Guest Post by William Neil
Part Two: A Brief History of
Democracy and Capitalism: A Troubled
Relationship
Before I conduct an examination of the Maryland Democratic claim that “this is the best we could do,” which involves an assessment of the legislature and its leaders in Annapolis, as well as the forces operating upon them, “constraining” them, I want to brief my readers on what I have been reading and listening to (at the Real News network) as deeper background for this writing. I maintain that these sources form the intellectual basis for the quickening of the national left’s pulse and the talk of a new left “populism.” Those sources have in turn built their views upon the cruel foundation of facts of today’s American political economy, the great and growing inequalities of wealth and income, and the related power to twist and deform our democratic institutions to produce these terrible outcomes for the bottom 50% of the population, the working class (who admittedly may not see themselves that way), and increasingly, the 40% who make up the “middle class.” (That split follows the handling of data on wealth and income distribution by Thomas Piketty in “Capital in the 21st Century, who looks at the top 1% of earners, the top 10%, the 40% in the middle class, and the bottom 50%.)
I begin with Chris Hedges powerful and
moving speech, which I first saw in written form in January of this year, but
which launched in Santa Monica, California on October 13, 2013. It is entitled The Myth of Human Progress and the Collapse of Complex Societies. I
won’t even try to offer you a condensed version, my words would fall short of
the electricity and tensions contained within it, but I will say that Hedges
has written elsewhere that American is now a “tinderbox” for revolution, or
something close to it, which will most likely ignite from two of the most
unhappy and disenfranchised sources: the indebted college graduates who can’t
find any work, or who now make up a substantial portion of the 28 million I
have written about, working in the service/retail sector and displacing those
with less education, and the déclassé
intellectuals thrown out of journalism, publishing and teaching by the
vast changes in corporate forms, technology and education itself. Are they now obsolete? We shall see. I must
note from my readings that these types were not hard to find rising to
prominence in the early days of the French Revolution. Now for Mr. Hedges, in his own words, taken
from the very beginnings of his speech:
The
most prescient portrait of the American character and our ultimate fate as a
species is found in Herman Melville’s “Moby Dick.” Melville makes our murderous
obsessions, our hubris, violent impulses, moral weakness and inevitable
self-destruction visible in his chronicle of a whaling voyage. He is our foremost oracle. He is to us what William Shakespeare was to
Elizabethan England or Fyodor Dostoyevsky to czarist Russia…Yet we, like Ahab
and his crew, rationalize our collective madness. All calls for prudence, for halting the march
toward economic, political and environmental catastrophe, for sane limits on
carbon emissions, are ignored or ridiculed…The corporate assault on culture,
journalism, education, the arts and critical thinking has left those who speak
this truth marginalized and ignored, frantic Cassandras who are viewed as
slightly unhinged and depressingly apocalyptic.
We are consumed by a mania for hope, which our corporate masters lavishly
provide, at the expense of truth.
All indications are that the Obama administration sentenced this man to death based on their own paranoia and thirst for vengeance. Their esteemed intelligence community had displayed gross incompetence in failing to detect and stop the Fort Hood psychiatrist. They needed a scapegoat.
If they have anything implicating Awlaki other than his rhetoric, they should furnish it to the public along with their self-serving legal memo.
Since they have not already done so speaks volumes.