Alex Foti on Mon, 25 Apr 2016 08:41:29 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> either in its neo- or ordo- version, liberalism is unwittingly fostering fascism |
Dear friends in Vienna and elsewhere in Europe and the World, this motherfucker hofer got over a third of the votes in the first round of austria's presidential elections. long gone are the days when FPÖ was seen as a threat to "european" values, the guy could inherit the post that once was waldheim's. however the green candidate, a likable 68er could rally all Austrian democrats and antiracists and defeat the cryptofascist in the second round (what are the polls?) Although the president's powers are largely ceremonial in Austria (like in Germany, Italy and elsewhere), this is not a freak accident. In fact it bespeaks of a more general trend that is apparent everywhere in the EU today. The christian/social democrat duopoly on power that has held since 1957 is crumbling due to the sociopolitical effects of the Great Recession and xenophobic fears of refugees, and especially the way the crisis has been mismanaged by european elites. Austerity is an ordoliberal, rather than neoliberal concoction. Anglo-Saxon neoliberalism has never had a problem with QE, unlike Rheinish ordoliberalism. Interestingly, anglophonic neoliberalism owes a lot to Austrian economics (Hayek, von Mises, Boehm-Bawerk) while ordoliberalism descends from the German Historical School of economics, which was eventually theoretically defeated by Austrian economics (Methodenstreit) to define a major part of the contemporary canon of neoclassical economics, but ended up shaping the policy mindset of Germanophone centrist politicians and all PP parties in Europe since the postwar period, what we know as ordoliberalismus. Europe today is like a giant Weimar - the red-yellow-black coalition supporting the republic was just too weak to withstand the assault of the nationalist and xenophobic right (nazis descended from ludendorff: weimar's centrism did well in dispatching the revolutionaries, though..) - just like today the forces behind Draghi and Juncker are internally divided and command a reducing part of Europe's political spectrum. Although ordoliberals and eurocrats are worried by lefties seizing power in Greece and elsewhere (tsipras is a goddamn delusion - never bet on a trotzkyist;) spain and catalunya hold more promise), it's the right wing that for the first time since the 1930s could end up dominating the whole continent. Two factors are driving the growth of racist formations, both controlled by liberals. One is budgetary rigor aka structural reform aka austerity, the fateful idea once espoused by Bruning in 1930 that you have to cut public spending when mass unemployment arrives. This is a nefarious policy that Obama never bought into (e.g. the major fiscal stimulus of 2008) and that by exacerbating unemployment delegitimizes the centrist establishment. The second is mass migration. Liberalism is for the free movement of people. We can discuss whether it's to lower wages or whether it's consistent with its philosophical tenets (open markets, open borders, open societies). Also the Christian social doctrine in its universalism has always looked generously (and paternalistically) to political and economic migrants. Conversely, reformist socialists/social democrats have always been wary of migration, unlike revolutionary syndicalists: during the Great Depression in France and elsewhere they called for tighter immigration laws and tolerated stigmatization of immigrant workers. In fact, social democracy in Europe has been a nativist affair with the nation-state since the end of WWII. So maybe it's less surprising to apprise that it is the present Grosse Koalition government (presided by an SPÖ guy) that has decided to shut down the Brenner pass, to the great chagrin of noborder activists in Italy, Austria and the whole of Europe. You don't have to live in former Habsburg lands (as I do;) to understand that blocking the Brenner means that not the Union, but the very Single Market is over. Since the 1950s boom, huge flows of goods and tourists between Italy and Germany have passed through Brennero and Verona. The Brenner is the physical manifestation of half a century of economic integration. Is a mini-Schengen in the making that excludes countries in Southern Europe that are more exposed to migrant inflows? In this grim scenario, #NuitDebout is a rare flash of hope. French lycéens have already managed to beat securitarianism and, if the old union and political left don't stand in their way, French youth will be able to inflict another political defeat to the presidency like it did in 2006 with CPE. Let's hope this evolves into Europe-wide movement by the precariat and for the precariat to protect society from xenophobia and inequality and keep borders open and solidarity going: Europe Debout Partout! lx # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: