Departments
No, higher consciousness won’t save us
by Norman Solomon
September 23, 2010
Autumn 2010 is a time of disillusionment for many who deplore the USA’s current political trajectory. Some who’ve been active for progressive causes are now gravitating toward hope that individual actions -- in tandem with higher consciousness, more down-to-earth lifestyles and healthy cultural alternatives -- can succeed where social activism has failed. It’s an old story that is also new.
From economic inequities to global warming to war, the nation’s power centers have repulsed those who recognize the urgency of confronting such crises head-on. High unemployment has become the new normal. Top officials in Washington have taken a dive on climate change. The warfare state is going great guns.
When social movements seem to be no match for a destructive status quo, people are apt to look around for alternative strategies. One of the big ones involves pursuing individual transformations as keys to social change. Forty years ago, such an approach became all the rage -- boosted by a long essay that made a huge splash in The New Yorker magazine just before a longer version became a smash bestseller.
The book was “The Greening of America,” by a Yale University Law School teacher named Charles Reich. In the early fall of 1970, it created a sensation. Today, let’s consider it as a distant mirror that reflects some similar present-day illusions.
On the front cover of “The Greening of America,” big type proclaimed: “There is a revolution coming. It will not be like revolutions of the past. It will originate with the individual and with culture, and it will change the political structure only as its final act.”
That autumn, I was upbeat about Reich’s new book -- including its great enthusiasm for “the revolution of the new generation.” (Hey, that was me and my friends!) The book condemned the war, denounced the overcapitalized Corporate State, panned the rigidity of schools, lauded the sensuality that marijuana was aiding, and dismissed as pathetically venal the liberalism that had driven the country to war in Vietnam.
At the time, I scarcely picked up on the fact that “The Greening of America” was purposely nonpolitical. Its crux was personal and cultural liberation -- in a word, “consciousness,” which “plays the key role in the shaping of society.” And so, “The revolution must be cultural. For culture controls the economic and political machine, not vice versa.” In effect, the author maintained, culture would be a silver bullet, able to bring down the otherwise intractable death machine.
Let’s freeze frame those two dreamy claims and mull them over. Consciousness “plays the key role in the shaping of society.” And culture “controls the economic and political machine, not vice versa.”
Reich combined those outsize tributes to “consciousness” and “culture” with disdain for some plodding struggles. “The political activists have had their day and have been given their chance,” he wrote. “They ask for still more activism, still more dedication, still more self-sacrifice, believing more of the same bad medicine is needed, saying their cure has not yet been tested. It is time to realize that this form of activism merely affirms the State. Must we wait for fascism before we realize that political activism has failed?”
In his 1970 book, Reich laid it on the line: “The great error of our times has been the belief in structural or institutional solutions. The enemy is within each of us; so long as that is true, one structure is as bad as another.” And Reich added a fanciful theory of “liberation” that would leave behind the corporate liberal constraints of the era.
Liberation, he wrote, “comes into being the moment the individual frees himself from automatic acceptance of the imperatives of society and the false consciousness which society imposes.” His optimism sprang from the belief that “the whole Corporate State rests upon nothing but consciousness. When consciousness changes, its soldiers will refuse to fight, its police will rebel, its bureaucrats will stop their work, its jailers will open the bars. Nothing can stop the power of consciousness.”
Fast forward a quarter century.
In 1995, the same Charles Reich was out with another book -- “Opposing the System” -- his first in two decades. Gone were the claims that meaningful structural change would come only as a final step after people got their heads and culture together. Instead, the book focused on the melded power of huge corporations and the U.S. government.
Reich’s new book was as ignored as “The Greening of America” had been ballyhooed; no high-profile excerpt in The New Yorker or any other magazine, scant publicity, and not even faint controversy. Few media outlets bothered to review “Opposing the System.” A notable exception, the New York Times, trashed the book.
In his 1995 book, Reich challenged what he called “the System” -- “a merger of governmental, corporate, and media power into a managerial entity more powerful by reason of technology, organization, and control of livelihood than any previously known form of rule.” Reich astutely noted that “we deny and repress the fact of corporate governmental power,” and he pointed out: “There will be no relief from either economic insecurity or human breakdown until we recognize that uncontrolled economic forces create conflict, not well-being.”
In sharp contrast to his flat assertion a quarter century earlier that “the whole Corporate State rests upon nothing but consciousness,” Reich now emphasized the egregious imbalances of financial power: “It is economic deprivation that comes first, dysfunctional behavior second, in the true cause-and-effect sequence.”
The author saw a much fuller social context for the yearning and euphoria that had animated “The Greening of America” and the era it celebrated to excess in 1970. Far wiser in 1995, he wrote: “Most of the important things in life, the things we truly desire, such as love, joy, and beauty, lie in a realm beyond the economic. What we do not recognize is how economics has become the destroyer of our hopes. It is economic tyranny that cuts off our view of a better future.”
Today, even more, we live in a time of economic tyranny. The mantra of “hope” has proven hollow when directed toward a political leader; some react to disappointment by pinning their hopes on individual consciousness or cultural transformations. But deep patterns of economic predation, ecological destruction and endless warfare cannot be effectively undermined by transcendent consciousness or cultural radicalism. Realistic hope is not in a political star or in the mere transformation of our individual selves. Our best strategies and our futures are bound together with political engagement that embraces all of humanity.
______________________________________
Norman Solomon is the author of many books including Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America’s Warfare State. This article is adapted from portions of that book. For information, go to: Norman Solomon
|
 |
Recent National Issues Articles
A Year of fall and decline December 28, 2010 David Swanson
2011: Year of resistance December 22, 2010 David Swanson
Antiwar protest at White House December 17, 2010 Pete Johnson
Transcending progressive discord December 16, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
Richard Holbrooke's deathbed conversion December 15, 2010 David Swanson
Obama wooing “Economic Royalists” November 20, 2010 Norman Solomon
The Republican war on reality October 29, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
Such is the peace process: Obama as a salesman October 28, 2010 Ramzy Baroud
Rules of play October 23, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
Leakers, Beware the Corporate Media October 14, 2010 Ray McGovern
An open letter to Barack Obama October 13, 2010 Paul Krassner
Stop the anonymous hit men: make shadowy campaign money the issue October 12, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
Don't let the Russ Feingolds go down for the sins of the Blanche Lincolns October 6, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
No, higher consciousness won’t save us September 23, 2010 Norman Solomon
Triumph of the Money Party!!! Warren's role downgraded, reports to Geithner September 16, 2010 Michael Collins
Wall Street's Mercenaries Ride Donkeys September 14, 2010 David Swanson
Right-wing Republicans vs. corporate Democrats vs. progressive populists September 10, 2010 Norman Solomon
Five years and still drowning: The New Orleans CNN would never show you August 25, 2010 Greg Palast
See something, say something August 19, 2010 James Hanson
An honest look at Obama's first year August 9, 2010 David Swanson
Let's give country reason to celebrate August 9, 2010 Rev. Jesse Jackson
Revenge of the weeds July 15, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
Holding Psychologists accountable for Torture July 8, 2010 Terry Lodge
Confronting rendition to torture in North Carolina July 7, 2010 Clare Hanrahan, WarIsACrime.org
Witnessing against torture: Why we must act June 23, 2010 Kathy Kelly, WarIsACrime.org
An easy way to dramatically change Congress June 22, 2010 David Swanson
Ten suggestions for effective activism June 18, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
Inauguration Day 2013 June 15, 2010 Ted Sylvester
California's Prop. 14: A bad deal for democracy June 6, 2010 Norman Solomon
The learning curve of peace May 25, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
U.S. laws rated worst value per dollar May 23, 2010 David Swanson
Getting smart about stupid communication May 17, 2010 David Swanson
Chevron's "crude" attempt to suppress free speech May 16, 2010 Bill Moyers and Michael Winship
Afghan escalation funding: More war, fewer jobs, poor excuses May 11, 2010 David Swanson
Kagan in context: Shafting progressive values May 10, 2010 Norman Solomon
12 fresh angles on the Gulf Coast oil spill, neatly packaged May 3, 2010 Tod Brilliant
Massey and Goldman under criminal investigation May 1, 2010 David Swanson
50 years later the struggle continues April 29, 2010 Saul Landau
Iran a Threat? I Mean, Really? April 27, 2010 Ray McGovern
Investigate the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal April 25, 2010 Dr. Suzanne Ross (917) 584-2135 • Pam Africa (215) 476-8812
A mad Tea Party April 23, 2010 Helen Werner Cox and John Werner Cox
Journey of a citizen April 22, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
Who let the Blue Dogs out? April 21, 2010 Norman Solomon
Our national epidemic of violence April 21, 2010 David Swanson
Tea Party and rail discussion April 17, 2010 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Mines have spurned safety for too long April 16, 2010 Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr.
Kucinich on assassinations and upcoming war funding vote April 16, 2010 David Swanson
Yeah, well you finally stopped getting mad April 15, 2010 David Swanson
Peace activists extend an olive branch to the Tea Party to talk about war April 14, 2010 Medea Benjamin
Corporatocracy and its discontents April 13, 2010 David Swanson
Our national epidemic of violence April 13, 2010 David Swanson
How the corporations broke Ralph Nader and America, too April 8, 2010 Chris Hedges
Citizens united against Citizens United March 27, 2010 David Swanson
Frank Olson, Enemy Combatant March 26, 2010 David Swanson
Lies, damn lies, and the media March 23, 2010 David Swanson
United States Hypocrisy Knows No Rationale - take it to the UN March 21, 2010 Jim Miles
'Soul Of A Citizen' excerpt: taking money out of politics: a grassroots effort for clean elections March 20, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
John Yoo: a president can nuke the United States March 20, 2010 David Swanson
The GITMO distraction March 18, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
How the Democrats can reclaim the youth vote March 17, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
I'm Down With Dennis March 15, 2010 david swanson
Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman on WCRS Radio March 13, 2010 Tom Over
Dear Eric Holder: Try accused criminals in courts of law March 11, 2010 The Robert Jackson Steering Committee
Jay Bybee questioned as prelude to prosecution March 6, 2010 David Swanson
Whirlpool in Evansville March 5, 2010 Jason Perlman, Communications Director, Ohio AFL-CIO
Paradise lost March 5, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
Does DOJ agree with Yoo on testicles, villages, and nukes? February 27, 2010 David Swanson
Pre-partisan America, 1789-1801 February 25, 2010 David Swanson
Yoo, Bybee, and disinformation February 21, 2010 David Swanson
Activists protest Dr. Larry James and torture at Wright State February 9, 2010 Pete Johnson
Feb. 6 Statement by Leonard Peltier February 7, 2010 Leonard Peltier
Kvetcher in the Rye February 5, 2010 Greg Palast
On war, conformity, the Democratic Party and progressive possibilities February 5, 2010 Norman Solomon
Top 10 problems with America assassinating Americans February 5, 2010 David Swanson
Blocking war funding just got easier February 4, 2010 David Swanson
Congressman Payne: I won't oppose war money because Obama's president February 1, 2010 David Swanson
The source of corporate power January 30, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
Fixing a bad Supreme Court decision January 29, 2010 Joel S. Hirschhorn
Give to the Congress information of the State of the Union January 29, 2010 David Swanson
Gone a week and you trash the country January 28, 2010 David Swanson
Et Tu, ACLU? January 27, 2010 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
PUBLIC INTEREST GROUPS CONDEMN SUPREME COURT'S RULING ON CORPORATE MONEY IN ELECTIONS January 22, 2010 David Swanson
A fable for our time January 15, 2010 David Swanson
Northwest Bomb Plot 'Oddities' January 13, 2010 Lori Price
Good News: Will We Hear It? January 11, 2010 David Swanson
Calling the bluff in the Conference Committee January 11, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
Naked empire January 7, 2010 Saul Landau
Recommended new year's resolutions for all Americans January 1, 2010 Bruce Arnold
Are Presidents Afraid of the CIA? January 1, 2010 Ray McGovern
Read National Issues Articles by Year: 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 |