"what liberalism has become" ?

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  • #48329
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Excerpt of a blog-article below, and a reference to a Karp book,
    …and a book review of T.Frank’s book on Liberalism.

    Fwiw.

    w
    v

    ———————-
    What Liberalism Has Become
    Liberalism, an endlessly perplexing beast. What exactly is it?

    What Liberalism Has Become


    ……This liberal class is the focus of Thomas Frank’s new book: Listen, Liberal. I read some of it, but I quickly realized it wasn’t a book I needed to read. I’m already familiar with the subject.
    It’s not new territory. Still, it’s important as it is presenting the issues in an accessible form that is getting widespread public attention at a time when it is needed more than ever. It’s part of a debate that finally is entering mainstream awareness….
    My curiosity was more about the response to Frank’s book. It’s only been out a couple of months and already has hundreds of reviews available online. One review that interested me is by Wojtek Sokolowski, “Excellent yet wanting“. One thing that the reviewer clarifies for me is that, despite his criticisms of the liberal class, Frank is coming at it from a liberal angle of attack. He isn’t a radical left-winger opining on the failures of liberalism. Rather, he is a disgruntled liberal. There are limitations to the liberal analysis of liberalism, as the reviewer points out….
    ….
    ….bibliography misses a rather obscure, to be sure, work by Walter Karp titled “Indispensable Enemies”. This book attempts to answer the same question as Frank’s work does – why the US political parties do not represent the interests of their constituents –
    https://www.amazon.com/Indispensable-Enemies-Politics-Misrule-America/dp/1879957132/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1468093562&sr=1-1&keywords=indispensable+enemies

    ============================
    https://www.amazon.com/review/R3ETZ5R2AK9B1D/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B012N992EK
    9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
    Excellent yet wanting, May 9, 2016
    By
    Wojtek Sokolowski

    This review is from: Listen, Liberal: Or, What Ever Happened to the Party of the People? (Kindle Edition)
    In this book the author takes another stab at one of the biggest paradoxes of American politics – why the political parties in the US do not represent the interests of their largest constituencies. The short answer that Frank gives to this question is “betrayal of the working and the middle classes” by the leadership of both parties. His previous work that gained international recognition, “What is the Matter with Kansas?” explores the process of capturing the “angry white voters” by the Republican Party leaders by manipulating anti-elite feelings (anti-liberal elite, to be more exact) of this group of voters. In this book, he extends his exploration to trace how that group of voters was pushed away from the Democratic Party that used to represent their interests under the “New Deal” arrangement.

    Frank traces the roots of this process to the Vietnam War era struggles, when the anti-war protests created a rift within the party between the pro-war blue collar labor and their unions and the anti-war students and intellectuals. The loss of the 1968 election to Richard Nixon sent the Democratic Party leadership on a long soul searching quest, in which the new social forces represented by professional and academic elites wrestled the control of the party from the labor unions and tied it to the socio-economic classes created by the “New Economy” – financial professionals and information technology specialists. This process was finalized by Clinton administration that performed one of the most spectacular turn-arounds in modern American history –the open abandonment of social protections favoring the poor and passage of the free trade agreement that eliminated large number of well-paying blue collar jobs (which the Clinton administration called “counter-scheduling”) coupled with deregulation of financial markets that opened the door for financial speculation, and massive subsidies for “innovation economy,” that is, information technology and big pharma.

    These policies continued under Obama administration, which abandoned the campaign promise of “hope” for the notion of “pragmatism,” which according to Frank is a subterfuge masquerading policy choices favoring the elites as historical or technological inevitability. Despite his pro-working and middle class rhetoric, Obama filled his administration with experts of one particular mold – graduates of elite universities. In sharp contrast to FDR, who picked experts from various backgrounds, often representing unorthodox opinions, Obama’s “expertocracy” was the paragon of professional orthodoxy and right thinking. Frank explains this selection of experts by Obama, and Clinton’s, own personal histories – both men were of humble origins and propelled to the top of social hierarchy by elite university education.

    Social science explanations of historical evens range between two polar opposites – voluntaristic and deterministic. The voluntaristic narratives, also known as “great men history”, attribute the causes of the events they try to explain to the preferences and choices made by individuals, especially those in leadership positions. The deterministic narratives, by contrast focus on impersonal factors – institutions, international relations, modes of production, natural events and the like that set the stage and define the roles for individual actors to play. Of course, in reality both factors must be taken into account. As Karl Marx aptly observed “Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past.”

    Frank’s narrative falls on the voluntaristic side. His explanation of why the Democratic Party does not represent the interests of its largest constituency is grounded in the moral judgment of its leadership. The judgment that prefers “meritocracy” or social hierarchy built on the claim to superiority based on (actual or claimed) knowledge to social solidarity, which is the underlying principle of organized labor. The remedy that Frank offers is voluntaristic as well – it explicitly denies the possibility of any change in the US political party structure and calls for a moral transformation of party leadership consisting in the abandonment of the sense of moral superiority linked to college credentials.

    For someone who spent his entire adult life in the academia, Frank’s analysis certainly rings true. This institution is filled with “stuffed shirts” who raise to the top by becoming adept in what passes for “right thinking” at the moment, hiding their lack of originality under obscure technical jargon, and collecting handsome rent from their credentials, titles, and positions. Allowing this bunch near the halls of power can indeed be risky. As William F. Buckley quipped “I’d rather entrust the government of the United States to the first 400 people listed in the Boston telephone directory than to the faculty of Harvard University.” Yet this moral explanation and moral remedy that Frank offers is somewhat disappointing when we consider the fact that similar transformations occurred in socialist and social democratic parties in many European countries as well. This coincidence cannot be simply explained by the change of heart of the people leading those parties. We must look into the structural determinants.

    What structural elements are missing from Frank’s narrative, then? One clue can be found in his bibliography – despite impressive documentation of his claims, his bibliography misses a rather obscure, to be sure, work by Walter Karp titled “Indispensable Enemies”. This book attempts to answer the same question as Frank’s work does – why the US political parties do not represent the interests of their constituents – but the answer it provides emphasizes the structure of the party system rather than preferences of their leaders. Karp’s explanation is a variant of what is known as Robert Michels’ “iron law of oligarchy” which in essence claims that the leadership of an institution is first and foremost concerned about its own power within the institution rather than the power of the institution itself. In case of US political parties, the party bosses are more concerned with keeping their control of their respective parties than with winning elections, and they tacitly cooperate by excluding any challenge to their leadership by dividing up their respective turfs in which they maintain their respective monopolies. Paradoxical as it may sound, such behavior is well known outside politics where it is referred to as oligopoly or niche seeking.

    Karp’s thesis offers a much better explanation of the abandonment of the working class and middle class constituents by both parties than the preference for meritocracy claimed by Frank. Even from Frank’s own account of the Democratic Party’s ‘soul searching’ in the aftermath of Humphrey’s defeat in 1968 it is evident that that the emerging party leadership was not afraid of losing a series of elections (McGovern, Mondale, Dukakis) before they could cement their hold on the party under Clinton. Clearly, a party whose leadership’s main goal is to win elections would not make such a cardinal mistake as losing elections for 20 consecutive years by abandoning their core constituency. Likewise, Obama’s abandonment of the “hope” promise led to a spectacular loss of both houses of Congress and numerous state legislatures, but that did not persuade the party leadership to change the course. Au contraire, they are determined to keep the course and undermine any challenge to the party leadership (cf. Sanders). This is not the behavior of a general who wants to win a war (cf. Robert E. Lee), but of one who wants to keep his position in his own army (cf. George Brinton McClellan).

    Taking into account Karp’s explanation of partisan politics would also offer a far more dramatic finale for Frank’s book. Instead pleading for a moral change in the existing party leadership, a more effective solution would be to replace that leadership with a new one by using the same gambit of counter-scheduling as Clinton did against labor, and voting against Hillary Clinton in November. That would surely result in the electoral loss for the Democrats in the coming election, but it would certainly help to wrestle the control of the party from the leaders who “betrayed” their main constituents. Perhaps this is not the road that Frank, and many life-long Democrats for that matter, are willing to travel, but it certainly makes a better and more uplifting story – one that gives the downtrodden masses, whose side Frank takes, a promise of doing something about the problem instead of pleading their superiors, hat in hand, for a change of heart.

    • This topic was modified 8 years, 4 months ago by Avatar photowv.
    #48336
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    In sharp contrast to FDR, who picked experts from various backgrounds, often representing unorthodox opinions, Obama’s “expertocracy” was the paragon of professional orthodoxy and right thinking.

    Yeah, I came to the conclusion years ago that if I was president, I would stock at least half of my cabinet with people who don’t agree with me. Maybe not the cabinet, but…you know…advisers. I would want to argue with people who believe something else, and if I think I win the argument, then I do whatever that thing is. And if I think I lose the argument, then I don’t. I cannot understand presidents who surround themselves with Yes Men. I would offer bnw a spot in the White House, for sure.

    Karp’s explanation is a variant of what is known as Robert Michels’ “iron law of oligarchy” which in essence claims that the leadership of an institution is first and foremost concerned about its own power within the institution rather than the power of the institution itself. In case of US political parties, the party bosses are more concerned with keeping their control of their respective parties than with winning elections….

    Deborah. Wasserman. Schultz.

    And Howard Dean, and Harry Reid, and Barney Fucking Frank. And I could go on.

    #48345
    bnw
    Blocked

    I cannot understand presidents who surround themselves with Yes Men. I would offer bnw a spot in the White House, for sure.

    I would be honored. Of course I would request permission to participate via some secure teleconferencing set up since all that dope smoking in cabinet meetings would be tough on my lungs. As for your State of the Union speeches I wouldn’t mind being the designated survivor either.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #48347
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I cannot understand presidents who surround themselves with Yes Men. I would offer bnw a spot in the White House, for sure.

    I would be honored. Of course I would request permission to participate via some secure teleconferencing set up since all that dope smoking in cabinet meetings would be tough on my lungs. As for your State of the Union speeches I wouldn’t mind being the designated survivor either.

    LOL.

    You got it. Consider the conditions met.

    #48357
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Thanks for the article, WV.

    Speaking of Walter Karp. I read his excellent Liberty Under Siege, and highly recommend it.

    Karp, Walter (1993). Liberty Under Siege: American Politics 1976–1988. New York: Franklin Square Press. ISBN 1-879957-11-6.

    And the book that pointed me in its direction, George Scialabba’s What are Intellectuals Good For. To me, it’s a must-read, especially for leftists.

    (I’ve had discussions online with Scialabba. He has a very sharp mind, and a good heart. Good sense of humor as well.)

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 4 months ago by Avatar photoBilly_T.
    • This reply was modified 8 years, 4 months ago by Avatar photoBilly_T.
    #48362
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    And the book that pointed me in its direction, George Scialabba’s What are Intellectuals Good For. To me, it’s a must-read, especially for leftists.

    (I’ve had discussions online with Scialabba. He has a very sharp mind, and a good heart. Good sense of humor as well.)

    ==================
    He has a favorite quote section.
    http://www.georgescialabba.net/mt/

    If i were lord of this kingdom, everyone would be required
    to have a favorite-quote section.

    Some of his:

    “And left-wing people are always sad because they mind dreadfully about their causes, and the causes are always going so badly.”
    Nancy Mitford, The Pursuit of Love
    ——-
    Heaven is where the police are British, the chefs Italian, the mechanics German, the lovers French, and it’s all organized by the Swiss.
    Hell is where the police are German, the chefs British, the mechanics French, the lovers Swiss, and it’s all organized by the Italians.
    Anonymous
    ——-
    I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger, even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly-wise race, to put it that way, has come in and taken their place.”
    Winston Churchill, 1937, on the Arab inhabitants of Palestine.
    —-

    Liberty is so much latitude as the powerful choose to accord to the weak.
    Judge Learned Hand
    —-

    When [government] regulation, therefore, is in favor of the workmen, it is always just and equitable; but it is sometimes otherwise when in favor of the masters.
    Adam Smith
    —–

    The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact; non-Westerners never do.
    Samuel P. Huntington

    While this America settles in the mould of its vulgarity, heavily thickening
    to empire
    And protest, only a bubble in the molten mass, pops and sighs out, and the
    mass hardens,
    I sadly smiling remember that the flower fades to make fruit, the fruit rots
    to make earth.
    Robinson Jeffers – “Shine, Perishing Republic”

    ————
    The buying of more books than one can peradventure read is nothing less than the soul reaching toward infinity.
    A.E. Newton

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