Fear of Socialism
By Jim Miles
ccun.org, December 26, 2008
Two recent events have prompted the ideas behind this
article – in truth, the whole history of recent events have prompted the
following comments, but it is two in particular that gave the push to
write them down.
The first event, unknown to most of the
world, was a tempest in a teapot when the opposition parties in Canada
made a legal political manoeuvre under our representational
parliamentary system to take over the administration of the government.
Stephen Harper, Canada’s answer to George Bush, has made several
critical mistakes recently, the first was an election call before his
own mandated four year date, an election during which he argued that the
economy was fine and they would not run a deficit budget, and then
having received a minority government, proceeded to act as if he had a
majority (when in reality he only had 38 per cent of the popular vote)
and introduced a budget outline that was at best lousy. That
budget paper incurred the wrath of the opposition parties and brought
about the announcement of a coalition to defeat the government.
Harper’s immature rant in response included the good old U.S. fear
factor of socialism, with Harper and cronies warning everyone about the
socialist hordes in the opposition (who combined held - obviously - the
majority of the votes).
My immediate response to those in
our government who fear socialism is to ask them to renounce their
inclusion in their very generous pension plans (voted on by themselves
of course, no conflict of interest there), their participation in the
universal health care that Canada provides, the safety net of Canada
pension, old age security and social assistance that assist other
members of their families who are not intelligent enough to get in on
the government dole. Those are the two big items, pensions and
health care, that you will not likely see these devout right-wingers
give up easily, even if they were given the opportunity to opt out.
The Canadian “fear of socialism” as with most things under the
Harper government, is one of the few legitimate trickle down effects of
living with the U.S. as our one and only immediate neighbour. One
is also left wondering how many Republican campaigners were assisting
Harper’s “war room” during the recent election as most of his
sloganeering seemed to parallel the U.S. manner of campaigning,
Republican in particular. But that is in conjectural territory and
I only submit it as a teaser. The real hangover from the U.S. is
its seemingly deep-seated fear of socialism.
U.S. progressives
I’ll return to that deep-seated fear in a moment, after introducing
the second item that prompted this, an article by Rob Kall of OpEd News
asking, “Which of these progressive positions is extreme left?”[1]
Kall leads the reader through a series of questions asking about the
“progressive” position, all questions asking if the positions given are
positions of the extreme left. Many ideas are introduced, ideas
that to most minds would simply seem to be common sense: health care,
racial equality, cleaner environment, fair workers rights, a safe food
supply, and on. Most of these items would, one would hope, fall
under the rubric of “common sense” before any other political
label could be applied to them.
Rob Kall has applied the
word “progressive”, and only uses the word “socialist” in one phrase,
“There are greens and others further left, even socialists (like Senator
Bernie Sanders) and communists who deserve at least an occasional voice
on mainstream media.” Yet most of his ideas, most of these
progressive ideas readily fall under the rubric of socialism. So
even Rob Kall, a very progressive proponent of very common sense causes,
avoids the word socialism as if it denotes some radical left wing
position. I would have to guess that growing up in a country that
fully and violently opposed socialism of any degree, and that has
denounced it with the support of the media throughout his lifetime, that
the word socialism still represents something a bit risky and shady.
U.S. fear of socialists
What is the U.S. fear of
socialism? What is it based on? It is based on the corporate
desire to control the economy and politics of the masses without having
those unruly masses having any say, other than a somewhat meaningless
vote every four years, in how the wealth of the country is to be
distributed. This can be seen with the Federalist Papers
that argued against “factions” that might oppose the ideas of the
propertied leaders of the country at the time. It can be seen in
the many violent actions taken by political leaders and corporate
leaders (generally one and the same, as today) when they called in the
armed Pinkerton squads, local militias, up to the military, to squash
any workers' demonstrations for better working conditions, for better
wages, essentially for a better life. It was seen in the hysteria
of the McCarthy era, and its fear of communist infiltrators hiding
everywhere, a projection of fear that supported the excesses of the
corporate, political and military leaders of the day. It can be
seen in the many governments that opposed U.S. interests in one way or
another, thus incurring the wrathful label of socialists or communists,
the enabling rhetoric of fear that then excused the violent invasion,
infiltration, and overthrow of many truly democratic governments that
had the legitimate support of the people of that country[2].
These artificially concocted fears of socialism (without addressing the
unrealistic fears of communism during the Cold War, nor how the
definitions of communism or capitalism ever accurately reflect what they
both really are) are inculcated into the U.S. mindset throughout all
facets of life from the educational system, through the media, and
through the political system (the latter not much different from the
media system). The underlying fear is from the corporate
owners and their political supporters fearing that the unruly masses of
people might not like what they are doing and try to put halters on
their corporate activities.
The images and rhetoric of
U.S./Canadian freedom and democracy are all very nice until they come up
against the reality of invaded and occupied countries, an environment
heading towards global changes that could affect our very survival, and
finally, the current economic collapse that endangers many livelihoods,
all based on the consumption of materials and the massive debt loads of
an artificial finance capitalism that serves the underlying purpose of
enriching the wealth and power of those already in control. With
these three (occupations/war, environmental decline, financial collapse)
all looming at the same time, the government’s response (U.S. and their
Canadian imitators) has been to support the corporations without any
apparent concerns about transparency and openness that is required for
other nations negotiating within the Washington consensus guidelines.
It is obviously not free market capitalism as the markets are being
avoided and/or controlled; nor is it socialism, as socialism, under its
purest definition is that “the community as a whole should own and
control the means of production, distribution, and exchange,” a concept
the current bail-outs are loath to approach even though it is the
taxpayers money that is being used. Your choice becomes some other
“-ism” but not capitalism or socialism.
Back to being
progressive.
Hmm, who would have thought, “the community as a
whole….” Sounds quite progressive to me, with a lot of
common sense, that the community should want universal health care,
worker protections of various sorts, retirement benefits universally
guaranteed and applied, an egalitarian distribution of educational and
medical services, equal rights for all (in deed as well as in law),
international laws that are upheld et al.
The problem of
course is not the ideas, as they are – or should be – a matter of common
sense for anyone with a touch of true humanitarian interests, but with
the label. Rob Kall lives in a country so imbued with “fear of
socialism” that he is wise to avoid its use and thus keep his arguments
open for acceptance to a wider audience. As I have no fear
of socialism, and advocate it quite strongly, I have been labelled as
being part of the extreme left. So be it. But all the
positions taken by Kall are ones that I support, as would anyone with a
gram of humanitarian compassion towards others in society.
There are many other nuances to the arguments of what comprises
socialism, capitalism, communism, fascism, with at times overlapping
features. But in support of U.S. initiatives as represented in Rob
Kall’s article, the word “progressive” fits well, as does the phrase
“common sense.”
Community of the whole
For all the talk of globalization, there is little talk of
community, the “global village” of the sixties having been swept aside
by the rise (and now fall…?) of corporate interests seeking to gather
wealth from abroad through financial empires supported by the hidden
fist of the military empire.
A true era of globalization
would be a “progressive” era, one in which all the people of the world
had access to what is described above as being progressive interests.
It would deny U.S. military occupation of countries or bases through
which the material gains of the corporate sector could be enriched.
It would deny the ability to harvest and capture the wealth of another
country. It would enable the freedoms of other people as is so
often not the case today. It would enable a world where
globalization meant equality for all, fair trade for all, environmental
protection, health care, education, workers equality, women’s equality –
all beyond the rhetoric and spin of any label and be an actuality based
on progressive actions throughout the world.
Notes:
[1] OpEd News, December 20,
2008.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Which-of-These-Progressive-by-Rob-Kall-081220-249.html
[2] I refer readers to the many sources that support these
positions at
www.jim.secretcove.ca/index.Publications.html and
www.palestinechronicle.com.
Jim Miles is a Canadian educator and a
regular contributor/columnist of opinion pieces and book reviews for The
Palestine Chronicle. Miles’ work is also presented globally
through other alternative websites and news publications.
jmiles50@telus.net
www.jim.secretcove.ca/index.Publications.html
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