Black Agenda Report TV: Cornel West on Sharpton, Jay-Z, and the 50th Anniversary Farce on Washington

Cornel West on Sharpton, Jay-Z, and the 50th Anniversary Farce on Washington—

Rev. Al Sharpton and other organizers of the March on Washington 50th anniversary commemoration are so tightly tied to “the Obama plantation,” said activist and academic Dr. Cornel West, “we won’t get to focus on the New Jim Crow; we won’t get to focus on the privatization of education; we won’t get to focus on the land grabs and the gentrification of land it the city; we won’t get to focus on working class people; and we certainly won’t get to focus on the drones and those bombs landing on innocent brothers and sisters in Pakistan and Yemen and Somalia, and especially the 222 innocent children who have been murdered by the U.S. government so far, and counting.”


President Obama is scheduled to speak at the August 28 event at the Lincoln Memorial. Dr. West, of the Union Theological Seminary, in New York City, does not plan to attend. “If Martin [Luther King Jr.] were to show up at this march and they asked him to give a speech,” said West, “what he would say would be so subversive that those on the Obama plantation would be revealed for who they are, which is obsessed with career, obsessed with access, obsessed with status as opposed to being obsessed with the suffering of poor Black brothers and sisters.”

Speaking on Black Agenda Television, Dr. West said George Zimmerman’s acquittal in the killing of Trayvon Martin has fueled “an overwhelming Black rage, and Brother Sharpton and the others are trying to contain it, and of course Obama and Holder are fearful of it, because Black rage is always the catalyst to Black self-determination, toward Black self-respect, and toward Black self-defense.”

Dr. West rebuked entertainment mogul Jay-Z, who said his “presence is charity” to Black people, “just like Obama’s is.”

“It’s what I call the re-niggerization of the Black professional class, where you have fear, you have a tremendous sense of being intimidated even though you have big money,” said West. “So you say to Brother Jay-Z, What are you risking? We don’t want to just see you successful, we appreciate it, we want to see you faithful to something bigger than you, and faith has to do with risking something. The only way you become de-niggerized and free is when you are willing to risk, when you’re willing to go against the grain, to show you’re not fearful, you’re not afraid. Unfortunately, Jay-Z at his worst is an example of folk who get so elevated that they don’t show courage and take a risk for something that is bigger than them.”




LA DOLCE VITA: A Catalogue of Deadly Sins

Classics revisited—we reproduce this review not only because La Dolce Vita is such a powerful icon in the history of modern cinema, but because in his commentary of this complex film Stanley Kaufman is at once insightful, original and bravely contrarian. Besides, by holding up a mirror at the rotten, decadent upper class of the 1960s Fellini lets us see that things haven’t changed in their essence, they have just gotten insufferably worse. —PG

FILM MAY 1, 1961
BY STANLEY KAUFMAN, THE NEW REPUBLIC
La Dolce Vita
(Astor)
la_dolce_vita
A young idealist comes up from the provinces and is corrupted by the depraved city. This perennial theme now reappears in La Dolce Vita, surely the most loudly-heralded foreign film ever to be seen here. With many virtues, this latest Federico Fellini work suffers unfairly from advance blather; and suffers fairly by comparison with Antonioni’s L’Avventura, which deals with some of the same matters.

Corruption, or at least skill in rascality, is well under way when we first meet Marcello, a young Roman journalist. The film opens with a gag of his–and a stunning visual effect. A helicopter flies over the city with a life-size figure of Christ dangling below it; he and a photographer follow in another helicopter recording the effect on people below, including a crowd in St. Peter’s Square …

And we are off on a three-hour account of Marcello’s money-sex jungle. The episodes include: making love with a rich girl in a prostitute’s room; pursuing a pneumatic movie star although his devoted mistress has just attempted suicide’; exploiting a false vision of the Madonna invented by two children; an intellectual’s party where Marcello glimpses the life he wishes he shared; taking his visiting father to a nightclub and providing him with a girl; an all-night rout at an aristocrat’s huge villa; the shock occasioned by” the intellectual’s murder of his children and; and a final orgy in which Marcello feverishly tries to find ways to amuse his companions.

All of the film’s 106 speaking parts are unexceptionably acted by a cast which includes Anouk Aimee, the rich nymphomaniac, Yvonne Furneau, the mistress, and Magali Noel, the nightclub girl. Even Anita Ekberg, as the movie star, is satisfactory. As the journalist, Marcello Mastroianni, an actor of force and beauty, gets the chance to display all his powers except his comic ones. Alain Cuny strikes a credibly grave note as Steiner, the intellectual, and Annibale Ninchi, the father, contributes a small gem. In fact, the father’s episode – his increasing hilarity and his sudden quiet self-disgust–the most satisfactory in the film.

Fellini, justly celebrated for La Strada, Cabiria, and / Vitelloni, is a director incapable of committing a stale or careless shot to film. His vision is lively and his command is firm, whether with an intimate scene (the vitriolic quarrel with the mistress) or a mob scene (the fake miracle). He makes his actors search for truth and doesn’t let them attitudinize en route. He puts his films together with a subtle rhythm and a sense of contrast which, if occasionally startling, usually justifies itself.

Yet about half-way through this film, I found myself thinking: “What next? We’ve had Exhibits A, B, C, of decadence. How many more?” For Marcello’s story is not the point of the picture, it is only the strand on which these exhibits are hung – self-contained episodes which are samples of Marcello’s environment. There is no dramatic cumulation. He is no more corrupt at the end than at the beginning; he is only more successful–and shorn of the wispy hope of being like Steiner; which was just something to mull about when drunk, like the old reporter’s novel.

Fellini has set out to move us with the depravity of contemporary life and has chosen what seems to me a poor method: cataloguing sins. Very soon we find ourselves thinking: Is that all? We feel a little like the old priest in the story who is bored not only by the same old sins in the confessional but by the necessity to appear shocked so as not to offend the sinner.

There is something inevitably wide-eyed and sophomoric in an attempt to prove decadence by showing us the pair in the prostitute’s bed, or Marcello riding piggy-back on a drunken girl, or by having a “respectable” woman do a strip-tease. (If we could collect five dollars from every suburban New Year’s Eve party al which there has been a strip-tease, we could finance Fellini’s next picture.) Anyway Fellini has loaded the dice by concentrating on the life of the Via Veneto, which has about as much relation to Rome as it does to us: a collection of international floaters of three sexes, remittance men and girls, film actors on their way up or down or through, and attenuated aristocrats. It is an ineffectual Sodom, made more remote by its orgies. I cannot remember a film orgy, from von Stroheim to the present, which didn’t seem to recede as it progressed. Such episodes are apparently inherently uninvolving of the audience.

There is a recognizable desperation in all this, for the most difficult thing to render in art today is evil. What is evil in our lives? What will really shock a civilized human being today? Fornications in various combinations and places? Venality? Not likely. “What is sin?” Kafka asked. “We know the word and the practice, but the sense and knowledge of sin have been lost.”

That seems a cardinal truth of our time. One perceives it in, for example, William Styron’s generally undervalued novel Set This House on Fire which tried to embrace an understanding of fundamental evil and in which the author had to spend much of his time searching for meaningful large examples. It is easy to find small examples: misleading advertising, broken promises to children. But after Buchenwald, who sees Dostoevskian evil in odd matings? After Hiroshima, what signifies a strip-tease? After Freud, can self-assault evoke anything but pity?

This is very far from saying that life is now all anarchy and amorality. The evanescence of evil does not, theology to the contrary, necessarily mean the evanescence of good; it may in a torturous way mean an increase in good, or at least in compassion, to fill the gap. To hold up a lot of “wicked” pictures, as Fellini does, can do no more now than elicit that compassion. At worst, it reminds us that Fellini’s Rome has not changed much since Nero’s (if anything, it’s improved) and that, like the poor, the shallow ye have always with you.

Antonioni’s method in L’Avventura is quite different and much more effective. It is not survey but penetration, not to collect samples but to explore a few people; and it is a scheme always posed against abandonments and possibilities. But what has Marcello abandoned? Parties where ladies recite poetry and sing folk-songs, instead of stripping and shimmying. Steiner’s spiritual bankruptcy is the only tragic subject in the film and it is insufficiently realized. Bereft of a cosmos, of anything more than book-club idealism (which Marcello fortunately never has the chance to explode for himself), Fellini’s indictment becomes increasingly glib the more he slogs away at it. The execution is excellent; the concept is superficial.

Stanley Kauffmann was the film critic for The New Republic.




FILM: Elysium, Revisited

By Steven Jonas
August 21, 2013, special for The Greanville Post
elyseum45

According to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elysium): “Elysium or the Elysian Fields is a conception of the afterlife that evolved over time and was maintained by certain Greek religious and philosophical sects and cults. Initially separate from the realm of Hades, admission was initially reserved for mortals related to the gods and other heroes. Later, it expanded to include those chosen by the gods, the righteous, and the heroic, where they would remain after death, to live a blessed and happy life, and indulging in whatever employment they had enjoyed in life.”

 

In his movie “Elysium,” set in 2154, writer director Neil Blomkamp has a rather different view of the place.  It is not reserved for the dead, but for the very much alive super/super/ultra-rich (read: ruling class) who have apparently survived the dead-zone for everyone else that their policies have created on Earth.  And as is well-known by now to most readers of these pages, they have retreated to a vast satellite world that, even though they are hardly dead, they have for some reason named “Elysium.”  Perhaps it is because even now, there are members of the present ruling class, not only in the U.S. but around the world from here to China, to Russia, to the oil Kingdoms, to certain European and South American enclaves, who think of themselves as truly above everyone else and totally entitled to their riches, even if in the process of gaining them they are dooming the rest of mankind to the kind of existence that Blomkamp portrays in his movie.

[pullquote] The future is here and it ain’t so pretty. A warning tale about the logical endpoint of corporate dominance supported by bold direction and bravura performances. [/pullquote]

That is, one could imagine the Kochs, for example, or certain Saudi princes, or certain Russian oligarchs, or certain Chinese’s “princelings” (that is descendants of founding members of the Chinese Communist Party — who would be rolling over in their graves if they knew what had become of their children and grandchildren), thinking of themselves in the category of the “righteous and the heroic,” entitled to the life they have developed for themselves 140 years from now on their space-island.  (Yes, entitled, there’s that word again.  Well you have heard of “entitlements,” haven’t you?  Indeed this, not pre-paid pension benefits like Social Security, is its real meaning: what the ruling class think they are entitled to, come what may for everyone else.) Indeed, Elysium does seem to be international, for English is not the only language spoken there; French is also.

“Elysium” is a movie that says many things to us, not, perhaps, all of them intended to be said by Mr. Blomkamp.  Let me get my criticisms out of the way first.  First, without giving it away, the movie has a happy, or at least apparently happy, ending.  One must presume that this is one of Mr. Blomkamp’s bows to Hollywood, necessary to get what is a very expensive, VERY high-tech movie (with marvelous special effects, which I happen to love) made.  But the ending is jarring, to say the least, and very unrealistic.  It’s sort of like the ending of Roland Emmerich’s (otherwise) masterpiece “The Day After Tomorrow” in which millions of  Nord Americanos, fleeing a new ice age (which indeed could be a short-term consequence of global warming, as is explained in that movie) are welcomed with open arms south of the border.  Oh yeah!

Second, in “Elysium” there is some confusion about what the real issue is between the masses trapped on the ravaged Earth and their rulers on Elysium: the total misery and oppression of the masses that has been created by those rulers on Earth out of which there seems to be no way, or the question of illegal emigration to the satellite and how that is managed.  Blomkamp seems to be trying to deal with both issues side-by-side.  For me this led to some confusion about what the movie is really about.  Third, there is no history: how did this all come to be?  We know already what capitalism and its evil twin global warming are leading to: the arrival of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse: Famine, Flood, Plague, and War.  But for the reality of the movie to have been achieved, how did the masses become so totally oppressed and repressed, how did the ruling class manage to get away with it, apparently unscathed, and how did even they manage to accumulate the capital for what would be a very expensive enterprise: Elysium itself?

However, there are many excellent features of the movie, and I don’t have space to deal with them all here.  First of all, one doesn’t have to imagine 2154 to see what life is like for many millions of humans, right now.  For the future slum of Los Angeles in the movie was actually set in one of the  present slums of Mexico City. The reality of health care faced by the masses is brilliantly portrayed by an emergency room scene likely not that different from those in many poor countries right now, and by the fact that cures for all sorts of ailments are readily available (in the movie provided by a magic, 22nd century fix-whatever-it-is-that-ails-you machine), but only on Elysium.  Which is how many people around the world must now feel about the lack of available medical care, and in the U.S., where modern medical care miracles are widely distributed, for those who can afford them.  But if in the U.S. you don’t have health insurance, fuhgeddaboudit.

The cops are vicious, violent, automatons (not that all present cops are, but there are plenty like them).  Max’s “parole officer” is a sappy automaton, in function probably much like certain members of that profession in real life, now.  “Homeland Security” is ever-present (as it is becoming more so, now).  The “Defense Secretary,” Delacourt, played by Jodie Foster, is a vicious, scheming Dick Cheney-like character for whom “defense” is primarily against all the people left behind on Earth.  She can see events on Earth that might present some kind of threat to her realm, in real time (and the NSA is already checking out the technology available to her).  And she uses working class traitors to help her keep the working class oppressed.  Then there is workplace reality faced by the movie’s hero, Max, brilliantly played by Matt Damon.  You see it all: speed-up, unions long gone, no occupational health and safety regulation, minimal pay for dangerous work, the foreman clearly acting as an intermediate oppressor, the boss of it seated in a sealed container overseeing the shop floor, but not wanting to even smell it, much less descend onto it.  And so on and so forth.

Blomkamp does present a vision of what Earth could look like in the future, and not necessarily 140 years in the future, with global warming already wreaking havoc and capitalism becoming ever more ferociously profit-centered.  What we need next is how this all is going to be prevented.  Since that is going to take leading parties and the next generation of socialist revolutions around the world, don’t expect to find that story in a Hollywood movie.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Protean senior editor Steven Jonas, MD, MPH is a Professor of Preventive Medicine at Stony Brook University (NY) and author/co-author/editor/co-editor of over 30 books. His articles are distributed on many venues including BuzzFlash@Truthout and he is the Editorial Director of and a Contributing Author to The Political Junkies for Progressive Democracy (http://thepoliticaljunkies.org/).  Dr. Jonas’ latest book is The 15% Solution: How the Republican Religious Right Took Control of the U.S., 1981-2022: A futuristic Novel, Brewster, NY, Trepper & Katz Impact Books, Punto Press Publishing, 2013, http://www.puntopress.com/jonas-the-15-solution-hits-main-distribution/, and available on Amazon.




Libertarianism in the Age of Obama

The Last, Best Hope?

by ANDREW LEVINE
In national politics these days, the most ardent opponents of the Bush-Obama surveillance state are libertarians in the GOP.  In the aftermath of the Snowden revelations, a few Democrats have taken leading positions too, but they equivocate, emphasizing the importance of “balancing” Constitutional protections with the imperatives of national security.   Libertarians equivocate less.

Libertarians were also conspicuous among opponents of the Iraq War, and they were better than most Democrats on Obama’s revving up (before revving down) the war in Afghanistan.  They have been better too on the quasi-wars Obama has been waging with drones and assassins.  How many of those wars there are and where they are being waged is, of course, “classified.”

This strange turn of events is at least partly explained by the fact that, like all Tea Party Republicans, they hate Obama viscerally and oppose everything he does.

But Obamaphobia alone does not explain why in these two areas only – civil liberties and war and peace — libertarians, some of them anyway, are fighting the good fight.

The question arises because the Tea Party runs on right-wing billionaire money and because many of its most prominent spokespeople are certifiable whack jobs.

The Tea Party base includes its share of whack jobs too.  But because it has struck a populist chord, all kinds of people have been drawn in under the Tea Party tent.

No doubt, many of them are sane and no more ill informed than anyone else in the Fox News/talk radio demographic.  Neither are they significantly more manipulated than ordinary citizens in the marketing campaigns that our elections have become.

No doubt too that what draws them into the Tea Party fold are legitimate grievances.  These are, for the most part, the grievances of every other card-carrying member of the ninety-nine percent.

It would be interesting to examine the social and cultural reasons that led them, and not the others, to take the Tea Party route.  Admittedly, it is hard to see how anyone could think that Tea Party nostrums would even begin to make life better.  But then it is also hard to see how Democratic or establishment Republican policies would be any less unhelpful.

Tea Partiers are a risible lot, and their views on economic and social policies veer towards the horrendous.  But at least they have the good sense to resist the Republican Party establishment.  “Progressive” Democrats seldom exhibit similar courage.

And if Tea Partiers wavered before, if they were tempted, like Democrats, to be more “reasonable” or “pragmatic,”  by now they surely know better.  Wavering got them Mitt Romney and therefore Barack Obama.

On the other hand, they could hardly have failed to notice that when they are obdurate to the point of ludicrousness they prevail.  House Republicans figured this out a long time ago.  This is why, despite serious losses in the 2012 elections, they are now more than ever set in their ways.

One of William Blake’s “Proverbs of Hell” goes: “if the Fool would persist in his follies, He would become wise.”   The Tea Party is full of fools, and they have indeed become wise, though not quite in the ennobling sense that Blake envisioned.   They are wise at getting their way.

This is not necessarily good news for the Koch Brothers and their ilk because populist movements, whether of the left or the right, are dedicated enemies of real (or perceived) elites.

Tea Partiers haven’t yet figured out who their real enemies are.  But the plain fact that it is not do-gooder liberals but economic grandeees like the Koch Brothers who cause their miseries cannot be evaded indefinitely.

All “mainstream media” dumb down public discourse; the right flank of the mainstream, epitomized by Fox News, also misinform and disinform egregiously.   But even they cannot keep populists on the wrong track forever – not when the views they inculcate fly so blatantly in the face of reality.

It may just be wishful thinking, but who knows:  in these anxious and turbulent times, erstwhile Tea Partiers, some of them anyway, might just turn on the billionaires who got them riled up, and who still, for the most part, pay their way.

That would be likely in a possible world very much like our own – if, for example, socialist theory and politics had managed somehow to remain alive even to the extent that was the case before the onset of the Reagan era.

Of course, that is not what happened in the actual world.  But nowadays, in America and elsewhere, in more than a few progressive circles, discussions of the evils of contemporary capitalism have become Topic A.  This is very much to the good.  What is missing, though, is a political practice built on a sustained critique of capitalism itself, not just its corruptions.

This is why ours is a world in which the Left has become a shadow of its former self.  It will likely remain so unless and until socialist theory and practice revive.

That the traditional Left has gone missing has moved the political spectrum rightward everywhere.  The  spectrum in the United States is especially skewed towards the right – not just by world standards, but even by those of our not very distant past.

Even so, libertarians who promote privacy and due process rights, and who fight against the Bush-Obama perpetual war regime, fall, with respect to everything else, on the far right fringe of the political spectrum.

How can people with such awful politics be so good on issues of such paramount importance?

Who are these libertarians?  In addition to the ones on the national stage who have spoken out against Obama’s national security and military policies, there are ordinary Tea Partiers and there are academics.  The distance between them is considerable if only because rank-and-file Tea Partiers are generally mindless, while the academics emphatically are not.

Those academics are, for the most part, politically inactive.  However, they do influence  the national politicians at least nominally.  By most accounts, pseudo-intellectual frauds like the stroke book author Ayn Rand influence them more.

However that may be, academic libertarianism does play at least an indirect role in the politics of our time.   The phenomenon therefore warrants scrutiny even apart from the inherent  interest of libertarian ideas.

In the sense in question here, libertarians are people who, to borrow a phrase from Robert Nozick, one of their foremost defenders, accord the highest moral priority to “capitalist acts between consenting adults.”

Libertarianism is not just pro-liberty.  All modern political philosophies are that; they all maintain that, when there are no compelling reasons to the contrary, individuals should be unhindered in the pursuit of their ends.  That is what the “liberty” in question is.

There are, of course, philosophical disagreements about what compelling reasons for restricting liberty are.  But there is no disagreement about the importance of liberty itself.  Everyone agrees that the default position, as it were, is the absence of (coercive) restraints; and therefore that, if liberty is to be restricted, a case must be made for doing so.

Neither is it enough just to be pro-capitalist to count as a libertarian – all liberals these days are pro-capitalist.  Even those who want to regulate capitalism severely do not want to replace it.

But not all pro-capitalist liberal positions are the same.  For mainstream liberals, capitalist social relations follow from or are at least consistent with more fundamental political principles; for libertarians, they come first – and everything else must accommodate to them.

What distinguishes libertarians from other liberals, then, is the idea that there is a basic right to own things privately, provided individuals have obtained their holdings without violating anyone else’s rights.

In the libertarian view, this right is indefeasible; it cannot be traded off for anything else.  And it is absolute; it cannot be restricted in any way.

Ordinary liberals support private ownership, but they do not regard property rights as fundamental requirements of justice.  Private ownership and market exchange are, at best, features of a just society.  For libertarians, they are its founding principle.

Libertarians also think that justice requires that individuals be free to do what they want with what they own, provided no one is involuntarily harmed and provided, again, that no one else’s rights are infringed.

In short, libertarianism is an up-dated version of the classical liberalism of John Locke and like-minded eighteenth and nineteenth century political philosophers.

In societies like ours, where market relations organize most human interactions and where almost everything can be bought and sold, most people are, to some extent, spontaneous libertarians, people with libertarian intuitions.

They are inclined to assume that they have a basic right to what they have “earned,” overlooking how utterly dependent market-generated holdings – and, of course, inheritances — are on the past and current contributions of countless others.

To some extent, this shortsightedness explains why it is comparatively easy to mobilize the disgruntled against Big Government, and to make taxes (government “takings”) issue number one.

The visible hand of the government is easy to demonize, while the invisible hand of the market feels like it is part of the natural order of things.

This position has been refuted countless times.  Still, for academic philosophers, it has a certain fascination, and not just because it offers a welcome alternative to more defensible ways of thinking about justice that have become boring if only by being predominant for so long.

What is mainly appealing is the classical liberal notion of self-ownership; the idea that persons own themselves absolutely, and that they therefore have unlimited rights to control and to benefit from their own bodies and powers – provided, again, that no harm is done to others and that no one else’s rights are infringed.

The self-ownership thesis appeals across the (academic)  spectrum.  Thus, in addition to the familiar right-wing kind, there are left libertarians who argue, ingeniously if not compellingly, for egalitarian redistribution on broadly Lockean grounds.

There were even Marxists who, without quite endorsing the self-ownership thesis, nevertheless insisted that it be taken seriously, and that some popular understandings of core Marxist doctrines – for example, Marx’s account of exploitation – implicitly assume it.

In short, within the insular world of academic philosophy, the case for the Lockean strain of libertarian thinking operates much like case for the existence of God.

No matter how often, and how decisively, arguments that purport to establish the rationality of belief in God are refuted, new, more ingenious arguments somehow emerge.  Libertarianism is similarly resilient.

Both are untenable positions, but both attract defenders who want those positions to prevail.  In both cases, it is the cleverness of their defenders, not the cogency of the positions they defend, that keeps the “debates” alive.

Libertarianism’s most ingenious academic defenders are philosophers, but they are not nearly as influential as libertarian economists or economist-minded political scientists.

In philosophy, libertarians were nothing until just a few decades ago, and they are still out there somewhere in right field.  In the economics profession, they don’t quite run the  show, but their role in it is central.

Part of the reason for this has to do with how modern day economists have effectively replaced the traditional concerns of political economy with investigations of the formal properties of market economies with private ownership.

Those investigations are anchored on results that vindicate Adam Smith’s celebrated conjecture that unconstrained market exchanges produce the best possible outcomes as if through the workings of “an invisible hand.”

Then it might seem that libertarianism would follow on utilitarian grounds – not because justice requires it but because it produces better outcomes than any feasible alternative.

It is easy to see how this conclusion would appeal to libertarians.  But it is so misleading that only a dedicated ideologue could take it at its word.

For one thing, “best” doesn’t mean best; it means most “efficient,” where that term does not mean what it does in ordinary speech.  “Efficiency,” in the sense in question, denotes a structural property that economists make much of but that has little to do with things working well, as one might suppose given how the word is used in ordinary speech.  An outcome is efficient, in the economist’s sense, if any change would make someone worse off.

Therefore a world in which one person has everything and everyone else nothing would  count as efficient provided only that taking something away from the person who has everything would make that person worse off.  This is a long way from “the best of all possible worlds.”

Then, the formal argument works only if a host of background conditions that are unrealizable in practice obtain.  Among many others, there must be perfect competition, no monopoly control over prices, no “externalities” (consequences of trade that affect persons who are not parties to the exchange), no “economies of scale” (savings in the cost of production from increasing production levels), and on and on.

And as if that weren’t enough to establish the policy irrelevance of the invisible hand, the old “paradigm” within which Smith’s conjecture was vindicated, nearly two centuries after he proposed it, has now been modified beyond recognition – because economists have learned to model and therefore to take into account some of the background assumptions that the old “neo-classical” paradigm never could.

But even before anyone had figured out how to deal, for example, with information asymmetries, most economists already understood that the invisible hand’s policy implications were tenuous at best.

There is also ample empirical evidence of how markets make outcomes worse – markets in health care provision provide particularly conspicuous examples.

Nevertheless libertarian ideologues continue to insist that if only the government would let capitalist markets alone, the best possible outcomes would automatically emerge.

Somehow it does not even occur to them that the very possibility of market institutions depends on the existence of government enforced legal frameworks and other institutional supports.

It is telling that even the economists libertarians love to cite, the titans of the so-called Chicago School and their epigones, seldom try to make a utilitarian case for capitalist market arrangements.  Their main focus is and always has been a rather different debate.

Their target has always been the Keynesian consensus that took hold, for obvious reasons, in the aftermath of the Great Depression and World War II and that continued to rule the economics profession until the late 1970s.

Theirs was not exactly a case for untrammeled markets: if it were, they would also have argued that money itself, along with labor and every other economic factor, should be subject to unregulated market discipline, as it was in the perilous days when the gold standard was still in effect.

But Chicago School economists were not quite that retrograde.  Instead of unregulated markets in currency, they championed state run monetary policies intended to substitute for the fiscal policies they opposed.  In other words they were willing, even eager, to set free market ideology aside when its precepts were likely to work to the detriment of capitalists’ interests.

For them, then, sophisticated economic modeling is all well and good; it is their stock-in-trade.     But, in the end, what it is really all about is making sure that capitalists and their interests are served.

When government “interference” is proscribed, private capital is all that remains.  Then the only hope for prosperity trickling down – or for alleviating gross and unnecessary misery — is assuring that the private power of capitalists flourishes as best it can.

The New Deal too was about saving capitalism – but then, with the Great Depression at full throttle, it was obvious that capitalists needed to be saved from themselves; from the unintended consequences of their own greed.

Now, with the balance of forces changed and with capitalists more empowered than before, all they want is to be left alone to enrich themselves as much as they can.

And that is precisely what libertarian theory purports to justify.

Even if the politicians who espouse it understand little of it, they do understand that they gain prestige by identifying with it; and that, they think, is not to be despised.

But this only explains libertarian political and economic philosophy’s appeal to the politicians who mediate between the Tea Party base and libertarianism’s academic defenders.

It does not address the more vexing question: how from such dark quarters, where capitalists’ interests reign supreme, do we get opposition to President Drone’s surveillance state and to his endless wars?

* * *

It is a mystery, about which we can only conjecture.

In the case of the surveillance state, the extent of which everyone now knows thanks to Edward Snowden’s revelations, one would expect all politicians of good will to rise up in fierce opposition.

But politicians of good will are rare indeed.

With few exceptions, they are missing from Democratic Party ranks.   Even “progressive” Democrats are loathe to buck their leadership and their President.  And so, they pull their punches.

Meanwhile, establishment Republicans along with Democrats who might as well be Republicans live in mortal fear of being thought “soft on defense.”   And so they too keep mum.

This leaves only the libertarians

One would also expect widespread opposition to the murder and mayhem Obama lets loose upon the world – if only because of how self-defeating and wasteful it is.   But similar considerations lead mainstream Democrats and Republicans to go along with varying degrees of enthusiasm.  Like the dutiful Babbitts they are, they “boost” and seldom “knock.”

In this case too, because they have a loyal base, libertarians are less disabled than the others from taking a decent and reasonable stand.  But there is also another factor at work.

This becomes evident if we take them at their word.  Libertarians oppose Obama’s wars because they oppose Big Government.

Since the dawn of the Progressive era more than a century ago, Big Government has been identified with militarism and imperialism.

The politicians of a century ago who opposed government efforts to keep the grandees of the Gilded Age from calling all the shots were as aware as anyone of the connection.  Today’s libertarians are their political and intellectual heirs.

Then and now, principled opposition to imperialism and militarism was not the moving force.  Those who opposed foreign wars in the days when “isolationism” flourished did so because, as capitalism’s ardent defenders, they felt, with good reason, that there is a slippery slope out there that class-conscious capitalists would do well to avoid.  This is what libertarians today think as well.

A massive juggernaut, the military-industrial complex President Eisenhower warned against, is indispensable for projecting American power abroad.

Libertarians understand that a precondition for anything like such a worldwide force is a large and powerful state, and they fear that a state of such size and power cannot be kept out of the economic sphere.  This, above all, is what they want to avoid.

Because isolationism has had a bad press for at least the past seventy years, the political heirs of the old rear guard used to have no choice but to accept America’s imperial role.  They were therefore reduced to hoping, in vain, that Big Government could be confined just to the military-diplomatic sphere.

Now, however, with the Cold War long over and with post-9/11 America drowning in its own bellicosity, the decades old “bipartisan” consensus around giving the military-industrial-national security state complex whatever it wants is beginning to crumble.  Libertarians are therefore freer than they used to be to resume an isolationist stance.

Ralph Waldo Emerson famously declared “a foolish consistency…the hobgoblin of little minds.”  The libertarian Tea Party vanguard is full of little minds, and their consistency is indeed foolish.

However, it is also very welcome – since, no matter how dubious their reasons, civil liberties and peace need all the defenders they can get.

Unless and until a genuine Left revives, libertarians may be our best hope for keeping our freedoms intact and our empire restrained.  It is a sorry pass to which we have come.

ANDREW LEVINE is a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, the author most recently of THE AMERICAN IDEOLOGY (Routledge) and POLITICAL KEY WORDS (Blackwell) as well as of many other books and articles in political philosophy. His most recent book is In Bad Faith: What’s Wrong With the Opium of the People. He was a Professor (philosophy) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a Research Professor (philosophy) at the University of Maryland-College Park.  He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press).




Does color mean anything in high government positions?

Many black Americans are sore at Barack Obama for his failure to appoint more blacks to high level positions. They may be missing the point, says Black Agenda Report executive editor Glen Ford. Race means nothing when not matched by commitment to working class values and objectives.