How The
West Was Lost and Other Joys of Greedy Sociopathy
By David
Michael Green
June 27,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Woo-hoo! Doesn’t that feel good?
Well, in
fact, for some folks it does. In particular, if
you’re an unempowered bloke, lacking much personal
sense of agency, and you’ve watched your world get
whittled down bit by bit over the last several
decades, the sense of doing something, anything –
the sheer joy of authoring some real wreckage – is
tasty. And all the more so because of its rarity.
It’s been so long since you got to poke some joker
in the eye, who cares who it is or what comes next,
eh? Just do it.
Whatever
the motivation, this is a milestone. The direct
consequences of the British referendum vote are
likely to be substantial, if not profound. But it is
the indirect consequences, and the symbolic import,
that are most significant. For this is, make no
mistake, the first but likely not the last major
manifestation of a long-brewing discontent that
threatens nothing less than the unraveling of a
post-war world order of (mostly) peace and
prosperity.
Worse, the
looming possible catastrophe has been eminently
avoidable. But certain actors had a strong interest
in getting what they wanted, and damn the(se) costs.
In the end, this is a story of what greed buys. And
all too often, what greed buys is death and
destruction.
The
phenomenon we’re talking about – let’s call it
Trumpism, for lack of a better term – is sweeping
the Western world. All across Europe and North
America and beyond there has been an explosion of
flailing political rage and stupidity in recent
years. Whether it takes the form of the avowed
Nazi-sympathizing Golden Dawn in Greece, the
less-avowed Nazi-sympathizing National Front in
France, slobbering Sarah Palin enthusiasts in
America, or agitated Brexit voters in the UK, it is
essentially the same concept everywhere, driven by
the same factors.
Given that
this is a cup of tea that has been steeping at least
since the 1980s, the current boiling point we’re
witnessing is in many ways actually less surprising
than that it has taken this long to happen.
Some of the
factors paving the road to this rash of
Neo-Know-Nothingism have been benign if not laudable
in their intent. Or, they have been simple products
of historical evolution, rolling along with no
intentionality, at all. Nobody makes tsunamis or
earthquakes (though DARPA has no doubt tried), and
nobody has any reason to do so (did I mention
DARPA?), but still they happen, and with enormous –
dare we say, tectonic – consequences. Similarly, at
some point in history somebody invents the printing
press, or manufactures gunpowder, or sequences DNA,
and the world is rocked, however little global
revolution may have been part of the original
intent.
In our
time, three such tendencies have conspired with
especial consequence to unmoor the foundations of
the post-war compact in Western societies:
technological revolution, globalization, and civil
rights movements. The last of these is certainly the
more intentional of the lot. The second is partly
the consequence of the first (that is to say, it’s a
lot easier to globalize when you have the technology
of satellites and oil tankers and the Internet with
which to do so). But what they share in common is a
slow tsunami-like effect on Western societies. And,
especially, on certain demographic cohorts within
those societies.
There is
much to say about the explosion of technological
capability in our time, of course. We could fill
entire libraries with just a card catalog (for one
indicator of the degree of technological change,
remember those?) of what has been said and needs to
be said on this subject. But, for our purposes in
exploring the current political meltdown of the
West, what matters most are the largely unmitigated
human-level economic byproducts of these changes.
One can build a robot to make widgets on an assembly
line without any other intention than, say, to
innovate, or to make money selling a product to
manufacturers, or to increase productivity. It
doesn’t matter so much what motivated these
technologies, but it does matter that their
near-universal effect is the destruction of working
and middle class jobs. It can be argued that this
‘creative destruction’ process also produces a raft
of new employment opportunities, but even if that is
true, the dislocations are still massive, not least
because 50 year-old blue collar assembly-line
workers are not especially good candidates for being
retrained to write computer code or design
fiber-optics networks.
While those
pressures have been crippling workers for decades,
perhaps an even more consequential development has
been the advent of globalization. This has meant
many things, some of them pretty great. If you like
eating Thai food, Skyping with your pal in Kathmandu
(for free, no less – remember how expensive
international (audio only) phone calls were not so
long ago?), or economic development opportunities
for Koreans, Taiwanese and other formerly
impoverished folk, you can’t in fairness be a total
critic of globalization. Its consequences have been
absolutely enormous, and by no means are all of them
bad. But, again, to understand why Western politics
is now going off the rails, it’s crucial to note
that some of them are in fact very nasty, especially
for certain particularly vulnerable folks. And these
mal-effects in the workplace have only exacerbated
those of the aforementioned technological change.
Indeed, perhaps even more than robots and computers,
it is ridiculously cheap labor costs in Mexico –
followed by China when Mexico was no longer cheap
enough, followed by Vietnam when China was no longer
cheap enough – that have massively undercut the
position of blue-collar workers in the West, with
their (once) decent salaries, health plans,
pensions, vacations and sick time. Remarkably, this
effect can now increasingly be seen in white collar
sectors as well, with First World professional jobs
in law or medicine shipping off to India and beyond.
Finally, a
series of civil rights movements have transformed
the Western world over the last half-century, most
visibly in America. It would not be overstating the
case to argue that these are among the greatest of
achievements in all of human history, right up there
with the advent of democracy, the abolition of
slavery and the dismantling of colonialism. For the
first time ever – in ethos and mostly in legal code,
if not always in practice – these societies have
embraced the idea that everyone is entitled to the
same opportunities, treatment and share of political
power, regardless of race, ethnicity, sex or sexual
orientation. As noted above, this is a landmark
development in human history, and it’s especially
great news if you happen to be brown, female or gay.
But what if
you’re the opposite of all those things? Let’s
assume that the distribution of power in a society
is a zero-sum game, meaning that for Individual A to
obtain X amount of additional power, Individual B
must lose precisely the same amount (add the two
quantities together and you get zero, hence the
term). That’s an arguably incorrect proposition, and
there certainly are non-zero-sum games identifiable
in the real world. But I think the assumption is
largely true in this case. Thus, if we acknowledge
that women and people of color and non-straights
have more power than they did fifty years ago, we
must also account for where that power came from in
our zero-sum game. And the answer, of course, is
from straight white males. And while we might argue
that a more inclusive society benefits all (an
example of a non-zero-sum effect), for many folks in
this category – especially the less educated and
therefore more economically vulnerable ones – the
tangible negative effects of yet more competition
for scarce resources are far more palpable.
Nor should
the psychological add-ons to shrinking wallets be
ignored. Let’s be real here. Humans are... well,
human. If you were the all-powerful king of the hill
yesterday, and today you’re just another schmo, it’s
probably gonna sting, even if your income were
somehow unchanged. Maybe there will be a few
enlightened souls from the former privileged class
who never felt comfortable with the evils of
inequality even while it benefitted them, and
therefore welcome these changes, but these folks
will be dwarfed in number by those whose self-esteem
has been damaged at least as much as their paycheck.
In addition to being poorer, they are going to be
angrier and more resentful as well. It may not be
pretty, but there’s no sense pretending this isn’t a
part of human nature.
So, to
recap the story so far, if you simply look at this
constellation of effects over the last half-century
– technology, globalization, civil rights – it’s
proven a very rough go for certain categories of
individuals. They’re beat-up, beleaguered, broken
and buffeted. If you’re surprised that they’re
scared, angry and desperate, you haven’t been paying
attention to the way the world works and how people
are wired.
But here’s
where the story gets really interesting. To
understand why, let’s go back to our earlier
analogy. Suppose you knew that a tsunami was headed
towards your country’s shores. Of course, there’s
nothing you can do to stop it – big damn waves go
where they want to go. But there are some things you
can do in advance that can make the ensuing tragedy
better or worse. You can, for example, evacuate
coastal regions. Or, alternatively, you could move
the whole population there instead, right in harm’s
way. You could mobilize medical personnel and relief
workers and helicopter crews and get them ready to
roll. Or, you could send them all off to another
continent to enjoy a three-week paid vacation. You
can lay in supplies of food and water to prepare for
the coming disaster. Or, you could organize a
national potlatch blowout to consume and waste as
much as possible before the big water hits.
See where
I’m going here? If huge proportions of your society
are being clobbered by technological change,
globalization and the flooding of the workplace with
tens of millions of formerly suppressed workers as
new competition for jobs – none of which you can do
much about – you nevertheless still have a choice.
You can enact policies that make it even harder for
those folks. Or you can take steps to at least
soften the blows of the inevitable tidal wave.
If you were
in fact to do the latter, it might be because you
were simply stupid as a society, and prone to
bumbling policy choices. But another explanation
would point to motivations that are far darker. What
if you took these catastrophic steps because of the
greed of already wealthy, already powerful
individuals who saw opportunities to benefit at the
expense of the suffering of hundreds of millions of
others? What if, while technology and globalization
and new workplace competition were already battering
workers, you adopted adverse trade policies on top
of that because the one percent got rich while the
99 percent got stiffed? What if you deregulated for
the same reason? What if you shifted the tax burden
around simply to satisfy the pure greed of the rich?
What if you shredded labor movements to transfer
wealth away from workers? What if you made education
(and thus the opportunity for upward mobility) more
expensive, so that the rich could save a few dollars
in taxes? What if you privatized societal functions
like education and criminal justice, so that profits
could be made off of them by a small few?
If you did
these things – and Western societies in varying
degrees did them all – you would, of course, make an
already bad situation far worse. And that is exactly
what has happened. The tsunami has been hitting, but
the hospitals are closed, the drinking water long
ago poured out into flower pots, and the helicopters
grounded. Why? Because that’s better for the
one-tenth of one percent at the top of the economic
pyramid who are already obscenely wealthy, and screw
everyone else.
And now we
can understand Trumpism, in the same way we could
understand Hitlerism. Desperate people turn to
desperate solutions. And Western policy makers have
made people desperate by serving the interests of
the overclass during already massively stressful
times. This greed and treason has been incalculably
stupid, even for the perpetrators, in the same way
that FDR had to save capitalism from
greedy-to-the-point-of-self-destruction capitalists
in a prior telling of this same tale. Their greed is
so insatiable they are bringing the house down
around their own heads too.
And so
there is rage, often of the blind, unthinking sort.
Like I said, for me, the wonder is not that it’s
happening, but that it’s taken as long as it has. In
European and other countries, that delay probably
can be explained by relatively robust welfare state
programs that substantially cushion the blow. In
America, it has a lot to do with the political power
of bigotry. The Republican Party has been dining out
on the faux enemies of the white male working class
for decades now. Give ‘em somebody brown or female
or foreign to hate and to blame, and they don’t
notice while you’re picking their pocket. The
Democrats of the Clinton/Obama era, meanwhile,
pretend to give a shit, all the while doing arguably
even worse damage to their historical constituent
base (i.e., America) than Ronald Reagan ever did.
What a racket.
What has
all this to do with Brexit? Well, everywhere you
turn you see surly bodies politic, fed up with the
destruction and deceit. Everywhere you look you see
the collapse of centrist, status quo political
parties that can no longer offer any remotely
realistic solution to what ails people, and that
probably can no longer be trusted with power even if
they could. And everywhere you see the rise of
Trump-like individuals and parties offering even
more destructive and – importantly – even more
deceitful ‘solutions’.
These
policy ideas are stupid on their face, even when
they are coherent enough that one can figure them
out. But desperate people... Britons, for example,
are likely to rue the day they shot themselves in
the foot and ditched the EU. Indeed, of all people,
they should have known this. They turned up their
nose at joining the nascent organization in the
1950s, only to spend the next two decades trying get
past a petulant Charles de Gaulle and scramble back
in, seeing what a mistake they had made. Betcha
they’re doing the same in 2030, assuming there’s an
EU then left to return to.
Or take
Trump’s idiocy (please). Imagine you’re a good ol’
boy in ‘Bama, watching your football games at home
on the big HD screen with 7.1 surround sound,
nursing your case of Coors and scarfing up pizza and
wings, sitting on the sofa underneath your framed
Confederacy flag. The Donald has just deported 11
million undocumented workers from America and built
his Great Wall. You shout “Hell yes!!” to your TV
set and celebrate. And why shouldn’t you? Think of
the new opportunities open to you. You can now take
a shitty job picking grapes, washing dishes or
cleaning toilets! And you can pay lots more for
everything you buy, including dinner at Cracker
Barrel (with its more expensive produce,
dishwashers, warehouse workers and so on) and the
mowing of your lawn. What a deal, hus? You go,
Bubba!
The good
news is that these Trumpian monsters, these mutant
PT Barnums, have so far largely remained peripheral
to gaining real destructive power or having
significant impacts in the world (though arguably
they rule Russia, Turkey, Hungary and other
not-insignificant countries already). The bad news
is that a swing of two percent of British voters has
now changed that. The horse is out of the barn.
Where we go from here, of course, is unknown. But
history may well record that the significance of
this vote is that it marked the day when a replay of
that delightful 1930s biopic of homo sapiens –
special IMAX 3-D version this time – began rolling.
We’ve seen
that movie before, of course, which makes current
developments especially egregious. Do we really,
really want to wreck the world for the short-term
benefit of a handful of sociopathic oligarchs? Call
me crazy, but I don’t. Seems like a pretty crummy
deal to me.
Let us hope
– and strive – for the world sobering up, and fast.
Trump-like figures are inevitable, but they only
thrive when times are lousy, mainstream politicians
are worthless (or worse, Bill, Hillary, Barack), and
ludicrous ‘solutions’ thus seem to struggling voters
like worth trying since they just might – you never
know! – be better than the stagnant and fetid status
quo.
Yes, as
improbable as it may seem, Nigel Farage, Boris
Johnson and Donald Trump’s policies might just make
things better.
Of course,
there’s also that other thing that can happen...
David
Michael Green is a professor of political science at
Hofstra University in New York. - (dmg@regressiveantidote.net)
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