Newmedia on Sun, 6 May 2012 21:53:05 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> The insult of the 1 percent: "Art-history majors" |
Armin:
> I find that phrase 'let's be honest' highly problematic
> and just like 'complex' it serves a certain purpose of
> cutting discussions short.
Not my intent at all. In fact, if you look at my "let's be honest"
comment in context (i.e. the paragraph you took it from), you will see that it
was attached to the work of UCLA sociologist Michael Mann and the need to
actually understand the "sources of social power." That topic is rarely
discussed on this list, so perhaps a good way to start our "honesty" would be to
admit how little we know and how much we all need to "organize our
ignorance."
My suggestion is that if we do this -- work hard to understand society
(ours, others, in history, through poetry) -- we will find that "elites" have
always been an integral part of the story. So, we need *more*
discussion about society, not less!
> Even in the USA, Mr. Stahlman, there were powerful
> mass movements of workers and intellectuals who > faced down the elites and forced them to make serious
> concessions.
When I was a graduate student at UW-Madison in 1970, I spent many months in
the Wisconsin State Historical Society library, which likely has the most
extensive collection of "radical" literature from such movements in the USA (due
to LaFollette and the Progressive Party.) I still have my stack 5x7
notecards. Then I became a supporter of Rosa Luxemburg.
I can assure you, however, wherever there were "concessions" there were
also elites. While it's an admittedly crude and anecdotal analysis, you
should be aware that one of the primary motivations behind many Democrat's
"social welfare" policy initiatives is to ensure that the "poor" won't burn
things down -- or so those *elites* tell me. The Republicans also
worry but they have other policy recommendations, albeit with a similar "no
riots" objective.
That has been the "elite consensus" since many cities were (partially)
burned down in the 1970s -- which, btw, I see everyday since I live in one of
those neighborhoods, where 50% of the buildings on Broadway (two blocks away)
were torched back then.
At the same time, one of the most enduring effects of Emma Goldman et al
were the Palmer Raids, which then became institutionalized as the NYPD "Red
Squad" and is now known as the "Intelligence Division," which is actually the US
version of MI-5 -- who I first met circa 1973 when their "chief" physically
lifted me off the ground and removed me from a protest I was staging in Cooper
Union's Great Hall.
> So 'let's be honest' there has been maybe always
> a tendency of the elites trying to rule completely
> unchallenged, yet lets work to not allow them to get > there, because actually they are quaking in their boots
;-)
Actually, the "problem" today is that there ISN'T an *elite* to even do that! This isn't the WASP-dominated 1930s anymore! Today, all there is are is the POLICE and their outstanding request for
more *surveillance* -- which now means domestic drones and total net-tapping and
extensive efforts at "infiltration" -- but be clear that they work for
themselves. There isn't anything like a "statistical" 1% with any
semblance of "class-solidarity" because, like the rest of us, they have no
*coherence* in their lives.
You think you are "fighting" the 1%? Guess again!
So, "let's be honest" and notice that "mass movements" are themselves a
*feature* of the society in which they arise. Elites and movements have
always been intertwined. Understand how *any* society operates and you
will understand its mass movements.
My suggestion is that we are now in a DIFFERENT society than in the past
times, so accounts of movements from the 1930s need to be put into their own
context and then related to our own times,
Technology changes everything in SOCIETY, so mass-movements that arose
under the conditions of *radio* (or television) will be different from movements
that arise under the environmental conditions of the Internet. So, also
will the nature of the *elites* thoroughly change. They are two-sides of
the same technology-defined *environmental* coin.
Understand society and understand how media/technology changes society and
you will be at least able to "honestly" have a discussion about the world we
live in -- in which more honest discussion needs to *begin* than to be "cut
short."
Mark Stahlman
Brooklyn NY
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