The usual caveat about not agreeing with everything said, but a  rethinking
of liberalism which sure sounds like Radical Centrism in many  particulars.
BR
 
-------------------------------
 
 
Great Britain
 
iai news
 
January 7, 2015
 
The Real Problem with Liberalism  
(http://iainews.iai.tv/articles/fulfilling-the-liberal-promise-auid-470/rss) 
The family unit must inspire a  new political radicalism, argues the brains 
behind the Big Society. 
 
Phillip Blond | Political  theorist, theologian, director of ResPublica 
think-tank, leading proponent of  Red Toryism and the Big Society 

 
The only political question that matters is the one asked by Plato: “What 
is  the good?” That is how we should judge every decision and event in time. 
The  good should be what predominates, and the good changes what exists into 
what  ought to be. It is a revolution in the Judeo-Christian tradition, and 
it is  exactly the kind of revolution we need today, to move conclusively 
beyond the  failures of neoliberalism. 
There has never been a successful form of neoliberal economics. The legacy 
of  neoliberal economics is the crash, the legacy is the new serfdom that we’
re  currently witnessing, in which more people become impoverished and 
reliant on  welfare, while less people pay taxes – especially the corporations –
 for that  welfare. What we have at the moment is the rhetoric of free 
markets and the  reality of monopolies. 
Look at the leaders of the three main parties – each comes from a highly  
privileged background. In today’s society you can only really prosper if you’
ve  gone to the right schools, have the right amount of money and are  
well-positioned by birth. This is the society that neoliberalism has produced.  
The real problem is that we’re a liberal society, and liberalism delivers 
the  opposite of what it argues for. It argues for freedom, and it introduces  
serfdom; it argues for liberty, and it only gives freedom for those at the 
very  top. What I believe in is a liberalism fulfilled, not a liberalism 
promised. The  solution is neither statism nor individualism; it is social 
conservation. 
What is social conservation? First of all, it is not necessarily 
right-wing.  There are clearly left-wing social conservatives. Most of the 
left, 
particularly  during the 19th century for example, was founded on the idea of  
preserving what people thought was valuable. Think of the environment. The  
environment is about preserving what people think of as valuable: beauty,  
landscape, an atmosphere that needs protecting. That is all conservative and  
that’s also clearly radical. In fact I’d go even further: there is no 
genuine  left-wing politics without conservatism. Without conservatism, all you 
do 
is  embrace change for the sake of change, and that is capitalism. If the 
left knew  or understood its own traditions, it would recognise that the best 
of it is a  form of social conservatism. It was Marx, after all, who said, “
all that’s solid  melts into air”. 
Social conservatism – or rather, social conservationism – is the 
preservation  of what is valuable in people’s lives. It entails the distinction 
between use  and exchange value, and it involves a reinstatement of the idea of 
inherent  worth. What we need, therefore, is a new form of mixed economy that 
prices in  externalities i.e. valuing what is really valuable. This means 
we make polluters  pay, we make people who are playing the system pay, and we 
ensure that radical,  free and fair competition actually takes place. 
Really there are no radical politics, left or right, without a notion of 
what  ought to be preserved against the mere forces of change. Genocide was a 
form of  change, and if you think people should be preserved, then you’re a 
conservative  in that regard. What we need, therefore, is a simple and clear 
recognition that  conservatism is at the basis of all genuine politics 
whatsoever. (Unless you  think there’s nothing valuable that is current, or 
there is nothing valuable  that is past, and all that is valuable are things we 
haven’t done yet. But then  that’s a peculiar form of nihilism that hardly 
anybody, perhaps Richard Dawkins  is the exception, would endorse.)  
The first step to implement the ideas of social  conservationism is the 
recognition that people are valuable and that they have  intrinsic value. Hand 
in hand with this is the recognition that people are  different, that 
elitism can be a good thing. All forms of human  activity are themselves 
elitist 
and need to be. Who believes in the average?  Other than Maoists, Marxists 
or, indeed, free-marketeers. Who believes that  we’re all the same? In 
anything from art to literature to architecture to  gardening to personalities, 
there are multiple elites and there need to be,  because elites create 
excellence and aiming for excellence is what creates the  good. What social 
conservation stands against is the idea that there is one  excellent. This is 
untrue; there are many excellents, as William Morris argued.  We therefore need 
policies that recognise all forms of excellence. Excellence is  only elitist 
if you think there’s one form of excellence or alternatively that  there’s 
no form of excellence. It’s only the plurality of excellence that’s  
compatible with democracy. 
We therefore need to recognise that many of the approaches that we’ve 
adopted  to help people actually harm them. Think of state education in our 
poorest areas  – it’s almost unbelievably bad. We’ve destroyed culture when we 
should preserve  culture. We’ve destroyed working class culture – the 
culture of the miners who  played Handel, the workers’ educational association. 
All of that has been  aborted from our lives, in part by the left just 
following a completely statist  approach, and also by the right where there’s 
been 
contempt for working class  people. 
What we have to look at is the whole range of social institutions and 
remodel  them so they can preserve and advance what people value. Let’s take 
one 
example:  regardless of class, people have an equal aspiration to marry. But 
for those in  the most disadvantaged parts of society, that equal 
aspiration to marry isn’t  mirrored by an equal success in marriage. 
Increasingly it’
s the wealthy and  successful who marry. Once we’ve destroyed the cultures 
of marriage and  partnership, what happens is that women are left with the 
children and with a  low paid job moving from welfare into low paid work and 
back again, whilst men,  feckless and indolent, are allowed to evade their 
responsibilities to women and  to children. 
What we need to do is recover the progressive nature of the family. The  
family isn’t some awful fascist imposition, as Engels wrote, where women are  
essentially enslaved to patriarchy. The family is the most effective tool to 
 fight modern poverty because it creates, at the beginning, a shared 
approach to  all the problems that confront us when we raise our children or 
try 
to progress  our lives. The destruction of the family is the destruction of 
the life chances  of the poor. 
The tragedy of modern feminism is the pursuit of sharp elbowed autonomy, 
and  there has now been significant recognition that modern feminism has 
essentially  become a tool of modern capitalism, i.e. feminism has lost its 
project of  solidarity. The recovery of the project of solidarity for feminism 
is 
absolutely  vital both for women and for men. 
The first principle of solidarity that all human beings experience, if  they
’re lucky, is the solidarity of their parents with their own well-being.  
That’s what is meant by social conservation. Far from being the pursuit of 
some  hideous campaign against different sorts of people, it’s a preservation 
of what  people value, and what the overwhelming majority of people value is 
other  people, and their most intimate and important relationships. Yet 
everything in  how we run our society and economy today privatises those 
relationships. It  doesn’t capture the public worth of our public concern with 
one 
another. All of  my work, from the Big Society to Devo-Max, is about trying 
to recreate social  solidarity, trying to recreate the conditions whereby 
people can interact with  one another, on the most intimate level – the 
family – up to the more abstract  level – a community around a city, place or 
locale, or indeed the nation. That’s  the only real radical project we have. 
If you look at this issue historically, women have always created a 
domestic  economy that was actually also a non-domestic economy. What I argue 
for 
is full  and equal participation by women in all the goods of society: 
academically,  intellectually and creatively. One of the greatest factors 
holding 
women back  today is that when successful women have children, they leave 
full-time work and  go into part-time work, or they never return to work. If 
you track male-female  incomes, women are doing far better than men; women 
are far more competent in so  many ways than men. By their 30s, by many 
indices, women perform far better than  men. After their 30s, when they have 
children, they drop out. That’s the  standing indictment of the forms of modern 
feminism that we’ve had, which in my  view are patriarchal. That’s the form 
of modern feminism that says men and women  are no different, and they’re 
just essentially different bodies. That means that  the difference of women – 
one of which is of course that they have children –  isn’t catered for. I 
believe in a completely enhanced offer around maternity and  maternity care 
that ensures equality. In many ways we have to treat people  differently in 
order to achieve equality. In many ways one of the greatest  agents of 
inequality is egalitarianism. 
Let’s take another example: the welfare state. What if the welfare state  
doesn’t preserve welfare? Let’s think big. The aim of the welfare state was 
to  secure people against poverty, to ensure that capitalism didn’t just pay 
people  the very minimum in order for them to survive. But now there is a 
situation,  particularly in the developed world, where welfare has enabled 
people to get  something for nothing; where you make no contribution and you 
get rewarded  anyway. This has produced a society where disadvantage has 
almost become an  inheritable condition. Levels of social mobility are back to 
the Edwardian  times, and the postcode where you’re born is a better 
predictor of your outcome  than any other social indicator. 
Besides, does anybody in the developed world seriously believe that welfare 
 actually relieves poverty? The evidence is clear: welfare can have the 
complete  opposite effect; it can create a whole group of people who live on 
welfare and  nothing else. Of course, income welfare is necessary for some 
people at certain  stages of their life, but I actually believe in a more 
radical form of welfare,  a form that is true to welfarism’s original 
intentions, 
which is transforming  people’s outcomes. I believe in asset welfare. 
If the left was more critical it would realise that welfare in many cases  
actually harms the poor. Welfare is a substitute for ownership, and 
ownership is  the only thing that can genuinely create mass social justice. 
Without 
mass  ownership, we will always have a class that relies on wages, which is 
exactly  what we have now. Where is the greatest amount of wealth? It goes 
hand in hand  with ownership. Where do radical policies create mass 
ownership? Nowhere on the  left. We’ve got to rethink what welfare is. If we 
take it 
seriously, welfare is  the flourishing of human beings, and it’s hard to 
think of our social system as  contributing to that. Just tour the great cities 
of the north, and see whole  council wards where essentially their future 
is impoverished and that of their  children and their children’s children. 
In this regard, my vision for the Big Society is as  pertinent as it ever 
was. Indeed the government adopted Devo Max – Devo Manc,  which by the way is 
a Big Society vision – within months of me publishing a  report at 
ResPublica. What happened is that conservatism reverted tragically to  type. It 
once 
again became the utilitarian, free market fundamentalist approach  that 
will never ever gain majority support. Conservatism is at its best when  it’s 
broad and One Nation, and encompasses more than just the interests of the  
economically autonomous south-eastern folk, and actually cares for the whole  
nation. 
What was really lost with the abandonment of the Big Society is a  
conservatism that would have majority appeal. But I have no doubt, and I know  
this 
from my work in Europe, that those ideas will come back. Indeed in his  
superb policy review John Cruddas said very publicly that many of his ideas are 
 
about trying to make the Big Society work, and actually the future of 
policy  will look like the Big Society. 
No cultural shift is unstoppable. History isn’t governed by necessity;  
history is governed by contingency. Many of the things that have happened have  
been good, such as medical research, but many things that have happened  
throughout history have been appalling, from mass war to climate change and so 
 on. I doubt very much anyone thinks that climate change is a historical  
necessity, it’s only happening because we don’t have the economics and 
politics  to reverse it, but they’re theoretically achievable. It’s the same 
with anything  from obesity to poor education. These look like long-term 
trends, but they’re  the results of social and cultural decisions. It’s time we 
made some good  decisions. 
Social conservation is not a defence that’s merely fixed. To quote 
Augustine,  it’s the “moving image of eternity”. Let us not forget that the 
first 
form of  politics we ever had was Judaism, where God wasn’t conceived as 
validated status  quo, but was conceived of as imagining an entirely different 
human community.  Most people today view religion as social conservatism, but 
religion is  essentially the most radical form of politics in its Jewish 
and Christian forms.  It argues for a fundamentally different view of the 
world, where the good should  be what predominates and the good changes what 
exists into what ought to be. In  that sense, the most progressive politics for 
a better future is that of social  conservatism.

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