Marx and I, having been wrong about how the class contradictions within the Republican party were going to work themselves out, but not about how far the politics of ignorance could really go once it had actually taken over the leading strings of government, are now preparing something useful and new.


When different people say the word "socialism," they make roughly the same sounds but may mean quite different things. We are going to look at the things the word can properly mean, including and emphasizing scientific socialism.



Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Off with their heads!

Those who think having to face a recall election is too stiff a penalty for political crimes against the people of Wisconsin should reflect that, in some societies, some political crimes are or were capital. Now I don’t want to resurrect Joe Stalin and run him for governor, but I do want to re-emphasize the kinds of outlawry as such certain people are being held to account for in these elections.
One and all these are crimes of fraud and manipulation in favor of narrow, partisan, and merely political interests, and against public interest and good. It was possible to commit them because an anomaly gave Republicans complete control of the legislative process. After that: no amity, no consensus, no compromise…nor even consideration nor communication. Finding no other worthy interests, they consulted only their own. There’s the crime.
Most of these arguments have already been made, some by people in an official capacity. My purpose is to shed a different light both on the arguments and the actions themselves.
Here are the several counts in the indictment, in rough order of notoriety and abuse.

Collective Bargaining: The right of unions to exist was paid for in blood, even on the streets of Milwaukee. Predicated on that right, the rights to bargain and to strike make a double-edged sword. The Republicans blunted the one edge – without cause or need, ignoring offers of compromise on the point essential to the public good, which was the budget. It was pretence: the obliteration of rights was unnecessary to the stated purpose of the scheme of legislation. So: notorious abuse of the first order.
Voter Identification: Again, in some countries offenses against fundamental law are or were capital in nature. The courts, more than one of them, have found this legislation so offensive they granted a preliminary injunction, without a full hearing of the case, against its enforcement. For purely partisan reasons, to prevent a wrong merely imagined to exist, the Republicans placed an unconstitutional burden on a fundamental right – a poll tax, notoriously unconstitutional since the days of Jim Crow.
If the right to vote is sacred, what kind of outlawry is this?
Secret Redistricting: …was also roundly criticized by the courts – the federal courts – both the secrecy and the result. So far were the Republicans from an attitude of political amity that they refused to correct their error, and left it to the court to restore the voting rights their redistricting plan had infringed.
For people who may not understand what they did that was wrong, let me explain a bit. When they moved the Senate district lines, some people, hundreds of thousands of them, lost their votes in the next Senate elections. They were put in districts where the vote does not take place until the following cycle, and they have to wait until then to cast them: four years instead of two. So their votes were taken away, delayed, solely to advantage Republican candidates by giving them more Republican voters in the some of the affected districts.
Politics always obtrudes on the redistricting process, but in this case the abuse was egregious and ran afoul of constitutional law.
Again, if the right to vote is sacred…?
Fake Candidates: …were nominated by the Republicans to run fraudulently as Democrats, in their own words, to “level the playing field.” A notorious case of advertising a weak point! The real intent is to give their Senate candidates the advantage of Walker’s coattails in the general election. This isn’t spin: it’s an open lie. It might be higher on the list, but the public cost of this particular abuse is hard to measure and may not be particularly much.
Mining Legislation: …is last on the list, but only because it was an attempted abuse. See my post at the time the legislation failed.
Now Mr. Walker wants to revive the legislation on a “bipartisan” basis. But this only proves my point: up to now, in none of these instances were anything other than partisan interests ever considered.

I’ve already characterized The Outlaw for what he is. Too bad his Senate seat is secure. At the very least, the recall election will make him attempt to justify, if not answer for, his crimes. In fact, he’s the chief conspirator, isn’t he? I’ve permitted myself to wonder what leadership role Mr. Walker himself played, if any, but from here it’s impossible to tell. I don’t know what he’s telling his big bourgeoisie friends either. I do know Ms. Kleefisch made a phone call or two; she says so on television. That is enough to implicate her in the conspiracy.
And so the verdict, and the sentence, mild as it must be, lie in the hands of Wisconsin voters.
Fortunately not in the hands of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. The grounds for their endorsement of Mr. Walker are disingenuous. The question is not whether Mr. Walker deserves to face the recall – that is, it’s not about whether the paper’s editorial position on that point was correct. Now it’s about who should be governor of Wisconsin.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Class Math: The Mythmakers

What about those people who paid for, among others, the “Job creators” myth, the ones for whom political influence is an element of profit?
I realize I can scarcely post to this blog without making reference to the “lies” and “manipulations” of certain classes of people, or to their ability to buy “impressions” that serve as a substitute for the truth. Yet, absent some kind of explanation, people might think that I am making things up, that I have embraced some sort of conspiracy theory, and that I, not they, am guilty of lies and manipulations.
But while it’s still a conspiracy, it’s not a theory any more. The steps in the process are all more or less in the open now. You don’t have to use your imagination to supply missing ones, or substitute passion for understanding, any more.
Here’s how it works, step-by-step. Keep in mind that this is all in addition to directly supporting the candidates the mythmakers favor, and therefore is not determined by any candidate’s views, policies, opinions, or publicly-held positions.

Buying the Impressions:
1.       The Few – really the big bourgeoisie, but generally speaking the Few – have interests to advance or protect.
2.       It’s easy – it’s natural – to formulate opinions expressing such interests, both directly and as a guide to public policy.
3.       The opinions constitute a message one would like to share.
4.       It’s lawful to promulgate, publish, broadcast such messages…
5.       …and to do so under some name or form other than, as I do, in one’s own proper person.
6.       The message requires a medium.
7.       The medium must be paid for.
8.       So form an organization.
9.       Give it the money. (Who gives it is still the great secret.)
10.   Get your similarly situated friends to give it money.
11.   Package the message. The organization designs the packaging; the buyers, naturally, approve it.
12.   Buy impressions. There are plenty of vendors in the market and vanishingly few have any scruples about it.
13.   Measure the effect and adjust the package as necessary.
For example, whence these distorted advertisements about right-to-work legislation in Wisconsin? That’s a 20th century issue – from before the Big War. Why is it coming up now? Well, because the unions, weak as they are, are about the only entities the big bourgeoisie have to fear, and they would like to make them weaker. For another example, just today there is a report that Mr. Romney has had to repudiate advertisements funded by a Mr. Billionaire Ricketts.
Next: Why are the messages, like the ones in my examples, always and in principle lies and manipulations?

Making up Lies
1.       The message couldn’t start off any truer than an opinion. The Few are not philosophers, nor are philosophers among the Few.
2.       Is the opinion thus ever anything more than a more or less direct expression of self-interest?
3.       If it weren’t, why the anonymity of an organization? All those names are either tautological or fraudulent in themselves. All Americans are “for prosperity” – with a small “p.” The question is: whose? Why not use personal names? That would be unmistakable and truthful. As it is, we don’t know quite exactly whose interests are being served, and only by inference what class of people they belong to.
4.       The message is bent and spun. The Few would like to take the hopes and fears of the many, and match them up with their own exaggerated ambitions. And they have running dogs to help them. But the interests don’t really match. They don’t match at all: that’s the point. So now it begins to look like manipulations…
5.       …and finally passes to lies. When a string of manipulations and half-truths achieves a certain level of intensity, and something is needed to top it off, where else can you go? And it’s not just getting carried away or getting careless; it’s open, conscious, purposeful lies.
We’ve all seen political advertisements we don’t believe. Why believe any of them? Just think about where they come from – who pays – and then decide what to believe.

There’s another way, metaphorical for now, of looking at this. False opinions are sticky. Hold one and others will stick to it. Pretty soon you’ve got a whole view of the world that is irretrievably false – and a following besides. Think Rush Limbaugh. Jefferson Davis. Adolf Hitler. Sensible people proceed quite differently, as I’d be happy to explain in another place and time.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Class Myth: The Job Creators…

…never create jobs unless they stand to gain from it. Job creation is not a charity. Making them heroes is a myth. Who are these people? They are very few indeed. And the Republican Party would like to take the shackles off certain of these individuals or entities as might in return do the many the favor of giving them jobs.
It’s useful to boil the Republican jobs program down to one proposition: let’s find ways to make it more profitable to create a job. In general, this is to be done by sacrificing some other public interest, not to the creation of the job, but to the profit of the creator. Tax incentives are one such, possibly the least abusive, form of public sacrifice.
It’s just mathematics, isn’t it? At the margin, the public gets another job, but has to give up something from a different margin of their own. Why not rather insist that the job creators be good at what they do, and then make shift themselves to gather an adequate profit? Those who insist they can’t create a job because of, say, a regulated use of public lands, either lack ideas or energy  for other kinds of efficiencies, or want to make a killing out of public assets that cost them nothing.

And so there are already two kinds of job “creators,” maybe three. Some, the real ones, are entrepreneurs who can deliver products or services better, faster, cheaper (according to the old business saw, pick two of the three). These people rely on their own ideas to make a buck, and as necessary to that end, they create a job. They may be rich, but not wealthy yet. The only way they’ll ever become wealthy is to create jobs; this kind of job creation is real, not mythical.
They’re not permanently petit bourgeois, and they’re not yet big bourgeoisie either. Even if they’re already among the Few, they’re too busy to try to influence public policy – at least not directly, and not just to generate profit. Instead they vote, and they may contribute to the candidates of their choice. But they (the ones I’m thinking of) rely more on industry associations and the like, and not on their own dollars, for political influence. At the margin, they’d rather invest that dollar in, for example, creating a job, than in contributing to a PAC with a specific policy change agenda and a known record of…we’ll see. For one thing, the profit on the job is tangible, immediate, calculable, and under their own control. The profit in political manipulations is none of those things, so to these people it’s not worth the risk.
They are entitled, it seems to me, to vote Republican if they like. But there aren’t enough of them to elect one, and the people who work for them do not have to vote with them to keep their jobs. They can and should vote in their own interests.

Next, what about all that cash money on the books of the largest corporations? If somebody wanted to create jobs, why not use that money? But they don’t, as we’ve seen, unless the new worker will bring profit. Otherwise it’s just wages down the drain – which makes the worker bee who doesn’t have a chance to earn them, metaphorically, a “drain.”
So the money is used instead to buy back stock, to acquire businesses that actually are creating jobs, to pay dividends – in short, for things that make the balance sheet and stock price look good – but not for things that in themselves create jobs.
No: institutional investors and boards of directors are not job creators either. They’re profit takers, profit creators, not job creators. In fact that, not job creation, is their fiduciary duty, not their self-interest only. I suppose if you’re a small investor like me, to whom this fiduciary duty is owed, you might want to vote Republican, just to help ensure your retirement is comfortable.  But I’ll take a pass. I’d rather vote to help ensure the working poor can take care of themselves when they retire.

Which brings me back to those other people, the people who purchased the “job creators” myth, and several others, the ones for whom political influence is an element of profit. It’s always something for nothing with them, isn’t it? We’ll tell you lies and you give us votes. And with your votes, we’ll loose the bonds on the public values we covet, and tear off the shackles on our…greed.
But all this require further explanation, otherwise it might look like a conspiracy theory. And so…coming soon: The Mythmakers.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Class Math: Voting for “the man…”

…and not the party. I’m happy to say I’ve never done that. I’ve been terribly impressed with Mr. Clinton’s genius for policy sometimes, and with Mr. Obama’s wisdom. I had great hopes for Mr. Carter. I even forgave Mr. Reagan a little for the regressive things he did when I saw that he had been able to end the Cold War favorably to us as a people and to the world as a whole. Even though that was a relief, it doesn’t mean I would change my votes against him.
I regret that my party hadn’t better candidates than the ones who lost, but that didn’t make me think twice about whether to vote for them.
So I have to wonder about people who let considerations merely personal to the candidates involved decide their votes. For one thing, people are better judges of their interests than of character – more precisely, they are less easily deceived about the former than about the latter (though to be sure, it’s not impossible to deceive people about their interests).
The principles of the Democratic party have not changed since the days of Jefferson and Jackson: we are the party of the many. The principles of the Republican party, on the contrary, have changed since the days of Lincoln, maybe since the days of Eisenhower: at some point they became the party of the Few, or at best simply their willing accomplice.
Do your interests change from one election to the next? Maybe you got a job. Is that enough reason to vote Republican? Maybe you earned enough to begin to hope that some day you might become one of the Few. Maybe you actually became one of the Few. That last might be a good reason from the standpoint of class interest to switch parties. But that doesn’t happen to many of us; by definition it only happens to a few. So why would you vote for a democrat in one cycle, and a republican in the next, and then back again? Does your life, do your interests, really change that much?
While the principles of an individual might be more or less nuanced, while they might be unique – not to say peculiar – to that unique individual, while they might be formed by accident of birth or any number of other accidents, the principles of party are by comparison simple, straightforward, well known, generally shared, and formed under the experience of history. A party is like a culture that, being formed by a common set of influences, shares a common set of attitudes – which by the way is the original meaning of common sense.
This is the math part. What really happens is that the Few buy enough impressions to put in front of the public so that voters begin to think they constitute a form of truth about the candidate. They think they are voting for “the man,” when they are really voting for the impressions of the man that someone else could afford to put before them. Or, worse yet, voting against impressions of the other man or woman that were also bought and paid for.
Yes, it’s true, there have been great presidents and there have been, it’s not unfair to say, disastrous ones. Can you tell the difference? in advance? It’s by far a surer thing to vote for party. Even the failings and mistakes of an individual can be carried forward by the commitment to progress the Democratic party represents and by the party as a whole. Progress would be better and surer without party rancor, just because conflicting interests would be more likely to reach salutary adjustment. Who can change this if the voters do not select individuals, of either party, more moderate at least in their forms of expression?
So by all means, vote for that if you cannot bring yourself to vote for a democrat.