Of Course Capitalism is Evil, So is the USA

I invented a tire that would never go flat, in the 3rd grade. I came up with the idea during study hall and within a few minutes I had drawn a rough picture of it and showed it to my teacher. The picture showed, instead of one big area of air, many little “cells” (think of a honeycomb) so that should one or two get punctured, the overall integrity of the tire would not be compromised.

The teacher scoffed at my little drawing and expued, “Why would we want that? If tires never went flat then no one would ever buy tires again and the tire makers would all go out of business.”

That was my introduction to the principle of planned obsolescence.  It was also the moment I realized that capitalism was largely a barbaric and stupid economic system. For though he was incorrect with respect to my cellular tires (they still wear out), he was generally correct as to the principle: benefiting society, really solving problems, making real quality products, and even saving lives, is more often than not, bad for business. Sure, there are exceptions to the rule. There always are with anything as complex as human society. But the principle is almost always applicable: if you’re in the business of making things, then making them too well will put you out of business. This is why our landfills are so huge.

Third grade was also the year I became a socialist. To my 10 year old mind, it was inconceivable to view any system that almost demands one to make a lesser product, to do poorly instead of well, or to even risk people’s safety in the name of profit, as anything other than insanity. And while I eventually moved beyond socialism, at least as it’s usually conceived, my disdain for capitalism has not waned. In fact, over the years, I have accumulated much more evidence of its inherent evil than Michael Moore could present in 10 movies.

I may present some of this evidence below, but at this point I just want to summarize my view: Capitalism is a savage, predatory economic system. It is the economy of savages because that is what most people are. It’s a wonder they don’t eat each other. Even the language of capitalism is predatory and sets things up as a conflict instead of people working together. This is clear not just with the more obvious terms like “vulture fund” or “hostile takeover”, but with one of the most fundamental terms: competition.

Yes, competition is one of the axioms of capitalism. And we all love a good fight. But let’s think about that word for a minute.


Compete

intr.v.

To strive against another or others to attain a goal, such as an advantage or a victory.

Now, we humans usually think of competition as a good thing. That is because we like our games so we can role play our savagery. And we like to think that a good competition makes us stronger, even when we lose.

But capitalism isn’t a game. It is chillingly real. And the losers are usually ordinary people who weren’t even aware that there was a game.

These are lives we’re talking about here. When “competition” closes down entire local economies, in thousands of small towns and neighborhoods across the country, it’s not a game at all. One day you’re a happy, well adjusted teenager and your biggest problem is that you hate your math class. Then, suddenly, the factory in your town closes and within three months, your family is homeless, your dad has moved to another state to find work, and your entire world has collapsed around you.

This is a true story. And it has been repeated millions of times over and over again for the last 20 years as “competition” has gutted the entire manufacturing sector of the economy and wiped out most of the middle class.

It is true that often enough, the losers in business competition are people who make an inferior product. But far more often they are families with kids.

I harp on the kid theme not because I think people who don’t have kids are any less important. But I see the health of our youth and our schools as the ultimate bellwether. For one, a society can be judged on how we treat the weakest among us. And the weakest among us are always our children. And secondly, kids in school represent our posterity in the most vivid way. And right now, across the country, our children and our schools are sick. Police are stationed on campuses that more resemble prison camps than places of higher learning.

But of course, this should be no surprise. Our country is sick. And it is so because our economy is sick.

Now, I’m sorry, but it is absurd to blame “Republicanism” or, more accurately, conservatism for the nature of capitalism. First of all, that would grotesquely let Democrats off the hook. But more importantly, it is just plain false. All conservatism is is code for “get your hands off my capitalism.” And that’s what we’ve seen over the last forty years. Not the replacement of true capitalism with some impure, Republicanized form. But the slow and steady de-shackling of capitalism in its true form.

It is a fact that we have seen a more benign expression of capitalism in the past. But that was not because capitalism was different then. It is because people weren’t as capitalistic then. Jonas Salk, who Michael Moore used in his film as an example of excellence without a profit motive, gave away the polio vaccine for free. Can you imagine anyone doing that now?

The fact is, up until a few decades ago, people’s behavior was still governed more by a sense of common decency than any market fundamentalism. All this free market, ‘self interests rises all boats’ nonsense was concocted in think tanks and spread with a multi-billion dollar PR campaign to recreate society in the image of Friedrich Hayek’s and Milton Friedman’s psychopathic conception of the rational, selfish man. Then they kind of gave up on rational and stuck with selfish.

Now, you can see the fruits of their labor in television ads depicting a father stealing the last Leggo from his son at breakfast. ‘So good you’ll steal food from your babies.’ Turns out they don’t really have to be that good at all because it was relatively easy to program people to be selfish. It’s in our nature. I started noticing the “selfishness” ads about 20 years ago. Are they part of the campaign to make us all like Ayn “The Virtues of Selfishness” Rand? Or do they just work?

In summation, what we are seeing now is total capitalism, where the moral codes of conduct (some of which were, granted, appalling) that guided most of society for centuries, and especially after the New Deal, have been replaced by capitalism’s purest state: market fundamentalism.

Haven’t you heard? There’s even talk of replacing government and the institutions of democracy with Market Democracy. Why have elections when you can vote every day with your credit card? Seriously, the smart people from the Ivy Leagues love this idea.

The predatory nature of capitalism, the way it turns people against people, and sets up almost all economic relationships as adversarial, is only one of many reasons why capitalism is evil. I could write ten essays on how capitalism and the environment are natural born enemies. But I won’t. In a nutshell, it is a system that brings out, encourages, and sometimes even requires the absolute worst in human beings. We need laws to both inspire and compel us to be better people. And the laws of capitalism do the exact opposite. It is a reversion to humans’ most primitive instincts. The laws of the jungle. Cannibalism bars where people go to eat pieces of human flesh are not out of the question if we continue down this trajectory.

No, the capitalist system has only survived this long, without devouring itself, because it was tempered by another system – social democracy.

As for the USA, it is the most powerful and influential force for capitalism in the world. And for decades, it has been destroying millions of lives, betraying the principles of democracy it was founded on, and murdering poor and indigenous peoples around the world to force the capitalistic model down the throat of mankind.

It is absolutely evil. Americans are shielded from it because they are sedated by drugs, alcohol and television. But in our names, powerful forces have been wreaking terror on the world for many years, all in the name of freedom and liberty. But what they were really doing was raping and pillaging.

Did the Nazis know that their country was evil? Did the Romans?

And don’t give me any crap about exporting democracy or any of the other propaganda that has been used to rob the rest of the planet for the last two centuries. The only thing we’ve exported is the opportunity to become lifelong consumers of cheap crap and poisonous, corporate grown foods.

Now don’t get me wrong. No one loves the promise of America, and the principles it was founded on more than me. But the US has been an evil, savage pillager of the world almost from its inception. Between Slavery, the Native American holocaust, and the wholesale devastation of the natural world, your great country will rank up there with the worst monstrosities of history. And from where I sit, it looks like it’s just getting warmed up.

Now, I know it’s not politically expedient to say the US is evil. I don’t care. It’s the truth. Period.

Meanwhile, I’m still waiting for a tire that won’t go flat. I gave my idea to the three tire manufacturers back in the early 70s. Still no reply.

 

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    • Edger on October 7, 2009 at 04:28

    Resurrecting Hope: William Blum interviewed, May 2007

    Absolutely convinced we possess the right to pursue our “happiness” and “security”, regardless of the cost to the Earth and the rest of its sentient inhabitants, we US Americans are in a race to hoard the most toys, to eat the most food, to have the most orgasms, to be the best looking, and to be the biggest winners as we engage in a repugnant orgy of narcissistic and gluttonous hedonism.

    Contrary to the false consciousness bestowed upon us by a horde of incredibly adept propagandists who “dutifully” man the bulwarks of exploitative capitalism, we are not “benevolent liberators” or “peace makers”. We wage war perpetually, strip the world bare like a swarm of locusts, and give virtually nothing in return. Ensuring our “happiness” and “security” extracts a tremendous price from the rest of the Earth.

    Since it rose to military and economic hegemony at the close of World War II, the United States, its proxies, an array of US-installed ruthless reactionary tyrants, and the World Bank have worked in concert to slaughter, torture, and impoverish untold millions of human beings in the “developing world” in an endless quest to satiate our plutocracy’s insatiable thirst for power and treasure.

    Bush, his henchmen, and their multitude of war crimes are not anomalies. Amerikkka the Babylon (as our nation is referred to in some circles) has been a barbaric, opportunistic, exploitative, racist, and imperialistic entity since the first Western Europeans set foot on North American soil. Contrary to the delusion proffered by our “manufacturers of consent” (i.e. the “liberal” New York Times), changing the cast of characters in the White House in 2008 may give the world a bit of relief from egregious crimes against humanity and planetary devastation, but until our malignant system of merciless plunder for profit is eradicated, increasing numbers of wretched beings will languish in misery to permit a relative handful to revel in obscene opulence.

    To sharpen our perspective on the American Empire and to renew our sense of hope that human decency has a chance of prevailing, let’s visit with William Blum, a noted researcher and author who has been documenting the crimes of the United States for many years:

    • icosa on October 7, 2009 at 04:36
  1. and capitalism appears to have become the ultimate source for that human trait.  

  2. wow, I was also listening to that guy on Olbermann talking about how the insurance companies have this whole HCR rigged, all ways, upside down and inside out…. then reading this.

    wow.

  3. It is a fact that we have seen a more benign expression of capitalism in the past. But that was not because capitalism was different then. It is because people weren’t as capitalistic then.

    is the concept of capitalist discipline, the training of minds and bodies to function as part of the big machines which accumulate capital.  I think that what has happened to us over the years has been the deepening of capitalist discipline, and the extension of capitalist discipline to practically every aspect of society and of nature, all the way down to the DNA of our food, which has now become a genetic commodity for appropriation by corporations.  See, e.g. Basmati Rice and RiceTec.  Kees van der Pijl discusses the dynamic of capitalist discipline in the greater sweep of history in Transnational Classes and International Relations.

    It’s hard for me to see capitalism moralistically, as “greed,” and easier for me to see it as a particular system of exploitation which involves appropriation of the surplus from wage labor.  There are, then, other systems of exploitation, other greeds — what comes to mind is the Roman system of villas, or the manorial system of feudal Europe.  

    Capitalism, however, appears exponentially scary (aside the other exploitative alternatives) in light of its ability to deceive the masses through a culture industry, through its stockpiling of weapons of mass destruction, in its out-of-control statistics as regards human population, consumption of fossil fuels (and subsequent accumulation of atmospheric carbon dioxide), extinction of species, disparities in wealth and power, and so on.

    The US looks evil because its history coincides with the development of capitalism, and because it’s the primary “core state” of this era of capitalism.  Once it loses its “core” status, once its currency collapses and natural disasters bring it to ruin, it will develop some humility.  But life will be worse.

  4. take what you can, and each man for himself.

    You are dead right, tocque, this is pure capitalism as Friedman envisioned it and as Marx feared, a thing that brooks no quarter and will take you, chew you up and spit you out, and for a price, and for someone else’s profit.

    WTF?

    Tear it down, tear it down and wash it into the ocean

    • Inky99 on October 7, 2009 at 06:49

    Americans are fascinated by gangster movies, and violent movies, I think, because of this.

    I believe that most people sense, even if they don’t know that our society is run by gangsters.   Thus movies and stories about gangsters infiltrated into American life are simply fascinating.

    Because there’s a certain admiration for them — when it’s drilled into your head that capitalism is the way to go, and that those who succeed at it are supposed to be your role models, the paradigms of “success”, well, when you see gangsters, fictional or otherwise, you can’t help but go “wow, maybe I should be more like that”.  

    What society tells you to value people who win at any cost, who take what they want and screw everybody else, who are the heroes?   The gangsters.

    Then you’ve got the entire Corporate Noise Machine known as our “news media” telling us that capitalism is tantamount to a religion, even going to far as to talk about “The Invisible Hand” that makes it all work, well, that has an affect on people.   Subconsciously or consciously.    It’s almost like “Let them make their money or the system will break down and we’ll all DIE.”

    We know we all depend on “the system”, we’re told it’s a capitalist system, so we tend to support this “capitalism” because we’re all terrified that if the system breaks  down we will literally starve.

    At the same time we know it’s immoral and we look up to the gangsters as the Kings of the World because goddamnit they don’t let those pesky moral concerns get in the way.

    The result is that the gangsters do in fact run things in our culture, and nobody really wants to stop it.

    How many people said about Carter “he’s too nice a guy to be President”?   A hell of a lot, like almost everybody.  

    We want America to be bad-ass.   We want it to be the toughest guy on the block.  

    And if starts kicking our ass?   Well, we’re just not tough enough, are we?   We should work harder to get into the club that doesn’t get its ass kicked.  

    America is in need of some serious therapy.  

    • Inky99 on October 7, 2009 at 06:54

    is that capitalism, left unchecked, destroys capitalism.

    Here’s an example.   Capitalism, as imagined by those who imagined it, as a system that is supposed to give you the best products at the lowest price, is supposed to be based on a pure competetive system.

    However, those who are involved in this?   The last thing they WANT is competition.  They want monopoly.

    So in a capitalist system, what happens is that the organizations that are more successful start to consciously and actively destroy the organizations that are less powerful.

    Ultimately, the goal is to kill off all the competition.

    And without some seriously HEAVY regulation of the system, that is exactly what happens.

    And then the powerful monopolies get their people into government to actually ensure that we DON’T have competition for them, THUS we actually don’t have capitalism, yet these people are those who scream the loudest about how we MUST HAVE CAPITALISM.

    That’s where things are now, where up is down, white is black, right is wrong, and the most uncompetetive system you can imagine is called “capitalism”.

  5. Exopolitics

    • TomP on October 7, 2009 at 17:26

    It’s a long struggle but we will prevail one day.

    • banger on October 7, 2009 at 17:41

    … I would say “normal”. We are a normal society and all imperial systems have used torture, massacres etc. to rule and no one expected anything else. The difference was that the central governments didn’t have quite as much power before the 20th century and also didn’t have to pretend so much to be benevolent (though they did). Today the average person is completely ignorant of almost any of the salient facts about anything. They live and want to live in a fantasy world. I think there are and have been many great things about the U.S. (and I think we are part of that so when we say the U.S. is evil we have to include ourselves and our friends and loves).

    We should not be shocked that people us torture or make offers that can’t be refused (the Godfather series is a good treatise on government). That’s normal. Wall Street got away with stealing our money in broad daylight because they knew that they had taken over the government. They own it right now — the rest of us have no say in anything that they don’t approve of. They will protect their power by killing and torturing if they have to (they’d rather not being usually well-educated civilized types). Fortunately for them the population is so stupified and drugged there is no problem with letting the rest of us write on this blog because we are no threat at all, yet….

  6. runs out of fresh meat and turns to eat it’s own people will rethink their obsessions with winning and greed is good and the American Dream/Nightmare. Hard to equate freedom with screw you and super size me when your standing in a bread line or figuring out how to pay the vig without a job. Although maybe not look at the right wing loonies who live in poverty and sign up to defend the most vicious of the assholes.    

  7. to read your diaries again…I’ve been wandering the orange forest for far too long without any real red meat!

    Capitalism…the USA…evil? well, yeah… anything that has caused such destruction and misery, with its’ utter disregard for the value of all human life, then evil describes capitalism, and what the USA has become, perfectly…

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