In part, a response to Re: Things Fall Apart: China and the Decline of
US Imperialism

It's interesting to compare this review below (and presumably the book
it reviews) with the 'China and Decline of US Imperialism' piece.
Really the 'lefty liberal' stance one sees on A certain list, waiting
for the internal conflict and decline', gets to be just another tiring
millenarianism--just like all that unoriginal 'environmental
socialism' of the apocalypse.
CJ
------------------------------------------

http://gnn.tv/articles/3118/Love_Me_I_m_A_Liberal

Love Me, I'm A Liberal?

By Sam Urquhart
A review of Stephen Marshall's Wolves in Sheep's Clothing

excerpt:

>>GNN co-founder Stephen Marshall is an activist, writer, film-maker,
a Canadian moonlighting as an American as well as a traveller of the
globe. And just like its author, Marshall's new book, Wolves in
Sheep's Clothing: The New Liberal Menace in America, is many things at
once. The posing of the question "what drives 60s radicals into
supporting military action to promote liberal ideals?" leads Marshall
to explore issues stretching from corporate-led globalization, the
historical importance of the American frontier, the theoretical
virtues of apolitical centrist government and the troubled aftermath
of a previous liberal intervention.

Above all else though, the book is an enquiry into where America is
taking the world. Can America allow the world to simply "be?" Can it
begin its retreat from empire and seek to restore (or create) viable
multilateral international relations, without the ever present threat
of interventions, be they military or financial?

Unfortunately, as I read it, Marshall's answer is no. At least not
now. If Americans want to project a humanistic liberalism which fights
for equality, individual fulfilment and peace, then they will have to
fight for it themselves.

Globalization and terror have implanted the idea of intervention into
both the American press and political system. Isolationist
conservatives or multilateralist liberals have been relegated to the
op-ed pages of second rank newspapers, samizdat web-sites and John
Stewart's desk. Since 9/11 an elite consensus has arisen around the
need for an aggressive and pre-emptive U.S. military, despite
widespread anti-war sentiment. The stage remains set for military
interventions, and, Democrats are at least as likely to launch them as
Republicans. Public sentiment has not morphed into effective
opposition.

What Wolves does is, if not a first, then a rarity. Marshall
interviews some of the most prominent liberal hawks with a serious eye
and ear, taking them at their word and tracing their "Damascene
conversions" to pro-war positions. Resisting polemical rebuttals of
their positions, he then goes further, drawing out some of the aspects
of American intellectual life and history which situate these
conversions in a wider context, that of the American frontier and the
deceptively "flat" world of economic prophet Thomas Friedman.

In the end, it is for the reader to decide whether the
interventionists make sense, given the context in which Marshall
places them, opening up the text to the reader and encouraging them to
form their own interpretations. With an almost lawyer-like instinct,
Marshall leaves the "wolves" to damn themselves with their words.

Along with its serious subject matter, Wolves is also an exhilarating
read. Marshall succeeds in fusing travelogue with political analysis,
making the book more accessible than most in the same genre. It's also
not wholly pessimistic. Marshall describes the hegemony of
interventionist ideas, but he also presents their flip-side. Peace in
the future and continual war are both seen as very real possibilities.
The activist in him allows Marshall to generate hope, but the
journalist in him presents a formidable body of opinion that the
anti-war movement will continue to confront as the Bush era winds down
and, as Wolves reminds us, a probable Democrat administration kicks
off.

Su-Berman and the flattening of the world

At a recent debate, Democrat presidential candidate Mike Gravel
produced a small epiphany for the anti-war liberal left. "You people
scare me" he said, calling out Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in
particular for their willingness to consider military action against
Iran. Clinton, runaway leader, expresses "total support" for Israel
and fondles the nuclear button on the Iranian threat.

In a climate of fear, with rumors of war, there is an urgent need to
confront such liberal hawks and to create leverage points to draw the
Democrats back towards the left. Wolves takes on several of these
hawks and provides more then enough ammunition to neutralize their
rhetorical influence.

Paul Berman, for example, could be the archetypal liberal hawk: from
60s hellraiser, to Sandinista sceptic, to Gulf War booster and now,
doom-mongering prophet of clashing civilizations. Still though, he
tells Marshall, he claims to be a socialist.

The problem for Berman, is that by coming out all guns blazing against
"Islamo-fascism" he has allied himself with the boosters of
free-wheeling globalization, a globalizing capitalism which is
fragmenting societies and creating room for extremist ideologies to
thrive. High profile (and eloquent) liberal writers have chosen to
adopt a marriage of convenience with conservative militarists,
seemingly out of the hope that the actions of such allies will
eventually produce liberal outcomes. But it's a Faustian bargain.>>end
of excerpt

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to