{"id":3472149,"date":"2018-06-19T10:29:06","date_gmt":"2018-06-19T10:29:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/?p=3472149"},"modified":"2018-06-19T10:29:07","modified_gmt":"2018-06-19T10:29:07","slug":"conservativism-now-market-economies-and-the-liberal-anti-culture","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/stories\/2018-06-19\/conservativism-now-market-economies-and-the-liberal-anti-culture\/","title":{"rendered":"Conservativism Now? \u00a0Market Economies and the Liberal Anti-Culture"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The persistent purpose of my writing over the past decade has been to reflect in a hopefully complex manner on the sort of culture necessary to \u201csolve\u201d the climate and ecological crisis and create a truly sustainable way of life.<\/p>\n<p>One of my main themes has been that neither liberalism (nor Liberalism<a href=\"#_edn1\" name=\"_ednref1\">[i]<\/a> ) is suited to that task, in large part because it is fundamentally <em>growthist<\/em>, requiring for social stability the \u201csimple requirement,\u201d as Franklin Delano Roosevelt put it, of \u201cthe enjoyment of the fruits of scientific progress in a wider and constantly rising standard of living.\u201d \u00a0As David Fleming wrote, \u201cstarting some three centuries ago, the market economy has, with growing confidence, been the source and framework for a loose and easy-going but effective civil society and social order\u201d (85).\u00a0 Expansion, growth, and the promise of limitless possibility are the foundation of the \u201ceffectiveness\u201d mentioned by Fleming.\u00a0 Growth is the social glue that has held liberal industrial societies together, which is one of several connected reasons why we won\u2019t address our relationship to our natural ecology by becoming \u201cmore liberal\u201d or \u201cmore progressive.\u201d Sustainability, then, is neither liberal nor progressive.<\/p>\n<p>But, one might ask, why so persistent a critique of our liberal friends?\u00a0 After all, they (we) seem the most inclined to pay attention to the environment, and to show care and concern for our connection to nature.\u00a0 One might imagine a story about a contradiction in progressive attitudes, torn between concern and empathy, on the one hand, and growth and prosperity on the other, happily resolved as the empathetic side prevails in the face of growing awareness of the collateral damage of growth and prosperity.\u00a0 Perhaps.<\/p>\n<p>But my suspicion, in contrast, is this: not only are the liberal beliefs, expectations, and assumptions that require for their satisfaction permanent growth, material progress, and the removal of limits ultimately stronger than any countervailing care and concern, the care and concern (the part that may embrace nurture and restorative values) is unfortunately tied up in the quest for justice through material progress and removal of limits, beneath which is a void of cultural emptiness.\u00a0 Liberalism, I will argue, is in all its facets wed to the market and market values.<\/p>\n<p>In today\u2019s thoughts, I\u2019m going to extend both aspects of the argument that 1) liberals may be inclined to protect the environment but 2) a stronger set of wants is bent on destroying it; and I\u2019m going to extend this by focusing more explicitly on the market economy, which forms the values both of liberal growthism and, perhaps to our surprise, is the source of liberal empathy.\u00a0 Just as liberals are soft environmentalists, so also are they soft anti-capitalists.\u00a0 And while political liberals can be proud of substantial gains that protect our common good from the extremes of worker exploitation and consumerism, these gains are still grounded in a Liberal faith about the market or the freedoms the market secures.\u00a0 Therefore liberals (as liberals) have nothing to fall back on as a replacement for this consumerism.\u00a0 Thus the gloomy state of today\u2019s liberal politics: liberals have little substantial to fight for<a href=\"#_edn2\" name=\"_ednref2\">[ii]<\/a> beyond a somewhat more fair and equitable consumerism\u2014hardly compelling and hardly useful in the fight against the destruction of our biosphere. \u00a0Becoming \u201cmore liberal\u201d will be of little use.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Great Annihilation <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>One of the best ways to appreciate what we might call liberalism\u2019s care and concern or protective tendencies (it\u2019s soft anti-capitalism and nominal support of workers\u2019 rights) is to take a brief tour of Karl Polanyi\u2019s indispensable book, <em>The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of our Time.\u00a0 <\/em>Polanyi\u2019s subject is the rise of the market society, which he traces with both historical detail and a philosophical sense of its inherent tensions and contradictions.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, the rise of the market economy is hardly a story about the development of protection, nurture, or empathy.\u00a0 Even before it transformed the entire surface of the globe in its pursuit of gain, early capitalist production destroyed more simple and necessary economies of basic need fulfillment, physical and social. Its first victims were the English peasantry: \u201cat the heart of the Industrial Revolution of the eighteenth century,\u201d says Polanyi, \u201cthere was an almost miraculous improvement in the tools of production, which was accompanied by a catastrophic dislocation of the lives of the common people\u201d (35). \u00a0The sort of change we still think of as \u201cimprovements\u201d or praise as \u201cdevelopment,\u201d writes Polanyi, \u201cwrought unprecedented havoc with the habitation of the common people.\u00a0 Before the process had advanced very far, laboring people had been crowded together in new places of desolation, the so-called industrial towns of England; the country folk had been dehumanized into slum dwellers; the family was on the road to perdition; and large parts of the country were disappearing under the slack and scrap heaps vomited forth from the \u2018satanic mills\u2019\u201d (41).<\/p>\n<p>Now, all traditional ways of fulfilling physical and social needs were uprooted and cleared away so that nothing would stand in the way of the requirements of capital accumulation. The situation was grave and untenable, as all aspects of life became servants to the \u201claws\u201d of supply and demand, ruled by the mercurial sovereignty of price.\u00a0 \u201cRobbed of the protection of cultural institutions human beings would perish from the effects of social exposure; they would die as victims of acute social dislocation through vice, perversion, crime, and starvation.\u00a0 Nature would be reduced to its elements, neighborhoods and landscapes defiled, rivers polluted, military safety jeopardized, the power to produce raw materials destroyed\u201d (76).<\/p>\n<p>The process was very much like that suffered by victims of colonialism in his own day, where the market\u2019s cunning destroys the social and cultural landscape and then claims its inhabitants free: \u201cthis effect of the establishment of a labor market is conspicuously apparent in colonial regions today.\u00a0 The natives are forced to make a living by selling their labor.\u00a0 To this end, their traditional institutions must be destroyed and prevented from reforming\u201d (171).\u00a0 As long as traditional means of subsistence remain intact, common people will resist the compulsions of wage-labor. And so, beginning with the enclosure laws followed by a century of domestic colonial violence and disruption, were the English peasantry steadily forced into the misery of the factory or mill.<\/p>\n<p>Of the<em> pure <\/em>market economy, Polanyi concludes \u201cSuch an institution could not exist for any length of time without annihilating the human and natural substance of society; it would have physically destroyed man and transformed his surroundings into a wilderness\u201d (3).\u00a0 But none of this happened, at least not yet, at least not entirely. \u00a0\u00a0The market economy still stumbles on; or, some say, it has reached a global zenith, now six times as large as it was when Polanyi penned these predictions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Liberal Equilibrium Points<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Why has the market economy not yet <em>annihilated<\/em> the human and natural substance of society\u2014or at least not entirely?\u00a0 The answer to this question provides the answer to another one: namely, where did liberals (small \u201cl\u201d) come from?<\/p>\n<p>Because, Polanyi explains, in the face of this coming annihilation \u201cinevitably society took measures to protect itself.\u201d \u00a0\u00a0The moment it revealed its destructive force, the <em>pure<\/em> market economy was quickly transformed, sometimes fitfully and unevenly, into a <em>managed and regulated<\/em> market economy.\u00a0 By ceding the \u201cpure\u201d part of the market economy, capitalism did steady itself, both in the last third of the nineteenth century and again after Polanyi\u2019s writing during the middle of the twentieth century.<\/p>\n<p>This self-steadying by way of regulation and management, Polanyi shows, forms most of the content of nineteenth-century British social and political history; the same could be said for the period between WWII and around 1980, though this history is still viewed mainly with partisan passion.\u00a0 Most of the political and social struggles and political divisions orbited around a \u201cdouble movement: the market expanded continuously but this movement was met by a countermovement checking the expansion in definite directions\u201d (137), an ongoing \u201cconflict between the market and the elementary requirements of an ordered social life\u201d (257)<\/p>\n<p>To our more specific purposes here, this conflict explains the great political divide within a functionally unified Liberal tradition: fostering and fomenting the expansion of the market we have the original \u201cliberals,\u201d those who today might be referred to as conservatives or neo-liberals.\u00a0 Supporting the countermovement that checked the expansion, we have the side of Liberalism dedicated to social reform.\u00a0 These were the first \u201cprogressives,\u201d today\u2019s \u201cliberals.\u201d\u00a0 The proud achievement of these liberals has been the humanizing laws and regulations that have indeed relieved wage labor from much of its original misery and uncertainty.<\/p>\n<p>But the more important accomplishment of liberals and progressives, may have been preventing capitalism from dying \u201cfrom an overdose of itself,\u201d as sociologist Wolfgang Streeck puts it, echoing Polanyi.<\/p>\n<p>Streeck suggest that in a capitalist society such as ours, government policies have traditionally \u201cvacillated between two equilibrium points, one political, the other economic,\u201d thus mediating between the rights of citizens and the requirements of capital accumulation\u201d (16, 90).<a href=\"#_edn3\" name=\"_ednref3\">[iii]<\/a> The political point, or the rights of citizens, which I have been associating with liberals, concerns itself with civil rights, equality, education, housing, leisure, and a number of other needs that stand outside of a narrow understanding of the economy.\u00a0 Polanyi referred to these political or social phenomena as labor, nature, and money, which <em>can<\/em> be treated as commodities and be bought and sold, but only up to a point, after which catastrophic destruction will occur.\u00a0 Conservatives (who used to be called liberals and now are aptly referred to as neo-liberals) form the other equilibrium point.\u00a0 They, of course, are more attentive to the economic side, arguing that without sufficient capital accumulation the whole show falls apart and that nothing should therefore stand in the way of the commodification of labor and land, people and nature.<\/p>\n<p>Today, each side pursues its \u201cequilibrium point\u201d with unshaken confidence in the absolute rightness of its cause, wishing to vanquish their opponents who, they claim, stand in the way of progress.\u00a0 But, as Streeck and Polanyi argue, it is only by finding a middle-ground or by vacillating between the two sides, never pausing too long at either extreme, that the way of life ultimately demanded by all Liberals, liberal and conservative ones alike, has been fitfully sustained.<a href=\"#_edn4\" name=\"_ednref4\">[iv]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>One of Polanyi\u2019s main arguments in <em>The Great Transformation<\/em> thus attacks the \u201cmyth of a collectivist conspiracy\u201d\u2014that, in other words, the rise of intervention, regulation, and reform was initiated by workers or peasants, mobilized to destroy the nascent capitalist system.\u00a0 Rather, it turns out, the liberal reformers and the checks on market expansion put in place were neither external or hostile to the market economy.\u00a0 Social reform grew out of the explicit and <em>conscious <\/em>needs of the capitalist, ownership class; reform and regulation have always been an integral, homegrown, part of a successful capitalist system that ensured that it would not devour itself.<\/p>\n<p>The reforms these economic liberals sought may have had an underside of humanistic motivation, and may have helped create a self-conscious working class (in addition to the sympathetic bourgeois progressive); but by tracing it to its legislative roots and discursive explanation and defense, Polanyi shows that the protection of workers or the setting aside of land did not result from class-consciousness or worker self-protection.\u00a0 Rather, regulation of the markets was performed out of an overriding and quite conscious goal to save the markets in the face of their destructive power, initiated by those most committed to the unrealizable ideal of the self-regulating market who traded ideals for the requirements of practical survival. \u00a0As Polanyi summarizes it, \u201cfinally, the behavior of [economic laissez-faire] liberals themselves proved that the maintenance of freedom of trade\u2014in our terms of a self-regulating market\u2014far from excluding intervention, in effect, demanded such action, and that liberals themselves regularly called for compulsory action on the part of the state as in the case of trade union laws and anti-trust laws\u201d (157).\u00a0 Thus did Capitalism demand of the government to pull in the slack, ensuring that they hadn\u2019t enough rope to hang themselves.\u00a0 Political liberals and progressives are in this view capitalism\u2019s rope handlers.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Cultural Contradictions of liberals<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Liberals want (at least) two contradictory things.\u00a0 But the liberal creed prevents them from making a workable choice and it is from the point of view of this contradiction that we can understand the liberal paralysis in the face of globalism, the un-regulated dominance of \u201ctech\u201d and social media in the lives of the middle-class, as well as the utter failure to address our growing ecological nightmare.<\/p>\n<p>Polanyi\u2019s description of the Liberal check on itself and its markets, along with Streeck\u2019s discussion of the political and economic poles of society can thus help shed life on our current situation as well as the dull confusion involved with being a liberal today, and thus the increasingly stale fare that passes for a vision or optimism for the future, as liberals swing lazily between hope and change, Clinton and Obama, Sanders and Clinton.\u00a0 Perhaps liberals will reunite in the face of Trump, but what then?<\/p>\n<p>There is, of course, a \u201cliberal class\u201d that maintains an adversarial self-image.\u00a0 I\u2019m thinking, as one example, of the fleet of Suburu Outbacks lined up in the university parking lot proudly wearing \u201cRESIST\u201d bumper stickers.\u00a0 No doubt resistance is necessary, but what or how is certain only in its unspecific generality, while the alternative (should one actually exist) remains a mystery shrouded in vague images of a tastefully appointed liberal utopia.\u00a0 Such a statement represents a cry of discontent, an important recognition that things are not okay.\u00a0 The particular complaints may be as diverse as the paint colors and interior packages Subaru offers, but aim their actionless ire towards the not insignificant but still predictable constellation projected in the shape of racial injustice, sex discrimination, economic inequality (because the lawyers and brokers make more than the professors?)<a href=\"#_edn5\" name=\"_ednref5\">[v]<\/a>, environmental destruction, and so on.\u00a0 \u201cCommon Dreams,\u201d which sells one version of the bumper sticker on their website says it all, when they assure us that \u201cdisplaying a sticker is a small but effective means of being a part of the growing <em>community of resistance<\/em>\u201d (emphasis added), a notion we will consider later.\u00a0 This is not to diminish the anguish-filled importance of attending to children cut off from their immigrant parents, but to recognize at the same time that the entire issue has as its broader causal context the commodification of labor.<\/p>\n<p>While part of this resistance is anti-capitalist, at least on a sentimental level, it is a very soft anti-capitalism, a statement more of ambivalence directed towards the true believers.\u00a0 The market economy\u2014the organization of life into working for wages and pursuing gain, buying from strangers in an endless pursuit of want-fulfillment regulated by supply and demand and thus price\u2014is itself not at stake in liberal resistance: only several of the entirely predictable <em>symptoms<\/em> of this setup are considered.\u00a0 At issue, then\u2014and this is true of most Socialisms\u2014is only the uneven distribution of the opportunities the market system promises and the bounty it provides.\u00a0 While liberal resistors may picture themselves fighting for larger and universal goods like equality and justice for all, and against the many hurdles (often bound up in traditional prejudice) that prevent equality and justice, this is all done <em>within the market context<\/em>\u2014a context which is never questioned.\u00a0 Like its nineteenth century predecessor social reformers, even the \u201cOccupy\u201d movement was devoted to making the market economy work more fairly starting with a redistribution of the 1%\u2019s sickening plunder.\u00a0 But as Polanyi and Streeck point out, making it operate more fairly is necessary for it to operate at all.\u00a0 Without liberal resistors, in other words, capitalism overdoses on itself\u2014or, I would suggest, will do it sooner.<\/p>\n<p>I think this view helps explain certain contradictions and tensions in the current liberal world view.\u00a0 Liberals and progressives, the side interested in protecting democracy and civitas, know what to think about abortion rights, school shootings and gun control, or the #metoo movement, not to mention the science behind global warming and the vague notion that we need to \u201cget off of fossil fuels.\u201d\u00a0 But how should we consider Wall Street and the role it plays in our economy?\u00a0 What about free trade agreements and globalism that the bankers and Silicon Valley love, but that what is left of the labor movement does not? \u00a0But then again globalism may be a requirement of a cosmopolitan progressive, while the (\u201cbackwards\u201d) rural working class, at least, is all too ready to embrace the \u201cwrong\u201d side of the several issues that liberals are sure about, thus the ease with which the Democratic Party has become the party of the professional class, as Thomas Frank has noted. \u00a0In the meantime, liberals know what to think about Walmart. . . but what about Target, or Amazon with its Orwellian sounding \u201cfulfillment centers<a href=\"#_edn6\" name=\"_ednref6\">[vi]<\/a>\u201d?\u00a0 What are we to think of the cheap consumer goods?\u00a0 Does the activist bourgeoisie resist at the cash register, and if so, which ones? \u00a0Perhaps Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos and their wired-in and linked-up knowledge economy are the way to go.\u00a0 Never mind, as someone recently pointed out, Facebook was invented by a college sophomore with college sophomore concerns.\u00a0 But the good people of Google and Facebook, youthfully disrespectful of conservative stodginess, do speak out on issues of discrimination and the environment, and seem prepared to speak truth\u2014or at least a whole lot of something else\u2014to power.\u00a0 Does the future not belong to innovators and entrepreneurs who will come up with the next great idea?<\/p>\n<p>Someday it may be clear that these contradictions between the various incompatible wants of liberals signified the unravelling of a d\u00e9tente between the two poles of government described by Streeck.\u00a0 Polanyi and Streeck would both argue that this d\u00e9tente was temporary at best,<a href=\"#_edn7\" name=\"_ednref7\">[vii]<\/a> even without a serious or detailed understanding of the ecological limits of growth, and I think the unravelling of this d\u00e9tente is the best way to understand the current texture of our politics, as well as those in the European Union.<a href=\"#_edn8\" name=\"_ednref8\">[viii]<\/a> \u00a0For the demands of the market and the demands of politics or social and civic life are easy enough to keep in balance when the economy is growing.\u00a0 Then, profits and return on capital remains high, but not at the expense of workers\u2019 wages and benefits.\u00a0 In the absence of growth, tension turns into conflict as society and government is forced to choose between the market and ordinary people, investors and paycheck to paycheck workers.\u00a0 But to make matters yet more complicated, neither that division nor the decision is very clear. After all, \u201cpeople\u201d <em>do<\/em> depend on the markets for a host of their human needs.\u00a0 Of course, this dependency is historical and conditional, rather than absolute or intrinsic; but for the time being the delivery of our daily bread depends on the current state of continued capital accumulation.<\/p>\n<p>One of the strategies used by industrial democracies to postpone the collapse of a workable and livable balance in the face of lowering growth rates was the development of what Streeck calls the \u201cdebt state,\u201d which he contrasts to the earlier \u201ctax state.\u201d\u00a0 In the debt state, as Thomas Piketty, similarly puts it, we\u2019ve decided to borrow from the wealthy rather than tax them, a view that Hyman Minsky foresaw at the beginning of the 80s. \u00a0The debt state is able to buy capitalism time by borrowing and thus creating money earmarked for future riches, instead of redistributing real and current goods and services by taxing the wealthy. \u00a0While a tension between the two poles of government that reached its workable heights in the tax state remains visible today, it is clear that governments have been choosing markets over people in a consistent and accelerating way since around 1980.\u00a0 Another name for this choice might be called neo-liberalism.<\/p>\n<p>A significant task of the \u201cknowledge economy\u201d is devoted to making the choice of markets look like a grand historical reconciliation.<a href=\"#_edn9\" name=\"_ednref9\">[ix]<\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>Liberal Utopia<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>We live in a strange time.\u00a0 Confidence in the future is in decline, yet liberals are presented with two utopian options in the face of this impossible balance between the two poles of government and the increasingly self-annihilating market order. \u00a0And it is around the issue of the liberal market utopia that I would distinguish liberalism from the deep, anti-market, sustainability of something like the Transition movement.<\/p>\n<p>Liberals adopt one, or a combination, of two types of magical thinking, both of which provide a fantasy of a long-term ecological, political, and economic balance between markets or capital accumulation, on the one hand, and democracy or the needs of the citizen, on the other, according to a stable production and consumption regime. \u00a0Both visions are utopian.<\/p>\n<p>Some liberals expect a new technological breakthrough, or a series of super-efficiencies that will return us to high levels of growth, but without further environmental degradation or oil depletion.\u00a0 This is the clean, green knowledge economy of the future.\u00a0 One can merely look at the graphics on Bill McKibben\u2019s 350.org website to get a sense of this liberal utopia, which is based largely on the contrast between old, oil-based technologies, and new, renewable ones, each carrying a set of vaguely articulated but ready moral and aesthetic associations.\u00a0 Here we see mirages projecting an illusory synthesis between creative self-fulfillment and complete commodification, as work becomes recast as innovation and innovation becomes stripped of collateral damage so that its heroic entrepreneurs will miraculously create new efficiencies without uprooting and atomizing human workers.\u00a0 Imagine beneath the soft hum of wind turbines fit and happy people chatting happily as they attend to their Scandinavian-designed raised bed gardens, pleased with the way they\u2019ve maintained the benefits of globalism without its hazards.<\/p>\n<p>The other utopian vision doesn\u2019t dismiss the possibility of technological breakthroughs but is more focused on purely political decisions.\u00a0 It imagines that simply bearing down on the democratic or civic aspects of our society and politics will, in and of itself, return us to this balance (which, by virtue of that view, his hardly recognized as a balance).\u00a0 According to this view, the only thing wrong with our current political and economic order is the excessive focus on the market and its needs.\u00a0 As Paul Krugman puts it, quoting F.D.R.\u2019s 1936 speech accepting the Democratic nomination: \u201c\u2019We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; we know now that it is bad economics.\u2019 And that line had never run truer\u201d (xiv). \u00a0\u201cGood morals,\u201d in this silly formulation which ignores the material complexities of economics, provide the necessary <em>and<\/em> sufficient conditions for a liberal paradise of permanent economic growth and fair distribution.\u00a0 Why and how?\u00a0 It is precisely <em>the fair distribution<\/em>, itself, overloaded by Krugman with imaginary causal weight, that makes an economy accelerate without the danger of excessive speed according to this euphoric post-Keynesianism. \u00a0If bad morals make for bad economics, then (never mind logic 101) good morals <em>must<\/em> make for good economics.\u00a0 All we have to do, then, is nurture the political and social pole and the economics will miraculously recover&#8211;a view as na\u00efve as the one, following Hayek, Friedman, and Reagan and his revolution, that holds that the only thing necessary to create political freedom is sufficient market freedom.<\/p>\n<p>The important upshot of the work of Polanyi and Streeck is that the market economy is an improbable and probably temporary balance that has been maintained only under very specific conditions, two of which I\u2019d like to isolate here. \u00a0If the market economy were sustainable, then the liberal program of resistance would, perhaps, be an adequate political guide. \u00a0One necessary condition, either way, involves the successful liberal and conservative check on each other\u2019s more single-minded concerns.\u00a0 Just as capitalism can devour itself if we let it&#8211;a message that liberals are quite prepared to hear&#8211;capitalism can also be dampered by excessive demands made upon it in the name of equality and the common good. \u00a0Polanyi could be talking about someone like Chris Hedges or even Thomas Frank when he wrote, \u201che did not, at that time, foresee that the self-protection of society for which he was calling would prove incompatible with the functioning of the economy itself\u201d (135).<\/p>\n<p>I hate to say it folks, but conservative marketeers are not entirely wrong when they talk about the need, from the standpoint of system-sustaining capital accumulation, that \u201cexcessive\u201d democratic demands can upset and upend markets.\u00a0 As Streeck, no friend to capitalism points out, it is possible for voters to demand \u201cbenefits and services in excess of what a democratic-capitalist economy could be made to hand over\u201d without facing insolvency (89).\u00a0 It is only within a progressive utopia free from the demands of energy, resources, and the requirements of debt and its servicing\u2014where corporations will supply all that we want without requiring substantial profits in the face of an uncertain future&#8211;that prosperity might be entirely demand, and not supply, driven. \u00a0I don\u2019t say this to diminish the importance of those social goods, as some liberals might interpret me, but to doubt the capacity of capitalism to maintain the profits and liquidity it requires without devouring land, people, and fomenting financial crises. \u00a0The friendly capitalism of Subaru drivers is unsustainable.<\/p>\n<p>The second condition necessary for a stable balance between markets and social well-being is, as I noted earlier, the presence of steady, and perhaps relatively high, rates of economic growth.\u00a0 Remove the growth and a vicious economic and political cycle begins.\u00a0 As Streeck puts it, \u201cexcept in special situations of very high economic growth, it would appear that the social corrections of the market that are needed to achieve political equilibrium in a democracy tend to undermine the confidence of capital owners and investors, thereby upsetting the economic equilibrium that is equally necessary for capitalist-democratic stability\u201d (192).\u00a0 Only growth maintains profits and the \u201cwider and constantly rising standard of living\u201d that Franklin Roosevelt declared a necessary part of a functioning democracy.\u00a0 Remove the growth and you have to choose financial stability or the rising standard of living.<\/p>\n<p>But, of course, this isn\u2019t really a choice, for each remains a necessary part of the other\u2019s continuation.\u00a0 I would only underline the unfortunate fact that the market economy\u2019s persistence, which has perhaps surprised many doomsayers, has to do with its ability to increasingly jettison the democracy and social well-being and mobilize enough of the body politic, or the part that is allowed to matter, around the primary national goal of maintaining the solvency of the debt state, in a form that Streeck refers to as the \u201cconsolidation state.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>We are now at a point where we can draw a sharper distinction between liberals, on the one hand, and Transitioners or Limit to Growthers, on the other.\u00a0 Like progressives, the latter value the civic or communal, the realm of human well-being that might be threatened by unregulated markets.\u00a0 In this way, many progressives and Transitioners will share similar affinities towards nature and empathy with regard to human suffering and injustice.\u00a0 But there is also an important difference, at least in principle<em>: <\/em>this difference is the knowledge and acceptance that the market economy will eventually collapse (or devour us and itself)\u2014that the market economy is unsustainable in a number of converging ways<em>.<\/em>\u00a0 That means it can\u2019t keep working.\u00a0 Liberals can\u2019t imagine how human needs (including freedom and justice) might be met without a high-surplus industrial economy whose permanence seems entirely normal (and they are not wrong to sense the difficulty and the dilemma, but without having the courage to identify it), while Transitioners know that we must find a way and do the best we can. \u00a0While liberals dream of a socially constrained, sustainable market economy, we in the deep sustainability world are willing (or should be) to let the market economy be damned. \u00a0It is not Transition that offers a utopian world view, but the liberals, for it is they who dream of sustaining the unsustainable and of balancing the contradictory, and under increasingly difficult conditions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Our Progressive Friends<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In many of my past essays I have been guilty of portraying Liberalism as a monolithic market-driven belief-system, interested in nothing more than economic growth, material prosperity, and unlimited freedoms.\u00a0 I haven\u2019t made the distinctions present in the two equilibrium points discussed by Streeck.<\/p>\n<p>To cite Polanyi, Liberalism, as I have often been using the term, is best described as an outgrowth of the Industrial Revolution, \u201ca revolution as extreme and radical as ever inflamed the minds of sectarians, but the new creed was utterly materialistic and believed that all human problems could be resolved give an unlimited amount of material commodities\u201d (42).\u00a0 I more or less stand by that definition of Liberalism, especially in our current era, especially if we add some provisions about the modern liberal \u201cvirtue\u201d of unlimited self-creation, and the unconscious role that a high surplus society plays in most liberal wants, hopes, and expectations.<\/p>\n<p>But a monolithic growthist Liberalism does, I will admit, ignore an important aspect of liberalism, namely the history of liberal reformism that has consistently sought protections against market excesses, a history that might also be considered a sort of \u201cfeeder\u201d to movements like Transition, as well as a broad host of extra-market values that continue to thrive (if in relative seclusion from market-based norms) in liberal, industrial society.\u00a0 A monolithic view of Liberalism downplays the real dilemma (unresolvable in Liberalism but still strongly felt) between the needs of the market, and the needs of people outside of the market.<\/p>\n<p>Or to put this another way, I have been fairly determined in my rhetoric, at least, to call for a post-Liberalism, as if Liberalism has nothing to offer for a sustainable future.\u00a0 Perhaps, in view of the history I\u2019ve been reviewing here, the goal instead might not be to \u201cgo beyond\u201d Liberalism, but to encourage and expand an existing side of Liberalism that already has a history of defending human needs and democratic or egalitarian values.<\/p>\n<p>In practical terms this seems the way to go.\u00a0 In this way we might see part of our outreach mission to nudge people towards the social, common, and human goods that many liberals identify with, slowly showing how we can preserve these extra-market values only if we start untethering ourselves from some of the comforts, amusements, safety, and convenience of bourgeois life and its market economy.\u00a0 In fact, I am overstating the distinction by talking about a \u201cwe\u201d who needs to convince a \u201cthem.\u201d\u00a0 This is as much a matter of \u201cwe\u201d convincing \u201courselves\u201d and then learning to act on what we\u2019ve determined.\u00a0 At any rate, all this talk of post-Liberalism might be seen as unhelpful when all that is really required is to get Bernie Sanders to walk back any talk about economic growth and start thinking about progressive degrowthist liberal justice and equality.\u00a0 Perhaps this is to project values on Sanders that he doesn\u2019t actually share, but the growthist aspects of his platform sometimes appears incidental and an unnecessary part of the \u201creal\u201d Bernie.<a href=\"#_edn10\" name=\"_ednref10\">[x]<\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>Culture and Community<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I would admit that there is some merit to this criticism.\u00a0 But I think there is an additional element at play here that bring us to the crux of my argument.\u00a0 I\u2019ve been using phrases like social, common, and communal good as if we know what they mean\u2014as if they have a meaningful content, especially within the liberal vernacular. \u00a0The same goes for Common Dreams and its reference to a \u201ccommunity of resistance.\u201d For within liberalism-proper, the social and the common good are, following classical market liberalism, other names for the opportunity to consume both life\u2019s material and experiential goods in a fair and equitable way. \u00a0As Alasdair MacIntyre explains it, in premodern, non-liberal societies the human good is always an inherently communal or common good, while the modern liberal state is charged with \u201cproviding the arena in which each individual seeks his or her own private good\u201d (172). \u00a0\u00a0The main unit of society is the self, a self freed from limits.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cCommon good\u201d may of course refers to clean air and water, low crime rates, and intact bridges and pot-hole free roads. \u00a0But if we press on the concept with any degree of critical pressure, we will see that it mainly reverts back to the creation of a fair and equitable arena in which individuals can pursue his or her own private, individualized goods, with almost no limits\u2014goods by definition cut off from tradition or kinship requirements. It is not clear that there is any sort of meaningful community in a \u201ccommunity of resistance.\u201d \u00a0As Daniel Bell points out, our society stresses \u201cunrestrained appetite,\u201d celebrating those who want and demand without limits, dividing us into \u201cconsumption communities\u201d where we create identity through buying or other consumer-like choices, otherwise known as creating a \u201clifestyle.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The \u201cgood\u201d part of common good is thus largely empty of content, and purposely and necessarily so within Liberalism.\u00a0 One of the founding tenants of Liberalism is official neutrality with regard to what, following MacIntyre, we referred to as \u201cthe human good.\u201d As Bert van den Brink explains in his excellent study of Liberalism, <em>The Tragedy of Liberalism: An Alternative Defense of a Tradition<\/em>, liberalism has two \u201chighest aims\u201d: \u201con the one hand, the politically liberal aim for state neutrality towards various conceptions of the good life and, on the other, the necessity for liberalism to affirm\u2014both in theory and in practice\u2014the perfectionist values of personal autonomy and a pluralist social environment\u201d (2).<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ll unpack these concepts by continuing the contrast I initiated above.\u00a0 In \u201ctraditional\u201d societies, recall, the \u201cgood\u201d was generally inherited and bound up in kinship relations or a teleological conception of life as having some overriding purpose.\u00a0 In most societies, it involved fulfilling a given social role with the table of virtues providing the instruction-guide for fulfilling that role with excellence and dignity.\u00a0 Social practices involved cherished skill, craft and virtue of the kind we might associate with artisans or farmers.\u00a0 They are passed down as a precious value, knowledge, and art, necessary not only for community survival but as a sense of cultural identity and personal satisfaction.\u00a0 As Wendell Berry puts it, the common good, otherwise known as culture, \u201creveals the human necessities and human limits.\u00a0 It clarifies our inescapable bonds to the earth and each other.\u00a0 It assures that the necessary work is done and that it is being done well\u201d (43).\u00a0 Berry suggests that culture is a \u201cpractical necessity,\u201d which it was and may eventually be again.\u00a0 Though he forgets sometimes that the market society is specifically designed so that <em>this<\/em> culture is not a practical necessity.\u00a0 Rather, a lack of this culture, its destruction, is a practical necessity within a Liberal market order.<\/p>\n<p>For wrapped up in these notions of practice, virtue, and excellence is a conception of \u201cthe good\u201d\u2014namely what <em>specific sorts<\/em> of life practices, rituals, associations, and work leads to human well-being.\u00a0 This is heresy within the liberal creed of choice and of fulfilling our wants whatever they happen to be, regardless of where they come from.\u00a0 There are, nonetheless, modern and contemporary attempts to resurrect the sort of culture described by Berry and with it a non-liberal conception of the good.\u00a0 Consider, for instance, the culture of some eco-villages, where there are very specific group goals and an overriding purpose, which ideally is reflected in nearly every aspect of life and sociability in the community, extending to child-rearing and food preparation, reuse of waste and decision-making.\u00a0 Unlike liberal society, not everything goes and not all \u201clifestyles\u201d are treated as morally equivalent.\u00a0 The purpose of the community is not to create the free possibility for everyone to pursue their desires and wants, whatever they are and without limits.\u00a0 Rather it is to foster a specific kind of culture.\u00a0 This is most certainly not the mainly empty \u201cculture of resistance\u201d that liberals (as liberals) are able to embrace.<\/p>\n<p>The cultural constraints (and benefits) similar, in structure at least, to our eco-village example used to be found throughout entire societies and continents.\u00a0 This is no knock against eco-villages, but they exist in Liberal society only because their barriers to entry and exit are low enough to satisfy the demands of liberal individualism.\u00a0 Otherwise, we\u2019d consider them cults, a concept that only makes sense within a society built around individual freedom.\u00a0 Prior to the seventeenth or eighteenth century, all human cultures were organized around some concept of \u201cthe good,\u201d and one couldn\u2019t scroll through the smartphone all day considering which \u201cgood\u201d fits your personal style. \u00a0I\u2019m not dismissing the sensibility of the (non) hierarchy of (non) values and (non) requirements in a pluralist society.\u00a0 The \u201cpractical requirement\u201d of culture offers no simple solutions.\u00a0 But we need to back away, at least enough to set our imaginations free, from the Liberal notion that, prior to its freedoms, all of society was one big cult that everyone would have left if only they could.\u00a0 This is how we modern liberals tend to judge Puritan society or Medieval culture.<\/p>\n<p>So to return to our historical digest, the way that life, including economic arrangements had previously been embedded in an inherited cultural tradition all changed with the onset of the market economy, which at once disrupted these cultural traditions (creating misery and dismay) while offering a new set of incentives (with anxiety becoming a new social disease).\u00a0 Liberalism, the market economy\u2019s handmaiden, provided a new ethic based on perpetual critique of tradition.\u00a0 Because tradition and its norms may attempt to prevent the commodification of some aspects of life, while putting limits on consumption and maintaining old ways of producing, tradition becomes the permanent enemy of Liberalism.\u00a0 Consider, for instance, the way social mobility has, in David Fleming\u2019s words, \u201cbecome a defining ethic.\u00a0 It implies that manual skills and the places left by the socially mobilier present failure.\u00a0 Community is where the talented want to leave\u201d (435).\u00a0 As Defoe\u2019s Moll Flanders put it, \u201cwith money in your pocket you are at home anywhere in the world,\u201d and it is money, rather than culture, that \u201cassures the necessary work is done.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Prior to the rise of the market economy, Polanyi shows, \u201ceconomy is submerged in its social relationships\u201d (48). This means that the rules of the economy are controlled by inherited cultural values, including the means of production and the price of goods. \u00a0Now \u201cthe running of society,\u201d he quips, \u201cis an adjunct to the market.\u00a0 Instead of the economy being embedded in social relations, social relations are embedded in the economic system\u201d (60).\u00a0 The market economy thus reverses the old hierarchy, so that economic laws of supply and demand, and pricing based on self-regulating equilibrium, provide the overriding structure of society, while the primary individual motive is one of gain and accumulation.\u00a0 And because the wants and gain that provide the structure of incentive are unlimited, we see the rejection of any culture or tradition that urges moderation or that maintains a principle of \u201cenough.\u201d \u00a0This is true even as the market is humanized and regulated so as to keep it from devouring itself.<\/p>\n<p>For our purposes and our analysis of the capacity of Liberalism and Liberals to provide social cohesion or even basic operating rules as the market economy falters, it appears that Liberalism has shed most of the cultural resources that might be of use in the absence of a stable and growing economy that has devoured all remaining frontiers and begins a steady and final diet of its own.\u00a0 To put it in a way that will require some qualifications, Liberalism lacks culture, or at least a culture not \u201creduced to an optional spectator activity,\u201d as Fleming puts it.<\/p>\n<p>By saying that Liberalism has no culture, I\u2019m not making a highbrow point about kitsch and commodification.\u00a0 Rather I\u2019m paradoxically thinking about Liberal culture\u2019s response to the common idea of culture as it has evolved through most of human history. Culture is based on experience, specifically shared experience, as we collectively with both strife and cooperation, attempt to situate ourselves in relation to questions of life and death, work and leisure, rest and play, the sacred and profane, the past and future.\u00a0 Because it is based on experiences and our response to them it cannot be simply created or invented (the best we can do is embed ourselves thoughtfully in experience).<\/p>\n<p>Of course, members in a highly individualistic society have experiences and these experiences naturally have a degree of similarity within the broader social group as well as specific subgroups.\u00a0 As Americans or citizens of industrial societies, we have stories and myths that we tell, ones that talk about our past, our present, our shared destiny or aspirations for the future.\u00a0 So of course, as for all human groups, there is a culture here. \u00a0\u00a0The interesting thing about these stories and myths within Liberal societies, though, is that they are dominated by the individual.\u00a0 True, we may \u201ccome together\u201d as a nation (from our normal state of separation), but unless it is to defeat an external enemy, we bond and mobilize over the shared purpose of releasing individuals from any limiting culture or community.<\/p>\n<p>To put it another way, all societies have individual and collective stories.\u00a0 In our society, our collective story is about the primacy of the individual and his or her solo quest for self-creation, identity, and gain. The primacy of the individual can work in a market economy, where social bonds are primarily contractual, and thus voluntary, and when the market economy is prosperous enough to keep enough money in Moll Flanders\u2019 pocket so he will be at home as he casts about in search of gain or identity or adventure, and able to provide for himself anywhere in the world, far away from reciprocal obligations of kinship and community-based societies.<\/p>\n<p>Liberal culture, then, is a sort of anti-culture because it presents us with a sort of anti-community.\u00a0 Community is of course an ideal, or perhaps mainly a rhetorical place-holder, that our market-moderating liberals relish. We hear constant talk about communities in Liberal society, some rather absurd if we think about it: \u201cthe law-enforcement community,\u201d the \u201cfinancial community,\u201d \u201cthe community of resistance,\u201d and my favorite, \u201cthe international community.\u201d\u00a0 I don\u2019t want to dismiss the value of our loose professional associations, our neighborhood comradery, or our self-selected friendship-groups and their capacity to create safe and caring places.<\/p>\n<p>But their optional and voluntary nature (as much as we count on that with our market-based incentives and cultural training) limit the amount of <em>social work<\/em> they can perform.\u00a0 The obligational and limit-setting work performed by traditional communities are precisely the same qualities that required their elimination by market forces.\u00a0 Fleming again states it with lean precision: \u201cmost of us,\u201d he notes, \u201cface no particular challenge and well-being from our local community\u201d (64). \u00a0But it is to that same extent that we cannot expect our local community and its culture to provide stability and order, not to mention acceptable limits, if called to do so. In a market society, the civil order is created by a set of laws distinct from morality and beyond that, mainly by prices and the contractual obligations we make to clarify our shared understanding of any given price and the scope of work or the type of product to be provided.<\/p>\n<p>In contrast, a culture that can provide for substantial social order&#8211;the sort of culture we need in the absence of a well-functioning market or the one Berry refers to as a \u201cpractical necessity\u201d&#8211;has high barriers to entry and exit.\u00a0 Its bonds are just that.\u00a0 They limit and control\u2014words in the Liberal vernacular that imply injustice, even as the Liberal forgets that society does need limits, control, and order, and that those provided by the market remain largely invisible and importantly impersonal, and as if they were as ineluctable and thus as unobjectionable as gravity itself.<\/p>\n<p>It is the absence of a Liberal culture\u2014one that establishes in non-economic terms the rules of economic engagement, limits on consumption outside the demands of \u201cconsumer confidence,\u201d or that \u201cassures that the necessary work is done and that it is being done well\u201d in the absence of a motive geared towards economic stability\u2014that makes Liberalism unable to address our climate or ecological crisis or to offer a reorganizing principle as the market economy falters. \u00a0What does this mean for us?\u00a0 It means that we need to start questioning liberal values and concepts such as unlimited, voluntary, and open, as crucial as they may <em>seem<\/em> to social justice as we understand it.\u00a0 It also means that we need to start experimenting with concepts and values eliminated from the Liberal moral vocabulary, concepts like order, need, obligation, even hierarchy, remembering that the cultural transmission of skills and practices are based on criteria of knowledge, experience, and expertise, of master and apprentice, even parent and child&#8211;a relationship that is undergoing constant egalitarian pressure in a Liberal market society where wants and desires need to be unlimited and unfettered, even by a tradition as weak and unconstraining as the easy-going modern liberal family.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAny society,\u201d wrote Daniel Bell, \u201cin the end, is a moral order that has to justify. . . its allocative principles and the balance of freedom and coercions necessary to facilitate or enforce such rules\u201d (250).\u00a0 Liberalism has ceded that function first to the market, and then to the governmental facilitation of the market, and now, increasingly, to the high finance that holds the gun of economic collapse to our heads. \u201cWith the liberal,\u201d Polanyi adds, \u201cthe idea of freedom thus degenerates into mere advocacy of free enterprise\u2014which today is reduced to a fiction by the hard reality of giant trusts and princely monopolies\u201d (264).\u00a0 The most the liberal or progressive can add is a small but market-dependent measure of minor restraint on the unfettered commodification of land and labor.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Old Conservatives<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Alasdair MacIntyre, along with Pope Francis, David Fleming, Wendell Berry, even some aspects of Marx, might be assembled as a broad attempt to revive a notion of conservativism, a word too loaded and weighted to be used broadly without misunderstanding, perhaps, until neo-liberals and market fundamentalists relinquish its use.\u00a0 But maybe we need to think about this project and start thinking about different kinds of conservativism.\u00a0 As MacIntyre puts it,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The individualism of modernity could find no use for the notion of tradition within its own conceptual scheme except as an adversary notion; it therefore all too willingly abandoned it to the Burkeans, who, faithful to Burke\u2019s own allegiance, tried to combine adherence in politics to a conception of tradition which would vindicate the oligarchical revolutions of property of 1688 and adherence in economics to the doctrine and institutions of the free market.\u00a0 The theoretical incoherence of this mismatch did not deprive it of ideological usefulness.\u00a0 But the outcome has been that modern conservatives are for the most part engaged in conserving only older rather than later versions of liberal individualism.\u00a0 Their own core doctrine is as liberal and individualist as the self-avowed liberals.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>That is why MacIntyre, Polanyi, and Fleming reach back towards the middle ages, a time subject to the disdain of Liberals matched only, perhaps, by the Liberal contempt of Puritans and their admittedly rigid (but practically necessary) communal obligations.\u00a0 Perhaps, then, it is in our premodernity that we can find useful concepts and a moral vocabulary, not as an attempt to reverse history, but to escape the corroding iron logic of the market.\u00a0 Instead of reclaiming a lost side of liberalism, another name for the market economy\u2019s wing designed to protects us from market excess, we need to reclaim a lost side of conservativism, one where nurture and care existed, where limits were observed, and the necessary work was done and done well.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref1\" name=\"_edn1\">[i]<\/a> By <em>Liberal <\/em>or <em>Liberalism<\/em> I mean the philosophy of Individual Liberalism and its several political parties and positions.\u00a0\u00a0 By <em>liberal<\/em> or <em>liberalism<\/em> I refer to American Democrats and those somewhat to their left as well as other people who hold similar political, moral, and economic beliefs and values.\u00a0 While so-called <em>conservatives<\/em> are also Liberals of\u00a0 a sort, I don\u2019t imagine my ideas will gain much purchase with the current cohort of conservatives so direct my thoughts mainly towards liberals and progressives.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref2\" name=\"_edn2\">[ii]<\/a> What, one may ask, about racial injustice, sex-discrimination, the cruelty of rising nationalism and anti-immigrant sentiments.\u00a0 These are, I agree, certainly worthy of our vigilance and passion.\u00a0 But there are two ways of addressing them: first is from the model of equitable and fair access to the market and all that it promises; second is according to an alternative cultural model of compassion that I am struggling to describe.\u00a0 The immediacy of the concerns make fighting the battle within a consumerist model necessary, despite the ultimate failure of the struggle in a world of increased competition over depleting bounty.\u00a0 As Fleming puts it, \u201cwe have a timing problem.\u201d\u00a0 And a timing problem requires ambivalence.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref3\" name=\"_edn3\">[iii]<\/a> In my conclusions, I\u2019m combining Polanyi with Hyman Minsky, in a way that Streeck does, though with a different combination of sources.\u00a0 Polanyi had more faith than I that industrial production could continue in the absence of capitalist accumulation.\u00a0 He understood the profit motive, but not the role played by profits in maintaining a high-surplus society.\u00a0 In his view, industrial society might be able to mature beyond its growthist phase.\u00a0 He maintains this view by describing economic liberalism as a utopian ideology rather than a necessary pole of industrial society.\u00a0 The problem with industrial production, removed from capitalism, Polanyi overemphasizes the utopia of self-regulated markets as the center of the capitalist program.\u00a0 In a way that he actually manages to explain, but not see, the value of growth and expansion may be more fundamental to capitalism as well as industrial production.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref4\" name=\"_edn4\">[iv]<\/a> It might be argued that the Democratic party, rightly decried for its rightward moving centrism by true progressives, has in its \u201cstand for nothing\u201d mentality done its level best to hold on to this uninspiring mid-point, a mid-point, I will argue, and have previously, that is moving right in the face of increasingly tough conditions of capital accumulation.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref5\" name=\"_edn5\">[v]<\/a> The quasi-symbolic and entirely semiotic nature of RESIST might be confirmed by the fact that you never see these bumper stickers on an Audi, BMW, or Lexus, but only on Toyotas (which of course owns Lexus), Hondas and of course the master trope of moderate liberal pseudo anti-capitalism, Suburus, which, that company\u2019s Mercedes Benz driving marketers thoughtfully assure us, are made from love rather than steel, plastic, copper, glass, and aluminum.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref6\" name=\"_edn6\">[vi]<\/a> This observation about Amazon \u201cFulfillment Centers\u201d was made somewhere by Rob Hopkins<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref7\" name=\"_edn7\">[vii]<\/a> Though Polanyi is hopeful about the prospects of a managed economy that, by embedding itself in humanist values, might permit a kind of freedom similar in some aspects to the modern liberal one\u2014as sort of permanent New Deal.\u00a0 While Polanyi understands the way markets ravage nature, he seems unaware about the way industrialism does as well.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref8\" name=\"_edn8\">[viii]<\/a> In a brilliant analysis of fascism, Polanyi argues that fascism and Soviet Communism were \u201crooted in a market society that refused to function\u201d (248).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref9\" name=\"_edn9\">[ix]<\/a> I will discuss the neo-liberal synthesis in a forthcoming essay entitled \u201cHegel\u2019s Smartphone.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref10\" name=\"_edn10\">[x]<\/a> In his Foreword to economist Jeffery Sachs\u2019 latest book, <em>Building the New American Economy: Smart, Fair, and Sustainable.<\/em> Senator, and hero of the American progressive class, Bernie Sanders provides a snapshot of his economic views and expectations:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>What I have heard and what I continue to hear is that Americans have had enough of establishment politicians and establishment economists who have claimed for far too long that we must choose between economic growth, economic fairness, and environmental sustainability.\u00a0 They have sold us a bill of goods that says we can\u2019t have all three.\u00a0 Well they are wrong. (ix-x)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><strong>Bibliography<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Bell, Daniel. 1996. <em>The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism.<\/em> New York: Basic Books.<\/p>\n<p>Berry, Wendell. 1977. <em>The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture.<\/em> San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.<\/p>\n<p>Fleming, David. 2016. <em>Lean Logic: A Dictionary for the Future.<\/em> Edited by Shaun Chamberlin. White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green.<\/p>\n<p>\u2014. 2016. <em>Surviving the Future: Culture, Carnival and Capital in the Aftermath of the Market Economy.<\/em> Edited by Shaun Chamberlin. White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green.<\/p>\n<p>Frank, Thomas. 2016. <em>Listen Liberal, or, What Ever Happened to the Party of the People.<\/em> New York: Metropolitan Books.<\/p>\n<p>Hedges, Chris. 2010. <em>Death of the Liberal Class.<\/em> New York: Nation Books.<\/p>\n<p>Krugman, Paul. 2007. <em>The Conscience of a Liberal.<\/em> New York: Norton.<\/p>\n<p>MacIntyre, Alasdair. 1981. <em>After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory.<\/em> London: Duckworth.<\/p>\n<p>Minsky, Hyman. 1982. <em>Can it Happen Again?<\/em> London: Routledge.<\/p>\n<p>Pinketty, Thomas. 2014. <em>Capital in the Twenty-First Century.<\/em> Cambridge, MA: Belknap.<\/p>\n<p>Polanyi, Karl. 2001. <em>The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of our Time.<\/em> Boston: Beacon Press.<\/p>\n<p>Sachs, Jeffrey D,. 2017. <em>Building the New American Economy: Smart, Fair, and Sustainable.<\/em> New York: Columbia University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Streeck, Wolfgang. 2016. <em>How Will Capitalism End.<\/em> London: Verso.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Growth is the social glue that has held liberal industrial societies together, which is one of several connected reasons why we won\u2019t address our relationship to our natural ecology by becoming \u201cmore liberal\u201d or \u201cmore progressive.\u201d Sustainability, then, is neither liberal nor progressive.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":128238,"featured_media":3472150,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[79718,79720],"tags":[163844,94903,94273,110721,98139],"class_list":["post-3472149","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-environment","category-society","tag-buildingresilientsocieties","tag-culture","tag-economicgrowth","tag-liberalism","tag-transitionmovement"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3472149","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/128238"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3472149"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3472149\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/3472150"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3472149"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3472149"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3472149"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}