There is no danger that the
protesters who have occupied squares, parks and plazas across the nation in
defiance of the corporate state will be co-opted by the Democratic Party or
groups like MoveOn. The faux
liberal reformers, whose abject failure to stand up for the rights of the poor
and the working class, have signed on to this movement because they fear
becoming irrelevant. Union leaders, who pull down salaries five times that of
the rank and file as they bargain away rights and benefits, know the
foundations are shaking. So do Democratic politicians from Barack Obama to
Nancy Pelosi. So do the array of “liberal” groups and institutions, including
the press, that have worked to funnel discontented voters back into the swamp
of electoral politics and mocked those who called for profound structural
reform.
Resistance, real resistance,
to the corporate state was displayed when a couple of thousand protesters,
clutching mops and brooms, early Friday morning forced the owners of Zuccotti
Park and the New York City police to back down from a proposed attempt to expel
them in order to “clean” the premises. These protesters in that one glorious
moment did what the traditional “liberal” establishment has steadily refused to
do—fight back. And it was deeply moving to watch the corporate rats scamper
back to their holes on Wall Street. It lent a whole new meaning to the phrase
“too big to fail.”
Tinkering with the corporate
state will not work. We will either be plunged into neo-feudalism and environmental
catastrophe or we will wrest power from corporate hands. This radical message,
one that demands a reversal of the corporate coup, is one the power elite,
including the liberal class, is desperately trying to thwart. But the liberal
class has no credibility left. It collaborated with corporate lobbyists to
neglect the rights of tens of millions of Americans, as well as the innocents
in our imperial wars. The best that liberals can do is sheepishly pretend this
is what they wanted all along. Groups such as MoveOn and organized labor will
find themselves without a constituency unless they at least pay lip service to
the protests. The Teamsters’ arrival Friday morning to help defend the park
signaled an infusion of this new radicalism into moribund unions rather than a
co-opting of the protest movement by the traditional liberal establishment. The
union bosses, in short, had no choice.
The Occupy Wall Street
movement, like all radical movements, has obliterated the narrow political
parameters. It proposes something new. It will not make concessions with
corrupt systems of corporate power. It holds fast to moral imperatives
regardless of the cost. It confronts authority out of a sense of
responsibility. It is not interested in formal positions of power. It is not
seeking office. It is not trying to get people to vote. It has no resources. It
can’t carry suitcases of money to congressional offices or run millions of
dollars of advertisements. All it can do is ask us to use our bodies and
voices, often at personal risk, to fight back. It has no other way of defying
the corporate state. This rebellion creates a real community instead of a managed
or virtual one. It affirms our dignity. It permits us to become free and
independent human beings.
Martin Luther King was
repeatedly betrayed by liberal supporters, especially when he began to
challenge economic forms of discrimination, which demanded that liberals,
rather than simply white Southern racists, begin to make sacrifices. King too
was a radical. He would not compromise on nonviolence, racism or justice. He
understood that movements—such as the Liberty Party, which fought slavery, the
suffragists, who fought for women’s rights, the labor movement and the civil
rights movement—have always been the true correctives in American democracy.
None of those movements achieved formal political power. But by holding fast to
moral imperatives they made the powerful fear them. King knew that racial
equality was impossible without economic justice and an end to militarism. And
he had no intention of ceding to the demands of the liberal establishment that
called on him to be calm and patience. “For years, I labored with the idea of
reforming the existing institutions in the South, a little change here, a
little change there,” King said shortly before he was assassinated. “Now I feel
quite differently. I think you’ve got to have a reconstruction of the entire system,
a revolution of values.”
King was killed in 1968 when
he was in Memphis
to support a strike by sanitation workers. By then he had begun to say that his
dream, the one that the corporate state has frozen into a few safe clichés from
his 1963 speech in Washington, had turned into a nightmare. King called at the
end of his life for massive federal funds to rebuild inner cities, what he
called “a radical redistribution of economic and political power,” a complete
restructuring of “the architecture of American society.” He grasped that the
inequities of capitalism had become the instrument by which the poor would
always remain poor. “Call it democracy, or call it democratic socialism,” King
said, “but there must be a better distribution of wealth within this country
for all of God’s children.” On the eve of King’s murder he was preparing to
organize a poor people’s march on Washington, D.C., designed to cause “major,
massive dislocations,” a nonviolent demand by the poor, including the white
underclass, for a system of economic equality. It would be 43 years before his
vision was realized by an eclectic group of protesters who gathered before the
gates of Wall Street.
The truth of America is
understood only when you listen to voices in our impoverished rural enclaves,
prisons and the urban slums, when you hear the words of our unemployed, those
who have lost their homes or cannot pay their medical bills, our elderly and
our children, especially the quarter of the nation’s children who depend on
food stamps to eat, and all who are marginalized. There is more reality
expressed about the American experience by the debt-burdened young men and
women protesting in the parks than by all the chatter of the well-paid pundits
and experts that pollutes the airwaves.
What kind of nation is it
that spends far more to kill enemy combatants and Afghan and Iraqi civilians
than it does to help its own citizens who live below the poverty line? What
kind of nation is it that permits corporations to hold sick children hostage while
their parents frantically bankrupt themselves to save their sons and daughters?
What kind of nation is it that tosses its mentally ill onto urban heating
grates? What kind of nation is it that abandons its unemployed while it loots
its treasury on behalf of speculators? What kind of nation is it that ignores
due process to torture and assassinate its own citizens? What kind of nation is
it that refuses to halt the destruction of the ecosystem by the fossil fuel
industry, dooming our children and our children’s children?
“America,” Langston Hughes
wrote, “never was America to me.”
“The black vote mean
[nothing],” the rapper
Nas intones. “Who you gunna elect/ Satan or Satan? In the hood nothing is
changing,/ We aint got no choices.”
Or listen to hip-hop artist
Talib Kweli: “Back in the ’60s, there was a big push for black … politicians,
and now we have more than we ever had before, but our communities are so much
worse. A lot of people died for us to vote, I’m aware of that history, but
these politicians are not in touch with people at all. Politics is not the
truth to me, it’s an illusion.”
The liberal class functions
in a traditional, capitalist democracy as a safety valve. It lets off enough
steam to keep the system intact. It makes piecemeal and incremental reform
possible. This is what happened during the Great Depression and the New Deal.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s greatest achievement was that he saved capitalism.
Liberals in a functioning capitalist democracy are at the same time tasked with
discrediting radicals, whether it is King, especially after he denounced the
war in Vietnam, or later Noam Chomsky or Ralph Nader.
The stupidity of the
corporate state is that it thought it could dispense with the liberal class. It
thought it could shut off that safety valve in order to loot and pillage with
no impediments. Corporate power forgot that the liberal class, when it
functions, gives legitimacy to the power elite. And the reduction of the
liberal class to silly courtiers, who have nothing to offer but empty rhetoric,
meant that the growing discontent found other mechanisms and outlets. Liberals
were reduced to stick figures, part of an elaborate pantomime, as they acted in
preordained roles to give legitimacy to meaningless and useless political
theater. But that game is over.
Human history has amply
demonstrated that once those in positions of power become redundant and
impotent, yet retain the trappings and privileges of power, they are brutally
discarded. The liberal class, which insists on clinging to its positions of
privilege while at the same time refusing to play its traditional role within
the democratic state, has become a useless and despised appendage of corporate
power. And as the engines of corporate power pollute and poison the ecosystem
and propel us into a world where there will be only masters and serfs, the
liberal class, which serves no purpose in the new configuration, is being
abandoned and discarded by both the corporate state and radical dissidents. The
best it can do is to attach itself meekly to the new political configuration
rising up to replace it.
An ineffectual liberal class
means there is no hope of a correction or a reversal through the formal
mechanisms of power. It ensures that the frustration and anger among the
working and the middle class will find expression now in these protests that
lie outside the confines of democratic institutions and the civilities of a
liberal democracy. By emasculating the liberal class, which once ensured that
restive citizens could institute moderate reforms, the corporate state has
created a closed system defined by polarization, gridlock and political
charades. It has removed the veneer of virtue and goodness that the liberal
class offered to the power elite.
Liberal institutions,
including the church, the press, the university, the Democratic Party, the arts
and labor unions, set the parameters for limited self-criticism in a
functioning democracy as well as small, incremental reforms. The liberal class
is permitted to decry the worst excesses of power and champion basic human
rights while at the same time endowing systems of power with a morality and
virtue it does not possess. Liberals posit themselves as the conscience of the
nation. They permit us, through their appeal to public virtues and the public
good, to see ourselves and our state as fundamentally good.
But the liberal class, by
having refused to question the utopian promises of unfettered capitalism and
globalization and by condemning those who did, severed itself from the roots of
creative and bold thought, the only forces that could have prevented the
liberal class from merging completely with the power elite. The liberal class,
which at once was betrayed and betrayed itself, has no role left to play in the
battle between us and corporate dominance. All hope lies now with those in the
street.
Liberals lack the vision and
fortitude to challenge dominant free market ideologies. They have no
ideological alternatives even as the Democratic Party openly betrays every
principle the liberal class claims to espouse, from universal health care to an
end to our permanent war economy to a demand for quality and affordable public
education to a return of civil liberties to a demand for jobs and welfare of
the working class. The corporate state forced the liberal class to join in the
nation’s death march that began with the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Liberals
such as Bill Clinton, for corporate money, accelerated the dismantling of our
manufacturing base, the gutting of our regulatory agencies, the destruction of
our social service programs and the empowerment of speculators who have trashed
our economy. The liberal class, stripped of power, could only retreat into its
atrophied institutions, where it busied itself with the boutique activism of
political correctness and embraced positions it had previously condemned.
Russell Jacoby writes:
“The left once dismissed the market as exploitative; it now honors the market
as rational and humane. The left once disdained mass culture as exploitative;
now it celebrates it as rebellious. The left once honored independent
intellectuals as courageous; now it sneers at them as elitist. The left once
rejected pluralism as superficial; now it worships it as profound. We are
witnessing not simply a defeat of the left, but its conversion and perhaps
inversion.”
Hope in this age of bankrupt
capitalism comes with the return of the language of class conflict and
rebellion, language that has been purged from the lexicon of the liberal class,
language that defines this new movement. This does not mean we have to agree
with Karl Marx, who advocated violence and whose worship of the state as a
utopian mechanism led to another form of enslavement of the working class, but
we have to learn again to speak in the vocabulary Marx employed. We have to
grasp, as Marx and Adam Smith did, that corporations are not concerned with the
common good. They exploit, pollute, impoverish, repress, kill and lie to make
money. They throw poor families out of homes, let the uninsured die, wage
useless wars to make profits, poison and pollute the ecosystem, slash social
assistance programs, gut public education, trash the global economy, plunder
the U.S. Treasury and crush all popular movements that seek justice for working
men and women. They worship money and power. And, as Marx knew, unfettered
capitalism is a revolutionary force that consumes greater and greater numbers
of human lives until it finally consumes itself. The dead zone in
the Gulf of Mexico is the perfect metaphor for the corporate state. It is part
of the same nightmare experienced in postindustrial mill towns of New England
and the abandoned steel mills of Ohio. It is a nightmare that Iraqis,
Pakistanis and Afghans, living in terror and mourning their dead, endure daily.
What took place early Friday
morning in Zuccotti Park was the first salvo in a long struggle for justice. It
signaled a step backward by the corporate state in the face of popular
pressure. And it was carried out by ordinary men and women who sleep at night
on concrete, get soaked in rainstorms, eat donated food and have nothing as
weapons but their dignity, resilience and courage. It is they, and they alone,
who hold out the possibility of salvation. And if we join them we might have a
chance.
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