Liberalism’s core values remain strong, persuasive and enduring.
Their fighting vitality is apparent in the spreading youth-led protests
on Wall Street and across the country. What we lack is a coherent
progressive narrative explaining and justifying liberalism’s role in the
radically changed circumstances of the twenty-first century—a liberal
vision of the kind Thomas Jefferson and Sam Adams offered the founders
or John Dewey gave the Progressive Era. Liberals need to stop denying
who they are and, like the young protesters, start fighting for what
they believe in. For though aggravated and anxious, liberals have never
been less visible in the struggle for the hearts and minds of our fellow
citizens.
With no coherent new liberal narrative to render our values timely,
we too often cleave to the center and compromise to the right. We care
about civility, but civility is looking a lot like surrender. We must
not step away from our values before negotiation begins, allowing
runaway financial markets, bloviating plutocrats and anti-government
hubris to dominate, while poverty, social justice and climate change
slip off the legislative agenda. And when we do take to the streets to
voice our anger, we lack the clarity and focus that only a relevant
narrative can offer.
The stakes have never been higher: nearly three years after the
inauguration of a moderate African-American president, our nation
confronts a rapacious plutocracy reminiscent of the Gilded Age and a
noisome corporate media along with a noisy, supposedly anti-plutocratic
populist Tea Party that is in fact funded by that very plutocracy. This
weird coalition of the smug and the frightened cries, “We’re number
one!” even as it dismantles the democratic institutions and programs
that make America great and plays roulette with the debt ceiling and
America’s global reputation.
The Tea Party screams, “Less government!” but liberals are loath to
retort, “More government!” because we no longer have a compelling
narrative showing that government or even civil society can be an ally
of liberty and democracy. Right-wing populists may be uneasy with
globalization, but liberals seem even more anxious, ready to curse it
rather than question their own parochialism, more prone to build higher
walls than to construct longer bridges. And too willing to discount
outrageous inequalities, now globalized, that have historically spurred
liberals to action.
Those with the highest incomes today make hudreds of times more than
those on the bottom; one in three black males between 20 and 29 is in
the criminal justice system; and one in five children lives under the
poverty line. Because of the recession, Hispanics have suffered a 66
percent drop in wealth since 2005, with blacks declining 53 percent and
whites 16 percent, leading to the largest disparity in median wealth
between whites and people of color in recent history. Yet though we
occupy Wall Street and fight to defend teachers and cops and other
public employee unions; and though we do battle in states like Wisconsin
and Ohio and organize movements like Rebuild the Dream; and though we
try, as Tavis Smiley has with his Poverty Tour, to illuminate the dark
corners of American inequality, such admirable efforts cannot by
themselves reinforce a common narrative or inspire others too wounded by
inequality to engage politically. It is easier for us to ask, What
happened to Obama? as Drew Westen did in his much-tweeted New York Times
op-ed, rather than, What happened to liberalism? We try to psych out
why our wayward president won’t fight rather than give him a reason to
fight. We need to recall what FDR said to A. Philip Randolph when the
Pullman Porters Union president complained bitterly about how Roosevelt
wasn’t backing the union’s struggles. “Make me do it!” said Roosevelt.
Liberals need to stop blaming Obama and make him do it.
Obama has done much that is right and liberal, finally getting beyond
“don’t ask, don’t tell,” getting a major economic stimulus bill passed,
producing (for all its flaws) the first genuine national healthcare
policy, enacting food safety and child nutrition bills, extending
unemployment benefits, regulating tobacco and introducing a Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau; not to mention the new START nuclear arms
treaty, drawing down US forces in Iraq and two superb Supreme Court
appointments. Moreover, he has recently begun to display the fight we
have begged for.
Yet the United States is still bleeding lives and resources on an
unwinnable war in Afghanistan, and antagonizing both sides of the
Israel-Palestine conflict. Here at home, the poor are being rendered
invisible by endless rhetoric about the “middle class” that seems aimed
at denying that real poverty exists; the banks that got us into our
economic mess go unregulated, not even being required to lend out the
enormous government handouts they received. The right-wing “no taxes”
mantra is being tolerated rather than opposed by the president. And
global warming? It’s so totally off the table that Al Gore has become
one of Obama’s fiercest critics. It’s hard to turn people on to
government when politics and plutocracy seem like synonyms, and harder
still to sell democracy to Americans, whether liberal or conservative,
when politics feels so fraudulent. When money talks, democracy goes
silent.
Liberals fight first for liberty—not for equality and against
liberty, not for community and against individualism. The young people
in Zuccotti Park (which they call Liberty Plaza, its original name) talk
about their “autonomy” before anything else. Liberty is no single
ideology’s privileged ground but the alpha and omega of Western
political culture. It is the core of the conservative and liberal
visions. The difference is that for liberals, liberty is public.
Liberals believe that while private individuals enjoy a right to
freedom, only citizens realize freedom by making laws for themselves.
Humans are social by nature and live in relationships—families,
neighborhoods and communities. We must legitimate our dependent
relationships and render them interdependent through democratic
institutions and government. It is citizens who are truly free.
Consequently, government cannot be deemed an anonymous “them” or
bureaucratic “it” that oppresses individuals. For in a democracy,
citizens are government. Democracy is not opposed to but is the
condition of our liberty. It enables citizens to be autonomous as well
as to live under the moral and civic restraints imposed by
self-legislation—the rule of law.
Taxation, far from being a bureaucratic scam to steal our hard-won
earnings by some alien “them” or “it,” is the way citizens pool
resources to do public things together they can’t do alone. Attacking
the power to tax is attacking the power of the people to spend their
money in concert to achieve important public goals, whether national
defense, public education or social justice. The anti-tax ideologues
pretend to protect us, but in truth they disempower us.
* * *
So to be a liberal today means to fight for more democracy, to fight
against the corruption of politics by money and plutocratic special
interests that delegitimize it in the eyes of wary citizens. But it also
means fighting against that insidious “war on government” being waged
by conservatives. Because that war is really a war against “we the
people,” against all we share, and hence against democracy itself.
Conservatives claim that democracy is ailing, and they are right. Yet as
Jefferson said, the remedy for the ills of democracy is more democracy,
while those who assail government are opting for less democracy, opting
to suspend the social contract that undergirds our democratic
civilization.
Public liberty and the egalitarian, democratic values it enjoins must
remain the liberal North Star. But the political sky is in motion, and
liberal values must accommodate fundamental changes in science and
society, technology and capitalism. Capitalism in our time has moved
beyond simple industrialism and unfolds today under conditions of
automation and an information society, resulting in parallel dilemmas
for the capitalist sector: first, increased productivity with fewer
jobs. The New York Times recently reported, “Workers are
getting more expensive while equipment is getting cheaper, and the
combination is encouraging companies to spend on machines rather than
people.” Meanwhile, a Chinese company that partners with Apple,
exhibiting the future face of capitalism, plans to replace thousands of
its Chinese Foxconn workers with up to a million robots.
The second dilemma posed by the new capitalism is the privatization
of a digital public utility (the Internet) as the result of Bill
Clinton’s decision (in the Telecommunications Act of 1996) to deregulate
digital media because of so-called spectrum abundance, which supposedly
offers room for diverse voices and needs no government enforcement of
fairness or the public good.
These two developments in our automated information society have been
accompanied by two other related developments in the capitalist
environment. First, neoliberal anti-government ideology has engendered
pervasive privatization and a commercialization that have made
consumerism ubiquitous, replacing the public citizen with the private
consumer and tarnishing the very idea of a “public sector” subject to
democratic control. Even quintessentially sovereign public functions
like national defense and incarceration are being privatized in ways
that subordinate goods like just war and the rehabilitation of prisoners
to profits.
Second, the realities of globalization and planetary ecology have
signaled the coming of an interdependent world whose challenges are all
cross-border and have left territorial and sovereign nation-states
unable to govern themselves. While Americans indulge in a deeply
parochial and increasingly counterfactual triumphalism in which liberals
are sometimes complicit, interdependent reality is demanding new forms
of democratic globalism and cooperative interdependence. The Occupy Wall
Street movement is going global so fast, its organizers can scarcely
keep up. Yet we remain far behind.
September 11 offered a brutal tutorial in the meaning of
interdependence: our enemies from “without” actually came from “within,”
blurring the difference between “domestic” and “foreign.” Al Qaeda is a
malevolent NGO, and old-fashioned national frontiers and armies are of
little relevance to its threats. The 9/11 attacks yielded the crucial
modern dilemma precipitated by interdependence: the fundamental
asymmetry between our challenges and our remedies; between global
twenty-first-century problems like terrorism and eighteenth-century
sovereign state solutions rooted in territorial jurisdiction, national
prerogatives and secure borders.
Terrorism and war are hardly the only interdependent challenges,
however. Crime, drugs, prostitution, runaway markets, unprecedented
planetary diseases, weapons of mass destruction, unregulated
cross-border movement by capital and labor, and—especially
daunting—climate change and environmental deterioration are equally
perilous. Yet US politics right and left remains fatally parochial.
Nowhere are the dilemmas of interdependence more evident than in the two
leading crises of our time that most concern liberals: the double-dip
global economic recession—precipitated by runaway financial
institutions, imprudent lending and linked global markets—which has
defied national efforts to stimulate jobs, salvage sinking economies,
regulate banks and financial capital, or avert the consequence of a near
American default; and climate change, apparently far too inconvenient
and politically expensive a truth even for liberals to address. Many
liberals and the president seem more concerned with the benefits of oil
drilling, shale fracking for natural gas and corn-based ethanol than
with their environmental costs or than with fighting for energy
independence from foreign sources by seeking alternatives to fossil fuel
or by modernizing the grid.
* * *
To succeed in a changed world, a new liberal vision will have to be
as interdependent as the challenges it faces, operating across borders
and among peoples, focused less on what is good for America than what is
good for the planet—which happily also defines what is good for
America. It must push out temporal horizons beyond the shrunken limits
that define quarterly profit statements and daily political
calculations. It must be cosmopolitan rather than parochial, long rather
than short term, focused on public goods pertinent to a planetary
public rather than on private liberty and personal property. This is a
tough sell, but in the long run our fighting creed must insist that
liberalism is not just by and for Americans. We must refuse to pit
American advantage against global public goods.
What about jobs? When Marx exhorted, Workers of the world unite! he
meant they ought to prefer their economic to their national and
religious interests. They have no choice. This is the brutal logic of
the marketplace, which mandates that if they fail to unite, workers will
secure neither their rights nor their jobs one nation at a time. Who
benefits when poor nations use low wages and an indifference to
environment and safety to lure jobs from rich nations, only to have rich
nations fight to get them back (though at lower pay, with no pensions
or healthcare so the jobs are “competitive”) with tariffs and boycotts
and novel trade barriers? Or with stealth attacks on social justice via a
“conditionality” approach to investment and loans that forces poor
nations to sacrifice social welfare programs to receive the aid they
require to create jobs. The result is a race to the bottom in which
neither developed nor developing nations prosper, and in which the
inequality within nations comes to mimic the inequality among nations.
The only way for liberals to break this sinister logic is to insist
on cross-border strategies in which “workers” means all workers
everywhere, not just those lucky enough to belong to American unions;
and in which the global economy includes not just free markets in
capital but free markets in labor, with workers as free as capital is to
cross borders. This is already happening in practice, despite
ineffective national laws forbidding “illegal” immigration, with firms
in the United States and Europe looking the other way as undocumented
workers cross from Mexico or North Africa to take jobs not available in
their own countries. Global market logic here trumps sovereign national
law, and the only way to address “illegal” immigration is to globalize
law and regulation. International financial institutions like the IMF
and the WTO push for global regulations, but on behalf of the interests
of global corporations. Liberals need to be fighting for transnational
democratic institutions to assure democratic outcomes in the global
public interest.
Above all, a fighting liberalism must address radical marketization—a
narrowly conceived capitalism that achieves productivity and profits
without creating jobs. Liberals must widen the horizon: don’t just bash
the banks but make the case for employment at home and abroad as a
public good, valuable not just in its economic contributions to
productivity but in what it does for individual dignity, civic
empowerment and healthy human community. Otherwise, jobs will continue
to be downsized, outsourced and disappeared. Economists label as
“externalities” those values not immediately part of the economic
calculus. What is external to economics narrowly construed, however, is
internal and absolutely essential to human happiness. The social
dimension of employment may be an externality, but it is crucial to why
work matters and should be at the center of a fighting liberal vision.
It also explains why liberals should propose a new metrics that includes
indicators of social goods and human happiness when we measure, for
example, GNP. Why are the creative contributions of artists, teachers
and scientists not part of national product? Why aren’t environmental
costs a debit? The current system in effect socializes the invisible
public costs of capitalism, spreading them across the backs of taxpayers
while privatizing the visible profits. This is not capitalism but
corporate welfare—socializing risk for the rich and powerful while
leaving the poor to the social Darwinism of a pitiless marketplace.
As with unemployment, climate change cannot be addressed one nation
at a time. Cities, NGOs and citizens have proven far more able. Take,
for example, the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, a group of
megacities working across borders to reduce carbon emissions despite the
reluctance of governments. We can also do more than just push (or
curse) politicians on such modest measures as cap and trade on emissions
or a fossil fuel tax or offshore drilling restrictions; we can protest
the Keystone XL pipeline with Bill McKibben, support Al Gore’s Climate
Reality Project or state- and city-based initiatives to ban fracking,
like the ones in Easton, Pennsylvania, and New York State; and help
establish farmers’ markets in poor inner-city areas where fresh
vegetables are scarce and obesity rampant. In these efforts, civil
society is as important as government.
The Internet also beckons liberals to engage directly. We know well
enough that corporate ownership of traditional media is pernicious to
democracy, but we are more naïve about its hold on new media. The web’s
democratic architecture and disposition to interactivity and
interdependence are undeniable: in Berlin the web-inspired Pirate Party
just won a significant share of votes, and in Tahrir Square and Zuccotti
Park alike the new media have proved their democratic organizing
potential. But the Internet, too, is subject to the power of money.
Liberals may love the web, but sometimes they seem delusional about
issues of power and ownership. They do not always recall that we protect
speech in order to protect democracy and equal access to civic and
political power rather than to protect commerce. Having become adept at
using the Internet for conventional electoral purposes, as Howard Dean
and Barack Obama did, liberals conclude that a web dominated by
commerce, games, pornography and social media isn’t a problem.
With the web (and media generally) it is not enough for liberals to insist (contrary to Citizens United) that corporations are not people; they also must insist (contrary to Buckley v. Valeo)
that money is not speech, and recognize that the web is a public
utility whose privatization and subjugation to money have diminished it
as an instrument of democracy. Private ownership corrupts democracy
because money skews power rather than equalizing it. For new media to be
potential equalizers, they must be treated as public utilities,
recognizing that spectrum abundance (the excuse for privatization) does
not prevent monopoly ownership of hardware and software platforms and
hence cannot guarantee equal civic, educational and cultural access to
citizens.
So we come full circle, to the dream liberals want to rebuild, the
dream in whose name young protesters are once again marching. It is a
dream that rests on the reality that freedom is public—a shared product
of strong democracy. Langston Hughes said, “There is a dream in the
land/With its back against the wall…. To save the dream for one/It must
be saved for ALL.” Our liberalism today must fight to save the dream for
all. For today “all” means not just our country but our ever more
interdependent and badly hurting world.