What's the single biggest missing element on the Left today? I would say to you it's not raising consciousness -- although we need to do that. It's not understanding -- although we need that. And it's not the numbers -- we have those. We don't have any organization.
We're the most disorganized left I know of. It's an amazing testimony, in my judgment, to the isolation, individualism, and ideological underdevelopment of the American left that it cannot make organization -- or to put it otherwise: it shrinks away, hesitates, is skeptical, worried all the time that an organization will "rob me of my individuality", it'll "tell me what to do," etc., even though you spend your whole life in a school or a job where you're told what to do by people all the time, but when it comes to your volunteer political activity you don't want that (partly because you have to suffer it everywhere else, you don't want it here). This is a lovely idea, but that ain't gonna work. You're not going to confront a system as organized as capitalism is by simply hugging it to death, that's not gonna work. You need organizations.
It's possible to have organizations that are not oppressive, and not arbitrary; it's possible -- it's hard, but it's possible. But if you don't try, you're disarming yourself and the system can afford to ignore you.
I used to think that the Right was powerful, I now travel around the country doing a lot of public speaking -- Texas, California, everywhere in between -- the Left, which I knew was there, is much bigger and in many ways much deeper than the Right. [...]
Whatever it is about American capitalism that has achieved that, that's the most important item protecting American Capitalism, in my view -- it's not the military, it's not the Republicans, it's that. — Richard Wolff
Notwithstanding what the right says about the left being sheeple, the simple fact is, they are cats. You can't herd cats. The right, however, loves a strong leader who tells them what they want to hear, and they will fall in goosestep behind him (or, her, if she's hot). — James Riley
As a side note, I saw so many working class people who refused to avail themselves of any government services (that they had paid for with their tax dollars) because they "didn't want to be no welfare queen!" They end up physically broke down in a hovel somewhere and dying early. Oh well. — James Riley
I don't think that's fair, actually. The "Left" (if they can be called that) fell right in line with Obama. At first it was borderline cultish, and it dissipated. — Xtrix
Biden is still in the honeymoon that Obama and most POTUSs get. — James Riley
A fish stinks from the head.I realize more and more the importance of power in numbers, and that almost anything worth achieving can be done easier (and sometimes only) with groups of people working together. After writing this down, it feels like a truism -- and while that may be accurate, I don't see it showing up in our society (the United States) to the degree it does in others. — Xtrix
I think the whole idea of there being Red and Blue states within one country is insane. It's a miracle the US has any semblance of functionality at all, given the political principles by which it is governed.Or look at the Republican states denying medicaid expansion or federal unemployment funding. It's truly insane. — Xtrix
That's the thing: It dissipated; over Gitmo, Black Sites, etc. And that's what the left usually does: They turn on their own once in power. Because, of course, "they" could always do it better. — James Riley
much harder to make a reality unless you really pull out the stops. — Xtrix
A fish stinks from the head.
The American political system is, in most states, based on the motto "winner takes all". As long as this is in place, in law and in popular culture, there's just no reason to place much value on working together with others. — baker
I think the whole idea of there being Red and Blue states within one country is insane. It's a miracle the US has any semblance of functionality at all, given the political principles by which it is governed.
And then this whole notion of the president being a member of a political party! How could things not go wrong?! — baker
True. I just don't know what pulling out all the stops would look like if you don't have the Senate in the bag. — James Riley
A major part of keeping the ruling minority class in the position they are, is keeping the majority divided. — Xtrix
Divide and conquer is a piece of it, but probably a small one. The ruling class has other, very robust tools:
Misinformation; relative and absolute poverty; the law (which is more on the side of the rich than it is on the side of the poor); the police (and if need be, armed forced); the obedience training programs of secondary education; the mass media; and so on and so forth. — Bitter Crank
Rugged Individualism is a ruling class friend. By all means! Encourage the masses to be individualists, rugged or not. Individuals should definitely pursue their unique set of interests. The ruling class, or the rich, have class consciousness. Let's not let the masses get infected by the kind of thinking that shows them that they are all in the same sinking boat! — Bitter Crank
The only solutions to our biggest shared challenges are solutions that have the following four characteristics: they're public, institutional, democratic, and universal. In other words, they solve the problem at the root, for everyone.
Anybody trying to sell you the notion that they have some quick-win, low-hanging-fruit, fill-the-gap thing that happens to be funded by the people causing the problem is trying to sell you a bill of goods.
What we have to do is reclaim the story that what we do together is more interesting, more compelling, more powerful, more valuable, than what we do alone.
The religion of the neoliberal era, the spiritual tradition of the neoliberal era, has been the notion that what we do alone is better and more beautiful than what we do together.
That was a massive propaganda push. It's incredibly counterintuitive. It goes in defiance of most traditions in the world, so it took a lot of work, but they did it. They pulled it off.
Margaret Thatcher literally saying, "There's no such thing as society” — which of your ancestors in any community around the world would have understood the notion that there's no such thing as society, only individual men and women?
That is a profoundly modern idea, a bullshit idea, a ridiculous idea, that none of our ancestors would have recognized, because all of our ancestors, wherever they came from, understood that they live in societies and would have felt dead to not live in societies of people with whom they had interdependence.
Over the last 40 years, we got sold this fraudulent religion, which only benefits those at the top, that what we do alone is great — and what we do together is corrupt, is tyrannical, is evil. It's false. It has hurt untold numbers of people. It's come crashing and burning down with Covid, which is the ultimate expression of a phenomenon where being left alone is literally death.
It's time to reclaim the story and venerate the tradition of valuing what we do together. — Giridharadas
Just read this, by Anand Giridharadas, which also sums up nicely what I was driving at before:
The only solutions to our biggest shared challenges are solutions that have the following four characteristics: they're public, institutional, democratic, and universal. In other words, they solve the problem at the root, for everyone.
Anybody trying to sell you the notion that they have some quick-win, low-hanging-fruit, fill-the-gap thing that happens to be funded by the people causing the problem is trying to sell you a bill of goods.
What we have to do is reclaim the story that what we do together is more interesting, more compelling, more powerful, more valuable, than what we do alone.
The religion of the neoliberal era, the spiritual tradition of the neoliberal era, has been the notion that what we do alone is better and more beautiful than what we do together.
That was a massive propaganda push. It's incredibly counterintuitive. It goes in defiance of most traditions in the world, so it took a lot of work, but they did it. They pulled it off.
Margaret Thatcher literally saying, "There's no such thing as society” — which of your ancestors in any community around the world would have understood the notion that there's no such thing as society, only individual men and women?
That is a profoundly modern idea, a bullshit idea, a ridiculous idea, that none of our ancestors would have recognized, because all of our ancestors, wherever they came from, understood that they live in societies and would have felt dead to not live in societies of people with whom they had interdependence.
Over the last 40 years, we got sold this fraudulent religion, which only benefits those at the top, that what we do alone is great — and what we do together is corrupt, is tyrannical, is evil. It's false. It has hurt untold numbers of people. It's come crashing and burning down with Covid, which is the ultimate expression of a phenomenon where being left alone is literally death.
It's time to reclaim the story and venerate the tradition of valuing what we do together.
— Giridharadas
I agree wholeheartedly. — Xtrix
The full Thatcher quote is actually more interesting than the simple phrase that always gets clipped.
I think we have gone through a period when too many children and people have been given to understand ‘I have a problem, it is the Government’s job to cope with it!’ or ‘I have a problem, I will go and get a grant to cope with it!’ ‘I am homeless, the Government must house me!’ and so they are casting their problems on society and who is society? There is no such thing! There are individual men and women and there are families and no government can do anything except through people and people look to themselves first. — Tom Storm
No, I think this is backwards anyway. Once the original sense of community is lost, it cannot be rebuild. It's like an arm that was cut off and then sewn back on: it's never quite the same and doesn't have the same functionality.So beware what you wish for. "Valuing what we do together", building communities usually implies values and stories build around common goods and goals, and those usually end up not being very sensitive to particular individuals. Or do we really think we can have our cake and eat it too? — ChatteringMonkey
So beware what you wish for. "Valuing what we do together", building communities usually implies values and stories build around common goods and goals, and those usually end up not being very sensitive to particular individuals. Or do we really think we can have our cake and eat it too?
— ChatteringMonkey
No, I think this is backwards anyway. Once the original sense of community is lost, it cannot be rebuild. It's like an arm that was cut off and then sewn back on: it's never quite the same and doesn't have the same functionality. — baker
The full Thatcher quote is actually more interesting than the simple phrase that always gets clipped. — Tom Storm
It's not just neo-liberal ideology that is to blame though, that's only part of the story I'd say and a bit short-sighted. — ChatteringMonkey
But still, what have ideologies on the left been other than 'critical', i.e. aimed at tearing down something rather than building up a community around shared ideas. — ChatteringMonkey
Recent woke/identity politics are only the next iteration and further splintering of shared categories that may bind a communities together into something more than a collection of individuals. — ChatteringMonkey
So beware what you wish for. "Valuing what we do together", building communities usually implies values and stories build around common goods and goals, and those usually end up not being very sensitive to particular individuals. Or do we really think we can have our cake and eat it too? — ChatteringMonkey
Marxism is literally the most powerful political movement in recent history. The only movements of comparable scope and influence are the major world religions (and perhaps capitalism, though there is an interesting discussion about that to be had). Given the tremendous influence on world history exercised by this ideology, it seems weird to claim that it hasn't "build" anything. — Echarmion
Is it? It sounds like more of the same to me. — Echarmion
Marxism didn't "build" the communities, or "Marxist" states... it usually had to devolve into some kind a authoritarian person-cult to created some kind of shared ideology (i.e. Stalin, Mao, Castro etc...) — ChatteringMonkey
Marxism didn't "build" the communities, or "Marxist" states... it usually had to devolve into some kind a authoritarian person-cult to created some kind of shared ideology (i.e. Stalin, Mao, Castro etc...)
— ChatteringMonkey
This view isn't compatible with the evidence. There were significant Marxist movements around the world, united by a shared vision. They were occasionally close to coming to power in Germany and France. Nor can either the USSR or the PRC be reduced to "Stalinist personality cult". In the beginning, genuine hope and Identification with the ideals of Marxism existed. And there was genuine societal transformation that is visible until today, for example in the area of women's rights. — Echarmion
Of course people build communities. But I'm pointing at the difference between a community build for the purpose of survival and a community built for some lesser purpose, such as the purpose of entertainment. Nowadays, people seem to be willing and able to build mostly the latter.It's seems to me that given the chance people will look for ways to build communities, i'm thinking of fans of sports-club for instance, or even the recent rise of far-right/nationalism/populism can be seen under that light. It won't be the same (and maybe that's a good thing), but new forms of community will be built it seems to me. — ChatteringMonkey
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