Surlethe wrote: ↑2019-11-09 01:39pm
Proletarian wrote: ↑2019-11-06 05:58am
Zaune wrote: ↑2019-11-05 12:13pm
Progress, however slight, is still progress. I call this a win.
Is it indeed?
Yes
It is my contention that social democracy and conservatism, like the State and the market, are not antagonistic forces; indeed, unlike populists who talk about "corporatism" and "crony capitalism", it is my contention that they never are. And just as the bourgeois State selectively intervenes in the interests of the market, so too does social democracy serve to produce conservatism, abd visa versa.
What do you mean by "conservatism" here? If you mean that social democracy benefits more people in a country and thereby invests them in the perpetuation of that country's existing cultural, social, and political structures, that seems almost self-evident to me. But you could also be making a narrower, empirical claim about e.g. european conservative populism being rooted in redistributive european social democratic apparatuses.
Not even in a sociological or economic but in a narrowly historical-poitical sense, I believe that social democracy tends to produce conservatism as a byproduct, as well as the reverse. Or rather, that the logic of each is embedded in the other.
The example I cited was an article claiming that Reagan was FDR's "true heir", not his antithesis, as is often claimed. He probably identified more with the social and aesthetic heritage of the New Deal than did his immediate predecessor, Carter, who himself presided over the inauguration of neoliberalism in the United States - a new ideology whose impetus for being existed as much on the official liberal-left as the Right.
https://reason.com/2018/02/09/what-jimm ... wn-can-te/
"We really need to realize that there is a limit to the role and the function of government," Carter said in his first State of the Union address, in 1978. "Bit by bit we are chopping down the thicket of unnecessary federal regulations by which government too often interferes in our personal lives and our personal business."
If that sounds more like your conception of Ronald Reagan than the peanut farmer from Plains, it may be time to check your premises.
After televised hearings chaired by Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy, based on academic spade-work by the liberal economist Alfred Kahn, featuring testimony from consumer advocate Ralph Nader, Carter in 1978 signed the death warrant for the Civil Aeronautics Board, thus breaking up the regulatory cartel that had kept the same four national airlines virtually unchallenged the previous four decades.
Thus began a federal assault on "price and entry" regulations, or rules that determine which companies can compete in a given industry and what they're allowed to charge.
Carter also lifted individual prohibitions, most notably (thanks to an amendment by California Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston) on brewing beer at home. Result? You're drinking it. There were fewer than 50 breweries in the United States when Carter deregulated basement beer-making; now there are more than 5,000. In two generations, America went from world laughingstock to leader in the production of tasty lagers and ales.
Such was Carter's conviction about deconstructing chunks of the administrative state that he dwelled on it at length in his only presidential debate with Reagan.
"I'm a Southerner, and I share the basic beliefs of my region [against] an excessive government intrusion into the private affairs of American citizens and also into the private affairs of the free enterprise system," he said. "We've been remarkably successful, with the help of a Democratic Congress. We have deregulated the air industry, the rail industry, the trucking industry, financial institutions. We're now working on the communications industry."
Here in California, then fresh off its Proposition 13 tax revolt, Jerry Brown, in his first stretch as governor, was sounding similar themes. Government must "strip away the roadblocks and the regulatory underbrush that it often mindlessly puts in the path of private citizens," Brown said during his bracingly anti-statist second inaugural address in 1979. "Unneeded licenses and proliferating rules can stifle initiative, especially for small business….[M]any regulations primarily protect the past, prop up privilege or prevent sensible economic choices."
And the reverse is also true. Observe how Trump distinguished himself from his Republican competitors in 2016 by campaigning on such heterodox positions as the preservation of Social Security benefits and Medicare, the better to support the retiree base in the Republican Party. Or how Obama's reign as "Deporter-in-Chief", founded on a basically workerist-populist logic coming out of the Recession, melded seamlessly with Trump's anti-immigrant campaigns. Or, further back yet, how the so-called "Hoover New Deal" blended together with the Roosevelt New Deal, despite their bases in conflicting business interests (demonstrated by my second post in this thread):
https://www.cato.org/publications/brief ... r-new-deal
Pliticians and pundits portray Herbert Hoover as a defender of laissez faire governance whose dogmatic commitment to small government led him to stand by and do nothing while the economy collapsed in the wake of the stock market crash in 1929. In fact, Hoover had long been a critic of laissez faire. As president, he doubled federal spending in real terms in four years. He also used government to prop up wages, restricted immigration, signed the Smoot-Hawley tariff, raised taxes, and created the Reconstruction Finance Corporation—all interventionist measures and not laissez faire. Unlike many Democrats today, President Franklin D. Roosevelt's advisers knew that Hoover had started the New Deal. One of them wrote, "When we all burst into Washington ... we found every essential idea [of the New Deal] enacted in the 100-day Congress in the Hoover administration itself."
I believe that conservatism and social democracy must be understood as a single logic, just as I hold that the market and the State must be understood as a single logic (and this holds good even of systems wherein a cartel of businesses function effectively as the government, i.e. an imagined anarchocapitalism). Rather than looking for cleavages we
must look for continuities. We must understand them as
one logic, as
one system - as Capital. Only by grasping them as a totality, rather than a disparate collection of opposing parts, can you see the logic of how it functions in concert.