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Those
of us who are at middle age or beyond have lived through a revolution in
political and economic theory and practice, a revolution so profound that
few of us can even begin to appreciate its significance, much less its
peril.
Future historians, however, will understand
and appreciate this revolution and will wonder at the passivity of the
public today and the ease with which those who instituted this upheaval
achieved their success. The same historians, I would venture, will be
equally or more amazed at how this moment played out. But this we cannot
know, for their past is our immediate future. We are the agents of that
still-to-be written history. The United States of America, in this year of
2006, is at a hinge of history. Our fate, and that of our successors,
rests directly in the hands of all of us who are politically alert and
active today. As Edward R. Murrow famously said, “we can deny our heritage
and our history, but we cannot escape responsibility for the result."
Those factions and interests now in control of the United States
government declare that their policies, which they choose to call
“conservative” and I prefer to call “regressive,” are an advancement in
the course of human history. Those who disagree, and the pollsters tell us
that they are a majority of the American people, believe that in the past
five years, and arguably in the past twenty-five years, the people of the
United States and their government, have suffered a grievous setback.
I count myself among this dissenting majority. In my book, Conscience
of a Progressive, now nearing completion, I attempt to articulate that
dissent, criticize the foundational dogmas of the regnant, “regressive”
regime that now controls our country, and justify the principles of
“progressivism” -- the political-economic ideology that distinguished and
honored our past, and if we are both determined and fortunate, may once
again guide and enrich our national future.
Here, briefly, are the “players” in this political contest.
The Regressives
To begin, it is important to note that the
regressivism that controls and supports our present government is not a
unified political doctrine. Rather, it is a coalition, some factions of
which are in strong disagreement with others, most notably “the
libertarian right” and “the religious right.”
In general, most regressives tend to believe that the ideal society is
merely a collection of autonomous individuals and families in voluntary
association. In fact they assert that strictly speaking, as Dame Margaret
Thatcher once proclaimed, “There is no such thing as a society -- there
are individuals and there are families,” and Ayn Rand, “There is no such
entity as ‘the public’ ... the public is merely a number of individuals. ”
It follows that there is no such thing as “public goods” and “the public
interest,” apart from summation of private goods and interests. Moreover,
there are no “victims of society.” The poor choose their condition;
poverty is the result of “laziness” or, as the religious right would put
it, a “sin.”
Each individual, by acting to maximize his or her personal self-interest,
will always act “as if by an invisible hand” (Adam Smith) to promote the
well-being of all others in this (so-called) “society:” that which is
good for each, is good for all. Accordingly, the optimal
economic system is a completely unrestricted and unregulated free market
of “capitalist acts by consenting adults.” (Robert Nozick) Moreover,
private ownership of all land, resources, infrastructure, and even
institutions, will always yield results preferable to common (i.e.
government) ownership and control. Finally, the regressives firmly believe
that because economic prosperity and growth are accomplished through
capital investment, the well-being of all is accomplished by directing
wealth into the hands of “the investing class;” i.e. the very rich,
whereby that wealth will “trickle down” to the benefit of all others.
The libertarian right insists that the sole legitimate functions of
government are the protection of the individual’s unalienable natural
rights to life, liberty and property. The libertarian’s demand for
individual autonomy and government non-interference entails a tolerance
and respect for privacy, and thus the libertarian has no use for sodomy
and drug laws, for laws prohibiting gay marriage, abortion, voluntary
euthanasia, and least of all for government endorsement of religious dogma
or enforcement of religious practice. Thus the libertarian fully endorses
John Stuart Mill’s pronouncement that, “over himself, over his own body
and mind, the individual is sovereign.” In general, the libertarian
advocates the fullest possible freedom of the individual, consistent with
equivalent liberty of all others. In these respects, there is much of
libertarian thought that should be attractive to the progressive.
The religious right, of course, vehemently rejects the libertarian’s
uncompromising tolerance and insistence that the government has no right
whatever to interfere in the private life of the individual. The religious
right, to the contrary, believes that the government is entitled to
enforce moral behavior and even to support religious institutions and
“establish” religious doctrines in the law. In the most extreme cases, the
religious right advocates the establishment of “biblical law” in place of
our present system of secular Constitutional law.
With the exception of the dispute between the libertarians and the
religious right regarding private behavior, all the other tenets of
regressivism share this characteristic: They all lead to policies that
benefit wealth and power (“the masters”), to the disadvantage of all
others; i.e., the “ordinary citizens.
The Progressives:
“Progressivism” is essentially the
“liberalism” of most of the twentieth century, as promulgated by both
Roosevelts, by the Kennedy Brothers, and by many Republicans, such as
Dwight Eisenhower, Jacob Javits and Earl Warren. “Progressivism,” to put
it simply, is “liberalism,” free of the slanderous connotations heaped
upon it by contemporary right-wing propagandists.
In general, progressives endorse the political principles of our founding
documents, the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, as well
as the fundamental moral precepts of the great world religions and the
ideas of many secular moral philosophers -- precepts most familiar to the
American public through the moral teachings of Jesus of Nazareth.
Accordingly, progressivism is founded on enduring “conservative”
principles. Thus the familiar “liberal vs. conservative” dichotomy is a
hoax. Moreover, the Right, far from being “conservative,” in fact endorses
a radical political doctrine, with policies designed to return society and
the economy to a condition of autocracy, wealth and power for the
privileged few, and servitude, poverty and ignorance for “the masses” -- a
condition which, until recently, was generally believed to be permanently
discredited and relegated to the distant past. Hence my preferred term,
“regressive.”
In contrast to the regressive, the progressive regards society not as an
aggregate of autonomous individuals but as an “emergent” entity that is
more than the sum of its individual human components. In this sense, a
society is like a chemical compound such as table salt or water:
substances with properties that are separate and distinct from the
properties of their component elements. It then follows that there are
“social goods” and “public interests” that are demonstrably separate from
the sum of private goods and interests. Moreover, there are genuine
“victims of society” who are in no way responsible for their suffering and
poverty. (The illegitimate child of a teen-age heroin addict did not
choose her parents. The decision to “outsource” a job was out of the hands
of the worker who loses that job).
Because society (or “the public”) is demonstrably distinct from the sum of
its component individuals, behavior that might be good for each individual
may be bad for society as a whole; and conversely, what is “bad” for the
individual (e.g., taxes and regulations) may benefit society at large.
These fundamental precepts: “good for each, bad for all” and
“bad for each, good for all” are of essential importance to the
defense of progressivism, and by implication to the refutation of
regressivism.
The progressive is not “against” free markets, but rather believes that in
the organization and functioning of society and its economy, markets are
invaluable servants. But markets can also be cruel masters. Thus, in the
formulation of public policy, markets should count for something and even
for much, but not for everything. There is a “wisdom” of the marketplace,
but that “wisdom” is not omniscient. Adam Smith was right: each individual
seeking his own gain might act, “as if by an invisible hand,” to the
benefit of all. But as Adam Smith also observed and regressive economists
tend to forget, there is a “back of the invisible hand,” whereby
self-serving action by each individual can bring ruin upon the whole -- a
warning that was vividly presented by Garrett Hardin in his landmark
essay, “The Tragedy of the Commons.” (1968)
The progressives are so much in favor of a market economy that they are
determined to protect it from its excesses and from its inborn tendency
toward self-destruction. The progressive recognizes that the natural
tendency of “free markets” is toward monopoly and cartels, which are, of
course, the end of the free market. Thus the progressive endorses
anti-trust laws, which means, of course, a rule of law enforced by
government.
The progressive also recognizes that market transactions, especially those
by large corporations, affect not only the parties of those transactions
(the buyers and sellers), but also unconsenting third parties, the
“stakeholders”; for example, citizens who reside downwind of and
downstream from polluting industries, citizens who are enticed by false
advertising to endanger their health, and parents whose children's minds
and morals are corrupted by mass media. “Stakeholders” should thus have a
voice in these corporate transactions, and the only agency with a
legitimate right to represent the stakeholders is their government; hence
the justification for regulation of corporations.
The progressive agrees that economic benefits “trickle down” from the
investments of the wealthy. But he also insists that the wealth of the
privileged few “percolates up” from knowledge and labor of the producers
of that wealth -- the workforce -- and from the tranquility and social
order that issues from a public that is served well by, and freely
consents to the rule of, its government. The progressive insists that the
workers are most productive and prosperous when they participate, through
collective bargaining, in determining the conditions of their employment.
The progressive also recognizes that the productivity of that workforce
results from public education and from the publicly funded basic research
that might otherwise be neglected by private entrepreneurs.
In addition to the libertarian’s defense of government’s function of
protecting the rights of “life, liberty and property,” the progressive
believes that it is also the function of government “to establish Justice,
insure domestic Tranquility, ... [and] promote the general Welfare."
Critics of The Right, who choose to call themselves “conservatives,”
should note that these words are quoted directly from the Preamble to the
Constitution of the United States.
Also, along with the libertarians, the progressive endorses the “like
liberty principle” which affirms that each individual is entitled to
maximum liberty, consistent with equal liberty for all. Likewise, the
“no-harm principle,” expressed in the familiar folk maxim, “my freedom
ends where your nose begins.” However, the libertarians fail to come to
terms with the full implications of these principles, for their program
results in freedom for the privileged few at the cost of the freedom and
welfare of the many. To put the matter bluntly, the progressive disagrees
with the libertarian, not because the progressive values liberty less, but
because he values liberty more.
The progressive insists that certain institutions and resources are the
legitimate property, not of private individuals, but of the public at
large. These include, first of all, the government itself: the
legislature, the executive, and the courts. In addition, the natural
environment -- the atmosphere, the waterways, the oceans, the aquifers,
wildlife -- can not be parceled out, marked by property lines, and sold to
the highest bidder. Language, the arts, literature, the sciences, are
common heritages which must be protected and nurtured for the common good,
and not be used and exploited exclusively for private gain.
Finally, the progressive demands that government belongs to the people,
and not exclusively to those interests that can afford to “buy into”
access to and influence upon the government. “Governments,” the
progressive reminds us, “are instituted among Men, deriving their just
powers from the consent of the governed,” and that “whenever any Form of
Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the
People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government.” And if
the (self-described) “conservatives” find such sentiments to be
treasonous, they should again take note of the source. These words are
from the founding document of our republic: The Declaration of
Independence.
Accordingly, far from being “traitors,” as Ann Coulter would have us
believe, progressives are among the most authentic of patriots.
Dr. Ernest Partridge
is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics
and Public Policy. He publishes the website,
The Online Gadfly
and co-edits the
progressive website,
The Crisis Papers.
His book in progress, Conscience of a Progressive, can be seen at:
www.igc.org/gadfly/progressive/^toc.htm.
E-mail him at:
crisispapers@hotmail.com.
Other Articles by Ernest
Partridge
*
The
Gulliberal Problem
* In 2006,
Voting Fraud is the Keystone Issue
* Dear
Howard Dean: Why Bother?
* The
Illusion of Normality
* Why
Economics Fails as a Sole Foundation of Public Policy
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