Is
Bernie Sanders A Socialist?
The
Anti-Empire
Report #143
By William
Blum
February 05, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- “Self-described socialist” … How many times have
we all read that term in regard to Vermont senator
Bernie Sanders? But is he really a socialist? Or is
he a “social democrat”, which is what he’d be called
in Europe? Or is he a “democratic socialist”, which
is the American party he has been a member of (DSA –
Democratic Socialists of America)? And does it
really matter which one he is? They’re all
socialists, are they not?
Why does a person raised in a capitalist society
become a socialist? It could be because of a parent
or parents who are committed socialists and raise
their children that way. But it’s usually because
the person has seen capitalism up close for many
years, is turned off by it, and is thus receptive to
an alternative. All of us know what the ugly side of
capitalism looks like. Here are but a few of the
countless examples taken from real life:
Following an earthquake or other natural disaster,
businesses raise their prices for basic necessities
such as batteries, generators, water pumps,
tree-removal services, etc.
In the face of widespread medical needs, drug and
health-care prices soar, while new surgical and
medical procedures are patented.
The cost of rent increases inexorably regardless of
tenants’ income.
Ten thousand types of deception to part the citizens
from their hard-earned ages.
What do these examples have in common? It’s their
driving force – the profit motive; the desire to
maximize profit. Any improvement in the system has
to begin with a strong commitment to radically
restraining, if not completely eliminating, the
profit motive. Otherwise nothing of any significance
will change in society, and the capitalists who own
the society – and their liberal apologists – can
mouth one progressive-sounding platitude after
another as their chauffeur drives them to the bank.
But social democrats and democratic socialists have
no desire to get rid of the profit motive. Last
November, Sanders gave a speech at Georgetown
University in Washington about his positive view of
democratic socialism, including its place in the
policies of presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Lyndon B. Johnson. In defining what democratic
socialism means to him, Sanders said: “I don’t
believe government should take over the grocery
store down the street or own the means of
production.”1
I personally could live with the neighborhood
grocery store remaining in private hands, but larger
institutions are always a threat; the larger and
richer they are the more tempting and easier it is
for them to put profit ahead of the public’s
welfare, and to purchase politicians. The question
of socialism is inseparable from the question of
public ownership of the means of production.
The question thus facing “socialists” like Sanders
is this: When all your idealistic visions for a more
humane, more just, more equitable, and more rational
society run head-first into the stone wall of the
profit motive … which of the two gives way?
The most commonly proposed alternative to both
government or private control is worker-owned
cooperatives or publicly owned enterprises managed
by workers and consumer representatives. Sanders has
expressed his support for such systems and there is
indeed much to be said about them. But the problem I
find is that they will still operate within a
capitalist society, which means competition,
survival of the fittest; which means that if you
can’t sell more than your competitors, if you can’t
make a sufficient net profit on your sales, you will
likely be forced to go out of business; and to
prevent such a fate, at some point you may very well
be forced to do illegal or immoral things against
the public; which means back to the present.
Eliminating the profit motive in American society
would run into a lot less opposition than one might
expect. Consciously or unconsciously it’s already
looked down upon to a great extent by numerous
individuals and institutions of influence. For
example, judges frequently impose lighter sentences
upon lawbreakers if they haven’t actually profited
monetarily from their acts. And they forbid others
from making a profit from their crimes by selling
book or film rights, or interviews. The California
Senate enshrined this into law in 1994, one which
directs that any such income of criminals convicted
of serious crimes be placed into a trust fund for
the benefit of the victims of their crimes. It must
further be kept in mind that the great majority of
Americans, like people everywhere, do not labor for
profit, but for a salary.
The citizenry may have drifted even further away
from the system than all this indicates, for
American society seems to have more trust and
respect for “non-profit” organizations than for the
profit-seeking kind. Would the public be so generous
with disaster relief if the Red Cross were a regular
profit-making business? Would the Internal Revenue
Service allow it to be tax-exempt? Why does the Post
Office give cheaper rates to non-profits and lower
rates for books and magazines which don’t contain
advertising? For an AIDS test, do people feel more
confident going to the Public Health Service or to a
commercial laboratory? Why does “educational” or
“public” television not have regular commercials?
What would Americans think of peace-corps
volunteers, elementary and high-school teachers,
clergy, nurses, and social workers who demanded well
in excess of $100 thousand per year? Would the
public like to see churches competing with each
other, complete with ad campaigns selling a New and
Improved God?
Pervading all these attitudes, and frequently
voiced, is a strong disapproval of greed and
selfishness, in glaring contradiction to the reality
that greed and selfishness form the official and
ideological basis of our system. It’s almost as if
no one remembers how the system is supposed to work
any more, or they prefer not to dwell on it.
It would appear that, at least on a gut level,
Americans have had it up to here with free
enterprise. The great irony of it all is that the
mass of the American people are not aware that their
sundry attitudes constitute an anti-free-enterprise
philosophy and thus tend to go on believing the
conventional wisdom that government is the problem,
that big government is the biggest problem, and that
their salvation cometh from the private sector,
thereby feeding directly into pro-free-enterprise
ideology.
Thus it is that those activists for social change
who believe that American society is faced with
problems so daunting that no corporation or
entrepreneur is ever going to solve them at a profit
carry the burden of convincing the American people
that they don’t really believe what they think they
believe; and that the public’s complementary mindset
– that the government is no match for the private
sector in efficiently getting large and important
things done – is equally fallacious, for the
government has built up an incredible military
machine (ignoring for the moment what it’s used
for), landed men on the moon, created great dams,
marvelous national parks, an interstate highway
system, the peace corps, social security, insurance
for bank deposits, protection of pension funds
against corporate misuse, the Environmental
Protection Agency, the National Institutes of
Health, the Smithsonian, the G.I. Bill, and much,
much more. In short, the government has been quite
good at doing what it wanted to do, or what labor
and other movements have made it do, like
establishing worker health and safety standards and
requiring food manufacturers to list detailed
information about ingredients.
Activists have to remind the American people of what
they’ve already learned but seem to have forgotten:
that they don’t want more government, or less
government; they don’t want big government, or small
government; they want government on their side.
Period.
Sanders has to clarify his views. What exactly does
he mean by “socialism”? What exactly is the role the
profit motive will play in his future society”?
Mark Brzezinski, son of Zbigniew, was a post-Cold
War Fulbright Scholar in Warsaw: “I asked my
students to define democracy. Expecting a discussion
on individual liberties and authentically elected
institutions, I was surprised to hear my students
respond that to them, democracy means a government
obligation to maintain a certain standard of living
and to provide health care, education and housing
for all. In other words, socialism.”2
We should never forget
The modern, educated, advanced nation of Iraq was
reduced to a virtual failed state … the United
States, beginning in 1991, bombed for much of the
following 12 years, with one dubious excuse after
another; then, in 2003, invaded, then occupied,
overthrew the government, tortured without
inhibition, killed wantonly … the people of that
unhappy land lost everything – their homes, their
schools, their electricity, their clean water, their
environment, their neighborhoods, their mosques,
their archaeology, their jobs, their careers, their
professionals, their state-run enterprises, their
physical health, their mental health, their health
care, their welfare state, their women’s rights,
their religious tolerance, their safety, their
security, their children, their parents, their past,
their present, their future, their lives … More than
half the population either dead, wounded,
traumatized, in prison, internally displaced, or in
foreign exile … The air, soil, water, blood, and
genes drenched with depleted uranium … the most
awful birth defects … unexploded cluster bombs lying
in wait for children to pick them up … a river of
blood running alongside the Euphrates and Tigris …
through a country that may never be put back
together again … “It is a common refrain among
war-weary Iraqis,” reported the Washington Post in
2007, that things were better before the U.S.-led
invasion in 2003.”3
The United States has not paid any compensation to
Iraq.
The United States has not made any apology to Iraq.
Foreign policy is even more sensitive a subject in
the United States than slavery of the black people
and genocide of the Native Americans. The US has
apologized for these many times, but virtually never
for the crimes of American foreign policy.4
In 2014, George W. Bush, the man most responsible
for this holocaust, was living a quiet life in
Texas, with a focus on his paintings. “I’m trying to
leave something behind”, he said.5
Yes, he has certainly done that – mountains of
rubble for one thing; rubble that once was cities
and towns. His legacy also includes the charming
Islamic State. Ah, but Georgie Boy is an artiste.
We need a trial to judge all those who bear
significant responsibility for the past century –
the most murderous and ecologically destructive in
human history. We could call it the war, air and
fiscal crimes tribunal and we could put politicians
and CEOs and major media owners in the dock with
earphones like Eichmann and make them listen to the
evidence of how they killed millions of people and
almost murdered the planet and made most of us far
more miserable than we needed to be. Of course, we
wouldn’t have time to go after them one by one. We’d
have to lump Wall Street investment bankers in one
trial, the Council on Foreign Relations in another,
and any remaining Harvard Business School or Yale
Law graduates in a third. We don’t need this for
retribution, only for edification. So there would be
no capital punishment, but rather banishment to an
overseas Nike factory with a vow of perpetual
silence.6
On March 2, 2014 US Secretary of State John Kerry
condemned Russia’s “incredible act of aggression” in
Ukraine. “You just don’t in the 21st century behave
in 19th century fashion by invading another country
on completely trumped up pretext.”
Iraq 2003 was in the 21st century. The pretext was
completely trumped up. Senator John Kerry voted for
it. Nice moral authority you have there, John.
On the same occasion, concerning Ukraine, President
Obama spoke of “the principle that no country has
the right to send in troops to another country
unprovoked.”7 Do our leaders have no memory or do
they think we’ve all lost ours?
Does Obama avoid prosecuting the Bush-Cheney gang
because he wants to have the same rights to commit
war crimes? The excuse he gives for his inaction is
so lame that if George W. had used it people would
not hesitate to laugh. On about five occasions, in
reply to questions about why his administration has
not prosecuted the like of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld,
Wolfowitz, et al. for mass murder, torture and other
war crimes, former law professor Obama has stated:
“I prefer to look forward rather than backwards.”
Picture a defendant before a judge asking to be
found innocent on such grounds. It simply makes
laws, law enforcement, crime, justice, and facts
irrelevant. Picture Chelsea Manning and other
whistleblowers using this argument. Picture the
reaction to this by Barack Obama, who has become the
leading persecutor of whistleblowers in American
history.
Noam Chomsky has observed: “If the Nuremberg laws
were applied, then every post-war American president
would have been hanged.”
It appears that the German and Japanese people only
relinquished their imperial culture and mindset when
they were bombed back to the stone age during World
War II. Something similar may be the only cure for
the same pathology that is embedded into the very
social fabric of the United States. The US is now a
full-blown pathological society. There is no other
wonder drug to deal with American-exceptionalism-itis.
William
Blum is an author, historian, and U.S. foreign
policy critic. He is the author of
Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions
Since World War II and
Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower,
among others.
Notes -
1)
Senator Bernie Sanders on Democratic Socialism in
the United States,, November 19, 2015.
2) Los Angeles Times, September 2, 1994.
3) Washington Post, May 5, 2007.
4) William Blum, Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s
Only Superpower, chapter 25.
5) New York Times, September 16, 2014.
6)
Sam Smith
of
Maine, formerly of Washington, DC.
7) Reuters, March 3, 2014. |