Dear Michael, we fundamentally agree and yet it seems we also fundamentally
disagree.

Yes, I too think November is pivotal and the defeat of the Republican party
and the disempowerment of its chief is essential. Like yourself, moreover,
I think this way because of the reality of climate change. Trump has worked
on nothing so hard as dismantling every piece of environmental legislation
achieved over the past five decades. He has been effective at it, despite
tremendous resistance. I think this is a crime against humanity. We really
don't have to disagree on that, I can assure you.

The question is how to win in November. This question is at the center of
Democratic political strategy. Can the party win by throwing its support
behind a surge of young candidacies responding to a massive conviction that
the economic system has been rigged against the majority, that they have
been denied a good life, duplicitously saddled with debt, relegated to
precarious employment, swindled of their money by financial fraud, denied
public services, shut out of health care, blocked because of the color of
their skin, struck down by racist police? Or can the party win by going
back to Clintonian triangulation and the soothing assurance that all is
already for the better in the best of all possible worlds?

Those who want to take Option 2 represent the deeply rooted inertial
faction of the Democratic Party. Those who want Option 1 - whose most
accurate name is social democracy, and whose most rhetorically powerful
name is socialism - can recognize momentum when they see it.

This is not about voting for a third party. This is about changing the only
viable one we have.

The Republicans in their twisted way recognized this, albeit reluctantly,
in the wake of 2008. Their activist donor networks supported the grassroots
upsurge of the Tea Party and turned it into an electoral surge that
disempowered Obama in 2010 (Theda Skocpol's book is the best story about
this, but Jane Meyer's Dark Money fills in the gaps about the donor
network's role). A right-wing critique of neoliberal capitalism thereby
made its way into the Republican Party. Don't waste time explaining that
this was no real critique, they don't understand the modern economy, etc.
What matters in politics is the effectiveness. This critique grew and it
was not fully instrumentalized by the usual Republican power brokers. In
2016 it shattered the traditional structures of the Republican party and of
its policy elites to smithereens, unleashing the irrational fury of the
present regime.

My claim is that this was achieved because Trump himself criticized the
structure of the US political economy as it had evolved with effective
bipartisan support over decades, calling out its injustices in a language
that his constituency could understand and taking bold moves to change it.
Nevermind that his moves are contradictory, incoherent, hypocritical,
self-destructive. They continue to be far more effective politically than
anything the Democrats have produced, including Obama, who despite his
centrism was in many respects an outlier in his own party.

The Democrats need to repopulate their party with representatives who do
not look, talk, act or cash in like the Clintons. They need to critique the
political economy for its flagrant injustices and, because their
constituency is rational, they need to propose radical but effective
solutions to those injustices while also moving decisively ahead on the
biggest injustice of all, climate change. To do this requires a shakeup
equivalent to the one performed by the Tea Party. It requires an upsurge by
the base. The keyword of the upsurge is socialism.

Now,  as Gary Hall just said on this list the other day, politics is about
hegemony. Hegemony is not total power, nor is it the reconciliation of all
political contradictions. It is about the temporary unification or suturing
of contradictions so as to produce an effective unity within a specific
conjuncture. Time is short. The strategic question is what are the
contradictions, and how can they be overcome in November?

Those who are energized to win the November elections are divided into
three camps. The first just viscerally hate Trump and think that the hatred
of Trump is all that matters, don't worry, they will vote for any Democrat
that makes it onto the ticket and no one will have to go knocking on their
door and offering them a ride to the polls. The second camp wants a return
to a version of common sense forged by Kennedy on the basis of FDR. They
want a renewal of public institutions, an extension of public employment,
economic planning to relieve hardship, the extension of civil rights, a
return to ethical considerations in every profession and a renewed sense of
community, social democracy in short. The third camp are the campers, the
Occupiers, who gave up anarchy for electoral politics because of Bernie
Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. They want the same things, but they see the
situation as much more urgent, because they see the historical trajectory
of the Democratic Party as culminating in the profound corruption of
Clintonian neoliberal globalism. They are the most volatile of the three
camps, by far. They're the people who will go out knocking on doors and
offering a ride to the polls. And yes, they/we are given to writing
screeds, it's true...

The election cannot be won on the basis of camp one -- Hillary already
tried that. The current form of capitalism must be honestly critiqued, and
those who are suffering from it whether economically or morally must be
addressed directly and unambiguously. The key to the November elections is
a language that can speak to camps two and three. Nevermind that there are
contradictions between the two. Nevermind that it is extremely risky to
rock the boat of an established political party. The tide that came in back
in 2010 is now sinking us, precisely because of the false promise that
neoliberal finance and communications would lift all boats. A risk has to
be taken. The risk is to say the word socialism, and mean it -- while still
speaking truthfully and persuasively to those who want social democracy.

We can do this. Or we can fail abysmally, as in 2016. Doesn't matter that
Hillary won the popular vote, as you pointed out very energetically in the
days after the election (I remember that one). What matters is overcoming
the traditional Democratic Party's abysmal failure at the job of producing
an egalitarian democracy under real political conditions.

David, you have always had such interesting and intelligent perspectives.
Feel free to respond. This is not a flame war. I totally agree with you
that we need to find a strategy that works. I have done my best to spell
out what seems to a major strategy, currently under debate with the
Democratic Party itself and within its donor networks. The strategy has to
be immediate, aiming first of all in Novemebr, but it cannot be incoherent,
self-defeating and violent like the Tea Party/Republican one. Because the
point is not just to lurch from crisis to crisis as the Republicans are
doing. The point is to really solve inequality in a way that generates
enough consensus and resolve to face climate change.

all the best and thanks for your post, Brian

On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 1:29 PM, Michael Goldhaber <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Brian, your cri de coeur is certainly evocative, but I don’t see why you
> had to title it "What Trump Gets Right". The elites he attacks are not
> primarily corporate leaders at all. His appeal has been fundamentally
> racist from the very start of his campaign. I know of no evidence that he
> gives a damn about automation.
>
> Aside from that, your comments are unfortunately ahistoric and unrealistic
> in my opinion. Today’s socialists, whom I generally support, have no
> distinct model whatsoever of reshaping corporations. I don’t believe that
> have any coherent response to automation either. Nor, aside from
> self-serving predictions of tremendous AI success to come do we have any
> clear ability to predict the extent or effects of AI in the near future.
>
> Here is what we definitely must worry about in the near future:
> (1) the effects of climate change–Right now California is burning year
> round, there have been forest fires above the Arctic Circle, levels of heat
> too high for human survival are predicted relatively soon in heavily
> populated places around the world, etc;
> (2) Authoritarian regimes are on the rise, and companies like Google are
> eagerly aiding them (with its current plan not produce a censored version
> that will satisfy the Chinese “Communist “ regime [just try to advocate
> socialism in China]);
> (3) these authoritarian regimes disdain for ordinary people’s lives are
> even worse than those of American corporate leaders. Consider the
> devastation in Syria, and Yemen, among the Rohingya in Myanmar, etc., (of
> course, past tycoons had equal disdain).
>
> Right now, any hope for any kind of decent future pivotally rests on a
> defeat of Trumpism this fall. Otherwise democracy in many parts of the
> world is quite possibly doomed, and the corporatist-authoritarian noose
> will grow ever tighter.
>
> Screeds like yours don’t help at all  right now, I’m afraid. They just
> help muddy the waters, when some clarity and singleness of focus is so much
>  needed.
>
>
>
> Best,
>
> Michael
>
> On Aug 3, 2018, at 12:04 AM, Brian Holmes <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> What does Trump get right?
>
> As a socialist, who votes Democratic but doesn't believe in it, I have
> been able to tell you the answer to this question for the last 20 years.
> Now that Apple is valued at $1 trillion, the New York Times finally agrees
> with me:
>
> https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/02/business/apple-trillion.html
>
> The shorty: Trump gets it that a mere 30 banks and corporations take half
> the profits of the US economy. These companies have emerged from the tech
> boom, they are so-called knowledge-based industries, their HQs and design
> labs are staffed by the hippest university-educated urbanites in the world,
> and their vanishing labor force is either located offshore (like Apple's)
> or paid the most abysmal wages imaginable, for example to pick products in
> warehouses so hot that employees are routinely carried out on stretchers
> and revived with salts before being sent home, wherever that might be
> (tent, trailer, SRO, nearby freeway bridge, you name it).
>
>
>
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