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We can use the S word now

If We Are in the Death Spiral of Capitalism,
Can We Start Using the "S" Word? 

By Barbara Ehrenreich and Bill Fletcher, Jr., 
The Nation Posted on March 6, 2009, 
Printed on March 9, 2009


Note for NYC Residents: This Friday, The Nation
Institute, Nation Books, and AlterNet are co-hosting a
panel discussion, "Meltdown: The Economic Collapse and
a People's Plan for Recovery," with an all-star cast
that includes Joseph Stiglitz, Barbara Ehrenreich, Bill
Fletcher, Jr., Jeff Madrick, Christopher Hayes. Some of
them should be consulting for the Obama administration
in place of Tim Geithner, Larry Summers et al. instead
of offering us their thoughts for free at 8 pm this
Friday at 2 West 64th Street in New York City at The
New York Society for Ethical Culture. Doors open at
7:15, first come, first served.

If you haven't heard socialists doing much crowing over
the fall of capitalism, it isn't just because there
aren't enough of us to make an audible crowing sound.
We, as much as anyone on Wall Street in, say, 2006,
appreciate the resilience of American capitalism--its
ability to regroup and find fresh avenues for growth,
as it did after the depressions of 1877, 1893 and the
1930s. In fact, The Communist Manifesto can be read not
only as an indictment of capitalism but as a breathless
paean to its dynamism. And we all know the joke about
the Marxist economist who successfully predicted eleven
out of the last three recessions.


But this time the patient may not get up from the
table, no matter how many times the electroshock
paddles of "stimulus" are applied. We seem to have
entered the death spiral where rising unemployment
leads to reduced consumption and hence to greater
unemployment. Any schadenfreude we might be tempted to
feel as executives lose their corporate jets and the
erstwhile Masters of the Universe wipe egg from their
faces is quickly dashed by the ever more vivid
suffering around us. Food pantries and shelters can no
longer keep up with the demand; millions face old age
without pensions and with their savings gutted; we
personally are consumed with anxiety about the future
that awaits our children and grandchildren.

Besides, it wasn't supposed to happen this way. There
was supposed to be a revolution, remember? The
socialist idea, prediction, faith or whatever was that
capitalism would fall when people got tired of trying
to live on the crumbs that fall from the chins of the
rich and rose up in some fashion--preferably
inclusively, democratically and nonviolently--and
seized the wealth for themselves. Such a seizure would
have looked nothing like "nationalization" as currently
discussed, in which public wealth flows into the
private sector with little or no change in the elites
that control it or in the way the control is exercised.
Our expectation as socialists was that the huge amount
of organizing required for revolutionary change would
create an infrastructure for governance, built out
of--among other puzzle pieces--unions, community
organizations, advocacy groups and new organizations of
the unemployed and nouveau poor.

It was also supposed to be a simple matter for the
masses to take over or "seize" the physical
infrastructure of industrial capitalism--the "means of
production"--and start putting it to work for the
common good. But much of the means of production has
fled overseas--to China, for example, that bastion of
authoritarian capitalism. When we look around our
increasingly shuttered landscape and survey the ruins
of finance capitalism, we see bank upon bank, realty
and mortgage companies, title companies, insurance
companies, credit-rating agencies and call centers, but
not enough enterprises making anything we could
actually use, like food or pharmaceuticals. In recent
years, capitalism has become increasingly and almost
mystically abstract. Outside manufacturing and the
service sector, fewer and fewer people could explain to
their children what they did for a living. The
brightest students went into finance, not physics. The
biggest urban buildings housed cubicles and computer
screens, not assembly lines, laboratories, studios or
classrooms. Even our flagship industry, manufacturing
autos, would require major retooling to make something
we could use--not more cars, let alone more SUVs, but
more windmills, buses and trains.

What is most galling, from a socialist perspective, is
the dawning notion that capitalism may be leaving us
with less than it found on this planet, about 400 years
ago, when the capitalist mode of production began to
take off. Marx imagined that industrial capitalism had
potentially solved the age-old problem of scarcity and
that there was plenty to go around if only it was
equitably distributed. But industrial capitalism--with
some help from industrial communism--has brought about
a level of environmental destruction that threatens our
species along with countless others. The climate is
warming, the oil supply is peaking, the deserts are
advancing and the seas are rising and contain fewer and
fewer fish for us to eat. You don't have to be a freaky
doomster to see that extinction may be what's next on
the agenda.

In this situation, with both long-term biological and
day-to-day economic survival in doubt, the only
relevant question is: do we have a plan, people? Can we
see our way out of this and into a just, democratic,
sustainable (add your own favorite adjectives) future?

Let's just put it right out on the table: we don't. At
least we don't have some blueprint on how to organize
society ready to whip out of our pockets. Lest this
sound negligent on our part, we should explain that
socialism was an idea about how to rearrange ownership
and distribution and, to an extent, governance. It
assumed that there was a lot worth owning and
distributing; it did not imagine having to come up with
an entirely new and environmentally sustainable way of
life. Furthermore, the history of socialism has been
disfigured by too many cadres who had a perfect plan,
if only they could win the next debate, carry out a
coup or get enough people to fall into line behind
them.

But we do understand--and this is one of the things
that make us "socialists"--that the absence of a plan,
or at least some sort of deliberative process for
figuring out what to do, is no longer an option. The
great promise of capitalism, as first suggested by Adam
Smith and recently enshrined in "market
fundamentalism," was that we didn't have to figure
anything out, because the market would take care of
everything for us. Instead of promoting self-reliance,
this version of free enterprise fostered passivity in
the face of that inscrutable deity, the Market.
Deregulate, let wages fall to their "natural" level,
turn what remains of government into an endless source
of bounty for contractors--whee! Well, that hasn't
worked, and the core idea of socialism still stands:
that people can get together and figure out how to
solve their problems, or at least a lot of their
problems, collectively. That we--not the market or the
capitalists or some elite group of ueber-planners--have
to control our own destiny.

We admit: we don't even have a plan for the
deliberative process that we know has to replace the
anarchic madness of capitalism. Yes, we have some
notion of how it should work, based on our experiences
with the civil rights movement, the women's movement
and the labor movement, as well as with countless
cooperative enterprises. This notion centers on what we
still call "participatory democracy," in which all
voices are heard and all people equally respected. But
we have no precise models of participatory democracy on
the scale that is currently called for, involving
hundreds of millions, and potentially billions, of
participants at a time.

What might this look like? There are some intriguing
models to study, like the Brazilian Workers Party's
famous experiments in developing a participatory budget
in Porto Alegre. Z Magazine founder Michael Albert
developed a detailed approach to mass-based planning
that he calls participatory economics, or "parecon,"
and one of us (Fletcher, in his book Solidarity
Divided, written with Fernando Gapasin) has proposed a
locally based network of people's assemblies. But all
this is experimental, and we realize that any system
for mass democratic planning will be messy. It will
stumble; it will be wrong sometimes; and there will be
a lot of running back to the drawing board.

But as socialists we know the spirit in which this
great project of collective salvation must be
undertaken, and that spirit is solidarity. An antique
notion until very recently, it flickered into life
again in the symbolism and energy of the Obama
campaign. The Yes We Can! chant was the slogan of the
United Farm Workers movement and went on to be adopted
by various unions and community-based organizations to
emphasize what large numbers of people can accomplish
through collective action. Even Obama's relatively
anodyne calls for a new commitment to volunteerism and
community service seem to have inspired a spirit of
"giving back." If the idea of democratic planning, of
controlling our destiny, is the intellectual content of
socialism, then solidarity is its emotional energy
source--the moral understanding and the searing
conviction that, however overwhelming the challenges,
we are in this together.

Solidarity, though, is an empty sentiment without
organization--ways of thinking and working together,
and of connecting the social movements that are
battling injustice every day. We see a tremendous
opportunity in the bleak fact that millions of
Americans have been rendered redundant by the
capitalist economy and are free to dedicate their
considerable talents to creating a more just and
sustainable alternative. But if we are serious about
collective survival in the face of our multiple crises,
we have to build organizations, including explicitly
socialist ones, that can mobilize this talent, develop
leadership and advance local struggles. And we have to
be serious, because the capitalist elites who have run
things so far have forfeited all trust or even respect,
and we--progressives of all stripes--are now the only
grown-ups around.

Barbara Ehrenreich is the author, most recently, of
This Land Is Their Land: Reports From a Divided Nation.
Barbara is an Honorary Chair of DSA. 

Bill Fletcher Jr. originated the call for founding
"Progressives for Obama." He is the executive editor of
Black Commentator, and founder of the Center for Labor
Renewal (c) 2009 The Nation All rights reserved.