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Die Neue Zeit
20th February 2012, 00:22
http://dissentmagazine.org/atw.php?id=560



By Bhaskar Sunkara, Jacobin

Mark Engler’s commentary on my symposium entry and the “legacy of anti-globalization” more generally is appreciated. I don’t disagree with him on the specifics. “Anti-globalization” had its genesis before Seattle, rattled on after 9/11, and left behind a tangible legacy. But was this legacy an unambiguously positive one? The diversity of the global justice movement is undeniable, but to the extent its prominent intellectual voices represented broader trends, we can see the crystallization of a new type of radical that would come to prominence on the Left. The reconfiguration of the Left at the end of the twentieth century created a void. The “anarcho-liberal” filled it.

The mainstream media weren’t the only ones surprised by the “battle in Seattle.” Left-wing commentary also betrayed disbelief at the return of mass street protests. But much had changed since the New Left. The intervening decades saw the rise of neoliberalism, while on the center Left, social democracy was in crisis and struggling to modernize. The situation among radicals was even more disorienting. Stalinism was vanquished, but this triumph, long hoped for by democratic socialists, did not cause a revival on the Left. The old working-class parties weren’t reclaimed by radicals; they either faded away or drifted along with no sense of historical purpose in technocratic directions. Socialism had failed as a political movement and, at the theoretical level, Marxism was increasingly abandoned as a way to understand the world.

This is moment when the “anarcho-liberal,” the iconic actor in the “anti-globalization” movement, was forged—a figure in flux between the historic positions of the social democratic and anti-capitalist Lefts.

The center Left had tasked itself with the burden of governance, delivering welcomed doses of socialism within the capitalist framework. The crowning achievement of postwar social democracy, the welfare state, represented a high point in human civilization. The state was wielded, not smashed, and class compromise, not class struggle, fostered economic growth and shared prosperity previously unimaginable.

But social democracy faced the structural crisis in the 1970s that Michal Kalecki, author of “The Political Aspects of Full Employment,” predicted decades earlier. Contra Leninist predictions, near-full employment and a cushy welfare state made workers bold, not docile. They made militant wage demands. Capitalists were able to keep up with them when times were good, but when stagflation hit—the intersection of poor growth and rising inflation—capital suffered from a crisis of profitability. Neoliberalism’s success came in curbing this inflation and restoring profits through a vicious offensive against the working class.

Social democratic parties that sought to administer advanced economies in the neoliberal age, especially with the pressures wrought by globalization, had to adapt their platforms to this new reality. It’s often meant, such as in the case of New Labour in Britain, betraying the principles and constituencies that these parties built their legacies around. But, at its best, it has yielded a “progressive neoliberalism.” Certain European nations, like Sweden, have maintained much of their social safety net, and Lula’s Brazil provides a model of market-oriented center-left governance for the developing world.

A crude overview, sure, but right in the broad strokes: the Marxist-derived Left was defeated, while social democracy reconciled to the neoliberal framework. “Anarcho-liberalism” sauntered in a weird middle ground between both camps. Its representatives had the modest ambitions of the social liberals of the center Left, but the flair for the dramatic associated with the most militant anarchists of the far Left. Take the talented Naomi Klein, the archetypical “anarcho-liberal.” At a panel hosted by the Platypus Affiliated Society, Klein critiqued Milton Friedman on the peculiarly reactionary grounds that he was a “Utopian ideologue,” mentioning that she didn’t think that there was any great need for “grand projects of human freedom.” This is consistent with past statements to the effect that she wasn’t “a utopian thinker.” She continued, “I don’t imagine my ideal society. I don’t really like to read those books, either. I’m just much more comfortable talking about things that are.”

An odd stance for an iconic intellectual of an avowedly radical movement. Adding to the confusion, she has described herself as a Keynesian. Meaning there’s little separating her and the members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, much less many European politicians, in terms of their vision of a just society. Yet instead of traveling to Socialist International meetings, Klein attends the World Social Forum or files adoring reportage from an occupied factory in Argentina, a raucous street protest, or Zapatista strongholds in the Lacandon Jungle.

Klein is a pre-crisis social democrat, untainted by neoliberalism. But if she wants to restore the policies of “golden age” social democracy, she is going about it in an unusual way. Social democracy drew its strength from the institutions of the workers movement—parties, unions, programmatic platforms, and the degree of discipline and coherence that came along with them. But to quote from a New Yorker profile, “[Klein] distrusts centralization, institutions, platforms, theories—anything except extremely small, local, ad-hoc, spontaneous initiatives.” Small c conservative Keynesianism! Lyrical, creative, disruptive protests in pursuit of a localized variant of what the New Left considered a drab and conformist bureaucratic welfare state. The incoherence is baffling.

Some things were broadly shared by “anarcho-liberals”: an anti-intellectualism that manifested itself in a rejection of “grand narratives” and structural critiques of capitalism, abhorrence for the traditional forms of left-wing organization, a localist impulse, and an individualistic tendency to conflate lifestyle choices with political action. The worst of both worlds, the “anarcho-liberal” can neither manage the capitalist state nor overcome it, and aspires to do both and neither at the same time.

GoddessCleoLover
20th February 2012, 00:28
Anarch-liberal seems to be just another ideological flavor of the week. Seems like a description of liberals who harken back to the "small ball" politics of the Clinton years. Yawn.

Ocean Seal
20th February 2012, 00:38
Was I the only one who thought that this article was going to be about Noam Chomsky?

GoddessCleoLover
20th February 2012, 00:42
Chomsky is a reformist perhaps, but a liberal?

Franz Fanonipants
20th February 2012, 00:45
Chomsky is a reformist perhaps, but a liberal?

what the shit why does this ridiculous shit start up every single week on revleft dot com?

Chomsky is a terrible liberal.

e: restricted poster ngnmwhatevernumber is the perfect example of an anarcho-liberal. he also basically lives in noam chomsky's basement. or amy goodman's. either way.

GoddessCleoLover
20th February 2012, 00:47
Because he is a reformist. I see your point, although I would classify him more as a social democrat. Not much difference, I suppose.

Franz Fanonipants
20th February 2012, 00:48
Because he is a reformist. I see your point, although I would classify him more as a social democrat. Not much difference, I suppose.

none at all

Os Cangaceiros
20th February 2012, 01:07
I don't really get what this article is on about in regards to Naomi Klein. She's just a liberal. There's nothing about her that justifies an "anarcho" prefix.

Caj
20th February 2012, 01:25
Anarcho-liberal? How does that make any sense? And Naomi Klein an anarchist? C'mon. . . . :rolleyes:

Minima
20th February 2012, 03:04
occupy-liberals

she's coming to speak at my school as an event we're hosting.

I got some hard questions to ask her but you are welcome to contribute

GPDP
20th February 2012, 05:04
Basically, what I got out of the article is an anarcho-liberal is one who pursues, or at the very least advocates achieving modest, reformist goals through radical non-establishment means.

Obviously, "anarcho-liberalism" is not real anarchism, as anarchism seeks to destroy the state and class society, but its tactics emulate it to an extent. The focus on confrontation and public dissent distinguishes it from run-of-the-mill reformist liberalism, which seeks to work squarely within the establishment political framework to advance its "progressive" agenda. That said, the article is also right to point out it often plays to idealism and individualism, given its fetish for de-centralized small-scale action and organization. And all of this to achieve mere reformist demands.

Honestly, it truly does bring the Occupy phenomenon to mind. Outside of perhaps Oakland, it basically was reformist liberals roleplaying as anarchists. For all the counter-culture and civil disobedience, its demands and goals were squarely within the realm of social-democratic politics at best. That's not to say progressive reform is necessarily bad, of course. But when said reform is the end goal of a movement rather than a stepping stone toward something bigger, it is not something I can quite 100% get behind without criticism. And unfortunately, much of Occupy didn't move beyond such politics, despite its seemingly radical trappings, which is why it looks to me as the archetypal "anarcho-liberal" movement.

NewLeft
20th February 2012, 05:09
This site is like a competition, who can be the furthest left.

Naomi Klein is incredibly arrogant. People who've met her in Toronto know what I mean, but she gets alot of coverage for a lefty.. Same with Noam Chomsky.

bricolage
20th February 2012, 10:02
meh, naomi klein's a liberal yeah but I get the bit about the weakness of what's perceived as anarchist form (ie, non-hierarchical, non-centralised, non-permanent) existing without the anarchist (or communist) content, which to be honest does happen a lot. keep the decentralisation stuff but lose the anti-capitalism and you're just a street gang for the lib dems. that being said this article just seems another recuperative tool to get those pesky radicals back into TEH TRADITIONAL ORGANISATIONS.

Vladimir Innit Lenin
22nd February 2012, 13:55
Awful article.

How dare people try to move on from the great Marxism-Leninism of the 20th century? How dare people not conform to Socialist orthodoxy and stray from words and phrases like 'class struggle' and 'proletarian revolution' and 'changing ownership of the means of production' and so on?

This is an horribly defensive article from an ideology that has no sway any more. It strikes me as jealous, paranoid, insular and, above all, the type of trash that appears in the worst gossip-rags of the left.

I'm not endorsing Naomi Klein's political views as my own, nor any liberal's views as my own for that matter, but in a period where localised, bottom-up movements have shown to be far more effective in creating mass movements, it strikes me as weird that an article like this would pop up.

Die Neue Zeit
22nd February 2012, 14:07
Um, neither the author nor the paper is "Marxist-Leninist."