by Rex van Schalkwyk
In politics, it is the idea that counts. So also in philosophy, pop
music, pedantry and philanthropy. The idea is everything. And between the idea
and the reality, there lies that vast uncharted terrain of promises
unfulfilled, of lies and deceit and of naked hypocrisy, all of which account
for the failure of the public discourse and of public life. In short, this
self-inflicted deception accounts for the failure of society.
Bertrand Russell, who is said by some to have been the greatest
philosopher of the 20th century,
and a notable socialist, proposed that in the one-world society he envisaged,
the supply of food should be used as a lever to ensure social compliance. This
is what he wrote on the need to prevent the increase of the world's population:
"If this is to be done otherwise than by wars, pestilence and famines, it
will demand a powerful international authority. This authority should deal out
the world's food to the various nations in proportion to their population at
the time of the establishment of the authority. If any nation should
subsequently increase its population, it should not on that account receive
more food…"
In this way, the philosopher would have contrived a one-world
totalitarian dictatorship in a perpetual state of starvation. Russell did not
even consider where the world's food, without which people were to be starved
into submission, would realistically be produced. The most extraordinary thing
of all is that he could suggest such an idea in pursuit of his ideal of the
utopian life. Were it not for the fact that his work, The Impact of Science on Society,
is no laughing matter, it might have been read as a malicious satire.
There is a conundrum here: why is it that so many of those who enthusiastically embrace a benign cause conduct themselves with such malevolent intent? The answer in Russell's case and many others besides is that the real object of their concern is not the welfare of the individual, or of the collective, or the world, as the case may be. The real preoccupation is the idea, and close by the idea is the individual who will see self-interest as synonymous with the public good.
And so it is easy for Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, George Soros, and
others who have made their billions to adopt neo-socialist causes and to plead
the morality of higher taxation because, having made their pile, they can with
impunity identify with the perceived interests of the disadvantaged. They can
adopt the mantle of compassion because there is no real cost involved.
The worst crimes in human history were committed in the name of the
communist ideology, whose central premise was the brotherhood of men. Everyone
was a comrade, except when they were not, which was practically all the time.
Never included in the common definition were the rulers, although they were
routinely referred to by the same fraternal denomination.
George Bernard Shaw actually visited Russia in the company of a clutch
of like-minded intellectuals after the commencement of Stalin's infamous
purges. When he returned to the safety of London, he proclaimed to have been
well-pleased by the progressive nature of Russian society.
How did this man of letters come to a conclusion so perverse? The answer
is that he traded his integrity in exchange for the acknowledgement of the intellectual
establishment of the time. It was believed then, particularly among the
intellectual classes of Oxford and Cambridge, that communism was the way of the
future. In Major
Barbara, Shaw had excoriated the wealth derived from machines of
death and destruction. What better trade for a playwright of his inclinations
than to feign ignorance of the depravity of Stalin's Russia. In this way he
would find favor with the masters of the intellectual universe.
In a letter written to The
Manchester Guardian on
March 2, 1933, Shaw and 20 other fellow travelers made this observation:
"We desire to record that we saw nowhere evidence of such economic
slavery, privation, unemployment and cynical despair of betterment as are
accepted as inevitable and ignored by the [British] press… Everywhere we saw
the hopeful and enthusiastic working-class, self-respecting and free up to the
limits imposed on them by nature and a terrible inheritance from tyranny…"
If Shaw were to be believed, he was well aware of the tyranny of the
tsar but blissfully ignorant of the savagery of Joseph Stalin, of the
ubiquitous secret police, the extermination of the kulaks and the mass
deportation and starvation of vast swaths of the Russian population. On his
visit, he did not even notice the ever-present apparatus of Stalin's propaganda
machine.
Joseph Schumpeter, who was both a sociologist and an economist, had the
measure of human nature. In every democracy, votes are exchanged for favors. As
the democracy matures and as the prize of political office becomes ever more
seductive, the promises become ever more extravagant. By this process the
democratic bribe must, according to Schumpeter, result in government that
becomes increasingly socialist. If practical proof of Schumpeter's thesis is
required, it is to be found in the inexorable rise of socialism in Europe,
Canada, Australia and in the United States.
Add to this the requirement of the bankers and of the lesser financial
institutions to secure political advantage, and it becomes easy to follow the
money. This also explains the paradox of capital making common cause with
socialism. If there is hypocrisy in those who choose to ignore the
contradictions of their actions, this hypocrisy is multiplied in those who
regard such conduct as a promotion of the public good.
When, as Treasury Secretary, Hank Paulson went down on his knees in his
abject supplication before Nancy Pelosi, the high priestess of Congress, was it
for the survival of the economy or his share-option scheme that he most
fervently prayed? Whose interests was he guarding when he provided his banker
friends and colleagues with insider information about the imminent collapse of
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae – a possibility that only weeks before he had
publicly and emphatically dismissed?
The "liberated" South Africa is governed by the African
National Congress (ANC), which comprises an assortment of socialists,
communists, trades unionists and a sprinkling of pragmatists. The one thing
that this unruly crowd has in common is its conspicuous consumption. In the
process, billions of rand are misspent, unaccounted for or simply stolen. The
chief in the office of former president Thabo Mbeki, Smuts Ngonyama, once
proclaimed that he had not engaged in the liberation struggle to be poor.
Candor of this kind is, however, rare; far more likely, a critic of government
corruption will be met with the accusation of racialism.
The poor and the dispossessed are routinely exploited for the social and
political ambitions of their rulers. Winnie Mandela, the former wife of the
idealized former president, was convicted of the common-law crimes of
kidnapping and assault. Were it not for an opportunistic appeal-court judgment,
she might have spent many years in jail. Although she no longer goes by the
moniker "Mother of the Nation," she still cuts a prominent and
elegant figure on the many occasions she appears in public. Her kidnap victim
was found dead, but her compassion is always on display: she never misses a
photo shoot opportunity in the immediate presence of misery.
If the politicians and intellectuals are masters at the art of
hypocrisy, Hollywood actors and pop stars have a sublime skill in the promotion
of humbug. One such practitioner is Paul David Hewson, also known simply as
Bono, the lead singer and lyricist of the accomplished Irish rock group U2.
Bono has turned his talents and his genius for publicity to the
international populist causes of the day. He has organized many benefit
concerts, eagerly supported by the "me-too brigade" who make up much
of the entertainment industry. The most woebegone victims invariably attract
the greatest artistic support, which is always provided for free.
For his efforts, Bono has consorted with presidents and kings and
accumulated an assortment of titles and awards. Formally granted an honorary
knighthood in March 2007 and thrice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, the
former Time Person of the Year has been described
by Paul Theroux as a "mythomaniac"; a person who wishes "…to
convince the world of (his) worth." The sociologist and political
commentator Muhammad Idrees Ahmad has condemned Bono's conduct as "…a
grand orgy of narcissistic philanthropy." So we have it on good authority:
narcissism and philanthropy can coexist.
If the hypocrisy of the pop stars is nauseating, the grandiloquent but
meaningless oratory of the aspirant political "leaders," of which
much will be seen and heard in the coming months, is almost certain to produce
results, the very opposite of what is pledged.
Greece, Spain, Portugal, Italy and others besides have fallen into the
trap of bribing their electorates with promises that become ever more
unsustainable. In each of these states, expectations have been created that
cannot be met and that cannot now be undone. This is surely a recipe for social
unrest.
These will not be the only countries to succumb to failure. The national
debt, the unaffordable long-term cost of social security, health care and a
myriad other entitlements and the mounting evidence of the insolvent state
point to the same outcome for the UK and the US. Failure is ensured; the more
pressing question is, what happens next?
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