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<nettime> metag11n and its metadiscontents digest [st george x2 / goldschmidt] |
Paul St George <stgeorge@lgu.ac.uk> Re: <nettime> Anti-globalisation movements "David Goldschmidt" <dgoldsm1@tampabay.rr.com> Re: antiglobalization and its discontents digest [jay, graham] Paul St George <email@paulstgeorge.com> Re: <nettime> Anti-globalisation movements - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2001 17:55:19 +0100 (BST) From: Paul St George <stgeorge@lgu.ac.uk> Subject: Re: <nettime> Anti-globalisation movements There is some interesting and revealing conflation in this email. Economic globalisation and the spread of democracy are not the same thing. The problem is that in America they are increasingly looking like the same thing. The rules that govern capitalism and the rules that govern democracy are not the same. All the way through this email the words capitalism and democracy are used as if they were synonyms. We all have a big problem when some corporations have more money and power than many governments. That problem is increased when an American president acts for the corporations that paid for him rather than the people who elected (sic) him. The alternative? Take money out of the American election process. Then we can have more faith that the elected will protect the rights of the many against the wrongs of the few. ------------------- Paul St George mailto:stgeorge@lgu.ac.uk http://www.lgu.ac.uk/~stgeorge/ Voicemail 020 7320 1709 On Sat, 13 Oct 2001, David Goldschmidt wrote: > "Globalisation is much more than an economic system, or strategy. It is also a <...> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "David Goldschmidt" <dgoldsm1@tampabay.rr.com> Subject: Re: antiglobalization and its discontents digest [jay, graham] Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2001 23:15:19 -0400 Dr. Phil Graham, WOW . you are a very clever man. You are a brilliant wordsmith and your cyber-jousting skills are excellent. Two quick notes before I begin replying to your email in earnest. First, the Hitler comment . was way out of line. But I think that most people will see it for what it really was . just a bit of nastiness from a melodramatic scholar. Second, as I stated above, you are a clever wordsmith. At times, I likened your discourse to a verse from a song by the Police (or Sting) . "their logic ties me up and rapes me". But, in all fairness, you did make some good points and I am re-evaluating some of my opinions. One of the points that I am NOT going to re-evaluate is my opinion that many of the critics I have seen give the ruling powers (government, corporations, individuals) way too much power. In fact, you even agreed with me. You stated, "In fact, 300 million people are impossible to govern. The size of such systems are untenable in the long run. There are too many divergent interests, ways of life, cultural disjunctions, and so on. " To elaborate . many of the statements that I hear (from critics, activists and scholars) blame those in power for problems that are way beyond their control. In fact, I argue that the American government doesn't have near the power many give it. They are not in control. Control is an illusion. The only thing the American government does somewhat well is responding to [blatantly obvious] domestic and international crisis. Government is mostly reactive. My point is this, when you blame them for the huge global problems you infer that they have the power to do something about it. You give them more power than they actually have. You also infer that these people are inherently evil . that they are sitting on solutions to the world's problems but would rather see people suffer (and I am NOT saying that these power people are inherently good either . I'm just saying that they are not inherently evil). They can't solve many of the problems people think they can solve. The huge problems facing the world will not be resolved by a top-down solution. It'll begin at the grassroots level. David Goldschmidt wrote >It's as if they think that the leaders of the top democracies and >corporations are in control and conspire against the common >good (whatever that is). Dr. Phil Graham wrote "If you don't know what the common good is, may I suggest that you refrain from talking about it." You ripped me pretty good on that one. When I wrote that statement, I was thinking about the thousands of philosophies, religions, theories, isms, et cetera . and how each group has their own subjective idea of "good and bad". I should have elaborated . sloppy writing I guess. Dr. Phil Graham wrote In fact there is very little recognition of "a common good" in current practices amongst the "ruling powers" (as defined above), precisely because of the individualistic prejudices you exhibit which are inherent in the system -- i.e. that people can only achieve for *themselves*. Thus people at the top of corporations and governments *must* conspire against the common good to get the most for themselves, as you acknowledge in the following sentence: >One of the things that i witnessed in corporate america is that those who >rise to power ... have a very good understanding of >human nature ... are very adept to discovering the way things work ... and >use the system to their advantage (to accomplish their goals). "Their goals", "their advantage": there you have it. But you left out: "at the expense of others' goals". Again, you are explicitly stating that these people are inherently evil and this belief is warping your sense of reality. You also under-estimate their ability to understand that if they conspire against "the common good" . they only hurt themselves. If they destroy the economic system then they destroy themselves. Corporations are not very socially responsible but they are not stupid either. You don't conspire to destroy your customers . your ability to generate revenue. In general, a good economy means better profits. David Goldschmidt wrote >That is the difference between leaders and critics. Leaders, by >definiton, understand how things work and how to use the system to their >advantage regardless of what system is dominant at the time (capitalism, >marxism, gangs, communes, nonprofit organizations, christianity, islam, >whatever). Dr. Phil Graham wrote people who "rise to power". Out of nowhere? I think not. Your statement indicates a very bad social science. Who are these people who all of a sudden "rise to power"? Are we to suppose that they are born with the inherent ability to understand "human nature" better than, say, a carpenter or a taxi driver or a con artist? My point is that a leader, by definition, will find a way to rise to power. It doesn't matter if its in today's political-economic environment or in your utopian dreamland. Dr. Phil Graham wrote Or might we be more likely to find some correlation with, e.g., economic status at birth, education, and the social networks specific to those? I think the latter is a more likely general explanation than the former. Nepotism is not necessarily evil either. In fact, it is often the only practical option. If I were elected Governor and I needed to fill top spots in my administration . what am I suppose to do . take out an ad in the paper and hire someone I don't know??? I don't think so. I'm going to call on friends and relatives, people that I know, people that I can trust . people that I can count on. Dr. Phil Graham wrote I do not buy this at all. When do expect the next impoversished, female, Islamic US president to "rise to power"? You are talking about exceptions, not rules. The general rule is that an economically and socially well-connected, ivy-league educated, white protestant male will be the president of the US. Wrong. You are the one that is talking about exceptions. Throughout the entire email I have had to endure your continued analogies to the Presidency of the United States as the measure for success. David Goldschmidt wrote >A leader in America has the advantage of living in a system that is based >on eliminating the barriers to individual success. In America, an >individual can define success for his or herself and work towards their >own goals without having to belong to a particular race, sex, religion, et >cetera. I did not define "leader" as the President of the United States. A leader is someone who starts their own business, runs for a seat on the Board of Education, starts a charity, et cetera . AND YES, in America an impoverished female, Islamic can do these things . and that cannot be said for many other places in the world. Statistically speaking, no-one becomes President . not even white protestant males. But a lot of people can take advantage of the freedoms offered in the West and build a good life for themselves and their families. David Goldschmidt wrote >They say this about their own organization, "We are autonomous, >decentralized and non-hierarchical ... ". Dr. Phil Graham wrote I don't believe a word of it. Fine . here is the url. Look for yourself. http://www.abolishthebank.org/en/points.html Dr. Phil Graham wrote And do you think you *really* live in a democracy? At the Presidential and Senatorial level . no, it is not a true democracy. However, at the Representative level it is a democracy. and that is also true for State and Local politics. You should read Democracy in America by Tocqueville. We are a lot more engaged than many people realize (at least at the local level). Frankly, responding to this email is exhausting. Your email goes on to make some good points here and there but there is also a lot of unnecessary arrogance and mocking. As an entrepreneur, activist and artist . I find academic arguments a bit annoying ... especially those that don't propose solutions. Although, I do understand that it plays a necessary role for society. David Goldschmidt - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sun, 14 Oct 2001 13:14:15 +0100 Subject: Re: <nettime> Anti-globalisation movements From: Paul St George <email@paulstgeorge.com> There is some interesting and revealing conflation in this email. Economic globalisation and the spread of democracy are not the same thing. The problem is that in America they are increasingly looking like the same thing. The rules that govern capitalism and the rules that govern democracy are not the same. All the way through this email the words capitalism and democracy are used as if they were synonyms. We all have a big problem when some corporations have more money and power than many governments. That problem is increased when an American president acts for the corporations that paid for him rather than the people who elected (sic) him. The alternative? Take money out of the American election process. Then we can have more faith that the elected will protect the rights of the many against the wrongs of the few. -- Paul St George mailto:email@paulstgeorge.com http://www.paulstgeorge.com/ On Sat, 13 Oct 2001, David Goldschmidt wrote: > "Globalisation is much more than an economic system, or strategy. It is also a > political and cultural ideology. Globalisation can perhaps be summed up as an > ideology which seeks to impose a global regime (of accumulation), through rule > of law, which guarantees free trade at any cost (social, cultural, > environmental)." <...> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # 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: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net