COMMENTS: 87
Neoliberalism Dismantles Services to Make Elites Even Richer
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These problems appear unrelated, but they all have something in common. They arise in large part from a meeting that took place 60 years ago in a Swiss spa resort. It laid the foundations for a philosophy of government that is responsible for many, perhaps most, of our contemporary crises.
When the Mont Pelerin Society first met, in 1947, its political project did not have a name. But it knew where it was going. The society's founder, Friedrich von Hayek, remarked that the battle for ideas would take at least a generation to win, but he knew that his intellectual army would attract powerful backers. Its philosophy, which later came to be known as neoliberalism, accorded with the interests of the ultra-rich, so the ultra-rich would pay for it.
Neoliberalism claims that we are best served by maximum market freedom and minimum intervention by the state. The role of government should be confined to creating and defending markets, protecting private property and defending the realm. All other functions are better discharged by private enterprise, which will be prompted by the profit motive to supply essential services. By this means, enterprise is liberated, rational decisions are made and citizens are freed from the dehumanizing hand of the state.
This, at any rate, is the theory. But as David Harvey proposes in his book A Brief History of Neoliberalism, wherever the neoliberal program has been implemented, it has caused a massive shift of wealth not just to the top 1%, but to the top tenth of the top 1%. In the US, for instance, the upper 0.1% has already regained the position it held at the beginning of the 1920s. The conditions that neoliberalism demands in order to free human beings from the slavery of the state - minimal taxes, the dismantling of public services and social security, deregulation, the breaking of the unions - just happen to be the conditions required to make the elite even richer, while leaving everyone else to sink or swim. In practice the philosophy developed at Mont Pelerin is little but an elaborate disguise for a wealth grab.
So the question is this: given that the crises I have listed are predictable effects of the dismantling of public services and the deregulation of business and financial markets, given that it damages the interests of nearly everyone, how has neoliberalism come to dominate public life?
Richard Nixon was once forced to concede that "we are all Keynesians now." Even the Republicans supported the interventionist doctrines of John Maynard Keynes. But we are all neoliberals now. Margaret Thatcher kept telling us that "there is no alternative," and by implementing her programs Clinton, Blair, Brown and the other leaders of what were once progressive parties appear to prove her right.
The first great advantage the neoliberals possessed was an unceasing fountain of money. US oligarchs and their foundations - Coors, Olin, Scaife, Pew and others - have poured hundreds of millions into setting up thinktanks, founding business schools and transforming university economics departments into bastions of almost totalitarian neoliberal thinking. The Heritage Foundation, the Hoover Institute, the American Enterprise Institute and many others in the US, the Institute of Economic Affairs, the Centre for Policy Studies and the Adam Smith Institute in the UK, were all established to promote this project. Their purpose was to develop the ideas and the language which would mask the real intent of the program -- the restoration of the power of the elite -- and package it as a proposal for the betterment of humankind.
Their project was assisted by ideas which arose in a very different quarter. The revolutionary movements of 1968 also sought greater individual liberties, and many of the soixante-huitards saw the state as their oppressor. As Harvey shows, the neoliberals coopted their language and ideas. Some of the anarchists I know still voice notions almost identical to those of the neoliberals: the intent is different, but the consequences very similar.
Hayek's disciples were also able to make use of economic crises. An early experiment took place in New York City, which was hit by budgetary disaster in 1975. Its bankers demanded that the city follow their prescriptions - huge cuts in public services, smashing of the unions, public subsidies for business. In the UK, stagflation, strikes and budgetary breakdown allowed Thatcher, whose ideas were framed by her neoliberal adviser Keith Joseph, to come to the rescue. Her program worked, but created a new set of crises.
If these opportunities were insufficient, the neoliberals and their backers would use bribery or force. In the US, the Democrats were neutered by new laws on campaign finance. To compete successfully for funding with the Republicans, they would have to give big business what it wanted. The first neoliberal program of all was implemented in Chile following Pinochet's coup, with the backing of the US government and economists taught by Milton Friedman, one of the founding members of the Mont Pelerin Society. Drumming up support for the project was easy: if you disagreed, you got shot. The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank used their power over developing nations to demand the same policies.
But the most powerful promoter of this program was the media. Most of it is owned by multimillionaires who use it to project the ideas that support their interests. Those ideas which threaten their interests are either ignored or ridiculed. It is through the newspapers and TV channels that the socially destructive notions of a small group of extremists have come to look like common sense. The corporations' tame thinkers sell the project by reframing our political language (for an account of how this happens, see George Lakoff's book, Don't Think of an Elephant!). Nowadays I hear even my progressive friends using terms like wealth creators, tax relief, big government, consumer democracy, red tape, compensation culture, job seekers and benefit cheats. These terms, all invented or promoted by neoliberals, have become so commonplace that they now seem almost neutral.
Neoliberalism, if unchecked, will catalyze crisis after crisis, all of which can be solved only by greater intervention on the part of the state. In confronting it, we must recognize that we will never be able to mobilize the resources its exponents have been given. But as the disasters they have caused unfold, the public will need ever less persuading that it has been misled.
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Posted by: ScottP on Aug 28, 2007 4:47 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
- you can't possibly consume $100M in your lifetime no matter how wasteful you are
- if you live in a giant mansion that is run by a staff, it isn't really much different than living in a fancy hotel with an expense account, you sacrifice your private life
- if you insist on surrounding yourself with only expensive things, you've limited yourself from experiencing most of the world
- the ultra-rich have at least as many problems with depression, suicide, etc. (you can't buy happiness)
- the cruelty that you inflict on others while accumulating those riches makes you (and those like you) reviled around the world, regardless of the phoney smiles that your servants may display
And so I must guess that the author is using the second definition of elite: "a powerful minority group". Why would he choose to sully a perfectly good word like elite, which can be used to describe a skilled athlete or person of great wisdom by associating it with neoliberals? Is that caving to their frame?
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» The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftist.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: pdxstudent
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: yellow
» Webster's Dictionary, Capitalism:
Posted by: american
» Clarification
Posted by: american
» RE: Webster's Dictionary, Capitalism:
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» Mr. Holland, foreign articles need an explanation about 'neoliberal'='freemarket'
Posted by: medstudgeek
» How are they different from NeoCons?
Posted by: Artkansas
» RE: How are they different from NeoCons?
Posted by: Gegner
» Gee, Yellow, who would these "free market" advocates be?
Posted by: ReallyBearish
» I was only trying to clarify the contemporary revival of the term's classic meaning.
Posted by: yellow
» You didn't answer anything
Posted by: ReallyBearish
» The 19th Century US Economy was very regional and quite Primitive.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Neoliberal elite: an oxymoron?
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: ray burchard on Aug 29, 2007 10:49 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Also like cancer, avarice’s progression to greed is something that will require constant management for eradication is not an option.
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» RE: Like Red is indicative of an Apple
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» www.plainenglish.co.uk/generator.htm
Posted by: pzzp
» Invest in Growth!
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: Lincoln fan on Aug 30, 2007 5:19 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This may be true and I hope that it is. The only question then will be, "What shall we do about it?". The first thought of many will be armed revolution. This is a suicidal solution. The first thought of many others will be a third party.This is an impracticable solution.
In confronting it, we must recognize that we will never be able to mobilize the resources its exponents have been given.
This is a wise caution.
The people cannot outfight them, militarily, without catastrophic losses. The people can't outbid them in buying our political parties, for one simple reason. The small donations of private citizens are anonymous and the ordinary person can't tie his gift to a particular cause. The millions of dollars raised at fundraisers aren't anonymous, they are donations from an economic class, and they are tied to one common cause, corporate dominance of our government. Politicians know that to keep the money flowing they must follow a course that will lower corporate taxes and increase corporate profits. In other words, they must represent the interests of a minority of contributors rather than the interests of the majority of voters.
A new strategy is needed, a strategy of passive resistance. Politicians need campaign contributions for one reason: to get our votes. If we each would say, to both parties, before the election, "I won't vote for your candidate unless my most important issue is on your platform" then campaign funds would have no value. To get the votes of the people, politicians would have to represent the people. They would have to work for our votes, instead ofworking for corporate contributions.
A strong grassroots movement could take control of the platforms of both parties before the 2008 election. Make your vote count by casting your vote for a candidate who'll represent you or by casting a protest vote against both parties and their corrupted system.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director, The Lincoln Initiative.
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» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: pdxstudent
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: Gegner
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A new strategy is needed. The only times "the people" have enforced their will on the elite
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: A new strategy is needed. The only times "the people" have enforced their will on the elite
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» This is an automated response
Posted by: Sum Won
» RE: This is an automated response
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: johngary on Aug 30, 2007 5:52 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Soon the United States' middle class will wake up as they lose their houses, their jobs, their health insurance, their ability to send their kids to college. And as they look around and say golly my parents had all that what happened? And yes, as they struggle to pay for skyrocketing food and energy.
The uber upper class has gone too far. Greed unchecked! We have reached the point of no return!
The unspeakable, is now speakable...we are on the verge of a devastating state of Class Warfare and the consequences of the greedy few will shake our social fabric!
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» Exactly
Posted by: pdxstudent
» RE: xactly
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: justice, power and human nature
Posted by: compu
» RE: justice, power and human nature
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: citizenjoe on Aug 30, 2007 6:29 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: TagsNOLA
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: 1gma
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: jbur816
» Not quite.
Posted by: justaguy
» Soros is not a neoliberal like Clinton. Soros is a Keynesian liberal democrat. He's just very rich.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» The Term Neo-Liberal means a revival of the old neo-classical liberal capitalism, ie free markets.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal means a revival of the old neo-classical liberal capitalism, ie free market
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal means a revival of the old neo-classical liberal capitalism, ie free market
Posted by: dangerouslysane
» Adam Smith was a Classic Liberal. The Revival of his ideas today is thus named "neo-liberalism."
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: sausage on Aug 30, 2007 7:11 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now in my estimation guys like my state senator are way more dangerous than a whack-job, wing nut Republican. The reason being these guys are on the right side once in awhile but, then again, a broken clock is correct twice a day.
Currently my state senator's heart is bleeding over the disparity in health care coverage between whites and minorities: "The Commonwealth Fund reported earlier this summer that among adults ages 18 to 64, nearly half of Hispanics (49 percent) and more than one in four African Americans (28 percent) were uninsured compared to 21 percent of whites and 18 percent Asian Americans. " Hey, I won't dispute that, it's true but what's his solution?
"Most significant to eliminating the health care disparity between minority and white Iowans is the principle that “everyone should have a medical home”(emphasis in original). A medical home is a health care setting that provides patients with timely, well-organized care and enhanced access to providers. It emphasizes preventive care, especially in managing and eliminating chronic diseases and ethnic disparities in medical care. Individuals should be able to select their own health care(emphasis added by me)."
After searching the Internet for a definition of "medical home" I could only come up with this bullshit: A medical home is not a building, but rather a team approach to providing comprehensive primary health care services in a high-quality and cost-effective manner.
So he's set up a dog and pony show with a couple of prominent local black politicians and ex-governors Tom Vilsack, failed presidential candidate and Hillary Clinton running-dog, and Republican Terry Branstad, who both sets on the board of one of the state's largest nonprofit health care organization (its CEO BTW pulls down $1.3 million a year) and is president of osteopathic medical college Des Moines University!
So on the one hand my state senator may truly be concerned about the lack of adequate healthcare for the state's African American and Latino population. On the other, however, he can't let his buddies in the insurance industry down. And, since we're the fifth whitest state in the union, should the initiative fail in the upcoming legislative session, he can blame it all on the racist Republicans.
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» "...but, then again, a broken clock is correct twice a day."
Posted by: american
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Posted by: rtmyth on Aug 30, 2007 8:59 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Another fan of C. Wright Mills. He set us straight on the true undemocratic nature of US society
Posted by: yellow
» RE: dick
Posted by: jbur816
» Mills and Orwell had differing approachs and concerns.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: dick
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: Suzon on Aug 30, 2007 9:02 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The right-wing media does not have total control over what is known about the world. The "mainstream" can't really seen to be too far off from what people learn in other ways. Plays, films and local discussion groups are examples.
There are still elections and people who stand for office must have a semblance of respectability. Michael Moore isn't the only one who can put the pressure on. Let the politicians know that they need to deserve our respect if they want our votes. (Don't you think that an Edwards-Kuchinich or an Edwards-Obama ticket can be a winner? I do!)
The numbers are with us, the cash cows. Think of the things we can withhold (or at least begin to threaten to withhold): our labor, our purchasing, our vote, our deference and even our non-violence if it come to that. Just raising the idea can have some influence. Send the rich the message that they have gone too far.
There is nothing to stop us setting up independent grand juries, especially in the UK where they were abolished by Parliament in 1933 following riots in the streets of London.
Remember the mountains of flowers and notes that appeared ten years ago after Princess Diana died? Something simpler could begin to appear: clear plastic bottles of water to represent virtual tears (notes can be attached).
To be defeatist is to lose without ever bothering to work out a strategy.
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» Strongly agree
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: the human need to be respected may hold the key
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: madmac10 on Aug 30, 2007 10:06 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So we witness the insidious march of history, my friends. The arc of history is long indeed. Eventually, their season will end as well--it may take just as many centuries, though. And we may suffer greatly before it does. However, I believe that I and my offspring have chosen rightly.
They are weak and we are strong; we will endure the collapse of our infrastructure, economy or even nation; we will find or create our own values, and will continue to share our joys and loves. When we catch them, our knives will drink.
They may be well-educated, but they are stupid; they stubbornly repeat their forebearer's mistakes; they obstinately refuse to acknowledge the truth; and they tenaciously cling to their illusions and ratiocinations. It is fine though, we will make it through as we have for millenia. And, yes, once more after our inevitable victory, there will naturally come a day once again when the greedy, ignorant kleptocratic oligarchs hold the hill.
So let's bless them instead of revile them--it is much more than they would do for us. They are the fire that temper our souls. They give promise to my family, and they will bequeath a storied history in the process.
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Posted by: american on Aug 30, 2007 10:23 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Money in reserve is potential energy, also known as power. If you have a million dollars in the bank, you can summon a laborer to dig a hole, a programmer to write code, or an assassin to kill.
If you are the laborer, programmer or mercenary, it is your power and energy. It is your food, water, shelter, and transportation. It is directly related to your physical freedom if you are inside the system. And you are: It is your power and energy and (physical) freedom.
The law of conservation of energy states that energy cannot be created nor destroyed.
The energy -- the money -- is always there. Right now it is just being allocated to a single group, the self-anointed "elite," to an unacceptable degree.
Money is energy, yes. It is also known as a note. A note is a document. A document is a deed. They all have in common that they are pieces of paper. Money notes could be green. They could be pink. They could be yellow. It doesn’t matter what color they are, does it? What matters about money is what it can do.
What puts it in force? What makes it have its power and energy?
The answer? Energy itself does. Power. Force.
How do power and force come about? Laws and organization (footnote 1).
How are laws and organizations upheld and sustained? Force (footnote 2).
Laws and organizations exist for one of either of two things, money or principles (as in moral principles).
A telltale sign of whether the force is positive or negative is whether debt is required to sustain the organization. Debt occurs where people, I the final analysis, are not willing to take on an obligation all at once. It occurs when they are not willing to pay for, work for, or otherwise buy what is offered.
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» And this
Posted by: american
» Notes
Posted by: american
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Posted by: lamar on Aug 30, 2007 10:30 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dyer has been pushing his plan to make billionaire Rich DeVos even richer: Buddy Dyer spearheaded a campaign to funnel taxes collected on hotel rooms into a new arena for the Orlando Magic (even though the current arena is the second highest in revenues in the country). The Magic, of course, are a private business owned by DeVos. If he doesn't have to build a building, he hangs on to $200M or so. Why is Buddy Dyer giving them a building in the hundreds of millions of dollars for free?
Because he's one of these sleazy neoliberals who cozy up to the extremely wealthy while letting the poor suffer. Buddy Dyer banned feeding poor people. 'nuff said.
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» RE: Buddy Dyer is excellent example
Posted by: Lincoln fan
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Posted by: peacelf on Aug 30, 2007 12:21 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now, here comes Hillary, I-have-nothing-against-lobbyists, because they represent "real people" like nurses and social workers (but her record shows she doesn't listen to them?) I'm confused! Nonetheless, Hillary has given us no indication that she is any different than Billy, except for ML.
Cornel West says our political system is run by nihilists. They don't give a shit about anybody, so they go along with whoever keeps them in power, and that's the wealthy campaign donors. Are Americans just gullible, or are politicians that good?
I do have faith in one candidate, though, whose record speaks volumns: Dennis Kucinich. He's the only one with not only the language of the people, but the record of legislation for the people.
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» RE: I don't like to burst your bubble
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: I don't like to burst your bubble
Posted by: peacelf
» RE: Neoliberalism gone wild: Bill and Hillary Clinton
Posted by: sofla100
» RE: Neoliberalism gone wild: Bill and Hillary Clinton
Posted by: peacelf
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Posted by: dover23 on Aug 30, 2007 3:13 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Neoliberalism, if unchecked, will catalyze crisis after crisis, all of which can be solved only by greater intervention on the part of the state.
He plays the same game as the MSM... take a complex situation and simplify it for your target audience to soothe their insecurities and make them feel smart.
U.S. Policy has been sold under the guise of neoliberalism but implemented as fascism, made possible by the violently imposed status of the dollar as the official reserve currency of the planet. Monbiot only assists in covering up this crime with his nonsensical drivel about the failures of a free market as if it has even existed.
He suggests MORE power to the state will hurt the elite? What am I missing here people? The elite will always control the levers of power in this country as long as the levers exist! Do the words of the founders of this country mean anything to anybody anymore?
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» RE: Classic Misdirection by Georgie Boy
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: sofla100 on Aug 30, 2007 5:41 PM
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» What goes around comes around.
Posted by: Sum Won
» RE: Creating a "New Elite".. comments on our quest for utopia...
Posted by: TheProphet
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Posted by: Constitutionalist75 on Aug 31, 2007 5:05 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Depends on which side of the Atlantic you're on
Posted by: themotie
» RE: define your terms
Posted by: lamar
» RE: define your terms
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: american on Aug 31, 2007 8:26 AM
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Posted by: TheProphet on Aug 31, 2007 6:57 PM
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The deception of power today is propaganda; say the exact opposite of what you intend; lie and lie continuously.
Six corporations own 90% of all media in America today.
If this is not a hegemony on information, considering the sheer vastness of media in America, what could be more authoritarian?
Authoritarianism, like the Soviet communist state that dissolved in 1989, failed because it was overtly authoritarian. Today's American hegemony is more sinister because it is always wrapped in a cloak of diversity, giving the appearance of democratic ideals. In reality, however, America's corporate controlled media disallows any sustained dissent to the ruling authorities, namely themselves and their power-sharers in Washington.
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Posted by: medstudgeek on Sep 1, 2007 5:46 AM
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» RE: Alternet: include a 'neoliberalism=free marketism' disclaimer
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: djabooks on Sep 1, 2007 1:25 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: themotie on Sep 4, 2007 4:20 AM
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Adam Curtis Wikipedia entry
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Posted by: bob t on Sep 4, 2007 6:09 PM
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Posted by: halg on Sep 5, 2007 12:51 AM
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One comment though:
Nowadays I hear even my progressive friends using terms like wealth creators, tax relief, big government, consumer democracy, red tape, compensation culture, job seekers and benefit cheats. These terms, all invented or promoted by neoliberals, have become so commonplace that they now seem almost neutral.
If you have progressive friends using these terms favorably, then they are probably not progressives and probably not your bosom-buddy friends.
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Posted by: ScottP on Aug 28, 2007 4:47 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
- you can't possibly consume $100M in your lifetime no matter how wasteful you are
- if you live in a giant mansion that is run by a staff, it isn't really much different than living in a fancy hotel with an expense account, you sacrifice your private life
- if you insist on surrounding yourself with only expensive things, you've limited yourself from experiencing most of the world
- the ultra-rich have at least as many problems with depression, suicide, etc. (you can't buy happiness)
- the cruelty that you inflict on others while accumulating those riches makes you (and those like you) reviled around the world, regardless of the phoney smiles that your servants may display
And so I must guess that the author is using the second definition of elite: "a powerful minority group". Why would he choose to sully a perfectly good word like elite, which can be used to describe a skilled athlete or person of great wisdom by associating it with neoliberals? Is that caving to their frame?
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» The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftist.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: pdxstudent
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal is used in the Classic Sense of Pro-Free Market. Not in the Snese of Leftis
Posted by: yellow
» Webster's Dictionary, Capitalism:
Posted by: american
» Clarification
Posted by: american
» RE: Webster's Dictionary, Capitalism:
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» Mr. Holland, foreign articles need an explanation about 'neoliberal'='freemarket'
Posted by: medstudgeek
» How are they different from NeoCons?
Posted by: Artkansas
» RE: How are they different from NeoCons?
Posted by: Gegner
» Gee, Yellow, who would these "free market" advocates be?
Posted by: ReallyBearish
» I was only trying to clarify the contemporary revival of the term's classic meaning.
Posted by: yellow
» You didn't answer anything
Posted by: ReallyBearish
» The 19th Century US Economy was very regional and quite Primitive.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Neoliberal elite: an oxymoron?
Posted by: talkville
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ray burchard on Aug 29, 2007 10:49 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Also like cancer, avarice’s progression to greed is something that will require constant management for eradication is not an option.
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» RE: Like Red is indicative of an Apple
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» www.plainenglish.co.uk/generator.htm
Posted by: pzzp
» Invest in Growth!
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: Lincoln fan on Aug 30, 2007 5:19 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This may be true and I hope that it is. The only question then will be, "What shall we do about it?". The first thought of many will be armed revolution. This is a suicidal solution. The first thought of many others will be a third party.This is an impracticable solution.
In confronting it, we must recognize that we will never be able to mobilize the resources its exponents have been given.
This is a wise caution.
The people cannot outfight them, militarily, without catastrophic losses. The people can't outbid them in buying our political parties, for one simple reason. The small donations of private citizens are anonymous and the ordinary person can't tie his gift to a particular cause. The millions of dollars raised at fundraisers aren't anonymous, they are donations from an economic class, and they are tied to one common cause, corporate dominance of our government. Politicians know that to keep the money flowing they must follow a course that will lower corporate taxes and increase corporate profits. In other words, they must represent the interests of a minority of contributors rather than the interests of the majority of voters.
A new strategy is needed, a strategy of passive resistance. Politicians need campaign contributions for one reason: to get our votes. If we each would say, to both parties, before the election, "I won't vote for your candidate unless my most important issue is on your platform" then campaign funds would have no value. To get the votes of the people, politicians would have to represent the people. They would have to work for our votes, instead ofworking for corporate contributions.
A strong grassroots movement could take control of the platforms of both parties before the 2008 election. Make your vote count by casting your vote for a candidate who'll represent you or by casting a protest vote against both parties and their corrupted system.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director, The Lincoln Initiative.
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» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: pdxstudent
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: Gegner
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A new strategy is needed. The only times "the people" have enforced their will on the elite
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: A new strategy is needed. The only times "the people" have enforced their will on the elite
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» This is an automated response
Posted by: Sum Won
» RE: This is an automated response
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A new strategy is needed.
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: johngary on Aug 30, 2007 5:52 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Soon the United States' middle class will wake up as they lose their houses, their jobs, their health insurance, their ability to send their kids to college. And as they look around and say golly my parents had all that what happened? And yes, as they struggle to pay for skyrocketing food and energy.
The uber upper class has gone too far. Greed unchecked! We have reached the point of no return!
The unspeakable, is now speakable...we are on the verge of a devastating state of Class Warfare and the consequences of the greedy few will shake our social fabric!
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» Exactly
Posted by: pdxstudent
» RE: xactly
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: justice, power and human nature
Posted by: compu
» RE: justice, power and human nature
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: citizenjoe on Aug 30, 2007 6:29 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: TagsNOLA
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: 1gma
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: jbur816
» Not quite.
Posted by: justaguy
» Soros is not a neoliberal like Clinton. Soros is a Keynesian liberal democrat. He's just very rich.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» The Term Neo-Liberal means a revival of the old neo-classical liberal capitalism, ie free markets.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal means a revival of the old neo-classical liberal capitalism, ie free market
Posted by: SatanicJamboree
» RE: The Term Neo-Liberal means a revival of the old neo-classical liberal capitalism, ie free market
Posted by: dangerouslysane
» Adam Smith was a Classic Liberal. The Revival of his ideas today is thus named "neo-liberalism."
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Neo-liberalism and fascism
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: sausage on Aug 30, 2007 7:11 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now in my estimation guys like my state senator are way more dangerous than a whack-job, wing nut Republican. The reason being these guys are on the right side once in awhile but, then again, a broken clock is correct twice a day.
Currently my state senator's heart is bleeding over the disparity in health care coverage between whites and minorities: "The Commonwealth Fund reported earlier this summer that among adults ages 18 to 64, nearly half of Hispanics (49 percent) and more than one in four African Americans (28 percent) were uninsured compared to 21 percent of whites and 18 percent Asian Americans. " Hey, I won't dispute that, it's true but what's his solution?
"Most significant to eliminating the health care disparity between minority and white Iowans is the principle that “everyone should have a medical home”(emphasis in original). A medical home is a health care setting that provides patients with timely, well-organized care and enhanced access to providers. It emphasizes preventive care, especially in managing and eliminating chronic diseases and ethnic disparities in medical care. Individuals should be able to select their own health care(emphasis added by me)."
After searching the Internet for a definition of "medical home" I could only come up with this bullshit: A medical home is not a building, but rather a team approach to providing comprehensive primary health care services in a high-quality and cost-effective manner.
So he's set up a dog and pony show with a couple of prominent local black politicians and ex-governors Tom Vilsack, failed presidential candidate and Hillary Clinton running-dog, and Republican Terry Branstad, who both sets on the board of one of the state's largest nonprofit health care organization (its CEO BTW pulls down $1.3 million a year) and is president of osteopathic medical college Des Moines University!
So on the one hand my state senator may truly be concerned about the lack of adequate healthcare for the state's African American and Latino population. On the other, however, he can't let his buddies in the insurance industry down. And, since we're the fifth whitest state in the union, should the initiative fail in the upcoming legislative session, he can blame it all on the racist Republicans.
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» "...but, then again, a broken clock is correct twice a day."
Posted by: american
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Posted by: rtmyth on Aug 30, 2007 8:59 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Another fan of C. Wright Mills. He set us straight on the true undemocratic nature of US society
Posted by: yellow
» RE: dick
Posted by: jbur816
» Mills and Orwell had differing approachs and concerns.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: dick
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: Suzon on Aug 30, 2007 9:02 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The right-wing media does not have total control over what is known about the world. The "mainstream" can't really seen to be too far off from what people learn in other ways. Plays, films and local discussion groups are examples.
There are still elections and people who stand for office must have a semblance of respectability. Michael Moore isn't the only one who can put the pressure on. Let the politicians know that they need to deserve our respect if they want our votes. (Don't you think that an Edwards-Kuchinich or an Edwards-Obama ticket can be a winner? I do!)
The numbers are with us, the cash cows. Think of the things we can withhold (or at least begin to threaten to withhold): our labor, our purchasing, our vote, our deference and even our non-violence if it come to that. Just raising the idea can have some influence. Send the rich the message that they have gone too far.
There is nothing to stop us setting up independent grand juries, especially in the UK where they were abolished by Parliament in 1933 following riots in the streets of London.
Remember the mountains of flowers and notes that appeared ten years ago after Princess Diana died? Something simpler could begin to appear: clear plastic bottles of water to represent virtual tears (notes can be attached).
To be defeatist is to lose without ever bothering to work out a strategy.
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» Strongly agree
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: the human need to be respected may hold the key
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: madmac10 on Aug 30, 2007 10:06 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So we witness the insidious march of history, my friends. The arc of history is long indeed. Eventually, their season will end as well--it may take just as many centuries, though. And we may suffer greatly before it does. However, I believe that I and my offspring have chosen rightly.
They are weak and we are strong; we will endure the collapse of our infrastructure, economy or even nation; we will find or create our own values, and will continue to share our joys and loves. When we catch them, our knives will drink.
They may be well-educated, but they are stupid; they stubbornly repeat their forebearer's mistakes; they obstinately refuse to acknowledge the truth; and they tenaciously cling to their illusions and ratiocinations. It is fine though, we will make it through as we have for millenia. And, yes, once more after our inevitable victory, there will naturally come a day once again when the greedy, ignorant kleptocratic oligarchs hold the hill.
So let's bless them instead of revile them--it is much more than they would do for us. They are the fire that temper our souls. They give promise to my family, and they will bequeath a storied history in the process.
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Posted by: american on Aug 30, 2007 10:23 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Money in reserve is potential energy, also known as power. If you have a million dollars in the bank, you can summon a laborer to dig a hole, a programmer to write code, or an assassin to kill.
If you are the laborer, programmer or mercenary, it is your power and energy. It is your food, water, shelter, and transportation. It is directly related to your physical freedom if you are inside the system. And you are: It is your power and energy and (physical) freedom.
The law of conservation of energy states that energy cannot be created nor destroyed.
The energy -- the money -- is always there. Right now it is just being allocated to a single group, the self-anointed "elite," to an unacceptable degree.
Money is energy, yes. It is also known as a note. A note is a document. A document is a deed. They all have in common that they are pieces of paper. Money notes could be green. They could be pink. They could be yellow. It doesn’t matter what color they are, does it? What matters about money is what it can do.
What puts it in force? What makes it have its power and energy?
The answer? Energy itself does. Power. Force.
How do power and force come about? Laws and organization (footnote 1).
How are laws and organizations upheld and sustained? Force (footnote 2).
Laws and organizations exist for one of either of two things, money or principles (as in moral principles).
A telltale sign of whether the force is positive or negative is whether debt is required to sustain the organization. Debt occurs where people, I the final analysis, are not willing to take on an obligation all at once. It occurs when they are not willing to pay for, work for, or otherwise buy what is offered.
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» And this
Posted by: american
» Notes
Posted by: american
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Posted by: lamar on Aug 30, 2007 10:30 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dyer has been pushing his plan to make billionaire Rich DeVos even richer: Buddy Dyer spearheaded a campaign to funnel taxes collected on hotel rooms into a new arena for the Orlando Magic (even though the current arena is the second highest in revenues in the country). The Magic, of course, are a private business owned by DeVos. If he doesn't have to build a building, he hangs on to $200M or so. Why is Buddy Dyer giving them a building in the hundreds of millions of dollars for free?
Because he's one of these sleazy neoliberals who cozy up to the extremely wealthy while letting the poor suffer. Buddy Dyer banned feeding poor people. 'nuff said.
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» RE: Buddy Dyer is excellent example
Posted by: Lincoln fan
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Posted by: peacelf on Aug 30, 2007 12:21 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now, here comes Hillary, I-have-nothing-against-lobbyists, because they represent "real people" like nurses and social workers (but her record shows she doesn't listen to them?) I'm confused! Nonetheless, Hillary has given us no indication that she is any different than Billy, except for ML.
Cornel West says our political system is run by nihilists. They don't give a shit about anybody, so they go along with whoever keeps them in power, and that's the wealthy campaign donors. Are Americans just gullible, or are politicians that good?
I do have faith in one candidate, though, whose record speaks volumns: Dennis Kucinich. He's the only one with not only the language of the people, but the record of legislation for the people.
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» RE: I don't like to burst your bubble
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: I don't like to burst your bubble
Posted by: peacelf
» RE: Neoliberalism gone wild: Bill and Hillary Clinton
Posted by: sofla100
» RE: Neoliberalism gone wild: Bill and Hillary Clinton
Posted by: peacelf
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Posted by: dover23 on Aug 30, 2007 3:13 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Neoliberalism, if unchecked, will catalyze crisis after crisis, all of which can be solved only by greater intervention on the part of the state.
He plays the same game as the MSM... take a complex situation and simplify it for your target audience to soothe their insecurities and make them feel smart.
U.S. Policy has been sold under the guise of neoliberalism but implemented as fascism, made possible by the violently imposed status of the dollar as the official reserve currency of the planet. Monbiot only assists in covering up this crime with his nonsensical drivel about the failures of a free market as if it has even existed.
He suggests MORE power to the state will hurt the elite? What am I missing here people? The elite will always control the levers of power in this country as long as the levers exist! Do the words of the founders of this country mean anything to anybody anymore?
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» RE: Classic Misdirection by Georgie Boy
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: sofla100 on Aug 30, 2007 5:41 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» What goes around comes around.
Posted by: Sum Won
» RE: Creating a "New Elite".. comments on our quest for utopia...
Posted by: TheProphet
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Posted by: Constitutionalist75 on Aug 31, 2007 5:05 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Depends on which side of the Atlantic you're on
Posted by: themotie
» RE: define your terms
Posted by: lamar
» RE: define your terms
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: american on Aug 31, 2007 8:26 AM
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Posted by: TheProphet on Aug 31, 2007 6:57 PM
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The deception of power today is propaganda; say the exact opposite of what you intend; lie and lie continuously.
Six corporations own 90% of all media in America today.
If this is not a hegemony on information, considering the sheer vastness of media in America, what could be more authoritarian?
Authoritarianism, like the Soviet communist state that dissolved in 1989, failed because it was overtly authoritarian. Today's American hegemony is more sinister because it is always wrapped in a cloak of diversity, giving the appearance of democratic ideals. In reality, however, America's corporate controlled media disallows any sustained dissent to the ruling authorities, namely themselves and their power-sharers in Washington.
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Posted by: medstudgeek on Sep 1, 2007 5:46 AM
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» RE: Alternet: include a 'neoliberalism=free marketism' disclaimer
Posted by: talkville
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Posted by: djabooks on Sep 1, 2007 1:25 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: themotie on Sep 4, 2007 4:20 AM
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Adam Curtis Wikipedia entry
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Posted by: bob t on Sep 4, 2007 6:09 PM
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Posted by: halg on Sep 5, 2007 12:51 AM
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One comment though:
Nowadays I hear even my progressive friends using terms like wealth creators, tax relief, big government, consumer democracy, red tape, compensation culture, job seekers and benefit cheats. These terms, all invented or promoted by neoliberals, have become so commonplace that they now seem almost neutral.
If you have progressive friends using these terms favorably, then they are probably not progressives and probably not your bosom-buddy friends.
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Tax the Corporations and the Rich or Take Draconian Cuts -- the Decision Is Ours
Home Underwater? Walk Away from Geithner's Perverse 'Homeowner Relief' Plan
Fury at Wall St. Banks Fuels Public Action for Move Your Money Campaign




