or particular privileged social categories (“a woman cannot be a doctor!”).

Again this is subject to argument. Do we really want untrained or innumerate engineers building bridges, because we give them the liberty to do so?

This blog post has repeatedly suggested that liberty is political and involves struggle. So one aspect of enabling liberty is to enable people’s participation in political struggle. If people cannot participate in meaningful and effective politics, then they effectively have no liberty at all. They are vulnerable to whatever the more established, connected and powerful groups decide to do. Simply saying that the State should not take liberties away is not enough, as that may simply free up the powers of those who are already in charge to keep the gateways closed, and the people down.

The reality is that people with perceived similar interests and positions will ‘team up’ to increase their power and capacity, and sometimes to keep others down. The more the already established have the capacity to team up without opposition, and the more they can prevent others from joining together, the less liberty remains.

In a society dominated by wealth, which can buy all the other forms of power, those without wealth are far less able to contribute to the general discussion or to the defense of their liberty, other than as tools, or objects to be manipulated in the service of someone else’s power and privilege. The information promulgated by the rulers can keep them programmed and unable to engage in the knowledge processes that help liberty. Without a process of enablement, whole groups of people are likely to become victims.

There is a genuine question as to whether we can have liberty if a society has severe inequalities, or if we have large gaps in power between the ranks in a hierarchy. The greater the divisions in access to different modes of power, the greater the likelihood that some peoples’ liberty will be impinged, and that the impingement will be hidden or not even be noticed.

Just as with the struggle for the ‘liberation’ of women, or the freedom of ethic minorities, such enabling can be resisted by those with privilege, who may not even have realised that they were curtailing liberty. They would rather keep the exclusions going, their places secure, and claim that such liberty is interference with their privilege. Not that they will put it that way; other people’s failure will not be said to arise because of the dominant groups’ abuse of power, but because of the dominated’s lack of skill, talent, work, or god’s approval, and it will be implied that helping to overcome these restrictions is bad.

For me this is one of the possible uses of a state, when it is controlled by the people. This is, for me, the socialist ideal that the people should be able to be enabled to engage in liberty and self-governance, rather than simply left alone to sink under the rule of others, whether they want to or not. Of course no one should have to accept the enabling if they do not want it, but no one should be prevented from accepting it either.

Conclusion

All I can hope to do here is suggest liberty is complicated, subject to argument, and something which is either continually opened or curtailed as a result of politics, and that liberty cannot exist without politics and perhaps without a recognised place for politics and struggle.

Liberty also seems paradoxical, as it probably cannot exist without some range of compulsions and limits. Culture is one kind of limit which also enables discussion and human existence in the first place, but it is probably necessary to be aware of a large range of cultural responses to be free.

Individual liberty grows out of group liberty. Liberty is an ongoing social and political process, which involves people testing limits and imposing limits, teaming up and resisting team ups. Liberty for some groups can challenge the liberties of other groups – especially when the challenging group has previously been suppressed. This may not be easy to resolve, as the oppressing groups may not even be aware of their acts of suppression.

Liberty may need to be enabled to exist. It does not come into being, merely by removing constraints. Established groups may still prevent people from other groups using their liberty, and refuse to admit this is a restraint, people may not receive the education to follow their inclinations, or may be deliberately excluded from participation.

The liberty of different groups may conflict, and it is vital for everyone’s liberty, that these struggles have a place to occur, and that the struggles are recognized. At the least, liberty involves being enabled to participate in the politics around liberty with enough force to be heard and not completely bypassed by others. The ability to organise with others is necessary to defend liberty from the organisation of dominant or ‘imperialist’ groups. It also helps enable and extend personal action, thus giving people more liberty to fully engage in life and protect themselves. If the struggles are reduced to one type of liberty, one type of culture, or one type of power, then it is highly probable that this will be the liberty and power promoted by the ruling class.

Liberty is social or it does not exist.

Continues in Neoliberal Liberty and the Market.

Simple Thoughts on Politics

November 29, 2019

The world is complex. It is composed of heavily interactive systems that modify themselves in response to events within both themselves and within the ‘external’ world.

As the world is complex, responsive and interactive, it is always in flux. It is never completely stable.

Such complex systems are not completely understandable, or replicable, by humans.

Such complex systems are not completely predictable. The further into the future you imagine, the less accurate your predictions are likely to be.

As a result of these factors, political or other actions are extremely likely to have unintended consequences.

There are several common responses to these unintended consequences.

  • a) Refusal to accept the unintended consequences.
  • b) Accept that other people’s policies can have unintended consequences but not yours, because yours are true.
  • c) Accept the unintended consequences, but say they are irrelevant to what you are doing.
  • d) Suggest that the unintended consequences have unpleasant political consequences and are therefore unreal or a plot.
  • e) Argue that because the world is complex we cannot be sure these events have anything to do with our actions. We must continue.
  • f) Accept the unintended consequences, but blame evil forces.
  • g) Refuse to accept the unintended consequences and still blame evil forces.
  • h) Recognise the problems, but claim the bugs are features.
  • i) Start to eliminate, or silence, those who are telling you about the unintended consequences.
  • j) Start to eliminate those who you blame as evil forces, even if they cannot be proven to have anything to do with it, and even if you deny the consequences are real.
  • k) Intensify the actions we are performing, because clearly we are not applying them strongly enough. The theory is correct therefor we are not being thorough. We are being weak.

These common responses simply make the trap harder to escape.

Ways out.

Do not assume that because you are well intentioned, the policies you favour must work, and the theories you hold must be correct.

Policies and theories are tools, to be discarded when shown not to work in the ways they are expected to work.

As the world is complex, try innovations in small relatively enclosed areas, to see what happens. Realise problems can change with scale of implementation. For example, small amounts of fracking can be relatively harmless, but small amounts of fracking seem to be impossible.

If we are plagued with problems, especially problems we did not have before our innovations, then investigate those problems, and see if we can ameliorate, end them, or use them. Do not ignore them or blame others.

Problems are information, and must be listened to, to understand what we are doing, and do it better.

Change our actions, listen to the critics, see what they say is correct and what is wrong.

Be prepared to change as the world changes, because the world is always changing.

Recognise politics is always an experiment, and some times experiments will show you your theories are wrong.