I
always like a bit of intellectual history ….and last week I alighted on a
conversation with Roger Scruton around a revamp of a book which this English
Conservative philosopher first issued in 1985
We
have been told for several decades that the left-right spectrum no longer has
any basis in reality although it remains a label very much in evidence
Now 71, Scruton has been
the bête noire of British left intellectuals for more than 30 years,
and gives them another beastly mauling in his new book “Fads, Frauds and Firebrands: Thinkers of the New Left”. It is a tour de
force that, the introduction concedes, is ‘not a word-mincing book’, but
rather ‘a provocation’.
In just under 300 pages he Scruton-izes a collection of
stars, past and present, of the radical Western intelligentsia – the likes of
Eric Hobsbawm and EP Thompson in Britain, JK Galbraith and Ronald Dworkin in
the US, Jurgen Habermas, Louis Althusser, Jacques Lacan and Gilles Deleuze in
Europe. An expanded and updated version of his controversial Thinkers of
the New Left (1985), the book ends with a new chapter entitled ‘The kraken
wakes’ dealing with the ‘mad incantations’ of Alan Badiou and the left’s
marginally newer academic celebrity, the Slovenian Zizek.
A
copy of the book was lying in Bucharest’s English bookshop when I popped in
there on Sunday - giving me the chance
to read its opening pages which, I have to confess, made a great deal of sense
even to an old lefty like me.
“Why, he asks, use a single term to cover
anarchists such as Foucault, Marxist dogmatists like Althusser, exuberant
nihilists like Zizek and US liberals like Dworken, Galbraith and Rorty? Two
reasons – they call themselves this and they all have an “enduring outlook” –
some belonging to the New Left of the 1960s and 1970s and others to the
post-war thinking according to which the state is or ought to be in charge of
society and empowered to distribute its
goods…..”
This
- the dimension of economic ownership
(monopoly through oligopoly to cooperatives/shared ownership to private owners)
- is indeed one of the axis you need to make sense of world views. But it is
not the only one – particularly these days when the social dimension has become
so important. Class (rarely talked about now) is only one form of group
identity – with race and sexuality being the new entrants. So an additional
axis is needed for the strength of
social norms - with totalitarianism being at one axis and anarchy at the
other. There is a third – for the role
of the state, for example, in welfare provision and general regulatory
measures – but that’s a bit complicated for this blog.
So
I will start with four quadrants which we can use, for example, to plot the old
and new left and right-
- Old Left; supporting a
strong state sector for infrastructure and health (inc insurance although the
religious and cooperative sectors could equally have responsibility for this
last)
- Old Right; recognizing the
role of the state in sustaining property rights and traditional ways of doing
things
- New Left; which has
supported the liberation struggles of repressed groups and the onward march of
post-modernism….
- New Right; which tends
to divide strongly between the economic agenda of the Neo-liberals (whose
eulogies for “the market” conceals support for oligopolistic licence and the spread
of “commodification”) and the more traditional social agenda of the American
Neo-Cons.
But
how long can we keep using the term “new”? The UK “New Left” started all of 60
years ago – and the “New right” at Mont Pelerin a few years earlier..
We
are surely, therefore, overdue another term…..and the one I suggest is
“emergent” (which Mintzberg, I think it
was, first used to distinguish one meaning of strategy). And,
as few people relish being labelled as either left or right, we need a mid-way
point for them….
That
then gives a 3x3 matrix and the question is what terms to use for the resultant
combinations……??? This is what I’ve come up with as a first shot…..
key
words/symbols for the various points of the political spectrum
|
LEFT
|
CENTRE
|
RIGHT
|
OLD
|
Working class
|
Family, property
|
Tradition, duty
|
SOFT
|
Social democracy
|
liberalism
|
duty
|
NEW
|
Liberation
struggle
|
consumerism
|
The individual
|
EMERGENT
|
The commons
|
identity
|
libertarian
|
See also the Acorn Guide to
Consumers
You can actually
read the entire “Thinkers of the New Left” here
In Fools, Frauds and Firebrands Scruton
attacks the left idea of thought for a cause, ‘politics with a GOAL’.
‘Conservatives are by their nature people who
are trying to defend and maintain existence without a cause’. Simply to keep
things as they are? ‘We obviously all want to change things, but recognise that
human life is an end in itself and not a means to replace itself with something
else. And defending institutions and compromises is a very difficult and
unexciting thing. But nevertheless it’s the truth.’
For
Scruton, the left intellectuals’ apparent attachment to a higher cause only
disguises what they really stand for: ‘Nothing.’ He writes that ‘when, in the
works of Lacan, Deleuze and Althusser, the nonsense machine began to crank out
its impenetrable sentences, of which nothing could be understood except that
they all had “capitalism” as their target, it looked as though Nothing had at
last found its voice’.
More
recently, ‘the windbaggery of Zizek and the nonsemes of Badiou’ exist only ‘to
espouse a single and absolute cause’, which ‘admits of no compromise’ and
‘offers redemption to all who espouse it’. The name of that cause? ‘The answer
is there on every page of these fatuous writings: Nothing.
So,
what is all this Nothing-ness about? ‘My view’, says Scruton, ‘is that what’s
underlying all of this is a kind of nihilistic vision that masks itself as a
moving toward the enlightened future, but never pauses to describe what that
society will be like. It simply loses itself in negatives about the existing
things – institutional relations like marriage, for instance – but never asks
itself if those existing things are actually part of what human
beings are. Always in Zizek there’s an assumption of the right to dismiss
them as standing in the way of something else, but that something else turns
out to be Nothing.’
‘Ideas,’
Rodgers writes, ‘moved first in the arena of economic debate.’ Throughout the
first half of the 20th century, the dominant tropes in economics had been
institutional, even among conservatives. Right-wing critics of the welfare
state and state-managed economies did not speak of the market; they spoke of
corporations and banks and ‘championed the rights of management and the
productive powers of the free enterprise “system”.’
The
idea of the market that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s – ‘self-equilibrating,
instantaneous in its sensitivities and global in its reach, gathering the wants
of myriad individuals into its system of price signals in a perpetual
plebiscite of desires’ – dispensed with these settings and constraints.
It
also dismantled the ‘troubling collective presence and demands’ of social
democracy, turning unions, workers and the unemployed ‘into an array of
consenting, voluntarily acting individual pieces’.
Everyone
became a buyer or seller, everything – kidneys, pollution – got bought and
sold. The only thing holding it all together was the magnetic energy of these
individual acts of exchange. Like
most scholars of the free-market movement, Rodgers assigns great weight to
Milton Friedman, ‘the University of Chicago’s most forceful politiciser’, and
the right’s answer to J.K. Galbraith. He wrote columns for Newsweek,
advised presidents (and dictators), and organised the ten-part PBS
series Free to Choose as a counter to Galbraith’s 15-part BBC series
on capitalism.
With
his focus on the money supply as the source of economic well-being, Friedman
helped popularise a ‘radically simplified model of aggregate economic
behaviour’, in which ‘state, society and institutions all shrank into
insignificance within a black box that translated money inputs directly into
price outputs.’
Yet,
as Rodgers points out, Friedman’s monetarism was also far more state-centric –
the Federal Reserve played an almost heroic role in determining the direction
of the economy – than most market theologians would have liked.What
truly pushed the market into the culture – high and low – were the adjutants of
Friedman’s revolution: the law professors and jurists, not just on the hard
right (Richard Posner) but also on the squishy left (Stephen Breyer), who made
economic efficiency the measure of all things and provided much of the
rationale for deregulation; the second wave of free-market economists (Robert
Lucas, for example, or Gary Becker), who took apart the field of macroeconomics
in favour of game theory, behavioural economics, rational expectations and
other individualist approaches;
One recent analyst on the “ideological
roots of populism” suggests that there are now 4 tribes – liberal and
conservative centrists and left and
right anarchists.
For
more, read –