21.7.25

Profit orver people

 

The current spectrum of public policy debate has as little relevance to policy as its numerous antecedents: neither the United States nor any other power has been guided by "global meliorism". Democracy is under attack worldwide, including the leading industrial countries, at least, democracy in a meaningful sense of the term, involving opportu nities for people to manage their own collective and individual affairs. Something similar is true of markets. The assaults on democracy and markets are furthermore related. Their roots lie in the power of corporate entities that are increasingly interlinked and reliant on powerful states, and largely unaccountable to the public. Their immense power is growing as a result of social policy that is globalizing the structural model of the third world, with sectors of enormous wealth and privilege alongside an increase in the "proportion of those who will labor under all the hardships of life, and secretly sigh for a more equal distribution of its blessings", as the leading framer of American democracy, James Madison, predicted 200 years ago. Current versions reflect "capital's clear subjugation of labor", the perceptions of a highly class-conscious business community, dedicate to class war.

Noam Chomsky