Alexander Bard on Sun, 24 Apr 2016 17:20:17 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Guardian > Monbiot > Neoliberalism |
Dear Brian & Co Thanks for an excellent posting. However, regardless of whether the current malaise is factual or rather just medial, but your questions "So, why did Germany veer away from being a society oriented toward labor unions, social welfare and complete inclusion, to gradually become the society that promotes unequal competition and savage inequality on a European scale? And why is there such a broad consensus around that transformation within Germany itself?" do of course find their answer in the West Germany vs East Germany storytelling that has dominated German (and European) politico-historical discourse over the last 25 years. West Germany as a proto-socialist experiment died when the other European social democracies reached the end of the road, namely in the 1980s when workers themselves resisted and finally gave up on taking over the means of production completely (by realising they were unadept at doing that job by themselves and so turned their backs on Social Democracy and eventually headed for the Extreme Right instead). Soon afterwards, by coincidence, Eastern Europe under the Soviet Union, collapsed and the ordoliberal (not neo-liberal) gospel found wide acceptance: If you workers/voters accept widespread inequalities rather than obsess with economic equalities you will all be better off. You will be West Germany, only more of it, with even more TV channles, but we guarantee you will not be East Germany (equality sure, but under duress and extreme boredom; therefore widely resented and escaped). Or do you somehow believe the fall of the Berlin Wall was merely a propaganda trick? Or even more so, would the wall's fall have been met by disapproval from a Foucault who jerked off to the Iranian revolution in Tehran a decade before? Since then, European socialists of all colours have done a terrible job at "selling their vision" as if they could ignore the misery of Eastern Europe under the Soviets, and for good reasons. Which is precisely why we have arrived at the current situation which is certainly not the end of "neoliberalism" but rather ordoliberalism's split into two dominating sub-ideologies: the centre-right conservative-nationalist liberal agenda and the centre-left progressive-internationalist liberal agenda (where I suppose we all support the second alternative at the ballot boxes since it does take climate change seriously). So my opinion is that clumsily throwing these two camps (that both far outweigh any formal lefist agenda left in Europe) under the umbrella of "neo-liberalism" hardly does the eventual Marxist cause any good. We need to do better. And that means a revival on a spiritual level: Reformulating political empathy in the age of digitalisation, mass migration, automatisation and robotisation (the system no longer turns us into blind slaves, it turns us into transparent redundants for God's sake). The right way to then approach Foucault (who by the way never used the term neoliberalism) is of course to ask ourselves what he would have said about the current situation. Not what he forgot to say while he was too busy working on his life as a work of art in the Paris leather dungeons 40 years ago. Right? We might all dislike ordoliberalism. We might all agree it is unacceptable as some kind of end of capitalist history. But it is a far far better alternative than Vladimir Putin, Boris Johnson and/or Marine Le Pen who are its current and far worse, climate change-denying opponents. Which should answer your opening questions regarding the continous popularity and acceptance of ordoliberalism in post-protestant Europe rather well, don't you think? Unless you're an accelerationist in the Nick Landian mode, I guess. ;-) Those are my ten cents. Over and out. Best intentions Alexander Bard # 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: