The global crisis is not merely economic; it is the result of profound financial, sociological and political trends best captured by Marx, Orwell and Kafka.
by Charles Hugh Smith
The global crisis is best understood as the
convergence of the modern trends identified by Marx, Orwell and Kafka. Let's start with Franz Kafka, the writer (1883-1924) who
most eloquently captured the systemic injustices of all powerful
bureaucracies--the alienation experienced by the hapless citizen enmeshed in
the bureaucratic web, petty officialdom's mindless persecutions of the
innocent, and the intrinsic absurdity of the centralized State best expressed
in this phrase: "We expect errors, not justice."
If this isn't the most insightful summary of the
Eurozone debacle, then what is? A lawyer by training and practice, Kafka
understood that the more powerful and entrenched the bureaucracy, the greater
the collateral damage rained on the innocent, and the more extreme the
perversion of justice.
The entire global financial system is Kafkaesque: the bureaucracies of the
Central State have two intertwined goals: protect the financial Elites from the
consequences of their parasitic predation, and protect their own power and
perquisites.
While Marx understood the predatory, parasitic nature of Monopoly Capitalism, he did not anticipate the State's partnering with Cartel/Crony Capitalism; in effect, the State has appropriated the appropriators, strip mining the citizenry to protect the financial sector from the consequences of their "business model" (leverage, fraud, embezzlement and the misrepresentation of risk). But the State doesn't merely enable ("regulate") the predation of financiers; it also strip mines the citizenry to fund its own expansion into every nook and cranny of civil society.
This is where Orwell enters the convergence, for the State masks its
strip mining and power grab with deliciously Orwellian mis-directions such as
"the People's Party," "democratic socialism," and so on.
Orwell
understood the State's ontological imperative is expansion, to the point where
it controls every level of community, markets and society. Once the State
escapes the control of the citizenry, it is free to exploit them in a parasitic
predation that is the mirror-image of Monopoly capital. For what is the State
but a monopoly of force, coercion, data manipulation and the regulation of
private monopolies?
What
is the EU bureaucracy in Brussels but the perfection of a stateless State?
As Kafka divined, centralized bureaucracy has the
capacity for both Orwellian obfuscation (anyone read those 1,300-page
Congressional bills other than those gaming the system for their private
benefit?) and systemic avarice and injustice.
The convergence boils down to this: it would be impossible to
loot this much wealth if the State didn't exist to enforce the
"rules" of parasitic predation. In China, the Elite's looting
proceeds along somewhat different rules from the looting of Europe and the
U.S., but the end result is the same in all financialized, centrally managed
economies: an expansive kleptocracy best understood as the convergence of Marx,
Orwell and Kafka.
No comments:
Post a Comment