Log in

View Full Version : Micahel Parenti: Global Rollback



Xiao Banfa
31st January 2008, 08:04
Global Rollback: After communism

by Michael Parenti

CovertAction Quarterly, Spring 2002

Lately we have been hearing a great deal about "blowback." But the real menace we face today is global rollback. The goal of conservative rulers around the world, led by those who occupy the seats of power in Washington, is the systematic rollback of democratic gains, public services, and common living standards around the world.

In this rabidly anticommunist plutocratic culture, many left intellectuals have learned to mouth denunciations of the demon Soviets, thereby hoping to give proof of their own political virtue and acceptability. For decades they have been fighting the ghost of Josef Stalin, flashing their anticommunist credentials in tireless diatribes or elaborately casual asides, doing fearless battle against imaginary hordes of "doctrinaire" Marxist-Leninists at home and abroad.

The downfall of socialist governments in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe caused much rejoicing not only in U.S. ruling circles but among those who claim to inhabit the Left. Here now was a window of opportunity, a new beginning, they said. Freed forever from the stigma of "Stalinism," the US Left supposedly would grow in legitimacy and influence. Taken by these notions, they seemed not to have noticed how the destruction of socialism has shifted the center of political gravity in a drastically reactionary direction. Some of us did not join the chorus of liberals, libertarians, leftists, conservatives and reactionaries who hailed the establishment of monopoly capitalist "democracy" in Eastern Europe. We feared that it was a historic defeat for the people of the world. And now we are beginning to see evils coming to full bloom that the Communists and their allies had been holding back.

In some ways, the twentieth century was a period of retreat for Big Capital. In 1900, the United States and most other capitalist nations were part of the "Third World" well before the term had been invented. Within the industrialized nations could be found widespread poverty, high unemployment rates, low wages, child labor, 12-hour workdays, six- and seven-day work weeks, malnutrition, and the diseases of poverty such as tuberculosis and typhoid. In addition, there were no public services, occupational safety regulations, consumer protections, or environmental safeguards to speak of. Only after decades of struggle, mostly in the 1930s and again in the aftermath of World War II, did we see dramatic advances in the conditions of those who had to work for a living.

THREAT OF A GOOD EXAMPLE

One of the things that helped workers win concessions was "the threat of communism." The pressure of being in competition with socialist nations for the allegiance of peoples at home and abroad helped to set limits on how thoroughly Western leaders dared to mistreat their own working populations. A social contract of a sort was put in place, and despite many bitter struggles and setbacks, working people made historic gains in wages, benefits, and public services.

In the late 1940s and 1950s the U.S. ruling class took great pains to demonstrate that workers under U.S. capitalism enjoyed a higher living standard than their opposite numbers chafing under the "yoke of communism." Statistics were rolled out showing that Soviet proletarians had to toil many more hours than our workers to buy various durable-use consumer goods. Comparisons were never made in regard to medical care, rent, housing, education, transportation, and other services that are relatively expensive in capitalist countries but heavily subsidized in socialist ones. The point is, the gains made by working people in the West should be seen in the context of capitalism's world competition with communism.

That competition also helped the civil rights struggle. During the 1950s and 1960s, when US leaders were said to be competing with Moscow for the hearts and minds of non-white in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, it was considered imperative that we rid ourselves of Jim Crow and grant equality to people of color in the US. Many of the arguments made against segregation were couched in just that opportunistic rhetoric: not racial equality for justice's sake but because it would improve America's image in the Cold War.

With the overthrow of socialism in 1989-91, transnational corporate capitalism now seemed to have its grip on the entire globe. Yet an impatient plaint soon could be detected in conservative publications. It went something like this: "If everywhere socialism is being rolled back by the free market, why is there no rollback here in the United States? Why do we have to continue tolerating all sorts of collectivist regulations and services?" By 1992, it became clear to many conservatives that now was the time to cast off all restraint and sock it to the employee class. The competition for their hearts and minds was over. Having scored a total victory, Big Capital would be able to write its own reactionary ticket at home and abroad. There would be no more accommodation, not with blue-collar workers, nor even white-collar professionals or middle management.

Throughout history there has been only one thing that ruling classes have ever wanted-and that is everything: all the choice lands, forests, game, herds, harvests, mineral deposits and precious metals of the earth; all the wealth, riches, and profitable returns; all the productive facilities, gainful inventiveness, and technologies; all the surplus value produced by human labor; all the control positions of the state and other major institutions; all public supports and subsidies, privileges and immunities; all the protections of the law with none of its constraints; all the services, comforts, luxuries, and advantages of civil society with none of the taxes and costs. Every ruling class has wanted only this: all the rewards and none of the burdens.

Instead of worrying about lowering unemployment, as during the Cold War, the plutocrats who preside over this country now seek to sustain a sufficiently high level of joblessness in order to weaken unions, curb workers, and maximize profits. What we are witnessing is the Third Worldization of the United States, the downgrading of a relatively prosperous population. Corporate circles see no reason why millions of working people should enjoy a middle-class living standard, with home ownership, surplus income, and secure long-term employment. They also see no reason why the middle class itself should be as large as it is.

As the haves would have it, people must work harder ("maximize productivity") and lower their expectations. The more they get, the more they will demand, until we will end up with a social democracy-or worse. It's time to return to nineteenth-century standards, the kind that currently obtain throughout the Third World, the kind that characterized America itself in 1900-specifically, an unorganized working populace that toils for a bare subsistence without benefits, protections, or entitlements; a mass of underemployed, desperate poor who help to depress wages and serve as a target for the misplaced resentment of those just above them; a small, shrinking middle class that hangs on by its bleeding fingers; and a tiny, obscenely rich, tax-free owning class that has it all. For the haves, deregulation, privatization, and rollback are the order of the day. "Capitalism with a human face" has become capitalism in your face. While commentators announce "the end of class struggle" and even "the end of history," in fact, U.S. politico-economic elites are waging class war more determinedly than ever.

SECOND, THIRD, FOURTH WORLDS

The collapse of socialism has abetted a reactionary rollback not only in the United States but throughout much of Western Europe, Scandinavia, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Rollback also has accelerated the current economic collapse in many Third World countries. During the Cold War era, U.S. policymakers sought to ensure the economic growth and stability of anticommunist regimes. But Third World development began to threaten U.S. corporate profitability. By the late 1970s, governments in Brazil, Mexico, Taiwan, South Korea, and other nations were closing off key sectors of their economies to U.S. investment. In addition, exports from these countries were competing for overseas markets with U.S. firms, and for markets within the United States itself. At the same time, growing numbers of Third World leaders were calling for more coordinated efforts to control their own communication and media systems, their own resources, markets, air space, and seabeds.

By the 1980s, U.S. policymakers were rejecting the view that a more prosperous, economically independent Third World would serve the interests of U.S. capitalism. And once there no longer was a competing socialist world to which Third World leaders might threaten to turn, the United States felt freer than ever to undo any kind of autonomous development in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. One rollback weapon is the debt. In order to meet payments and receive new credits from the US-dominated World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), Third World governments have had to agree to merciless "structural adjustment programs," including reductions in social programs, cuts in wages, the elimination of import controls, the removal of restrictions on foreign investments, the privatization of state enterprises, and the elimination of domestic food production in favor of high profit export crops.

Such measures are ostensibly designed to curb inflation, increase exports, and strengthen the fiscal condition of the debtor nation. By consuming less and producing more, debtors supposedly will be better able to pay off their debts. In fact, these structural adjustments work wonderfully for the transnational corporations by depressing wages, intensifying the level of exploitation, and boosting profit rates. They also leave the economies and peoples of these various countries measurably worse off. Domestic production loses out to foreign investors. There is a general deindustrialization as state enterprises fall by the wayside or are handed over to private owners to be milked for profits. Many small farmers lose their subsidies and import protections and are driven off the land. No wonder that, as western investment in the Third World increases, so does poverty and misery.

In time, Third World countries like the Philippines, Brazil and Mexico slip deeper into the desperately absolute destitution of what has been called the "Fourth World," already inhabited by countries like Haiti the Congo and Afghanistan. Thus, malnutrition in Mexico City has increased six-fold. As many as one-fifth of Mexico's ninety million people are now considered "severely undernourished," while the incidence of cholera, dengue, and other diseases related to malnutrition is nearly ten times higher than in 1990. The Mexican public health system that had begun to improve markedly in recent years is now at the point of complete collapse, with overcrowded, underfinanced, and understaffed hospitals no longer able to provide basic medicines.

As a further blow, the industrial nations began making substantial cuts in nonmilitary foreign aid to poor countries. These include sharp reductions in funds for education, environmental protection, family planning, and health programs. As noted in the Los Angeles Times, "With the decline of the Soviet threat, aid levels fell off." Measured as a percentage of gross national product, the United States gives the least foreign assistance of all industrialized nations, less than .02 percent.

To make things worse, popular resistance movements that might challenge the takeover of their countries by western global investors no longer have the benefit of material support from socialist countries. Nelson Mandela frequently spoke of the "essential aid" that the African National Congress had received from the Soviet Union. Today, rather than aiding anti-imperialist rebellions, the former socialist countries join NATO and send armed units to participate in US-inspired military interventions. This represents a serious loss for popular forces and a real gain for repressive plutocracy.

Reformist governments are being further undermined by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and other "free trade" agreements that are neither free nor have much to do with trade, allowing transnational corporations to bypass whatever democratic sovereignty might exist within individual nations. Not only are Third World economies now more successfully penetrated but the governments and peoples themselves are being marginalized by the whole process of economic globalization in what amounts to a global coup d'etat by the transnational corporate powers. Under the guise of abolishing "restraints of trade," "unfair competition," and "lost market opportunities," corporate-dominated trade councils are wiping out Third World import protections, public services, local industries, and local decision-making.

Finally, it should not go unmentioned that nowhere has global rollback been more thorough than in the former socialist countries themselves. The "Second World" of socialist nations has fallen into Third and Fourth World depths. In the former Soviet Union, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Latvia, and elsewhere, the capitalist paradise has brought massive privatization and deindustrialization, the defunding of public services, rampant inflation, and dramatic increases in poverty, hunger, unemployment, illiteracy, homelessness, crime, prostitution, disease, alcoholism, suicide, and depopulation-along with the emergence of small self-enriched coteries of gangster capitalists.

Reformist governments are attacked not only economically but, if need be, militarily, as has been the fate of more than a dozen nations in the last decade or so. In some cases, they are subjected to dismemberment as with Yugoslavia or complete absorption as with East Germany and South Yemen. Yugoslavia's relatively prosperous industrial base with an economy that was three-fourths publicly owned- could no longer be tolerated to compete with western capitalist production. Secession and war accomplished the goal of breaking up Yugoslavia into small rightwing client states under the economic suzerainty of transnational corporations.

SUPERPOWER UNLIMITED

The overthrow of the Soviet Union has given the world's only remaining superpower a completely free hand to pursue its diplomacy by violent diktat. The record of US international violence just in the last decade is greater than anything that any socialist nation has ever perpetrated in its entire history. US forces or proxy mercenary forces wreaked massive death and destruction upon Iraq, Mozambique, Angola, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, East Timor, Libya, and other countries. In the span of a few months, President Clinton bombed four countries: Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq repeatedly, and Yugoslavia massively. At the same time, the US national security state was involved in proxy wars in Angola, Mexico (Chiapas), Colombia, East Timor, and various other places. And US forces occupied Macedonia, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Afghanistan, and were deployed across the globe at some 300 major overseas bases- all in the name of peace, democracy, national security, counter-terrorism, and humanitarianism.

Again we might note the connection between the collapse of the Soviet Union and the arrogance and brutality with which the United States has pursued its international agenda throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. Earlier dreams of a US global hegemony-an "American Century"- were frustrated by the constraints imposed by a competing superpower. But today, policymakers in Washington and in academic think tanks all over the country are declaring that the United States has a historically unprecedented opportunity to establish through the use of its unanswerable military and economic power a position of world dominance. Third World economic nationalism will no longer be tolerated in the New World Order. US "leadership" can now remove all barriers to the reorganization of the global economy on the basis of market principles, as interpreted and dominated by the giant transnational corporations.

Given all this, maybe it is time that certain personages on the Left put aside their anticommunism and acknowledge the magnitude of the loss that has been sustained and the real dangers we face with the downfall of Eastern European socialism. The life chances of hundreds of millions of people throughout the world have been seriously and irreparably damaged. It is time to see that our real and urgent enemy is not Stalin (who incidentally is dead) but the Western "democratic" leaders who are running the cruelest scam in history, pursuing policies of concerted rapacity, creating a world totally free for maximizing profits irrespective of the human and environmental costs. With the fall of socialism, we have global rollback, the creation of more wealth for the few and more poverty for the many, the creation of powerlessness by the powerful-a cycle that cannot be effectively opposed by those who remain mired in the class collaborationist rhetoric of anticommunism.

Nothing Human Is Alien
1st February 2008, 02:10
Another sober and honest analysis from Parenti which cuts against the current trends of reformism and anti-communism so many are attempting to pass off as "leftism".

It's a few years old, but valuable nonetheless.

Labor Shall Rule
1st February 2008, 02:16
Is Parenti involved in any parties currently?

I love his stuff. I love watching his talks too.

Tatarin
1st February 2008, 06:10
Somebody should ask him to join this forum. :)

Xiao Banfa
3rd February 2008, 03:37
Yeah definitely, he would breath life into these discussions.
email: [email protected]

non-vio-resist
3rd February 2008, 06:28
this sight has introduced me to dr. parenti, and i really like most of what he is saying. however, i think he misses the point of those that have anarchist leanings. i do not think the soviet union was as brutal as the west (with the exception of stalin), but i don't think that what lenin and co. did was much different in theory to the liberal intellectuals of, say, the jfk administration. i think very few hierarchies are justified, and the ussr was no different. the attitude of "we are the enlightened few to save the society and allow it to progress" is the elitist attitude of not only lenin and co., but the atrocious men who we call the "founders" in the usa. first of all, what is "anitcommunism?" i think many of us who have anarchist leanings are all in favor of "communism" (the word is so bastardized it's not even worth mentioning). however, marxists and anarchists see different means to an end. i think what parenti is talking about is those of us on the left who are anti state-socialism. we don't see justification in a lenin, mao, or a stalin. why do we need this "revolutionary" figure to teach us the way? well, i believe we don't need that. i'm as anti-lenin as i am jfk or james madison. i think most everyone on the hard-left, whether marxist/anarchist, would agree that mccarthyism was utter fascism analogous to the "war on terror" aka assault on the islamic world. however, simply saying that the ussr was legitimate would be neglecting many of our core beliefs. perhaps parenti is correct in the notion that a "socialist" superpower would off-set some of the west's criminality and would possibly make the us et al think twice when invading countries. what did he suggest for those of us who saw two villians: the ussr and the usa (two imperial powers, essentially)? shut up? would it be to support, blindly, the ussr because they are marxist in theory? i don't know what to make of this. if he is talking about the liberals of the 50's/60's that bought into mccarthyism hook, line,and sinker, then i agree with his criticism of the "left." but if he is referring to left-intellectuals who happen to come from an anarchist perspective, a la howard zinn and noam chomsky, i think he's wrong. i don't see a problem with an anarchist scholar critiquing american foreign policy and the ussr.

Xiao Banfa
3rd February 2008, 07:56
lenin and co. did was much different in theory to the liberal intellectuals of, say, the jfk administration.


Lenin and the Bolsheviks had nothing in common with JFK and his ideological allies.

Lenin was the leader of a socialist state which had nationalised the commanding heights of the economy.

JFK was the leader of an imperialist state which whose two parties were allied with huge corporations.

JFK's administration sent troops into Vietnam which, according to establishment figures, was vital for the "growth of the US economy".

That's imperialism.

There is no way the USSR, especially during Lenins time, was imperialist.
It didn't work like that, there might have been some bad ideas during Krushchevs time (as well as other soviet leaders) that encouraged specialisation and dependence on the USSR but that's not imperialism.

The USA wanted the world for it's resources. The USSR wanted the world to join it's camp for reasons of security and ideology.

The USSR gave resources to it's allies. The US used its millitary power to cripple the sovereignty of nations so it could send in the corporations and start exploiting.

Michael Parenti isn't saying the USSR shouldn't be criticised, as he has criticised it before, he is saying that he is sick of people on the left who devote so much energy spewing venom at the legacy of the USSR (while completely ignoring it's achievements) as if it was one of the worst systems in existence.

They do this get respectability, when they should really be challenging wikiality and defending it's achievements.

Spirit of Spartacus
3rd February 2008, 14:56
Hmmmm...I don't know if someone of his stature would post on a forum...

Intelligitimate
3rd February 2008, 16:04
I doubt Parenti would waste his time here. This is probably the most extreme example of a place where pseudo-Leftists spew as much venom as possible at all socialist countries.

However, he does do speaking engagements, and I have been thinking of trying to get my university to get him.

Xiao Banfa
4th February 2008, 02:08
I doubt Parenti would waste his time here. This is probably the most extreme example of a place where pseudo-Leftists spew as much venom as possible at all socialist countries.


Yeah but imagine how effective he could be at destroying kiddie-left arguments! The glory!:drool:

non-vio-resist
4th February 2008, 02:23
Lenin and the Bolsheviks had nothing in common with JFK and his ideological allies.
they were different sides of the coin ideologically but are quite similar in the fact that they considered themselves on the highest rung of society. so, call it what you want; liberal democracy or dictatorship of the proletariat. they are both irrational hierarchies. i don't believe society needs a lenin or a jfk liberal to tell them how to behave. perhaps you do, and this is where we differ. i do think dr. parenti is stellar, though, and i appreciate the fact that this site introduced me to him. i hope the poster was not referencing me as a pseudo-leftist because i dared to say unkind things about the former soviet. i constantly find myself defending cuba, and if the ussr was currently extant i'd probably defend it too vis-a-vis the u.s. or west europe. but as a non-marxist leftist, i'd be neglecting my core beliefs if i avoided the issue of state socialism. it's not my cup of tea, but neither is a liberal hawk like jfk who wants to terrorize those countries,eg cuba.

Xiao Banfa
4th February 2008, 03:03
they were different sides of the coin ideologically but are quite similar in the fact that they considered themselves on the highest rung of society.

Lenin was different not just "ideologically" but in practice.
He was elected by his comrades because of his talents- his intellectual brilliance manifested in a scientific manner of examining situations, his clarity of thought and ability to understand strategy and what was to be done now and later.

He wasn't a lord who was living the principle of a natural elite.

He was the leader of a democratic political movement who became an elected leader because of his prestige and effectiveness.

I wish we could immediately do away with hierarchy and leadership, but some people are more capable as leaders and (as long as they are democratically accountable) they benefit the cause by assuming that position.

Anarchist revolutionary tactics do not work as we have seen time and time again. And BTW I could name quite a few anarchist leaders, they just don't have a democratic structure which is the source of authority.

How many anarchist groups with tribal "big men" have I seen...