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Debt: The First 500 Pages

Mike Beggs

China in Revolt
Eli Friedman
Happy Hookers
Melissa Gira Grant

Gimme the Loot


Gavin Mueller

G E N E R A L G R A N T

DOUBLE ISSUE | SUMMER 2012


E M A N C I PAT I O N

7/8
Lincoln and Marx American Jacobins
Robin Blackburn Seth Ackerman

The War of Northern Aggression


James Oakes
JAC
Seth Ackerman, a p hd
CONTRIBUTORS

candidate in History at
Cornell, is an editor at
Jacobin.
Remeike Forbes is
Jacobin’s creative
director. He is an mfa
student in Graphic
Alex Gourevitch is co-
editor of The Current
Moment and an
assistant professor of
CITOYENS
publisher
Bhaskar Sunkara

managing editor
Connor Kilpatrick
Design at the Rhode Political Science at
Mike Beggs is an editor Island School of Design. McMaster University. editors
Bhaskar Sunkara, Seth Ackerman,
at Jacobin and a lecturer
Mike Beggs,
in Political Economy at Peter Frase is an editor Melissa Gira Grant has
Megan Erickson, Peter Frase
the University of Sydney. at Jacobin and a p hd written for Jezebel, Slate,
student in Sociology and the Guardian. creative director
Robin Blackburn is the at the cuny Graduate Remeike Forbes
former editor of New Center. Chris Hayes is editor- contributing editors
Left Review. at-large at the Nation Max Ajl, Liza Featherstone,
Eli Friedman is an and host of Up w/ Chris Belén Fernández,
Jake Blumgart is a assistant professor Hayes on msnbc . Sarah Leonard, Chris Maisano,
free­lance journalist in the Department Gavin Mueller,
who writes regularly of International and Michael Hirsch is a Kate Redburn, Corey Robin
for AlterNet, the Comparative Labor at veteran labor journalist assistant editor
Philadelphia City Paper, Cornell University. and an editorial board Cyrus Lewis
and the Philadelphia member of New Politics
proof
Inquirer. Anthony Galluzzo held and Democratic Left.
Karen Narefsky
a three-year visiting
Megan Erickson is an position at the United Sarah Leonard is an editorial assistant
associate editor at Big States Military Academy associate editor at Boian Boianov
Think and an editor at at West Point. He lives Dissent and is an editor distributor
Jacobin. in Brooklyn. at the New Inquiry. Disticor

Belén Fernández, the Audrea Lim is an editor Jacobin (2158–2602) is a magazine of


culture and polemic that
author of The Imperial at Verso Books.
Edmund Burke ceaselessly berates
Messenger: Thomas on his Twitter page. Each of
Friedman at Work, is a our issue’s contents are pored over
contributing editor at in taverns and other houses of
Jacobin. ill-repute and best enjoyed with
a well-shaken can of lukewarm beer.
Jacobin is published in print
four times per year and online at
http://jacobinmag.com
Subscription price: $24 per year,
$34 intl.
P. O. Box #541336,
Bronx N. Y. 10454
© 2012 Jacobin Press. All rights
reserved. Reproduction in
part or whole without permission
1 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012 is prohibited.
BIN
in memory of alexander cockburn, 1941–2012

James Livingston
teaches History at
Rutgers University–New
Brunswick. He is the
James Oakes teaches
American History
at the cuny Graduate
Center. His forth­
PUBLISHER’S
NOTE

I’ve boasted about Jacobin a bunch on this page.


Beyond narcissism, it’s rooted in the feeling
that our improbable success is symbolic of a
wider intellectual shift. Qualify that with sober
author of Against Thrift: coming book, Freedom acknowledgement of the Left’s marginality,
Why Consumer Culture National: The include token slaps in the direction of a certain
is Good for the Economy, Destruc­tion of Slavery mainstream commentator, strategically add
the Environment, in the United States, “youthful”
  profanity, and there you have it – a
and Your Soul (2011). will be published successful editor’s note.
in December. But here’s where the attention we’ve gotten
Chris Maisano is the is all smoke – we have no institutional base
chair of the Democratic Claire E. Peters is a and survive financially issue-to-issue. Jacobin’s
Socialists of America’s Washington, DC-based existence is more precarious than publications
New York City local. writer. with less reach and influence than us.
This is natural for a young magazine. But
Colin McSwiggen is Jason Schulman an rather than bleed our subscriber base,
pursuing an ma in editorial board member it’s worth pointing out that beyond having a
Design at the Royal of New Politics. microscopic donor base, we don’t have any
College of Art. institutional subscribers. Other publications
Arlene Stein teaches rely on a steady stream of renewals from
Gavin Mueller is a p hd Sociology at Rutgers, universities to stay afloat. Jacobin has been
student in Cultural and edits Contexts successful leaning on just our young cohort of
Studies at George magazine. readers, but it leaves little financial cushion.
Mason University and So please dear reader, fax your boss, email
contributing editor Bhaskar Sunkara is your university, take your librarian to
at Jacobin. He blogs at the founding editor dinner. Whatever it takes. Our institutional
Unfashionably Late. of Jacobin and a staff subscriptions are $60 yearly. Wealthy
writer at In These Times. people, subscribe at that rate too and we might
be kind to you after the revolution.
Tiffanie Tran is a recent By the way, did you see that shit Ezra Klein
grad from CalArts and just wrote?
a graphic designer from
Highland Park, Los —Bhaskar Sunkara
Angeles

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 2
AMERICAN

JAC O n a recent broadside against radical, indeed violent, social revolution in its
by Seth Ackerman
I the Occupy movement, Alexander
Cock­burn assailed, among other
things, “the enormous arrogance
past, one that expropriated, without compen-
sation, almost one quarter of the productive
wealth in the country and by the same act liber-
which prompted the Occupiers to claim that ated four million human beings from bondage.
they were indeed the most important radical That, of course, was the Civil War and Emanci-
surge in living memory. Where was the knowl- pation. And its political agents were Abraham
edge of, let alone the respect for, the past?” Lincoln and the Republican Party.
Cockburn may be prone to rhetorical excess, This last observation would have once been
but it is striking how little the Occupy move- considered unremarkable. But as James Oakes
ment has identified with any particular tradi- recounts in these pages, it has been submerged
tion of American radicalism. At the height in recent decades by a new historical orthodoxy
of the southern Civil Rights Movement, it was that attempts to sever the link between the
common in New Left circles to refer to the Republican program and emancipation, portray-
Freedom Riders as “the new abolitionists,” the ing the latter as an accidental byproduct of the
title of a much-read 1964 book by Howard former.
Zinn. No such cries of historical continuity were In response, Oakes demonstrates that Re-
audible from Zuccotti Park. publicans took power in March 1861 with
If there is one political movement that has a comprehensive antislavery policy of which
claimed kinship with an American revolution- emancipation was both the actual and
ary tradition these past few years, it has been the intended outcome. However unplanned
the Tea Party, with its tricorn hats and its fetish their specific course, the Republicans were
for the Founders. The American Revolution, or revolutionaries.
at least its orderly, legalistic reputation, is no That is why, to quote the words that Marx’s
doubt congenial to the Right and often held up International addressed to Lincoln in 1864, the
as proof of Americans’ imperviousness to radi- proletarian radicals of Europe “felt instinctively
cal adventures. Whatever the historical facts, that the star-spangled banner carried the
1776 is remembered as a mere “political,” and destiny of their class.” Robin Blackburn details
not a social, revolt: the solemn replacement of this transatlantic affinity in his essay on Marx’s
an imperial constitution with a republican one. milieu during the Civil War era. Indeed, during
But the United States indisputably has a the war, Radical Republicans in Congress were

3 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
BINS
commonly cursed as “Jacobins,” and their unof- The outer layers of these coalitions attracted
ficial leader, Thaddeus Stevens – soon to be bur- voters and politicians who lacked the hard
ied in an interracial cemetery – was nominated abolitionist principles of the militants, and in a
by one British observer “the Robespierre, Dan- racist society it was inevitable that many of
ton, and Marat of America, all rolled into one.” the converts to Free Soil would vaunt theirs as
It is worth asking, then, why the Ameri- the “true white man’s party.”
can left has lately neglected this revolutionary But the original nucleus of radicals – despite
inheritance. their own time-bound attitudes – lent the
In the American system, no political party project an inner egalitarian spirit, visible in party
can durably exist without the ability to win at campaigns for black suffrage and civil
least half the vote in a meaningful number rights across the North. And when the moment
of elections, yet almost by definition, no truly of mass radicalization finally arrived in the
radical program can ever quickly gain such wake of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, these
broad assent. abolitionists stood triumphantly at the heart of
In the mid nineteenth century, a faction the networks that became the new Republican
of abolitionists understood this dilemma. Fig- Party. “Our position is now rather enviable,”
ures such as Charles Sumner, Salmon P. Chase, wrote Giddings in 1854. “We lead the hosts of
Joshua Giddings, and John P. Hale, rejecting freedom.”
the heavily prefigurative and antipolitical Today on the radical left, there is a wide-
style of activism practiced by William Lloyd spread allergy to political strategy as such.
Garrison and his followers, saw that a strategic There is far more communion with the counter-
approach to abolition was required, one cultural legacy of Garrison than with the
in which the “cause of the slave” would be har- political acumen of Frederick Douglass, who by
nessed to a wider set of appeals. 1852 had become secretary of the Free Soil
At each stage of their project, from the Party, commenting that “what is morally right
Liberty Party to the Free Soil Party and finally is not at all times politically possible.”
the Republican Party, progressively broader The Second American Revolution was tragi-
coalitions were formed around an emerging ide- cally cut short, its unfinished work still visible
ology of free labor that merged antislavery on our streets and in our prisons. That’s all the
principles with the economic interests of ordi- more reason to embrace the legacy of its most
nary Northern whites. far-sighted champions. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 4
D O U B L E I S S U E 7– 8

Special Topic:
American Jacobins

E S S AY S

7 Gimme the Loot 77 Eating for Change 45 The War of Northern


Gavin Mueller Claire E. Peters Aggression
James Oakes

12 Working for the Weekend 80 Beyond November


Chris Maisano by Michael Hirsch & 48 Lincoln and Marx
Jason Schulman Robin Blackburn

15 Sarah Lawrence,
with Guns
Anthony Galluzzo

22 Terror Verde
Belén Fernández

24 Two Hurricanes
GENERAL GRANT

Alex Gourevitch
GENERAL GRANT

27 China in Revolt
Eli Friedman

52 How the Left has Won


James Livingston

74 Happy Hookers
Melissa Gira Grant

5 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
EMANCIPATION

EDITORIAL C U LT U R E REVIEWS

3 American Jacobins 64 Designing Culture 35 Debt: The First 500 Pages


Seth Ackerman Colin McSwiggen Mike Beggs

84 Fairer Sex 67 Dance Dance Revolution


Sarah Leonard Audrea Lim

71 Breuckelen Gentry INTERVIEWS


Arlene Stein

59 The Age of Illusion: An


Interview with Chris Hayes

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 6
The Sea was given by God for the use
of Men, and is subject to Dominion
and Property ... the Law of Nations
was never granted to them a Power to
change the Right of Property.

—Judge Nicholas Trott at the trial of


Stede Bonnet and crew, 1718

99%

7 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
GIMME THE LOOT

by Gavin Mueller FROM BLACKBEARD TO KIM DOTCOM,


HAS PIRACY BEEN A RADICAL FORCE?

In an honest service there is thin com- nce the heroes of nations, exchanged as smoothly as possible. Pi-
mons, low wages, and hard labor; in [pi-
racy], plenty and satiety, pleasure and
ease, liberty and power; and who would
O pirates went from being rates represented a dual threat to the
state-sponsored champions Atlantic Ocean factory of early capital-
to tolerated annoyances to ism. They were not only thieves; they
not balance creditor on this side, when the basest sort of criminals. Henry were also free.
all the hazard that is run for it, at worst, Morgan was knighted after plundering Being a sailor has never been easy,
is only a sour look or two at choking. Panama in 1674; fifty years later hun- and it was particularly tough in the sev-
dreds of pirates were dangling from the enteenth and eighteenth centuries. To
—Pirate captain Black Bart Roberts, gibbet at remote trading posts along maximize profits, sailors were forced to
circa 1720 Africa’s Gold Coast. eat rotten food and bunk in cramped
What changed? quarters, and were paid on credit – you
The modern day pirates at issue in this The change wasn’t so much what didn’t collect until you had completed
litigation do not wear tricornes and pirates did as the context in which your one-, two-, or three-year bid. And
extract their ill-gotten booty at cutlass they found themselves: a global mar- even then, you might not collect. You
point, but with a mouse and the inter- ket economy with England at its head. could die, of course. Or you might be
net. Nonetheless, their theft of property England went from a plucky backwater pressed into military service, or forced
is every bit as lucrative as their brethren to a capitalist empire in a century, and to work an extra few years on another
in the golden age of piracy. as its fortunes changed – or more spe- ship, or forfeit your wages as a punish-
cifically, as the way it made its fortunes ment for insolence. It wasn’t uncom-
—US District Judge Mark Bennett, after changed – so, too, did the way the state mon for sailors to go a decade without
awarding the maximum judgment treated piracy. seeing a shilling. Ship captains had
of $4 million to pornography company It was one thing when looted Span- absolute authority over their crews in
Private Media Group in a “shot ish gold filled the Queen’s meager order to enforce discipline. Any com-
across the bow” of online piracy, 2012 treasury; it was quite another when pi- plaining or shirking could be deemed
rates threatened to disrupt the increas- “mutinous,” and punishment could
Just pirate it. ingly disciplined circulatory system of range from whipping to hanging to be-
the Atlantic Ocean, which had be- ing dangled over the side of the ship to
—Game designer Notch’s advice to come the center of the British econ- have your brains bashed in.
Minecraft fans who can’t omy. Sugar, tobacco, slaves – these Pirate ships were different – they
afford the full version, 2012 commodities needed to move and be were under democratic worker control.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 8
PIRATES

REPRESENTED

A DUAL

THREAT TO THE

ATLANTIC

OCEAN FACTORY

OF EARLY

CAPITALISM.

Captains weren’t absolute rulers, but such as when pirates commandeered before. The book publishers who once
elected leaders who commanded only a slaver, armed the captured Africans flooded the continent with cheap cop-
during battle. Day-to-day operations with knives, then sent the hapless cap- ies of the great works of literature had
were handled democratically by the tain back on his merry way. Pirates also to go legit.
entire crew. Loot was divided equally held grudges, assaulting trading posts A similar change has happened in
and immediately, and pirates ate – and and towns where authorities had ex- our own era. Patents, copyrights, and
drank – better than their law-abiding ecuted their comrades. After a fellow trademarks are the legal apparatuses
contemporaries. This was the major pirate captain was executed at a Portu- that turn music, movies, and medicines
reason pirates were feared: it was easy guese slave fortress, Walter Kennedy into “intellectual property.” Infringe-
to convince exploited sailors to join up stormed the castle, captured it, and ments were once tolerated, or at least
with them. And join up they did. burned it to the ground. Not for noth- compromises were worked out. A small
Pirate crews were a polyglot, multi- ing did so many pirate vessels contain surcharge built into the price of every
racial multitude (this isn’t Hardt and the word “Revenge” in their names. cassette was the tribute thousands of
Negri; this was the word used at the homemade mixtapes paid to the re-
time) that included oppressed Irish- edia piracy , the now-mun- cord industry cartel. But in the inter-
men, escaped slaves, French heretics,
and members of Caribbean indigenous
M dane practice of streaming a tv
show or downloading an mp 3,
net age, no quarter has been given. Fan
remixes are summarily removed from
groups. Pirates hailed from all over seems a far cry from the life-or-death the web, even if they fall under legally
the Atlantic and Mediterranean, and struggles of buccaneers on the high seas. protected fair use. A grandmother dis-
included a high proportion of blacks But the history of media piracy in the placed by Hurricane Rita and a disabled
and mulattos, who often had leader- US is similar to that of seafaring pirates. single mother have been terrorized
ship roles. Marcus Rediker notes in Vil- In the early days of the republic, lack- with lawsuits; the young operators of
lains of All Nations that sixty members ing international copyright treaties, the NinjaVideo were prosecuted and given
of Blackbeard’s crew of one hundred US government encouraged pirating prison sentences merely for linking
were black. of British literary classics in order to to – not hosting – copyrighted material.
Pirates didn’t just plunder ships; promote literacy. Authors like Charles Just as the demonization and even-
they enforced their own brand of jus- Dickens complained to no avail; not tual destruction of the Atlantic pirates
tice across the Atlantic. Upon board- until American literature caught up in stemmed from the growing importance
ing a ship, pirates interviewed the crew quality and appeal could authors like of maritime trade, the crackdown on pi-
to determine how their captain com- Mark Twain and Harriet Beecher Stowe racy is linked not just to the fortunes of
manded. If he were said by his crew persuade the US government to enforce any one industry such as music or film,
to be cruel, the pirates might beat copyright. By their time the US had but to the fate of the economic system
or execute him; if he were fair, they become a scientific and cultural pow- as a whole. Intellectual property makes
treated him well and sometimes they erhouse in its own right, and it sought up 80 percent of the net worth of US
sent him off with a bit of money of his to protect its advantage by enforcing corporations and 60 percent of their
own. Sometimes their justice was poetic, property rights more strictly than it had exports. These rights secure streams

9 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
GIMME THE LOOT

of tribute from wherever our pharma- industry itself. Just as the old pirates decision to purchase is rooted in ethics,
ceuticals are purchased, wherever our used commandeered ships against At- not in need. And as Marx reminds us,
software is used legally, wherever Hol- lantic trade, online pirates use their the realm of freedom begins where the
lywood films are shown, resold, or spun workplace infrastructure to store and realm of necessity ends.
off into branded merchandise. This is host the information they liberate. In This is the fundamental difference
the so-called “knowledge economy,” a 2004, Fox Entertainment busted six between capitalists and pirates. Capi-
term that points less to global capital- employees who were hosting movies talists accumulate. Pirates archive. A
ism as a whole than to the American on the Fox servers for a warez group. capitalist wants profit from the sale of
position in the international division Movie studios are rife with pirates tor- every commodity and will enforce scar-
of labor. renting films. Low-level music industry city to get it. Pirates work to create vast
Piracy has been a part of the internet workers (including journalists) are the common spaces, amassing huge troves
since it left the confines of the military- most frequent source of pre-release mu- of content, much of it too obscure to
industrial complex and entered the sic leaks. The culture industries rarely be of much use to very many people.
worlds of commerce. Once people get disclose how their goods get onto the Piracy destroys exchange value, and
hold of any new medium, they set about internet before they’ve hit stores – it’s pays little heed to use value.
doing all the wrong things with it, ex- embarrassing to admit that your own
perimenting with blasphemy, pornogra- workforce is sabotaging you. in the early eighteenth
phy, and political radicalism. And so it
was with the internet. As soon as com-
Few in the warez scene make any
money from their piracy. Instead, they
I century, business and empire
came up with a strategy to de-
mercial software was available, groups boast of their noncommercial motiva- stroy piracy: extreme public violence.
of disciplined, organized volunteers tions, which they counterpoise to the Pirate ships were hunted down and
emerged to destroy it. They were soft- motivations of the software industry. pirates were hanged by the dozens, or
ware pirates, and in their dialect they They do it for status in their community, sent off to die “lingeringly” doing hard
called their ill-gotten goods “warez.” in an echo of Edward Bellamy’s utopian labor in one of the colonies. The decay-
They called themselves The Scene. novel Looking Backward, in which work ing corpses of executed pirates were
Piracy, the appropriation of private is divorced from the wage, and incen- chained to trading posts from Ghana to
property in the form of copyright in- tives instead come from badges that Virginia as warnings to others. Brutal
fringement, threatens this economy, reflect one’s effort. examples were set. And so it goes today.
just as Atlantic pirates threatened Pirates are self-consciously politi- Megaupload’s Kim Dotcom, a will-
slave-capitalism in the early eighteenth cal. They justify themselves by disavow- fully tacky fat guy with a baby face and a
century. And the source of the threat ing an industry that releases shoddy vanity license plate that says “guilty ,”
is identical: the very workers crucial products at high prices – the industry has styled himself as a kind of comic vil-
to those industries. The earliest soft- that employs many of them – and they lain, a composite of everything people
ware pirate groups were self-organized will also tell you they buy the products love to hate. He effectively serves as
clusters of skilled programmers and they like. But they don’t have to. Their empire’s face of piracy: an overweight
computer enthusiasts who tested their
abilities by reverse-engineering protec-
tions on proprietary software, “cracking”
it and rendering it “warez,” useable to THE CRACKDOWN ON PIRACY
anyone who downloaded it. Many of
these individuals came from the soft- IS LINKED TO THE FATE
ware industry itself, where they were
underpaid, unchallenged, or otherwise OF THE ECONOMIC SYSTEM
unfulfilled. They found their fulfill-
AS A WHOLE.
ment in collaborating with others to
release warez faster than any other pi-
rate group. This organizational model
has spread to the online piracy of other
media, such as movies and music.
In all of these cases, the means of
production, once they come under
worker control, are used against the

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 10
designer brands. European parliaments
have rejected the onerous acta treaty,
the most recent repressive telecom
legislation the content industries have
pushed on the increasingly skeptical
electorate. If modernity in the global
south has always been piratical, oppo-
sitional to the needs and desires of the
corporations in wealthy countries, it is
increasingly so worldwide.
While piracy is a frontline in the
struggle against capitalism, it is not in
and of itself “radical.” It is structurally
antagonistic to private property, but
CAPITALISTS ACCUMULATE. in contradictory ways. Kim Dotcom is
the obvious example of the pirate capi-
PIRATES ARCHIVE. talist; Google and the telecoms, which
reap profits from the searching and
bandwidth taken up by piracy, could
be thought of as others. The warez
scene and its offshoots in books, mov-
ies, and music are made up largely of
white-collar professionals who rarely
nouveau-riche wannabe hacker who The hydra was the preferred meta- profess any opposition to capitalism
finally gets his comeuppance through phor authorities used against all man- (only occasionally to “corporatism”
the macho justice of Uncle Sam. It’s ner of resistance to the violent and in that typically American fantasy of
so easy to hate Kim Dotcom that you tumultuous enclosures of common small independent business and mar-
almost forget that the US convinced property in the early centuries of capi- kets without monopolies). The Pirate
the New Zealand government to send talism. Peasants thrown off the land Party, born of the suppression of the
in an assault brigade, bereft of a valid vandalized enclosures, vagabonds openly property-hostile torrent site The
warrant but outfitted with automatic robbed the well-to-do, egalitarian reli- Pirate Bay, shows its political naïveté
weapons and helicopters, to arrest a gious figures preached the destruction in its inane techno-optimism and its
Finnish citizen at the demand of Holly- of hierarchy, writers blasphemed state members’ disdain for antiracism and
wood studios. If Kim Dotcom didn’t ex- churches, slaves murdered their mas- antisexism. The US Pirate Party tell-
ist, the fbi , with the help of the mpaa , ters. The powerful spoke of the need ingly gave up its own raison d’être, re-
would have invented him. to summon a Hercules to re­store order, nouncing piracy itself!
Megaupload, then the largest site via state terror, to destroy these beasts. But things could change. Anon-
for streaming pirated media, went off­ Today, the subversion of intellectual ymous quickly went from online
line in January. The second season of property is one of the hydra’s heads, pranksters to the Red Brigades of the
Game of Thrones aired from April to breathing poison and gnashing its teeth Occupy movement, striking fear into
June of this year, and more viewers at power. It has a proven ability to sap cops caught beating protesters. More
watched it illegally on laptops than on the surpluses that capital requires for recently, the group defaced Japanese
hbo . New hosting services, and the link its reproduction. And this is occurring government websites in response to dra-
compilers who organize them, spring on a scale much larger than torrenting conian antipiracy legislation. Though
up constantly. Take down one Game popular hbo costume dramas. National these are encouraging developments,
of Thrones stream, or even the entire governments are in open revolt against we must remind ourselves there is noth-
hosting site; take down a dozen or a US ip dominance: India has granted ing inevitable about the emergence of
hundred of them and the same episode compulsory licenses on patented drugs, anticapitalist politics, in piracy or any-
will pop up in a slew of other spots, hy- effectively nullifying proprietary claims where else. But anything that strikes
dra-like, as the pirate multitude con- by pharmaceutical companies. China’s terror into the hearts of the rich and
tinues to wage its decentralized battle consumer goods sector is made up powerful should be welcomed aboard
against property. of increasingly realistic knockoffs of with full honors. ¢

11 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
WORKING FOR THE WEEKEND

by Chris Maisano UNDER CAPITALISM, THE ONLY THING WORSE


THAN HAVING A JOB IS NOT HAVING ONE.

ast spring , as the US Steven is used as the avatar of work-

L economy entered yet an-


other period of slowdown
and unemployment lev-
ing-class security and agency. Still, the
meme resonates because it speaks to a
very real sense of loss, a yearning for a
els in the Eurozone hit record highs, time when the working class, particu-
a meme called “Old Economy Steven” larly unionized workers, could expect
started making the rounds on the a steadily increasing standard of living
Internet. Most memes are frivolous en- and the sense of security and freedom
deavors, devoted to exploiting cats for that came with it.
comedic purposes or projecting femi- Steven’s Old Economy was a full-
nist fantasies onto the empty signifier employment economy, and the demand
that is Ryan Gosling. But whoever came for full employment must be an integral
up with “Old Economy Steven,” likely employment! Eventually, he’s retiring component of a revitalized Left. This
a recent college graduate with moun- with five pensions and going on vaca- should not be interpreted, however,
tains of student loan debt and bleak tion whenever he damn well pleases. as a call to return to a time that was
prospects for reasonably gainful em- But Steven doesn’t just enjoy the exceptional in the history of capital-
ployment, was aiming for social critique. material comforts of Old Economy ist development. The Golden Age is
The image used to depict Steven abundance. He possesses a degree of irretrievably gone, and we shouldn’t
looks like a long-forgotten high school everyday power scarcely imaginable by recreate it even if we could.
yearbook photo of somebody’s “cool” working people today. Steven can tell A full-employment vision for the
uncle. With his feathered bangs, wispy his boss to shove it, walk out and get twenty-first century can and must look
mustache, and open-necked big-collared hired at the factory across the street. very different from the full-employment
shirt, Steven looks the kind of guy If he gets fired at the new job, that’s realities of the postwar era. Nor is the
who used to spend his Saturday nights no big deal. He’ll just pick up another call for full employment necessarily
cruising the main drag in his Trans- on the way home. If he wants a raise, bound up with a set of normative as-
Am, scoping babes and blasting Bach- he can just walk into the boss’s office, sumptions about the virtues of work
man-Turner Overdrive at maximum ask for one, and get it. Steven may be and the vices of idleness. We want full
volume. a working stiff, but he doesn’t have to employment precisely because it weak-
Most iterations of the meme implic- bow or scrape before anyone to make ens the disciplinary powers of the boss
itly or explicitly contrast the postwar ends meet. and opens up possibilities for less work
Golden Age of working-class prosper- There’s more than a whiff of second- and more leisure. A full-employment
ity with the straitened circumstances hand nostalgia emanating from the Old economy raises the bargaining power
of today’s young proletarians. Steven Economy Steven meme. Proletarian and living standards of the working
pays his yearly tuition at a state college –  life has never really been so easy, and class in the short run and erodes the
with his savings from a summer job! He not everyone got to taste the fruits of social power of capital in the political
graduates with a liberal arts degree –  postwar abundance. There’s a reason economy as a whole, opening up possi-
and actually finds suitable entry-level why a dorky-looking white dude named bilities for radical social transformation.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 12
A LONGER LEASH who skipped work nearly every Mon- to loosen the disciplinary constraints
day is confronted by his harried fore- on the working class, and too low to
y full employment , I man. When asked why he should only spontaneously generate mass move-
B mean something fairly intu-
itive: an economy in which
work four days a week, the worker gave
a wonderfully truculent response that
ments of the unemployed for jobs and
income. It’s up to those of us on the
everyone who is willing and able to captures the spirit of the time: “Because Left and in what remains of the labor
work has access to a job and where the I can’t make a living working three days.” movement to unite the employed and
unemployment rate is at or approaching How many workers would have the au- the unemployed, the organized and
zero. Mainstream economics, however, dacity to say that today? the unorganized, the secure and the
offers a rather different conception of The Polish Marxist economist precarious behind a political program
full employment under the infelicitous Michał Kalecki presaged these devel- that puts the right to work at the top of
acronym nairu , or Non-Accelerating opments in his classic 1943 essay “The its banner.
Inflation Rate of Unemployment. Political Aspects of Full Employment.”
Broadly speaking, nairu corresponds A full-employment economy would, THE HOURS ARE TOO
to an ostensibly “natural” level of un- at least in theory, benefit capitalists DAMN LONG!
employment that does not place any by boosting the purchasing power of
significant upward pressure on the rate the masses and therefore the profits he call for full employ-
of inflation. This is to say, it does not
reflect the common-sense definition of
of companies looking to meet that de-
mand. But as Kalecki observed, capital’s
T ment should not be confused
with an affirmation of the
full employment at all. It’s merely a pro- resistance to full-employment policies work ethic at the expense of pleasure
jection of the size of the “industrial re- derives from a different set of con- and leisure. We agree with Marx’s con-
serve army” of the unemployed needed cerns. In a full-employment economy, tention that the “true realm of freedom”
in a particular economy to keep wages the disciplinary effect exercised by the begins exactly where work ceases, and
and prices down and maintain business reserve army of the unemployed is fa- that “the shortening of the working-day
confidence in the investment climate. tally undermined. The power of the is its basic prerequisite.” For socialists,
The concept of nairu itself is an ide- boss shrinks not only in the context freedom is exclusively identified with
ological response to the political ramifi- of the individual workplace but in the the time we spend outside the sphere
cations of the postwar full-employment political economy as a whole, giving of material production. We cannot and
economy, where average unemploy- workers a longer leash and raising their should not “find ourselves” through
ment levels across the advanced capital- capacity to mount a challenge to the work, but through the relationships we
ist countries dipped below 3 percent in imperial prerogatives of capital. Though build with friends, neighbors, and lov-
the period between 1960 and 1973. This a full-employment economy would ers, the political struggles we engage in
state of near-full employment dramati- bolster bottom lines by boosting the alongside our comrades, and the cre-
cally enhanced the power of the work- purchasing power of the masses and ative and artistic endeavors we pursue
ing class by eroding the disciplinary making demand effective, the social as ends in themselves.
power of the boss, who could no longer and political relations of production Until the middle of the twentieth
control recalcitrant workers by pointing that come with it are untenable from century, even the most conservative
to the unemployed masses outside the capital’s point of view. Acceptance of sections of the US labor movement em-
factory gates or the office door. This a full-employment economy would be braced the progressive shortening of
strengthening of labor’s power in rela- tantamount to unilateral disarmament the working day and the working week
tion to capital is reflected in the massive in the class struggle. as a basic demand of trade unionism.
strike wave of the late 1960s and early Historical experience bears this ar- This aspiration united pure-and-simple
1970s, when workers sought not only gument out. The neoliberal order has unionists and revolutionary socialists,
higher wages and expanded benefits but not been very successful in restoring the afl and the iww , Samuel Gompers
a measure of control over the organiza- economic growth to the levels of the and Big Bill Haywood. During the
tion and management of the workplace postwar era. But it restored the elite Great Depression, the afl was instru-
itself. This dramatic shift in the balance class power that was threatened politi- mental in supporting Alabama Senator
of power also played out in innumer- cally by a rising tide of worker militancy Hugo Black’s effort to pass a bill for
able small-scale confrontations between and the radicalization of important sec- a thirty-hour work week in Congress.
workers and bosses on the shop floor. tions of the historical parties of the Left. The bill passed the Senate but was
In one telling anecdote from the pe- At just over 8 percent, the US un- opposed by Roosevelt, so it had little
riod, an assembly-line worker at gm employment rate is currently too high chance of actually becoming law. It was

13 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
WORKING FOR THE WEEKEND

subsequently watered down and passed The working day in the U S has t the end of The General
as the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938,
which established the forty-hour work
not been significantly altered, either
through collective bargaining or legis-
A Theory, Keynes surveyed the
dire political-economic scene
week we know and love today. lative action, since the passage of the of the mid 1930s and summed it up in a
The labor movement had tradition- Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938. As single, incisive phrase: “The outstand-
ally perceived the demand for full em- the global economy continues its seem- ing faults of the economic society in
ployment and the demand for shorter ingly interminable stagnation, it’s time which we live are its failure to provide
hours as inextricably linked; progress to rediscover the lost history of labor’s for full employment and its arbitrary
toward one was simultaneously prog- struggle for shorter hours. Unemploy- and inequitable distribution of wealth
ress toward the other. Gompers made ment remains stubbornly high while and incomes.”
the case bluntly: “so long as there is the average annual number of work After the long detour of the postwar
one man who seeks employment and hours in the US remains among the Golden Age, those thirty glorious years
cannot obtain it, the hours of labor are highest across the advanced capital- in which the advanced capitalist coun-
too long.” ist countries. In 2010, the average US tries appeared to square the circle of
As David Roediger and Philip Foner worker spent 1,778 hours on the job. By economic growth and social welfare, is
observe in Our Own Time, their survey contrast, workers in many continental there any doubt that we find ourselves
of labor’s struggle against the exigen- European nations and the Scandinavian once again in the same predicament?
cies of capitalist time, the demand for social democracies enjoy a much larger Then as now, the program is clear: tax
shorter hours addressed three impor- amount of leisure time, and at higher the rich, put people to work, shorten
tant goals. First, it tended to unite work- rates of labor market participation. To hours, and build the welfare state.
ers across divides of craft, skill, race, a significant extent, they have averted These are the demands on which we
ethnicity, gender, age, and employ- the social disaster of mass unemploy- might build a coalition of left-liberals,
ment status in ways that struggles over ment through work-sharing schemes social democrats, and radicals while ap-
wages could not. Second, it compelled and other policies aimed at prevent- pealing to a broad and deeply insecure
the labor movement to take action in ing workers from falling into long-term public. The current situation calls for
the political arena and broaden its ap- joblessness. nothing less.
peal beyond its own members. And Scores of studies have demonstrated Considering the paralysis and dys-
third, the demand for shorter hours that unemployment and weak attach- function of our political system, the
encroached directly on the right of ments to the labor force are deeply seemingly impregnable dominance of
management to organize and control damaging to the physical and emotional our economic elites, and the drastic
the labor process. If workers could have well-being of those who experience them. erosion in the size and strength of our
a say over when to work, what would Ending this plight should be among labor movement, it seems hopelessly
stop them from eventually demanding the main short-term goals of the Left, utopian to raise the demand for full
control over how to work? quite apart from any larger strategic employment as the rallying cry for a re-
After World War ii, when the bulk of agenda we may advance. So long as vitalized Left. But it’s the precisely the
informed opinion expected the global we remain within the coordinates of utopianism of the demand that makes
economy to fall into yet another slump, a capitalist political economy, the only it so compelling – and necessary – in
radicals and militants in unions like the thing worse than having a job is not the circumstances in which we find
United Auto Workers (uaw ) placed the having one. And as the experience of ourselves.
demand for shorter hours for the same the social democracies has shown, it’s The establishment of full employ-
pay at or near the top of their bargain- possible to maintain high rates of em- ment is the sort of transitional demand
ing agendas. At Ford’s colossal River ployment, shorter working hours, and that could appeal to the very real and
Rouge plant near Detroit, the radical robust welfare states – even in a neo- immediate needs of millions. It could
leaders of uaw Local 600 antagonized liberal era. Of course, the balance of shift the balance of power between
both the company and the union’s political forces in those countries has workers and capital and lay the ground-
leadership with their demand of “30 long been much more favorable to the work for more radical and permanent
for 40” – thirty hours’ work per week for labor movement and the Left than the changes in the basic structure of the
forty hours’ pay. uaw militants contin- situation we confront in our own coun- political economy. It constitutes a cen-
ued to demand less work for the same try. None of what we want is possible tral component of the strategy that
pay until the 1970s, when the neoliberal until we create the political forces we should guide the theory and practice
counterrevolution put an end to those need to win them – but that’s a subject of a revitalized Left for the twenty-first
aspirations. for a different essay. century. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 14
Grammar

Music Astronomy

Rhetoric Logic

Arithmetic Geometry

15 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
S A R A H L AW R E N C E ,
WITH GUNS

by Anthony Galluzzo WE ASKED A FORMER WEST POINT


PROFESSOR ABOUT TEACHING LITERATURE
AT THE NATION’S MOST PRESTIGIOUS
MILITARY ACADEMY. WHAT HE TOLD US
REVEALED THE TRUTH BEHIND THE
COUNTRY’S MOST ELITE WARRIOR CASTE –
AND HOW LIBERAL HEROES LIKE
THOREAU AND THE BEATS INSPIRE THE NEXT
GENERATION OF “RUNAWAY GENERALS.”

reg , a tall, lanky, and un- “No disrespect, sir, but I think this after all, talking shit about my vocation.

G usually thoughtful cadet,


waited for me after class.
While most West Point
poetry crap is pretty useless.” This was But rather than engage in Adornian
Troy, another very vocal cadet. Troy of- jujitsu – agreeing that the humanities
ten sounded off about the worthlessness are useless and it is exactly their use-
“plebes” (first-year students) ran out at of “English.” English was his catch-all lessness that is valuable – I instead re-
the end of the fifty-five minute period, term for the humanities, social sciences, iterated the standard apl party line:
Greg almost always lingered, wanting and any mode of intellectual inquiry literature is in fact very valuable for you,
to further parse this or that novel, play, without one “right” answer and some future wartime leaders, since it fosters
or poem. solid practical application, like building empathy (or is it sympathy?) for various
He regularly and passionately par- a bridge or blowing one up. He was not “others,” as you imaginatively identify
ticipated in class discussions while a fan of apl classes. apl is the official with the escaped slave or invisible man.
large groups of the cadets dozed. He United States Military Academy acro- Consider, young cadet, that you will
took unpopular positions when I ven- nym for Art, History, Philosophy, and be serving in very different cultural
tured into controversial territory and Literature: four separate disciplines all environments, such as Afghanistan or
sought me out for “A. I.” – additional rolled into one department, ironically Iraq, which requires a more expansive
instruction – whenever he wanted to confirming Troy’s worst assumptions kind of understanding. I could hear
discuss something above and beyond about their interchangeability. my inner critic objecting to this soft
the curriculum. Despite Troy’s many and frequent imperialist instrumentalization of liter-
But Greg was unusually silent that provocations in the classroom, I usu- ary study – a kind of weaponized senti-
day during a debate about the value of ally stuck to “facilitating debate,” in mentalism – but Troy was satisfied, or
“literature” and interpretation for our the bloodless lingo of the usma . But at least silent.
future military officers. that day, I took the bait and countered Just then, the section marcher po-
It hadn’t gone well. Troy’s swaggering declaration. He was, litely signaled to me that class was

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 16
WHILE THE CADETS KNEW and many of the leaders they will one
day replace.
THEY WERE SUPPOSED Greg questioned many of the he-
roic values central to the West Point
TO HATE THIS COMMUNIST, ethos and certainly rejected both
the unthinking obedience and the
HIS PROWESS AS A FIGHTER,
thoughtless self-congratulation that
HIS VIOLENT, SELF- I sometimes observed in the corps of
cadets. In other words, he is the kind
SACRIFICING DEATH, AND of critical thinker that the twenty-first
century Army needs for America’s for-
THE DANGEROUS ever wars, according to its more enlight-
ened spokesperson. And he is exactly
PROXIMITY OF HIS what West Point has promised to the
American public.
RHETORIC TO THEIR OWN
a
  ck in 2009, before I ever set
ELICITED SEVERAL

BEGRUDGING AND
B foot on West Point’s campus,
I interviewed at the Modern
Language Association Convention for
CONFLICTED EXPRESSIONS an assistant professorship with the
Citadel, the Military College of South
OF RESPECT. Carolina.
The Citadel is an unforgiving mili-
tary academy affiliated with the South
over. The cadets rushed for the door, or topic with a “hooah,” that all-purpose Carolina Militia, rather than any of the
but Greg stayed behind. His uncharac- West Point exclamation. Greg would US armed forces. The college gained
teristic silence in class and the look on almost always counter with a thorough notoriety in the nineties when its hide-
his face told me something was both- and levelheaded response. bound leadership refused to admit
ering him. They were a study in contrasts –  women – twenty years after the volun-
“I agreed with a lot of what you said lanky and thoughtful Greg versus teer military and its five service acad-
today, Professor Galluzzo,” he said. “But stocky and insouciant Troy. Troy was emies went coed. Shannon Faulkner,
don’t you think there’s a difference be- loud, inappropriate, and always sur- the prospective cadet denied admission
tween imaginary others and actual peo- rounded by a group of admirers as a due to her sex, sued the school and the
ple you meet on the ground, in a place result. Entranced by his outspokenness, case went all the way to the Supreme
like Afghanistan? Can’t fantasies also they seconded his views in class while Court, where she prevailed. She was
reinforce stereotypes?” He articulated Greg was usually alone in his opinions. eventually driven out of the place by
my own misgivings. I suggested he read “I wanted to say something, sir, but I a relentless campaign of harassment,
Edward Said. thought, after the ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t intimidation, and torment.
Although Greg didn’t know the Tell’ discussion the other day, I’d give My interview with them was off-
book, his questions reminded me that it a rest.” putting, to say the least.
Orientalism – a text and term often in- No one had vocally supported Greg’s Two civilians, a man and a woman,
voked by many of my West Point col- liberal stance on dadt , while several ca- kept me waiting in the hallway of a San
leagues at the time as what “we” weren’t dets had echoed Troy’s opposition, and a Francisco hotel for over an hour. They
doing over there – is very much about few others had remained silent. Silence finally emerged from the suite after a
the ideological misuse of imaginative at West Point doesn’t necessarily entail friend stopped by with a bottle of cham-
literature in the service of nineteenth- indifference or disengagement; I know pagne. We sat down for the interview. I
century imperialism. that Greg had his supporters. At the told them about my dissertation while
Impressed, I asked him why he time, I drew the obvious conclusion –  they kept asking if I was really okay
didn’t participate in that day’s debate. while Troy’s views were typical, Greg with wearing the required military uni-
Greg and Troy often went at it. Troy was challenging the conservative con- form. It clearly wasn’t the place for me
would voice his disapproval of some text sensus of these aspiring Army officers and they wanted me to know it.

17 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
S A R A H L AW R E N C E , W I T H G U N S

My first encounter with West Point even explicitly critical perspectives in George Custer and Dwight Eisenhower,
couldn’t have been more different. military education. while more recent luminaries like Stan-
The job interview was conducted in a I accepted the position, telling my- ley McChrystal aspired to the position,
large room in one of the many impres- self that I would voice those challenging as one account of the great man’s time
sive granite buildings that comprise perspectives and foster a different kind at the academy recounts: “McChrys-
Thomas Jefferson’s military academy of officer in doing so. tal is a dissident ringleader on campus.
on the Hudson. I was to meet with One classmate, who asked not to be
the apl department’s most senior ci- lthough these liberal char- named, describes finding McChrystal
vilian professor, New Republic regu-
lar and recent Guggenheim fellow
A acter traits might seem un- passed out in the shower after he drank
suitable for a soldier, West a case of beer he’d hidden under the
Dr Elizabeth D. Samet. Point is ostensibly dedicated to shaping sink. He viewed the tactical officers,
Although West Point doesn’t offer “leaders of character” for an American sort of like glorified residential advisors
tenure, Professor Samet had achieved Army that, in Samet’s words, “prides at West Point, as the enemy.”
de facto job security. I read her 2006 itself on the soldier’s ability to recog- In The Operators, journalist Mi-
memoir, Soldier’s Heart: Reading Lit- nize immoral or unlawful orders: ‘I was chael Hastings tells the story of one of
erature Through Peace and War at West just doing what I was told’ isn’t a satis- McChrystal’s most elaborate campus
Point, to prepare, and was heartened factory excuse. That is why the abuses pranks: “McChrystal and five others
to discover that literature had value of Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib, for borrow old weapons from the campus
in what I still imagined to be the most example, have been such a crushing museum, including a French mat -49
pragmatically minded of American betrayal to military professionals, es- submachine gun and dummy hand gre-
institutions. pecially, perhaps, to those who teach nades made from socks. At 22:15 hours,
Samet and Colonel Scott Krawczyk, ethics at West Point.” dressed in full commando gear and
the vice chair of the department, were But my student Troy was also very with painted faces, they storm Greg
waiting for me with another civilian aca- much an iconoclast, bucking authority Hall. The main intent, says Barno (who
demic, who, I learned, was an expert on in the approved fashion, showing his didn’t participate in the raid) was to
modern and contemporary American co s that he, too, will one day assume ‘create chaos.’” As the managing edi-
poetry. Both Samet and her colleague command. On the surface, Troy isn’t tor of West Point’s literary magazine,
appeared more Columbia than West a follower, or in any way a good sol- McChrystal subsequently published a
Point. I felt at ease. Krawczyk, an im- dier-automaton, as I could hear in the short story about the raid with the title
posing figure, is a military officer with forced – and often “fuck you” – tone of “Where Goats Dare.”
a phd – which is required of the senior his “yes, sir – no, sir”s. He wore his re- My colleagues at other colleges and
faculty – and some academic reputation bellious streak on his dress grey sleeve, universities found my reports of this be-
as a romantic scholar. This is certainly often bragging about how he shirked havior surprising, wanting to maintain
not the Citadel, I thought to myself. this or that duty and suffered the con- the fantasy of perfectly behaved stu-
“We like to think that this is a liberal sequences for it: marching back and dents somewhere, anywhere, at the very
arts college. Which also happens to be a forth across a muddy field for hours least in the Army. Yet this hooah flavor
military school,” the colonel said. on weekends, or losing privileges, in- of disobedience is, in many ways, not
Elizabeth followed, in a half-joking cluding the passes he needed to leave inconsistent with West Point’s mission
tone. “Like Bard or Sarah Lawrence. “post” – the West Point campus. The to produce “leaders of character” – in
With uniforms.” campus, for most cadets, is little more other words, to institutionally and ideo-
The mood lightened, so I confessed than a grey, gothic prison on the pictur- logically reproduce the Army officer
my leftist and antimilitarist convictions. esque Hudson River. corps elite.
I wanted to get it all out on the table. Troy was willing to suffer the con- The military requires standardiza-
“Do you see this as a problem here?” sequences for his open defiance of the tion, regimentation, and subservience
The colonel responded by saying rules, even as he reiterated a certain to the chain of command, even as its
that while officers are “obliged to avoid version of “duty, honor, country” that leaders seek to groom the next genera-
explicit expressions of political belief, endeared him to his peers as a rebel tion of MacArthurs and Pattons, those
the US Military Academy is an insti- in the grand West Point tradition of exemplars of macho initiative who give
tution that prides itself on academic “the Goat.” orders rather than simply following
freedom in the classroom.” The Goat is the name for the mischief- them. Even the bureaucratic rituals
Samet echoed her book in stressing making cadet who graduates last in his imposed on cadets, which I initially
the need for different, challenging, and class. Famous Goats have included understood in terms of breaking down

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 18
the civilian and building up the sol- signs of decision, acts of manly self- She recounts a cadet’s report on
dier, nonetheless pale beside the orgies assertion – make sense. They mark the Thoreau’s “Civil Disobedience,” for
of affirmation and self-congratulation cadet as a future leader, willing to buck which he deliberately showed up late
showered on the cadets by their com- bureaucratic protocols if the exigencies and was subsequently punished for it,
manding officers. This was a far cry of battle call for such a thing or even cleverly illustrating Thoreau’s method,
from popular images of the sadistic, push back against a certain authority, while the principles that animated the
ego-demolishing drill sergeant apo- insofar as that line of action is dictated antislavery and antiwar protests were
theosized by Stanley Kubrick’s Full by the nebulous imperatives of “honor.” reduced to “radical individualism,”
Metal Jacket. In this way, West Point Those great West Point iconoclasts without much further elaboration.
is like Sarah Lawrence or even the Ivies: Patton, MacArthur, and Robert E. Lee During my initial campus visit,
“You’re the best!” is the dominant message best exemplify this phenomenon. All I was asked to teach a few chapters
to students. three of them are wildly popular among from On The Road to the introduc-
The mandatory Dean’s or Super­ the West Point corps of cadets, as each tory literature class. I was, at the time,
intendent’s “briefings” that I attended represents in his own way an ideal-type surprised by the cadets’ enthusiasm for
with my students were exalted pep ral- of the warrior as rebel against elected this material. In retrospect, the appeal
lies – the leaders telling their charges executive authority, or, in the case of of Kerouac’s masculine and frequently
how “excellent” they were, as they em- Lee, the Union itself. adolescent vision of rebellious self-
bodied the “excellence” of this most assertion makes sense in that environ-
“excellent” of places. Cadets hooahing in his selective disrespect ment. The course reading list for the
raucous agreement, in what amounted
to a collective high-five between current
T sometimes manifests as a
troubling contempt for the
class included Benjamin Franklin’s
Autobiography, Thoreau’s Walden,
and future Army leaders. The faculty American public and its political rep- Melville’s Typee, Kerouac’s novel, and
briefings weren’t much different, as we resentatives which I observed among Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild.
were informed that West Point is the some cadets and even their Army The Colonel who designed the syl-
“best liberal arts school in the country” officer instructors. To them, we’re labus around American individualism
ad nauseam, according to a method- a part of a flaccid civilian world at and American individualists’ various
ologically dubious 2009 Forbes college odds with West Point ideals of mar- “errands in the wilderness” later spent
rankings report. tial and heroic individualism. Several some time at the Afghan Military Acad-
This exceptionalist posture is curi- of my students were even offended emy, which is being organized on the
ously reinforced through institutional by the “support the troops” rhetoric usma model. In one mandatory brief-
coddling, at odds with both the Spartan trumpeted by a jingoistic US media, ing, he concluded his own tale of adven-
rigors of military training and the self- which they saw as expressions of bad ture by mentioning that Emerson and
reliance presumably required in a war faith or guilt. Thoreau are just what the religiously-
zone. While acting out is to be expected At the same time, many cadets –  minded Afghans need.
from teenagers in such a rule-bound and several of my Army colleagues –  The cadets’ reaction to Che Guevara’s
environment as they react to an often pledge allegiance to popular American “Man and Socialism” stood out, since
misconceived and outdated paternal- political viewpoints, such as libertari- the guerrilla’s vision is a martial and
ism, Troy’s hooah rebelliousness is a anism. This despite the fact that they masculine one in which Cubans are
direct extension of the demeanor fos- are servants of the state at its most asked to sacrifice for their new revolu-
tered by the leadership. Some cadets coercive, which feeds, clothes, houses, tionary society, which Che describes
thus break or bend the rules they deem educates, and employs them in what in language redolent of the battalion.
unimportant. is an admirably successful example of While the cadets knew they were
Most officers and cadets understand, central planning on a mass scale. One supposed to hate this communist, his
usually by their third year, the over- former colleague sometimes indig- prowess as a fighter, his violent, self-
whelmingly performative dimension of nantly invoked Murray Rothbard, the sacrificing death, and the dangerous
military culture: showing up and jump- “anarcho-capitalist” who dismisses the proximity of his rhetoric to their own
ing through the hoops that you have state as an “armed gang,” or attacked elicited several begrudging and con-
to in order to get by. There is a deep public-sector workers and their pen- flicted expressions of respect: “He was
vein of cynicism that reminded me of sions, without the slightest bit of self- a bastard, but....” This class, chock-
the Catholic Church of my childhood. awareness or irony. In Soldier’s Heart, full of rebels in the mold of Troy, wres-
It is against this background that cer- Samet describes another institutionally tled with the specter of the revolution-
tain circumscribed acts of rebellion –  approved form of iconoclasm. ary fighter.

19 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
S A R A H L AW R E N C E , W I T H G U N S

DISOBEDIENCE IS AMBIGUOUS IN ITS

IMPLICATIONS, SINCE, THE

AUTHORITY THAT IS DISOBEYED COULD

JUST AS WELL BE THE

DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED EXECUTIVE

AS THE ROGUE CO WHO

BARKS “ILLEGAL AND IMMORAL” ORDERS.

At West Point, the rebellious gesture his experience in the Sunni Triangle, it was useful tool for the cultivation of
is presented as nearly synonymous with led him to this career choice. readers’ moral sensibilities, massaging
the popularity of the abovementioned Samet never fully considers how dis- our sentimental capacities into such a
writers, so that confederate Lee joins obedience, which is not coextensive state where we would more easily iden-
hands with abolitionist Thoreau. Dis- with critical thinking, moral scruple, or tify with the lowly, the alien, and, in this
obedience is ambiguous in its impli- healthy irreverence, could produce “in- case, the enemy. Or at least the civilian
cations, since, devoid of any specific cidents” such as Haditha or Fort Nama, populations, often indistinguishable
ethical or political content, the author- as well as prevent them. from America’s various opponents, in
ity that is disobeyed could just as well Samet’s book is, among other things, counterinsurgency warfare.
be the democratically elected executive a long apologia for the value of literary This very old discourse overlaps with
as the rogue co who barks “illegal and study at the military academy, which the counterinsurgency doctrine cham-
immoral” orders. is described as providing an intellec- pioned by General David Petraeus,
In a chapter entitled “To Obey or tual space for the cultivation of these among other prominent West Point
Not to Obey,” Samet describes her own critical and reflective faculties, a space alumni, and was all the rage at West
cadets’ disobedient behavior and icono- for students like Greg. She presents Point when I arrived in the summer
clastic impulses, which she automati- the humanities in general – a marginal of 2009.
cally identifies with a critical moral course of study that most cadets en- While Samet highlights the aber-
outlook certain to reassure those read- counter in the form of the four required rant monstrosity of American milita-
ers who crave a more enlightened form apl courses – and English Literature rism and takes issue with the troubling
of militarism. in particular as fostering those habits growth of evangelical belief in the ser-
She recounts the story of a former of mind necessary for the exercise of vice academies, the basic structure of
student who declares in an email that “moral courage.” American militarism and the heroic
in light of his experience in Iraq, he She distinguishes moral courage values she celebrates in a thoughtfully
wants to study military law in order from mere bravery, which “sometimes literary and thoroughly secular fashion
to uphold the “laws of war,” informed consists in speaking up, sometimes remain uninterrogated.
by “humanitarian principles,” in the in stoic silence, sometimes in forging Moral courage, and the questioning
“murky wars” the United States will ap- ahead, sometimes in circumspection, it entails, has its limits.
parently prosecute in perpetuity. and sometimes in preserving nothing
We are made to recognize how this less than our humanity.” olonel Gian Gentile, a
ex-student’s disobedient streak, as Yet Samet’s account of the uses of
demonstrated in the classroom, is sub- literature in an officer’s education takes
C West Point professor of mili-
tary history – and an admi-
limated into moral awareness through on a decidedly eighteenth-century char- rably scathing critic of the Petraeus
an engagement with modernist poetry acter, recalling how certain defenders of doctrine – wrote recently that “at the
and its ambiguities, which, more than the novel, among other genres, argued U. S. Military Academy at West Point,

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 20
where I teach history, intellectual discipline of accepting orders without est point cadets have un-
freedom is fiercely encouraged and questioning them.” Against this nar-
protected.” row and reactionary perspective, Samet
W til the summer between their
“yearling” (sophomore) and
Conservative critics have derided articulates a seemingly liberal position, “cow” (junior) years to leave the academy
what they see as the growing influence which she also ascribes to usma lead- without penalty. After that, they owe
of left-leaning civilian academics at the ership, sounding almost like a former the Army several years of service for
various service academies, exemplified cadet: “The department doesn’t tell us their approximately $300,000 educa-
for them by the Naval Academy at what to think; it teaches us how to think.” tion. Those cadets who would not rather
Annapolis, where half of the faculty is Certainly no one ever told me what I be there than anywhere else leave, and
civilian and a tenure system is in place could or couldn’t teach in some crudely a few former students did ask me for
far exceeding the Clinton-era Congres- coercive fashion. But conservatives are letters of recommendation.
sional mandate to increase the civil- often ineffective when defending their Greg had already decided to transfer
ian makeup of the faculty to at least own institutions. West Point liberal- when he approached me for a letter.
20 percent. ism is, in spite of some genuine con- He intimated that he’d been ostra-
John Miller gives voice to this line viction on the part of several former cized by many classmates when the
of thinking in a 2002 National Review colleagues, at least partly designed for liberal views he articulated in class
article on bringing “Babylon” to Sparta public consumption. As David Petraeus were made known, which I had always
where he writes: “One of the aims of a once wrote in a policy paper that long assumed to be the case. Greg and the
general education is to teach students precedes his counterinsurgency fame, other dissident thinkers I taught always
how to think on their own. A military ed- “it’s not what happens, it’s what policy­ struck me as case studies in moral and
ucation, on the other hand, requires of- makers think happens – the key is intellectual courage, willing to suffer
ficers-in-the-making to absorb the stern ‘perception.’” potentially greater consequences than a
lost weekend pass or six hours worth of
pacing to and fro across a muddy field.
He also informed me that neither
tactical noncommissioned officers nor
military instructors look kindly on a
cadet with a reputation for intellectual
nonconformity, and it is the military
education that weighs the most heav-
ily among the three pillars of the West
Point experience, official claims to par-
ity notwithstanding.
He recently sent me an email: he’s
decided to take time off and is living in
California. Greg and the many cadets
WEST POINT LIBERALISM like him whom I taught are as intellec-
tually curious as any civilian students
IS, IN SPITE OF SOME I have encountered. These cadets all
report the same thing: their intellectual
GENUINE CONVICTION ON curiosity was stifled at usma in myriad
ways. Even while the Dean brags that
THE PART OF SEVERAL
“we’re better than Harvard, better than
FORMER COLLEAGUES, AT Princeton,” most cadets learn to “beat
the Dean,” or do just enough to get by
LEAST PARTLY academically, with a wink and a nod.
I ran into Troy this past spring, at
DESIGNED FOR PUBLIC the end of my contract, when he told
me how much he dreaded “en  302,”
CONSUMPTION. that he looked forward to his “cow”
year, and then ultimately graduation.
He hopes to go on to Ranger school. ¢

21 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
TERROR VERDE

by Belén Fernández LATIN AMERICA’S PINK TIDE


INVENTS GREEN TERROR.

n december 2011, Mary movements, earned the applause of

I Anastasia O’Grady, edito-


rial board member at the
Wall Street Journal and
none other than O’Grady herself when
he militarized his cabinet in response
to protests in the northern Peruvian
patron saint of the Latin American far city of Cajamarca, coveted by Colorado-
right, cautioned that the ongoing anti- based Newmont Mining Corporation.
mining protests in Peru highlighted Despite having committed during
“risks to development coming from a his election campaign to the idea that
hard left operating under the guise of water is more important than gold,
‘environmentalism.’” Humala appears to have reworked his
The sinister designs of protesters priorities to favor the eradication of lo-
“calling themselves environmentalists” cal water supplies in accordance with
were exposed via the following factoid: Newmont’s proposed $4.8 billion gold
“Wilfredo Saavedra, president of some- and copper mine project. The intran-
thing called the ‘Environmental De- sigence of those Peruvian citizens who
fense Front,’ also happens to be a former have not arrived at the conclusion that
member of the terrorist Tupac Amaru environmental degradation by foreign
Revolutionary Movement, which advo- resource extractors is consistent with
cates Cuban-style communism.” “development” has resulted in deadly
Given that O’Grady’s previous warn- police crackdowns on protesters, cast
ings of Cuban-style communism have by the government as self-defense ma-
suggested that the current US State neuvers forced on police by extremists.
Department is in cahoots with Fidel The state’s response to the organiza-
Castro, political observers might be for- tion of an anti-mining “march of expect-
given for not lapsing into panic-induced ant mothers” in Cajamarca on June 19
seizures. was described by Reuters as follows:
Of far more legitimate concern than
the impending subversion of world or- Ana Jara, Peru’s minister of women and
der by greenwashed commie terrorists vulnerable populations, said pregnant
is, of course, that the fabrication of such protesters would be putting their unborn
threats contributes to a blanket dele- babies at risk by going to [the] rally....
gitimization of environmental activism. She accused organizers of using pregnant
More concerning still is that Peruvian women as shields to prevent police from
President Ollanta Humala, elected breaking up protests.
last year with the support of leftist

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 22
approximately 400 usd . Sure enough, Amazonian region in 2009, I was invited
DESPITE MORALES’S following a session of police repression by a member of the Huaorani tribe to
in the city center, the state-run newspa- view a film on a dvd player that had
IMAGE AS A STAUNCH per Cambio reported that the marchers been bestowed on her family by an in-
had attacked the police in an operation ternational oil company. The film cen-
DEFENDER OF THE coordinated by infiltrados posing as tered on the gifts bestowed on Huaorani
disabled people. civilization by evangelical Christian
RIGHTS OF MOTHER
In lieu of an assessment of the le- missionaries, whose modus operandi
EARTH AND OF gitimate desires of legitimately disabled in the 1950s involved dropping cooking
citizens, Cambio offered an array of pots on the tribe from helicopters and
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, elaborate photographic spreads delegiti- encouraging indigenous relocation to
mizing all manifestations of opposition protectorates in less oil-rich areas.
HIS GOVERNMENT to Evo Morales’s government. In one, As for indigenous groups that have
the caption “Activist beats up police- thus far remained outside the grasp
HAS DENOUNCED man at disabled protest” corresponded of missionaries and oil companies,
to a photo of a man in a striped sweater Ecuador’s Tagaeri and Taromenane
OPPONENTS OF THE standing in front of a policeman in riot tribes are known as pueblos no con-
gear. Two more photographs purported tactados and exist in voluntary isolation
ROAD AS IMPERIALIST
to highlight the presence of the same in Yasuní National Park, a biosphere
AGENTS. man at previous protests against the reserve also containing tens of mil-
proposed highway through Bolivia’s lions of animal and plant species and
Isiboro Sécure National Park and a number of oil blocks. One of these
According to the news agency, Jara also Indigenous Territory (tipnis ). is the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini
warned that the Peruvian penal code Despite Morales’s image as a staunch (itt ) block, subject of the Yasuní-itt
stipulates a punishment of three years defender of the rights of Mother Earth proposal, according to which Ecuador
in prison for mistreatment of a fetus. and of indigenous peoples, his govern- will refrain from exploiting itt oil re-
The purported concern for fetal well- ment has denounced opponents of the serves in exchange for billions of dol-
being in this case is difficult to recon- road as imperialist agents and, in re- lars in international compensation and
cile with the fact that one of the effects sponse to far-reaching public support freedom to unrestrainedly exploit all
of cyanide used in mining operations for anti-road marchers, has engaged in other blocks.
is an increase in spontaneous abor- the liberal use of tear gas, rubber bul- Shortly after presenting the proposal
tions and birth defects in surrounding lets, and more hands-on forms of police to the United Nations, Ecuadorian Pres-
communities. violence. ident Rafael Correa enjoined: “Don’t
While Reuters reported a turnout Indigenous leader Fernando Var- believe the romantic environmentalists;
of dozens of pregnant women in Caja- gas, president of the tipnis Subcen- everyone who is against the country’s
marca in spite of Jara’s threats, Peru’s El tral, was recently quoted in the Bolivian development is a terrorist.” Given the
Comercio insisted that in fact only five paper Los Tiempos as registering the resemblance between this statement
out of forty protesters who appeared following complaint: and Mary O’Grady’s alert about the
to be pregnant were actually expecting “risks to development” emanating from
and that the rest had disguised their I thought that 500 years of colonization terrorists disguised as environmental-
non-pregnancy with pillows and other had already ended, but it turns out that ists, we should ask why the rhetoric of
materials. [the process] is being carried forward in Latin American leftist leaders mirrors
Humala is not the only regional Bolivia by President Evo Morales him- that of the US ultraright.
leader who has had to contend with self, who personally goes to indigenous In the event that the Yasuní-itt
political saboteurs feigning environ- communities bearing gifts [in an effort arrangement proves untenable, the
mental concern, pregnancy, and other to decrease resistance to the road]. Ecuadorian government could always
conditions. Earlier this year in Bolivia, capitalize on the allegations, backed by
I watched a protest of disabled persons Gifts are said to consist of motors, oil companies, that pueblos no contacta-
in wheelchairs and on crutches – some solar panels, and electric generators. dos don’t actually exist. It might even
of them missing limbs – arrive in La Similar methods of placating indige- be argued that imaginary people are
Paz after a thousand-mile march in pur- nous opinion have been implemented faking their own existence for political
suit of an annual disability subsidy of in Ecuador. During a visit to the eastern purposes. ¢

23 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
T WO HURRIC ANES

by Alex Gourevitch WHY ENVIRONMENTALISTS’ FEAR


OF BIGNESS DOOMS THE
DEVELOPING WORLD – AND THE LEFT.

come from the minor- be helping the Global South industri- and humanistic. These pessimistic and

I ity on the Left that is skep-


tical of environmentalism.
This is not skepticism of
alize, so that it has more protection
from the vicissitudes of nature. After
all, there are always going to be natural
conservative tendencies are rooted very
deeply in environmentalism itself. To
see the way these tendencies play out,
the science, but of the politics and ide- disasters. So better to redistribute re- let’s look at the ideological and political
ology of environmentalism. sources to the South so that it can scale affinities between environmentalism
Consider the difference between up its ability to control nature, rather and Occupy.
Hurricane Mitch, a Category 4 hurri- than to roll back that project in the Ideologically, there is a shared view
cane, and Hurricane Andrew, a Cat- developed countries. regarding the dangers of size. Through-
egory 5. That, to me, is the radical position out Occupy, there was a common ar-
1992’s Andrew was a more power- on the environment. It calls for a large- gument against corporations on the
ful storm than Mitch, but Andrew hit scale industrial development and a mas- grounds that they are large-scale hu-
Florida, where it killed about 80 peo- sive redistribution of wealth. And yet, it man enterprises, which destroy com-
ple and left about 125,000 temporarily is almost entirely at odds with the poli- munities and nature simply by virtue
homeless. Due to the wealth and social tics and ideology of environmentalism. of their size.
organization of the region, most people Environmentalists consistently tend to That critique taps into the environ-
had a place to take refuge, and nearly see the development of industry, and mentalist tendency to be hostile to the
everybody had found a new place to the wider attempt to dominate nature, industrial revolution and the aspiration
live within a year. as wrong, perverse, and the source of to control nature for human purposes
Mitch hit Central America – mainly man’s domination over man. that lay at the heart of that revolution.
Honduras, Guatemala, and Nicaragua –  The control and manipulation of A strain of antihumanism has been
in 1998. It was catastrophic, killing nature is a good thing. It is potentially prominent in environmentalism for a
11,000 people, with just as many miss- emancipatory. Such technological con- long time. This antihumanism is rooted
ing, and it left 2.7 million people home- trol is certainly a condition of possibil- in that very premise – that it is wrong
less. The economic devastation led to a ity for any of the aims regarding the to control nature for human purposes,
cholera outbreak. reduction of necessary labor and en- and that the attempt to control nature
Why the difference? joyment of leisure time that the Left lies at the root of contemporary prob-
The answer lies with Central Amer- used to be committed to and which lems. The problem with large-scale hu-
ica’s poverty and underdevelopment. have been consistently defended in man enterprises like corporations is
Honduras, Nicaragua, and Guatemala Jacobin’s pages. not their size or relationship to nature,
are much less industrialized countries, I may be more pessimistic than but who controls them. If anything,
with bad roads, poor communication others about the ability to transform the hostility to controlling nature dis-
networks, weak construction, and so on. environmentalism, especially its ten- places a concern with the relations of
The lesson here is that our most dencies toward misanthropy and de- production onto the forces of produc-
urgent environmental priority should spair, into something more affirmative tion. The most problematic thing about

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 24
corporations is the way the distribution
of ownership and control ends up so-
cializing costs while privatizing benefits.
But those benefits could be socialized
and put into a more rational relation-
ship to human needs.
The other ideological affinity is that
while Occupy has been global in its per-
spective, it has been very local in its uto-
pian vision and prefigurative politics.
That’s also true of environmentalism,
which has had trouble giving us an al-
ternative social vision that could be in-
ternational in scope. At least, it has not
given us anything that would be more
than a bunch of federated, small-scale,
self-sufficient production communities.
I don’t think there is anything attractive
in that vision, and it is not something
that I identify with the forward-looking,
universalistic aspirations of the Left.
On the political side, Occupy has
been a kind of cipher for a number of
movements that have had trouble con-
necting with mass politics. It seemed
to offer a mass political moment to
which various groups could attach
themselves. Environmentalism is one of by telling people they should consume This appeal to fear will limit the ap-
those movements that have had trouble less – it is deeper than that. When you peal to mass politics. It is debilitating,
finding and establishing majoritarian are trying to mobilize people to engage not invigorating. In the face of a crisis
connections. in large-scale political action, but the of this magnitude and immediacy, why
There are a number of reasons why lesson is that whenever we engage in act? Why would anyone think action
it has faced these obstacles. One is the large scale international action there are can make a difference? Moreover, the
social pessimism of environmentalism even worse unintended consequences, appeal to fear is a way of supplanting
itself. Its narrative is one of despair. It it is hard to see why anyone would be rather than articulating more robust
is hard to convince many to sign on willing to sign up. It’s no wonder en- human aspirations. Survival alone is
to a political project that is pessimis- vironmentalists find themselves in a not much to aspire to.
tic and verges on misanthropy, or at certain kind of political impasse vis-à- Environmentalists have attempted
least tends toward the view that, on the vis mass politics. to overcome these limitations by ap-
whole, human will and intention have There are two other self-limiting pealing to the authority of science. It is
largely led to destruction rather than aspects of environmentalism. One is very common to hear that “the science
production. After all, a basic premise the “crisis” mode of politics. This “we is in,” as if that tells us what we ought
running through much of environ- must act now, we don’t have time to to do. But even if the science is in, the
mentalism is that the past three hun- reflect” that we find in much climate science does not tell us how to act.
dred years teach us a particular lesson: activism is deeply problematic. As I Scientists can tell us about the com-
when we try to control nature, the un- have written elsewhere, it is a politics plex things happening in the natural
intended consequences of human ac- of fear. Our existence is threatened (by world. But before we can act, we have
tion are far more destructive than the natural catastrophe); we don’t have time to find agreement on a host of political,
intended ones. to argue or disagree; we must act now; economic and ideological questions
The problem here is not merely that politics has been reduced to the quest about which scientists have nothing
you are going to have trouble appeal- for survival – this all sounds exactly like to say. Scientists often know very little
ing to mass interests when you begin the War on Terror. about political and economic questions.

25 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
TWO HURRICANES

the public of environmental aims. It during the California energy crisis of


is, moreover, where the background 2000–1. I would be sitting at home in
THE CONTROL AND ideological and political issues – is en- the middle of the summer and suddenly
vironmentalism antihumanistic? does the lights would go out and the air con-
MANIPULATION it really articulate progressive aspira- ditioning shut off. This was the richest
tions? can it do more than appeal to state in the richest country in the world
OF NATURE IS A fear? – matter. The turn to science reg- and it couldn’t supply energy properly
isters these ideological problems and to its citizens.
GOOD THING. IT IS
weaknesses. As it turned out, this had to do
POTENTIALLY In the talk on which this essay is with market manipulation by energy
based, someone made the observation companies and traders, mainly Enron,
EMANCIPATORY. that when Israelis destroyed a power who were creating artificial shortages
generator in Gaza, Palestinians turned to drive prices up and overcharge the
to bicycle generators. They produced public.
their own energy in their own homes. What I distinctly remember is that
The Palestinian bicycle generators were many California environmentalists ar-
offered as an example of how carbon- gued that this was an opportunity to
free energy technology could also serve learn to conserve, and spent most of
as a moment of resistance to domina- their time either recommending con-
tion. The sympathetic audience wel- servation strategies or arguing that this
comed this example. was further proof that we shouldn’t de-
This kind of argument exemplifies mand such cheap energy. Many people
a very dangerous and conservative ten- followed suit, and various conservation
dency in environmentalism. There was efforts sprang up across the state.
nothing subversive about the Palestin- Now, I don’t think there was any-
ian response. It was accommodation thing very positive about these efforts,
to necessity – a necessity imposed by and I think the environmental argu-
Should we adapt to effects or miti- Israeli occupation and the authoritarian ments were downright pernicious. Both
gate the causes? Who should bear the destruction of cheaper, more efficient in practice and in theory, environmen-
burdens of adaptation or mitigation to sources of energy. talist efforts were rationalizing a major
climate change? Which economic and The virtue of a power plant is that market failure. Like the defenders of
political institutions are the most desir- it frees all but the few who run it from Palestinian bicycle generators, these
able? Which risks and natural changes having to dedicate labor to power gen- environmentalists turned a situation
are acceptable? These are social ques- eration, or having to rely on costlier that was the product of radically unfair
tions, not scientific ones. But the appeal energy sources. That Palestinians were and unfree social relations into a moral
to science is an end run around trying forced to produce energy in their own story about our relationship to nature.
to resolve them – it dresses up ideologi- homes was a further sign of their un- Not only do is there a tendency to
cal concerns in the garb of unimpeach- freedom, as they had to devote more of rationalize relations of political and eco-
able scientific authority. their labor to producing bare necessi- nomic irrationality, but this tendency
Even some of the more outlandish ties than they had previously. Any cele­ steers debates in a dangerous direction.
versions of “denialism,” or rejection of bration of bicycle generators ignores Cheap energy is a good thing. It frees
the science, should be understood as a actual power relations by turning the people from all kinds of mundane tasks,
reaction to this authoritarian attempt to radically unequal relations of power allows for the production and use of
use science to force certain policies and between Palestinians and Israelis into machines that could eliminate neces-
projects down people’s throats. People a question of the Palestinian relation- sary labor, and makes possible much
can tell when science is being used as a ship to nature. better standards of living.
stick to silence legitimate disagreement. If this were an aberrant and mis- There seems to be a strong environ-
And this holds not just for certain ele- guided example, it would mean little. mentalist impulse to reverse that trend,
ments of right-wing populism, but even But environmentalist arguments fre- to get us to spend more, not less, of our
within and amongst lefties themselves. quently rationalize conditions that day having to waste our time with mun-
This appeal to “the science” is a last- the Left ought to criticize. I remember dane tasks, even generating our own
ditch reaction to the failure to convince being in San Diego, where I grew up, power. There’s a better way. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 26
CHINA
IN
R E VO LT
by Eli Friedman

27 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
FEW IN THE WEST ARE AWARE OF
THE DRAMA UNFOLDING IN
TODAY’S “EPICENTER OF GLOBAL
LABOR UNREST.” A SCHOLAR
OF CHINA EXPOSES ITS TUMULTUOUS
LABOR POLITICS AND
THEIR LESSONS FOR THE LEFT.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 28
he chinese working epicenter of global labor unrest. While their grievances through legal chan-

T class plays a Janus-like


role in the political imagi-
nary of neoliberalism. On
there are no official statistics, it is cer-
tain that thousands, if not tens of thou-
sands, of strikes take place each year. All
nels instead.
The legal system, comprising work-
place mediation, arbitration, and court
the one hand, it’s imagined as the com- of them are wildcat strikes – there is no cases, attempts to individualize conflict.
petitive victor of capitalist globalization, such thing as a legal strike in China. So This, combined with collusion between
the conquering juggernaut whose rise on a typical day anywhere from half a state and capital, means that this sys-
spells defeat for the working classes dozen to several dozen strikes are likely tem generally cannot resolve worker
of the rich world. What hope is there taking place. grievances. It is designed in large part
for the struggles of workers in Detroit More importantly, workers are win- to prevent strikes.
or Rennes when the Sichuanese mi- ning, with many strikers capturing large Until 2010, the most common reason
grant is happy to work for a fraction wage increases above and beyond any le- for workers to strike was nonpayment
of the price? gal requirements. Worker resistance has of wages. The demand in these strikes
At the same time, Chinese workers been a serious problem for the Chinese is straightforward: pay us the wages to
are depicted as the pitiable victims of state and capital and, as in the United which we are entitled. Demands for
globalization, the guilty conscience of States in the 1930s, the central govern- improvements above and beyond ex-
First World consumers. Passive and ex- ment has found itself forced to pass isting law were rare. Given that legal
ploited toilers, they suffer stoically for a raft of labor legislation. Minimum violations were and are endemic, there
our iPhones and bathtowels. And only wages are going up by double digits in has been fertile ground for such defen-
we can save them, by absorbing their cities around the country and many sive struggles.
torrent of exports, or campaigning be- workers are receiving social insurance Strikes generally begin with workers
nevolently for their humane treatment payments for the first time. putting down their tools and staying
at the hands of “our” multinationals. Labor unrest has been growing for inside the factory, or at least on factory
For parts of the rich-world left, the two decades, and the past two years a- grounds. Surprisingly, there is little use
moral of these opposing narratives is lone have brought a qualitative advance of scab labor in China, and so pickets
that here, in our own societies, labor in the character of worker struggles. are rarely used.*
resistance is consigned to history’s But if there are lessons for the When faced with recalcitrant man-
dustbin. Such resistance is, first of all, Northern left in the experience of Chi- agement, workers sometimes escalate
perverse and decadent. What entitles nese workers, finding them requires an by heading to the streets. This tactic is
pampered Northern workers, with their examination of the unique conditions directed at the government: by affecting
“First World problems,” to make mate- those workers face – conditions which, public order, they immediately attract
rial demands on a system that already today, are cause for both great optimism state attention. Workers sometimes
offers them such abundance furnished and great pessimism. march to local government offices or
by the wretched of the earth? And in simply block a road. Such tactics are
any case, resistance against so formi- ver the past two decades risky, as the government may support
dable a competitive threat must surely
be futile.
O of insurgency, a relatively
coherent catalog of worker-
strikers, but just as frequently will re-
sort to force. Even if a compromise is
By depicting Chinese workers as resistance tactics has emerged. When struck, public demonstrations will of-
Others – as abject subalterns or compet- a grievance arises, workers’ first step is ten result in organizers being detained,
itive antagonists – this tableau wildly often to talk directly to managers. These beaten, and imprisoned.
miscasts the reality of labor in today’s requests are almost always ignored, es- Even more risky, and yet still com-
China. Far from triumphant victors, pecially if they relate to wages. mon, is for workers to engage in sab-
Chinese workers are facing the same Strikes, on the other hand, do work. otage and property destruction, riot,
brutal competitive pressures as workers But they are never organized by the murder their bosses, and physically
in the West, often at the hands of the official Chinese unions, which are confront the police. Such tactics ap-
same capitalists. More importantly, it is formally subordinate to the Commu- pear to be more prevalent in response to
hardly their stoicism that distinguishes nist Party and generally controlled by mass layoffs or bankruptcies. A number
them from us. management at the enterprise level. of particularly intense confrontations
Today, the Chinese working class is Every strike in China is organized took place in late 2008 and early 2009
fighting. More than thirty years into autonomously, and frequently in di- in response to mass layoffs in export
the Communist Party’s project of mar- rect opposition to the official union, processing due to the economic crisis in
ket reform, China is undeniably the which encourages workers to pursue the West. As will be explained, workers

29 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
C H I N A I N R E V O LT

may now be developing an antagonistic THE WORKING


consciousness vis-à-vis the police.
But the least spectacular item in this CLASS IS POLITICAL,
catalog of resistance forms the essential
BUT IT IS
backdrop to all the others: migrants,
increasingly, have simply been refus- ALIENATED FROM
ing to take the bad jobs they used to
flock to in the export processing zones ITS OWN
of the southeast.
A labor shortage first arose in 2004, POLITICAL ACTIVITY.
and in a nation that still has more than
700 million rural residents, most as-
sumed it to be a short-term fluke. Eight They have not called for independent union, which was offering the workers
years later, there is clearly a structural unions outside of the official All-China virtually no support in their struggle, as
shift taking place. Economists have Federation of Trade Unions (acftu ), well as the reinstatement of two fired
engaged in intense debate about the as this would surely incite violent state workers. During the talks workers again
causes of the labor shortage, a debate repression. But the insistence on elec- walked out, and one week into the strike
I will not recap here. Suffice it to say tions represents the germination of po- all of Honda’s assembly plants in China
that a large swath of manufacturers in litical demands, even if the demand is had been shut down due to lack of parts.
coastal provinces such as Guangdong, only organized at the company level. Meanwhile, news of the Nanhai
Zhejiang, and Jiangsu has not been able The strike wave was detonated at strike began to spark widespread unrest
to attract and retain workers. Nanhai, where for weeks workers had among industrial workers around the
Regardless of the specific reasons, been grumbling about low wages and country. Chinese newspaper headlines
the salient point is that the shortage discussing the idea of a stoppage. On told the story: “One Wave Is Higher
has driven up wages and strengthened 17 May 2010, hardly any of them knew Than the Next, Strike Also Erupts At
workers’ power in the market – an ad- that a single employee – whom many Honda Lock Factory”; “70 Thousand
vantage that they have been exploiting. reports have since identified by the Participate in Dalian Strike Wave Af-
pseudonym Tan Zhiqing – would call fecting 73 Enterprises, Ends With
turning point came in the the strike on his own initiative by sim- 34.5% Wage Increases”; “Honda Wage
A summer of 2010, marked by a
momentous strike wave that
ply hitting the emergency stop button,
shutting down both of the plant’s pro-
Strikes Are a Shock to the Low-Cost
Manufacturing Model.” In each strike,
began at a Honda transmission plant duction lines. the main demand was for major wage
in Nanhai. Workers walked out of the factory. increases, although in many of them
Since then, there has been a change By that afternoon, management was demands for union reorganization were
in the character of worker resistance, a pleading with them to return to work also heard – a political development of
development noted by many analysts. and open negotiations. Production great importance.
Most importantly, worker demands was in fact resumed that day. But the One of these copycat strikes was espe-
have become offensive. Workers have workers had formulated their initial cially notable for its militancy and orga-
been asking for wage increases above demand: a wage increase of 800 rmb nization. Over the weekend of June 19–20,
and beyond those to which they are per month, amounting to a 50 percent a group of up to two hundred workers
legally entitled, and in many strikes hike for regular workers. at Denso, a Japanese-owned auto parts
they have begun to demand that they More demands followed: for the “re- maker supplying Toyota, met secretly
elect their own union representatives. organization” of the company’s official to discuss plans. At the meeting, they

*It
  is not immediately apparent why employers have only infrequently attempted to
use scab labor. One explanation is that the government would not
support such a move, as it could heighten tensions and lead to violence or greater
social disruptions. Another factor is simply that strikes rarely last for
more than a day or two, as strikers do not have the institutional
support of a union and often come under intense pressure from the state. The result
is that there is perhaps less need for scabs on the part of employers.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 30
decided on a strategy of “three nos:” for proliferated in an environment where from the government, it is likely that a
three days there would be no work, no open association is not tolerated. Af- number of people were killed.
demands, and no representatives. ter surrounding the government of- In just a few years, worker resistance
They knew that by disrupting the fices, the migrants quickly turned has gone from defensive to offensive.
supply chain, the neighboring Toyota their ire on local residents who they Seemingly small incidents have set off
assembly plant would be forced to shut felt had discriminated against them. mass uprisings, indicative of general-
down in a matter of days. By commit- After they burned dozens of cars and ized anger. And ongoing labor shortages
ting to strike for three days without looted stores, armed police were re- in coastal areas point to deeper struc-
demands, they anticipated mounting quired to put down the riot and to dis- tural shifts that have also changed the
losses both for Denso and for Toyota’s band locals who had organized into dynamics of labor politics.
larger production chain. vigilante groups. All of this presents a severe chal-
Their plan worked. On Monday Just one week later, an even more lenge to the model of export-led devel-
morning, they kicked off the strike by spectacular uprising took place on the opment and wage repression that has
walking out and blocking trucks from outskirts of Guangzhou in Zengcheng. characterized the political economy
leaving the plant. By that afternoon, six A pregnant woman from Sichuan hawk- of China’s southeastern coastal regions
other factories in the same industrial ing goods on the side of the street was for more than two decades. By the end
zone had closed, and the next day the approached by police and violently of the 2010 strike wave, Chinese me-
lack of parts forced a shutdown in the shoved to the ground. Rumors imme- dia commentators were declaring that
Toyota assembly plant. diately began circulating among fac- the era of low-wage labor had come
On the third day, as they had plan­ tory workers in the area that she had to an end.
ned, workers elected twenty-seven rep- miscarried as a result of the altercation;
resentatives and went into negotiations whether or not this was actually the case ut if such material gains
with the central demand of an 800 rmb
wage increase. After three days of talks
quickly became irrelevant.
Enraged by another incident of
B are cause for optimism, en-
trenched depoliticization
involving the ceo of Denso, who had police aggression, indignant work- means that workers cannot take much
flown in from Japan, it was announced ers rioted throughout Zengcheng for satisfaction from these victories. Any
that they had won the full 800 rmb several days, burning down a police attempt by workers to articulate an ex-
increase. station, battling riot cops, and block- plicit politics is instantly and effectively
If the summer of 2010 was character- ading a national highway. Other Sich- smashed by the Right and its state allies
ized by radical but relatively orderly uanese migrants reportedly poured into by raising the specter of the Lord of
resistance to capital, the summer of Zengcheng from around Guangdong to Misrule: do you really want to go back
2011 produced two mass insurrections join in. Eventually the People’s Libera- to the chaos of the Cultural Revolution?
against the state. tion Army was called in to put down the If in the West “there is no alterna-
In the same week in June 2011, im- insurrection and engaged the militants tive,” in China the two official alter-
mense worker riots rocked the subur- with live ammunition. Despite denials natives are a frictionless and efficient
ban manufacturing areas of Chaozhou
and Guangzhou, both leading to wide-
spread and highly targeted property STRIKE
destruction. In the Chaozhou town of
Guxiang, a Sichuanese worker seeking
back wages was brutally attacked by
knife-wielding thugs and his former
boss. In response to this, thousands of
other migrants began demonstrating at
the local government offices, many of
them having suffered years of discrimi-
nation and exploitation by employers
working in collusion with officials.
The protest was purportedly orga-
nized by a loosely organized Sichuan
“hometown association,” one of the
mafia-like organizations that have

31 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
C H I N A I N R E V O LT

capitalist technocracy (the Singaporean providing housing, education, health street food, or earn a living as sex work-
fantasy) or unmitigated, feral, and pro- care, pensions, and even wedding and ers. But the state never made any pre-
foundly irrational political violence. As funeral services. tense that migrants are formally equal
a result, workers self-consciously sub- In the 1990s, the central govern- to urban residents or that they are wel-
mit to the state-imposed segregation of ment began a massive effort to priva- come for the long term.
economic and political struggles and tize, downsize, or desubsidize many Migrants do not enjoy access to
present their demands as economic, state-owned enterprises, which led to any of the public services that urban
legal, and in accordance with the stul- major social and economic dislocations residents have, including health care,
tifying ideology of “harmony.” To do in northeastern China’s “Rust Belt.” housing, and education. They require
otherwise would incite harsh state While material conditions for workers official permission to be in the city, and
repression. in the remaining state-owned compa- during the 1990s and early 2000s there
Perhaps workers can win a wage nies are still better in relative terms, were many instances of migrants being
hike in one factory, social insurance today these firms are increasingly run detained, beaten, and “deported” for
in another. But this sort of dispersed, in accordance with the logic of profit not having papers. For at least a genera-
ephemeral, and desubjectivized in- maximization. tion, migrant workers’ primary aim has
surgency has failed to crystallize any Of greater immediate interest is been to earn as much money as they
durable forms of counter-hegemonic the new working class, composed of could before returning to the village in
organization capable of coercing the migrants from the countryside who their mid twenties to get married and
state or capital at the class level. have flocked to the “Sun Belt” cities have a family.
The result is that when the state of the southeast. With the transition Other formal arrangements ensure
does intervene on behalf of workers –  to capitalism beginning in 1978, farm- that migrants are not able to make a
either by supporting immediate de- ers originally fared well, as the market life in the city. The system of social in-
mands during strike negotiations or provided higher prices for agricultural surance (including health insurance,
passing legislation that improves their goods than the state had. But by the pensions, unemployment insurance,
material standing – its image as “be- mid 1980s, these gains began to be maternity insurance, and workplace in-
nevolent Leviathan” is buttressed: it has wiped out by rampant inflation, and the jury insurance) is organized at the mu-
done these things not because workers rural population started to look for new nicipal level. This means the migrants
have demanded them, but because it sources of income. As China opened who are lucky enough to have employer-
cares about “weak and disadvantaged its doors to export-oriented manufac- supported social insurance – a small
groups” (as workers are referred to in turing in the southeast coastal regions, minority – are paying into a system that
the official lexicon). these farmers were transformed into they will never benefit from. If pensions
Yet it is only through an ideologi- migrant workers. are not portable, why would a migrant
cal severing of cause from effect at the At the same time, the state discov- demand a better one? Worker demands
symbolic level that the state is able to ered that a number of institutions in- therefore focus quite rationally on the
maintain the pretense that workers are herited from the command economy most immediate of wage issues.
in fact “weak.” Given the relative suc- were useful for enhancing private ac- Thus, subjectively, migrants do not
cess of this project, the working class cumulation. Chief among these was the refer to themselves as “workers,” nor do
is political, but it is alienated from its hukou or household registration system, they think of themselves as part of the
own political activity. which tied an individual’s social ben- “working class.” Rather, they are min-
It is impossible to understand how efits to a particular place. The hukou is a gong, or peasant-workers, and they en-
this situation is maintained without complex and increasingly decentralized gage in “selling labor” (dagong) rather
grasping the social and political posi- instrument of administration, but the than having a profession or a career.
tion of today’s working class. The Chi- key thing to note is that it institution- The temporality of this relationship to
nese worker of today is a far cry from alizes a spatial and social severing be- work is perhaps the norm under neolib-
the heroic and hyper-masculinized pro- tween migrant workers’ productive and eral capitalism, but rates of turnover in
letarians of Cultural Revolution propa- reproductive activities – between their many Chinese factories are astonishing,
ganda posters. In the state-owned sector, work life and their home and family life. sometimes exceeding 100 percent a year.
workers were never really “masters of This separation has shaped every as- The implications for the dynam-
the enterprise” as claimed by the state. pect of migrant workers’ labor struggles. ics of worker resistance have been im-
But they were guaranteed lifetime em- Young migrants come to cities to work mense. For example, there are very few
ployment, and their work unit also in factories, restaurants, and construc- recorded struggles over the length of
bore the cost of social reproduction by tion sites, to engage in petty crime, sell the working day. Why would workers

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 32
want to spend more time in a city that interns, and, most importantly, “dis- still quite low by global standards (less
rejects them? The “work-life balance” patch workers.” than 200 usd a month), wages in inte-
of hr discourse means nothing to an Dispatch workers are directly em- rior provinces such as Henan, Hubei,
eighteeen-year-old migrant worker toil- ployed by a labor contracting firm –  and Sichuan can be almost half that.
ing in a suburban Shanghai factory. In many of which are owned by local labor Many employers also assume, perhaps
the city, migrants live to work – not in bureaus – which then “dispatches” its correctly, that more migrants will be
the self-actualizing sense but in the very workers to sites where they will be put available closer to the source, and a
literal sense. If a worker assumes that to work. This has the obvious effect of looser labor market also has immedi-
they are just earning money to even- obscuring the employment relation- ate political advantages for capital. This,
tually bring back home, there is little ship, and enhancing flexibility for capi- too, is a familiar story of capitalism: the
reason (or opportunity) to ask for more tal. Dispatch labor now constitutes a labor historian Jefferson Cowie iden-
time “for what one will” in the city. huge percentage of the workforce (often tified a similar process at work in his
Another example: every year just be- more than 50 percent in a given work- history of electronics manufacturer
fore the Chinese New Year, the num- place) in an incredibly diverse array of rca ’s “seventy-year quest for cheap
ber of strikes in the construction sector industries, including manufacturing, labor” – a quest that took the company
surges. Why? This holiday is the only energy, transportation, banking, health- from New Jersey to Indiana to Tennes-
time of the year that most migrants will care, sanitation, and the service indus- see, and finally to Mexico.
return to their hometowns, and is often try. The trend has emerged in domestic If coastal China has offered trans-
the only time that they can see fam- private, foreign private, joint-venture, national capital highly favorable social
ily members, often including spouses and state-owned enterprises. and political conditions for the past
and children. Construction workers are But the big story in recent years two decades, things will be different in
generally paid only when a project is has been the relocation of industrial the interior. The antagonism between
completed, but nonpayment of wages capital from the coastal regions into labor and capital may be universal, but
has been endemic since the deregula- central and western China. There are class conflict proceeds on the terrain of
tion of the industry in the 1980s. The huge social and political consequences particularity.
idea of going back to the village empty- that derive from this “spatial fix,” and So what is particular about the
handed is unacceptable for workers, they present the working class with a Chinese interior, and why might it
since the reason they left for the city in new and potentially transformative set be grounds for cautious optimism?
the first place was because of the prom- of possibilities. Whether or not these Whereas migrants in coastal regions
ise of marginally higher wages. Hence possibilities will be realized is of course are necessarily transitory – and their
the strikes. a question that can only be resolved struggles therefore ephemeral – in
In other words, migrant workers in practice. the interior they have the possibility
have not attempted to link struggles The case of Foxconn, China’s largest of establishing durable community.
in production to struggles over other private employer, is instructive here. Theoretically, this means that there is
aspects of life or broader social issues. Foxconn moved from its original home a greater possibility to fuse struggles
They are severed from the local com- in Taiwan to coastal Shenzhen more in the spheres of production and re-
munity and do not have any right to than a decade ago, but in the wake of production, something that was not
speak as citizens. Demands for wages the 2010 worker suicides and the ongo- possible when these two arenas were
have not expanded into demands for ing public scrutiny of its highly milita- spatially severed.
more time, for better social services, or rized and alienating work environment, Consider the issue of hukou, the
for political rights. it is now being forced to move once household registration. The huge east-
again. The company is currently in the ern megalopolises to which migrants
apital , meanwhile, has process of drawing down its manufac- have flocked in the past have very tight
C relied on several tried-and-
true methods to prop up
turing workforce in Shenzhen, having
built massive new facilities in inland
restrictions on gaining local residency.
Even white-collar workers with gradu-
profitability. provinces. The two largest of these are ate degrees can have a difficult time
Within the factory, the biggest de- in the provincial capitals of Zhengzhou getting a Beijing hukou.
velopment of the past few years is one and Chengdu. But smaller cities in the interior
that will be drearily familiar to workers It isn’t hard to understand the at- have set a much lower bar for gaining
in the US, Europe, or Japan: the ex- traction that the interior holds for local residency. While it is admittedly
plosive growth of various kinds of pre- such companies. Although wages in speculative, it is worth thinking about
carious labor, including temps, student Shenzhen and other coastal areas are how this will change the dynamics of

33 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
C H I N A I N R E V O LT

bosses and their state allies could be


an invaluable resource.
Finally, workers will have greater
social resources at their command. In
large coastal cities, they would be un-
likely to garner much sympathy from lo-
cal residents, a fact made painfully clear
in the Guxiang riots. But in the interior,
workers may have friends and family
nearby, people who are not just inclined
to side with labor but who may in a
THE ANTAGONISM BETWEEN LABOR very direct way depend on increased
wages and social services. This presents
AND CAPITAL MAY BE UNIVERSAL, the possibility of expanding struggles
beyond the workplace to incorporate
BUT CLASS CONFLICT PROCEEDS ON broader social issues.

THE TERRAIN OF PARTICULARITY.


here may be some on the
T Left who are sanguine about
perpetual resistance in and
worker resistance. If, before, migrants’ public services were never an expecta- of itself. And the form of class con-
presumed life trajectory was to go work tion of migrants on the coast. But if flict that has prevailed in China has
in the city for a few years to earn money they can establish residence rights in caused major disruptions for capital
before returning home and starting a the interior, demands for social services accumulation.
family, workers in the interior may have could easily be generalized, providing But workers are alienated from their
a very different perspective. Suddenly the opportunity to escape the isola- own political activity. A profound asym-
they are not just “working,” but also tion of workplace-based struggles. De- metry exists: workers resist haphazardly
“living,” in a particular place. mands for social protection are more and without any strategy, while the state
This implies that migrants will be likely to be aimed at the state than at and capital respond to this crisis self-
much more likely to settle permanently individual employers, establishing the consciously and in a coordinated manner.
in their places of work. They will want symbolic foundation for a generalizable So far, this fragmented and ephem-
to find spouses, have their own places confrontation. eral form of struggle has been unable to
of residence, have kids, send those kids Although it is easy to romanticize make any major dent in the basic struc-
to school – in short, engage in social the brave and sometimes spectacular tures of the party-state and its ruling
reproduction. resistance of migrant workers, the real- ideology. And capital, as a universal ten-
Previously, employers did not have ity is that the most frequent response dency, has proven its ability to subdue
to pay migrant workers a livable wage, to bad working conditions has simply militant particularities over and over
and there was no pretense that this been to quit and find another job or again. If militant worker resistance sim-
was to be expected, since it was clear return home. This, too, may change if ply forces capital to destroy one working
that workers would go back to the they work where they live. The condi- class and produce a new (antagonistic)
village to settle down. But in the in- tions may now be in place for migrants working class somewhere else, can we
terior, migrants will likely demand to stand their ground and fight for their really consider this a victory?
all the things one needs for a decent community and in their community The new frontier of capital accumu-
life – housing, health care, education, rather than simply fleeing. lation presents the Chinese working
and some protection against the risks of The biographies of workers in the class with opportunities to establish
unemployment and old age. They may interior may also present opportuni- more enduring forms of organization
also want time for themselves and ties for enhanced militancy. Many of capable of expanding the domain of
for their community, a demand that these migrants have previous experi- social struggle and formulating broad-
has been conspicuously absent up to ence working and fighting in coastal based political demands.
the present. regions. Older workers may lack the But until that happens, it will re-
This raises the possibility of the po- militant passion of youth, but their ex- main a half-step behind its historical
liticization of worker unrest. Decent perience in dealing with exploitative antagonist – and ours. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 34
EXCHANGE

COMMUNISM

HIERARCHY
IOU

EVIL
 D E B T
WE NEED MORE GRAND
HISTORIES, BUT
5,000 YEARS
 T H E
FIRST
OF ANECDOTES IS NO
SUBSTITUTE FOR
REAL POLITICAL ECONOMY.

 5 0 0
by Mike Beggs

PAG E S
avid graeber’s Debt: is impressive, and he draws from it a convention. Partly, his maverick status

D The First 5,000 Years is an


ambitious book. The title
tells us that, and so does
wealth of insightful fragments of history. rests on his politics – he is the anar-
The prospect of a grand social history of chist saying things about debt, money,
debt from a thinker of the radical left markets, and the state that the powers-
its author. At the anthropology blog is exciting. The appeal is no mystery. I that-be would rather not look squarely
Savage Minds, Graeber reports that a wanted to love it. in the face. But largely his argument is
friend, on reading a draft, told him, “I Unfortunately, I found the main ar- a move in an interdisciplinary struggle:
don’t think anyone has written a book guments wholly unconvincing. anthropology against economics.
like this in a hundred years.” Graeber The very unconvincingness poses Economics, he complains, “is treated
is too modest to take the compliment, the question: What do we need from as a kind of master discipline,” its tenets
but admits his friend has a point. He our grand social theory? The success of “treated as received wisdom, as basically
did intend to write “the sort of book the book shows there is an appetite for beyond question.” And yet it is a kind
people don’t write any more: a big book, work that promises to set our present of idiot discipline: its assumptions have
asking big questions, meant to be read moment against the sweep of history so been shown again and again to be false,
widely and spark public debate, but at as to explain our predicament and help but it keeps on keeping on, secure in
the same time, without any sacrifice of us find footholds for changing it. What its dominance like a stupid rich man
scholarly rigor.” is wrong with Graeber’s approach, and sought out by sycophants for his ideas
So it is a book in which endnotes how could we do better? on the issues of the day.
and references make up almost 20 per- If there is one argument that pro-
cent of the page count, but also one that ebt is about much more vides a thread through the whole nar-
makes liberal use of contractions and in-
cludes the occasional personal anecdote.
D than debt. A history of debt, rative, it is Graeber’s view that money
Graeber writes, is also “neces- has its origins in debt and not exchange,
It is, as Graeber says, “an accessible sarily a history of money.” The differ- and that economics has always got this
work, written in plain English, that actu- ence between a debt and an obligation the wrong way around. He establishes
ally does try to challenge common sense is that the former is quantified and (1) that economics texts typically pres-
assumptions.” The style is welcome, needs some form of money. Money and ent the need for money as rising out
akin to that of the best interdisciplinary debt arrived on the historical scene to- of the inefficiencies of barter; and (2)
scholarly blogs (like Crooked Timber, gether, and “the easiest way to under- that nevertheless there is no historical
where Debt has been the subject of a stand the role that debt has played in record of money rising out of a prior
symposium): clear, intelligent, and free human society is simply to follow the system of generalized barter.
of unexplained specialist jargon. forms that money has taken, and the Graeber considers the “myth of
It has had great success in finding way money has been used, across the barter” so central to economics that to
a popular audience and accumulated centuries.” But to make debt the guid- point out its status as myth is to pull out
glowing press reviews: “one of the year’s ing thread of your history of money the Jenga block that brings the whole
most influential books,” “more readable gives “necessarily a different history of structure down. Economics has little
and entertaining than I can indicate,” money than we are used to.” worth saying on money, and so econo-
“a sprawling, erudite and provocative And a history of money must also mists can safely be pretty much ignored
work,” “fresh ... fascinating ... not just be a history of nothing less than social for the rest of the book:
thought-provoking, but also exceedingly organization – not because monetary “Can we really use the methods of
timely,” “forced me to completely re- exchange has always been so central modern economics, which were de-
evaluate my position on human eco- to social organization, but precisely be- signed to understand how contempo-
nomics, its history, and its branches of cause it has not. Graeber uses such a rary economic institutions operate, to
thought.” It has also found the desired wide historical and geographical canvas describe the political battles that led to
political audience: Graeber became a because it shows us the sheer variety the creation of those very institutions?”
guru of the Occupy movement, not only of shapes in which society has been Graeber’s answer is negative: not only
as a participant but as an intellectual formed, and this broadens our vision would economics mislead us, but there
presence, his book in encampment li- of the possible. The history of debt and are “moral dangers.”
braries everywhere. money gives us “a way to ask fundamen-
Debt, then, does not need any more tal questions about what human beings This is what the use of equations so of-
kind words from me. It’s enough to say and human society could be like.” ten does: make it seem perfectly natural
that there is a lot of fantastic material in Throughout the book, Graeber pres- to assume that, if the price of silver in
there. The breadth of Graeber’s reading ents himself as a maverick overturning China is twice what it is in Seville, and

37 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
D E B T: T H E F I R S T 5 0 0 PA G E S

inhabitants of Seville are capable of get- against making too much of this, which study – a fair point – what is Graeber’s
ting their hands on large quantities of would fall into the economists’ trap of alternative?
silver and transporting it to China, then assuming reciprocal exchange to be the First, we get a story about Cortés and
clearly they will, even if doing so requires baseline against which all other rela- the conquistadors. Economics would
the destruction of entire civilizations. tionships should be measured. have us “treat the behavior of early Eu-
The most simplistic renditions of ropean explorers, merchants, and con-
Economics’ lack of moral sense is not neoclassical economics may reduce all querors as if they were simply rational
only dangerous, corrupting our sen- human interactions to self-interested responses to opportunities.” Graeber
sibilities, but prevents it from under- exchange. But the idea that society replaces this explanation with another:
standing the social reality it pretends to is made up of different but interde- they were especially greedy, and “we
describe. It starts from the false premise pendent levels is hardly new in social are speaking not just of simple greed,
“that human beings are best viewed as theory. Neither is Graeber’s view that but of greed raised to mythic propor-
self-interested actors calculating how to to talk of a society as a unit may be tions.” The greed of the Europeans is
get the best terms possible out of any misleading, since people are involved contrasted with the inscrutable war-
situation, the most profit or pleasure in social interactions across multiple rior honor of Moctezuma, who would
or happiness for the least sacrifice or horizons that may not fit together into not object when he saw Cortés cheat
investment.” a coherent whole. One could cite, for at gambling. Also, Cortés and his fel-
Graeber’s alternative is to recognize example, Althusser’s “decentered struc- lows were drowning in debt, and so was
the diversity of motives that guide peo- ture” and Michael Mann’s “multiple Emperor Charles v, who sponsored his
ple’s economic interactions. He pro- overlapping and intersecting sociospa- expeditions.
poses that there are three “main moral tial networks of power.” Indeed, it could Meanwhile, back in Europe, Martin
principles” at work in economic life: almost be seen as a constant in social Luther is coming to terms with usury
communism, exchange, and hierar- theory since the classics. and urging rulers to “compel and con-
chy. “Communism” describes sharing But most of these other approaches to strain the wicked ... to return what they
relationships based on the principle grand socio-history differ from Graeber’s borrow, even though a Christian ought
of “to each according to their needs, in treating these levels as structures, and not to demand it, or even hope to get it
from each according to their abilities.” not simply as the practices that create back.” Graeber tells us the story of the
“Exchange” relationships are based on them. They are made up of complex, Margrave Casimir of Brandenburg, who
reciprocity and formal equality, while evolving patterns of relationships burned and pillaged his way through
“hierarchical” relationships are unequal that cannot be reduced to or derived his own realm to put down one of the
and tend to work by a logic of social from deliberate individual or inter- great peasant rebellions of 1525. Ca-
precedent rather than reciprocity. personal action. They emerge, as Marx simir, too, was deep in debt and had
These are not different kinds of put it, “behind the backs” of the very farmed out offices to his creditors, who
economies, but principles of interac- people who collectively create them. squeezed the population into revolt.
tion present in all societies in differ- They become the social contexts that For Graeber, the violence of Cortés and
ent proportions: for example, capitalist frame our actions, the circumstances Casimir “embod[ies] something essen-
firms are islands of communism and not of our choosing within which we tial about the debtor who feels he has
hierarchy within a sea of exchange. make history. They are collective hu- done nothing to be placed in his posi-
We can untangle history by looking at man products, but not of ideological tion: the frantic urgency of having to
the shifting boundaries between the consensus – rather, they are the out- convert everything around oneself to
different kinds of relationships. Debt come of often competing, contradictory money, and rage and indignation at hav-
shakes things up by inserting hierar- pressures. ing been reduced to the sort of person
chical relationships into the sphere of Graeber, in contrast, stays mainly who would do so.”
exchange – an “exchange that has not at the level of conscious practice and From there we are off to jolly, rus-
been brought to completion,” which gives a basically ethical vision of his- tic early modern England, to witness
suspends the formal equality between tory, where great changes are a result feudalism’s replacement by capitalism.
parties in the meantime. If the mean- of shifting ideas about reality. I cannot Graeber intends to “upend our assump-
time stretches out because the debt do justice here to the whole sweep of tions” about the rise of capitalism as
becomes unpayable, the equality may his history, but let’s look at his section the extension of markets. English vil-
be permanently suspended and the re- on the rise of capitalism. If we can’t use lagers were quite happy with market
lationship become a precedent-based modern economics to explain the rise of transactions in their place, as part of a
hierarchy – though Graeber warns the modern institutions it is designed to moral economy of mutual aid. This is

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 38
symbolized by the fact that they didn’t stock companies that feed off the mar- might call “virtual money,” govern-
use much gold and silver, but tended ket and reorganize it. For Graeber, the ments redoubled their commitment
to carry on everyday transactions on easiest way to make money with money to the metallic base, and economists de-
credit, based on mutual trust. But this is to establish a monopoly, so “capital- veloped their barter theories of money
economy came to be undermined by ists invariably try to ally themselves as king of commodities.
the encroachment of a cash-focused with political authorities to limit the Let’s turn now to what Graeber
economy that criminalized debt. This freedom of the market.” thinks this all means for debt and
was a deliberate effort by a coalition of But Graeber is no Braudel. The lat- money today – since, in his reading, our
the wealthy and the state, who were at ter’s epic history of the rise of capital- present chaos reflects another revolu-
the same time foolishly deluded into be- ism (with the luxury, it must be said, tion of the wheel back to virtual money.
lieving that the real nature of money lay of covering just four centuries in three
in the intrinsic value of precious metals. volumes) also takes a pointillistic ap- n place of the “myth of

The story of the origins of capitalism,


proach, but is full of actual data, dia-
grams, and maps, organized to give us
I barter,” Graeber champions
alternative stories which
then, is not the story of the gradual de- a real sense of the material conditions economists have kept “relegated to the
struction of traditional communities by of life and the operations of economic margins, their proponents written off as
the impersonal power of the market. It networks. Graeber stays almost en- cranks.” These are the state and credit
is, rather, the story of how an economy tirely within the domain of “moral uni- theories of money, which he rightly sees
of credit was converted into an economy verses” and discourse. We don’t get a as overlapping.
of interest; of the gradual transforma- sense of just how the moral economy of Credit theorists insist that “money
tion of moral networks by the intrusion Merrie England was undermined, ex- is not a commodity but an accounting
of the impersonal – and often vindic- cept that the powers-that-were didn’t tool”:
tive – power of the state. get it, didn’t like it, and imposed their
own morality somehow. He engages In other words, it is not a “thing” at all.
And that is Graeber’s explanation for very selectively with the literature on You can no more touch a dollar or a
the rise of capitalism. Evil: the root of the “rise of capitalism” – how else to deutschmark than you can touch an hour
all money. explain his portrayal of the news that or a cubic centimeter. Units of currency
Of course, there is a lot of insight in sophisticated banking and finance long are merely abstract units of measure-
the detail, fascinating interpretations of predated the rise of the factory system ment, and as the credit theorists correctly
the writings of merchants and political and wage labor as if it were a challenge noted, historically, such abstract systems
philosophers. Graeber is a wonderful to all preconceptions? This “peculiar of accounting emerged long before the
storyteller. But the accumulation of paradox” has been a commonplace of use of any particular token of exchange.
anecdotes does not add up to an ex- the Marxian literature since Marx.
planation, and certainly not one that In place of a materialist economic What do these units of measurement
would overturn the existing wisdom on history, Graeber’s 5,000 years are orga- measure? Graeber’s answer is: debt. Any
the subject, conventional or otherwise. nized according to a purported cycle piece of money, whether made of metal,
It is a story told almost entirely in the of history in which humanity is per- paper, or electronic bits, is an iou, and
realm of political and moral philosophy, petually oscillating between periods so “the value of a unit of currency is not
and told essentially from a populist lib- of “virtual money” – paper and credit- the measure of the value of an object,
eral or even libertarian perspective: it money – and periods of metal money. but the measure of one’s trust in other
was the state and big business stepping The emergence and rise of capitalism human beings.”
all over the little guys and their purer up to 1971 has to be shoehorned into How is trust in particular kinds of
exchange relationships. this quasi-mystical framework as a turn money established? Clearly we don’t ac-
Graeber approvingly cites the great of the wheel back toward metallism. cept just anyone’s iou in payment. This
social historian Fernand Braudel’s The spectacular development of the is where the state theorists of money,
distinction between markets and cap- capitalist banking and financial system the chartalists, come in. Graeber draws
italism (which draws on Marx) – the in this period, seemingly “a bizarre con- on what is still the classic statement of
former being about exchanging goods tradiction” to the overarching frame of chartalism, G. F. Knapp’s State Theory
via money, and the latter about us- the narrative, turns out to be just what of Money (1905). States, Knapp argued,
ing money to make more money. For proves the rule – for just as monetary have historically nominated the unit of
Braudel, capitalism is the domain of relations began to sprout in all kinds account, and by demanding that taxes
the big merchants, bankers, and joint of weird and wonderful directions we be paid in a particular form, ensured

39 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
D E B T: T H E F I R S T 5 0 0 PA G E S

without money but somehow still with


AND THAT IS GRAEBER’S a highly developed division of labor is
V V a counterfactual, a tool of abstraction,
EXPLANATION FOR which in fact the textbooks are often
careful not to describe as actual history.
THE RISE OF CAPITALISM. As for arguments that money is es-
sentially about debt, or essentially a
EVIL: THE ROOT OF ALL
creature of the state: this is to make
M the mistake of reducing something
MONEY.
involved in a complicated set of rela-
tionships to one or two of its moments.
Economics has generally met the chal-
that this form would circulate as means For an anarchist like Graeber, the lenges of credit and state theories of
of payment. Every taxpayer would have appeal of a state theory of money is money not with fear or incomprehen-
to get their hands on enough of the ar- precisely the opposite: money is a crea- sion, but with indifference: if credit or
bitrarily defined money, and so would ture of the state, and so tainted. But the the state is the answer to the riddle of
be embroiled in monetary exchange. then-orthodox view Keynes enlisted money, the wrong question may have
Economists have never been able to chartalism to oppose – the notion that been posed.
face up to these arguments, says Grae- money is naturally a commodity, and Joseph Schumpeter captures the ba-
ber, because they would undermine the that states break the link to metal at our sic reason for chartalism’s unpopularity
precious myth that money emerged nat- peril – is now the doctrine of cranks. in his discussion of the “tempest in a
urally out of private barter, and make The idea that money may be backed teacup” surrounding the original recep-
all too visible the hand of the state in by nothing more than the writ of a state tion of Knapp’s famous book:
the construction of markets. Credit and functionary and yet function perfectly
state theorists of money have therefore well is hardly a radical notion anymore. Had Knapp merely asserted that the state
always been dismissed as cranks. It is, in fact, typical in monetary eco- may declare an object or warrant or to-
A big exception here, as Graeber ac- nomics textbooks. (See, for example, the ken (bearing a sign) to be lawful money
knowledges, is Keynes. The opening opening chapter of Charles Goodhart’s and that a proclamation to this effect
chapter of his Treatise on Money (1930) standard text Money, Information and that a certain pay-token or ticket will be
is heavily influenced by Knapp’s book, Uncertainty.) Yet it doesn’t seem to have accepted in discharge of taxes must go a
which had been translated into English made much difference to monetary the- long way toward imparting some value
only a few years before. Keynes writes ory. Texts have no problem acknowl- to that pay-token or ticket, he would have
that the state enforces contracts denom- edging that money is not a commodity, asserted a truth but a platitudinous one.
inated in money, but more importantly, and then going on to claim that money Had he asserted that such action of the
“claims the right to declare what thing exists because barter is inefficient. state will determine the value of that pay-
corresponds to the name, and to vary its The reason, to be blunt, is that un- token or ticket, he would have asserted
declaration from time to time,” a right like Graeber’s critique, not much of an interesting but false proposition. [His-
“claimed by all modern States and ... so monetary theory itself rests on the his- tory of Economic Analysis, 1954]
claimed for four thousand years at least.” torical origins of money. Economics
For Keynes, part of the appeal of deals with the operation of a system. In other words, chartalism is either
chartalism was surely the political im- It attempts to explain the system’s sta- obvious and right or interesting and
plication: if states created money, they bility, how the parts function together, wrong. Modern states are clearly cru-
could do what they liked with their and why dysfunctions develop. The ori- cial to the reproduction of money and
creation; there was no need for super- gins of the parts may say little about the system in which it circulates. But
stitious attachment to that barbarous their present shape or roles within the their power over money is quite lim-
relic gold. The foolhardy attempt to system. Modern monetary economics ited – and Schumpeter puts his finger
restore sterling to its pre–World War i has been concerned above all else with exactly on the point where the limits
parity with gold had wreaked havoc on explaining the value of money, and the are clearest: in determining the value
1920s Britain, so Knapp’s was a mes- conditions of its stability or instability. of money.
sage of major contemporary signifi- This is a problem that concerns the role The mint can print any numbers on
cance dressed in the ancient robes of of money in organizing exchange via its bills and coins, but cannot decide
the Kings of Lydia. prices. The imaginary barter economy what those numbers refer to. That is

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 40
determined by countless price-setting seems to be saying two quite different decisions, each aiming to attract ac-
decisions by mainly private firms, react- things. First, there is the argument we tual purchases: money changing hands.
ing strategically to the structure of costs have already seen that money is not a What circulates in this way need not be
and demand they face, in competition thing but an abstract unit of measure- a physical thing, but it is a thing in the
with other firms. Graeber interprets Ar- ment. Now, on the economists’ list of sense that it cannot be in two places at
istotle as saying that all money is merely money’s functions, “unit of account” once: when a payment is made, a quan-
“a social convention,” like “worthless is an absolutely standard item, along- tity is deleted from one account and
bronze coins that we agree to treat as side “store of value” and “means of added to another. That the thing that
if they were worth a certain amount.” payment” or “medium of exchange” is accepted in payment may be a third
Money is, of course, a social phenom- (views differ as to whether these are one party’s liability does not change this
enon. What else would it be? But to call function or two). fundamental point.
its value a social convention seems to Few would deny that money is, The second thing Graeber seems to
misrepresent the processes by which among other things, a unit of measure- mean by saying that debt is the essence
this value is established in an economy ment. But Graeber apparently means of monetary relations is that exchange
like ours – not by general agreement more than this – that this is money’s often is, and has been, mediated by
or political will, but as the outcome of essence. credit relations rather than through
countless interlocking strategies in a As with state theories of money, this the actual circulation of money. This
vast, decentralized, competitive system. is to reduce money to one of its aspects. is undeniably true: credit relationships
Keynes understood this, and it is Problems become clear as soon as we transform exchange so that payments
why, as Graeber complains, he “ulti- start to think about how money does its do not coincide with transactions and
mately decided that the origins of measuring. It is odd that Graeber claims reciprocal relationships may mean that
money were not particularly important.” that “you can no more touch a dollar or some debts balance without ever need-
After a few pages at the outset of the a deutschmark than you can touch an ing to be cleared by monetary payment.
Treatise, Keynes moved on from char- hour or a cubic centimeter” – because Debt instruments may circulate as
talist theory, hardly to mention it again. there actually are things called dollars means-of-payment even among people
The bulk of the remaining 750 pages is you can touch, carry around in your not party to the original debt – and in
devoted to explaining the determina- wallet, and spend. fact most of our modern money is of
tion of the value of money, with respect And they are not measuring instru- this kind: we pay each other with bank
both to commodities and to other cur- ments like rulers or clocks that we take liabilities.
rencies, and to problems of state man- out to measure the value of something But however far credit may stretch
agement of the value of money. that would exist without them. With- money, it still depends on a monetary
Where does this leave Graeber’s out actually-circulating money, there base: people ultimately expect to get
other alternative approach, the credit would be no value to measure, because paid in some form or other. There are
theories of money? In asserting that the price system only emerges out of times in Debt when Graeber implies
debt is the essence of money, Graeber innumerable strategic price-setting otherwise. He portrays credit in early

H
FOR AN ANARCHIST LIKE

GRAEBER, THE APPEAL OF

A STATE THEORY OF

MONEY IS PRECISELY THE

OPPOSITE: MONEY IS

A CREATURE OF THE STATE, C


AND SO TAINTED.

41 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
D E B T: T H E F I R S T 5 0 0 PA G E S

modern rural England, for example, sparked a theoretical and political con- eventually beat out the other metals
as a system of mutual aid – debt is all troversy which continued sporadically on a world scale thanks to various ac-
about trust, after all – ultimately under- across much of the century: first the cidents and a snowballing network ef-
mined by the incursions of cold hard so-called Bullionist Controversy, and fect. The point was never to drive out
cash, the nexus of suspicious, calcu- later, the battle between the Currency state paper money, but to promote
lating relationships among strangers. and Banking Schools. its acceptance as a stable standard of
He takes this duality between debt and These did indeed revolve around value. Neither was it intended to wipe
cash quite literally, to the extent that the relationships between the value of out credit-money, but to tend and grow
he seems to see credit relationships as gold, the value of national currencies, it by taming the wild fluctuations of
a kind of charity. He claims that Adam and the value of central and private bank credit.
Smith’s line about not expecting our banknotes. But they are not resolv- These were problems that could not
dinner from the benevolence of the able at all into Graeber’s moralistic be answered with metaphysical ideas
butcher, the brewer, or the baker “sim- framework. They were not ultimately about the true nature of money. They
ply wasn’t true” because “most English questions about the “true nature of were problems of social science.
shopkeepers were still carrying out the money,” but about how a system oper- The ultimate killer of the gold stan-
main part of their business on credit, ated and the limits and potentials of dard in the twentieth century was
which meant that customers appealed state and central bank action within not changing minds about the nature
to their benevolence all the time.” that system. of money, but the rise of the labor
Graeber’s general reading of Smith’s It was not necessarily because peo- movement and collective bargaining:
worldview is quite tendentious: Smith ple were under illusions about the time- deflations became more painful and
was blind to the flourishing credit econ- less intrinsic money-ness of metals that politically unacceptable. Money-wages
omy of mutual aid all around him, had the gold standard lasted so long, but and prices could no longer adjust so
hang-ups about debt, and “created the because it actually took a very long time easily to shifts in the economic flux;
vision of an imaginary world almost en- for the state to build up trust in the employment no longer sacrificed on
tirely free of debt and credit, and there- value of its money, in circumstances the “cross of gold.” But the further the
fore, free of guilt and sin.” The gold where it was easy for individuals to capitalist monetary system stretched
standard was a strategy by the powerful engage in arbitrage between differ- away from its anchor in the precious
to undermine the informal rustic credit ent forms of money, bullion and dif- metals, the more states found it neces-
economy. He portrays Smith as an arch- ferent national currencies. This trust sary to have other ways of sustaining
metallist, morally opposed to debt and was threatened by every inflation and confidence in the value of their curren-
blind to his society’s mutual bonds of banking crisis. The mint could print cies by targeting inflation. An anchor to
credit. In fact, Smith wrote glowingly in money, but it couldn’t print the price one commodity was, in fits and starts,
The Wealth of Nations about Scotland’s lists. Banks could exchange deposits replaced by a moving, flexible anchor
laissez faire approach to letting private for merchants’ bills of exchange, but to a whole basket of commodities aver-
banks issue paper money: “though the their ability to convert deposits into aged together. It is no accident that the
circulating gold and silver of Scot- central banknotes or gold depended period since the formal gold tie was
land have suffered so great a diminu- on the state of the network of monetary finally cut has seen inflation become
tion during this period, its real riches flows and their position within it. the overriding priority of economic
and prosperity do not appear to have The value of gold acted as an anchor policy. States print the money, but not
suffered any.” for the value of any currency convert- the price lists. We live in an era not of
Smith’s treatment of the relation- ible into it. This was not due to any in- fiat money, but of what Keynes called
ship between bank credit-money and herent goldness to money, and people “managed money.” Unemployment dis-
the precious metals is far too complex didn’t have to believe in any such thing ciplines money-wages and central banks
to fit into Graeber’s framework. The to support the gold standard. There was have become the queens of policy, tech-
same can be said for the whole tradi- a big difference, as Schumpeter put it, nocratic institutions isolated from de-
tion of classical monetary theory, which between theoretical and practical metal- mocracy, their jobs too important and
was building steam at exactly the point lism, a difference which does not regis- technical for that.
where Graeber’s history of it breaks ter in Graeber’s picture.
off, the turn of the nineteenth century. In the modern period, state after one of that story appears
The Bank of England’s suspension of
gold convertibility in 1797 and the ensu-
state committed to metallic anchors
as strategic decisions to enhance trust
N in Debt. Instead, Graeber has
little to say about capitalism’s
ing inflation, or “high price of bullion,” in their national currencies. Gold Golden Age except this:

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 42
The period from roughly 1825 to 1975 the chapter, and in the entire book – is
is a brief but determined effort on the a welcome attempt to present some
part of a large number of very powerful THE ANSWER quantitative data, but it compares gov-
people – with the avid support of many ernment debt (a stock) to the military
of the least powerful – to try to turn that TO BAD budget (an annual flow) – they happen
vision into something like reality. Coins to have a similar shape when the axes
and paper money were, finally, produced ECONOMICS IS are scaled just so.
in sufficient quantities that even ordi- An attack on economics evidently
GOOD
nary people could conduct their daily goes down well with Graeber’s target
lives without appeal to tickets, tokens, ECONOMICS, audience. It is not a hard sell to anger
or credit. the average leftist about the power and
NOT NO arrogance of the discipline, or to flat-
Any history covering 5,000 years is ter them that they can see through it
inevitably going to gloss over the odd ECONOMICS. all. But it is an unfortunate attitude.
century and a half. But you would think “For – though no one will believe it,”
this century and a half fairly important WE NEED as Keynes once wrote, “economics is a
for understanding our present situation. technical and difficult subject.”
And so we come to the final chap- A GENUINE Modern society has a complex, im-
ter, where Graeber cashes out what personal structure by which goods and
POLITICAL
all this means for us, living near the services are produced and distributed.
“beginning of something yet to be de- ECONOMY. Explaining this structure is econom-
termined.” Our present era begins pre- ics’ primary problem. The neoclassical
cisely in 1971, when the US unilaterally strategy for solving it through method-
suspended its Bretton Woods obliga- ological individualism led to the unreal-
tion to exchange gold for dollars at $35 international macroeconomics, fin­ance, istic assumptions Graeber derides. He
per ounce. Disappointingly, for a period and policy. Graeber believes that the is perfectly right to reject that solution.
in which debt and credit take so many US public debt is “a promise ... that ev- But it still leaves the problem, which
fascinating forms and seem so close to eryone knows will not be kept,” but the will not be solved just by thinking in
the center of life, Graeber chooses to truth is exactly the opposite: Treasury terms of a wider range of human mo-
focus almost entirely on a single kind bonds are considered the safest, surest, tivations. There is an economics-sized
of debt – US Treasury bonds – and an most liquid store of value in the world. gap in Graeber’s history, which he can-
argument that the large and sustained The central banks of the surplus coun- not fill. The answer to bad economics
national debt of the US government tries whose currencies are managed is good economics, not no economics.
constitutes a kind of imperial tribute. relative to the dollar accumulate their We need a genuine political economy.
Out of the whole book, this argu- reserves as a byproduct of exchange rate Pierre Berger, a French economist
ment has received the most criticism management, and have to hold them responding to a previous incursion
from reviewers, so I will not go over somewhere. by the anthropologists, wrote in 1966:
the territory again. (Henry Farrell’s It is in this chapter that Graeber’s “With no disrespect to history, one is
at Crooked Timber is comprehensive blithe dismissal of economics – really, obliged to believe that an excessive con-
and on target.) But both the decision to a willful ignorance – grates the most. centration on research into the past can
make this the focus of the conclusion, Mainstream economics comes in for an- be a source of confusion in analyzing
and the mode in which the argument other lashing – but the examples of eco- the present, at least as far as money and
is made, highlight again Graeber’s aver- nomics he cites are from Ludwig von credit are concerned.” He meant that
sion to economic analysis. It is certainly Mises, an Austrian far from the main- economics studies a system, and the
true that the position of the US dollar stream and forty years dead, and Niall origins of its parts might mislead about
in the world economy allows the Ameri- Ferguson, a conservative historian! their present functions and dynamics.
can state to sustainably fund a large Monetary policy is dismissed as Of course, he is quite wrong that his-
debt more cheaply than others. But “endlessly arcane and ... intentionally tory must confuse: it is just that we need
Graeber’s understanding of the reasons so”; central bank strategy after the 2008 the right kind of history, which seeks
for that position is entirely geopolitical. crisis described as “yet another piece to explain the evolution of a material
To understand the position of the of arcane magic no-one could possibly system. Stringing together 5,000 years
dollar requires an understanding of understand.” A chart – one of four in of anecdotes is not enough. ¢

43 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
SPECIAL TOPIC

AMERICAN
JACOBINS

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 44
T H E WA R O F N O R T H E R N
AGGRESSION

by James Oakes A LEADING CIVIL WAR HISTORIAN


CHALLENGES THE NEW
ORTHODOXY ABOUT HOW SLAVERY
ENDED IN AMERICA.

n 6 november 1860, the surrounding the South with free states, Union invasion of the South, and that

O six-year-old Republican
Party elected its first presi-
dent. During the tense
free territories, and free waters. What
Republicans called a “cordon of free-
dom,” secessionists denounced as an
the invading Union army would free
the slaves.
But to read what historians have
crisis months that followed – the “se- inflammatory circle of fire. been saying for decades is to conclude
cession winter” of 1860–61 – practically The Southern cooperationists –  that all of these people – the Democrats,
all observers believed that Lincoln and those who opposed immediate seces- the secessionists, the cooperationists,
the Republicans would begin attacking sion – agreed with the secessionists’ and the slaves – were all wrong. The
slavery as soon as they took power. and Northern Democrats’ analysis of Northern Democrats were just dema-
Democrats in the North blamed Republican intentions. But they argued gogues. The secessionists were hyster-
the Republican Party for the entire that the only way the Republicans would ical. And the slaves were, alas, sadly
sectional crisis. They accused Repub- actually have the power to act on those misguided.
licans of plotting to circumvent the intentions was if the Southern states Unwilling to take seriously what
Constitutional prohibition against di- seceded. If the slave states remained contemporaries were saying, historians
rect federal attacks on slavery. Repub- within the Union, the Republicans have constructed a narrative of Eman-
licans would instead allegedly try to would not have the majorities in Con- cipation and the Civil War that begins
squeeze slavery to death indirectly, by gress to adopt their antislavery policies. with the premise that Republicans
abolishing it in the territories and in And if the South did secede, all bets came into the war with no intention
Washington DC, suppressing it in the would be off. The rebellious states of attacking slavery – indeed, that they
high seas, and refusing federal enforce- would forfeit all the constitutional pro- disavowed any antislavery intentions.
ment of the Slave Laws. The first to tections of slavery. The South would get The narrative is designed to demon-
succumb to the Republican program something much worse than a cordon strate the original premise, according
of “ultimate extinction,” Democrats of freedom. It would get direct military to which everyone at the time was mis-
charged, would be the border states intervention, leading to the immedi- taken about what the Republicans in-
where slavery was most vulnerable. ate and uncompensated emancipation tended to do.
For Northern Democrats, this is what of the slaves. It’s a familiar chronology: Under
caused the crisis; the Republicans were The slaves themselves seem to the terms of the First Confiscation
to blame for trying to get around the have understood this. They took an Act of August 1861, disloyal masters
Constitution. unusual interest in the 1860 election would “forfeit” the use of their slaves,
Southern secessionists said almost and had high hopes for what Lincoln’s but the slaves were not actually freed.
exactly the same thing. The Republi- victory would mean. They assumed Lincoln ordered General John C. Fré-
cans supposedly intended to bypass the that Lincoln’s inauguration would mont to rescind his decree of that Sep-
Constitution’s protections for slavery by lead to war, that war would bring on a tember freeing the slaves of rebels in

45 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
Missouri, and several months later the
President rescinded General Hunter’s
order abolishing slavery in three states.
As late as the summer of 1862, we are
reminded, Lincoln was writing let- BUT ONCE THE SOUTH SECEDED, ALL BETS
ters to Horace Greeley saying that if
he could end the war without freeing WOULD BE OFF  –   IT WOULD LOSE
a single slave, he would do so. Even
after the President finally promised THE CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTIONS THAT IT
an emancipation proclamation, in Sep-
HAD PREVIOUSLY ENJOYED.
tember 1862, several months elapsed
until the proclamation actually came on THE REPUBLICANS WOULD THEN IMPLEMENT
1 January 1863.
Only then, according to the standard THE SECOND POLICY: DIRECT
narrative, was the North committed to
emancipation. Only then did the pur- MILITARY EMANCIPATION, IMMEDIATE AND
pose of the Civil War expand from the
mere restoration of the Union to in- UNCOMPENSATED.
clude the overthrow of slavery.
In one form or another, this narra-
tive is familiar to all scholars of the pe- Revisionists claimed that slavery was argument, in turn, was really just a re-
riod. Historians who agree on little else already dying in the South, that it was vival of the antebellum Democratic Par-
will agree on this version of the story, unprofitable, that it wasn’t important ty’s relentless efforts to shift the terms
even when they have entirely divergent to Southern economy and society, that of debate from slavery to race.
interpretations of what it means. it had reached the natural limits of its Today, this revisionist interpretation
But what if the original premise is expansion, and that Southern leaders of the North is alive and well. Indeed, it
wrong? What if, during the secession were more concerned about defend- is pervasive among historians. We are
winter of 1860–1861, everybody was right ing state rights than protecting slavery. repeatedly told that the North did not
about what the Republicans intended Most contemporary historians, though go to war over slavery. The Civil War is
to do about slavery? What if the Re- not all of them, now reject these old once again denounced as morally un-
publicans came into the war ready and revisionist claims. Slavery was thriv- justified on the grounds that the North
willing to destroy slavery? What does ing and the Southern states seceded was not motivated by any substantial
that do for a narrative of emancipation? to protect it. antislavery convictions. Emancipation
For one thing, it flies in the face of But revisionists also claimed that the itself is described as an accidental by-
the prevailing neo-revisionism in con- North did not go to war over slavery. If product of a war the North fought for
temporary Civil War scholarship. The there were “interests” involved, they no purpose beyond the restoration of
old revisionist interpretation, which were the interests of Northern capital- the Union. A recent study of the seces-
reached its zenith of influence in the ists against Southern agrarians. The sion crisis states that during the war,
1930s and 1940s, came in many varieties. Civil War was an accident brought on slavery was abolished “inadvertently.”
But it always rested on an essentially by bungling politicians. The abolition- Contemporary scholarship is satu-
negative proposition: whatever else the ists were a tiny, beleaguered minority; rated by this neo-revisionist premise.
war was about, it was not about slav- most Northerners shared the general Like the antebellum Democrats and the
ery. This viewpoint required one set of conviction of black racial inferiority. Civil War revisionists, neo-revisionists
claims about the South, and another The South had slavery, the argument have insistently shifted the terms of the
about the North. went, but the North was racist too. This debate from slavery to race. Virtually

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 46
AMERICAN JACOBINS

any Republican in 1860 would have rec- of the constitutional premises of the to the states where it already existed.
ognized this argument as Democratic Republican antislavery agenda. I doubt Republican policymakers would seal
Party propaganda. anything Lincoln said is more com- off the South: they would no longer en-
If I sound skeptical, that’s because I monly repeated by historians than the force the Fugitive Slave Clause; slavery
am. On the basis of my research, I can no promise he made in his inaugural ad- would be suppressed on the high seas;
longer accept the thesis that the Union dress not to interfere with slavery in it would be abolished in Washington
did not begin emancipating slaves until the states where it already existed. That DC, banned from all the Western ter-
1 January 1863. little quotation is all the proof histori- ritories, and no new slave states would
It was never my intention to over- ans seem to require to demonstrate that be admitted to the Union. A “cordon
turn the conventional narrative. I began when the war began, neither Lincoln of freedom” would surround the slave
by accepting the standard assumption nor the Republicans had any idea of states. Then Republicans would offer a
that that the first Confiscation Act emancipating slaves. series of incentives to the border states
achieved nothing. But I still wanted In fact, nearly every abolitionist where slavery was weakest: compensa-
to know what Republicans thought they (and just about every historian I can tion, subsidies for voluntary emigration
were doing when they passed the law. think of) would agree with Lincoln: the of freed slaves, a gradual timetable for
Why did the Act turn out to be so tooth- Founders had made a series of compro- complete abolition.
less? Why did it fail to free any slaves? mises resulting in a Constitution that Slavery was intrinsically weak, Re-
Secondary accounts usually pass over did not allow the federal government publicans said. By denationalizing it,
this question; they couldn’t provide me to abolish slavery in any state where they could put it on a course of ultimate
with the answers I needed: who wrote it existed. extinction. Surrounded on all sides, de-
the law, where did it come from, how William Lloyd Garrison wrote that prived of life-giving federal support, the
did people talk about it? consensus into the founding document slave states would one by one abolish
To my astonishment, I discovered of the American Anti-Slavery Society, slavery on their own, beginning with
that Section Four of the Act, the clause the 1833 Declaration of Sentiments, the border states. Each new defection
specifically authorizing the forfeiture of which flatly declared that the power to would further diminish the strength of
slaves, was written by Senator Lyman abolish slavery rested exclusively with the remaining slave states, further ac-
Trumbull, chair of the Judiciary Com- the states. Theodore Dwight Weld said celerating the process of abolition. Yet
mittee, as an emancipation clause. In- the same thing. So did Joshua Giddings, because the decision to abolish slavery
deed, it was understood by everyone in Salmon Chase, and Charles Sumner. remained with the states, Republican
Congress to be an emancipation clause. The federal government had no power policies would not violate the constitu-
Trumbull’s proposal was denounced to interfere with slavery in the states tional ban on direct federal interference
by Democrats and border-state con- where it already existed. in slavery.
gressmen as an emancipation clause, Which raises the obvious question: The South would simply have to
defended almost unanimously by con- how did the abolitionists expect to get accept this. And if it couldn’t tolerate
gressional Republicans as an emancipa- slavery abolished? A small group of such a federal policy, it could leave the
tion clause. These men thought they nonpolitical abolitionists argued for Union. But once it seceded, all bets
were writing an emancipation bill. moral suasion. An even smaller faction would be off – it would lose the Con-
That’s what they said at the time. of antislavery radicals argued that the stitutional protections that it had previ-
A full-scale congressional debate Constitution was an antislavery docu- ously enjoyed. The Republicans would
erupted in July of 1861, focusing on the ment. But most abolitionists believed, then implement the second policy: di-
legitimacy of the emancipation that Re- on the one hand, that the Constitution rect military emancipation, immediate
publicans were undertaking. When I did not allow the federal government and uncompensated.
read those debates I wondered where to abolish slavery in the states, but that Republicans said this openly during
the arguments for emancipation had on the other hand, political action was the secession crisis. And that’s what
come from. necessary for slavery to be abolished. they were saying in Congress as they
I went back to the secession debates. Given the Constitution’s restrictions, debated the Confiscation Act. It’s time
And sure enough, everything critics had what did opponents of slavery think to start rethinking our fundamental
accused the Republicans of planning to could be done? assumptions about the causes as well
do was exactly what Republicans them- Coming out of the 1860 election, Re- as the trajectory of the Civil War. And
selves were saying they were going to do. publicans declared that there were two we can start by taking the perceptions
The great mistake that historians possible policies. The first was to make of its contemporaries a great deal more
have made, I realized, was a misreading freedom national and restrict slavery seriously. ¢

47 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
LINCOLN AND MARX

by Robin Blackburn THE TRANSATLANTIC CONVERGENCE OF


TWO REVOLUTIONARIES.

braham lincoln , as French socialists and German social cause in the present conflict with

A president, chose to reply democrats. The Ambassador wrote to slavery-maintaining insurgents as the
to an “Address” from the the iwa , explaining that the president cause of human nature, and they de-
London-based Interna- had asked him to convey his response rived new encouragement to persevere
tional Workingmen’s Association. The their “Address.” He thanked them for from the testimony of the working men
“Address,” drafted by Karl Marx, con- their support and expressed his con- of Europe.”
gratulated Lincoln on his reelection viction that the defeat of the rebellion Lincoln would have wished to thank
for a second term. In some resonant would indeed be a victory for the cause British workers, especially those who
and complex paragraphs, the “Address” of humanity everywhere. He declared supported the North despite the dis-
heralded the world-historical signifi- that his country would abstain from tress caused by the Northern block-
cance of what had become a war against “unlawful intervention” but observed ade and the resulting “cotton famine.”
slavery. The “Address” declared that vic- that “The United States regarded their The appearance of the names of several
tory for the North would be a turning
point for nineteenth-century politics,
an affirmation of free labor, and a de-
feat for the most reactionary capitalists
who depended on slavery and racial
oppression.
Lincoln saw only a tiny selection
of the avalanche of mail he was sent,
employing several secretaries to deal
with it. But the US Ambassador in Lon-
don, Charles Francis Adams, decided
to forward the “Address” to Washing-
ton. Encouraging every sign of support
for the Union was central to Adams’s
mission. The Emancipation Proclama-
tion of January 1863 had made this task
much easier, but there were still many
sections of the British elite who sympa-
thized with the Confederacy and some BUT SOMETHING OF THE CONSERVATIVE SPIRIT
who favored awarding it diplomatic rec-
ognition if only public opinion could OF THE ANTEBELLUM REPUBLIC, WITH ITS
be brought to accept this.
The “Address” carried, beside that of AVERSION TO FEDERAL TAXATION, LINGERED ON
Marx, the signatures of several promi-
IN THE WEAKNESS OF THE FEDERAL POWER.
nent British trade unionists as well as

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 48
AMERICAN JACOBINS

German revolutionaries would not have friend Engels – over five hundred arti- into free states, the South found itself
surprised him; the defeat of the 1848 cles for the Tribune. Hundreds of these outnumbered; the North was loath to
revolutions in Europe had swelled the pieces were published under Marx’s recognize any new slave states. The
flood of German migrants arriving in name, but eighty-four appeared as un- slaveholders had alienated Northern-
North America. At an earlier date – in signed editorials. He wrote on a global ers by requiring them to arrest and
1843 – Marx himself had thought of im- range of topics, sometimes occupying return fugitive slaves, yet they knew
migrating to Texas, going so far as to ap- two or three pages of a sixteen-page they needed the wholehearted support
ply to the mayor of Trier, his birthplace, newspaper. of their fellow citizens if they were to
for an immigration permit. Once the Civil War began, US news- defend their “peculiar institution.”
What path would world history have papers lost interest in foreign cover- Lincoln’s election was seen as a deadly
taken if Marx had become a Texan? We age unless it directly related to the war. threat because he owed Southerners
will never know. What we do know is Marx wrote several pieces for European nothing and had promised to oppose
that Marx remained in touch with many papers explaining what was at stake in any expansion of slavery.
of the exiles. His famous essay on “The the conflict and contesting the claim, Marx gave full support to the Union
Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napo- widely heard in European capitals, that cause, even though Lincoln initially re-
leon” was first published in New York slavery had nothing to do with the con- fused to make emancipation a war goal.
in German. Not all German émigrés flict. Important sections of the British Marx was confident that the clash of
were radicals, but many were. With and French elites had strong commer- rival social regimes, based on opposing
their beer halls, patriotic songs, and cial ties to the US South, buying huge systems of labor, would sooner or later
kindergartens, they helped to broaden quantities of slave-grown cotton. But surface as the real issue. While consis-
the distinctly Puritan culture of Re- some European liberals with no direct tently supporting the North, he wrote
publicanism. They had been educated link to the slave economy argued that that the Union would only triumph if it
to despise slaveholding, and eventu- secession by the Southern states had to adopted the revolutionary anti-slavery
ally nearly two hundred thousand Ger- be accepted because of the principle of measures advocated by Wendell Phil-
man Americans volunteered for the self-determination. They attacked the lips and other radical abolitionists. He
Union army. North’s option for war and its failure was particularly impressed by Phillips’s
There was an affinity between the to repudiate slavery. speeches in 1862 calling to strike down
German democratic nationalism of In Marx’s eyes, British observers all compromises with slavery. He ap-
1848 and the free labor doctrine of the who claimed to deplore slavery yet provingly quoted Phillips’s dictum
newly-established US Republican Party, backed the Confederacy were simply that “God had placed the thunderbolt
so it is not surprising that a number humbugs. He attacked the visceral hos- of emancipation” in Northern hands
of Marx’s friends and comrades not tility to the North evident in the Econo- and they should use it.
only became staunch supporters of mist and the Times (of London). These Marx continued to correspond with
the Northern cause but received senior papers claimed that the real cause of the Dana and sent him his articles (Dana
commissions. Joseph Weydemeyer and conflict was Northern protectionism was fluent in German). By this time
August Willich, both former members against the free trade favored by the Dana had left the world of journalism
of the Communist League, were pro- South. Marx rebutted their arguments to become Lincoln’s “eyes and ears” as
moted first to the ranks of Colonel and in a series of brilliant articles for Die a special commissioner in the War De-
then to General. Presse, a Viennese publication, which partment, touring the fronts and report-
Lincoln may have recognized the caustically demolished their economic ing to the White House that Ulysses
name Karl Marx when he read the iwa determinism, and instead sketched out Grant was the man to back. Marx ar-
“Address,”
  since Marx had been a pro- an alternative account – subtle, struc- gued in Die Presse in March 1862 that
lific contributor to the New York Daily tural, and political – of the origins of the Union armies should abandon their
Tribune, the most influential Republi- the war. Marx insisted that secession encirclement strategy and seek to cut
can newspaper of the 1850s. Charles A. had been prompted by the Southern the Confederacy in two. Dana may
Dana, publisher of the Tribune, first elite’s political fears. They knew that have noticed that Grant had reached
met Marx in Cologne in 1848 at a time power within the Union was shifting the same conclusion by instinct and
when he edited the widely read Neue against them. The South was losing its experience. In 1863, Dana became Assis-
Rheinische Zeitung. In 1852, Dana in- tight grip on federal institutions be- tant Secretary of the War Department.
vited Marx to become a correspondent cause of the dynamism of the Northwest, Marx was delighted when Lincoln – 
for the Tribune. Over the next decade a destination for many new immigrants. emboldened by the abolitionist cam-
he wrote – with some help from his As the Northwest Territory matured paign and a radicalization of Northern

49 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
LINCOLN AND MARX

WHAT PATH WOULD WORLD

HISTORY HAVE TAKEN IF MARX

HAD BECOME A TEXAN?

opinion – announced his intention to professional, or even an employer. Marx it by blind haste, slowly maturing his
issue an Emancipation Proclamation held that this picture of social mobility steps, never retracing them ... doing his
in January 1863. The Proclamation was a mirage, and that only a handful titanic work as humbly and homely as
would make it difficult for the British could succeed in acquiring economic heaven-born rulers do little things with
or French governments to award diplo- independence. the grandiloquence of pomp and state.
matic recognition to the Confederacy. For Marx, the wage worker was only Such, indeed, was the modesty of this
It also allowed for the enrollment of partly free since he had to sell his la- great and good man that the world
freedmen in the Union army. bor to another so that he and his fam- only discovered him a hero after he
Marx and Lincoln had very diver- ily might live. But, since he was not a had fallen a martyr.” However, the tragic
gent opinions on business corporations slave, the free worker could organize loss could not prevent Northern victory
and wage labor, but from today’s per- and agitate for, say, a shorter working opening the way to a “new era of the
spective they shared something impor- day and free education. Weydemeyer emancipation of labor.”
tant: they both loathed exploitation and had launched an American Labor Fed- Marx and Engels were both soon
regarded labor as the ultimate source of eration in 1853 which backed these ob- troubled by the actions of Andrew John-
value. In his first message to Congress jectives and which declared its ranks son, the new president. On 15 July 1865,
in December 1861, Lincoln criticized open to all “regardless of occupation, Engels wrote to his friend attacking
the “effort to place capital on an equal language, color, or sex.” These themes Johnson: “His hatred of Negroes comes
footing with, if not above, labor in the became central to the politics of Marx’s out more and more violently.... If things
structure of government.” Instead, he followers in America. go on like this, in six months all the old
insisted, “labor is prior to and inde- Lincoln’s assassination led Marx to villains of secession will be sitting in
pendent of capital. Capital is only the write a new “Address” from the iwa to Congress at Washington. Without co-
fruit of labor.... Labor is the superior of his successor, with a fulsome tribute to loured suffrage, nothing whatever can
capital, and deserves much the higher the slain president. In this text, Marx be done there.” Radical Republicans
consideration.” described Lincoln as “a man neither to soon came to the same conclusion.
Lincoln believed that in America be browbeaten by adversity, nor intoxi- In the immediate aftermath of the
the wage laborer was free to rise by cated by success, inflexibly pressing on war, and thanks in part to the pub-
his own efforts and could became a to his great goal, never compromising lication of the iwa addresses, the

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 50
AMERICAN JACOBINS

International attracted much interest But by the early 1870s Northern progressive income tax, introduced by
and support in the United States. support for Reconstruction, with its the Lincoln administration in 1862, was
Marx was putting the finishing expensive occupation of the South and unconstitutional. Without the income
touches on Capital: Volume i , in 1866–67, its bold affronts to racial prejudice, was tax, paying for the war would be much
and included a new section at this late beginning to ebb. A wave of corruption harder and future redistribution im-
stage on the determinants of the length scandals sapped Republican morale. possible. Another retrograde step was
of the working day. The call for an eight- The real problem, however, was that the a Supreme Court ruling that construed
hour day had emerged as a key demand Republican program had come apart at the promise of equal treatment of “all
in several US states. In 1867, the iwa the seams. Lincoln had hoped to build a persons” in the Fourteenth Amend-
welcomed the appearance of a Na- strong and authoritative federal govern- ment of 1868 – a measure introduced
tional Labor Union in the US, formed ment in Washington, and thus obtain to protect the freedmen – as offering
to spread the demand as a unifying goal. respect for the rule of law throughout protection to the new corporations,
At its first conference the nlu declared: the restored Union. In Marx’s eyes, Lin- since they were also deemed to enjoy
“The National Labor Union knows no coln would have built the sort of “bour- the status of “persons.” The direct result
north, no south, no east, no west, nei- geois democratic republic” that would of this decision was to make it far more
ther colour nor sex, on the question of have allowed for the emergence of a difficult for federal or local authorities
the rights of labor.” Within the space of labor party dedicated to free education, to regulate corporations (the ruling is
a year, eight different Northern states progressive taxation, and an eight-hour still in force).
adopted the eight-hour day for public work day. Reconstruction ended with a deal
employees. These hopes were dashed. Lincoln’s between Republicans and Democrats
The regions of the United States assassination, the chaos and reaction of that resolved the deadlocked Electoral
offered very different possibilities for the Johnson presidency, and the failure College of 1876 by confirming the
political action. Only the presence of of Ulysses Grant, his successor, to im- fractured authority of the state. This
Union troops in the South prevented pose moral leadership all undermined deal allowed the candidate with fewer
white vigilantes, many of them Con- or compromised the promise of an au- votes to enter the White House while
federate veterans, from terrorizing the thoritative, undivided federal govern- requiring the withdrawal of all federal
freedmen. In Tennessee, South Caro- ment. Marx was not surprised by the troops from the South. This gave free
lina, and Louisiana, there were black emergence of “robber baron” capital- reign to the lynch mobs. Within a few
congresses that drew up a “Declaration ists, nor by the bitter class strife they months, Grant himself complained, the
of Rights and Wrongs,” insisting that unleashed. He had expected – indeed federal troops that had been prevented
freedom would be a mockery if it did predicted – as much. from tackling the Ku Klux Klan were
not entail equal access to buses, trains, But the failure of the federal state to sent against the railworkers during the
and hotels, schools and universities. impose its authority on the South was Great Strike of 1877, suppressing it at
In the North and West, the boldest another matter, as was the Northern the cost of a hundred lives. American
radicals organized sections of the Inter- bosses’ ability to crush strikes by de- workers fought back tenaciously, but
national; by the late 1860s there were ploying thousands of special constables often on a regional or state-by-state ba-
about fifty sections and a membership and Pinkerton men. sis. To many, syndicalism made more
of perhaps five thousand. In December The end of slavery certainly vali- sense than the labor party that Marx
1871 the iwa in New York organized a dated the momentary alignment of and Engels advocated, though Marx’s
seventy-thousand-strong demonstra- Lincoln and Marx. During Reconstruc- penetrating analysis of capitalism still
tion of sympathy with the victims tion (roughly 1868–76), freedmen could had an impact on people as diverse
slaughtered in the suppression of the vote, their children could go to school, as Samuel Gompers (founder of the
Paris Commune. The throng promi- and there were many black elected of- afl ), Lucy Parsons (syndicalist, femi-
nently featured a black militia called ficials. In the North, there were gains nist, founder of the iww ), and Eugene
the Skidmore Guards; many trade for the eight-hour movement and the Debs (Socialist).
unionists with their banners; Victoria first attempts to regulate the railroad The defeat of Lincoln’s vision of a
Woodhull and the feminist leaders of corporations. But something of the con- unified, democratic, and authoritative
Section 12; an Irish band; and a con- servative spirit of the antebellum repub- republic was a defeat for the socialists
tingent marching behind the Cuban lic, with its aversion to federal taxation, too. Not for the last time, the genius of
flag. Many of the unions founded at this lingered on in the weakness of the fed- the US Constitution, with its multiple
time included the word “International” eral power. In an ominous development, checks and balances, was to frustrate
in their name. the Supreme Court declared that the the plans of progressives. ¢

51 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
HOW THE LEFT
HAS WON

by James Livingston

OR, WHY
IS THERE hen did you stop beating

STILL “W your wife?” “Why can’t


Johnny read?” “Why did
the Harlem Renaissance
SOCIALISM fail?” “Why is there no socialism in the
United States?”
IN THE What happens when we refuse to an-
swer leading questions like these, which
UNITED contain conclusions that should be in
contention?
STATES? What happens when we stop looking
for socialism in all the wrong places?
Start here. When we think about
the transition from feudalism to capi-
talism, we take the long view – we scan
the four centuries from 1400 to 1800,
looking for signs of fundamental but
incremental change. To be sure, we as-
sume that the great bourgeois revolu-
tions of the seventeeth, eighteenth, and
nineteenth centuries were both symp-
toms and causes of this transition; in
that sense, we proceed in our thinking
as if capitalism were created by social
movements, political activism, ideologi-
cal extremism. Still, we know these early
modern movements can’t be compared
to the communist parties that created
state socialism in twentieth-century
Russia, China, and Cuba, because
in these more recent instances, self-
conscious revolutionaries organized
workers and peasants to overthrow
capitalism and create socialism.
In the mid seventeeth century, John
Milton, John Lilburn, and Gerrard Win-
stanley clearly understood that they

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 52
were overthrowing something, but over many years, so that a new mode template. Why do we think that social-
they didn’t know they were creating of production and new modes of con- ism is, in this sense, the economic effect
the conditions of capitalism; neither sciousness, emerged to challenge (if not of political actions?
did Thomas Paine a century later, as supplant) the old. Or rather, in keep- We typically assume that socialism is
he made his way from the American ing with what Raymond Williams, something signified by state command
to the French Revolution, from Com- Antonio Gramsci, and Stuart Hall have of civil society, rather than the other
mon Sense to The Rights of Man. Not taught us, we ask when capitalism be- way around. Why? Why do we assume,
even Maximilien Robespierre, the came the hegemonic mode in a mon- in other words, that markets and social-
mastermind of the Terror, was prophet grel social formation that contained ism don’t mix, that private enterprise
enough to see this improbable future. fragments of a residual feudalism and public goods – commutative and
And when Theodore Weld, Angelina and harbingers of a precocious social- distributive justice – are always at odds?
Grimke, Frederick Douglass, and ism. We don’t think that capitalism And why do we think, accordingly, that
Abraham Lincoln set out to overthrow was created overnight by revolution- socialism must repudiate liberalism and
slavery, they didn’t know they were ary parties – Independents, Jacobins, its attendant, modern individualism,
making “The Last Capitalist Revolu- Federalists, or Republicans – because rather than think, with Eduard Bern-
tion,” as Barrington Moore, Jr called it we know from reading Marx that, as stein and Sidney Hook, that socialism
in Social Origins of Dictatorship and a mode of production, it reaches be- is their rightful heir?
Democracy (1966). yond the scope of any state power or Let’s uproot our assumptions, in
In short, capitalism was the unin- legislative act. We know from reading keeping with our radical calling. Let’s
tended consequence of bourgeois revolu- Smith and Hegel that the development look for the evidence of socialism in
tions, whereas socialism has been the of capitalism means the articulation the same places we’ve always looked for
avowed purpose, or at least a crucial and expansion of civil society against the evidence of capitalism: in changing
component, of every revolution since the (absolutist) state. social relations of production as well as
1911. This difference has become so Why, then, would we look for evi- legislative acts and political actions, in
important that when we think about dence of socialism only where a state the marketplace of ideas as well as pork-
the transition from capitalism to social- seized by radicals of the Left inaugu- bellies, in everyday life and popular cul-
ism, we take the short view: we look for rates a dictatorship of the proletariat? ture as well as learned assessments of
ideological extremes, social movements, Or, to lower the rhetorical volume the American Dream, in uncoordinated
vanguard parties, self-conscious revo- and evidentiary stakes, why would we efforts to free the distribution of infor-
lutionaries, radical dissenters, armed expect to find socialism only where mation and music – the basic indus-
struggles, extra-legal methods, politi- avowed socialists or labor parties con- tries of a postindustrial society – from
cal convulsions – as if the coming of tend for state power? We should instead the “business model” quotes of the
socialism requires the abolition of assume that socialism, like capitalism, newspapers and record companies as
capitalism by cataclysm, by insurgent, is a cross-class cultural construction, to well as social movements animated by
militant mass movements dedicated which even the bourgeoisie has already anticapitalist ideas. By now we’re ac-
to that purpose. As a result, we keep made significant contributions – just customed to studies of the “culture of
asking Werner Sombart’s leading ques- as the proletariat has long made sig- capitalism,” or the culture of the mar-
tion, “Why Is There No Socialism in nificant contributions to the cross-class ket, which of course aren’t the same
the United States?” And we keep an- construction we know as capitalism. thing – you can’t have capitalism with-
swering defensively, on our way to an What follows? out markets, but you can have markets
apology. We typically assume that socialism is without capitalism – so let’s get used
the exclusive property of “the” working to studying the culture of socialism in
II class, despite the simple fact that there the market.
has never been a socialist movement or While we’re at it, let’s stop assum-
ook at it this way. We don’t system based on this one stratum. Why ing that socialism is by its very nature
L measure the transition from
feudalism to capitalism only
do we deny the historical evidence? We
also typically assume that socialism re-
democratic or progressive, and realize,
accordingly, that sometimes we’ll find
by assessing the social origins and polit- quires the seizure or overthrow of the it where we don’t want to, in strange,
ical-economic effects of bourgeois revo- state, as in a Bolshevik “war of maneu- unlikely, and regressive places – for ex-
lutions – we’d have to be daft to do so. ver,” rather than a cultural revolution, ample, in the teaching of the Catholic
Instead we ask when, how, where, and as in the “war of position” Gramsci pro- Church on economic justice, or in neo-
why social relations were transformed, posed as an alternative to the Leninist conservative tracts sponsored by the

53 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
HOW THE LEFT HAS WON

American Enterprise Institute, or in has worked to turn a once profoundly try to create a just society, because to do
the All-Volunteer Army. racist institution into job training, so would be to modify the arbitrary re-
higher education, and social mobility sults of anonymous market forces in the
III for working-class kids of every color. name of justice, and thus to staunch the
It’s the last stand of that once-upon-a- economic source of political freedom.
n history as in theory, so- time War on Poverty: a public works Kristol blasted this righteous in-
I cialism, like capitalism, has
no predictable political va-
program that, within its limited pur-
view, has redeemed MLK’s promissory
difference to justice on the grounds
that it denied modernity itself, the mo-
lence. It can be liberal and democratic, note of equality. It’s the site of rigorous ment when consent – not force and not
as in the policies of the Labour Party, historical consciousness and training, chance – became the principle of social
the welfare states of Scandinavia, and where the most searching critiques of order and political innovation. “But can
the second New Deal. But it can be American empire have become routine: men live in a free society,” he asked, “if
viciously illiberal, as in the practices since 1992, it’s become our most reliable they have no reason to believe that it
of fascist and communist states in the intellectual opposition to imperial idi- is a just society?” His answer was no,
mid-to-late twentieth century, or those ocy. It’s an antimetaphysical rendition in thunder. The “historical accidents of
of contemporary China and Cuba. It of debates on masculinity and femi- the marketplace cannot be the basis for
can be quaintly Aristotelian, as in the ninity, where homosexuality and com- an enduring and legitimate entitlement
US Bishops’ Letter on the Economy bat readiness can no longer appear as to power, privilege, and property,” he ex-
(1982), or vaguely communitarian, as the terms of an either-or choice. It’s claimed, not any more than the histori-
in Michael Novak’s Spirit of Democratic the cutting edge of practical solutions cal accidents of birth could make the
Capitalism (1981), a book that came to workplace issues and public policy claims of hereditary aristocracy seem
with a subvention from the American conundrums on sexual orientation. It’s reasonable.
Enterprise Institute. In fact, like capital- also the late-imperial rendition of the He tried to detach conservatism
ism, socialism can be both progressive workhouse, where fragile souls go to die from its schizophrenic devotion to free
and reactionary, liberal and conserva- in the name of a “national” security that markets on the one hand and tradition
tive, at the same time. acknowledges neither geographical nor on the other. A “combination of the
Take, for example, the US military ethical limits. reforming spirit with the conservative
since 1975, since the advent of the All- Or take Irving Kristol, the found- ideal,” he declared, “is most desperately
Volunteer Army. I know what you’re ing father of neoconservatism and Mi- wanted.” He cited Herbert Croly, the
thinking. But let’s stop assuming that chael Novak’s mentor. Nobody would original big-government liberal from
socialism is a systemic totality that nec- call him a socialist, but his opposition the Progressive Era – he was what we
essarily appears and operates as a closed, to what now goes by the name of neo- would now call a social democrat – as
national, political regime – Cuba is a liberalism sounds very much like the his source of inspiration.
socialist country, the US is not – and contemporary Left’s opposition to the Kristol also knew that the compeati-
start thinking of it as a constituent ele- arbitrary inequities of deregulated capi- tive entrepreneurial economy Fried-
ment of centrifugal social formations talism and its offspring, globalization; it man and Hayek posited as the source
and international relations. In these also sounds like a critique of what the of freedom was a mere fantasy: “There
terms, the US has a more socialist cul- New Left learned, in the 1960s, to call is little doubt that the idea of a ‘free
ture than China (and this according corporate liberalism. Kristol made his market’, in the era of large corpora-
to senior Chinese officials) because it bones by picking a fight with Friedrich tions, is not quite the original capitalist
has many more viable social, intellec- Hayek and Milton Friedman, who in- idea.” Some producers had more market
tual, and political constraints on market sisted that socialism was preposterous power than others; some legal persons
forces which reach beyond the state- because it supposed that the market were more equal than others. Corpo-
centered institutional powers of a cen- could be subordinated to reason. For rate capitalism was therefore a pressing
tral bank or a central committee. Hayek, as for Friedman, market forces moral problem, at least in view of the
In the same terms, the All-Volunteer were the source of freedom precisely American commitment to both liberty
Army looks like an enclave of socialism because they couldn’t be manipulated and equality, for in “its concentration
in a country where the still-hegemonic by individuals or companies or govern- of assets and power – power to make
mode of production is more or less capi- ments. From this premise, they argued decisions affecting the lives of tens of
talist. The US military is now the far- that only capitalist societies could be thousands of citizens – it seems to cre-
thest outpost of the New Left or the free societies. They also argued that the ate a dangerous disharmony between
Great Society, where affirmative action citizens of a free society could not even the economic system and the political.”

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 54
So even within the language of the very same thing about capitalism in that economic self-assertion through
original neoconservative, we can find Western Europe and the United States, liberty of contract is the path to gen-
the same serious doubts about capital- suggesting that Americans were far- uine selfhood. We know better – we
ism more typically expressed by the ther down the road to a postbourgeois know without consulting Aristotle that
liberal and socialist left – doubts about regime – a consumer culture – than the selfhood is a social construction – but
markets and price systems as the ap- Europeans. we keep claiming that our interests as
propriate means of distributing public They were right. Social democracy individuals are by definition in con-
goods like justice, and doubts about is impossible without political and cul- flict with larger public goods like social
the quasi-political powers of large tural pluralism, but such pluralism is mobility and equal access to justice and
corporations. inconceivable in the absence of markets opportunity.
geared toward decentered consumer We keep urging our fellow Ameri-
IV choices, which are in turn dependent on cans to “rise above” a selfish attachment
price systems, advertisements, novelty, to their own little fiefdoms, whether
ocialism resides in and and fashion; in other words, on the bad these appear as neighborhoods or jobs,
S flows from markets as mod-
ulated and administered
taste, bad faith, and bad manners that
come with “reification,” aka consumer
and their cherished consumer goods.
In doing so, we’re asking them to give
by corporations, trade unions, con- culture. When the economic future up their local knowledge, livelihoods,
sumer associations, and other interest is left in the hands of the oligarchs –  and identities on behalf of an unknown
groups as well as from public policy, the best and the brightest, those who future, a mere abstraction, a canvas
executive orders, regulatory agencies, know what’s good for us, whether stretched to accommodate only the
court decisions, or five-year plans. In they’re from the Politburo, Harvard, or beautiful souls among us: we’re ask-
its original nineteenth-century defi- Goldman Sachs – the political future ing them to get religion. Either that
nitions, and in later translations by will be theirs, too. Like capitalism, andor we’ve acceded to the anti-American
Solidarity in Poland and Charter 77 in like democracy, socialism needs mar- fallacy cooked up by the neoclassical
Czechoslovakia, “socialism” signified kets to thrive, and vice versa. As Brus economists who decided in the 1950s
a demand for the supremacy of civil put it in 1969, in a subversive little es-
that liberty and equality, or individu-
society over the state; it thus carried say called “Commodity Fetishism and alism and solidarity – like capitalism
profoundly liberal, pro-market, yet an- Socialism”: “In given socioeconomic and socialism – are the goals of a zero-
ticapitalist connotations. It meant the circumstances an increase in the scope sum game.
“self-management” of society as well and importance of commodity rela- By now we know what the founders
as the workplace – the sovereignty of tions may, for a number of reasons, fa- did: that equality is the enabling con-
the people – and by the late twentieth cilitate the development of a socialist dition of liberty, and vice versa. There
century it was profoundly realistic in society.” were two “cardinal objects of Govern-
view of new thinking about markets The question for socialists, then, isment,” as James Madison put it to his
and new intellectual capacities en- not whether whether we want markets friend and pupil Thomas Jefferson in
abled by universal education and mass or not, but what kind of markets we 1787: “the rights of persons and the
communications. need to maximize the utility we call rights of property.” Each constitutional
Reputable economists in Eastern self-determination? What kind of mar- purpose permitted the other, not as an
Europe such as Włodzimierz Brus, who kets (and what forms of property) would “allowance” but rather as a premise. One
studied with Oskar Lange and Michał enable the sovereignty of the people, as is not the price of the other, as in a cost
Kalecki – Brus and Radoslav Selucký against the oligarchs? What degree of imposed on and subtracted from the
were the de facto theorists of the Prague perestroika shall we require? benefit of the other. Instead, liberty for
Spring – argued in the 1960s that the all has been enhanced by our belated
Soviet Bloc would stagnate, and social- V approach to equality, our better ap-
ism would expire, if it didn’t enact a proximations of a more perfect union;
dispersal of power from state to soci- ndividualism isn’t the for example, by the struggles and vic-
ety by using market devices to enfran-
chise consumer demand as the source
I antithesis of community or tories of the civil rights movement, the
socialism. To think so is to women’s movement, and the gay rights
of “intensive” growth (as against the assume that attaining autonomy as an movement. By the same token, demo-
“extensive” pattern of state plan-driven, individual requires the denial of all cratic socialism enhances individual-
investment-led growth). Daniel Bell and tradition and solidarity, whether in- ity. By equipping more people with the
Georges Bataille meanwhile argued the herited or invented, or it is to assume means by which they can differentiate

55 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
HOW THE LEFT HAS WON

themselves, if they choose, from their


origins – income and education are YOU HAVE TO BELIEVE THAT YOUR
the crucial requisites here – socialism
becomes the solvent of plainclothes POLITICAL PURPOSE IS
uniformity and the medium of unruly,
American-style individualism. SOMETHING LIKE A SACRED VOW THAT

EXEMPTS YOU FROM THE


VI

CORRUPTIONS OF THIS WORLD.


y now we can also see that
B Gramsci was right: as the rela-
tion between state and soci- standing or immunity which nonethe- and the designation of political opposi-
ety changed in the twentieth century, so less have profound economic and po- tion, dissidence, or exile. So conceived,
did the nature and scope of politics, and litical effects. the possession of state power, the holy
with these the meaning of revolution Taken together, these trends made grail of Leninists then and now, is nei-
as such. Accordingly, we can adopt a for what Gramsci (also Harold Laski, ther here nor there; it’s an afterthought.
new perspective on the transition from Mary Follett, Jessie Taft, G. H. Mead, Vaclav Havel was the epitome of this
capitalism to socialism, one that corrob- Horace Kallen, Georges Sorel, and Carl Gramscian attitude toward revolution
orates Marx’s anti-apocalyptic narrative Schmitt, among others) identified as a until Occupy Wall Street did him one
of this transition in Capital: Volume iii. dispersal of power from the state to so- better in 2011.
Most informed and interested ciety (pragmatists like Laski, Mead, and In Gramsci’s terms, revolution in
observers of early-twentieth-century Kallen called it pluralism). On these em- the name of socialism was not some-
politics, regardless of their affiliations, pirical grounds, Gramsci suggested that thing to be measured by Jacobin or
noticed three salient trends. First, and the overthrow of the state by a vanguard Bolshevik standards, as a function of
most obvious, the state’s regulatory party – a “war of maneuver” waged ac- state-centered politics animated by
power and authority grew remark- cording to the Leninist blueprint – was, mass movements and organized by dis-
ably, whether under revolutionary or practically speaking, beside the point, ciplined parties. The transition from
reformist or reactionary auspices, but and that a long-term ideological strug- capitalism to socialism would be as pro-
the sources of its sovereignty became gle for cultural hegemony – a “war of longed, boring, and mundane as the
questions rather than premises, as the position,” which would effect a “passive transition from feudalism to capitalism.
inherited liberal opposition between revolution” – was the proper vocation But its secret history would begin in the
state and society stopped being self- of the organic intellectual. (Schmitt twentieth century.
evident, and with it the boundary be- of course used the same empirical Marx said pretty much the same
tween the public sphere and the private grounds to propose a redefinition and thing in Capital: Volume iii. Here he
sector. Second, and almost as obvious, reassertion of the state’s sovereignty.) suggested, without rhetorical flourish,
the atomic particles of politics became Apart from any vocational agenda that the late-nineteenth-century com-
groups, associations, collectives – in the for intellectuals, Gramsci’s argument bination of modern corporations and
US, corporations and labor unions, to implied at the very least that revolu- modern credit, both predicated on a
be sure, but also cross-class organiza- tion would hereafter be the cultural separation of ownership and control of
tions like the naacp and the Women’s cause rather than the political effect assets, had created remarkable new real-
Trade Union League – rather than un- of state power: the “war of position” he ities. It signified “the abolition of capital
bound individuals, those self-contained, advocated was a theoretical forecast of as private property within the bound-
omnicompetent bourgeois citizens of the Popular Front, and what we have aries of capitalist production itself.” It
nineteenth-century lore. Third, and no- more recently come to know as cultural also entailed the “transformation of the
where near obvious, even as the state’s politics. Revolution in the name of so- actually functioning capitalist into a
powers grew, so too did the capacities cialism (or anything else) would have mere manager, an administrator of
of these new groups, associations, and no headquarters, no mastermind, no other people’s capital.” In short, the
collectives to regulate or administer center; it would be conducted not on combination of modern corporations
the market, and to shape civil society, many fronts, as with guerilla warfare, and modern credit had inaugurated
in their own interests. Think of them as but from nowhere, because its advo- the transition to a new “socialised mode
local precursors of ngo s, those transna- cates and participants – never the same of production,” in other words, social-
tional organizations without diplomatic thing – could honestly refuse the role ism. This volatile combination would

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 56
inevitably create a “new aristocracy and less important as a determinant of in goods production or not, and so they
of finance” – promoters, speculators, growth – after 1919, simple replacement pile up, waiting for another bubble
and merely nominal directors – and “a and maintenance of existing assets im- to inflate.
whole system of swindling and cheating proved output and productivity. To the Meanwhile, proletarians of all kinds
by means of corporation juggling, stock same extent, capitalists and their crite- continue to go to work because they
jobbing, and stock speculation.” ria of investment became less and less know that if they don’t their incomes
From this standpoint, the evidence important: growth happened in their will disappear. But as they buy the
of transition from capitalism to social- absence, and so the customary rewards, right not to die on a daily basis, they
ism might be found in yet another prerogatives, and incentives accruing to also know that the hours they spend
strange, unlikely, and regressive place: capital began to look like archaic rents on the job are a waste of their time
the socialization of private property paid to absentee landlords, like income and talents: unlike the “aristocracy of
effected by modern corporations and without work, just another inherited finance,” they know that their incomes
modern credit – the process we now call entitlement. The profit motive began to have no relation to the value they cre-
the “financialization of assets” – and its look like a “somewhat disgusting mor- ate while at work, because they know
results, the economic crises caused by a bidity,” as Keynes put it in 1930. that their increased productivity has
new aristocracy of finance dedicated to On the other hand, those same gone, literally, to waste. They know
stock jobbing and speculation. corporate economies and innovations that what the functionaries of capital
expelled labor from goods production, call “entitlements” and “transfer pay-
VII to the point where the industrial work- ments” are justifiable supplements to
ing class stopped growing except when or substitutes for income that can’t be
arx suggested , however, and where war (“defense spending”) earned by working for it, either because
M that the separation of own-
ership and control required
sustained demand for labor. Since the
1920s, all growth in the labor force has
there aren’t enough good jobs or be-
cause there aren’t enough labor unions.
by corporate enterprise is a revolution been driven either by state, local, and These supplements or substitutes have
in itself, because when the mere man- federal public spending or consumer been the fastest-growing components of
ager performs all real functions, “the spending for services, not goods, apart labor income since 1959; according to
capitalist disappears from the process from the component of the National the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the
of production as a superfluous person.” Income and Product Accounts la- New York Times, they now account for
Let me stretch this insight to fit the beled “residential investment” (that is, one of every five dollars of all house-
economic history of the twentieth cen- home-building). hold income.
tury, as a way of claiming that social The upshot of these changes, which I The bourgeois criterion of produc-
relations of production have changed would summarize as the decomposition tivity – from each according to his abili-
so fundamentally in the last hundred of capitalism, is a situation in which ties, to each according to the value he
years that we can plausibly equate the the extraction of surplus value from creates through productive labor – has
coming of a postindustrial society with labor by capital has lost its investment in this limited sense given way to the
the emergence of a postcapitalist soci- function, and the production of value ancient Christian and the modern so-
ety – in other words, that we’re living by labor has lost its income function. cialist criterion of need – from each
through an evident yet unrecognized In short, capitalism has stopped mak- according to her abilities, to each ac-
transition from capitalism to social- ing moral sense because it has stopped cording to her needs.
ism which, if we’re lucky, will never making economic sense. It’s not a
be complete. technical issue. Capitalists and their VIII
The corporations didn’t just put political functionaries continue to ex-
functionaries in charge, thus setting tract surplus value from labor however ocial relations more
them loose, as nominal capitalists, to
speculate at will. The economies of
they can – these days by fierce asser-
tion of their prerogatives, as if they’re
S generally have changed for
the better, as the meaning
scale and the technological innovations Charles i defending the divine right of of both liberty and equality has been
enabled by corporations in the early kings against a dubious Parliament, as broadened and deepened in accor-
twentieth century extricated capital and if the rights of property as such are at dance with the agendas of the civil
labor from the “process of production,” stake – but the profits that result have rights movement, the women’s move-
making both factors superfluous. no purpose, no outlet, no investment ment, and the gay rights movement.
On the one hand, net private in- function. Growth will happen with or These changes, too, are evidence of an
vestment from profits became less without them, whether they’re invested ongoing transition from capitalism to

57 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
HOW THE LEFT HAS WON

socialism, for they transpose consent What do we call the results? The decom- beyond the pale, on the run, off the
from the minor key of politics to the modification of communication, the reservation, or at sea: you’re a mariner,
major key of society, from the voting demise of “reification,” the socialization a renegade, a castaway, you march to a
booth to the workplaces and the com- of the culture industry? Has the “self- different drummer, you’re above all a
mon carriers and the schools. Thus they organization” of society now reached a dissenter from the political mainstream.
are moving us, hesitantly to be sure, point where the reproduction of capital- You know that in these United States,
from a strictly political to a broadly so- ism requires ever greater doses of social- socialism is a foreign import, branded
cial democracy. ism, liberalism, and democracy? Is the as such by politicians and social sci-
Note, accordingly, that the conserva- transition from capitalism to socialism entists alike, and you want – no, you
tives who invoke the specter of social- legible here, too, in the new battles over really need – to come from that world
ism when they draw the line on the copyright and intellectual property in elsewhere. Europe will do but France
“social issues” are closer to the truth of cyberspace? would be better. The danger on the
the matter than the liberals and leftists rocks has surely passed; still you remain
who dismiss identity politics as evasion IX tied to the mast.
of the “real” economic issues. Note also You want – no, you really need – to
that the epochal changes in social rela- uite possibly , I would believe that socialism can’t ever happen
tions which conservatives rightly fear
also reflect the dispersal of power – the
Q say, because I think Brus was here, because that would mean heaven
right to claim that an increase and earth had somehow intersected,
“self-organization” of society – that has in the scope and importance of com- that the revolution of the saints had
enlarged the rights of persons vis-à-vis modity relations can facilitate the devel- been televised but you missed it. You
the rights of property since the 1930s opment of socialism, and vice versa. I’m have to believe that your political pur-
(although the Roberts Court seems de- certain that the questions need asking, pose is something like a sacred vow that
termined to reverse this trend). because they can help us take the long exempts you from the corruptions of
But I will leave this matter aside for view on the transition from capitalism this world. Your dissent keeps you clean.
now, and conclude instead by asking to socialism. But that cleanliness, next to godliness,
whether we are living through a new I do not mean that the transition is makes you a holy fool who must abstain
market revolution wrought by the inter- complete, or that it could be, or that from the real world.
net, which, by changing the way we ap- we would want it to be. In my view, the “Do you seek far off? Surely you come
propriate basic goods, is changing social continuing collaboration and interpen- back at last.” That’s Walt Whitman sing-
relations of production. Marx famously etration of the two modes of produc- ing the antimetaphysical lullaby that
wrote about “the so-called primitive tion – “the mix,” as Martin Sklar has made him a nineteenth-century scan-
accumulation” in Capital: Volume i , called it – is better for all parties to dal. In the spirit of that poem, I hereby
where he explained it as the conversion the social bargain. I mean only that invite you back to these United States,
of natural resources, including land the transition has been underway for where socialism is a historical reality
itself, into commodities that could be at least a century, and that even in the that saturates our time and place, re-
bought and sold in markets, which in absence of a socialist movement or a gardless of ideological commitments,
turn allowed for the expulsion of peas- labor party – perhaps because of the party labels, and political discourse.
ants from enclosed commons and the absence of either – there is still social- It’s not the name of an unobtainable
creation of a propertyless proletariat. ism in the United States. desire – it’s all around us.
The social relation of capital and labor But why is that simple historical fact So conceived, socialism no longer
was born (not realized) in this moment. important, or even interesting? Who functions as an ethical principle with
As I’ve suggested, this social rela- cares whether or where socialism ac- no bearing on the historical circum-
tion is already attenuated by the extri- tually exists anymore? Or rather, what stances of our time, which is about
cation of both capital and labor from is the point of caring? A famous politi- as useful as a crucifix when the real
the fabled “process of production.” cal philosopher put the question to me vampires approach. Instead of a pious
What happens to it when the internet this way: “Why is socialism the name wish that things should be better – an
permits what I have elsewhere called of our desire?” “ought” with no purchase on the “is” – it
“primitive disaccumulation,” the con- In the American intellectual context, begins to feel like the fuller expression
version of basic commodities like infor- the answers are always framed by Som- of an actually existing social reality,
mation and music into goods that we bart’s question: the name of our desire something we can live with, build on,
can appropriate or distribute without is the unobtainable. To say you’re a so- and build out. It begins to look like a
the mediation of money and markets? cialist is to place yourself at the margin, usable past. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 58
THE AGE OF ILLUSION

Interview by Jake Blumgart AN INTERVIEW WITH CHRISTOPHER HAYES.

risis is the catchword of our time. meritocratic elite, which cannot help but be

C After the dawning of the new


millennium, America stumbled
from debacle to debacle. The elec-
dysfunctional. Hayes argues that it is the
meritocratic ideals of our elites, ossified into
perverse caricatures, which engender their
tion of Barack Obama gave hope to many, but repeated blunders. A wide but shallow notion
the realities of a deeply dysfunctional political of equality allows for greater acceptance
economy do not readily yield to a good speech of, say, gay marriage, but leaves social mobility
or two. As I write, the slow-motion collapse of a pipe dream, the working and middle
public education, aided by the policies of a classes sidelined, and the safety net perpetually
Democratic administration, continues apace. set upon.
The financial system seems as unwieldy, reck- The book is strongly influenced by the work
less, opaque, and insanely powerful as ever. I of Christopher Lasch, whose 1994 book
could go on, but my crippling depression Revolt of the Elites presages many of Hayes’s
prevents me from listing anymore cripplingly arguments, and Robert Michels, an early-
depressing examples. twentieth-century socialist intellectual whose
Chris Hayes has a theory about why ev- most famous book, Political Parties,
erything is going straight to hell. The culprits argued that all organizations, even those of the
aren’t the typical cast of Republicans, funda- Left, inevitably slide into oligarchy. I read
mentalists, and rednecks. It’s the meritocracy all three books in an inspired blaze of near-
that did it. comprehension and then waded through a tide
Hayes is an editor-at-large with the Nation of schoolchildren to meet Hayes at a diner
and host of the only cable news program near his home in Park Slope, where the elite go
worth watching. In his new book, Twilight of to breed. The following is a lightly edited
the Elites, he explains that the “fail decade” is version of our discussion over coffee, omelets,
the result of an insular and corrupt and free-range hash browns.

Jake Blumgart You argue that meritocracy inevita- their [outside] features, but by their
bly metastasizes into oligarchy, innate talent and drive. And I do not
creating “elites who cannot help say this mockingly. It’s an incredibly
but be dysfunctional and corrupt.” appealing vision. But meritocracy
Some I’ve explained the idea to contains the seeds of its own destruc-
seem skeptical – what’s wrong with tion. It concedes inequality. As an
letting the smartest and most ethos it doesn’t trouble itself with
driven run society? what the results are going to be. One
of the key arguments of the book is
Chris Hayes I think people are resistant to the idea that those results have real effects.
because the meritocracy is our social And they then queer the system to
ideal, particularly among good liber- produce more inequality and restrict
als. Equality of opportunity, but not equality of opportunity.
of outcome. Not evaluating people by Meritocracy leading to oligarchy:

59 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
and test-prep industry in New York,
THESE ARE THE along with the massive rise in in-
equality, and it has produced a system
CONCRETE EFFECTS in which the school is now admitting
only three, four, five black and La-
OF HAVING AN tino students. The students they are
admitting are almost entirely white,
UNEQUAL ENOUGH
affluent kids with tutors or second-
SOCIETY THAT generation, first-generation immi-
grants from Queens and other places
THESE GUYS DON’T where the parents pay for test prep.
You end up with a system where who
GET FEEDBACK. you are really letting in are the kids
with access to test prep, the kids with
access to resources. Hunter can be an
amazing engine of mobility, but over
time it can’t help but break down if it
my high school is a concrete parable isn’t embedded in a society that has
for that. Here’s a place, the Hunter egalitarian commitment. That’s the
College High School [a prestigious theoretical soul of the book.
public high school in Manhattan], Meritocracy has amazing things
an amazing place that in some ways about it and terrible things about it.
sticks to a beautifully austere vi- Part of the purpose of the long sec-
sion of meritocracy. They have this tion on Major League Baseball is to
single test and it literally doesn’t show that one of the outgrowths of
matter if you are Mayor Bloomberg’s a system of incredibly intense em-
daughter; if you don’t take and pass phasis on performance, with finely
it you are not getting in. I’ve talked granulated judgments of who’s bet-
to the president of Hunter and she ter than whom, is that you produce
told me, “You would not believe the real intense incentives for fraud, for
phone calls I get, and who I get them cheating. And that’s not to say it’s
from – ‘is there some way to make impossible, but in the same way that
an arrangement?’” And there’s some- everyone recognizes that in a bureau-
thing incredible about that, particu- cracy or a system driven by seniority,
larly in an era in which there are very that there are side effects to that, you
few institutions that can confidently need to keep people motivated and
say Mayor Bloomberg’s daughter you have to make sure you don’t end
wouldn’t [necessarily] get in. up with blockages and obstacles to
But what’s happened to this, at getting things done. If we are going
some level brutally, equal system? to keep embarking on this merito-
That equality is embedded in a so- cratic project, we should be clear-eyed
cial system full of massive inequality, about what the negative effects are.
and the latter leaks into the former
and colonizes it. We’ve had ... the The Atlanta education testing scan-
growth of this tremendous testing dals really exemplify that for me.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 60
That’s a perfect example. There is a It’s not an accident that all the hedge I want to circle back to something
certain social vision that bureaucracy fund guys are funding school reform. you said about reporting for the
is bad and meritocracy is good and I think they really believe, really are book. In contrast to Lasch and
we are going to replace the [former idealistic in that sense. They hate Michels, you come from a journalis-
with the latter]. That’s clearly what a unions too. But they see a manifestly tic background. You’ve engaged
lot of the education reform fight is unequal society and within the terms with actual people while writing this
about. One of the points of the book of the ideology they have, the way to book. How did that affect your
is, wait a second; it’s a lot more deal with that is to make education perspective and work?
complicated than bureaucracy bad, better. My point is that their whole
meritocracy good. You can create framework is screwed up. It’s a methodological toolkit I’ve been
tremendously destructive meritocra- trained in. It’s a huge part of how I
cies. One of the interesting things They have this view from 20,000 learn about the world. There’s a
about doing reporting for the book feet of what education policy certain form of content synergy inso-
was talking to people from Enron. should be, but they are too far far as if the problem is social dis-
People loved that company. removed to get any feedback from tance.... Look, I’m a member of the
Numerous people said to me, “It was the community when it doesn’t elite I’m writing about. That’s a weird
the least bureaucratic place I ever work. and uncomfortable thing for me to
worked; you couldn’t keep deadwood say, but there is no definition of
around.” The favored son of some Exactly. These are the concrete effects the elite, no plausible, coherent one,
manager wouldn’t cut it, because of having an unequal enough society that I don’t belong to. I’m just as
everything was structured in a very that these guys ... don’t get feedback. subject to the same forces, so it’s
fluid way. People really loved that. really important for me to actually
There are benefits. Despite its seeming novelty, this talk to people. And I think reporting
isn’t a new idea. Back in 1994, makes it more compelling storytell-
I liked your description of meritoc- Christopher Lasch (whom you cite) ing. The book’s form is weird in a
racy as “a new hierarchy based on wrote: “the chief threat seems to way; it’s both a reported work and a
the notion that people are come from those at the top of the work of theory.
deeply unequal in ability and drive.” social hierarchy, [the “new aristoc-
When put like that it does racy of brains”], not the masses.... Michels had a strong influence on
seem a deeply conservative idea, Meritocracy is a parody of democ- your work, but the conclusion he
ignoring social realities of racy.” How influenced were you by reaches – “Democracy leads to
poverty, structural racism, lack of Lasch’s work, where do you diverge oligarchy, and necessarily contains
social mobility, ideas central from his analysis, and how have an oligarchical nucleus,” implies
to the vision of education reformers things changed since his writing? intrinsic limits to the radicalism of
like Michelle Rhee. any project. Is a better elite the
I’m heavily influenced by his work. best we can hope for?
This idea of “equality of opportunity, And the trends have only gotten
not of outcomes” is very bipartisan, much, much, much worse. In fact, I I was having an exchange with some-
almost meaningless pabulum. But it think that’s a very prophetic book. He one who was really active in Occupy
means something, it has a politics. deals with the way it sort of destroys Wall Street and I asked him about
One of the inevitable results is that the moral fabric of society, and is this horizontalism and, yeah, I’m
you are going to ask the educational unjust. But my book – I don’t think with Michels on the limits of horizon-
system to expiate the sins of the it’s a very moralistic book. Lasch is talism. At a certain point you run up
entirety of the rest of society. It’s the making a very moralistic argument; against these basic mundane, logisti-
only place where we can make he’s a polemicist, a Jeremiah figure, a cal problems. Again, I don’t want to
interventions. And that’s what you prophet railing against the fallen overgeneralize, there are some coop-
are seeing in our politics; that’s society in which he lives. I’m trying eratives that are really functional and
the place where energy is being made. to make, in some ways, a practical some that are complete nightmares.
argument. About the practical effects, But Michels’ core insight, it seems to
Education policy is the one place the negative consequences. No one me, is undeniable. The question is
where there seems to be bipartisan wants an Enron; no one wants a what you do with it. Michels took it
overlap. financial crisis. and became a fascist.

61 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
THE AGE OF ILLUSIONS

He pitches it as an objective truth seductive during times of discredited but he went into a hedge fund and is
he’s found. elites, but it’s important to keep all making $10 million.”
this in relative terms. We are not in a That is a lot of power, resources,
That’s another place where his influ- crisis like Greece is in a crisis. In cultural capital, network, class, mon-
ence shows in my book. He actually Greece the [neo-Nazi] Golden Dawn etary power. The working class has al-
isn’t making a moral argument; he’s party got 7 percent in the May ready been ground into dust in terms
making an almost entirely practical elections [allowing the possibility of of political power, as I cite in the book
one about organization. I’m trying to parliamentary seats], and who the Martin Gilens and Larry Bartels
do an analogous work on meritocracy. knows what they are going to get in studies showing [the preferences of
But the question was about better June? Probably higher. voters in the top one-third of income
elites.... There is no final fix, no static distribution are represented in the
condition. The nature of having egali- Or consider the Hungarian example. votes of senators to the exclusion of
tarian commitments is recognizing everyone else]. It’s not uncommon for
that the work is never done.... The in- Hungary’s even worse. But I don’t revolutions to stem from a radicalized
evitability of that; it’s a little like the want to be too alarmist. We are not group just outside the circle of power.
Camus essay The Myth of Sisyphus. Hungary, we are not Greece.... But That’s what the French Revolution
The inevitability of that doesn’t mean because we are so powerful our fail- was all about; that’s what the Ameri-
it’s invalid, it means the struggle con- ures resonate more. In some ways, can Revolution was. The question is:
tinues. You keep fighting for equal- the worst victims of our institutional Are all those groups, because of the
ity because equality isn’t the natural and elite failures, through the ripple nature of partisan polarization and
state of human beings; I think that’s effect of financial crisis and war, ideological polarization, just going to
in some ways the really profound aren’t Americans. fight each other? Or is there capacity
insight. Inequality is baked into the to organize?
cake. Inequality and hierarchy are With the massive power differen- I don’t want to be overly optimis-
natural, but that doesn’t mean they tials you describe, how can we hope tic because I don’t think polarization
are right, that doesn’t mean there to enact real reform? In the case of, is some kind of grand distraction. It’s
isn’t a productive tension between say, abolition or civil rights, there real. People have different commit-
those forces and the forces of equality. were other powerful groups for the ments, believe in different things and
You need the horizontalism always oppressed to ally with. Or a strong principles, different visions of the
present as a challenge, different egali- labor movement, or mass-based good life ... but there is also a degree
tarian movements or forces pushing political party that wasn’t depen- to which all the really big, successful
and forcing events, if you are going dent on the wealthy. That seems reform movements in the country
to create this vibrant tension, rather harder to imagine here. I don’t had extremely bizarre ideological
than some end-of-history equilibrium. really see a power base that can coalitions. Abolition did, Prohibition
push back. did. So I wonder if that’s the way out
Michels felt he had proved the for us.
impossibility of socialism and de- The argument I make in the book,
mocracy. He sought a magical cure and it’s a tentative argument, is that You cite Latin America’s leftward
of sorts and ended his life a fascist. there is a potential for a radicalized turn as an example of nations tak-
Do you fear such an analysis stem- upper-middle class. We already see ing inequality seriously and political
ming from the “near-total failure of that; it’s just a question of how that parties utilizing progressive policies
each pillar institution of our gets channeled. Everything about the to reduce it. What lessons can pro-
society”? Netroots, the antiwar, anti-Bush gressives learn from Latin America?
sentiment [the Tea Party is also cited What of their experience is
Yes, I’m very worried about that. I in the book]. One of the interesting replicable?
think the data are interesting; you see things about the way our certain kind
the two institutions that have gained of fractal inequality has manifested, The important lesson is that it’s do-
in public trust are the military and the people who see it the most, have able. It wasn’t rocket science. The
the police. The most trusted institu- the closest proximity to it, say, are the Lula government [in Brazil] started
tion in the country is the military; the top 2 to the top 20 percent: “I went to giving a lot of money to poor people.
least trusted is Congress. law school with Joe and I have some This isn’t something beyond our
Authoritarianism becomes very job at a firm and I’m doing alright, control; there are things we can do.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 62
I DON’T THINK POLARIZATION IS

SOME KIND OF GRAND

DISTRACTION. IT’S REAL. PEOPLE

HAVE DIFFERENT

COMMITMENTS, BELIEVE IN

DIFFERENT THINGS AND

PRINCIPLES, DIFFERENT VISIONS

OF THE GOOD LIFE.

Some have been more successful than crisis and huge inequality; backlash or unemployed. It’s horrible and
others in that part of the world. The against that; government elected to miserable and acute. But 8 percent
other important lesson is that it shrink inequality. unemployment is not 20 percent
doesn’t have to come at the expense unemployment. There is this weird,
of growth. Which is always the trad- In Twilight of the Elites, you advo- frustrated sense of unhappiness with
eoff [that is posited]. Brazil is a com- cate “disrupting the normalcy and the status quo, and yet, a sort of re-
plicated case because there has been a comfort of the elite.” What actions turn to normalcy. I want us to make
huge boom in energy exports due to and organizations are you most the changes we need to make, and
sugar-based ethanol. And obviously excited by? redistribute power in the way we
it’s easier to grow faster when you are need to, but I don’t wish for crisis.
a less-developed country than when I see a lot of hope in the Occupy Crisis is horrible and hurts people
you are where the US is. mobilizations.... I think that’s really at the bottom the most. So what you
The basic story of Latin America: incredibly important because one of really need to do is create disrup-
ten to twenty years of imf -imposed the strange things about the bizarre tion, because there is either going to
austerity and structural adjustment post-crisis interregnum we’re in is be exogenous disruption, which will
that created terrible crisis, terrible that the elites, once they produced mean another shock, another crisis,
poverty, and terrible inequality, the crisis, did a good job of essentially or you create the disruption through
which provoked a backlash across the keeping the ship afloat. Bernanke, movements, through street protests,
continent. Left and center-left leaders Paulson, Geithner, the president. It through all sorts of creative ways to
were voted in who had mandates and really could have been much worse. say, no, this is not tenable.
political coalitions in which inequal- Look at Europe. We could have I really worry, because if the analy-
ity was explicitly part of their agenda, 20 percent unemployment. They sis is right, the current constitution
and then implemented policies that could have screwed it up enough to of the American elite and American
were egalitarian. Again, there are tre- do that. And if they did there prob- power will inevitably lead toward
mendous differences between Brazil ably would be more mass movements another crisis. So this is our chance
and Bolivia and definitely Venezu- in the streets. to, in a sense, save the elites from
ela, which is a special case because [The] potential for crisis is clear themselves. And we see it in the news
of Chávez and the resource-curse of to everyone, but the actual depth from J. P. Morgan Chase in the last
Venezuelan politics. But that three-act and acuteness of the current cri- few weeks. The smartest guys in the
drama is the basic story – financial sis [is felt by] people who are poor world, back at the casino table. ¢

63 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
D E S I G N I N G C U LT U R E

by Colin McSwiggen DESIGN PLAYS A CENTRAL ROLE


IN CULTURAL REPRODUCTION.
THIS ISN’T NECESSARILY A GOOD
THING, FOR ANYONE.

ant to hear a really the final call on what will actually be and samples rather than selling them

W pretentious definition
of design? Probably not,
but I have to listen to this
manufactured, printed or constructed.
There are precedents set by existing
designs that simultaneously inspire
directly off the shelf in stores. But first
they had to solve an unprecedented
problem: customers buying from a cata-
stuff almost constantly and misery loves and circumscribe the designer’s work log would expect their goods to look just
company, so here it is: “Giving form and limit the range of possibilities that like the picture, or else they’d return
to culture.” clients and users will find acceptable. the goods and probably start buying
I hear people actually say those Finally, designed objects, spaces and from a competitor. This meant that
words from time to time, and it never images are frequently reinterpreted and factory output would have to be made
puts me in a particularly good mood. repurposed by people who have no idea almost perfectly uniform, which had
My main beef with that definition is what the designer had in mind. In short, never been done before.
that after a year in a postgraduate de- design is subject to the same limitations Originally, factory craftsmen had
sign program and too many hours spent as any other so-called creative practice, a fair amount of creative license over
between stacks of anthropology text- and designers are no more authors than, what they produced, which meant
books, I still can’t figure out what “form” well, authors are. that individual products in the same
and “culture” even mean. But despite the limited influence style could vary quite a bit. Now that
My other beef is that the above that designers themselves are able to freedom had to be taken away. Com-
definition is delusional. It seems to be exert over culture at large, design as a plex, varied jobs originally performed
gesturing toward the all-too-common practice plays a central role in cultural by a single craftsman were chunked
notion that designers have some kind reproduction. into simpler, more easily standardized
of sociocultural superpower: by shap- Industrial design in particular has units. Each of these subtasks was then
ing the physical objects that mediate been especially important in the cre- assigned to a different artisan, with the
and regulate people’s behaviors and ation and maintenance of class divi- goal of eliminating any creative deci-
interactions, they are shaping society sions. Here’s a second, much different sion making on the part of the people
itself! It’s a classic credit-hogging move definition of industrial design specifi- actually making the wares.
on the part of the design world’s plenti- cally: it’s the profession of creating in- The most famous documented ex-
ful narcissists, who would like you to structions for factory workers. Design ample of this process occurred in the
believe that material culture emerges is one of the linchpins of capitalism, be- factory of the pottery tycoon Josiah
fully formed from the depths of their cause it makes alienated labor possible. Wedgwood, described in Adrian Forty’s
magical sketchbooks. Starting in the mid eighteenth cen- design history classic Objects of Desire.
The reality is that most designers tury, some factory owners realized that Forty quotes Wedgwood boasting that
work under some pretty heavy con- they could increase the efficiency of he would “make such Machines of the
straints: There’s a client or employer their operations by allowing custom- Men as cannot Err.” But having stripped
who gives them a mandate and makes ers to order their wares from catalogs his men’s work down to the most inane,

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 64
repetitive tasks possible, Wedgwood class waste their money on goods they
needed to pay someone else to do the otherwise wouldn’t want. This traps
creative work of preparing the origi- them in poverty by preventing them
nal models that the rest of the artisans from accumulating capital, and also
would then bore themselves stiff trying creates a feeling of inferiority to the
to replicate. higher classes, who are able to afford
Who would be good for such a job? the material signifiers of status that
The ideal candidate would be good with poorer people are tricked into craving.
their hands and broke enough to need My attitude toward that line of rea-
employment, but still conversant in the soning could be characterized as sea-
tastes of the upper classes, whose pur- sick agreement. There’s a lot of truth
chases supplied most of the factory’s in there somewhere, but such a facile
revenue. What Wedgwood needed, explanation leaves me feeling queasy.
obviously, was an artist. So he hired Yes, everyone buys too much shit and
one, and the field of industrial design poor people get exploited in the process,
was born. but forty-two years after Baudrillard’s
As manufacturing shifted away from Consumer Society we know it’s not that
handicrafts and became increasingly simple. The ideas of waste and need
mechanized, design as a distinct form are monumentally more complicated
of labor, and designs themselves as a than a lot of leftists are willing to ad-
form of intellectual property, became mit. Who can I trust to tell me which
more and more important to sustaining of my needs are real? How can I know they are technically inept, uninterested
relations of production. whether I’m wasting money or invest- in challenges and generally stupider
The historical lesson here is that the ing in symbolic capital? than boys; more importantly, the com-
idea that designing something should In any case, when it comes to de- pany was also proliferating objects that
be done independently from making sign’s influence on social structures, obviously embodied some blatantly dis-
it – in other words, the idea that de- the focus on consumerism distracts criminatory ideas about differences be-
sign should even exist as a profession from something more significant and tween the sexes. The point would not
in its own right – has been foundational interesting. Design’s real power is that be lost on a five-year-old, who would
both to the formation of the modern it makes relationships and divisions realize immediately that compared to
working class and to capitalist produc- between people concrete. Without her brother’s lego s, hers look like they
tion period. This is not to hate on de- physical stuff to remind us of how we were made for an idiot.
signers, who don’t get much say in the supposedly differ from one another, This is a big deal because one of the
matter either. our hierarchies would be awfully ram- main ways that people are socialized is
All of that, though, is only what shackle; stripped of our possessions, through using, observing and contem-
goes on in the factory and the studio. categories like “class” start to look like plating material objects. The idea that
Designed objects don’t exert their full just a bunch of learned behaviors and people learn their places in society by
influence over cultural reproduction confused ideas. Whether prohibitively engaging with the physical stuff around
until they get out into the world of our priced cars, gendered garments, or sepa- them has a long history in anthropol-
homes, offices, and schools. rate schools for blacks and whites, social ogy, but it was finally cemented into the
Most criticism of industrial design’s hierarchies are always maintained with theoretical mainstream in 1972 when
impact on everyday life amounts to a the help of physical objects and spaces Pierre Bourdieu published his Outline
lamentation of consumerism. I think designed to reflect those hierarchies. of a Theory of Practice. Bourdieu makes
that sort of misses the point, but let’s Otherwise everyone’s claims of supe- the case that we come to internalize
run with it for a moment. Design is of- riority and difference would be quite the expectations of our particular so-
ten decried as a tool for creating false literally immaterial. cial group by analogy with categories,
needs through unnecessary product This is why women’s rights groups orders and relations of things. Spatial
differentiation, promoting a pandemic were so pissed off when lego released arrangements of objects in the home,
obsession with individuality and new- its dumbed-down “LadyFigs” line tar- for example, or the use of different
ness. As the popular argument goes, geted at young girls. By simplifying a farming tools at different times of year,
design enforces and reproduces existing common toy for girls to use, lego was come to stand for intangible relation-
social hierarchies by making the lower not only insulting girls by implying that ships between genders, social strata and

65 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
D E S I G N I N G C U LT U R E

information about the organization of


DESIGN IS ONE OF society, something amazing happens:
you suddenly stop feeling bored in
THE LINCHPINS OF home furnishings stores. Washing ma-
chines and cooking implements have
CAPITALISM, a lot to say about norms surrounding
domestic labor; office trash cans em-
BECAUSE IT MAKES
body the values of a middle class that
ALIENATED can’t deal with its own waste; alarm
systems and porch lights offer a crash
LABOR POSSIBLE. course in the popular phenomenol-
ogy of crime. But these objects are not
just passive representations of ideas
about how society should run. They
actively promote those ideas, validat-
ing certain prejudices and chastising
us when our behavior deviates from
certain norms.
Maybe the problem with designers
who boast that they are “giving form to
culture” is that they don’t realize how
the like, thereby anchoring abstract In addition to creating a bunch of big a responsibility they’re claiming.
ideas about social organization to the new rules for servants’ conduct (stuff The chicken-and-egg relationship be-
physical world. like, don’t hand the master anything tween systems of stuff and systems of
Regardless of whether you buy what unless it’s on a silver tray), wealthy fami- people is very real, and with the world
Bourdieu has to say about it, it’s inter- lies began to build homes with separate as it is, anyone who could legitimately
esting to note that people often really living quarters and work areas for ser- claim control over either would have to
do act like objects and spaces are actual vants, which were decidedly shabbier be a pretty unthinkable asshole. Rather
concrete instantiations of their relation- than the rest of the house. Homewares than glorifying themselves as cultural
ships with other groups of people. A companies started designing extra-low- architects, perhaps designers should be
particularly good example of this sort of quality furniture and crockery and mar- relieved that they are such a small part
behavior comes again from Forty, who keting them to the rich as items for their of the apparatus that actually gives rise
details the measures taken by Victorian servants to use, the idea being that any- to the stuff all around us.
elites to maintain a sense of superiority one who ate and slept on stuff that bad That’s not to say that designers are
to their servants. couldn’t help but know their place. powerless. Far from it. They occupy a
In nineteenth-century England, Of course the servants knew what nodal position in the capitalist mode of
domestic servitude was one of the few was going on. Forty cites the autobiog- production, and they’ll be important for
lines of work in which employees still raphy of one housemaid who complains getting out of it. Stuff – objects, spaces,
lived with their employers, a practice about her “lumpy mattress, specifically images, technologies – play just as criti-
that had been common on farms and in manufactured for the use of maids, I cal a role in restructuring relations be-
workshops a century earlier. Servants, suspect.” But it wasn’t particularly tween people as they do in maintaining
whose social peers in other professions important whether the servants were them, and a solar cooker or a free soft-
had more of a life outside of work, were savvy to the situation or not, because ware application requires way more
growing frustrated with what they saw their employers had fulfilled their real design work than a Philippe Starck
as an anachronistic form of labor that goal: they’d successfully created mate- lemon squeezer. But any kind of pro-
offered little in the way of personal in- rial environments that reassured them gressive work is difficult if we’re de-
dependence. Upper-class households that they were better than the people luded about what we actually do. As
read their servants’ disgruntlement as a who worked for them, which enabled designers, we’d do well to abandon
crisis of disobedience, and they reacted them to keep acting like they actually preoccupations with our own ability
by systematically degrading servants’ were better. to generate solutions, and start being
living standards, just to make sure ev- Once you realize that all designed more aware of the ways that we partici-
eryone knew who was who. objects carry this sort of encrypted pate in the problems. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 66
DANCE DANCE REVOLUTION

by Audrea Lim COMMUNAL CELEBRATION HAS DEEP


ROOTS IN HUMAN CULTURE. WHY
SHOULDN’T THE LEFT EMBRACE IT?

Plant a stake crowned with flowers in ome great things look


the middle of a square, gather the
people together there, and you’ll have
a festival. Do better: let the spectators
S suspect from the outside;
many mediocre things
look great at first glance.
become an entertainment to them- When images of chanting crowds are
selves; make them actors.... This way invoked, it’s easy to think of the Nazi
each one sees and loves himself in the spectacle – unthinking, ecstatic people
others; and all will be better united. manipulated by crude, irrational forces.
But that probably says more about the
—Jean-Jacques Rousseau poverty of our experience with large
crowds than about the nature of crowds
themselves.
The masses in Tahrir Square dur-
ing the Arab Spring were hardly fanati-
cal. And for the first time in years, the
mainstream media didn’t represent a
mass uprising as such. They were not
so nice to the Occupy movement. Activ-
ists at Liberty Square often looked like
fringe nutjobs on tv , ecstatic with joy
and rage. This shouldn’t have been sur-
prising. The media seek out the crazy,
weird, and sensational, while the liberal
establishment looks down on anything
resembling religious conviction. But
while tv treats sports fanatics and pro-
testers as species of the same family, the
uprisings of 2011, anchored in public
squares, included moments of collec-
tive joy of two different types, including
one quite different from sports-induced
euphoria.
I have experienced the type of joy
that is similar – though not identical – 
to sports-mania mostly in protests,

67 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
including the #n 17 march that began recent movements broadly anchored by of maypoles, whether for revolution-
with tens of thousands gathered in the occupation of public squares – not ary purposes or otherwise, and once
Foley Square, then proceeded across just Occupy, but also Tahrir Square, in power, even banned cross-dressing
the Brooklyn Bridge. Along the way, Syntagma Square, Puerta del Sol – from (a common feature of Carnival).
people sang, danced, and randomly the protest movements of the past many Maypoles are no longer a divisive
hugged like it was a New Year’s party. years. It gives these movements a strate- issue for the Left. Neither are happi-
I saw this on rare occasions at pro- gic advantage that radical movements ness and collective joy, but they are
tests, as well as in the streets of Toronto of the past few decades have lacked. undervalued. Traditional organizing
after Canada won the Olympic gold in Where the consumer capitalist soci- tactics – leafleting, petitioning, strikes,
men’s hockey in 2002. Immediately fol- ety offers little more than hedonism –  picketing, and media campaigns – 
lowing the medal ceremony that night, momentary pleasure, instant gratifica- are hardly unimportant, but neither is
a raucous party broke out along Yonge tion – movements anchored in public holding public space merely symbolic.
Street, stretching through nearly all of squares offer participants something The public square offers many things – 
downtown. Cars inched along, unable richer. They connect the swelling feel- a site that the attention-deficit media
to break through a dense slurry of bod- ing of ecstasy to participation in a new can focus on, a space where people can
ies and Canadian flags. At one point, a way of living and ordering our lives. circulate and casually get to know one
man climbed on the roof of an empty I can’t count the number of politi- another. But with the desire for joy
van and posed for a photo with a cop, cal protests I’ve attended, but I can say long rationalized by capitalist society
who stood beneath with arms folded in that most of them have been unmem- and confined to acceptable venues and
a play of authority, and afterward they orable, consisting of a few hundred times (read: drinking alcohol, in res-
hugged. The experience felt singular, in- people standing around, occasionally taurants and bars, after work hours),
communicable – I tried to explain it to yelling things like, “What do we want? the offer of a different kind of happi-
my brother over the phone, with what I [Insert what we want]. When do we ness constitutes a powerful mobilizing
think were mixed results – the thrill of want it? Now!” and wondering if some- force – and a radical one.
being united in joy with so many oth- thing is going to “happen,” whatever
ers, most of whom I would never know. that means. Usually, nothing does, and arbara ehrenreich’s
The other type of collective joy that
was manifest in Occupy was present
after a while, groups of people begin
to leave in search of food or because
B Dancing in the Streets: A
History of Collective Joy
in Liberty Square almost all the time, they have other plans. Life continues, tells of deliberate expressions of col-
and could be described as the joy of be- uninterrupted. lective ecstasy – and their subsequent
ing united in a project unlike anything Joy has been a contentious issue repression – across the continents
many people in the United States have in radical movements of the past. and through the ages. Beginning with
ever experienced. I did not camp in The original Jacobins – the ones who carefully planned dance rituals in
the Square, but I still felt this joy on were instrumental in the overthrow of “primitive” and prehistoric societies,
a number of occasions. The feeling of the Bourbon monarchy and counted Ehrenreich describes how anthropolo-
being part of something greater than Max Robespierre among their ranks –  gists of the 1930s began to see them as
yourself that still represents you – the included many members of an emerg- functional, even rational, for creating
feeling itself is not so different from ing educated middle class, who consid- social cohesion in small-scale societies.
the protests-and-sports-mania type of ered public carnivals and festivals to be British anthropologist Robin Dunbar
collective joy. But the fact that it derives barbarous wastes of time. That time, discovered that speech was inadequate
from participation in a radical politi- they thought, would be better spent to hold together Paleolithic groups at
cal project – not a momentary burst of laboring, a view that separated them the emotional level. “Just as we were
excitement – makes it very different. from the workers and peasants who acquiring the ability to argue and ra-
Providing a venue for this type of made up the bulk of the Third Estate. tionalize, we needed a more primitive
collective joy is one thing that separates In fact, the Jacobins frowned on the use emotional mechanism to bond our

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 68
large groups,” he wrote. “Something common in early Christianity, but this corresponded with a rise in diagnoses
deeper and more emotional was needed suppression was also accompanied by of mental illness, Ehrenreich argues
to overpower the cold logic of verbal the emergence of Carnival. Within that Western psychology, with its focus
arguments.” the boundaries of the Carnival, the on bolstering the individual self against
Western observers of ecstatic rituals transgression of social categories was the force of irrational emotion, is woe-
in these non-Western “primitive” soci- sanctioned (participants commonly fully inadequate in understanding the
eties initially viewed them as savage and cross-dressed and mocked authority benefits of experiencing collective joy
contemptible, but the history of the figures), and dancing, drinking, and and ecstasy. In fact, the standard psychi-
West is not without its own examples, feasting could occur unabated – but atric guide to mental illness, the DSM-
from Dionysian ritual in ancient Greece only within that delimited space and IV, pathologizes collective ecstasy as
to ecstatic dancing in the European period of time. The spirit and thrill of “depersonalization disorder.”
churches of the Middle Ages (involving festival was permitted, but it could only Ehrenreich’s conclusion? While
priests, women, and entire congrega- be marginal, never prolonged into rou- there may not be any innate human
tions). However, these rituals have al- tine condition. need to experience communal plea-
ways precipitated social tensions as well: In contemporary American capital- sure, the decline in opportunities for
where social hierarchy is understood ism, happiness and joy are largely pri- collective pleasure has taken away a
to have arisen in step with militarism vate or individual experiences, whether potentially effective cure for depres-
and war, group ecstatic rites threatened they involve the hedonistic pleasure of sion – a cure that has been used against
military preparedness and social hier- consumption or fulfillment through physical, psychological, social, and spiri-
archy itself. The rise of capitalism in personal achievement. Workers and tual illnesses in both Western and non-
particular required changes to the val- consumers are ideally satisfied enough Western societies.
ues and behaviors of the citizenry. The not to opt out, but not so satisfied that There is an odd duplicity to the place
industrialism that corresponded with participation in the consumer econ- of ecstatic ritual in society, which Danc-
the Protestant reform of the sixteenth omy becomes unnecessary, and ecstatic ing in the Streets touches on but does
to nineteenth centuries required the ritual in the US is largely confined to not flesh out. Ecstatic ritual doesn’t
middle classes to save and to defer grati- the realm of entertainment, such as leave the sociopolitical structures that
fication, while discipline was required sports events and nightlife. “It is a mea- cause anomie untouched – it actually
of the lower classes in order to ensure sure of our general deprivation,” writes strengthens them by acting as a pres-
a continuous year-round labor force Ehrenreich, “that the most common sure valve.
(unlike the seasonal labor force of the referent for ecstasy in usage today is not But as expressions of the collective
peasant society). This discipline was an experience but a drug, mdma , which spirit – where individuals are united
ensured partly by the widespread sup- offers fleeting feelings of euphoria and by something greater than them-
pression of traditional festivities and connectedness.” selves – ecstatic rituals can also have
the rollback of holidays. The consequence? Ehrenreich ar- a more radical edge. After the Middle
But the suppression of collective gues that urbanization and the rise of Ages, writes Ehrenreich, it became
ecstatic rituals required a compro- the competitive, market-based economy more common for people to launch
mise between obedience and joy; com- “favored a more anxious and isolated armed rebellion under cover of the
pletely miserable people don’t make sort of person,” one with a heightened masks and noises of traditional festivi-
good workers or subjects. Anthropolo- sense of individuality and personal au- ties, and many people began to see in
gist Victor Turner, whose study of the tonomy – traits that encourage great these events “the possibility of inverting
“ritual process” is credited with giving intellectual and physical daring, but hierarchy on a permanent basis, and not
ecstatic group behavior a legitimate can also lead to isolation, loneliness and just for a few festive hours.” Has this
place in anthropology, saw the main disengagement from the world. Today, panned out in the case of the Yippies
function of collective ecstasy as keeping depression is the fifth leading cause or the street-party atmosphere of the
the structures of society from becom- of death and disability in the world, Seattle wto protests?
ing too rigid and repressive by provid- according to the who ; 10 percent of My most notable experience of col-
ing occasional relief. The twelfth- and Americans over the age of six are on lective ecstasy was not a radical protest,
thirteenth-century Catholic Church, antidepressants; and antipsychotics are but Obama’s inauguration in 2008. Two
determined to “maintain its monop- now the highest-selling class of drugs million people were reported to have
oly over human access to the divine,” in the US. Leaving aside the interests gathered on the National Mall, and
purged the church of unruly behavior, of the lucrative and powerful pharma- it was the most diverse group of peo-
including the ecstatic dancing rituals ceutical industry, whose growth has ple I have ever been part of – racially,

69 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
DANCE DANCE REVOLUTION

GROUP experience of collective joy – and its The other obvious limitation is


offer of happiness – is a powerful force. that the power of the public square is
ECSTATIC There has not been a popular radi- also limited to those who participate – 
cal movement for decades now (Seattle which is why it is no substitute for a
RITES 1999 was largely a movement of organiz- good media strategy or organizing cam-
ers, not a popular movement, and is paign. But the promise of joy is also
THREATENED
barely within the memory of most of powerful. It was hard not to be moved
MILITARY Occupy’s participants, including my- by the images from Tahrir Square, even
self ). The past decade has only seen via laptop in New York. While the me-
PREPAREDNESS localized and largely issue-centered dia makes lots of great things look sus-
movements, anchored by dedicated ac- pect, joy can be infectious at a distance.
AND tivists and professional radicals in the One of the more bizarre phenomena
nonprofit world – meaning that grass- that Ehrenreich describes is the dance
SOCIAL roots power requires some building. manias that broke out spontaneously
With radicalism heavily marginalized, in Europe during the late Middle Ages.
HIERARCHY ghettoized and relegated to lifestyle In each case – one in Utrecht in 1278,
politics until very recently, this is an along with others in Germany and Bel-
ITSELF.
urgent priority for the Left. gium in the wake of the Black Death – 
Like Dunbar, I don’t believe that hundreds of people suddenly started
economically, geographically, cultur- the power of education, rhetoric, and dancing in public and didn’t stop until,
ally, and in age. It was the first time debate will be enough, and that is in Utrecht, the bridge under their feet
I thought I understood the power of where the promise and experience of collapsed, and in the other cases, until
religious experience – of palpably feel- joy and happiness come in. The pro- the dancers fell in exhaustion. Mean-
ing something greater than oneself. If cess of learning to believe and trust that while, bystanders, at first watching in
I hadn’t felt this, I would have said we’re part of something that is greater amazement, found themselves swept
that the sight of strangers from radi- than ourselves yet also reflects who we into the frenzy as well. While most
cally different demographics passing are, does not occur through discussion scholars have tried to explain these
around coffee and snacks, and enthu- or online campaigns. It can only be phenomena as contagious diseases
siastically exchanging conversation and achieved in person, by gathering people (“plagues”), or as caused by tarantula
hugs, was unnatural. Usually, this only together in a physical space. But once bites or fungal poisoning, Ehrenreich
occurs with the aid of some very power- in play, it is first-hand evidence that an points out that the manias were conta-
ful social lubricants. But in person, it alternative to our hyper-individualistic gious and could be “spread” by visual
made perfect sense even to my cynical and highly regimented world is actually contact alone.
self and gave me some hope (naively, it possible – and this experience binds There is something incredibly com-
turns out) for a rebirth of people power. you to the ideas of the movement, and pelling about seeing people ride a wave
We all know how Obama’s first term to the other people in the square. Not of ecstasy firsthand, especially a wave
has gone – and perhaps that is what to undercut the importance of reading built on spontaneous bursts of collec-
makes this a good example. The gal- Kropotkin, but experiencing mutual aid, tive empowerment. There will always
vanizing force of collective joy may be and deriving joy from it, is a far better be bystanders, but some will also be
more powerful than the force of words, education than reading a treatise about drawn in, whether by excitement or
but like experiencing the divine, it also mutual aid. mere curiosity. Dionysus, according
has severe limitations: what makes it There are limitations to everything; to Nietzsche, demanded “nothing
powerful – its deeply personal, expe- this is no exception. Public squares in- less than the human soul, released by
riential nature – can also make it apo- evitably get cleared out, and afterwards, ecstatic ritual from the ‘horror of in-
litical. There is no reason that, even everyone may simply call it a day; life dividual existence.’” A radical move-
when experienced in a political setting, continues, uninterrupted. But with- ment can offer this release without
it will precipitate any concrete action. out belief in the movement – a belief also demanding the soul as payment,
However, that doesn’t make it unim- that goes beyond the truth or falsity but the effect is the same: “Now the
portant; the Yippie Revolution was not of a debate – and without the offer of slave emerges as a freeman; all the rigid
worthless because it didn’t invert the joy and happiness in a world obsessed hostile walls which either necessity or
hierarchies of its surrounding world. with comfort and pleasure, there is no despotism has erected between men
Particularly in an age of anomie, the chance for a popular movement. are shattered.” ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 70
BREUC KELEN GENTRY

by Arlene Stein ‘GOOD GENTRIFIERS’ AND THE NEW


BROOKLYN AESTHETIC.

rooklyn Magazine is of creating neighborhoods that urbanist But there’s more to the appeal of

B a glossy quarterly pub-


lished in, well, Brooklyn.
It aspires to be a New York
Jane Jacobs would be proud of, where brand Brooklyn than just the possibility
people of different ethnicities, races, of more space. In the most recent issue
and especially classes live cheek-to-jowl, of Brooklyn Magazine, humorist David
magazine for the Brooklyn hipster set, where bohemianism and literary experi- Cross is asked why he gave up his home
and is filled with ads for Brooklyn beer, mentation flourish. in Manhattan for Brooklyn’s Dumbo.
Brooklyn real estate, Brooklyn clothiers, Today, those Manhattan neighbor- “I had lived in the East Village for ten
and Brooklyn literature. hoods those neighborhoods are avail- years,” he says, and “it got to feel like a
In its pages one can discern the mak- able only to those few who can afford different place.” There were two factors:
ings of a distinctive borough aesthetic: them. While Hudson Street, Jane Jacobs’ “The first was the mall-ification of the
off-center, handmade, pastiche, vintage, beloved Greenwich Village haunt, still area, the arrival of 7-Elevens, Subway
cluttered – West Coast grunge meets looks as quaint as it did in her day, with sandwich shops,” he says. And then,
East Coast sophistication. Homes are prices averaging $1,000 per square foot there was the arrival of the weekend
filled with repurposed school desks or more, it’s now populated by invest- crowd: “drunk girls” and “guys who
and chairs, retro turntables, flea mar- ment bankers and celebrities. No went with a group of friends and tried
ket finds that are kitschy but cool, wonder, then, that Brooklyn pioneers to get laid.”
and objets de nature made from tree have disavowed Manhattan. “For all The city has always hosted its share
trunks and taxidermy. While mid- the money in the world, we wouldn’t of bridge-andtunnel types, of course.
century modern furnishings are oc- move back to Manhattan,” says Pilar The population expanded in the post-
casionally seen, handmade and found Guzman, a Park Slope homeowner Giuliani, Sex in the City era, when clean
objects trump the manufactured and quoted in the 2008 coffee table book streets and an active police presence
the mass-marketed; old and worn, put Brooklyn Modern by Diana Lind, which meant that Manhattan ceased to be a
together with a seemingly unstudied showcases the transformation of Brook- scary place for all but a few city-phobes.
elegance, is preferable to new and shiny. lyn brownstones. With its Subways, 7-Elevens, and other
Breuckelen, the old Dutch name for the In Brooklyn Modern, we are welcomed chain stores, Manhattan today looks
borough, is now the moniker of a local into the beautifully appointed Park Slope like a much more densely populated
distilling company, as well as a café and triplex Guzman and her husband Chris version of the rest of America – which,
an apparel company. Mitchell share with Mitchell’s brother for some, is part of the appeal. But a
There is a lot to admire about the and sister-in-law. It is grand and high- lot of the young people who crowd the
values that animate this emerging life- ceilinged, filled with simple wooden Village’s streets on the weekend actually
style: concern for the environment, rev- furnishings, parquet floors, and lots of live there – they’re students at nyu , or
erence for the past, a desire to make an light. In this version of Breuckelen style, other schools, and often their parents
urban life that is rich and inviting. Like there is little in the way of hipster clut- are paying the bills for them to live out
other middle-class urban pioneers, the ter, though there is reverence for the tra- their urban adventure.
agents of the new Brooklynism reject ditional and the handmade. Pilar and There goes the neighborhood.
the dream of suburban living with its Chris prefer Brooklyn to Manhattan: What’s missing from Manhattan’s in-
focus on the family and its desire to grand Brooklyn brownstones offer upper- creasingly sanitized streets for Cross
flee crime, crowds, and the space of middle-class families the kind of space and others is, in short, “authenticity,” a
difference. They revel, instead, in the and privacy that would be the envy of sense of rootedness that, in the case of
unruliness of cities and the possibility even the superrich in Manhattan. urban romantics, “humanizes the inner

71 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
city poor and celebrates rather than in the suburbs who want a different and stylized, and extends into the
disparages the messiness of city life,” as experience for their children, and New home. Critic Kurt Andersen, in a re-
historian Suleiman Osman describes it. York City, shinier and less crime-ridden cent issue of Vanity Fair, notes that
In The Invention of Brownstone than ever, is seen as a good place to find the styled home is no longer merely
Brooklyn, Osman shows that the quest these things. No wonder townhouses the preserve of rich people. Millions
for urban authenticity really began in built for nineteenth-century laborers of Americans, he writes, are now “am-
the postwar era, as progressive lawyers, in neighborhoods like Carroll Gardens ateur stylists – scrupulously attend-
teachers, writers, and white-collar work- or Park Slope now go for $3 million ing, as never before, to the details and
ers began to reclaim neighborhoods or more. meanings of the design and décor of
like Brooklyn Heights, seeking a sense But authenticity is a loaded term. their homes, their clothes, their appli-
of permanence and rootedness as a Sociologist Sharon Zukin, in her 2009 ances, their meals, their hobbies, and
refuge from Manhattan’s more imper- book Naked City, describes how res- more.” It’s décor that bears little re-
sonal verticality. They were drawn to taurants and bars and the resurgence lationship to the way its inhabitants
the brownstones that are the trademark of farmers’ markets offer urban con- live: think vintage typewriters and
architectural style of the borough, in- sumers a safe and comfortable place deer antlers.
fluenced by the Dutch who first colo- to “perform” a sense of difference from Brooklyn Magazine rebels against
nized the area, and housed the growing mainstream norms. These spaces fab- this, and yet also participates in the
middle class that settled in the borough ricate an aura of authenticity based on commodification of anti-style. In an ar-
in the nineteenth century. the history of the area or the backstory ticle entitled “Department of Records,”
Today’s urban pioneers are not alto- of their products, and capitalize on written by Amanda Park Taylor, we are
gether different from their 1940s prede- the tastes of their youngish, alterna- treated to sumptuous photos of quirky
cessors. The difference is that there are tive clientele. These middle- and upper- Brooklyn interiors. While most inter-
more of them: the quest for authenticity class folks consume, at least in part, to esting homes, she suggests, are created
is no longer confined to a relatively elite mark distinctions, as sociologist Pierre by design professionals or those who
segment of the educated middle classes. Bourdieu put it. follow them, the “other kind of remark-
There are more people with college de- For those on the cutting edge, this able home,” she says, “is much rarer.”
grees, more people who have grown up authenticity is highly self-conscious It is “the product of personality.” This

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 72
home shuns design icons like Eames Brooklyn Magazine is a symptom has over the past few decades been on
and antler lamps. “Rather than prove of the process by which working-class the leading edge of this reclamation of
a point about its owners’ curatorial neighborhoods are upscaled, and it is city life. Though gentrification seems
prowess, it serves its residents’ higher- also a harbinger of this change. As a unremarkable, inevitable, and the prod-
order needs.” mythmaker, the magazine helps de- uct of individual choices rather than
In other words, Brooklyn’s cultural fine what is cool, but stops short of collective actions, to name it, and be-
omnivores pride themselves as hav- announcing to its readers: this is how come aware of it, is a necessary first step.
ing eclectic tastes, and even at times you should dress, think, and furnish Brooklyn gives a knowing wink to its
as being “rebel consumers.” (How your abode in order to be one of us. liberal readers’ unease. In a self-mock-
else can we make sense of the ongo- Still, it provides a blueprint for how ing column called “The Self-Loathing
ing struggles at the Park Slope Food to know and live Brooklyn, or at least Gentrifier,” an inquirer who identifies
Coop over whether to boycott Israeli- how to know and live a certain gentri- himself as a Bay Ridge native writes:
made goods?) Still, says Zukin, these fied hipster aesthetic embodying ideals “I recently moved to Williamsburg and
consumers with a difference are “not- of authenticity, individuality, cosmo- I’m getting all sorts of grief from old
so-innocent agents of change.” While politanism, and reverence for the past. neighborhood friends about being a
they might see their struggles for their Its editors, like all editors of lifestyle yuppie-scum gentrifier. What should I
own pleasures as somehow daring magazines, are tastemakers who are tell them? Are they right?” He is told,
and confrontational, their desire for one step ahead of the game, who know in effect, yes. Another asks: “I’ve been
alternative foods, both gourmet and where to place their money, or at least hearing about this new entrepreneurial
organic, and for middle-class shopping proclaim that they know. In one article, Brooklyn economy? How can I get in on
areas encourages a dynamic of urban we learn about a number of neighbor- that shit?” He is advised to place fifty
redevelopment that displaces working- hoods in the borough that have yet to dollars in an envelope and send it to
class and ethnic minority consumers. be fully “discovered.” These “lost neigh- the columnist, and the columnist will
That should give pause to the Brook- borhoods of Brooklyn” include places send him a tip sheet that will tell him
lyn style mavens whose sense of supe- like Georgetown, King Bay, Remsen everything he needs to know. There’s se-
riority rests on drawing distinctions Village, and Mapleton. Are these neigh- riousness behind the gag: an admission
between “good gentrifiers” and “bad borhoods, the reader wonders, the next that cash is king, even among those who
gentrifiers.” Red Hook or Crown Heights? are looking for alternatives – like many
Bad gentrifiers buy new high-rise Gentrification is about change of Brooklyn’s readers. The magazine is
condos, shop at the Gap, and feel re- and renewal, remaking urban spaces, filled with ads for high-end real estate,
lieved the more their neighbors come to opening them up to new groups of city infertility doctors, and Mercedes Benz.
look like them. Good gentrifiers buy up inhabitants, and closing them off to oth- Good gentrifiers are, in other words, as
old brownstones and keep their original ers. It signals the triumph of the mar- implicated in the system as anyone else.
details intact, gently restoring them to ket, and in the absence of strong tenant They’re just more self-aware – and have
their original patina and lament the protections, public housing programs, better taste.
fact that the neighborhood is whiten- or subsidies for lower-income home “Brooklyn-ness,” as art critic Holland
ing up. Bad gentrifiers welcome the fact ownership, we have no choice but to Cotter wrote, has become “a cultural
that a restaurant touted as having “the play by its rules, maximizing our own ethnicity.” If it is an ethnicity, it is or-
best burgers in the borough” has re- self-interest however we see fit. ganized mainly around practices of
placed the bodega on the corner. Good In places like New York, where real consumption. Flows of money and
gentrifiers collect vintage vinyl, drive estate is at a premium, the process will real estate converge with movements
Priuses, drink craft beers and frequent continue to transform urban land- of cultural innovation, and with pro-
the neighborhood Burmese restaurant. scapes until there are no longer any cesses of emulation, appropriation, and
While bad gentrifiers see themselves new frontiers to be had. Virtual social- mixing, which bring together and also
as having little impact on their envi- ity, it turns out, is no substitute for the separate races, classes, and ethnicities.
ronment – they are simply maximizing real thing: people, particularly young The music, food, and sensibilities of
their own self-interest by getting a good people, want to be in public spaces, sur- others insinuate themselves in us, and
deal in an up-and-coming neighbor- rounded by other living, breathing hu- we become attuned to worlds that once
hood – good gentrifiers are supremely mans they can smell and see and touch. seemed very far away. We learn from
aware of their privileged place in the No wonder Brooklyn, with its impres- unfamiliar others, but tend not to no-
urban food chain, and sometimes even sive housing stock, huge landmass, and tice when they mysteriously disappear
feel guilty about it. proximity to Manhattan’s urban core, from view. ¢

73 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
HAPPY HOOKERS

by Melissa Gira Grant SEX WORKERS AND THEIR WOULD-BE


SAVIORS.

Original image of Nicholas Kristof by Monika Flueckiger. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.

he following books When it reached their top five, the if they hadn’t, say the critics of hooker

T were not published in


1972: The Happy Secretary,
The Happy Nurse, The
New York Times described the book
as “liberally dosed with sex fantasies
for the retarded.” The woman who
happiness, we would have had to in-
vent them.
Is prostitution so wicked a profes-
Happy Napalm Manufacturer, The wrote them and lived them, Xaviera sion that it requires such myths?
Happy President, The Happy Yippie, Hollander, became a folk hero. She re- We may remember the legend, but
The Happy Feminist. The memoir of mains the accidental figurehead of a the particulars of the happy hooker story
a Manhattan madam was. The Happy class of women who may or may not have faded. Hollander and the charac-
Hooker climbed best-seller lists that have existed before she lived and wrote. ters that grew up around her are cor-
year, selling over sixteen million copies. Of course, they must have existed, but rectly recalled as sexually omnivorous,

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 74
SEX WORK NOW ISN’T A

LIFESTYLE; IT’S A

GIG, ONE OF MANY YOU

CAN SELECT FROM

A VENUE LIKE BACKPAGE

OR CRAIGSLIST.

but desire alone didn’t make her suc- What’s on trial in the film is ridicu- the man said to me, not knowing I
cessful as a prostitute. She realized that lous, but the questions are real. What had ever been a prostitute, “almost all
the sex trade is no underworld, that it is value does a prostitute bring to society? of these women don’t really want to
intimately entangled in city life, in all Or is hooking really not so grandiose be doing it.”
the ways in which we are economically as all that? Could it be just another Let’s ask the people around here, I
interdependent. Hollander was famous mostly tedious way to take ownership wanted to say to him: the construction
for being able to sweep through the over something all too few of us are workers who dug up the road behind
lobby of the Palace Hotel, unnoticed called before Congress to testify on (the us, the cabbies weaving around the con-
and undisturbed, on her way to an as- conditions of our work)? struction site, the cops over there who
signation, not because she didn’t “look have to babysit us, the Mister Softee
like” a working girl, but because she id you know that 89 per­ guy pulling a double shift in the heat,
knew that too few people understood
what a working girl really looked like.
“D cent of the women in pros- the security guard outside a nearby bar,
titution want to escape?” a the woman working inside, the recep-
In The Happy Hooker Goes to Wash- young man told me on the first day tionist upstairs. The freelancers at the
ington, a 1977 film adapted from Hol- of summer this year, as he protested Village Voice. The guys at the copy shop
lander’s memoir, a scene opens with in front of the offices of the Village who printed your flyers. The workers at
teletype bashing the screen with Wood- Voice. He wanted me to understand the factory that made the water bottles
ward-and-Bernstein urgency. Flash- that it is complicit in what he calls you’re handing out. Is it unfair to esti-
lights sweep a darkened hall. Inside “modern-day slavery.” The Village mate that 89 percent of New Yorkers
an unlocked office, a criminal scene is Voice has moved the bulk of the sex- would rather not be doing what they
revealed: a senator embracing a prosti- related ads it publishes onto the have to do to make a living?
tute. Hollander is called before Con- website Backpage.com. This young “True, many of the prostitution ads
gress to testify. When the assembled man, the leader of an Evangelical on Backpage are placed by adult women
panel interrogates her career, attack- Christian youth group, wanted to has- acting on their own without coercion,”
ing her morals, she is first shameless, ten the end of “sex slavery” by shutting writes New York Times columnist and
then spare but sharp in pointing out Backpage.com down. What happens professional prostitute savior Nicholas
the unsurprising fact that these men to the majority of people who adver- Kristof. But, he continues, invoking
are patrons of the very business they tise willingly on the site, who rely on the happy hooker trope, “they’re not
wish to blame for America’s downfall. it to draw an income? “The reality is,” my concern.” He would like us to join

75 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
HAPPY HOOKERS

him in separating women into those only become more profitable under advertisers have come out today to op-
who chose prostitution and those who what sociologist Elizabeth Bernstein pose us.” So a prostitute’s dissent is only
were forced into it; those who view it terms “post-industrial prostitution.” possible if, as they understand prostitu-
as business and those who view it as After the vigilant anti-prostitution tion itself, she was forced into it.
exploitation; those who are workers campaigns of the last century, which “Why did it take so long for the
and those who are victims; those who targeted red-light districts and street- women’s movement to genuinely con-
are irremediable and those who can based prostitution, sex work has moved sider the needs of whores, of women
be saved. These categories are too nar- mostly indoors, into private apartments in the sex trades?” asks working-class
row. They fail to explain the reality of and gentlemen’s clubs, facilitated by queer organizer and ex-hooker Amber
one woman’s work, let alone a class of the internet and mobile phones. The L. Hollibaugh, in her book My Dan-
women’s labor. In this scheme, a happy sex economy exists in symbiosis with gerous Desires. “Maybe because it’s
hooker is apparently unwavering in her the leisure economy: personal services, hard to listen to – I mean really pay
love of fucking and will fuck anyone for luxury hotels, all increasingly anony- attention to – a woman who, without
the right price. She has no grievances, mous and invisible. At the same time, other options, could easily be cleaning
no politics. more young people find themselves your toilet? Maybe because it’s intoler-
But happy hookers, says Kristof, without a safety net, dependent on in- able to listen to the point of view of a
don’t despair, this isn’t about women formal economies. Sex work now isn’t woman who makes her living sucking
like you – we don’t really mean to a lifestyle; it’s a gig, one of many you off your husband?”
put you out of work. Never mind that can select from a venue like Backpage Hollibaugh points to this most dif-
shutting down the businesses people or Craigslist. ficult place, this politics of feelings per-
in the sex trade depend on for safety Recall the favored slogan of pros- formed by some feminists, in absence
and survival only exposes all of them titution prohibitionists that on the of solidarity. They imagine how prosti-
to danger and poverty, no matter how internet, they could buy a sofa and “a tution must feel, and how that in turn
much choice they have. Kristof and girl.” It’s not the potential purchase makes them feel, despite all the real-life
the Evangelicals outside the Village of a person that’s so outrageous; it’s prostitutes standing in front of them to
Voice succeed only in taking choices the proximity of that person to the dispute them.
away from people who are unlikely to legiti­mate market.
turn up outside the New York Times, Bernstein calls these “slippery bor- t didn’t used to be that
demanding that Kristof’s column be
taken away from him.
ders,” and asks us to observe the feel-
ings provoked by them, and how they
I people opposed to prostitu-
tion could only get away with
Even if they did, with the platform are transferred. Anxieties about slip- it by insisting that “happy” prostitutes
he’s built for himself as the true ex- pery market borders become “anxi- didn’t really exist. From Gilgamesh
pert on sex workers’ lives, men like eties about slippery moral borders,” to the Gold Rush days, right up until
Kristof can’t be run out of town so which are played out on the bodies of Ms Hollander’s time, being a whore
easily. There’s always another ted sex workers. was reason enough for someone to
conference, another women’s rights The anxiety is that sex work may be demand you be driven out of town.
organization eager to hire his expertise. legitimate after all. In a sense, the prohi- Contemporary prostitution prohibi-
Kristof and those like him, who have bitionists are correct: people who might tionists consider the new reality, in
made saving women from themselves have never gotten into the sex trade which they deny the existence of any-
their pet issue and vocation, are so fix- before can and are. Fighting what they one with agency in prostitution, a form
ated on the notion that almost no one call “the normalizing of prostitution” is of victory for women. We aren’t ruined
would ever choose to sell sex that they the focus of anti-sex work feminists. In now. We’re victims.
miss the dull and daily choices that all this view, one happy hooker is a threat Perhaps what they fear most of
working people face in the course of to all women everywhere. all is that prostitutes could be happy:
making a living. Kristof himself makes “It’s sad,” said the speaker from the that what we’ve been told is the worst
good money at this, but to consider sex women’s-rights ngo Equality Now in thing we can do to ourselves is not the
workers’ equally important economic protest outside the Village Voice. She worst, or even among the worst. What
survival is inconvenient for him. directed her remarks at the cluster marks us as fallen – whether from femi-
of sex workers who had turned out nism or Christ or capital – is any sug-
his business of debating sex in counterprotest. “Backpage is able gestion that prostitution did not ruin
T workers’ choices and whether
or not they have them has
to be a pimp. They’re so normalizing
this behavior that a group of Backpage
us and that we can deliver that news
ourselves. ¢

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 76
EATIN G FOR C HAN GE

by Claire E. Peters WHEN IT COMES TO REFORMING


OUR FOOD SYSTEM,
CONSUMER CHOICE ISN’T ENOUGH.

n may , Michael Bloom­ bloodstreams of America’s famously

I berg proposed a ban on


the sale of sugary bever-
ages over 16 ounces. If it
large citizens, as well as the hearts of
whole-food evangelists.
Over the past decade, a vibrant food
passes, New Yorkers with an urge for a movement has grown out of an increase
deluge of high-fructose corn syrup and in popular knowledge regarding the
caramel coloring will be forced to pur- ecological, social, economic, and health-
chase multiple puny 12-ounce beverages. related threats posed by the conven-
Bloomberg’s war against dental and ar- tional agricultural system. Supporters
terial destruction was praised and de- of sustainable food are armed with a
rided with equal fervor, with most of wealth of information regarding unsus-
the commentary revolving around the tainable farming methods, the exploi-
tension between health outcomes and tation of farmers and migrant workers,
consumer freedom. the commodity crop system, and the
The mayor’s proposed legislation twin epidemics of diabetes and obesity
may have provoked libertarians, but that our supply of heavily processed
it struck many in the sustainable food foods has abetted. Rather than focus on
movement as little more than a gesture, creating collective action to change the
with soda a random mark among many system that produces these effects, how-
other possible targets – his announce- ever, the food movement has taken on a
ment, incidentally, took place just be- distinctly supply-side, neoliberal flavor.
fore “National Donut Day.” According to the Centers for Dis-
Whether it passes or not, the proposal ease Control and Prevention, 7 percent
has stirred debate around how much of Americans are overweight and 33 per-
say government should have in shap- cent are obese. The World Health Orga-
ing individual consumer choices that nization reports that Americans exhibit
inevitably have broader social impacts. higher rates of high blood pressure,
Cries of protest by the food and bev- diabetes, and heart disease than those
erage industries are to be expected, but in other developed countries. Our na-
it’s worth noting that the majority of tional statistics make it clear that we are
food advocates, and other opponents unhealthy, but why we are so remains
of industrial food, structure their ar- the object of contentious debate.
guments around the ideology of con- For every study alleging that any
sumer choice as well. Faith in the free single factor is the main contributor
market flows steadily through the to increasing rates of obesity and type 2
clotted arteries and glucose-flooded diabetes, there are ten more suggesting

77 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
alternative culprits. We have pointed
the finger at cake, cars, stress, chairs,
tv, genes, and pvc shower curtains.
We have blamed a lack of access to the
right food, an excess of the wrong food,
or that we eat our food too quickly or
in inappropriate locations. Where our THE ‘DEATH BY A THOUSAND
diet is concerned, the federal govern-
ment has tried to make things simple CUTS’ TACTIC WILL NOT BE
for us. The usda and fda have built
us pyramid after pyramid, and in 2008, EFFECTIVE, BECAUSE THE FOOD
they served their guidelines to us
MOVEMENT’S RANKS WILL
on a platter with the introduction of
MyPlate. Yet despite all of these efforts, ALWAYS BE RELATIVELY SMALL.
our unhealthy eating behaviors persist.
The current food movement argues
that structural changes to the agricul-
tural system, infrastructural improve-
ments, urban renewal, and increased
wages for farmworkers are necessary,
but only insofar as they will ultimately
result in changes to individual con-
sumer behavior. The movement re-
mains infinitely hopeful that increased also ignore the myriad factors besides loss of enjoyment and the increased
access to more affordable produce is access and education that influence sensations of anxiety, discomfort, and
enough to turn Americans away from food choice. work (in the form of cooking for oneself
processed food, and, with guidance, to- Anyone who has tried to reduce his or engaging in a way of eating that may
ward a future filled with victory gardens or her caloric intake or make substantial be different from one’s peers).
and home-cooked meals. dietary changes of any kind knows that Food advocates may extol the vir-
These are admirable goals, but their it takes a high level of mental jujitsu to tues of sustainable farming methods, or
focus on facilitating more healthful convince oneself that these changes regale one another with tales of home-
consumer choices overlooks broader amount to anything more than an cooked meals eaten slowly and enjoyed
structural issues – persistent economic increase in personal discomfort. The thoroughly. But for people without so-
inequality, unemployment or underem- prospect of long-term health or eco- cial networks in which healthy eating
ployment, inadequate healthcare – that logical sustainability is vague and in- is a priority, or for whom the potential
affect health and quality of life. They tangible compared to the immediate for lifelong health takes a backseat to

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 78
more immediate concerns, the sugges- Recent cultural commentary sug- during the food festival at which he was
tion that they ought to endure added gests that interest in food and eating interviewed he planned to “eat until
discomfort “for their own good” may is fast becoming a stand-in for other I’m physically full and can’t eat any-
seem insulting and cruel, not to men- hobbies and forms of cultural explora- more.” Myers’s piece in the Atlantic is
tion patronizing and unrealistic. tion. In a New York Times article from full of similar statements from foodies
In an attempt to elevate the act of March of this year, one source compares for whom overeating is inherent to a
eating from the clutches of vulgar hun- New York’s current food scene to its satisfying culinary experience.
ger or hedonistic indulgence, and to fine-arts scene in the eighties, as people Everyone has to eat, however, and
liberate cooking from its current place seek out eating experiences that offer those who can afford to make decisions
within the domain of “work,” propo- an “underground cachet.” Another dis- based on factors other than cost must
nents of sustainable food often end cusses how food has replaced his re- eventually decide how to feed them-
up fetishizing these acts: preparing cord collecting habit: “I used to spend selves. At the moment, the food move-
a meal is a holy rite, and eating is a five hours in a record store looking for ment seems to offer only two choices.
communion with the gods. Many food albums,” he says. “Now everything’s The first is to be vigilant about eating
advocates support the cultivation of a online. But I can’t find artisanal sau- sustainably, and run the risk of ending
relationship, however fleeting, with the sage online and eat it right away. Maybe up in the “good consumer” trap. The
people who produce their food. This food markets are the vintage record second is to opt out of the conventional
places growers and purveyors in the shops of 2012.” food system as much as possible by
position of having to sell themselves Because their actions are in keeping growing tomatoes in a rooftop garden
along with what they produce. with the “vote with your dollars” ethos, or raising chickens in our backyards.
A recent article by Benjamin Wallace these foodies can feel morally upright Both of these choices are probably bet-
in New York magazine demonstrates and politically correct for spending ter than throwing up one’s hands and
how this phenomenon is unfolding in money on nonconventional food, while reaching for a bag of Funyuns, but nei-
Brooklyn’s artisanal food scene. Judg- competing with one another to stay at ther addresses the structural factors
ing by the commentary provided by the forefront of the culinary zeitgeist. that make the food movement’s idea of
the food makers Wallace consulted In the March 2011 issue of the At- “good choice” difficult or unappealing
for the article, staying in business is lantic Monthly, B. R. Myers wrote a to those outside the movement.
a matter not simply of selling whole, scathing takedown of foodie behavior, More importantly, they do not ac-
unadulterated, sustainably produced calling attention to foodies’ “affectation knowledge the near-impossibility of
food, but of having a good origin story of piety,” which is contradicted by their changing the food system through in-
to go along with it. Not to say that “penchant for obscenely priced meals, dividual consumer choice. The “death
increased interest in the lives of the for gorging themselves.” Myers re- by a thousand cuts” tactic will not be
people who grow or prepare our food minded readers that the word “glutton” effective because, due to the limitations
isn’t to society’s benefit, but a sustain- not only pertains to those who overeat explored earlier, the current food move-
able food system should not require to the point of being ill or obese, but to ment’s ranks will always be relatively
the custodians of a safe and nutritious anyone who is preoccupied with con- small. As de facto representatives of
food supply to double as performers or sumption. The food movement, in both the anticonventional food movement,
storytellers. its foodie and food advocate iterations, food advocates and foodies need to
Another expression of this type of represents a form of gluttony not so ask themselves whether their current
anti-industrial food fetishism can be different from that of the binge-eating approach to food and eating is truly
seen in the behavior of the so-called McDonald’s lovers they deride. Their sustainable, or if they are instead engag-
“foodies.” The term “foodie” is flexible; it image of the “conventional” American ing in self-satisfied gustatory acquisi-
might be used in reference to a twenty- eater is of a person obsessed with quan- tiveness among themselves. Beyond
something food blogger snapping pho- tity (huge portions in restaurants, value- the ideology of liberation and sustain-
tos of himself at a new Korean taco joint sized packages at Walmart and Sam’s ability, through consumer choice, and
in Greenpoint. It might just as well Club). The food movement, however, avoiding what cultural geographer Ju-
refer to a food celebrity like Anthony is obsessed to a similar degree with the lie Guthman has referred to as “food
Bourdain, the aggressive, hypermascu- quality and origin of its food. This is not messianism” – outreach and education
line culinary conqueror who will hold to say that foodies are in the habit of measures that tend to strike a discor-
us captive with his expletive-punctu- eschewing indulgence when it comes dant tone with their supposedly be-
ated narrative of the incomparable plea- to their carefully curated food choices. nighted subjects – lies the possibility of
sure of glutting on fattened songbirds. A subject in “Eat, Talk, Tweet” said that a food movement driven by the Left. ¢

79 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
BEYOND NOVEMBER

by Michael Hirsch & THOUGHTS ON POLITICS, SOCIAL


Jason Schulman
MOVEMENTS, AND THE 2012 ELECTIONS.

arx wrote in The Civil In Western Europe, the social- check and other labor law reforms, his

M War in France that every


few years workers got to
decide which members of
democratic parties act as the kinder,
gentler face of neoliberalism. In the
United States, the labor movement can’t
refusal to treat Wall Street as a criminal
enterprise, his embrace of reactionary
education philosophies, his incursive
the ruling class were to misrepresent point to a signal federal legislative vic- black-ops foreign policy, and his ten
them. How right he was. And is. That tory since the 1970 passage of the Oc- o’clock scholar’s embrace of gay mar-
is uncontestable. What’s at issue are cupational Safety and Health Act – and riage, his is an administration not to
the implications. What politics is nec- that under a Republican president. In praise but to damn.
essary in a formal democracy where most developing countries, politics is So what to do? Or how do we even
elites have a stranglehold on national a reflection of the competing demands think about what to do? That’s not like
election outcomes and even candidate of comprador and local bourgeois fac- asking, “Why is there no labor party
selection? What is to be done when the tions; working-class struggles are subter- in the United States?” Political soci-
working class acts less like a class for ranean. The magnificent Arab Spring ologist Robin Archer offers a compel-
itself and more like a crush of sharp- was remarkable for what it was and not ling argument that points out specific
elbowed shoppers at a Walmart Presidents’ for what it portended. The contenders conditions – the weakness of the early
Day sale? in Egypt’s first elections were the army industrial union organizing efforts, the
While movements for social and eco- and the Muslim Brotherhood, both level of state repression, the structural
nomic justice are in the final instance with infrastructures in place and both divides determined by religious affili-
the agents of historical change, elec- former collaborators with the hated ations, the bonkers politics of Daniel
tion efforts should reflect those move- Mubarak regime. DeLeon’s Socialist Labor Party and the
ment interests. Yet the form electoral In 2012, the US presidential election equally malignant and self-interested
action takes rarely jibes with move­- will once again be decided not on wants craft union response – conditions that
­ment needs. or needs but on fear. With neither can- in combination were true nowhere else.
In no advanced industrial nation, didate likely to gin up much energy for These inhibited any class-based politics,
and especially not the United States, themselves based on program, personal- even of the most tepid kind. Archer
have the needs of social movements and ity, or merit, the election will go to the explains why the US was late to the
electoral gains been conjoined. World- campaign that scares key voting blocs game, if not awol , but not why corpo-
wide, the Occupiers deny a connection the most about the opposition. rate ideology is still the common coin
is even warranted – the Spanish Indig- The prospects of selling Obama as of both parties, let alone what can be
nados are the most vocal – saying that the preferred candidate are daunting, done today.
political parties of the Left and Right if worth doing at all. With his prolifera- Radicals, since at least the 1936 re-
inevitably work to maintain social or- tion of the national security state, his election of Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
der. Descriptively, it’s true; that is how refusal to put juice behind the Conyers have battled over two key electoral
governments of the Left and Right have jobs bill, his water-carrying for the in- strategies: relate in whatever way pos-
acted, at least since the Second World surance companies and destruction of sible to progressive forces around the
War. But it’s not inevitable, and aban- any near-term possibility for single- Democratic Party or denounce the
doning politics is no solution. payer health care, his failures on card two-party system as a sham and build

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 80
institutional support. Anything a third
party can do – anything a third party
should do – can also be done in local
and state Democratic primaries.
Parties are not creatures of desire
alone. They are political expressions
THINK OF SHAKESPEARE’S of movements arising at historical con-
junctures, or comprise decades of work
GLENDOWER BOASTING culminating in effective interventions
in crisis situations. The last third-party
THAT “I CAN CALL SPIRITS effort institutionalized nationwide was
the Republican Party. Not only was it the
FROM THE VASTY DEEP.” TO
outcome of the struggle over slavery – 
WHICH HOTSPUR APTLY something the Whigs could not get
right – but the Lincoln election was
REPLIES, “WHY, SO CAN I, the proximate cause of the South Caro-
lina secession and the Civil War that
OR SO CAN ANY MAN; BUT followed. The gop ’s creation was not
epiphenomenal; it was structurally
WILL THEY COME WHEN driven, and the war emerged as the
central and as yet unrivaled organiz-
YOU DO CALL FOR THEM?” ing event of the modern American party
system.
Yes, radical parties had influence,
too. The Socialist Party that thank-
fully succeeded the slp in prominence
excelled before and during the First
World War, electing thousands of lo-
cal officeholders. But it sent just two
members to Congress – one from New
York and one from Milwaukee, cities
with substantial foreign-born popula-
tions with radical views and roots in
European working-class organizations.
The party had its faults, including an
electoral orientation that could not
abide the direct-action tactics of its own
a progressive third party. The two don’t electoral politics as hopeless or build- supporters, but it acted as the party of
exhaust the list of left possibilities, but ing third parties out of whole cloth “are a class – something no third party can
they take to the field at election time actually unpolitical and lack any sort of do today.
as dueling perspectives. We find the concrete analysis.” He’s right. Absent Absent mass upheavals that make
first simplistic and the second at least strategy, anything else is just expressing electoral reform a concession, US third-
a telescoping of events. a shopping preference. party efforts are also handicapped by a
Strategic planning includes sizing political system that is not analogous
ELECTORAL POLITICS AND up your own side’s strengths. Frankly, to that of any other liberal-democratic
T H E B U R D E N O F H I S T O RY we’re too weak to have any effect on state. Here, it’s the state, not the parties,
the Democratic Party network at the that controls who can join (anyone who
eteran labor activist Bill national level. registers). The parties have no sway over
V Fletcher, Jr, writing in his
Organizing Upgrade blog,
At the same time, we can’t build
much of a third party with impos-
who registers, runs in their primaries,
or holds office under their name. Yes,
argues that election perspectives need sible state ballot access requirements, election lawyer-wizards do challenge
to be strategic, and that dismissing winner-take-all elections and a lack of dissident Democrats’ election petitions

81 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
BEYOND NOVEMBER

at the behest of county-based, paid po- affect national party policy, but it can increments – is the only contemporary
litical functionaries. The outcome: can- still hold a local candidate’s feet to politics possible.
didate suppression, especially of the the fire. That’s why the links institutions like
novice hopeful. But it’s state law, not the naacp and the afl-cio have with
party manipulation, that is responsible STRUCTURAL BARRIERS the Democratic Party won’t be over-
for voter suppression, the more toxic A N D C O A L I T I O N “ PA R T I E S ” come by an act of will or even the elec-
threat to free elections. tion of a new generation of Marxists to
hort of storming the a handful of top union leadership posts,
U N D E R S TA N D I N G T H E
D E M O C R AT S
S Winter Palace, politics re-
quires coalitions. But what
as desirable as that would be.
Those on the Left who call for a third
kind of coalitions? Both main parties party are basing their choice on a prayer,
hat complicates things are coalitions of disparate elements. not a plan. Think of Shakespeare’s Glen-
W is that Dem­ocrats themselves
talk about one big party, un-
Ostensibly, class-based parties in a par-
liamentary system function the same
dower boasting that “I can call spirits
from the vasty deep.” To which Hotspur
der one big tent, dancing to one tune. way, with the deals cut after the election, aptly replies, “Why, so can I, or so can
It’s rubbish. The US effectively has 435 but they have the advantage of raising any man; But will they come when you
separate Democratic Party organiza- sharp differences during campaigns do call for them?”
tions corresponding to incumbents or and allowing radicals a role, at least be- Even Hotspur’s advice, “Tell truth
challengers in each congressional dis- fore entering government. and shame the devil,” has its limits. The
trict, with the loosest of national affili- The U S party coalitions are not Left has ample truths deserving of a
ations. Politics USA-style is candidate-, particularly unified. Both have a hard hearing, but given its weakness and dis-
not party-driven. core of ideological or interest-group connect from the lives of working peo-
It’s not the party that does the lion’s supporters, and a periphery of idio- ple, who’s listening? And given that we
share of fundraising, either. It’s the can- syncratic centrist allies. The cores are can’t deliver, and that our self-appointed
didates, and – thanks to the Supreme always dissatisfied that their interests vanguard tribunes know they can’t de-
Court – the virtually flying-under-the- aren’t served, while the moderates en- liver, it’s like hawking shoddy goods to
radar corporate-run Super pacs. One tertain fantasies of a great party of the demand that working people must, as
effect of the McCain-Feingold cam- center-right, which would ostensibly at least one sect said in all seriousness,
paign finance law is that even fewer dol- sweep any election. Today, the chief “Break with the elephant; break with the
lars will be coordinated by the national exponent of that view is the drearily ass. Build a party of the working class.”
parties. The afl-cio , its numerous predictable New York Times scribe Support for a nationwide third party
constituent unions, and others expect Thomas Friedman. today isn’t a political response, but a
to ride that money-churning tiger, but It should be no surprise, then, that propagandistic one. It’s also bad pro-
the advantage goes to business. every Democratic president since the paganda because it assumes that the
The Democrats are not even a rule- Civil War has come from the middle Democrats are hegemonic due to voter
from-the-top party that disciplines its of the coalition. That’s the nature of ignorance. It’s not illusions that drive
elected officials, though under Rahm the Democratic Party, and it is that way voters. Asking working people to forgo
Emanuel, progressive candidates were because of the reality of the US political their only practical form of politics is
pushed aside by the party’s congressio- system. Changes in state laws permit- like urging the religious to abandon
nal fundraising arms in favor of more ting multiple-party endorsements, the their gods. That’s something even the
mainstream and ostensibly electable alternate vote, proportional represen- twenty-four-year-old Marx knew was
moderates. Party discipline at times tation, same-day registration, and the nonsense, when he wrote that the world
is enforced by promising or denying like would vastly improve prospects of atheists “reminds one of children, as-
“pork” or committee chair posts, yet for third parties, but winning these suring everyone who is ready to listen
for all those cozy arrangements, party means fighting state-by-state. Even a to them that they are not afraid of the
politics is decentralized. This means constitutional amendment requires bogy man.”
grassroots efforts to elect allies or pun- some thirty states to agree. It’s a fight The Democrats as a coalition are he-
ish enemies are viable. worth having, but short of that, or short gemonic because they provide a service,
Want to punish incumbents? Pri­ of a cataclysm delegitimizing the main finite as it is, that is indispensable for
mary ’em up. Even if you lose, you’ve parties, coalition politics and the sort institutions, whether they be unions,
killed their summer and made your of incrementalism revolutionaries de- social service providers, or community-
point. The Left is in no position to spise – in part because there are so few based organizations.

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 82
Let’s face reality: Obama is the worst
Democratic president since Grover
THE REAL SUBTEXT IS “VOTE Cleveland. He’s a Wall Street enabler,
and like his sorry predecessors, he’s let
OBAMA: his agenda be determined by corporate
pressure and far-right hysteria.
HE’LL SCREW US LESS.” Just because the worst scum in
America want Obama gone, unions
neutralized, and the shreds of the wel-
fare state effaced is not reason in itself
for the Left to mute criticisms and act
A S S E S S I N G L E F T PA R T Y propitious moment. That’s no knock. the good soldier. The only sound jus-
C A M PA I G N S Often the Left can’t manage even that. tification given for backing Obama in
Here we make no claim that La Botz 2008 was that he’d give the movements
f parties grow from move- or Hawkins could have made a differ- enough room and time to grow. We got
I ments and from cultures of
resistance, where is the util-
ence running in statewide Democratic
Party primaries. We do suggest that in-
neither.
The reason that we don’t write off
ity or veracity in claiming that today’s surgents backed by reform groups with Democratic Party campaigns is that at
Green Party represents a core wing local standing could run in area primary the local level, anyone involved in any
of environmentalism, let alone civil races and win. sort of community organizing or public-
rights, peace, labor, immigrant rights, sector bargaining has to have a relation-
or others? In many ways, the Green UNMASKING OBAMA ship with some elected officials. And
campaign for governor of New York that means visibly supporting them,
in 2010 had a model program and an till , the issue for November even if critically. Either that or prepar-
attractive, knowledgeable candidate
in Howie Hawkins. And that was all
S is how we impact political
discourse among those liv-
ing primary competition. And when a
mass left party emerges, it won’t be the
it had, though that was enough to se- ing perilous lives. expression of a rootless counterculture.
cure state ballot status through 2014. Someone’s got to tell the truth about But we’re not doing our allies any
It’s been somnolent since. the scabrous Obama presidency, and it good by echoing the line taken by
Dan La Botz, an articulate cam- won’t come from the three-wise-monkey the afl-cio today, which is that the
paigner on the Socialist Party line for approach of the liberal left or the venal- November election poses a choice
Senate in Ohio, ran on a platform light- ity and rampant racism of the Right. between two economic worldviews.
years ahead of anything the two major Yes, the Republicans are almost al- Would that it were. The real subtext is
parties offered. He declared: ways worse, and that algorithm gives “Vote Obama: He’ll screw us less.”
Democrats a free ride. The gop ’s not Independent left participation in
We need to organize a movement. To always worse, though. patco ’s strike the 2012 election should be based mini-
fight for jobs and full employment. To was broken by Ronald Reagan, but the mally on preparing people now for the
win health care for all. To really confront rage that consumed air traffic control- fight we’ll be in after the election, no
the environmental crisis by turning from lers in 1981 was the accumulation of two matter which party wins. That means
coal and oil to wind, solar, and hydro- decades of pressing grievances against no lionizing Obama and no relying on
thermal. To end the wars in Iraq and mostly Democratic-appointed heads of ghoulish tales about what a gop mo-
Afghanistan. I want to be the Senator the Federal Aviation Administration. nopoly of government and a knuckle-
who speaks for that movement. No wonder the patco leadership made dragging Supreme Court could unleash.
a Faustian bargain to endorse Reagan in Allowing Obama to be reelected with-
We wish he could, too. La Botz’s trac- 1980 in return for a deal that unraveled out any critique from the Left – even
tion – despite his garnering “more than over, among other things, acceptance of one that is purely propagandistic, as
25,000 votes for socialism in Ohio,” as collective bargaining over wages. the Green and Socialist parties will of-
his campaign put it – was the result less Anyone who says the future of work- fer – only ratifies his centrist approach
of his ability to front for mass move- ing-class America depends on beating of cottoning to and co-opting the Right
ments and more that the Democratic Romney downplays the harm succes- while neutering the Left and any pos-
candidate had no chance of winning. sive Democratic administrations did in sibility for substantial social gains. We
La Botz was a protest candidate at a shilling for corporate America. can do better. ¢

83 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
FA I R E R S E X

here’s been a lot of bullshit Those who demanded state wages for house-
by Sarah Leonard
T written lately about what is or is
not feminist. Notable bones
of contention include: ladyblogs,
work sought two things. First, to make wifely
love visible as productive work. Second, to un-
cover for women the leverage that workers have
working in finance, doulas, “having it all,” in their potential to strike. “To say that we want
housewifing, rioting, protesting, protesting in money for housework is the first step towards
lingerie, getting married, watching Girls. Essays refusing to do it,” wrote Italian feminist Silvia
in publications ranging from mass-circulation Federici, “because the demand for a wage makes
glossies like the Atlantic (“Why Women Still our work visible ... both in its immediate aspect
Can’t Have It All” by Anne-Marie Slaughter) to as housework and its more insidious character
small literary magazines like n+1 (“So Many as femininity.” This was feminism designed not
Feelings” by Molly Fischer) appeal to a wide- to increase individual compensation, but to
spread fascination with the confused meaning reveal and create power while undoing sex roles
of the term. The narcissism underlying the in all realms of life.
debate is parodied by the blog “Is This Looking for expressions of these objectives
Feminist?” featuring stock photos of people helps sort out what, today, is usefully “feminist.”
shaking hands, walking the dog, and doing If feminism is in fact the struggle against sexist
laundry. The pictures are rated as either “repre- oppression, and not merely a thousand little
senting feminism” or “problematic.” paths toward women’s personal fulfillment, we
With no sense of what feminism is, these can orient ourselves toward struggles that not
writers turn to personal experience. With each only benefit large numbers of women, but high-
step and gesture, they wonder what they’re con- light the ways in which uncompensated labor
tributing to feminism. Is navel-gazing feminist? shapes the meaning of what it is to be female.
Let us borrow a definition from bell Consider a movement rarely discussed in
hooks: feminism is the struggle to end sexist terms of feminism, certainly not in the Atlan-
oppression. tic. Domestic Workers United (dwu ) is “an
It cannot be about this or that group of wom- organization of Caribbean, Latina, and African
en’s ability to have careers or about individual nannies, housekeepers, and elderly caregivers
moments of empowerment while doing laundry. in New York, organizing for power, respect, fair
Feminist movements have long suffered from labor standards and to help build a movement
the disconnect between white middle-class to end exploitation and oppression for all.” They
feminism, often focused myopically on certain recently pushed a Domestic Workers Bill of
careers and lifestyle choices, and the goals of Rights through the New York State Legislature
working-class women. The “Wages for House- against all expectations.
work” demands of 1970s Marxist feminists dwu allies with unions, but it isn’t a union.
sought to make women’s uncompensated labor Its members know that their labor is brutally
under capitalism visible whether the woman exploited because of the sexist assumption
was a bourgeois housewife, a factory worker, or that care work done in the home is an act of
a poor mother. Since capital requires the love and shouldn’t be subject to such crass
housewife to reproduce the worker, they argued, impositions as labor standards. Employers of
this need dictates the role of women up and domestic workers frequently refer to these
down the class system. workers as “part of the family” – meaning, as

S U M M E R 2012 • J A C O B I N 84
always, that women in the kitchen don’t need campaign. Once care work across social strata
to be compensated. The dwu is fighting to gain is considered real work, radical compensatory
recognition for labor that has been historically mechanisms become imaginable, most notably
pushed from public view again and again. an unconditional basic income. That demand
The plight of the 1970s housewife and that of is intrinsically feminist because it recognizes
the domestic worker are not the same, but they the domestic work vital to the reproduction of
are linked. It is an ideological sleight of hand labor power.
that renders care workers “part of the family” Wages for Housework insisted that labor did
instead of properly paid employees, in much not mystically become love by virtue of
the way that Marxist feminists described house- occurring within the household. And members
wives as arbitrarily uncompensated for their of the dwu are converting what has been a
contributions to the economy. The domestic tactical weakness – the invisibility of female
workers’ movement, located in the most rapidly labor – into a demand for power and recogni-
growing sector of the US labor market, has the tion. If the feminism of the future is about
power to address the way un(der)compensated more than bloggers watching Girls, it will have
work underwrites the global economy by caring to directly address how sexism enables the
for the sick, young, and old. exploitation of women today, and draw on the
The dwu ’s struggle serves a similar reve- rich tradition of fighting for the recognition of
latory function to the Wages for Housework women’s work. ¢

85 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012
DONATE
DONATE
1 . WE D O N’ T UND E R STAND LIB EL LAW.

2. O UR LAWY E R S D O N’ T EITHER.

3 . WE ’ D LI K E T O T R AD E IN PB R FOR CHA MPA G NE.

4 . WE WO N’ T SE ND Y O U A TOTE B A G .

5 . WE WI LL SE ND Y O U A HOLIDAY CA RD,

6 . AND PO SSI BLY SO ME B A KED G OODS.

7 . WE ’ R E AN I ND E PE ND ENT LEFTIST MA G A Z INE.

8. I N C O LO R .

9 . WI TH PR E T TY PI CT UR ES.

1 0 . T HI S I S AN E XCE LLE NT WAY TO LA U NDER MON EY.

http://jacobinmag.com/donate/
“C. L
  . [S ULZBERG ER] WA S TH E
S UM M ATION , THE P L ATO N I C
I D E A L O F WHAT F OR EI GN
CO M M EN TARY IS AL L A BOUT,
N AM E LY TO FIRE VO L L EY A FTER
VOL L E Y OF CLIC HÉ I N TO TH E
D E N S E LY PAC KED P R EJUD I C ES OF
HI S R E ADERS.”


— A L E X A NDER COC K B U R N
( 194 1 –2012)

87 J A C O B I N • S U M M E R 2012

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