Bernie Sanders, Democratic Socialism, and the Other America - Part II
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By Edward Martin and Mateo Pimentel, Axis of Logic
Axis of Logic
Tuesday, Feb 23, 2016
The Legacy of Michael
Harrington, Hillary Clinton, and the Marxist Critique
Part II of V (find Part I here, Part III here, Part IV here, Part V here)
In 1962, Michael Harrington wrote The Other America, which basically identified the causes of poverty
and inequality in the United States as the result of unregulated free market capitalism. This book in
turn had a significant impact on the thinking
of John F. Kennedy and the role of government in promoting greater social justice. But it was the Johnson Administration and the War on Poverty
programs (Medicaid, Medicare, Food Stamps,
Expanded Social Security
Benefits, etc.) that followed
the
Kennedy Administration’s lead.
What the Johnson
Administration did was
address the issuesfacing The Other America, such as the fact that the economic
system in the United States had created
two
parallel Americas: one in which
socialism existed for
the
rich; and where
individualistic capitalism existed for
the
poor. Harrington further argued that this bi-polar arrangement was destroying not only the foundations of the US economy but the very foundation
of civil society. And
it was MLK, influenced by Vincent Harding and James Cone, who echoed this in
his 1967 speech against the Vietnam War, arguing that racial justice and
economic justice must not be separated from the other in promoting global
social justice.
In The Other America, Harrington drew on three major sources to support
his argument on two Americas: statistical analysis of current
trends in poverty; critiques of the market economy by way of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle; and the penetrating historical analysis
by historian Edward Bellamy in Looking
Backward: 2000-1887, a penetrating critique of the Gilded Age. But what people did not know at the time of the publication of The Other America, was
that Harrington was a socialist
–
a “democratic socialist” – and founding member of the Democratic
Socialists of America (DSA). The DSA argued that the Democratic Party was held captive by its clientele,
the
wealthy and elite in America, and that it had
become unresponsive to the
rights of labor, increasing
poverty, inequality, and
racism in America.
In fact, the Democratic Party
and
the Republican Party were becoming increasingly similar
according to the DSA. Yet, it was Harrington
and others on the New Left,
such
as the scholars
at the New School
for Social Research, and the
critical social theorists such
as
Herbert Marcuse and Jürgen
Habermas, and Marxists such as Paul Sweezy, Paul Baran and
Harry Magdoff, who argued that the structural
nature of capitalist arrangements fomented class conflict
and class warfare. In fact, Harrington,
along with these other scholars, argued that intrinsic to competitive market capitalism is an
ongoing struggle between labor and capital, profit maximization over labor, and
the liberal right to private property to the exclusion and marginalization of
labor. Systemic poverty
was no longer a random phenomenon beyond human understanding,
and
Harrington had made
this form of economic
analysis de riguer within academic
and journalistic settings. Even
in his appearances on William F. Buckley’s
Firing
Line, Harrington consistently
argued not only for the moral grounding
of a just economy but also its sound
economic sense. And all of this had a huge impact on a young Bernie Sanders.
Sanders is one of these DSA styled socialists, not the type that promotes a state
run system that owns and controls
the means of production and every aspect of people’s lives. Far from the raging Bolsheviks and Trotskyites at
the turn of the twentieth century, Sanders has explained
his version of DSA style socialism
on numerous media outlets over the years. So the media know well what he is all about.
He has a public record. His position is clear,
and
his untiring explanation
of his DSA position is basically
a repeat of The Other America, which calls for
economic rights in a democratic society,
exactly what FDR called for in his Economic
Bill of Rights. And if the market cannot accommodate these rights,
then the government of the United States, or
any
democratic government for that matter, has a moral duty to provide
fundamental human needs
as economic rights. This is exactly
the same form of social
democracy that has developed in the Scandinavian countries, Canada,
New
Zealand, etc., and it is amazingly
similar to what the Catholic Church prescribed in 1965, at the end of Vatican II in a document titled
Gaudium
et Spes (Church
in the Modern World).
Jesuit Theologian Daniel
O’Hanlon and Vatican observer
Gary MacEoin have argued that Harrington’s The Other America not only
influenced Pope John XXIII,
who commenced
the
Vatican II Council in 1962, but
also Pope Paul VI, who concluded
the
Council in 1965. What an interesting parallel between Harrington of the DSA,
and some savvy popes
who understood that the common good on a global
scale demanded a social mortgage.
Fast forward
to
2016
As a result of the Great Recession
in 2008, most Americans today have literally
struggled for
their economic lives in one way or another. The manifestations have been felt painfully in wage-reductions, job loss, depleted 401K accounts,
raided pensions, short sales on
homes, foreclosures on
homes, survival credit card debt, financial bankruptcy, healthcare bankruptcy, family
financial stress, repossessions,
economic and emotional scars of
the
phony war in the Middle East, soldier deaths,
wounded veterans, etc. At the same time,
billionaires and the 1% have been doing
better than ever with record
economic growth, publicly funded bailouts of corporations, and multibillion dollar tax breaks to boot. In contrast,
the pain that everyday people have experienced is real.
But the only political
candidate today that seems to have identified
this devastation and translated it into real political issues of substance is Bernie Sanders. He has tapped into this pain and has thus been able to pound
away on some of the most pressing policy issues of our time. Sanders has continually repeated the chorus of
injustices that people have experienced
as
a direct result of the billionaire conquest of our
democratic society and the financial destruction
of the middle class. Suffice it to say,
the
poor and underclass in America have
almost completely slipped under the radar. The result of this has
been that two different
Americas have re-emerged, and the use of the term “re-emerged” is intentional here because this has all happened before in the history
of the US.
Not a single-issue
candidate
In addition
to the class conflict-warfare theme underlying Bernie Sanders
political campaign (which is really what Citizens
United and campaign finance reform is all about) are several
other related issues. Bernie Sanders opposed the Iraq War Authorization,
Wall
Street Bailout (TARP), Patriot
Act 2001, Patriot
Act Reauthorization 2006, Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP),
Death Penalty, Keystone XL Pipeline, Border Fence Legislation 2006, and Offshore Oil Drilling.
He supports: breaking
up big banks; reauthorizing
Glass-Steagall; and rescinding Citizens
United and the corporate takeover of democracy in the US. He opposed the Brady bill simply because it made owners of gun shops criminally liable for
guns they sold to
non-criminals. But the key point is this: Sanders understands the human
economic tragedy suffered as a result of the 1%.
Bernie Sanders has a movement going that will not be stopped,
regardless of whether or not the media provide a shallow
analysis of his campaign.
Even if he is not elected president of the United States, his influence will
carry on because the issues are like raw wounds, compounded by Citizens United
undermining of legitimate democratic governance. What constitutes illegitimate
governance is corporate money paid to congressmen, congresswomen, and senators,
in order to do the business of big business as a priority, not the people’s
business.*
What the establishment elites and media want desperately
to avoid is the class conflict-warfare
theme underlying all of
this. Republican presidential
candidate Chris Christie mentioned at a recent Republican debate, February 8,
2016, that raising taxes on millionaires is “a failed idea and a failed policy;
it’s class warfare.” Imagine that! The rich are now being oppressed! So
the establishment plays victim and wants to avoid any
historical narrative
of actual life-and-death struggles that took place throughout the history
of the United States,
resulting from class conflict-warfare,
and
tragically, to which the United States is reverting. This narrative is becoming
uncomfortably reminiscent. Big business, government, military, bureaucracy, and
the
money media (military-industrial-bureaucratic-media complex)
do not want a systematic analysis of the economic
issues and the underlying causes of poverty and inequality taking place in the United States.
After all, why would they
jeopardize their profit margins?
Their bottom line is profits,
and they want to make sure
their profit margins
are steadily increasing. They do not want a systemic analysis
of stagnant wages by American workers over
the
past forty years or trade
deals leveraged on developing
countries and fast-tracked fascist style through
Congress as is the TPP. Yet, imagine if The Other America, “war on poverty”
safety nets were missing
when the Great Recession hit. Robert Reich has argued that the reason
it was a Great Recession, and not another Great Depression, was precisely because The Other America, “war on poverty”
“socialist” public policies were in
place. Absent these socialist
strategies, the economic damage
would have been catastrophic. Other economists,
such as Richard Wolff, Stephen Resnick,
and John Roemer, argue that the safety
net might already
be a thing of the past.
The ironic tragedy is that this has a boomerang effect on the rich themselves
if workers themselves are unable to purchase or consume. Henry Ford understood
this effect. Workers need to spend. If
not he would soon be out of business. Hauntingly, Marx and Engels’
prediction in the Communist Manifesto has become increasingly significant in that the bourgeoisie produces “its own gravediggers.”
So, what is really
the heart and soul of The Other America? What are the underlying principles that made this analysis by Michael
Harrington, and
embedded in Bernie Sanders, so incredibly insightful? To start, it will be helpful
to draw on some economists and their conceptual frameworks as the foundation
for The Other America. For example,
John Kenneth Galbraith and
Robert Heilbroner have argued
that since capitalism has
become an oligopoly, the entire system was in essence “too big to fail.” That is where that idea originates. Failure was not an
option since the system would collapse on everyone.
New Left critics
like C. Wright Mills and Herbert
Marcuse have argued that the “market” invariably tends toward crisis, which
is only satiated in warfare.
Could this be why some US
military generals are calling for women to now register
for the draft? Marxists
further argued that the fundamental tendency built into the very
nature of capital accumulation
is toward the crisis of overproduction
and under-consumption, forcing the economic system known today as market capitalism to invariably work against
its own interests. The result: economic collapse.
John
Maynard Keynes argued
that this could be prevented
and effectively managed through public policy;
however, Harrington was not convinced
of this at all. His vision was one of a democratic economy
where workers were co-owners of the means of production,
not simply as a right in that they create the “surplus value,” but that it also
makes good economic sense for workers and business in maintaining a healthy
economy. The operative presupposition: the more workers make the more they spend
to keep the economy healthy. Higher financial returns to shareholders do not
necessarily guarantee this.
* See some of the relevant research published by Larry Bartels, Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of
the New Guilded Age, Princeton University Press, 2008; Benjamin Page and
Lawrence Jacobs, Class War? What
Americans Really Think About Economic Inequality, University of Chicago
Press, 2009; Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page, “Testing Theories of American
Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens,” Perspectives on Politics, 2014, 564-581; and Edward Martin, “Oligarchy,
Anarchy, and Social Justice,” Contemporary
Justice Review, 2015, 55-67.
Edward
Martin is Professor of Public Policy and Administration, Graduate
Center for Public Policy and Administration at California State
University, Long Beach, and co-author of Savage State: Welfare Capitalism and Inequality.
Mateo Pimentel is an Axis of Logic columnist, living on the US-Mexico border. Read the Biography and additional articles by Axis Columnist Mateo Pimentel.
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