It is important to discuss alternatives before the Status Quo devolves and collapses, so we have an intellectual framework to guide healthier, more sustainable alternatives once the current system implodes.
by Charles Hugh-Smith
Two of the key characteristics of an empire in terminal decline are complacency and intellectual sclerosis, what I have termed a failure of imagination. (The others are military over-reach, chronic deficits, a parasitic Elite that is immune to what's left of the rule of law, weak leadership, mass dependence on the Central State and excessive consumption.)
Two of the key characteristics of an empire in terminal decline are complacency and intellectual sclerosis, what I have termed a failure of imagination. (The others are military over-reach, chronic deficits, a parasitic Elite that is immune to what's left of the rule of law, weak leadership, mass dependence on the Central State and excessive consumption.)
Michael
Grant described these causes of decline in his excellent account The Fall of the Roman Empire:
There was no room at all, in these ways of thinking, for the novel, apocalyptic situation which had now arisen, a situation which needed solutions as radical as itself. (The Status Quo) attitude is a complacent acceptance of things as they are, without a single new idea.
This acceptance was accompanied by greatly excessive optimism about the present and future. Even when the end was only sixty years away, and the Empire was already crumbling fast, Rutilius continued to address the spirit of Rome with the same supreme assurance.
This blind adherence to the ideas of the past ranks high among the principal causes of the downfall of Rome. If you were sufficiently lulled by these traditional fictions, there was no call to take any practical first-aid measures at all.
In other
words, if our idea of intellectual rigor and honesty is Paul Krugman dancing
around the Neo-Keynesian Cargo Cult campfire waving dead chickens and mumbling
the same old nonsensical chants about aggregate demand, we are well and truly
doomed.
This same
intellectual sclerosis and spiritual vacuum characterizes our acceptance of the
current welfare state. That dependence on the State is
destructive to the the well-being and productivity of the dependents and to the
fiscal health of the State is self-evident. As management guru Peter Drucker
observed in his 1993 book, Post-Capitalist Society:
Joseph Schumpeter warned in 1918 that the fiscal state would in the end undermine government's ability to govern. Fifteen years later, Keynes hailed the fiscal state as the great liberator; no longer limited by restraints on spending, government in the fiscal state could govern effectively, Keynes maintained. We now know Schumpeter was right.
The Status
Quo firmly embraces both sides of the welfare state coin: corporate welfare
lavished on favored cartels (education, healthcare, defense, oil/gas, banking,
etc.) and transfer payments to individuals, i.e. paying people to stay at home
watching TV. Republicans and Democrats alike are
crony-capitalists par excellence, and both ends of the political spectrum are
delighted to warehouse the poor at home via welfare, where the steady drip of
State dependence saps their motivation to make political demands on the
State-corporate partnership.
(Warehousing
the poor in prison for drug-related activity is far more costly and troublesome
than simply paying them to stay home and watch TV.)
Politicos
bleat the requisite lip-service to "creating jobs," but there is no
discussion of policies that might give meaning and purpose to those without
jobs while loosening the State's grip on the throat of society.
Correspondent
Jeff W. recently shared an alternative vision of dealing with chronic
unemployment that is light years away from the centralized welfare state. The
key feature of Jeff's system is that it is centered in the community-based
economy, the largely forgotten sector of the economy that has been hollowed out
by the Central State and corporate-market machine.
Here are some thoughts about replacing the welfare state with community groups:
- Three bad ways to deal with chronic unemployment: government income transfer, government make-work jobs, and goosing the economy with debt money. These bad practices need to be supplanted by new practices.
- Because people are not factory-farm chickens, they need more than food, shelter and clothing in order for society to survive. A person also needs important work to do that will allow him to earn a respected role in the community. Community groups can provide important work as well as providing basic food, clothing and shelter.
- Community groups could be funded using the following principles:
a. The tax assessment on businesses and individuals need not be a dollar amount. It can be a requirement to take care of a person, e.g., if you earn $100,000 per year as a single person with no dependents, you might be assessed 1.56 dependents. Your share of the burden of taking care of the unemployed would be 1.56 people.
b. Communities should operate in a competitive environment, e.g., Church A Social Services takes care of people at $10,000/year/dependent. Church B Social Services does it for $9500. The $100,000 earner in the example above could save money by directing his funds to Church B. In this example he saves $780 ($15,600 - $14,820).
c. Dependents should be able to choose which community group to belong to. If all the dependents leave Church B because they are doing a poor job, then Church B Social Services is out of business.
d. A community group can keep its costs low by putting dependents to work, e.g., Churches A & B could operate a taxpaying restaurant, and use its profits to help fund their programs.
The main point I am trying to make is
that intelligent new approaches are available to supplant the welfare state. Political leadership may not be available, and the people might not yet
be ready for radical change (though they are getting closer to being ready),
but ideas and plans are available today.
Thank you,
Jeff, for articulating a community-based alternative to the centralized welfare
state. One of the few commentators who
understand the importance of membership is John Michael Greer of the The Archdruid Report.
Membership
entails privileges that are dependent on fulfilling duties, guidelines and
responsibilities. Failure to comply with the guidelines or evasion of
responsibilities leads to dismissal from the group. This is the core of
membership: it can be revoked if the membership privileges or other members are
abused.
What is
especially noteworthy in Jeff's alternative is the freedom of choice and
competition. No one is forced to join a community
group; they are free to not join a group and as a result of that choice not
collect the benefits. Donors can choose which group to fund, so the community
groups are competing for both donors and dependents.
The second
key feature of Jeff's alternative is that the goal is not to warehouse the
unemployed in front of a TV set, it is to offer them meaningful work and
purposeful roles in their community.
As Jeff
observed, we as a nation are not yet ready to even discuss alternatives to our
corrupt, bankrupt corporate-state welfare system, but it is important to
discuss alternatives before the Status Quo devolves and collapses, so we have
an intellectual framework to guide healthier, more sustainable alternatives
once the current system implodes.
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