| Feb |
| 19 |
Sunday February 19, 11am – Discussion
The Nation Magazine Discussion Group
| Feb |
| 19 |
Sunday February 19, 11am – Discussion
The Nation Magazine Discussion Group
| Jan |
| 15 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, January 15, 11am – Discussion
The Nation Magazine Discussion Group Presents
Eugene McCarraher on The End of Capitalism and the Wellsprings of Radical Hope
Eugene McCarraher, Associate Professor of Humanities and History at Villanova University was published in a June 8, 2011 issue of The Nation on the topic: Reimagining Capitalism. His essay follows.
“Why should we want to reinvent capitalism? Rather than reinvent it, we should remind ourselves why capitalism is so pernicious. We could start by stating the obvious (which, apparently, needs restating): the nature and logic of capitalism are incorrigibly avaricious. As a property system driven by the need to maximize profit and production, capitalism is a giant, ever-whirling vortex of accumulation. Anything but conservative, it’s the most dynamic and protean economy in history. As Marx observed in the opening pages of The Communist Manifesto, capitalism thrives on constant reinvention: “The bourgeoisie cannot exist without constantly revolutionizing the instruments of production, and thereby the relations of production, and with them the whole relations of society.” Always seeking new ways to make money, capitalists have reinvented the system several times already. Enclosures, factories, Fordism, automation and “flexible production”—metamorphosis for the sake of profit is the only constant in capitalism. Each incarnation has featured new brands of exploitation and corruption, designed and packaged by masters of economic and managerial sophistry.
To be sure, reformers have been partially successful at shaping these reinventions: collective bargaining, regulations of business, the welfare state. Whatever victories for justice working people have won have been hard-fought and tenuous, the fruit of protracted struggle. But however ingenious or effective the reforms, they’ve been limited, if not eventually subverted, by the intractably mercenary nature of capitalism. As we can see from the history of the past forty years—an era that has been marked by a transatlantic assault on social democracy and New Deal/Great Society liberalism—the rage to accumulate remains the predatory heart and soul of capitalism. We have good reason to assume that capitalists will always seek and find fresh ways to cast off the fetters and vanquish their opponents.
But the iniquity of capitalism goes deeper than its injustice as a political economy, its amoral ingenuity in technical prowess or its rapacious relationship to the natural world. However lissome its face or benign its manner, capitalism compels us to be greedy, callous and petty. It takes what the Greeks called pleonexia—an endless hunger for more and more—and transforms it from a tawdry and dangerous vice into the central virtue of the system. The sanctity of “growth” in capitalist culture stems from this moral alchemy, as does the elevation of market competition into a model of human affairs.
Conscripting us into an economic war, capitalism turns us into soldiers of fortune, steeled against casualties and collateral damage, ransacking the earth to fill the shelves and banks with plunder. Capitalism stands condemned most profoundly not by its maldistribution of wealth or its ecological despoliation but by its systematic cultivation of people inclined toward injustice and predation. And I think we on the left need to start dismissing as utterly irrelevant the standard apologetic riposte: the material prosperity and technological achievement generated by capitalist enterprise. No amount of goods can compensate for the damage wrought on human nature by the deliberate nurturance of our vilest qualities. The desecration of the values we claim to hold most dear is the primary reason we should want to abolish, not reinvent, capitalism.
This suggests that what needs reinvention is not capitalism—leave that to the well-mannered barbarians in the business schools—but our moral and spiritual imagination. I don’t mean only the wisdom that lies in the venerable traditions of the left. Even those who have opposed capitalism have often fallen for its illusions: the ideal of “growth,” the mythology of “progress,” the cipher of “innovation.”
Any effort to end the tyranny of Mammon must be leavened by other concerns. What does it mean to be human? What do we really want? These are moral, even religious questions—the kind of questions we often dismiss as politically unserious, or relegate to the hallowed oblivion of “private life.” But they’re also political questions, for the answers determine the ends as well as the means of production. The ancient moral and metaphysical concerns may turn out to be not redoubts for reaction but wellsprings of radical hope.”
From Eugene McCarraher’s forthcoming book The Enchantments of Mammon:
“First, I think that Christians should stop yakking about “consumerism.” “Consumerism” is not the problem—capitalism is. Consumerism is the work ethic of consumption, the transformation of leisure and pleasure into duties. Talking about consumerism is a way of not talking about capitalism, and I’ve come to think that that’s the reason why so many people, including Christians, whine about it so much. It’s just too easy a target. There’s a long history behind this, but the creation of consumer culture is very much about compensating workers for loss of control and creativity at work, and those things were stolen because capital needed to subject workers to industrial discipline. (I don’t, by the way, believe that we inhabit a “post-industrial” society. Our current regimes of work are, indeed, super-industrial.) Telling people that they’re materialistic is both tiresome and wrong-headed: tiresome, because it clearly doesn’t work, and wrong-headed, because it gives people the impression that matter and spirit are antithetical. As Christians, we should be reminding everyone that material reality is sacramental, and that therefore material production, exchange, and consumption can be ways of mediating the divine.
As for abortion, I think we have to stop seeing it as the primary culprit in a “culture of death.” Abortion becomes conceivable as a moral practice once we take individual autonomy as the beau ideal of the self; but to recognize that is, if we’re logical, to indict not only abortion but also our cherished idyll of “choice” or “freedom.” But that, then, is to indict capitalism, which employs a similar language of sovereignty both to legitimate itself and to obscure the remarkable lack of creative freedom at work. I know that I’ll catch a lot of hell for saying this, but I think that a lot of opposition to abortion is sheer moral sentimentality which turns the fetus into a fetish. (You’ll notice that I think fetishism of some sort or other is a pretty salient feature of the contemporary American moral imagination.) Many of the same people who oppose abortion are champions of laissez-faire capitalism, and they either don’t see or don’t care to see the linguistic and cultural affinities between themselves and the pro-choice advocates they fight. They’ll retort that capitalism doesn’t kill anyone in its normal operations, but, first, that’s just not true—capitalism has never been instituted or maintained anywhere, not even in the North Atlantic, without considerable coercion and violence—and second, it doesn’t matter, because the exercise of market “autonomy” has devastating effects on individuals and communities regardless of whether or not they wind up dead. (“Yeah, the company cut your medical benefits or cut your job or left your town a mess, but hey, you’re still alive!”) When I say this, a lot of people retort that I’m “changing the subject.” In one way, yes I am, but for a reason—because I want them to see that it is the same subject, in a different guise. Talking about abortion is a way of not talking about the “autonomous individual,” the latest ideological guise of libido dominandi, discussion of which would topple quite a few idols, and not just “reproductive choice.”
| Dec ’11 |
| 4 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, December 4, 11am – Political Discussion – all welcome
The Nation Magazine Discussion Group Presents
Reimagining Capitalism, Part 2
The members who attended the last meeting enjoyed the discussion so much that it was agreed to continue the matter to the next meeting. So, the topic will be: Reimagining Capitalism, Part II. To get the discussion started, Will Richan has submitted an essay that I will attach to this message. If you have trouble downloading it, let me know and I’ll try to send it in another format. Also, Murray Sklar has agreed to report on the history of the Corporation in the U.S. The floor will be open for any other presentations, time permitting of course.
| Oct ’11 |
| 16 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, October 16, 11am – Discussion
The Nation Magazine Discussion Group discusses
Reimagining Capitalism
The Nation asked a playful question and got back serious answers. Imagine you have the ability to reinvent American capitalism: Where would you start? What would you change to make it less destructive and domineering, more focused on what people really need for fulfilling lives?
| Sep ’11 |
| 25 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday September 25, 11am – discussion group
Nation Magazine Discussion Group
| May ’11 |
| 22 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, May 22, 11am – Nation Discussion Group – Everyone Invited
The Nation Discussion Group
We will have a change of pace at next month’s Nation Discussion meeting. Our own Will Richan will do a presentation on his new novel, The Onion Man. Will writes, “The Onion Man is not a message wrapped in a piece of fiction. Only a few writers (e.g., Harriett Beecher Stowe and Upton Sinclair) got away with that.
Typically a message novel ends up with a muffled message and a not-so-good novel. The Onion Man just tries to tell a story about some real people struggling to make it in this crazy world. ”
Needless to say, Will manages to say a few things about the human condition along the way. The Onion Man is Danny Rablo, a guy who couldn’t make it as a writer and decided to join the opposition by becoming a scam artist in the guise of a literary agent. His philosophy of life can be summed up this way: “There are two kinds of people in the world, suckers and the people who make suckers out of them, and I don’t plan to be
a sucker.”
Everything is going swimmingly for Danny, separating Vonnegut wannabees from their life savings, until a writer with real talent, Earl Magnus, shows up among his intended victims. Earl’s unfolding manuscript – a novel-within-a-novel – ends up turning Danny’s cool world upside down, including his relationship with his live-in girlfriend- editor- cook-maidservant, Marie Foley. Now Danny the exploiter becomes Danny the
avenger, or so he thinks. Why the Onion Man? Aside from the fact that, as one bona fide agent tells Danny,
“It’s the onions like you that stink up the garden patch for the honest ones in this business,” onions are a metaphor for what happens as the book begins to peel away the layers in people’s lives.
Have a dialogue with our octogenarian Will Richan about this, his very first venture into the world of fiction. “It only took me thirty years to put this book together. Do the arithmetic: At that rate I don’t
expect to do too many more.”
| Mar ’11 |
| 13 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, March 13, 11am – Nation Discussion Group – All Welcome
Tom Paine Cronin will discuss the attack on government workers and their unions.
The first offensive is now underway as the Governor of Wisconsin has just announced his plan to strip state workers of their collective bargaining rights, cut pay and benefits and to deny any negotiations. He has also alerted the National Guard to be ready in the event the workers strike or protest. Government workers are the new scapegoats for the crises of the economic system. It’s alleged that their oversized pay and benefits have saddled the States with crushing debt and are blocking economic recovery.
Tom was President of AFSCME District Council #47, and is now the Director of the Comy Institute for Industrial Relations at St. Joseph’s University.
| Jan ’11 |
| 9 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, January 9, 11am – Discussion Group – open to everyone
The Nation magazine Discussion Group with special guest Will Bunch author of The Backlash: Right-Wing Radicals, High-Def Hucksters, and Paranoid Politics in the Age of Obama
“The Backlash” is the first hard-hitting – yet fairly and thoroughly reported – investigative report that goes behind the hype to reveal what the Tea Party Movement is really all about. Over the last two years, I went everywhere from the militia-breeding Knob Creek Machine Gun Shoot in rural Kentucky to the hot asphalt of the immigration debate in Phoenix to the inner circle of the radical Oath Keepers, to find out who was joining this backlash against the Obama presidency and what they really wanted . I’ll show you Glenn Beck as you’ve never seen him before, take you behind the scenes at Sarah Palin’s coronation as queen of the Tea Party, and introduce you to the most radical extremist in the U.S. Congress. “I tried to write “The Backlash” with the same rowdy spirit as the kind of political books I grew up with in the 1970s heyday of the likes of Tom Wolfe and Hunter Thompson, and critics seems to agree. MSNBC and Slate.com’s Dave Weigel named it one of the best political books of 2010 – “angry, opinionated, fair, and very, very funny”; the New York Times’ Michiko Kakutani called it “compelling” and “persuasive”; radio’s Thom Hartmann wrote “this book could have been a movie”; while Susie Madrak of Crooks and Liars said “The Backlash” “reads like a detective novel.” Will Bunch
| Dec ’10 |
| 5 |
| 11:00 am |
Sunday, December 5, 11am – Discussion Group
The Nation magazine Discussion Group – open to everyone
This month’s discussion will be on the mid-term elections. We’ll have an open floor discussion so, pick a campaign ( Sestak v. Toomey for example) or an issue and come and talk about it. A lot of good articles have been written on the election which you can read beforehand such as the one by FAIR, the media watchdog group and another by Noam Chomsky.