Socialism For Dummies or: Why Obama Isn't a Communist

The President's a socialist, Nancy Pelosi's a communist, and Mr. Coons
from Delaware is a bearded Marxist. Nice rhetorical ingredients to
boil up in the Tea Party's scalding kettle, but ridiculous as
philosophy, history or politics. I know that clarifying the actual
meaning of such terms, deployed by ignorant zealots to vilify
opponents in our over the top Congressional elections, is unlikely to
make much of a political difference. People who use words as clubs are
not really interested in their meaning. But just for the record, words
do have meanings.

Concepts like libertarianism, liberal democracy, socialism and
communism are meant to define attitudes about individualism and
collectivism, limited government and big government, and distrust or
trust of democracy. We actually have a rather ample store of such
terms to frame our democratic beliefs and define the broad spectrum of
attitudes we have about government, from total individualist enmity to
any and all government to total collectivist affinity for the most
corporatist forms of government. The spectrum reads, from pure liberty
to pure statism as follows: anarchism, libertarianism, constitutional
republicanism, liberal democracy, welfare state democracy, social
democracy, socialism, communism (Marxism) and corporatism.

It works like this: Radical individualists at the far end of the
spectrum, those who believe that all political authority is
illegitimate, are anarchists (not even Rand Paul goes this far). Like
those who distrust most but not all government, who distrust
government especially with respect to the economy and individual
rights, he's a libertarian. Advocates of limited government hemmed in
by constitutional authority and rights are constitutional republicans,
and most conventional Republicans belong here.

Right in the middle of the spectrum are those who embrace
individualism but see in government an instrument of freedom and
public purpose; these are liberal democrats, the identity that
historically has defined most of the American debate -- liberal
democrats like Eisenhower and Nixon favoring more personal liberty and
a little less government, liberal democrats like Carter and Clinton
insisting that a little more democratic governance actually favors
personal liberty. A bit more enthusiasm for how government can realize
both public goods and a degree of social justice turns liberal
democrats into welfare state democrats, think Chuck Schumer and
Barbara Boxer. Here, government is a vehicle for pursuing common
democratic ends such as guaranteeing competition and fair trade,
regulating capital and economic markets and assuring a degree of
distributive (redistributive) justice as well as a social safety net.

Leaving this centrist position that defines American politics, we move
into collectivist territory where individuals are less prized. Moving
well beyond welfare state democracy, we arrive at social democracy
(call it bottom up socialism like that of Sweden in the '80s),and then
socialism (top-down socialism, Chavez style) where government no
longer merely regulates the market and creates conditions that abet
justice, but begins to own the market and impose justice. With
communism, the state owns just about everything, and property, civil
society and the market largely vanish, as happened in Cuba and North
Korea. Individuals remain theoretically important, but their liberty
interests are forfeited. Marxism, bearded or not, denotes not a
different stage of communism but points to a theory about history that
claims communism is an inevitable consequence of how economic laws
unfold. Finally, at the far collectivist end of the spectrum is
corporatism, best exemplified in systems like Italian fascism and
German national socialism, where the individual has vanished
altogether both in theory and practice and where personal liberty
ceases to have any meaning at all. No, President George Bush, Jr. was
not a fascist and was more a libertarian than a corporatist (though he
practiced big government!)

Indeed, the American political discussion starting with the founding
debate between advocates of limited government and advocates of
democratic activism -- between liberalism and. egalitarianism -- and
coursing on through the argument over the New Deal and the Great
Society, right down to today's contest about health policy,
environmental oversight and financial regulation has pretty much
occupied the space defined by this central part of the political
spectrum. This means liberal democrats in the middle (Clinton) with
limited government constitutional republicans (Reagan)and the
occasional libertarian (Rand Paul) to the right and welfare state
democrats (Nancy Pelosi) to the left. America has been defined by this
centrist debate about how to reconcile individual liberty and
democratic egalitarianism, both being seen as valuable. Socialism has
never been an American option and certainly is not one today. If
anything, the center of the debate has moved slighted to the right.

What then has happened to our political discourse today? Polarization
has happened, and extremism, with publicity-seeking pundits and
irresponsible candidates refusing to be guided by the standard
glossary. Not enough rhetorical payoff. Instead vote-seekers have
injected terms like socialism and communism from the collectivist end
of the spectrum into the elections, even though they are utterly
without genuine political relevance in America. They are nothing more
than rabid slurs.

Obama a socialist? Has his administration collectivized the hospitals,
turned doctors into a state monopoly, nationalized the insurance
companies? Or are we continuing to privatize our security forces, turn
school and prisons into for-profit businesses, and let the financial
industry self-regulate? President Obama is a market-leaning liberal
democrat. Nancy Pelosi is a vigorous advocate of the welfare state and
of the social safety net, and she wants to regulate the runaway banks.
But that's not communism, folks, that's liberal democracy, and
reflects a less egalitarian agenda than the ones pushed by LBJ or FDR.

Bottom line, American politics have played out more or less in the
staid middle of the broad political spectrum and for all the noise
still do. Yes, an occasional libertarian surge pushes for the
revocation of redistribute taxes and an end to government regulation
on one side; and an occasional progressivist surge pushes towards New
Deal and Great Society interventions in the name of equality and
social justice on the other. But when zealots start throwing terms
like "socialist" at wan liberal democrats like President Obama, or
confusing weak regulation of the health and insurance industries with
communist ownership of the means of production, we have not just
conceptual confusion and noxious polemics, but abuses of speech
pernicious to the very life of democracy.


More:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/benjamin-r-barber/socialism-for-dummies-or_b_768464.html
-- 
Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy

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