I tend to agree with Eric's remarks in this thread. But just to add:

Brian Holmes wrote:

>This is the endgame of the neoliberal program for the total makeover of
society

Except that neither Trump nor Farage, nor Putin for that matter, are
neoliberals.

Nor are the Mercers. Cambridge Analytica and the Mercers began their
involvement in the 2016 Presidential elections by supporting the Ted Cruz
campaign - a far Right theocrat. Then they switched to Trump, in my opinion
a fascist in sensibility and 'instincts' if not in replete doctrine. Prior
to this the Mercers were financiing Breitbart which, like Bannon, who is a
fascist, and also likes to bang on about how bad liberalism and
neoliberalism are.

It is one thing to identify a conspiracy - they exist in mundane form, they
are called private contracts. Nothing remarkable about those. The problem
arises when it comes to explanation, including more or less implicit
explanations of why a group of three guys in a room end up wielding power
or influence. Conspiratorialism is explaining the impact of contracts by
virtue of the very existence of contracts, a cartoonish, individualist and
ultimately egocentric explanation about how the world works that might work
for, say, a documentary or in journalism, but it is not an analysis that
would enable or facilitate making change. Maybe it would persuade some
wealthy benefactor to fund a Left-wing think-tank, which is a worthy goal,
I suppose, but would not mean very much since the sheer existence of a
think-tank is not an explanation for why its Thinking has any influence or
does not.

Re: analoguehorizon's comments. There is a lot in Mirowski's work that is
interesting. But his methodology and exposition barely rises above tabloid
description and a Whig history of Great Men Who Do Stuff. Describing a
meeting and drawing links to another meeting or influence remains
descriptive; worse, in the absence of an explanation to the contrary, it
implies or supports a conspiratorial explanation by treating the mere fact
of associations as meaningful without explaining why they are meaningful,
have effects (or not). I know a lot of people find Mirowski valuable, but
imo (particularly going by how his work is often  taken up) his work too
easily lends itself to the worst kind of History of Ideas and Great (white)
Men.

In any event, the Mercers, Trump, Bannon, Cambridge Analytica ... are not
neoliberals and using that term to describe them is not just remote from
any capacity for explanation of their influence and power. In this case
it's also a basic descriptive failure. There are better versions of the
links between Trump, the Mercers and the far far Right around. Some of them
suffer from the same problem of simply outlining associations. But at least
they get the basic description right.

Best,
Angela
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