Neoliberalism: A Greater Threat to Humanity Than Communism Ever Was

Soviet-style communism failed because in practice it didn't come close to delivering what it promised in theory. The only way it could perpetuate itself was through brutal suppression of any political opposition. But with the advent of modern communications technology, the reality that western-style economic systems delivered a far superior lifestyle to the great majority of citizens became impossible to conceal from the masses. Communism was thus ultimately destroyed by its own internal contradictions.

What is ironic is that even as communist ideology was being abandoned in Eastern Europe, the dominant western ideology was mutating into something far removed from FDR's enlightened "capitalism with a conscience", and much closer to the Social Darwinist, "survival of the fittest" doctrine that became a dominant theme in western democracies in the late 19th century. It was almost as if the removal of the communist threat made the ruling elite in North America and Western Europe secure enough to unleash their inner apex predators.

Since 1980 the dominant philosophical motif in the US, Britain, and western countries in general has been a philosophy that is essentially an updated version of the Social Darwinist critique that was so popular during the first Gilded Age. Tracing its origins back to the 1930's and the writings of an Austrian expatriate named Freidrich Hayek, the impact and implications of neoliberalism are explored in two very worthwhile essays that appeared on the web this week:

The Zombie Doctrine, by George Monbiot

When Neoliberalism Was Young: A Lookback on Clintonism Before Clinton, by Corey Robin

Monbiot summarizes the central tenants of neoliberalism as follows:

Neoliberalism sees competition as the defining characteristic of human relations. It redefines citizens as consumers, whose democratic choices are best exercised by buying and selling, a process that rewards merit and punishes inefficiency. It maintains that “the market” delivers benefits that could never be achieved by planning.

Attempts to limit competition are treated as inimical to liberty. Tax and regulation should be minimised, public services should be privatised. The organisation of labour and collective bargaining by trade unions are portrayed as market distortions, that impede the formation of a natural hierarchy of winners and losers. Inequality is recast as virtuous: a reward for utility and a generator of wealth, which trickles down to enrich everyone. Efforts to create a more equal society are both counter-productive and morally corrosive. The market ensures that everyone gets what they deserve.

A telling point made by Monbiot is that the philosophy has now become so pervasive and widely accepted that it's now not even commonly recognized as an ideology, but instead viewed as an expression of some immutable force of nature. "But," Monbiot says, "the philosophy arose as a conscious attempt to reshape human life and shift the locus of power." In that effort, it has certainly succeeded most admirably.

With the rise of the Democratic Leadership Council and an agenda driven principally by the desires of the Democratic Party's corporate clientele, neoliberalism now provides the philosophical underpinnings for policies pursued by both of the mainstream political parties. It's instructive that social issues falling outside the parameters of neoliberal orthodoxy now represent nearly all of the criteria by which one is defined as either liberal or conservative. On the issues that truly impact the economic elite's bottom line, there is in fact no real space between your typical Clinton Democrat and Paul Ryan Republican.

The common refrain offered up by the defenders of the faith is basically a regurgitation of Margaret Thatcher's off-stated assertion that "there is no choice". But this, as is the case with so many other aspects of Thatcher and Reagan's spruced up Social Darwinism, is a lie. Of course there is a choice. And the fact is that we, as a society, have made a terribly bad one. Neoliberalism as a philosophy and societal blueprint is not only morally and intellectually bankrupt, it is also a colossal failure in the real world in terms of delivering on its stated promises.

Instead of promoting robust economic growth, since the 1980's growth has been stagnant compared to earlier eras. Instead of raising incomes and living standards for the many, these have declined for all but a tiny sliver of those who sit at the apex of the wealth/income pyramid. Instead of ensuring economic stability, the sustained and reckless assault on the physical environment has created the very real potential for a cataclysmic collapse of human civilization, not too many years down the road. As it turns out, an all-encompassing faith in the power of the marketplace to successfully resolve all of humanity's problems is in reality a fraud, a snare, and a delusion.

And yet, neither the bellicose buffoon nor the warmongering witch now vying for the position of Leader of the Free World can offer any more imaginative prescription than to boldly lead us even further down the road to ruination. "Pity the nation" indeed, to invoke Khalil Gibran's famous 1934 poem. And even more, pity the planet. Human activities that are not only allowed but actively encouraged by neoliberal policy makers have now taken both planet Earth and human civilization to a darker place than anything likely ever imagined in Josef Stalin's most malevolent fantasies.

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The huge error of Communism -as practiced by Lenin in particular- was to ignore human nature in seeking to enhance self-interest (generally denounced as bourgeois greed). There is NO chance that a large number of strangers will do what benefits the majority without getting a piece of the action. Communism never planned on taking control of nation-states since the possibility of success required that all participant knew and understood each other. This is not possible on that level.

Corporatism exploits human nature to achieve its goals, especially the desire of the self to enhance one's self-interest (more commonly known as greed), generally in the form of a promise of betterment without any overt likelihood of realizing that betterment. It isn't necessary to know more than who your competitors are, and how to triumph over them. That carrot dangled in front of a person as the reward for success always manages to remain just as distant and out of reach no matter how one strives to acquire it.

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Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.

With something I once read in a sales book, of all things. Human nature has this flawed condition where things that reward you some of the time are MORE addictive than things that reward you all of the time. That is why gambling is so addictive. It's also why corporatism survives, especially in America. I *might* be rich some day - and when I am - I don't want the government telling me what I can and can't do with my money! As opposed to socialism which is more of a guarantee of equality.

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Democrats, we tried to warn you. How is that guilt and shame working out?

I like it. As for the rest? I believe we are well and truly f@cked. Going Green in the fall. Maybe out of the chaos, Lucidity will emerge.
peace

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Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .

Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .

If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march

It's not. Out of chaos comes totalitarianism.

Look at what happened to France after the Terror frightened the reactionaries into action. I'm sure Napoleon's military casualties dwarfed the numbers guillotined, yet Napoleon is praised as a great national leader while the French revolutionaries are denounced.

Look also at the Russian Revolution. Lenin destroyed the only authority in Russia, which led to civil war. This left a lot of bitterness in Russia for Stalin, who responded with purges and pogroms and deliberate abuse of the people. The damage Stalin caused was almost enough for Hitler to exploit to achieve invasion victory despite his personal shortcomings as a military strategist.

All of the "legal" needs of such a totalitarian state are in place for an entity to impose themselves on the USA. All they need is an excuse to do so.

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Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.

Our oligarchy prefers to rule by proxy.

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Democrats, we tried to warn you. How is that guilt and shame working out?

NWIA's picture

Is that whatever economic theory or governmental bureaucracy is installed, the issue that determines equality is the level of totalitarian leanings of the state. A country ruled by a king devoted to equanimity for his people is superior to any purported Western -ism that wages continous wars for the good of only the powerful.

Edited to correct "couple try" into "country." Damn fingers.

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Considering how many Americans drool over the British Royal Family, you might be partly correct. The typical American royal fan would love to be ruled by them.

But the British Royals don't rule over the UK. Otherwise, Queen Liz II would have stepped all over Maggie Thatcher for being such a beyotch to her people.

I note that you don't offer an example of such a monarch as you propose. Got one in mind?

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Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.

NWIA's picture

It's all theory. And it's tough for leaders to avoid being dicks. I know. People can be just awful and I'd want to slap them hard to get them in line. As noble as I'd imagine the country of NWIA being, I could also imagine large prison camps of fat, rich white guys who said the wrong thing to me. Boom! How quick my experiment in fairness and harmony can plummet into a totalitarian state.

No specifics. I just don't think it matters. We see ebbs and flows of totalitarian/fascist impulses in our country continually, all the while slowly making some civil rights issues better, even as our current order is fleecing most of us for the most elite. We've come close to toppling this order in 2016, and I expect we will in the near future, before money begins to fuck things up again.

Communism could be great, but it never has been. Pure capitalism can never be great, because it depends on cheaper and cheaper labor to give the moneyed folk their well deserved ROI. And everything in between depends on how good/bad the political leadership is.

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Haikukitty's picture

I think in the past, there genuinely were some people raised to believe in an obligation to the people. No one really is raised within that sort of a cultural belief anymore. There were undoubtedly very good kings and queens. The problem is the heredity factor, you never know what you're going to get with the next generation.

I'd much rather see us go to some kind of tribal council type leadership, where there is no single ruler, but a council of chosen leaders who must talk until they agree unanimously on some course of action. And who can be removed by the people for any betrayals.

If we want to move towards compassion and community, we should include it in our government dreams. Smile I know in a sense Congress is supposed to be something like this, but it needs to be a smaller group of people, held accountable ONLY to their own constituents, and able to be removed at any time if the majority feel they should be.

Unfortunately, anything we do is going to be fallible until the entire mindset of the materialist age is overturned. Survival of the fittest, competition - all that needs to be replaced with the idea of interconnectedness and the welfare of all. It would be great to have a society where prestige was earned based on how much you gave to the community, not how much you are able to suck out of it.

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dynasties. They never seemed to last longer than about 500 years, before things fell apart, and someone had to start over. But there were major public works, canals and roads, and at one time, people were allotted land according to the size of their families. Confucius stressed the duty of the ruler, as well as everyone else's duty. Really interesting, I thought.

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polkageist's picture

I have felt for years now that communism and anarchy are not possible for human beings because they both are fit only for saints. "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" could have been said by Christ or any great religious teacher. It is very close to the golden rule. Thus I do not consider those philosophies/systems as practical or possible for us.

Neoliberalism is the philosophy of the flesh eating bacteria. Sooner or later it will kill its host and itself. Ronald Reagan became it's smiling suede shoe salesman in the eighties and was spectacularly successful. We lost our way through the success of a deceitful advertising campaign. An ironic fate for a country which has always been about success through hard work and small business and selling the latest labor saving doodad. We are now in the position of having to fight politically against neoliberalism's legion of opportunists because it is no longer a viable system.

What is possible is what we once had: a belief in the commonwealth. That word is excellent. It describes fire departments, hospitals, postal services, public lands, restrictions on pollution and crime, fair play for all people, and a belief that we are all worthwhile. Our republican form of government used to deliver that to us and was simply taken for granted when I was a boy in the thirties, forties, and fifties. Complacency is fatal.

There is enough for everyone if we share. There are too many of us on the planet, but we can remedy that peacefully and compassionately if we want to. Our ignorance and hubris has led us to the precipice of climate change. We may be able to ameliorate that too. But neoliberalism cannot do the job. It will annihilate us. It's time to resurrect our old civics text books and pay attention to what they teach.

The times are bleak. As sentient beings we must cooperate to bring about life giving change. For us right now, right here, at this time that means working for Bernie and planning for political change. It means simultaneously educating people everywhere about their peril and what must be done to avert killing the biosphere. It means believing in the commonwealth for all living beings not just the predators and in applying that knowledge and belief in our personal and public lives. Good luck to us. Success is not assured, but the fight sure is.

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-Greed is not a virtue.
-Socialism: the radical idea of sharing.
-Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy, In a speech at the White House, 1962

ZimInSeattle's picture

Having the sense, like Bernie says, that we are all in this together; democracy is instinctual. Let's not go against our instincts and care for one and other.

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"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." - JFK | "The more I see of the moneyed peoples, the more I understand the guillotine." - G. B. Shaw Bernie/Tulsi 2020

detroitmechworks's picture

There is one line in the first movie that exemplifies how to truly fight against evil.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MU5_-lLjhQw]

I know I've posted it before, but it really is the sum of lots of little good things that stop great evil. So, here's to continuing to do good things with my friends, and helping with my community. (IMHO, one of the saddest things about the two-income family paradigm is that it takes so much away from the community and focuses far too much on the self. Even the rearing of kids is seen as an economic burden to be foisted off on those that provide a service. Yes, and sometimes the Shire needs a good scouring, which is why Tolkien felt it was possibly the most important part of LOTR...)

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

TheOtherMaven's picture

but that Tolkien understood that no place, no matter how remote or well-hidden, is safe from the threat of war. (England had that lesson pounded home in both World Wars - London was bombed by Zeppelins in World War I.)

Kiwis (e.g. Peter Jackson) have a little trouble understanding that, just because New Zealand is so very remote.

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

If we had had even one major city leveled to the ground during the World Wars, let alone great whacking armloads of them, we might "get it", and already BE socialized democracies, like Europe.

I think that the Shire DID need scouring, BTW. I always interpreted that section of LOR as being a statement that if you find your home taken over by petty despots, that despoil the land and rule by fear, then you have a duty to depose them. -No matter how much you crave putting up your arms, no matter how tired you are of the fight. Kinda' like what we're trying to do here in 2016, sans the broadswords and arrows.

Europe had the great good sense to "scour" Europe, to a great extent, of Fascism, and they now have a better standard of living than we do. We never did that on this side of the pond. We coddled our fascists, and bought the Fascist line about the evils of Communism / Socialism / Organized Labor / etc., instead. And now the idealogical, or in a few cases literal, descendants of said Fascists rule us.

So, yeah. Failure to Scour. One of the things that plagues Us, still.

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"Capitalism is the extraordinary belief that the nastiest of men for the nastiest of motives will somehow work for the benefit of all."
- John Maynard Keynes

ZimInSeattle's picture

This line:

On the issues that truly impact the economic elite's bottom line, there is in fact no real space between your typical Clinton Democrat and Paul Ryan Republican.

is so very true. I'm voting Green as well unless Bernie can pull out the victory. The establishment is doing their damnedest to stop Bernie. "Bellicose buffoon" is excellent. I also like 'bloviating ignoramus'. The establishment must be destroyed. Electing either Bernie or Trump will do that nicely. I sure prefer the former though.

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"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." - JFK | "The more I see of the moneyed peoples, the more I understand the guillotine." - G. B. Shaw Bernie/Tulsi 2020

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture


"And yet, neither the bellicose buffoon nor the warmongering witch now vying for the position of Leader of the Free World can offer any more imaginative prescription than to boldly lead us even further down the road to ruination."

I would really wish the members here would refrain from calling women they do not like a "witch"... She is NOT qualified to be one.

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detroitmechworks's picture

Which suggests the trappings of malice without associating it with a legitimate source of wisdom...

I'd suggest Senator, in both the classic and modern sense...

But if that doesn't work, how bout "Daughter of Hel" ?

Smile

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

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detroitmechworks's picture

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

mouselander's picture

My compulsive alliterateness got the better of me on that one.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

part of the reclaiming of the title "Witch" is educating others about it. And thanks for understanding... Smile

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diary, and you're right, I won't do that again. But it just rhymed so nicely and is just SO fitting, fitting when one thinks of the bad connotation of witch that is. Warmongering Bitch works just as nicely.

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Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur

thanatokephaloides's picture

Warmongering Bitch works just as nicely.

But is an insult to woozle mommies, who don't deserve anything of the kind. We'd be better off with Fido as President. (What I do: I use "bitch" and then apologize to all pup-kind and their mothers.)

And I say this as a kitteh person!

Smile

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

lotlizard's picture

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thanatokephaloides's picture

I would really wish the members here would refrain from calling women they do not like a "witch"... She is NOT qualified to be one.

'Tis an itchy glitch in the English tongue, courtesy of James I/VI and the Puritan diseased ones who deposed his descendants. For that very reason, "Witch" (as we use the term, being initiated Witches) is often capitalized, as a distinction from the usage to which you rightfully object but will likely not succeed in getting your objection established. (I say this with 2 1/2 decades of experience, including a board membership of CultWatch Response, Inc., under my belt.)

But, dearest Martha, please do be assured that I know fully well that Hillary Clinton in her current state could not be initiated as a Witch. Her word cannot be taken and relied upon. This means that her Oath is valueless, and therefore she is, per natura, excluded from the ranks of persons capable of being properly prepared for initiation. The scariest part of all this is that it by rights excludes her from the Presidency -- also an Oath-bound office!

In many ways, this is tragic. Think of how great it would be if she were otherwise, and then seeking the Presidency! Our choice would be so easy!

But, alas, it isn't.

Sad

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides