The
Courtiers and the Tyrants
By Chris Hedges
September 19, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Truth
Dig"
-
Thomas
Frank’s marvelous scorched-earth assault on
the Democratic Party and professional elites
in his book “Listen,
Liberal: Or, What Ever Happened to the
Party of the People?” has one fatal flaw.
Frank blames the liberal class, rather than
the corporations that have seized control of
the centers of power, for our descent into
political dysfunction and neofeudalism.
Yes, self-identified liberals such as the
Clintons and Barack Obama speak in the
language of liberalism while selling out the
poor, the working class and the middle class
to global corporate interests. But they are
not, at least according to the classical
definition, liberals. They are
neoliberals. They serve the dictates of
neoliberalism—austerity,
deindustrialization, anti-unionism, endless
war and globalization—to empower and enrich
themselves and the party. The actual liberal
class—the segment of the Democratic Party
that once acted as a safety valve to
ameliorate through reform the grievances and
injustices within our capitalist democracy
and that had within its ranks politicians
such as George McGovern, Gaylord Nelson,
Warren Magnuson and Frank Church and New
Deal Democrats such as Franklin D.
Roosevelt—no longer exists. I spent 248
pages in my book “Death
of the Liberal Class” explaining the
orchestrated corporate campaign to erase the
liberal class from the political landscape
and, more ominously, destroy the radical
labor and social movements that were the
real engines of social and political reform
in the 19th and 20th centuries.
The
Democratic and the professional elites whom
Frank excoriates are, as he points out,
morally bankrupt, but they are only one
piece of the fake democracy that
characterizes our system of “inverted
totalitarianism.” The problem is not
only liberals who are not liberal; it is
also conservatives, once identified with
small government, the rule of law and fiscal
responsibility, who are not conservative. It
is a court system that has abandoned justice
and rather than defend constitutional rights
has steadily stripped them from us through
judicial fiat. It is a Congress that does
not legislate but instead permits lobbyists
and corporations to write legislation. It is
a press, desperate for advertising dollars
and often owned by large corporations, that
does not practice journalism. It is
academics, commentators and public
intellectuals, often paid by corporate think
tanks, who function as shameless
cheerleaders for the neoliberal and imperial
establishment and mock the concept of
independent and critical thought.
The
Democratic and the professional elites are
an easy and often amusing target. One could
see them, in another era, prancing at a
masked ball at Versailles on the eve of the
revolution. They are oblivious to how hated
they have become. They do not understand
that when they lambast Donald Trump as a
disgrace or a bigot they swell his support
because they, not Trump, are seen by many
Americans as the enemy. But these courtiers
did not create the system. They sold
themselves to it. And if Americans do not
understand how we got here we are never
going to find our way out.
During Barack Obama’s administration there
has been near-total continuity with the
administration of George W. Bush, especially
regarding mass surveillance, endless war and
the failure to regulate Wall Street. This is
because the mechanisms of corporate power
embodied in the deep state do not change
with election cycles. The election of Donald
Trump, however distasteful, would not
radically alter corporate control over our
lives. The corporate state is impervious to
political personalities. If Trump continues
to rise in the public opinion polls, the
corporate backers of Hillary Clinton will
start funding him instead. They know Trump
will prostitute himself to money as
assiduously as Clinton will.
Our
political elites, Republican and Democrat,
were shaped, funded and largely selected by
corporate power in what
John Ralston Saul correctly calls a coup
d’état in slow motion. Nothing will change
until corporate power itself is dismantled.
The
corporate elites failed to grasp that a
functioning liberal class is the mechanism
that permits a capitalist democracy to
adjust itself to stave off unrest and
revolt. They decided, not unlike other
doomed elites of history, to eradicate the
liberal establishment after they had
eradicated the radical movements that
created the political pressure for
advancements such as the eight-hour workday
and Social Security.
Lewis Powell, then the general counsel to
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, in August 1971
wrote a memo called “Attack on American
Free Enterprise System.” It became the
blueprint for the corporate coup. Powell
would later be appointed to the Supreme
Court. Corporations, as Powell urged, poured
hundreds of millions of dollars into the
assault, backing candidates, creating the
Business Roundtable, funding The Heritage
Foundation, the Manhattan Institute, the
Cato Institute, Citizens for a Sound
Economy, and Accuracy in Academia. The memo
argued that corporations must marginalize or
silence those who in “the college campus,
the pulpit, the media, and the intellectual
and literary journals” were hostile to
corporate interests. Powell attacked Ralph
Nader and called for a concerted campaign to
discredit him. Lobbyists eager to dole out
huge sums of cash flooded Washington and
state capitals. It soon became difficult and
often impossible, whether in the press, the
political arena or academia, to challenge
the dogma of neoliberalism.
“It
laid out a strategy to attack democracy in
America,” Ralph Nader said of the Powell
memo. “He basically said to the business
community, you’ve got to hire a lot more
lobbyists swarming over Congress, you’ve got
to pour a lot more money into their
campaigns, both parties’, Republican and
Democrat. You’ve got to get out on the
campuses and get right-wing speakers to
combat progressive speakers.”
The
eight-page memo, Nader went on, said, “Look,
galvanize, come into Washington like a
swarm, media, lobbying, put your high
executives into government offices, regulate
offices, Department of Defense, and so on.
But that wasn’t the most successful
strategy, although it was successful. The
most successful was that the Powell
Memorandum led to the massive corruption of
the Democratic Party. And that came at the
same time that Tony Coelho, who was a
congressman from California, took over the
fundraising for the House of Representatives
Democrats.”
The
infusion of corporate money into the
Democratic Party left the liberals in the
party with a stark choice—serve corporate
power or get pushed out. Those, like the
Clintons, who were willing to walk away from
the core values of liberalism profited. At
that point they became liberals only in
name. They were assigned their part in the
empty political exercise, full of sound and
fury, signifying nothing. Nader calls these
faux liberals “rhetorical snake charmers.”
Once corporate money started to pour into
the Democratic Party in the early 1970s,
legislation that sought to check or regulate
corporate power—the auto and highway safety
laws, oil pipeline safety laws, product
safety laws, the revised Clean Air Act, the
Occupational Safety and Health Act and the
measure that established the Environmental
Protection Agency—was no longer possible.
The Democrats began to compete with the
Republicans to propose legislation that
would provide tax loopholes for
corporations. Such legislation now legally
permits oligarchs such as Trump and
corporations to engage in a de facto tax
boycott. The system, designed to exclusively
serve corporate power, fell into political
paralysis. The consent of the governed
became a joke.
“There hasn’t been a single major piece of
legislation advancing the health, safety and
economic rights of the American people since
1974, arguably since 1976,” Nader told me.
“That’s the effect of money in politics.
That’s the effect of a totally subservient
strategy by the liberals.”
Labor, which once put about one in every
four dollars into the Democratic Party, was
sidelined as a political force. The
corporate campaign of union busting,
deregulation, automation and off-shoring of
jobs accelerated. And the class of faux
liberals, such as the Clintons, played its
assigned role, speaking in the old language
of liberal values while betraying working
people.
“[Bill] Clinton was an enemy of
environmental, consumer, and worker issues,”
Nader said. “He broke the modest welfare
system for single moms. He sold out to the
agribusiness companies. He allowed huge
mergers in a bill he signed for the
communications and the media giants, all in
1986, and this was quite apart from bombing
Iraq illegally, killing civilians. He never
opposed a swollen military budget that was
unauditable.
“If
you can smile and have the right
rhetoric—Reagan did that, too—you get away
with it,” Nader said. “… All you’ve got to
do in politics is say the right thing, even
though your whole record is contrary, and
you’re on your way.”
Those agencies tasked with protecting the
citizen from corporate abuse were
consciously underfunded or turned over to
corporate-approved staff members. Politics,
like very other aspect of American life, was
commercialized. Everything, from public
lands to politicians, was now for sale.
“There’s got to be sanctuaries in a
democratic society where nothing is for
sale,” Nader said. “Government shouldn’t be
for sale. Childhood should not be
commercialized and be for sale. The
environment shouldn’t be for sale. Our
genetic inheritance shouldn’t be for sale.
Elections shouldn’t be for sale. They’re all
for sale now.”
Out
of this rot and corruption, as it always
does, arose a class of privileged elites who
wallow in self-adulation and will do
anything to further their personal
self-advancement. Thomas Frank, who is a
gifted writer and reporter, peers into the
hermetic and exclusive world of the
professional Democratic power elite—the
vacations in Martha’s Vineyard, the hipster
innovation districts for budding tech
entrepreneurs in cities such as Boston, the
Ivy League pedigrees, the open disdain for
the working class and the blind faith in a
functioning meritocracy. The elites believe
they are privileged, Frank writes correctly,
because they are convinced they are the
smartest, most creative, most talented and
hardest working. They cap this grotesque
narcissism, he points out, with a facade of
goodness and virtue. They turn their elitism
into a morality play.
In
Frank’s book there is a wonderful depiction
of an event called No Ceilings, held in
March 2015 on the day after International
Women’s Day and sponsored by the Clinton
Foundation at New York City’s Best Buy
Theater (now the PlayStation Theater). The
participants spent most of the time gushing
over each other and uttering vague and
amorphous calls for innovation and
empowerment that have become to economic
advancement what phrenology once was to
science. They, like all other courtiers,
cannot distinguish between reality and the
masquerade.
“This is not politics,” Frank writes. “It’s
an imitation of politics. It feels
political, yes: it’s highly moralistic, it
sets up an easy melodrama of good versus
bad, it allows you to make all kinds of
judgments about people you disagree with,
but ultimately it’s a diversion, a way of
putting across a policy program while
avoiding any sincere discussion of the
politics in question. The virtue-quest is an
exciting moral crusade that seems to
be extremely important but at the conclusion
of which you discover you’ve got little to
show for it besides NAFTA, bank
deregulation, and a prison spree.”
But
Frank fails to grasp that, as
C. Wright Mills understood, the
Republican and the Democratic elites, along
with our financial and corporate elites, are
one entity. They are formed in the same
institutions, run in the same social circles
and cross-pollinate like bees. This has been
true since the country’s formation. Harvard
and Yale were designed, like Oxford and
Cambridge in Britain, to perpetuate the
plutocracy. They do an admirable job.
Hillary Clinton sat in the front row for
Donald Trump’s third wedding. And Chelsea
Clinton, living in a multimillion-dollar
penthouse in New York City, was until the
current presidential campaign a close friend
of Ivanka Trump. George W. Bush, although
doltish and inept, graduated from Andover,
Yale and Harvard Business School. His
appointees were no less steeped in elitist
Ivy League credentials than those around
Bill Clinton or Barack Obama. Paul Wolfowitz
attended Cornell and the University of
Chicago. Donald Rumsfeld went to Princeton.
Henry “Hank” Paulson graduated from
Dartmouth and Harvard Business School before
working for Goldman Sachs. Lewis “Scooter”
Libby went to Yale and Columbia Law School
(as well as the pre-prep school that I
attended). Joshua Bolten, a chief of staff
for President George W. Bush, went to
Princeton and Stanford Law School.
The
problem is not the liberal elites. The
problem is the elites. They serve the same
ideology. They work in the same financial
institutions, hedge funds and foundations,
including the Council on Foreign Relations,
where government officials often are parked
when they are out of power. They belong to
the same clubs. They are stunted technocrats
who function as systems managers for
corporate capitalism. And no class of
courtiers, going back to those that
populated the Ottoman palaces, Versailles or
the Forbidden City, has ever transformed
itself into a responsible elite. They are,
as John Ralston Saul writes, “hedonists of
power.”
I,
like Frank, have no affection for liberals.
They are, and have always been, a smug,
self-absorbed group who talk eloquently,
even passionately, about justice and equal
rights until their own privileges and sense
of entitlement are questioned and
threatened. They supported Martin Luther
King Jr., for example, as long as he
confined his struggle to integration. They
abandoned him when he began to call for
economic justice. But to blame liberals for
our corporate system of “inverted
totalitarianism” is ridiculous. They saw
what had to be done to serve the centers of
power, and they obliged. Those liberals with
integrity, those who actually believed—as
McGovern did—in reform and a liberal
democracy, have been pushed out of the
political system.
Contrary to what Frank asserts, the
Democratic Party was never the party of the
people. It functioned, at best, as a safety
valve during periods of discontent. It made
possible modest reforms. It was tolerated by
the elites because it set the limits of
dissent. It permitted a critique of the
excesses of the system but never a critique
of capitalism, the structures of power or
the supposed virtues of those who exercise
power. Noam Chomsky has amply elucidated the
role of liberals in a capitalist democracy.
The liberal class is used to discredit
radicals, like Chomsky, and radical
movements. It carries out reforms, which are
often later revoked, when capitalism
extracts too much blood or when it breaks
down as it did in the 1930s.
Roosevelt did not institute Social Security
and public works projects, create 12 million
jobs or give legal status to labor unions
because he and other oligarchs cared about
the working class. They enacted socialist
reforms because—and we know this from
Roosevelt’s private correspondence—they
feared revolt or, in Roosevelt’s precise
word, “revolution.” They established the New
Deal programs in order to save capitalism,
which Roosevelt later said was his greatest
achievement. They realized they would have
to give up some of their money; it was that
or risk losing all of their money. And they
allowed the New Deal to be born because they
felt the growing pressure of radical
movements such as those of the socialists
and communists. Politics is a game of fear.
And if you lose the capacity to make the
power elites afraid, you become their
plaything. This, in the simplest terms, is
what has happened to us.
One
of Frank’s most misguided attempts to pin
our debacle on liberals is his critique of
the 1972 campaign of George McGovern. He
argues that this moment marked the
Democratic Party’s pivot away from working
people and organized labor and into the
embrace of the white-collar professional
class. The McGovern campaign,
mistake-plagued though it was, had an
admirable platform that called for full
employment, a guaranteed minimum income—well
above the poverty line—and a redistribution
of wealth through a new system of taxation.
McGovern had long been a proponent of
universal health care. He called for a
union-like organization to be formed to
advocate on behalf of welfare recipients.
These were not concerns of the professional
class. McGovern also stood up to the war
industry. And, not unlike what is happening
to the Republican Trump, the elites in his
own party joined with the elites in the
other major party to attack their own
candidate’s campaign.
The
big problem for McGovern was not that he or
the Democrats abandoned labor but that labor
through the numerous anti-communist purges
during the previous decades had been
domesticated and turned over to Cold War
troglodytes like Lane Kirkland, Walter
Reuther and George Meany who worked overseas
with the CIA to break radical labor unions.
Organized labor, especially the AFL-CIO,
embraced Richard Nixon’s war in Indochina.
It denounced the hippies in the streets.
Labor was transformed into a junior partner
of capitalism. It was severed from its
radical roots. And its ideological
capitulation to capitalism, along with
deindustrialization, doomed it to oblivion.
McGovern’s last act of political courage was
as chairman of the Select Committee on
Nutrition and Human Needs. The committee
issued a report in 1977 called the “Dietary
Goals for the United States.” It warned of
the health risks of having a diet rich in
meat, sugar, saturated fat and cholesterol.
McGovern hoped the report would “perform a
function similar to that of the Surgeon
General’s Report on Smoking.” His committee
called on Americans to dramatically decrease
their consumption of meat, dairy fat, eggs
and other high-cholesterol sources. The
animal agriculture industry went berserk. It
exerted tremendous pressure to get the
report rewritten to obliterate the health
warnings. The committee was soon disbanded.
Its functions were turned over to the
Agriculture Committee, run by officials in
the pocket of the animal agriculture
industry. McGovern, like most liberal
politicians who refused to sell out, lost
his seat, ousted from the Senate in 1980 by
a Republican cattle rancher.
The
destruction of radical movements, begun by
President Woodrow Wilson, removed the
pressure placed on the liberal class. Once
our radical movements were destroyed,
corporations decimated the tepid liberal
class itself. No institution in America can
any longer be considered truly democratic.
And self-identified liberals, like every
other participant in the political charade,
act out their assigned parts to maintain the
fiction of electoral politics, voter choice
and a liberal democracy. But it is a
charade. We must not, however, confuse the
courtiers with the tyrants.
Chris Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a
foreign correspondent in Central America,
the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He
has reported from more than 50 countries and
has worked for The Christian Science
Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for
which he was a foreign correspondent for 15
years. |