Tuesday, April 4, 2023

THE POLITICS OF DISTRACTION: PRIORITIZING THE WORK OF THE LEFT

 Harry Targ


Reflections on Movements from Below

Revisiting peoples’ histories suggest that from time to time issues have emerged which led to the building of mass movements. Movements come from concrete circumstances, theoretical writings, grassroots organizing, and hitting the streets.  Also, periods of resurgence of theory and practice are joined with what Michael Denning called a “cultural front,” that is the development of art forms that educate and inspire in conjunction with mass movements. Some combination of these elements can be found if we examine the periods of abolitionism, resistance to the rise of capitalism in the late nineteenth century, early anti-imperialism and opposition to war in the 1890s and World War 1, the rise of the labor movement in the 1930s, and the anti-fascist movements in the late 1930s as a result of the Spanish Civil War and the growing power of fascist Germany, Italy, and Japan. After World War II, struggles, campaigns, and organizing efforts centered on opposing war and imperialism and challenging racism.

Looking back on these periods suggests that singular issues animated the organizing and movement building. Even if sectors of social movements envisioned building a new society they generally embraced just one or a few issues for purposes of organizing. In this sense, organizing in the periods mentioned were “easier;” single issues dominated the political terrain. The positions that should be taken by progressives were relatively clear.


However, because of the growing complexity of economic, social, political, and environmental developments in the twenty-first century  and because of the powerful new technologies of communication that have emerged, the issue/organizing domain has gotten much more difficult. One element of twenty-first century politics that needs to be recognized is what might be called “The Politics of Distraction.”


What is “The Politics of Distraction”


A distraction is “a thing that prevents someone from giving full attention to something else.” Over the last twenty years our political landscape has been populated with numerous distractions, even if they are important to peoples’ lives.

Perhaps the foremost distraction that has occurred in recent years has been the candidacy, presidency, and post-presidency of Donald Trump. His pomposity, racism, hate-filled messages, and his combination of power and ignorance of the issues has made him the prime target for the corporate media and mainstream politicians and pundits, while his base of support, largely those disenchanted with the direction of economic, political, and cultural change, has been wildly demonstrative in support of him.

For the corporate media, he has been the perpetual gift that continues to give. Fox News has built a media empire based on celebratory lies and distortions of political reality derived loosely from Trump’s words and deeds. But also Trump, and his friends at Fox News, have been the gift that keeps giving to other sectors of the corporate media. MSNBC and CNN have built their programs and diatribes around endless ridicule of Donald Trump and Fox News.

A second distraction involves highlighting the ugly underside of US politics, past and present. Today the term fascism or neo-fascism is used as a short-hand label to ground the racist, homophobic, and violent politics in the history of fascism in world history. There is no question that the politics of hate, racism, homophobia, and violence have had an enormous role to play in US history. The slaughter of the original inhabitants of the continent and 400 years of slavery speak to these pivotal features of the development of the country. And in conventional politics there has always been a percentage of the population attracted to these currents, perhaps 30 to 40 percent of the voting population from before the civil war to the present. But to bring to the conversation analogues to German, Italian, or Spanish history distracts discourse from what is central to the American experience in the past and what needs to be addressed in today’s politics. References to fascism in the contemporary context distracts activists from addressing the “why” question and further divides the politics of the nation.


A third distraction is the constant conversation in the corporate media and in grassroots progressive circles on elections. Almost immediately after one election occurs discourse shifts to speculation about the next election. Ahistorical predictions dominate the conversations. This is perhaps the major corporate media preoccupation. Polls, webinars, constant pontification by polling experts fill a high and growing percentage of all public discourse on the corporate media, social media, and discussions and planning among progressives.

Most of the conversation is based on longitudinal data using dubious methods and without comparisons with historical research. For example, political scientists have long noted that the vast majority of voters make their choices based upon the party they identified with as early as their childhood years. Similarly, lots of research has shown that except for dramatic historical changes such as the Vietnam War, most of us accept the beliefs and perceptions and attitudes that are learned at very young ages. Beliefs about “human nature” or “the inevitability of war” become part of our understanding of the world during our youth.

A fourth distraction is more time-bound. That is to say from time to time issues, statements, events occur that constitute flashy news that excites the viewer or listener, mostly because of the extremism embedded in the story or event. At the time of this writing, Florida has become a daily news story: censoring books in classrooms, punishing teachers of the renaissance who fail to get parental permission to use images of Michelangelo’s statue of David in class, or ongoing battles between the governor of the state and the Disney empire. Oftentimes prominent touring college speakers, sponsored by groups who know how to create distractions, become famous for hateful statements or preposterous claims, and find their way into both corporate and social media for days at a time. (One can only speculate what would be their impact if the media did not publicize these speakers. Of course, one could speculate whether Donald Trump could have been elected president if not for the corporate media providing billions of dollars of free publicity for his bizarre claims).

What are the More Fundamental Questions That Distract From “The Politics of Struggle”

The questions that seem to undergird the fundamental structures of our society remain the most basic ones that must be addressed.  These “fundamental” structures are indeed the deep structures that get lost in the panoply of distractions that populate discourse in every day life.

First, undergirding virtually every issue that has surfaced in the varied United States historical periods has been the economic system, that is capitalism. Everyone knows that however it is measured the profit system has created on the one hand huge corporations and banks that dominate the production of goods and services and shape everyday life. And everybody knows some small sector of the population benefits from this economic system and the vast majority do not. Further, and this is most vital to organizing, the economic and political institutions are created by and serve the interests of capitalists.

Second, capitalism, the dominant economic system in wealthy nations requires a global reach, imperialism. That is the economy requires cheap labor, natural resources, and land. To insure the acquisition of these resources, cooperating elites in countries all around the work are favored and supported. Writers often reflect on history by organizing their thoughts around colonialism and slavery, neocolonialism, dependency, and conceptualization of a struggle between the Global North and Global South. But what remains constant is that the capitalist economic system is a national and a global system. And when concerns are raised about arms races, wars, the danger of nuclear war, trade, aid, immigration, and environmental devastation, the global system of capitalism is involved.


Third, while the first two items above refer to “fundamental structures” they are inextricably connected to enduring and fundamental problems: economic inequality, poverty, racism, and misogyny. In every era, in every place (with a few exceptions), in every election cycle these issues directly or indirectly remain central and shape how people think and how they behave. To not address these issues and the “fundamental structures” that give rise to them is to misplace the forest for the trees.

Finally, the deep structures, the enduring problems are inextricably connected to many of the issues social movements are addressing today: access to income, food, health care education, housing, and healthcare. But progressives today compartmentalize their activism, do not connect their issues to the fundamental structures, fail to suggest the inextricable link between the issues and their connections to capitalism and imperialism, and fall prey to the politics of distraction.


In sum, in order to focus on the fundamental issues that need to be addressed, progressives have to challenge conceptualizations and actions that decontextualize and dehistoricize the deep, almost insurmountable, problems that most of humanity face. The task then is to revisit the movements we are part of, raise questions of interconnections between issues, struggle to understand the relationship between issues and fundamental structures and in the process work to overcome the politics of distraction. While the politics of distraction disarms and confuses progressive movements, linking the distractions to the economic system, imperialism, inequality and racism, and fundamental issues such as jobs, healthcare, education, and income can make organizing more effective.


 

The Bookshelf

CHALLENGING LATE CAPITALISM by Harry R. Targ

Read Challenging Late Capitalism by Harry R. Targ.