There once was a land that now seems from long ago and
far away. In that society, the inhabitants
had endured an evil period with a long war and an extended period of economic
deprivation. They learned the hard way
that a healthy and robust society requires a sense of community in which the
concept of “the common good” reigns.
This society organized itself in such a way that the weak and the
unlucky were not allowed to suffer too much and the strong and the lucky were
not allowed to profit too much from their circumstances. However, the strong and lucky, before the
evil times, had used their circumstances to increase their wealth far beyond
that of the majority of the people. They
would eventually want to return to their previous position of wealth and power.
Daniel T. Rodgers, in his book Age of Fracture, has documented
the means by which the wealthy and the lucky would transform society from one
focused on the common good to one focused on the individual good.
“In this reading of late-twentieth
century U.S. history, the key to the age was the conscious efforts of
conservative intellectuals and their institutional sponsors to reshape not only
the terms of political debate but the mechanics of intellectual production
itself. By the late 1970s, Nixon’s
former secretary of the Treasury, the Wall Street investor William E. Simon,
was urging that ‘the only thing that can save the Republican Party….is a
counterintelligentsia,’ created by funneling funds to writers, journalists, and
social scientists whose ideas had been frozen out of general circulation by the
‘dominant socialist-statist-collectivist orthodoxy’ prevailing in the
universities and media.”
The wealthy wrapped themselves in the mantel of
conservatism, but the goal was to shed any constraints on businesses and
initiate a new era of wealth accumulation.
And with increased wealth would come increased power.
“Within a decade, Simon’s
project had dramatically reshaped the production and dissemination of ideas. Older foundations, Simon’s Olin Foundation in
the lead, turned into conscious incubators of new conservative ideas,
publicizing books and sponsoring authors, subsidizing student organizations and
newspapers, and establishing university positions and programs for the
promotion of ideas more favorable to business enterprise, all with the intent
of changing the prevailing terms of debate.
With corporate and entrepreneurial support, a global network of
conservative think tanks proliferated to advance market sympathetic ideas and
speed their way aggressively into media and political debate. Journals and newspapers were floated on new
conservative money.”
Rodgers concludes that this strategy was broadly
successful in altering how individuals viewed their relationship to society as
a whole.
“The work of the conservative
idea brokers changed the landscape of publication and intellectual argument….In
some areas—the law and economics movement in the legal faculties, the hardening
terms of debate over policy toward the poor, the creation of the Federalist Society
as a fraternity of like-minded law students and faculty, and the elaboration of
a neoconservative foreign policy—the work of the conservative intellectual
establishment was decisive.”
Rodgers recognizes that a plutocratic minority was
successful at influencing society in a way that enhanced their prospects, but
he does not favor the notion that the major transformation of society can be
attributed to them. He provides an
alternate starting point.
“In this reading of the age, the
precipitant of its cultural and intellectual transformations was the collapse
of the high-wage, high-benefits ‘Fordist’ economy that had dominated post-World
War II American society.”
Rodgers seems to think that the “collapse” was the result
of the operation of some fundamental economic law rather than being initiated
due to the wishes of plutocrats with the power to make things happen.
Wealth provides political power and political power
produces more wealth….and so on.
Perhaps a better understanding of society’s current state
can be obtained by turning away from academics and listening to those who
preach the gospel of the individual good.
In one of the recent Republican debates Donald Trump was asked if it was
appropriate for him to have contributed money to the campaigns of Democrats. He replied—in so many words—when politicians
asked him for money he gave it to them—all of them. And later, when he needed something, he asked
them for it and they gave it to him. No
one was surprised or disconcerted by the comment.
And so the plutocracy came to rule the land.
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