Zcom_simple

12

Communist Manifesto Turns 160



Source: The Nation

Change Text Size a- | A+


This year marks the 160th anniversary of The Communist Manifesto and capitalism -- a k a "free enterprise" -- seems willing to observe the occasion by dropping dead. On Monday night, some pundits were warning that the ATMs might run dry and hinting that the only safe investment left is canned beans. Apocalypse or extortion? No one seems to know, though the populist part of the populace has been leaning toward the latter. An e-mail whipping around the web this morning has the subject line "Sign on Wall Street yesterday," and shows a hand-lettered cardboard sign saying, "JUMP! You Fuckers!"

 

The Manifesto makes for quaint reading today. All that talk about "production," for example: Did they actually make things in those days? Did the proletariat really slave away in factories instead of call centers? But on one point Marx and Engels proved right: within capitalist societies, or at least the kind of wildly unregulated capitalism America has had, the rich got richer, the workers got poorer, and the erstwhile middle class has been sliding toward ruin. The last two outcomes are what Marx called "immiseration," which, in translation, is the process you're undergoing when you have cancer and no health insurance or a mortgage payment due and no paycheck coming in.

 

Marx predicted that capitalism would fall in a spirited, proactive, fashion: the workers, fed up with immiseration, would revolt, seize the "means of production" and insist on running the show themselves, that being the original, pre-Soviet, notion of socialism. The revolution didn't happen, of course, at least not here. For the past several years, American workers have sweetly acquiesced to declining wages, rising prices, speed-ups at work, disappearing pensions and increasingly threadbare health insurance. While CEO pay escalated to the eight-figure range and above, so-called ordinary Americans took on second jobs and crowded into multi-generational households with uncomfortably long waits for the bathroom.

 

But all this immiseration -- combined with fabulous enrichment at the top -- did end up destabilizing the capitalist system, if only because, in the last few years, America's substitute for decent wages has been easy credit. Until about a year ago, we got almost daily messages, by telemarketer and by mail, urging us to consolidate our debts, refinance our homes, transfer our debts from credit card to another and try tasty new mortgages that didn't even require a down payment. All too often, we bit. It sounded so reasonable, for example, not to let our assets just "sit" in our houses but to start spending that money now.

 

At the other, Learjet, end of the economic spectrum, there was the problem of what to do with too much money. Yes, this can be a problem. Some of the super-rich have to hire consultants to help them spend their money: Where do you get a $20,000 bottle of wine or find a Picasso for the bathroom wall? More seriously, there was the problem of what to invest in. As Chuck Collins of the Working Group on Extreme Inequality has pointed out, huge concentrations of wealth can function like rogue waves, smashing around recklessly in their search for ever higher returns. A lot of these money waves flowed, directly or indirectly, into the dodgy credit schemes that were engulfing the un-rich majority, leaving even the fat cats imperiled by the toxic debts of the subprime class.

 

Marx's argument was that the coexistence of great wealth for the few and growing poverty for the many is not only morally objectionable, it's also inherently unstable. He may have been wrong about the reasons for the instability, but no one can any longer deny it's there. When the greed of the rich collided with the needs of the poor — for a home, for example -- the result was a global credit meltdown.

 

Obviously, the way to address the crisis is to deal with the poverty and inequality that led to it: bail out people facing foreclosures, increase food stamp allotments, extend unemployment insurance and make a massive job-generating, public investment in infrastructure -- and, since medical debts are the number-one cause of personal bankruptcy, enact universal health insurance immediately. But not even Obama, whose lawn sign I still proudly display, seems to have the stomach for such a "trickle upwards" approach. He has announced that he won't bother taking the bailout as an opportunity to change the bankruptcy law so that people facing foreclosure can renegotiate their mortgages.

 

So happy birthday, Communist Manifesto -- although I'm hoping that capitalism survives this one, if only because there's no alternative ready at hand. At the very least, we should get some regulation and serious oversight out of any bailout deal, meaning that, yes, the economy will look a little less like "free enterprise." But one thing we should have learned in the last week, if not the last year, is that, when applied to enterprise, "freedom" can be just another word for someone else's pain.

 

 

Barbara Ehrenreich, the author of Nickel and Dimed (Owl), is the winner of the 2004 Puffin/Nation Prize.

Amys_pic_of_me

sorry barbara

By McGehee, Michael at Oct 06, 2008 14:21 PM

I usually like your writings but ever since I read your interview of Albert in Real Utopia I have found some of your comments to be contradictory and irritating.

for example, you just wrote "Obviously, the way to address the crisis is to deal with the poverty and inequality that led to it." I cannot agree more with you but in your interview of Albert you defend markets - which is the center of gravity of these issues - on the most absurd basis.

im not sure how to reconcile the conclusion of addressing the root by defending it...

Reply this comment


671904

The Communist Manifesto

By Simpson, Bob at Oct 06, 2008 12:36 PM

I used to teach in a working class women\'s Catholic high school on the South Side of Chicago. I did an exercise in my AP European History class with the Communist Manifesto. Without telling the class what it was, I made a little checklist of the 10 points of the Manifesto and I asked the students to check off the ones they thought were good ideas and to prepare to discuss them.

Inevitably, they would always check off the majority of the 10 points and we would have a discussion about their choices. Then I would reveal what it was they were agreeing with. That usually provoked a spirited  discussion about capitalism, communism, socialism and whatever else was on their minds about political economy. While no one expressed any admiration for Soviet-style communism, modern capitalism was the target of some pretty withering criticism.

I learned that the ideology of neo-liberalism had made little headway down South Pulaski Ave.....

Reply this comment


Person

Chomsky Mental Exercise...

By P, Noel at Oct 06, 2008 08:15 AM

 

Can\'t help but remember a worthwhile mental exercise that I read once from Chomsky when one is trying to rationalize the current economic system...the exercise is simple:  could you imagine someone making similar arguments for slavery back in the day? 

Reply this comment


Amys_pic_of_me

HMMM

By McGehee, Michael at Oct 06, 2008 08:05 AM

"no alternative ready at hand."

I wonder how much of this paragraph was a reference to Barbara\'s pathetic interview of Albert in the book Real Utopia... I wonder how she interprests "ready at hand"...

Reply this comment

Comment_reply

681042

Re: HMMM

By Burseth, Jay at Oct 07, 2008 16:27 PM

I may be wrong, but I interpreted her interview with Michael Albert as playing devils advocate. what\'s the point of interviewing someone if you agree with them and suggest it in your questions?

Reply this comment

Comment_reply

Amys_pic_of_me

Re: Re: HMMM

By McGehee, Michael at Oct 08, 2008 13:59 PM

jay, i emailed the both of them to find out which it is...

Reply this comment

Comment_reply

Johnsps

Re: Re: Re: HMMM

By Cronan Jr, John at Oct 08, 2008 16:57 PM

Ehrenreich is a member of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). DSA believes in some form of planning for major industries and markets for basic goods. Check out DSA\'s website for more on specifics, i suppose.

Reply this comment

Comment_reply

Amys_pic_of_me

Re: Re: Re: Re: HMMM

By McGehee, Michael at Oct 09, 2008 06:33 AM

thanks John. Albert confirmed she was being serious. My thoughts are that her concern was more than moot, it is a figment of her imagination. She advocates markets, as you pointed out John, for small goods like \"lipstick and dresses.\" Albert pointed out that even small markets will have impacts on bigger industries and that the market systems distort the value of the goods and pit buyers against sellers. But I took her comment as an expression of unwillingness to participate in consumer councils on these \"small goods.\" Thats fine, but she wouldnt have to participate if she didnt want to. She could leave the allocation and communication with the workers councils to those who did want to participate, though she would be relying on others to share her sentiments and basic luck that the items she will want will get produced in enough volume to be able to purchase them. Which is not much different than market systems. She can contact market-based companies with requests or suggestions or she can fill out surveys or she can rely on their analyzing of past consumption trends to shape future ones. Just because she would have the ability to be more empowered or participate in a democratic fashion in choosing the \"small goods\" she wanted to consume doesnt mean she has to do so. I think her advocacy of small markets poses more negatives than she supposes about parecon.

Reply this comment

Loading_border