The "American experiment"
Over at Facebook my screen registered a piece from Medium, only three weeks old, titled "The End of the American Experiment." Author's name: Umair Haque. Don't know him. Point of the piece: well here's a quote:
Yet the relationship couldn’t be any more obvious, clear, or striking: no public goods are what uniquely separates America, the uniquely failed state, from the rest of the world.
Well, sure, but what attracted my eyes was this portion of the title: "The American Experiment." What was the American Experiment? It went like this:
1) Europeans invade a chunk of land, kicking the native peoples off or killing them with guns and smallpox.
2) They import African slaves to do their dirty work in a process that wipes out a couple of million of them in transit.
3) They invent "democracy" and put anti-democrat Alexander Hamilton in charge of designing it. Later Hamilton is killed in a duel.
4) The single human being most directly responsible for wiping out the native populations of the region is granted a space on the $20 bill -- later he merits a special issue of Time Magazine proclaiming him an "American populist."
5) After two centuries of slavery the Africans get another century of Jim Crow segregation, but no reparations. Japanese-Americans, interned for a few years in prison camps during World War II, get reparations.
6) The resultant nation-state becomes the primary core-vehicle for the capitalist system, existing largely to Hoover up what Jason W. Moore calls "cheap nature," mostly to further enrich the already-rich. A significant middle class benefits as a side-effect. The system transforms the planet into a consumer convenience, with abrupt climate change eventually promising the world climate departure.
So let's be clear. The "American experiment" offered, and offers, a bundle of benefits -- if you can catch them. It wastes your lives with the ceaseless struggle to catch and exercise those benefits. But at its core (and, Haque, PLEASE discover the rules regarding the use of "its" and "it's") is an irresponsibility, a recklessness, and a general regard for the narcissism of those at the top of the economic pyramids. If you're going to read one "great American novel," may I recommend Aldous Huxley's (1939) After Many A Summer?
And that's it. As far as I can tell, then, the "American experiment" is still alive and well. There might be "public goods" to it, but they're generally half-baked in content, pricey in actual cost, and haphazard in delivery. Kind of like "Obamacare."
Comments
The "American Experiment" created a monster.
Dr. Frankenstein coulda told ya.
"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"
a good scientist knows after a failed experiment...
it needs to be re-designed. Chris Hedges suggest the experiment didn't fail...it worked exactly as designed, to enrich the wealthy.
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Let me guess.
"Its" is possessive. Every dog has its day.
"It's" is a contraction of either "it is" or "it has". It's been hot this week and it's hot today.
THANK YOU!
The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.
Great essay
on a very insightful article. Two quotes from the article stand out.
A little further down, Haque also writes (my emphasis):
When we examine our country's values as compared to the neoliberal ideology, we can see that we are the epitome of that ideology. In my series on neoliberalism, my very first essay recalled a training program that was instituted for every city employee back in the 1990's. My political awareness was limited to just local politics back then and therefore, I was totally unaware of the neoliberal ideology. However in retrospect, our training was based heavily upon the neoliberal ideology in that it emphasized that competition would become the driving force behind everything we would do in our work, including competing with one another.
I referenced an article by George Monbiot as my inspiration for that first essay. In it Monbiot states the following (my emphasis):
Your essay shows that we never really had the moral universals deeply ingrained into our national psyche from the beginning. Like with everything else, our nation has played around the edges just enough to prevent revolution, but has never truly committed to those moral universals. Now, as a result, we are not only a nation in decline, but even worse, a society in decline with no universal moral compass to save us when we most need it.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
The competetive instinct
is a universal element of human nature, but it is certainly not a moral universal. If the desire to "do better than" one's fellows is not held firmly in check by some sort of universally accepted moral code, then society will inevitably revert to its most primitive form of organization, which is rule by brute force.
native
Agreed
The last supports of a cooperative society are being knocked out from underneath us with the privatization of our public facilities and services such as public lands, parks, schools, and even other public facilities like many of our ports that have been outsourced to United Emirates under a 35 year no bid contract.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
Our systems of social organization
are not designed to facilitate cooperative endeavor, they're designed to perpetuate the ideal (if not the actuality) of individual autonomy. Americans' extreme individualism seems to be a fairly deeply ingrained mindset.
native
I don't know for sure
I don't really know what to do with this concept of "moral compass." The nice people in Jennifer Silva's Coming Up Short have moral compasses just fine -- but they have no concept of society and they live in neoliberal Hell and so life is rough for them. Their problem is capitalism. It's invaded their brains so thoroughly they can't conceive of anything else.
The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.
Actually
I hope you do not think my take was hijacking your essay. I believe it has spawned some excellent conversation which is always important regardless of where it goes.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
No that's fine.
The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.
LOL, it is quite obvious
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
Workers Should Cooperate, Not Compete. nt
“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu
i could argue with you about the fundamental nature of what
i would call the American Experiment, but i do not think that on this day i have the heart for it, as i struggle through a particularly difficult valley in my existential journey.
however, i will say this: the American Experiment as envisaged and driven forward by diversely-opinioned people like Adams and Hamilton and Madison and Washington and Jefferson and Hancock and Franklin did not depend on african slavery, it only accommodated african slavery -- and then, not for long (post-1783, i mean) in the general scheme of things, and at extraordinary eventual expense.
jefferson's dream was that they could create a society in which the state quite explicitly existed to serve the people, rather than vice versa, and that given authority over the governors, the people could sustain such a society, if they were given the requisite education and access to information -- i.e., if the government were forbidden to render the mass of the people illiterate, ignorant, and misinformed.
Yes, being wealthy bourgeois or landed gentry, they were uninclined to create institutions that threatened their own status, but they nonetheless had a fundamentally progressive worldview, which was the truly revolutionary thing that set them apart from the movers and shakers of their European forebears: They believed that the physical and psychological state of the mass of humanity could be slowly but continually improved, if society were ordered so as to permit the fruits of technological innovation to be shared. (Another way of putting it is that they believed in real economic growth as something that in the first place was possible, and in the second place could better the lot of the average person.)
Significantly, they were right about that. And Jefferson was right about almost everything else -- about the dangers of standing armies, about the eventual horrific penalty the US would pay for slavery, about the unsustainability of the monarchical/aristocratic European societies, about the social negatives of dense populations and industrial economic organization, about the threat posed by a corporations and financialism, etc.
If it makes you feel better about your moral superiority, feel free to despise TJ for his slave-ownership, but think hard and carefully before concluding that you possess insights superior to his, regarding the essential problems of social organization, justice, nationhood, and self-government.
But yeah, the experiment has clearly failed, in the sense that certain parameters definitely needed to be set differently at the get-go.
The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.
The primary circuit of capital
Hamilton's idea, as substantiated in the Federalist Papers, was to weigh democracy down with so many "buts," "ifs," and "ands" that elite rule would remain undisturbed by the popular will. It appears to have worked. Hamilton was also the terror of the Whiskey Rebellion, as the link bearing his name will argue. Also see e.g. Gerald Horne's history.
Ideals are fine, but all of your "social organization, justice, nationhood, and self-government" thoughts will receive their genuine tests in physical reality. And if physics does not consent, then physical consequences there will be. One recalls the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, for instance, who believed devoutly in free love, and who left in his wake a number of women of ruined lives...
The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.
What was in Jefferson's mind regarding Sally Hemings
will never be known to any of us, and might or might not have been known to Sally Hemings; nor for that matter can we ever know how she felt about him and their relationship. Most of us have enough trouble knowing our own hearts, so I generally choose not to presume to know the hearts of others, lacking some considerable evidence -- but if I had to bet, with the outcome to be infallibly revealed, I would bet that you are rather wrong about how Jefferson thought and felt about Sally Hemings. Stating categorically, as you do, that Jefferson's cognition corresponded directly to what is a 21st-century sociological construct is epistemologically unsupportable.
Hamilton is no hero of mine, and yes it's a bit of a puzzle why he would be the hero of anybody else either.
Indeed so, which is why I agree that the American Experiment has failed. The minds that created our political nation were not starry-eyed idealists, but they were idealists, and it turns out that some of the ideals -- for example, a rather slavish devotion to the sanctity of private property -- are in the long run inevitably incompatible with others. They believed in progress, but lacked the 19th-century economic models to even describe capitalism, much less see the way in which it must inevitably lead to precisely the concentration of wealth and concomitant power that many of them abhorred. Jefferson, in his concern about corporations and banks, came as close as any of them to seeing through that veil, but in the end his vision failed him.
The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.
Reversing the engine which grew America
Everything is not the fault of neoliberalism, nor of neoconservatism. But these have been the primary motivating factors in the downfall of the American Empire since WW2. The first downfall of the US came to a large portion of what was then the Union due to slavery. The malign effects of slavery are still with us, but that is something slowly fading (too slowly for certain).
With the rise of neoliberalism, we see the perversion of the "rugged individualism" from allowing a self-sufficient population, sufficiently empowered through education and socialization to work both for themselves (and families) AND for the betterment of the whole of society; into a progressively more selfish interpretation generated by the more successful against the less successful. This is actually the end-result and cause of our current national decline.
Neoconservatism, besides scooping up money for engines of war, has done NOTHING to further humanity, including its own citizenry. Spending more than half of the income generated primarily by the less well-to-do to transfer it to the wealthy, while committing destruction not only on foreign nations but objectively and obviously on the majority at home.
Neoliberalism exults in privatizing things, like schools, roads, health care, thereby making them less accessible to persons of lesser means. Do you think George Soros gave a damn when he caused the pound sterling to crash? No way. He was only interested in racking one more billion to his own bank account. I will not go through the list of other economic plunderers of which many examples are well-known.
Here's a paradox, though totally predictable. By outsourcing much, although not the majority, of our military procurements, our country is actually weaker. Not mere financially or morally, but because we then have to rely upon a new supply chain. A supply chain that can be choked off anywhere off-shore.
I'll buy that.
The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.
Democrats Killing Economic Reform
Everyone at c99% knows the Democratic Party is helping the GOP drive a stake through the heart of The American Experiment. Richard Escow at Alternet runs through the history of Chuck and Nancy's "Better Deal" slogan that can be summed up as "American workers need better training and corporations need more tax cuts".
There's a Pernicious Economic Theory Creeping into the Heart of the Democratic Party
It's good to have goals, but I don't see the DNC getting behind this idea:
http://www.alternet.org/labor/uber-democrats-workers-should-cooperate-no...
The DNC got pawned by The Blueman Group at Politicon and nobody knew:
https://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2017/08/01/activists-call-dncs-blu...
Here's more from Naked Capitalism with the very realistic video performance at the end of the story:
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2017/08/yes-men-target-better-deal-dncta...
"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn
good to see you reference
Basically, the history of this country has been the success of a few at the expense of many and the environment. The use of the word "ompetition" is simply a re-branding of that age old philosophy of dog eat dog. Competition does not allow for the moral universals and public investment in people. Competition is the survival of the fittest without regard to the greater good of society.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
The token payments Nisei survivors got were hardly “reparations”
The payment program was very limited, and grudgingly and belatedly granted. When was a judicial or organizational effort ever made to document each Nisei family or individual’s specific material losses, let alone the permanent psychological and spiritual damage done?
The writer seems to be implying that it was unjust to pay Japanese-Americans anything because they only were deprived of their supposedly constitutionally protected rights for “a few years.” What an invidious comparison to make! And a typical use of identity politics to play ethnic groups off against each other.
They were at least called "reparations."
Joe Feagin's paper on the topic, at which he arrives at an estimate of $711 billion. Not to disparage the certainly-valid claims of Japanese-Americans, but the difference between $711 billion (what they deserve) and zero (what they're getting) appeared to me to be worthy of citation...
& as for what is due the descendants of slaves, you might be interested inThe ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.
"We feel bad for the
Statements like this truly infuriate me.
To begin, the Democrats being a party of the people? Nope, sorry, history shows otherwise. They are the other hand of the imperialist agenda of this country, a pro-capital party that believes in profit over people. Time and time again has shown that Democrats will do everything they can to enrich themselves at the expense and death of millions of others. It just is.
Second, "if people exert enough pressure" is complete and utter bullshit. Again, that is a tranquilizing drug, a strong drink meant to keep people placated and disoriented. That somehow, if you apply enough pressure, these sociopaths and psychopaths will listen to you. They never will. All this is is leading people back to their veal pens. You can never change the Democrats. They can not be changed. All this is is meant to force people to expend time, energy, and money in trying to change something that can not be changed.
Democrats and Republicans must be destroyed. Both parties must be completely and utterly burned to the ground. There is nothing left else to do.