Monday, November 26, 2018

From Freedom To Fascism


Chris Hedges writes that neoliberalism has always been an absurd idea:

Neoliberalism as economic theory was always an absurdity. It had as much validity as past ruling ideologies such as the divine right of kings and fascism’s belief in the Übermensch. None of its vaunted promises were even remotely possible. Concentrating wealth in the hands of a global oligarchic elite—eight families now hold as much wealth as 50 percent of the world’s population—while demolishing government controls and regulations always creates massive income inequality and monopoly power, fuels political extremism and destroys democracy. You do not need to slog through the 577 pages of Thomas Piketty’s “Capital in the Twenty-First Century” to figure this out. But economic rationality was never the point. The point was the restoration of class power.

And, starting in the 1970's, the wealthy began to take back what they viewed as their birthright. They did this by establishing institutions which sold the idea that human freedom was synonymous with market freedom:

“It’s important to recognize the class origins of this project, which occurred in the 1970s when the capitalist class was in a great deal of difficulty, workers were well organized and were beginning to push back,” said David Harvey, the author of “A Brief History of Neoliberalism,” when we spoke in New York. “Like any ruling class, they needed ruling ideas. So, the ruling ideas were that freedom of the market, privatization, entrepreneurialism of the self, individual liberty and all the rest of it should be the ruling ideas of a new social order, and that was the order that got implemented in the 1980s and 1990s.”
“As a political project, it was very savvy,” he said. “It got a great deal of popular consent because it was talking about individual liberty and freedom, freedom of choice. When they talked about freedom, it was freedom of the market. The neoliberal project said to the ’68 generation, ‘OK, you want liberty and freedom? That’s what the student movement was about. We’re going to give it to you, but it’s going to be freedom of the market. The other thing you’re after is social justice—forget it. So, we’ll give you individual liberty, but you forget the social justice. Don’t organize.’ The attempt was to dismantle those institutions, which were those collective institutions of the working class, particularly the unions and bit by bit those political parties that stood for some sort of concern for the well-being of the masses.”

The problem is that neoliberalism hollows out everything it touches:

Neoliberalism generates little wealth. Rather, it redistributes it upward into the hands of the ruling elites. Harvey calls this “accumulation by dispossession.”
“The main argument of accumulation by dispossession rests on the idea that when people run out of the capacity to make things or provide services, they set up a system that extracts wealth from other people,” Harvey said. “That extraction then becomes the center of their activities. One of the ways in which that extraction can occur is by creating new commodity markets where there were none before. For instance, when I was younger, higher education in Europe was essentially a public good. Increasingly [this and other services] have become a private activity. Health service. Many of these areas which you would consider not to be commodities in the ordinary sense become commodities. Housing for the lower-income population was often seen as a social obligation. Now everything has to go through the market. You impose a market logic on areas that shouldn’t be open to market.”

When everything and everyone is commodified, there's a short road to fascism. Those who possess the most value possess the most power. That power is concentrated in fewer and fewer hands. And those hands take steps to protect themselves. They establish the structures they need to do that. In the end, it is all about coercing the masses.

It's not difficult at all to go from freedom to fascism. All that is required is to establish market freedom as the conventional wisdom. Once freedom is defined as market freedom, social justice goes out the window. And where social justice disappears, fascism takes its place.

Image: politicsrespun.org

6 comments:

zoombats said...

Power and greed manifests itself in many forms. I was raised in the seventies and worked as a line worker at G.M. Those were heady times for Labour. Witness todays news where the Oshawa G.M. plant after over a hundred years is closing the plant. Free trade, greed, capitalism, crushing of labour, Trump, etc., etc. and human cruelty that is the sewer we must crawl through to survive. Man I hate Mondays! MJW

Owen Gray said...

It's a tough day, zoombats -- particularly for those GM workers. The onslaught continues.

zoombats said...

For your interest Owen you might want to review Democracy Now for the entire hour interview with Noam Chomsky. It is startling to say the least and goes hand in glove with your post.MJW

Owen Gray said...

Thanks for the tip, zoombats. Chomsky has understood for a long time what's been going on. Unfortunately, he doesn't command a big audience.

John B. said...

It was over forty years ago that the inspired gospellers of market libertarianism wrote the slogans and idiotic memes that are now contaminating the Internet and appearing on the bumper stickers and tee-shits that their successors flog to scabby masses of situational rugged individualists the free world over. At least they were being honest about one thing, however unwittingly: there really is no pie.

Is the Chomsky interview a recent one?

Owen Gray said...

The site has four segments with Chomsky, John, labelled Nov 22nd. I assume that's the interview zoombats has in mind.

And yes, for most folks, there is no pie.