by Tom Kando
Paul Krugman wrote a recent article, Socialism and the Self-Made Woman. He points out that Ivanka Trump is the last person in the world who should be writing about “self-made women,” since her entire “success” is derived from the fact that she is the silver spoon fed daughter of the billionaire President of the United States. Krugman then reminds us of a painful truth: Contrary to the myth that the US is the land of unlimited opportunity, the country where the “American Dream” provides upward mobility to an unparalleled extent, the truth is that America has LESS upward mobility than most other advanced industrialized countries. The children of poor Americans are LESS likely to move up the economic ladder in the US than in Canada, Scandinavia and other Western countries.
At the same time, in all those countries, the government plays a LARGER role in the economy than it does in the US. By and large, those countries are SOCIAL DEMOCRACIES. That is, they are more “socialistic” than America.
I scrolled down the first few dozen comments made on Krugman’s article. It’s sad. Many, perhaps most of them, show APPALLING ignorance. Readers clamor that “socialism” is a disaster in countries such as Holland; that Venezuela proves that socialism sucks; that the standard of living and the quality of life are far superior in America than in places like Canada and Sweden, because those countries are too socialistic.
It’s enough to make one despair! Is it even worth trying to shed some light on this issue, in the middle of such cacophony? Let me try once again, quixotically:
You see, “Socialism” can be defined in a nearly infinite number of ways. In the US, it is used largely as a cuss word by right-wing politicians such as the President.
As Fried and Sanders note in their seminal book Socialist Thought: A Documentary History, defining socialism is an impossible task, particularly in the United States.
Google defines it as follows: a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole. (in Marxist theory) a transitional social state between the overthrow of capitalism and the realization of Communism.
Wikipedia offers the following definition: Socialism is a range of economic and social systems characterized by social ownership of the means of production and workers' self-management..... Social ownership can be public, collective or cooperative ownership, or citizen ownership of equity. There are many varieties of socialism and there is no single definition encapsulating all of them, with social ownership being the common element shared by its various forms.
Let me add Webster’s New International Dictionary’s definition: “A Political and economic theory of social organization based on collective or governmental ownership and democratic management of the essential means for the production and distribution of goods....Socialism aims to distribute income and social opportunity more equitably than they are now believed to be distributed.”
The history and literature of socialism are vast. Marxism and Communism are merely one of many forms of “socialism,” one of its more extreme variants. It is true that in its “pure” form, socialism dictates public ownership of the means of production. However, what the knuckleheads at Fox News don’t understand is that the vast majority of “socialisms” around the world are not pure. Even Lenin had to deviate from his principles when he introduced his New Economic Policy. But when you define socialism as requiring the total ownership of ALL means of production, and also mandating total economic equality in terms of consumption, you equate socialism and communism, and you limit your understanding of socialism in its many forms.
Conservatives like to cherry-pick cases to buttress their positions: Venezuela proves that Socialism doesn’t work? Well, what about Sweden? Obviously, one has to look at the SPECIFICS. What are they doing, exactly, in Venezuela, as opposed to Sweden? This is not the place to do such an analysis. I am merely pointing out the absurdity of ad hoc arguments. I might as well reply that Somalia proves that Capitalism doesn’t work, or some other such nonsense...
With regard to Socialism, the fact is that most countries have MIXED economies. That is, they have adopted elements of Capitalism AND Socialism. The question is not whether a country is socialistic or not. It is the EXTENT to which it is socialistic.
Nowhere is this clearer than in the affluent social democracies of Western Europe, Canada, Australia and elsewhere. These countries are all Social Democracies. For example, one of Britain’s two major governing parties is the Labour Party. In Germany it’s called the Social Democratic Party. In France, Holland and elsewhere, they are the Socialist Parties.
The millions of ignorant people who use the word “socialist” as a cuss word don’t realize that socialism is a matter of DEGREE.
And yes, America has a lot of socialism already. Maybe not as much as some other countries, but plenty nevertheless. America started to become socialist the moment it instituted a government that dispenses services at taxpayer’s expense, for instance the postal service, public schools, public safety, public utilities, Social Security and Medicare. The public sector IS socialism. The armed forces ARE socialism, as is the IRS. Because the Democratic Party favors a greater public sector, it can be viewed as America’s socialist party.
The single most important political question is whether we want MORE socialism, or LESS socialism.
I personally favor an increase in socialism in the US.
Why?
Because my experience and my research both indicate that the most successful countries in the world are social democracies. They have mixed economies. They have more socialism than we do. By “most successful,” I mean that life for the overwhelming majority of the people in those countries is better than it is for most Americans: They live longer, healthier and happier lives. Simple.
© Tom Kando 2019;All Rights Reserved
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7 comments:
Well said, Tom. I wish you could be interviewed on Fox news and stand next to individual one in one of his rallies - You could explain
the truth to people. Thank you for this excellent explanation. I will be able to speak more coherently now about "socialism".
Tom, Your discussion is certainly an improvement over most of the stereotypes floating around--especially the fact that socialism does not have to be a system where the state owns the means of production. However, since Marxists have largely defined socialism and capitalism and coined the terms and stereotypes are so strong, it is hard for most people to understand society when these terms are used. Further, people often think "democracy" is opposed to "socialism" because Marxist rule has always been dictatorships.
Deng Xiao Ping realized that when the state owned the means of production very little got produced and he recommended China study "the forces of production." This turned to an examination of human nature, motives, and incentives, and before long China "a Communist state" abandoned state ownership and China prospered. It is a one-party state, not a democracy, and now it is outproducing most other states. It's run by a party that has the name "Communist" but fit most stereotypes of communism.
To get past the vagueness of these terms, I recommend using politicometrics, econometics, and culture metrics as much as possible.
In the last part of your article where you say that America became socialist and the armed forces are socialism, I think your terms become unscientific when you put "ist" or "ism" at the back of the term social. Human beings are social in nature and they are also individuals, and they create social institutions. But the term "ist" and "ism" refer to faith statements and doctrines of the type Comte considered to be reflecting the "theological" and "metaphysical" social consciousness that needs to be transcended by science.
Thus, while your discussion helps to break down the stereotypes by showing things are not so black and white, I'm not sure it is at the level of scientific consciousness I find in your demographiic studies grounded in empirical data.
Tom,
I just wrote a comment on your article and saw a typo, if you could correct it:
““Communist" but fit most stereotypes of communism.” towards the end of the second paragraph is missing the word “doesn’t”
Should be:
Communist" but doesn’t fit most stereotypes of communism.
Tom:
Check out the latest issue of The New Yorker. There's an article by Jane Mayer outlining Fox New's role in propping up the Trump presidency. She also suggests, correctly I believe, that it is Fox News that is responsible for keeping Trump's base solid. Fox has also, of course, been instrumental in demonizing all forms of socialism.
Scott
Scott G. McNall
Provost Emeritus and Professor, California State University, Chico
Faculty Affiliate, University of Montana, Sociology
Cultures of Defiance and Resistance: Social Movements in 21st Century America. Routledge, 2018.
thank anonymous, Gordon and Scott for their good comments.
Of course, Scott is totally right about Fox’s role: people such as Sean Hannity and Ann Coulter seem to be our unofficial government at times, as when the President shut down the government in an act that looked like pure obedience to these nefarious Rasputin-like figures.
As to Gordon: I understand your critique regarding my labeling a variety of things “socialist.” I suppose I am transgressing academic standards of scholarship and precise linguistic distinctions. You are also right in saying that the label “socialist” has become tainted by the bloody dictatorships that have become associated with it - prime among them the Soviet Empire and Maoist China.
I suppose I was trying to wake people up to the fact that all reasonable societies, including the US, have adopted many policies which are part of the socialist agenda. In the end, we may have to come up with different labels to designate the more progressive social and economic policies which liberals such as me favor. Maybe the label “socialism” can no longer be used meaningfully and fairly in this country. As Scott suggests, the people at Fox have made sure of that. So be it.
Hi Tom. Just my two cents. To me it's a little curious Americas relationship with the word socialism. To me it just means, like you said the degree to which countries decide to help eachother out in times of need. The weak, sick, injured, disabled, unfortunate, but also pregnant, inspired or what have I missed? From there you develop your sense of identity a s a nation. How much do give a damn about eachother? And therefor how nice are we? As a nation.x
Makes a lot of sense to me
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