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Richard Wolff: Marxism and Communism | Lex Fridman Podcast #295


small model | large model

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Slaves produce a surplus which the master gets. Serfs produce a surplus which the lord gets.
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Employees produce a surplus which the employer gets. It's very simple. These are exploitative
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class structures because one class produces a surplus appropriated, distributed by another
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group of people, not the ones who produced it, which creates hostility, enmity, envy, anger,
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resentment, and all of the problems you can lump under the heading class struggle.
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The following is a conversation with Richard Wolff, one of the top Marxist economists and
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philosophers in the world. This is a heavy topic, in general and for me personally, given my family
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history in the Soviet Union, in Russia, and in Ukraine. Today the words Marxism, Socialism,
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and Communism are used to attack and to divide, much more than to understand and to learn.
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With this podcast, I seek the latter. I believe we need to study the ideas of Karl Marx,
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as well as their various implementations throughout the 20th and the 21st centuries.
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And in general, we need to both steel man and to consider seriously the ideas we demonize,
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and to challenge the ideas we dogmatically accept as true, even when doing so is unpleasant,
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and at times, dangerous. This is the Lex Friedman Podcast. To support it, please check out our
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sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here's Richard Wolff.
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Let's start with a basic question, but maybe not so basic after all. What is Marxism? What are the
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defining characteristics of Marxism as an economic and political theory and ideology?
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Well, the simplest way to begin a definition would be to say it's the tradition that takes its
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founding inspiration from the works of Karl Marx. But because these ideas that he put forward
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spread as fast as they did, and as globally as they did, literally it's 140 years,
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140 years since Marx died. And in that time, his ideas have become major types of thinking
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in every country on the earth. If you know much about the great ideas of human history,
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that's an extraordinary spread in an extraordinarily short period of historical time.
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And what that has meant, that speed of spread and that geographic diversity, is that the Marxian
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ideas interacted with very different cultural histories, religious histories, and economic
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conditions. So the end result was that the ideas were interpreted differently in different places
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at different times. And therefore, Marxism, as a kind of first flush definition, is the totality
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of all of these very different ways of coming to terms with it. For the first roughly 40, 50 years,
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Marxism was a tradition of thinking critically about capitalism. Marx himself, that's all he
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really did. He never wrote a book about communism. He never wrote a book really about socialism.
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Either his comments were occasional, fragmentary, dispersed. What he was really interested in was
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a critical analysis of capitalism. And that's what Marxism was, more or less, in its first 40 or 50
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years. The only qualification of what I just said was something that happened in Paris for a few
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weeks. In 1871, there was a collapse of the French government, consequent upon losing a war to Bismarck's
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Germany. And then the result was something called the Paris Commune. The working class of Paris
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rose up, basically took over the function of running the Parisian economy and the Parisian
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society. And Marx's people, people influenced by Marx, were very active in that commune,
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in the leadership of the commune. And Marx wasn't that far away. He was in London.
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These things were happening in Paris. That's an easy transport even then. And for a short time,
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very short, Marxism had a different quality. In addition to being a critique of capitalism,
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it became a theory of how to organize society differently. Before that had only been implicit.
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Now it became explicit. What is the leadership of the Paris Commune going to do? And why? And
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in what order? And in other words, governing, organizing a society. But since it only lasted
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a few weeks, the French army regrouped. And under the leadership of people who were very opposed to
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Marx, they marched back into Paris, took over, killed a large number of the communards, as they
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were called, and deported them to islands in the Pacific that were part of the French empire at the
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time. The really big change happens in Russia in 1917. Now you have a group of Marxists, Lenin,
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Trotsky, all the rest, who are in this bizarre position to seize a moment. Once again, a war,
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like in France, disorganizes the government, throws the government into a very bad reputation
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because it is the government that loses World War I, has to withdraw, as you know,
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Brest, Litovsk and all of that, and the government collapses and the army revolts.
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And in that situation, a very small political party, Russian Social Democratic Workers Party,
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splits, under the pressures of all of this, into the Bolshevik and Menshevik divisions. Lenin,
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Trotsky and the others are in the Bolshevik division. And to make a long story short,
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he's in exile. Lenin's position gets him deported because he says Russian workers should not be
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killing German workers. I mean, this is a war of capitalists who are dividing the world up into
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colonies and Russian working people should not kill and should not die for such a thing. As you
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can expect, they arrest him and they throw him out. Interestingly, in the United States, the
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comparable leader at that time of the Socialist Party here, as you know, there was no Communist
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Party at this point, that comes later. The head of the Socialist Party, a very important American
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figure named Eugene Victor Debs, makes exactly the same argument that Americans should not fight in
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the war. He has nothing to do with Lenin, I don't even know if they knew of each other, but he does
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it on his own. He gets arrested and put in jail here in the United States. By the way, he runs for
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president from jail and does very well, really very well, remarkable. And he's the inspiration
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for Bernie Sanders, if you see the link, although he had much more courage politically than Bernie
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has. That's really interesting. I'd love to return to that link maybe later. History rhymes. Yes,
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the complicated story. Anyway, the importance in terms of Marxism is that now this seizure of power
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by a group of Marxists, that is a group of people inspired by Marx developing what you might call
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a Russian, even though there were differences among the Russians too, but a Russian interpretation,
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this now has to be transformed from a critique of capitalism into a plan, at least. What are you
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going to do in the Soviet Union? And a lot of this was then trial and error. Marx never laid any of
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this out. Probably wouldn't have been all that relevant if he had, because it was 50 years
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earlier in another country, etc. So what begins to happen, and you can see how this happens then
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more later in China and Cuba and Vietnam and Korea and so on, is that you have kind of a bifurcation.
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Much of Marxism remains chiefly the critique of capitalism, but another part of it becomes a set,
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and they differ from one to the other, a set of notions of what an alternative post capitalist
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society ought to look like, how it ought to work. And there's lots of disagreement about it,
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lots of confusion, and I would say that that's still where it is. You have a tradition now
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that has these two major wings, critique of capitalism, notion of the alternative,
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and then a variety of each of those, and that would be the framework in which I would answer,
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that's what Marxism is about. Its basic idea, if you had to have one, is that human society
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can do better than capitalism, and it ought to try.
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And then we can start to talk about what we mean by capitalism.
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Fine.
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So we'll look at the critique of capitalism on one side, but maybe stepping back,
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what do you think Marx would say if he just looked at the different implementations of the ideas that
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Marxism throughout the 20th century, where his ideas that were implicit were made explicit?
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Would he shake his head? Would he enjoy some of the parts of the implementations? How do you think
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he would analyze it?
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Well, he had a great sense of humor. I don't know if he had a chance to take a look at his writing,
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but he had an extraordinary sense of humorism. My guess is he would deploy his humor in answering
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this question, too. He would say some of them are inspiring, some of his interpretations of his work,
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and he's very pleased with those. Others are horrifying, and he wishes somehow he could
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erase the connection between those things and the lineage they claim from him, which he would.
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There's a German word—I don't know if you speak the other languages—there's a wonderful
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German word called verzichte, and it's stronger than the word refuse. It's if you want to refuse
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something, but with real strong emphasis. Verzichte darauf is a German way of saying,
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I don't want anything to do with that.
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He would talk then in philosophical terms, because remember, he was a student of philosophy.
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He wrote his doctoral thesis on ancient Greek philosophy and all the rest. He would wax
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philosophical and say, you know, that the ideas you put out are a little bit like having a child.
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You have a lot of influence, but the child is his own or her own person and will find his or
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her own way, and these ideas, once they're out there, go their own way. And as you said, there's
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a particular way that this idea spread, the speed at which it spread throughout the world made it
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even less able to be sort of stabilized and connected back to the origins of where the idea
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came from. The only people who ever really tried that were the Russians after the revolution,
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because they occupied a position for a while, not very long, but they occupied a position for a
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while in which, I mean, it was exalted, right? There had been all these people criticizing
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capitalism for a long time, even the Marxists ever since mid century. And these were the first guys
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who pulled it off. They made it. And so that there was a kind of presumption around the world,
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their interpretation must be kind of the right one, because look, they did it. And so for a while,
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they could enunciate their interpretation. And it came to be widely grasped as something which,
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by the way, gets called in the literature, official Marxism, the very idea that you would
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put that adjective in front of Marxism, or Soviet Marxism or Russian, there were these words that
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where the adjective was meant to somehow say, kind of, this is the canon, you can depart from
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it, but this is the canon. Before the Russian Revolution, there was no such thing. And by the
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1960s, it was already, it was gone. But for a short time, 30, 40 years, it was a kind of,
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and the irony is, particularly here in the United States, where the taboo against Marxism kicks in
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right after World War II, is so total in this country, that I, for example, through most of
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my adult life, have had to spend a ridiculous amount of my time simply explaining to American
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audiences that the Marxism they take as canonical is that old Soviet Marxism, which wasn't the canon
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before 1917, and hasn't been since at least the 1960s. But they don't know. It's not that they're
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stupid, and it's not that they're ignorant. It's that, well, ignorance may be, but I mean, it's not
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a mental problem. It's the taboo. Shut it down. And so all of the reopening that, in a way,
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recaptures what went before and develops it in new direction, they just don't know.
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LW. Nevertheless, it's a serious attempt at making the implicit ideas explicit. The Russians,
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the Soviets at the beginning of the 20th century, made a serious attempt at saying, okay, beyond the
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critique of capitalism, how do we actually build a system like this? And so, in that sense,
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not at a high level, but at a detailed level, it's interesting to look at those particular schools.
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Maybe… RL. Right, because, for example, let me just take your point one step further. You really
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cannot understand the Cuban Revolution, the Chinese Revolution, Vietnamese, and the others,
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because each of them is a kind of response, let's call it, to the way the Soviets did it.
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Are you going to do it that way? Well, yes, and no is the answer. This we will do that way,
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but that we're not going to do. And the differences are huge, but you could find a thread—I can do
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that for you if you want—in which all of them are, in a way, reacting. LW. To the originals.
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RL. Yes, very much so. LW. Like maybe most of rock music is reacting to the Beatles and the Stones.
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RL. Something like that. LW. Can you speak to the unique elements of the various schools
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of that Soviet Marxism? So we got Leninism, Trotskyism, Stalinism, maybe even let's expand
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out to Maoism. So maybe I could speak to sort of Leninism, and then please tell me if I'm saying
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dumb things. I think for Lenin, there was an idea that there could be a small sort of vanguard party,
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like a small controlling entity that's like wise and is able to do the central planning decisions.
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Then for Stalinism, one interesting—Stalin's implementation of all of this—one interesting
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characteristic is to move away from the international aspect of the ideal of Marxism to
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make it all about nation, nationalism, the strength of nation. And then so Maoism is
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different in that it's focused on agriculture and rural. And then Trotskyism, I don't know
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except that it's anti Stalin. I mean, I don't even know if there's unique sort of philosophical
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elements there. Anyway, can you maybe from those or something else speak to different unique
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elements that are interesting to think about implementation of Marxism in the real world?
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Probably the best way to get into this is to describe something that happened in Marxism
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that then shapes the answer to your question. In the early days of Marx's writings,
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and you know, his life spans the 19th century. He's born in 1818, dies in 1883, so literally
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he lives the 19th century. And to make things simple, you might look at the first half of the
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first two thirds of his life as overwhelmingly gathering together the precursors to his own work.
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Marx was unusually scholarly in the sense that partly because he didn't work a regular job,
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and partly because he was an exile in London most of his adult life, he worked in the library. I
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mean, he had a lot of time. He got subsidized a little bit by Engels, whose family were
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manufacturers. And you might say the first half to two thirds of his life are about
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the critique of capitalism. And that was what, in a broad sense, the audience for his work,
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Western Europe more or less, was interested in. That's what they wanted. And he gave that to them.
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He wasn't the only one, but he was very, very effective at it. By the last third of his life,
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he and the other producers of an anti capitalist movement, people like the Chartists in England,
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that's a whole other movement, the anarchists of various kinds, like Proudhon in France,
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or Kropotkin or Bakunin in Russia, and so on. You pull all these together, and there was a shift
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in what the audience, let's call it a mixture of militant working class people on the one hand,
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and critical or radical intelligentsia on the other. They now wanted a different question.
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They were persuaded by the analysis. They were agreeable that capitalism was a phase they would
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like to do better than. And the question became, how do we do this? Not anymore, should we? Why
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should we? Could we maybe fix capitalism? No, they had gotten to the point, the system has
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to be fundamentally changed. But they didn't go, you might imagine, they didn't go and say, well,
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what will that new system looks like? They didn't go that way. What they did was ask the question,
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how could we get beyond capitalism? It seems so powerful. It seems to have captured people's minds,
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people's daily lives, and so on. And the focus of the conversation became, this was already
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by the last third of the 19th century, the question of the agency, the mechanism whereby
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we would get beyond. And again, make a long story short, the conversation focused on seizing the
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government. Before that, the government was not a major interest. If you read Marx's Capital,
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the great work of his maturity, three volumes, there's almost nothing in the state. He mentions
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it, but he's interested in the details of how capitalism works, factory by factory, store by
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store, office. What's the structure? The government's secondary for him. But there's also humans within
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that capitalist system of, there's the working class. That's what he's interested in. He's
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interested in each, think of it almost mechanically like the workplace. In the workplace there,
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some people who do this and other people who do that, and they accept this division of authority,
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and they accept this division of what's going on here, particularly because he believed that the
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core economic objective of capitalism was to maximize something called profit, which his
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analysis located right there in the workings of the enterprise. The government was not the
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the key factor here. And he was looking at ideas of value. How much value does
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the labor of the individual workers provide? And that means, how do we reward the workers in an
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ethical way? And so those are the questions. But the government is not part of that picture.
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So it's very significant that towards the end of the 19th century, Marx is still alive when this
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begins, but it really gets going after he dies, is this debate among Marxists about the role of
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the state. They all agreed, nearly all of them agree, that you have to get the state. The working
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class has to get the state because they see the state as the ultimate guarantor of capitalism.
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When things get really out of hand, the capitalist calls the police or he calls the army or both of
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them. And so the government is in a sense this key institution captured in Marxist language
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by the bourgeoisie, by the other side, the capitalists, and yet vulnerable because of
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suffrage. If suffrage is universal or nearly so, if everybody gets a vote, which in a way
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capitalism brings to bear, part of its rejection of feudalism in the French American Revolution
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is to create a place where elected represented. So the government being subject to suffrage
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creates the notion, aha, here's how we're gonna, we have to seize the state. And then that gets
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agreed upon, but there's a big split as to how to do it. One side says you go with the election,
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you mobilize the voter. That gets to be called reformism within Marxism. And the other side
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is revolution. Don't do that. This system, if I may quote Bernie again, is rigged. You can't
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get there. They've long ago learned how to manipulate parliaments. They buy the politicians
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and all that, and therefore revolution is going to be the way to do it. Revolution
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gets a very big boost because the Russians, they did it that way. They didn't do, I mean,
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they fought in the Duma, in the Parliament, but they didn't. And this focus on the state,
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I would argue, goes way beyond what the debaters at the time, and if you're interested in the great
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names, there was a great theorist of the role of the state in a reformist strategy to get power
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in Germany named Edward Bernstein. Very important. His opponents in Germany were Karl Kautsky and
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Rosa Luxemburg, the two other huge figures in Marxism at the time, and they wrote the articles
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that everybody reads, but it was a much broader debate. By the way, that debate still goes on.
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Reformism versus revolution?
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WOLFF Mhm. And in terms of not all that different. I mean, it's adjusted to history, but
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in terms of different.
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SIMON Can you comment on where you lean in terms of
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the mechanism of progress, reformation versus revolution?
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WOLFF I'd rather tell you the historical story.
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SIMON Sure.
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WOLFF Over and over and over again, in most cases,
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the reformists have always won because revolution is frightening, is scary, is dangerous,
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and so most of the time, when you get to the point where it's even a relevant discussion, not an
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abstract thing for conferences, but a real strategic issue, the reformists have won.
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I mean, and I'll give you an example from the United States. In the Great Depression of the
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1930s, you had an extraordinary shift to the left in the United States, the greatest shift to the
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United States, the greatest shift to the left in the country's history before or since, nothing
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like it. Suddenly, you created a vast left wing composed of the labor movement, which went crazy
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in the 1930s. We organized more people into unions in the 1930s than at any time before
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or any time since. It is the explosion. And at the same time, the explosion of two socialist parties
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and the Communist Party that became very powerful, and they all worked together, creating a very
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powerful leftist presence in this country. They debated in a strategically real way reform or
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revolution. The reformers were the union people, by and large, and the communists were the
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revolutionaries, by and large, because they were affiliated with the Communist International,
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with Russia and all of that. And in between, you might say, the two socialist parties,
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00:27:13.280
one that was Trotskyist in inspiration and the other one more moderate Western European kind
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00:27:19.920
of socialism. And they had this intense debate. And they ended up, the reformists won that debate.
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00:27:26.320
There was no revolution in the 1930s here. But there was a reform that achieved unspeakably
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00:27:34.800
great successes, which is why it was as strong and remains as strong as it does, because
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00:27:40.480
it achieved in a few years, in the 1930s, starting around 1932,
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00:27:45.280
three social security in this country. We had never had that before. That's the same one we
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00:27:50.480
have now. Unemployment insurance never existed before that you have till today. Minimum wage
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00:27:57.440
for the first time, still have that today. And a federal program of employment that hired 15
link |
00:28:03.280
million people. I mean, these were unspeakable gifts, if you like, to the working class.
link |
00:28:09.440
So that's the 30s and the 40s.
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00:28:11.120
30s. Not much in the 40s anymore, but in the 30s. And here's the best part. It was paid for by taxes
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00:28:18.560
on corporations and the rich. So when people today say, well, you can tax the government,
link |
00:28:24.160
the joke is I have to teach American history to Americans because it has been erased from
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00:28:32.160
consciousness.
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00:28:33.360
We'll return to that. But first, let's take a stroll back to the beginning of the 20th century
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00:28:38.480
with the Russians.
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00:28:39.200
With the Russians. So their interpretation goes like this.
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00:28:47.040
Everybody was right. The state is crucial. We were right. We were the revolutionaries.
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00:28:52.640
We seized the state here in Russia. Now we have the state. And socialism
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00:28:59.440
is when the working class captures the state, either by reform or revolution, and then uses
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00:29:06.480
its power over the state to make the transition from capitalism to the better thing we're
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00:29:12.880
going toward. And again, make a long story short, in the interest of time, what happens,
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00:29:20.480
which is not unusual in human history, is that the means becomes the end.
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00:29:26.640
In other words, Lenin, who's crystal clear before he died, you know, he doesn't live
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00:29:31.200
very long, he dies in 23. So he's only in power from 17 to 22. By that time, he has
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00:29:38.240
his brain trouble.
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00:29:39.120
1923, by the way, not at age 23.
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00:29:42.000
Yeah, yeah, yeah. 1923. Yeah, he's only there for four or five years. He's very clear.
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00:29:48.240
He even says, I've done work on that, I've published, so I know this stuff. He says in
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00:29:53.440
a famous speech, let's not fool ourselves. We have captured the state, but we don't
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00:29:59.680
have socialism. We have to create that. We have to move towards that.
link |
00:30:06.880
With Stalin, you know, Lenin dies, and there's a fight between Stalin and Trotsky. Trotsky
link |
00:30:12.240
loses the fight, he's exiled, he goes to Mexico. Stalin is now alone in power, does
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00:30:18.000
all the things he's famous or infamous for. And by the end of the 20s, Stalin makes a
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00:30:27.120
decision. I mean, not that he makes it alone, but things have evolved in Russia so that
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00:30:32.560
they do the following. They declare that they are socialism. In other words, socialism becomes
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00:30:41.840
when you capture the state. Not when the state capture has enabled you to do X, Y, Z, other
link |
00:30:49.600
things. No, no. The state itself, once you have it, is socialism. So when a socialist
link |
00:30:57.600
captures the state, that's socialism. Exactly. That's exactly right. I feel like that's
link |
00:31:04.960
definitionally confusing. Well, it shouldn't be, because I'll give you an example. If
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00:31:10.160
you go to many parts of the United States today, and you ask people, what's socialism?
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00:31:16.160
They'll look you right in the face and they'll say, the post office. When I first heard this
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00:31:23.360
as a young man, I go, what? The post office. It took me a while to understand. The post
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00:31:30.080
office, Amtrak, the Tennessee, all the examples in the United States where the government
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00:31:36.960
runs something. This is socialism. See, capitalism is if the government doesn't run it. If a
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00:31:45.840
private individual who's not a government official runs it, well, then it's capitalism.
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00:31:52.000
If the government takes it, then it's socialism. So what is wrong with that reasoning? So the
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00:31:58.880
idea, I think... There's nothing wrong with it's a way of looking at the world. It's just
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00:32:04.160
got nothing to do with Marx. Well, there's Marx, there's Marxism. Let's try to pull
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00:32:09.280
this apart. So what role does central planning have in Marxism? So Marxism is concerned with
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00:32:22.320
this class struggle, with respecting the working class. What is the connection between that
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00:32:31.760
struggle and central planning that is often... Central planning is often associated with
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00:32:36.800
Marxism. Right. So a centralized power doing... Russia did that. Allocation. So that has to
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00:32:44.000
do with a very specific set of implementations initiated by the Soviet Union. Has nothing
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00:32:49.600
to do with Marx. How else can you do... I don't think you can find anywhere in Marx's
link |
00:32:54.960
writing anything about central planning or any other kind of planning. Again, fundamentally
link |
00:33:00.880
then, Marx's work, it has to do with factories, with workers, with the bourgeoisie, and the
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00:33:14.480
exploitation of the working class. Exactly. You still have to take that leap. What is
link |
00:33:20.080
beyond capitalism? Right. So maybe we should turn to that, focus on that. Yes. Okay. We've
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00:33:28.000
already looked historically at several attempts to go beyond capitalism. How else can we go
link |
00:33:34.240
beyond capitalism? Right. Let me push a little further. They didn't succeed in my judgment
link |
00:33:40.000
as a Marxist. And I'm now gonna tell you why they didn't succeed, because they didn't understand
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00:33:46.880
as well as they could have or should have what Marxist was trying to do. I think I would
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00:33:52.160
have been like them if I had lived at their time under their circumstances. This is not
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00:33:55.360
a critique of them, but it's a different way of understanding what's going on. All right.
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00:34:01.120
So give you an example. Most of my adult life I have taught Marxian economics. I'm a professor
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00:34:09.840
of economics. I've been that all my life. I'm a graduate of American universities. As
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00:34:16.720
it happens, I'm a graduate of what in this country passes for its best universities.
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00:34:22.640
That's another conversation you and I can have. So I went to Harvard, then I went to
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00:34:29.440
Stanford, and I finished at Yale. I'm like a poster boy for elite education. They tried
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00:34:35.600
very hard. By the way, I spent 10 years of my life in the Ivy League, 20 semesters, one
link |
00:34:42.160
after the other, no break. In those 20 semesters, 19 of them never mentioned a word about Marxism
link |
00:34:51.280
that is no critique of capitalism was offered to me ever with one except one professor in
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00:34:59.200
Stanford in the one semester I studied with him, he gave me plenty to read, but nobody
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00:35:05.360
else. So that's really interesting. You've mentioned that in the past, and that's very
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00:35:09.520
true, which makes you a very interesting figure to hold your ground intellectually through
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00:35:18.560
this idea space where just people don't really even talk about it. Perhaps we can discuss
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00:35:25.600
historically why that is, but nevertheless, that's the case. So Marxian economics, did
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00:35:31.360
Karl Marx come up in conversation as a kind of...
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00:35:36.080
Dismissal. The best example, yeah, he came up only as an object of dismissal. To give
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00:35:42.160
you an example, the major textbook in economics that I was taught with, and that was for many
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00:35:48.000
years the canonical book, it isn't quite anymore, was a book authored by a professor of economics
link |
00:35:54.800
at MIT named Paul Samuelson, and a whole generation or two were trained on his textbook.
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00:36:03.200
If you open the cover of his textbook, he has a tree, and the tree is Adam Smith and
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00:36:10.480
David Ricardo at the root, and then the different branches of it. He's trying to give you an
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00:36:16.240
idea as a student of how the thing developed. And it's a tree, and everybody on it is a
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00:36:22.480
bourgeois. And then there's this one little branch that goes off like this and sort of
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00:36:27.760
starts heading back down. That's Karl Marx. In other words, he had to have it complete
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00:36:33.040
because he's not a complete faker, but beyond that, no, there was no. Nothing in the book
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00:36:38.720
gives you two paragraphs of an approach. But that's Cold War. I mean, that's really neither
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00:36:47.520
here. That's the craziness. Yeah, that's the Cold War in this country. My professors
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00:36:52.080
were afraid. Anyway, let me get to the core of it, what I think will help. Marx was interested
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00:36:59.280
in the relationship of people in the process of production. He's interested in the factory,
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00:37:05.680
the office, the store, what goes on, and by that he means what are the relationships among
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00:37:12.800
the people that come together in a workplace. And what he analyzes is that there is something
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00:37:22.320
going on there that has not been adequately understood and that has not been adequately
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00:37:31.760
addressed as an object needing transformation. And what does he mean? The answer is exploitation,
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00:37:40.560
which he defines mathematically in the following way. Whenever in a society, any society,
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00:37:48.800
you organize people, adults, not the children, not the sick, but, you know, healthy adults,
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00:37:54.960
in the following way, a big block of them, a clear majority, work. That is, they use their
link |
00:38:03.120
brains and their muscles to transform nature. A tree into a chair, a sheep into a woolen sweater,
link |
00:38:09.920
whatever. In every human community, Marx argues, there are the people who do that work,
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00:38:16.400
but they always produce more chairs, more sweaters, more hamburgers than they themselves consume,
link |
00:38:25.120
whatever their standard of living. Doesn't have to be low, can be medium, can be high,
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00:38:29.680
but they always produce more than they themselves consume. That more, by the way, Marx, when he
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00:38:38.200
writes this, uses the German word mehr, m e h r, which is the English equivalent of more. It's the
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00:38:44.960
more. That more got badly translated into the word surplus. Shouldn't have been, but it was. By the
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00:38:54.720
way, by German and English people doing the translations. What's the difference between
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00:38:59.360
more and surplus? Is there a nuanced? Yeah, because surplus has a notion of its discretionary,
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00:39:06.080
it's sort of extra. He's not making a judgment that it's extra. It's a simple math equation.
link |
00:39:12.480
Yes, very simple. One minus the other. Yes, x minus y. That's right. x is the total output,
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00:39:20.400
y is the consumption by the producer, therefore x minus y equals s, the surplus. Exactly. Now, Marx
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00:39:29.200
argues, the minute you understand this, you will ask the following question. Who gets the surplus?
link |
00:39:38.400
Who gets this extra stuff that is made but not consumed by those who made it? And Marx's answer
link |
00:39:47.560
is, therein lies one of the great shapers of any society. How is that organized? For example,
link |
00:39:54.800
who gets it? What are they asked, if anything, to do with it in exchange for getting it? What's
link |
00:40:03.440
their social role? For example, here we go now, if you get this and you get the core of it anyway,
link |
00:40:10.640
and I don't charge much, the workers themselves could get it. The workers themselves could get
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00:40:20.480
it. That's the closest Marx comes to a definition of communism. Communism would be if the workers
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00:40:28.960
who produce the surplus together decide what to do with it. So this has to do not just with who gets
link |
00:40:38.160
it, but more importantly, who gets to decide who gets it. Well, who gets it and who gets to decide
link |
00:40:43.840
what to do with it. Right. Because you can't decide it if you don't have disposition over it.
link |
00:40:49.440
So this is the logic of the word sequence. It's produced. Marx uses the word appropriated. In
link |
00:40:57.920
other words, whose property, who gets to decide, if you like, what happens. All that property ever
link |
00:41:04.400
meant is who gets to decide and who's excluded. That's a clean definition of communism.
link |
00:41:10.160
Right. By the way, it's not just clean. This is the only one.
link |
00:41:14.880
So can we just linger on the definition of exploitation in that context?
link |
00:41:20.080
Easy. It becomes very easy. Exploitation exists if and when the surplus that's produced
link |
00:41:27.600
is taken and distributed by people other than those who produced it. Slaves produce a surplus
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00:41:34.480
which the master gets. Serfs produce a surplus which the lord gets. Employees produce a surplus
link |
00:41:42.000
which the employer gets. It's very simple. These are exploitative class structures because one
link |
00:41:52.000
class produces a surplus appropriated, distributed by another group of people, not the ones who
link |
00:42:01.920
produced it, which creates hostility, enmity, envy, anger, resentment, and all of the problems
link |
00:42:10.320
you can lump under the heading class struggle. I use a metaphor, simple metaphorical story.
link |
00:42:18.240
You have two children, let's assume, and you take them to Central Park a few blocks from here.
link |
00:42:23.440
It's a nice day and the children are playing and in comes one of those men with an ice cream truck
link |
00:42:29.440
comes by. Dingalingalingaling, your children see the ice cream. Daddy, get me an ice cream. So you
link |
00:42:35.600
walk over, you take some money, and you get two ice cream cones and you give them to one of the
link |
00:42:41.520
children. The other one begins to scream and yell and howl, obviously. What's the issue? And you
link |
00:42:49.040
realize you've just made a terrible mistake. So you order the one you gave the two ice cream cones
link |
00:42:55.520
to give one of those to your sister or your brother or whatever it is. And that's how you
link |
00:43:01.440
solve the problem. Until a psychologist comes along and says, you know, you didn't fix it by
link |
00:43:08.480
what you just did. You should never have done that in the first place. My response, so you understand,
link |
00:43:17.040
all of the efforts to deal with inequality in economic, political culture, these are all
link |
00:43:25.520
giving the ice cream cone back to the kid. You should never do this in the first place.
link |
00:43:30.560
LW. The reallocation of resources creates bitterness in the populace.
link |
00:43:34.080
RL. Look at Arva. This country is tearing itself apart now in a way that I have never seen in my
link |
00:43:39.920
life, and I've lived here all my life, and I've worked here all my life. It's tearing itself
link |
00:43:45.360
apart, and it's tearing itself apart basically over the redivision, the redistribution of wealth,
link |
00:43:53.520
having so badly distributed in the first place. But that's all in Marx. And notice as I explain
link |
00:43:59.840
to you what is going on in this tension filled production scene in the office, the factory,
link |
00:44:06.000
the store. I don't have to say a word about the government. I'm not interested in the government.
link |
00:44:10.640
The government's really a very secondary matter to this core question. And here comes the big point.
link |
00:44:18.400
If you make a revolution and all you do is remove the private exploiter
link |
00:44:25.520
and substitute a government official without changing the relationship,
link |
00:44:32.640
you can call yourself a Marxist all day long, but you're not getting the point
link |
00:44:36.560
of the Marxism. The point was not who the exploiter is, but the exploitation per se.
link |
00:44:43.360
You've got to change the organization of the workplace so there isn't a group that makes all
link |
00:44:49.040
the decisions and gets the surplus vis a vis another one that produces it. If you do that,
link |
00:44:55.120
you will destroy the whole project. Not only will you not achieve what you set out to get,
link |
00:45:01.760
but you'll so misunderstand it that the Germans again have a phrase,
link |
00:45:06.880
es geht schief. It goes crooked. It doesn't go right. The project gets off the rails because
link |
00:45:14.800
it can't understand either what its objective should have been, and therefore it doesn't
link |
00:45:19.600
understand how and why it's missing its objective. It just knows that this is not what it had hoped
link |
00:45:25.760
for. I mean there's a lot of fascinating questions here. So one is to what degree,
link |
00:45:33.520
so there's human nature, to what degree does communism, a lack of exploitation of the working
link |
00:45:42.160
class naturally emerge? If you leave two people together in a room and come back a year later,
link |
00:45:48.960
if you leave five people together in a room, if you leave a hundred people and a thousand people,
link |
00:45:54.480
it seems that humans form hierarchies naturally. So the clever, the charismatic,
link |
00:46:02.560
the sexy, the muscular, the powerful, however you define that, starts becoming a leader and start to
link |
00:46:11.360
do maybe exploitation in a nonnegative sense, a more generic sense, starts to become an employer,
link |
00:46:20.960
not in a capitalist sense, but just as a human. Here, you go do this, and in exchange I will give
link |
00:46:25.520
you this. Just becomes the leadership role, right? So the question is, yes, okay, it would be nice,
link |
00:46:33.200
the idea sort of of communism would be nice to not steal from the world.
link |
00:46:37.680
Nice in theory, but it doesn't work in practice because of human nature.
link |
00:46:41.680
Because of human nature. That's, thank you. So what can we say about leveraging human nature
link |
00:46:48.320
to achieve some of these ends? There's so many ways of responding,
link |
00:46:53.280
in no particular order. Here are some of them. The history of the human race, as best I can tell,
link |
00:47:01.600
is a history in which a succession of social forms, forms of society, arise,
link |
00:47:13.360
and as they do, they rule out some kinds of human behavior on the grounds that they are socially
link |
00:47:22.160
disruptive and unacceptable. The argument isn't really then, is there a need or an instinct,
link |
00:47:30.160
is there some human nature that makes people want to do this? Well, whatever that is,
link |
00:47:36.560
this has to be repressed or else we don't have a society. And Freud helps us to understand
link |
00:47:43.520
that that repression is going on all the time and it has consequences. It's not a finished project,
link |
00:47:49.920
you repress it, it's gone, it doesn't work like that. So for example, when you get a bunch of
link |
00:47:56.160
people together at some point, they may develop animosities towards one another that lead them to
link |
00:48:02.880
want the other person or persons to disappear, to be dead, to be gone. But we don't permit you to
link |
00:48:11.040
do that. We just don't. Every economic system that has ever existed has included people who defend it
link |
00:48:21.600
on the grounds that it is the only system consistent with human nature and that every
link |
00:48:29.920
effort to go beyond it has to fail because it contradicts human nature. I can show you
link |
00:48:37.040
endless documents of every tribal society I've ever studied, every anthropological community that
link |
00:48:44.160
has ever been studied, slavery wherever it's existed. I can show you endless documents in
link |
00:48:50.400
which the defenders of those systems, not all of them of course, but many defenders used that
link |
00:48:56.800
argument. To naturalize a system is a way to hold on to it, to prevent it from going,
link |
00:49:04.400
to counter the argument that every system is born, every system evolves, and then every system dies.
link |
00:49:12.240
And therefore capitalism, since it was born and since it's been developing, we all know what the
link |
00:49:19.360
next stage of capitalism is. The burden is on the people who think it isn't going to die.
link |
00:49:26.800
Okay, so it doesn't mean they're wrong, but what you're saying is if we look at history,
link |
00:49:31.840
you're deeply suspicious of the argument this is going against human nature because we keep
link |
00:49:36.720
using that for basically everything including toxic relationship, toxic systems, destructive
link |
00:49:42.160
systems. That said, well, let me just ask a million different questions. So one, what about
link |
00:49:50.080
the argument that sort of the employer, the capitalist takes on risk versus the employee
link |
00:50:01.120
who's just there doing the labor? The capitalist is actually putting up a lot of risk. Are they not
link |
00:50:10.000
in sort of aggregating this organization and taking this giant effort, hiring a lot of people?
link |
00:50:15.040
Aren't they taking on risk that this is going to be a giant failure? So first of all, there's risk
link |
00:50:22.000
almost in everything you undertake. Any project that begins now and ends in the future takes a
link |
00:50:28.400
risk that between now and that future something's going to happen that makes it not work out. I mean,
link |
00:50:34.880
I got into a cab before I came here today. In order to do this with you, I took a risk. The cab
link |
00:50:42.080
could have been in an accident. The lightning could have hit us. A bear could have eaten my
link |
00:50:46.400
left foot. Who the hell knows? But shouldn't I reward you for the risk you took? No, hold it
link |
00:50:51.200
a second. Let's do this step by step. So everybody's taking a risk. I always found it wonderful.
link |
00:50:57.040
You talk about risk and then you imagine it's only some of us who take a risk. Let's go with
link |
00:51:03.040
the worker, with the capitalist. That worker, he moved his family from Michigan to Pennsylvania to
link |
00:51:12.160
take that job. He made a decision to have children. They are teenagers. They're now in school at a
link |
00:51:20.400
time when their friendships are crucial to their development. You're going to yank them out of the
link |
00:51:25.440
school because his job is gone. He took an enormous risk to do that job every day, to forestall all
link |
00:51:35.200
the other things he could have done. He was taking a risk that this job would be here tomorrow, next
link |
00:51:41.920
month, next year. He bought a house, which Americans only do with mortgages, which means he's
link |
00:51:48.720
now stuck. He has to make a monthly payment. If you make a mistake, you capitalist. He's the one
link |
00:51:57.120
who's going to, you're a capitalist. You got a lot of money. Otherwise, you wouldn't be in that
link |
00:52:00.480
position. You've got a cushion. He doesn't. If you investigate, you'll see that in every business
link |
00:52:08.400
I've ever been in. I've been involved in a lot of them. So you think it's possible to actually
link |
00:52:11.920
measure risk or is your basic argument is there's risk involved in a lot of both the working class
link |
00:52:17.360
and the bourgeoisie, the capitalists. That's right. And the worker would never come and say,
link |
00:52:23.760
because he's been taught right, I want this payment, a wage for the work I do.
link |
00:52:32.560
And I want this page, this payment for the risk I take. Well, there's some level of communication
link |
00:52:39.200
like that. You have acknowledgement of dangerous jobs, but that's probably built into the salary,
link |
00:52:44.640
all those kinds of things. But you're not incorporating the full spectrum of risk.
link |
00:52:50.720
You don't believe that. This country is now being literally transformed from below by an army of
link |
00:52:57.680
workers who work at Amazon, fast food joints. You know what their complaint is? It's killing us.
link |
00:53:05.760
We get paid shit and it's killing us. There is no relationship except in the minds of the defenders
link |
00:53:13.520
of capitalism between the ugliness, the difficulty, the danger of labor on the one hand and the wage.
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00:53:21.120
Let me give you just a couple of examples. This is my job. This is my life, what I do.
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00:53:26.880
The median income of a child care worker in the United States right now, as we speak,
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00:53:33.520
is $11.22 an hour median. So 50% make less, 50% make more. The median income for car park attendant
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00:53:46.480
is several dollars per hour higher than that. What does the car park attendant do? He stares at your
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00:53:53.440
car for many hours to make sure that nobody comes and grabs it. Maybe he parks it and he moves it
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00:54:02.080
and he moves it around to get it in and out. By any measure that I know of that makes any rational
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00:54:08.800
sense, being in charge of toddlers, two, three, four year olds who are at the key moment of
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mental formation the first five years, to give that a lower salary than you give the guy who
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00:54:23.200
watches your car. Come on, I know how to explain it. Gender explains all kinds of issues that the
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00:54:31.120
car park people are males and the day the child care people are females. And that in our culture
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00:54:37.360
is a very big marker of what, but the one who said only the economics professor, nobody else
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00:54:45.600
says this stuff because in economics, I don't know if you were familiar with our profession, but
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00:54:50.160
we have something which we call marginal product. This is a fantasy. I was a mathematician. Before
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00:54:58.320
I became an economist, I loved mathematics. I specialized in mathematics. So I know mathematics
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00:55:05.040
pretty well. What economists do is silly, is childish, but they think it's mathematics.
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00:55:13.840
But think for a minute what it means to suggest that you can identify the marginal product
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00:55:22.480
of a factor of production, like a worker. In the textbook when it's taught, I've taught this stuff.
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00:55:30.240
I hold my nose, but I teach it. Then I explain to students what I've just taught you is
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00:55:35.040
horse shit, but first I teach it. What is the marginal product if it might be useful?
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00:55:39.360
The notion is if you take away one worker right now from the pile, what will be the diminution
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00:55:46.320
of the output? That's the marginal product of that worker measured by the amount of the output
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00:55:54.240
that diminishes output of the raw product of the product. Usually in real terms or physical,
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00:56:01.280
not the value. You could do a value, but it's really more the physical you're at.
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00:56:05.360
I mean, there is a transformation thing. I'd love to talk to you about value. It's so interesting.
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00:56:11.840
What is value? I'd be glad to talk to you about value and price and all of that,
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00:56:16.800
but I just want to get to this. Hegel, who was Marx's teacher, has a famous line.
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00:56:23.680
You can't step in the same river twice. The argument is you and the river have changed
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00:56:30.400
between the first and the second time. It's a different you and it's a different river.
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00:56:34.560
You can choose not to pay attention to that. You can't claim you're not doing that.
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00:56:39.440
You can't claim that you can actually do that because you can't. There is no way to do that.
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So the meaning that you can't just remove a worker and have a clean
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00:56:49.840
mathematical calculation of the effect that it has on the output.
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00:56:52.480
That's right, because too many other things are going on, too many things are changing,
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00:56:57.200
and you cannot assume, much as you want to, that the outcome on the output side is uniquely
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00:57:05.600
determined by the change you made on the input side. You can't do that.
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00:57:10.160
Even in the average, it's not going to work out.
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00:57:14.000
You can take, look, mathematics is full of abstractions. You can say, as we do in economics,
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keteris paribus, everything else held constant, but you have to know what you just did. You know
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why you do that? Because you can't do that in the real world. That's not possible. You better
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account for that, otherwise you're mistaking the abstraction from the messy reality you abstracted
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00:57:39.280
from to get the abstraction. As a quick tangent, if we somehow went through a thought experiment
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00:57:46.240
or an actual experiment of removing every single economist from the world, would we be better off
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00:57:51.360
or worse off? Much better off. Okay. Economics, and I'm one, you know, I'm talking about myself.
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00:57:57.920
We're going to ship all the economists to Mars and see how well it works off.
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00:58:03.920
The serious part of this is that economics, it's really about capitalism. Economics as a
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discipline is born with capital. There was no such thing. I teach courses at the university,
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for example, called History of Economic Thought. I begin the students with Aristotle and Plato.
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00:58:24.480
And I say, you know, they talked about really interesting things, but they never called it
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00:58:30.000
economics. It made no sense to people to abstract something as central to daily life as economics
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00:58:40.400
broadly defined. It made no sense. That's a creation much, much later. That's capitalism
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00:58:46.400
that did that, created the field. So when I give them Plato and Aristotle, I have to give them
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00:58:52.000
particular passages. By the way, footnote, because your audience will like it. Plato and Aristotle
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00:58:58.960
talked about markets because they lived at a time in ancient Greece when market relations were
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beginning to intrude upon these societies. So they were both interested in this phenomena,
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00:59:12.720
that we're not just producing goods and then distributing among us. We're doing it in a quid
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00:59:18.160
pro quo. You know, I'll give you three oranges, you give me two shirts, a market exchange.
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And both Aristotle and Plato hated markets, denounced them, and for the same reason,
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they destroy social cohesion. They destroy community. They make some people rich and
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other people poor, and they set us against each other, and it's terrible. And here's what
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00:59:41.360
that they agreed on that. Here's what they disagreed on. One of them said, okay, there
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00:59:46.720
can be no markets. That was Plato. Aristotle comes back and says, no, no, no, no, no, too late for
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that. The disruption caused in society by getting rid of this institution that has crawled in
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01:00:00.800
amongst us would be too devastating. So we can't do that. But what we can do is control it, regulate
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01:00:09.760
it, get from the market what it does reasonably well, and prevent it from doing the destructive
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01:00:16.880
things it does so badly. So the fundamentally the destructive thing of a market is it's the
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01:00:23.680
engine of capitalism, so it creates exploitation of the worker. It facilitates it, and it is an
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01:00:32.960
institution that Plato and Aristotle feel is a terrible danger to community. Which, by the way,
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01:00:40.880
is a way of thinking about it that exists right now all over the world.
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01:00:45.360
Look, the medieval Catholic Church had a doctrine, the prohibition of usury.
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01:00:53.280
You know, and this was that God said, if there's a person who needs to borrow from you,
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01:00:59.360
then that's a person in need. And the good Christian thing to do is to help him. To demand
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01:01:07.360
an interest payment rather than to help your fellow man is, God hates you for that. That's a sin.
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01:01:16.000
Jesus is crying all the way to wherever it is he goes.
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01:01:19.680
But would Jesus be crying when you try to scale that system? So that has to do with the
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01:01:26.080
with the intimate human interaction. The idea of markets is you're able
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01:01:33.360
to create a system that involves thousands, millions of humans, and there'd be some level of
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01:01:41.600
safe, self regulating fairness.
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01:01:46.800
There might be, but it's hard to imagine that charging interest would be the way to do that.
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01:01:52.160
I wonder what, so I guess...
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01:01:53.840
Suppose you were interested in having, suppose you took us your problem.
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01:02:00.080
We have a set of funds that can be loaned out.
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01:02:04.080
People don't want to consume it. They're ready to lend it. Okay. To whom should they lend it?
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01:02:11.680
Well, we could say in our society, we're going to run this the way professors
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01:02:16.480
in institutions like MIT work this. They write up a project. They send the project into some
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01:02:24.080
government office where it is looked at against other projects. And this office in the government
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01:02:31.360
decides we're going to fund this one and that one because they're more needed in our society.
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01:02:38.400
We're in greater need of solving this problem than that problem. And so we're going to lend
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01:02:43.760
money to people working on this problem more readily or more money than we lend over here,
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01:02:49.280
because we're going to, but instead what we do is, who can pay the highest interest rate?
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01:02:55.440
Whoa, what are you doing? What ethics would justify you doing? It's like a market in general.
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01:03:02.800
Something is in shortage. All markets are about how to handle shortage. That's one
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01:03:08.080
basic way to understand it. And so if the demand is greater than the supply, which is all the word
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01:03:14.480
shortage means, has no other meaning, if the demand is greater than the supply, okay, now you've got
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01:03:20.480
a problem. You can't satisfy all the demanders because you don't have enough supply. You have
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01:03:27.600
a shortage. Okay, now how are you going to do it? In a market, you allow people who have a lot of
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01:03:32.960
money to bid up the price of whatever's short, and that solves your problem because as the price goes
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01:03:40.480
up, the poor people, they drop out. They can't buy the thing at the exalted price, so you've got a
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01:03:47.120
way of distributing the shortage. It goes to the people with the most money. At this point, most
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01:03:53.680
human beings confronted with this explanation of a market would turn against it because it
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01:04:00.080
contradicts their Christian, Judaic, Islamic, all of them would say, what? You know what that means?
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01:04:07.600
It means that a rich person can get the scarce milk and give it to their cat, while the poor
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01:04:13.440
person has no milk for their five children. There it is. You want a market? Why?
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01:04:19.440
The fundamental thing that seems unfair, there's the resulting inequality. Now...
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01:04:25.760
Or death.
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01:04:26.800
Or death. Well, that's the ultimate inequality.
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01:04:30.560
Yes, it is.
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01:04:32.160
What about, and we're going to jump around from the philosophical, from the economics,
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01:04:36.480
to the sort of debate type of thing. What about sort of the lifting ties raise all boats?
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01:04:45.840
Meaning, if we look at the 20th century, a lot of people, maybe you disagree with this,
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01:04:53.360
but they attribute a lot of the innovation and the average improvement in the quality of life
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01:05:01.360
to capitalism, to inventions and innovation, to engineering and science developments
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01:05:09.600
that resulted from competition and all those kinds of forces. So, not looking at the individual
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01:05:17.360
unfairness of exploitation as it's specifically defined, but just observing historically.
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01:05:24.800
Looking at the 20th century, we came up with a lot of cool stuff that seemed to have made life
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01:05:28.880
easier and better on average. What do you say to that?
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01:05:35.120
I have several responses to that, but I do disagree pretty fundamentally with what's
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01:05:42.880
going on there. But let me give you the arguments so that you can hear them,
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01:05:47.600
and then you can evaluate them, as can anybody who's listening or watching.
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01:05:56.160
Marx was a student of Hegel, and one of Hegel's central arguments was that everything that
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01:06:01.600
exists exists, quote, in contradiction. In simple English, there's a good and bad side,
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01:06:09.760
if you like, to everything. And you won't understand it unless you accept that proposition
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01:06:15.040
and start looking for the good things that are the other side of the bad ones, and the bad things
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01:06:20.160
that are the other side of the good ones, etc. So, the dialectic. Yes, exactly. And Marx,
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01:06:26.320
very attentive to that, explicitly agrees with this on many occasions, and applies it,
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01:06:33.200
of course, to the central object of his research, capitalism. So, this is not a simple minded fellow
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01:06:41.040
who's telling you all the bad things about capitalism as if there were nothing that this
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01:06:45.840
system achieved or accomplished. And one of the things he celebrates a lot is the technological
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01:06:53.760
dynamism of the system, which Marx takes to be profound, because, you know, he lived at the time
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01:07:00.800
when major breakthroughs in textile technology and mining and chemistry and so on were achieved.
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01:07:10.800
But as to the notion that capitalism is therefore responsible for the improvement in
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01:07:18.800
the quality or the standard of living of the mass of people, Marx now comes back and says,
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01:07:23.920
oh wait, wait a minute here. Number one, capitalism as a system has been mostly represented by
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01:07:36.320
capitalists, which makes a certain sense. And those capitalists, with very few exceptions,
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01:07:43.440
some but very few, have fought against every effort to improve the lives of the mass of people.
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01:07:51.840
The goal of a capitalist is to minimize labor costs. What that means is replace a worker with
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01:07:58.400
a machine, move the production from expensive U.S. to cheap China, bring in desperate immigrants from
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01:08:07.200
other parts of the world, because they will work for less money than the folks that you have here
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01:08:11.520
at home. Every measure to help the standard of living of American workers had to be fought for,
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01:08:18.240
had to be fought for, for decades over the opposition of capitalists from the beginning
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01:08:26.160
to right now. The reason we have a minimum wage, which was passed in the middle of the 1930s,
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01:08:32.720
when it was proposed, it was blocked by capitalists. They got together. And today,
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01:08:39.520
just a factoid for you, the last time the minimum wage was raised in the United States,
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01:08:45.520
federal minimum wage, was in 2009, when it was set at the lofty sum of $7.25 an hour,
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01:08:56.240
which you cannot live on. Over the last 12 years or so, whatever it is now, 11, 12, 13 years
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01:09:04.480
since then, we have had an increase in the price level in this country every year. And in the last
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01:09:10.640
year, 8.5%. During that time that the prices went up, the minimum wage was never raised.
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01:09:19.600
What? This is a time of stock market boom, of growing inequality. This is the nerve of the
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01:09:31.520
defender of capitalists, who wants now to get credit for the improvement in the standard of
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01:09:39.360
life of the workers that was fought by every generation. You know, it takes your breath away.
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01:09:45.040
It's an argument. Whoa. But I take my hat off if I had one, because that is one of the only ways
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01:09:53.120
to justify this system. Long ago—let me get to the heart of it—long ago, capitalism could have
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01:10:02.160
overcome hunger, could have overcome disease, could have, I mean, way beyond what we have now,
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01:10:11.600
but it didn't. And that's the worst moral condemnation imaginable. How do you justify
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01:10:20.800
that when you could, you didn't? Look, let me get at it another way, because this may
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01:10:27.360
interest you anyway. The issue is not that capitalism isn't technologically dynamic.
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01:10:35.440
It is. And along the way, it has developed things that have helped people's lives get better. No
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01:10:41.840
question. But the notion that the mass enjoyment of a rising standard of living is somehow built
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01:10:50.560
into capitalism is factually nuts and is such an outrageous—and I can give you a—because
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01:10:59.360
you do math, you'll understand it. Think of it this way. Imagine a production process in which
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01:11:05.840
you have $100 that the capitalist has to lay out for tools, equipment, and raw materials,
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01:11:14.160
and $100 that he has to lay out for workers, hire the workers. And he puts them all together,
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01:11:20.080
and he has an output. And let's say the output is 100 units of something, or whatever the price is,
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01:11:27.520
and that's his revenue. And when he takes his product and sells it and gets the revenue,
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01:11:35.600
let's say the revenue is—it doesn't really matter—it's $120, for lack of a better word.
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01:11:42.400
And he takes $100 of it and replaces the tools, equipment, and raw materials he used up,
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01:11:49.520
another $100 to hire the workers for the next shift, and the other $20 is his profit,
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01:11:54.240
and he puts that aside. Now along comes a technological breakthrough,
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01:12:00.000
a machine, a new machine. And the new machine is so effective,
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01:12:07.600
you can get the same number of units of output with half the workers. So you don't need to spend
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01:12:13.920
$100 on workers. You only need to spend $50. You can do it with half the workers. And so the
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01:12:20.400
capitalist goes to the workers—by the way, this happens every day—and he says to half of them,
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01:12:25.360
you're fired. Don't come back Monday morning. I don't need you. It's nothing personal. I got a
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01:12:31.280
machine. Why does he do that? Because of the $50 he now no longer has to spend on labor, because
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01:12:38.880
he doesn't need half of them. He keeps. Everything else is the same. The machine, everything else is
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01:12:44.640
just to make the math easy. So he keeps as his own profit the $50 that before he paid for those
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01:12:52.800
workers. Because when he sells it for $220, that $50 he doesn't have to give to the next
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01:12:58.480
job because he has a new machine. So that's what he does. The technology leads. He's happy. He's
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01:13:06.880
become more profitable. He's got an extra $50, which is why he buys the machine. The workers
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01:13:13.760
are screwed. Half of them just lost their job, have to go home to their husband and wife,
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01:13:20.640
tell them I don't have a job anymore. I didn't do anything wrong. The guy was nice enough to
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01:13:25.280
say it was nothing wrong with me, but he doesn't need it. So I'm completely screwed here. I don't
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01:13:31.600
know what I'm going to do about the debts we have, the house on mortgage, my children's education,
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01:13:36.240
or whatever else he's got going for himself. Now the point. There was, of course, an alternative
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01:13:43.040
path. The alternative path would have been to keep all the workers, pay them exactly the same that
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01:13:49.440
you did before, for half a day's work. You would have got the same output, same revenue, same
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01:13:58.160
profit as before. But the gain of the technology would have been a half a day of freedom every day
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01:14:06.560
of the lives of these workers. The majority of workers would have been really helped by this
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01:14:15.360
technology. But instead they were screwed so that one guy, the employer, could make a big bundle of
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01:14:23.280
more money. You want to support a system like this? Well, to go back to Hegel, the good and the bad.
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01:14:32.320
So you just listed the bad and you also first listed the good, the technological innovation
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01:14:37.360
of this kind of system. The question is the alternative, whatever, as we try to sneak up to
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01:14:44.080
ideas of what the alternative might look like, what are the good and the bad of the alternative?
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01:14:48.880
So you just kind of, as a opposite, by contrast, showed that, well, a nice alternative is you work
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01:14:56.800
less, get paid the same, you have more leisure time, opportunity to pursue other interests,
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01:15:06.720
the creative interests, family, flourish as a human being, basically strengthen and embolden
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01:15:15.920
the basic humanity that's under all of us. Yes. But then what cost does that have on the deadline
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01:15:27.600
fueled, competition fueled machine of technological innovation that is the positive side of capitalism?
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01:15:36.080
Slows it down.
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01:15:37.360
It slows it down. And the question is which is more important for the flourishing of humanity?
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01:15:44.080
I agree with that. And I'd love there to be a democratic mechanism. So let's discuss it,
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01:15:52.240
let's debate it, and then let's decide what mixture, because it's not either or,
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01:15:57.360
the math problem I gave you is either or, we could mix it. You could have a third less of a working
link |
01:16:03.600
day instead of a half less, and then the other part would be extra profit for our employer,
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01:16:08.000
etc. etc. So let's have a democratic discussion of what is the mix between the positive, and we have
link |
01:16:16.400
no such thing. All of this is decided by one side in this debate, which not only, we know what they
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01:16:22.880
do, they always choose the one that maximizes their profit because that's what they were told
link |
01:16:27.520
to do in business school where I've taught. So not only is it an undemocratic decision,
link |
01:16:34.160
but it's lopsided to boot. So we don't have the opportunity, but I would love for us to be good
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01:16:40.720
Hegelian Marxists and say, let's take a look at the plus and the minus and make the best decision
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01:16:46.720
that we can. We'll make mistakes, but we'll all make them together. It won't be one of us making
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01:16:53.280
a dictatorial decision. You know, Marx developed the notion of the dictatorship of the proletariat,
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01:16:59.360
not as a notion of how government works, but as a notion of what the practical reality is.
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01:17:10.560
The dictatorship in these key decisions is not made by some sitting council, it's made by each
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01:17:16.640
little capitalist in his or her relationships with the workers in the workplace, which is why Marx
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01:17:22.800
focused his analysis on that point. And by the way, I can sketch for you right now so it doesn't
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01:17:28.560
lurk in the background what the alternative is. Let's go there. Okay. It goes right back to what
link |
01:17:34.080
I said earlier. The workers themselves, the collection of employees together appropriate
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01:17:42.480
their own surplus and decide democratically what to do with it, which includes the decision of
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01:17:51.920
whether or not to buy a machine and whether or not to use the machine and the savings it might allow
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01:18:02.160
to be handled by more leisure for themselves or as a fund for new developments in technology or
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01:18:12.160
new products or whatever they want. And you know, this is an old idea in humans. Marx loved that.
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01:18:20.720
Toward the end of his life, he started reading extensively in anthropology. And one of the
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01:18:27.760
reasons he did that toward the end of his life was because he kept discovering that in this
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01:18:33.520
society and that one, including here in the United States, that there were examples of people who
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01:18:40.560
organized their production in precisely this way, as a collective democratic community in which
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01:18:50.000
everybody had an equal voice. So we all together decide democratically what to produce, how to
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01:18:56.080
produce, where to produce, and what to do with the output we all help to produce. So let's do it in,
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01:19:03.680
you know, in this country where democracy is a value nearly everybody subscribes to.
link |
01:19:13.360
Think about it this way, the stunning contradiction that there is a place in our society
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01:19:20.400
where democracy has never been allowed to enter. The workplace. In the workplace, a tiny group of
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01:19:28.080
people, unaccountable to the rest of us, the employer, whether that's an individual, a family,
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01:19:35.040
a partnership, or a corporate board of directors, tiny group of people controls economically a vast
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01:19:43.040
mass of employees. Those employees don't elect those people, have no nothing. There is no
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01:19:49.520
accountability. It is the most undemocratic arrangement imaginable. And this society
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01:19:56.960
insists on calling itself democratic when it has organized the minor matter of producing
link |
01:20:04.000
everything in a way that is the direct, it's autocratic. So to push back on a few things.
link |
01:20:11.440
So one is the idea of this society calling itself democratic is that the government is elected
link |
01:20:18.400
democratically and the government is able to pressure the workplace through the process of
link |
01:20:24.160
regulation. You pass laws of the boundaries of how, you know, minimum wage, all those kinds of things.
link |
01:20:31.040
That's the one idea. The other is there is a natural force within the capitalist when there's
link |
01:20:37.360
no monopolies of competition being the accountability. So if you're a shitty boss,
link |
01:20:45.040
the employee in the capitalist system has the freedom to move to another company, work for a
link |
01:20:50.880
better boss. So that creates pressure on the employers and the bosses. That's at least the idea
link |
01:20:56.880
that there's two boundaries of you not misbehaving. One is the law, so regulations
link |
01:21:05.440
passed by the government, democratic. And the second is because there's always alternatives,
link |
01:21:12.240
in theory, then that puts pressure on everyone to behave well because you can always leave.
link |
01:21:19.200
So, I mean, that's kinds of accountability. But what you're saying is that does not result
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01:21:25.920
in a significant enough accountability for the employer that avoids exploitation of the worker.
link |
01:21:32.720
WOLFF Absolutely. I mean, whatever accountability you get in those mechanisms. And let me respond
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01:21:39.040
to that and then I'll counterargument. First, competition. Here again, we have to be Hegelians
link |
01:21:48.560
just a little. Competition destroys itself. It doesn't need any—the whole point of competition
link |
01:21:56.880
is to beat the other guy. If I can produce the same product as the other guy, either a better
link |
01:22:02.960
quality or a lower price or maybe both, then I win because the customers will come to me
link |
01:22:08.720
because my price is lower or my quality is better, and they'll leave the other guy,
link |
01:22:12.880
he'll go out of business. Now, let's follow. When he goes out of business, because I've won
link |
01:22:17.360
the competition, he fires his workers. I hire them because I'm now going to be able to serve a market
link |
01:22:25.200
he can't serve anymore. So I'm going to buy the used equipment, and thereby many become few.
link |
01:22:34.400
Monopoly is the product of competition. It's not the antithesis, it's the product.
link |
01:22:41.360
LAROI Well, let's see.
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01:22:43.520
WOLFF That's where it comes from.
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01:22:44.720
LAROI There's another element to the system where there's always a new guy that comes in.
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01:22:48.880
WOLFF There isn't. There isn't.
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01:22:51.600
LAROI Well, that's the dream. The entrepreneurial spirit of the United States,
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01:22:58.800
for example, of a capitalist system is you can be broke and one day have a strong idea and build
link |
01:23:07.200
up a business that takes on Google and Facebook and Twitter and all the different car, Ford, GM,
link |
01:23:14.880
which is what you look at Tesla, for example. That's the American dream. One of the many
link |
01:23:20.400
ideals of the American dream is you can move from dirt poor to being the richest person in the world.
link |
01:23:30.960
WOLFF Right.
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01:23:31.440
LAROI It can happen.
link |
01:23:33.680
WOLFF It can happen.
link |
01:23:34.480
WOLFF You know what that's like? That's like you can win a lottery.
link |
01:23:37.520
LAROI No, that's not quite. No, the lottery is complete luck. Here,
link |
01:23:42.240
you can work your ass off if you have a good idea.
link |
01:23:44.320
WOLFF The odds are better in the lottery.
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01:23:46.080
LAROI That's not true. There's a lot of new businesses.
link |
01:23:49.840
WOLFF How many Teslas do you know?
link |
01:23:52.080
LAROI Tesla is a really bad example because the car
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01:23:54.080
company, the automotive sector is so difficult. They operate at such a thin margin of profit.
link |
01:24:03.920
They're probably a good example of capitalism just completely coming to a halt in terms of
link |
01:24:10.800
lack of innovation. That's a very complicated industry because of the supply chain.
link |
01:24:16.880
WOLFF Come on. They have their uniqueness as you're quite right, but so does every other
link |
01:24:23.280
industry. The one thing that's common is that many become few. What you can also have is when you
link |
01:24:29.200
have a few, they jack up the price. They make an enormous profit. In the irony of capitalism,
link |
01:24:36.080
Marx would love this, they begin to incentivize people to break into this industry because the
link |
01:24:42.480
few remaining are making a wild amount of profit because they are a few and can jigger the market
link |
01:24:49.520
to make it work like that for them. The reason every small capitalist is trying to build market
link |
01:24:58.320
share—that's a polite way of saying they want to become a monopolist or to be more exact,
link |
01:25:04.320
an oligopolist, one of a handful of firms that dominates. That's what they're there for.
link |
01:25:09.600
PEDRO But yeah, to push back a little bit also, because this is a question also,
link |
01:25:16.160
do you think we're in danger of oversimplifying capitalism that completely removes the basic
link |
01:25:22.960
decency of human beings? If you give me a choice to press a button to get rid of the competition,
link |
01:25:34.240
but that's going to lead to a lot of suffering, there's a lot of people at the heads of companies
link |
01:25:38.080
that won't press that button. That it's not in the calculation, it's not just money,
link |
01:25:44.480
it's human well being too. So like—
link |
01:25:47.680
PEDRO You think?
link |
01:25:48.240
PEDRO Yes.
link |
01:25:50.400
PEDRO You and I don't live in the same place then.
link |
01:25:53.360
PEDRO So you're saying that the forces of capitalism
link |
01:25:56.320
take over the minds of the people at the top, and then they cease being human.
link |
01:26:01.840
PEDRO No.
link |
01:26:02.640
PEDRO Depending on your model of humans.
link |
01:26:07.040
PEDRO Yeah.
link |
01:26:08.000
PEDRO They lose track of the better angels of their nature,
link |
01:26:11.120
and they just become cogs in the machine, but they just happen to be the cock at the top.
link |
01:26:15.520
PEDRO I would put it differently. The system is so set up, it's a little bit like natural
link |
01:26:20.080
selection. The guys who may—I could say the women too, it doesn't matter—the people who make it up
link |
01:26:26.320
through the layers of the bureaucracy and get to the top in these things have had to do things along
link |
01:26:32.240
the way that become selective. If they can't stand it because they have that human quality—and there
link |
01:26:38.400
are people, I've known them—they're the ones running an Airbnb in Vermont. They went there and
link |
01:26:45.760
they said, I'm not doing this anymore. I'm not going to treat people like that. I'm going to
link |
01:26:49.760
make a lovely place in Vermont with my husband or my wife or whatever, and I'm going to be enjoying
link |
01:26:56.000
the people that come by and be a decent—of course, of course. But the system selects the firm. If you
link |
01:27:04.480
don't do what has to be done to make the profit go up, you're toast there anyway. The rest of the
link |
01:27:10.400
people who vote for you are going to kick you out. You can tell them all day long what a lovely
link |
01:27:15.120
person you are. Then they're going to look at you and wonder what happened to you. How did you even
link |
01:27:19.360
get this far with the lovely person horseshoe? RL It's not necessarily just a lovely person.
link |
01:27:25.520
So maybe my—I'll just say my bias is the people I know are, especially at the top of companies,
link |
01:27:34.240
are in the tech sector where innovation is such a big part of it. So I think a lot of the things
link |
01:27:44.480
we're talking about is when there's not much innovation in the system. So—
link |
01:27:49.840
RL Innovation usually comes—in the history of capitalism, innovation comes in spurts.
link |
01:27:56.480
There's the electric period, the chemistry period, the nuclear period. There's now whatever you want
link |
01:28:01.680
to call it, the artificial intelligence or robotics or computer. It comes, and then there's a flurry
link |
01:28:08.720
as everything is reorganized around whatever the newest technology is, and then you have a period
link |
01:28:15.920
where you can get excited about that, and the very rich people who come to the top can talk endlessly,
link |
01:28:21.680
as they always do, about innovation. But again, it really is—this is a recurring kind of debate and
link |
01:28:32.240
a recurring kind of issue. For me—how do I put this in a way that—no, I don't mean to offend.
link |
01:28:41.440
RL Please, please. RL No, no, no, I don't. I don't want to, but
link |
01:28:51.600
the problem with capitalism is—and maybe you'll like this—the problem with capitalism is
link |
01:28:58.800
not that it is the one thing that's consistent with human nature. That's what its defenders
link |
01:29:03.600
would like to have us believe. But if anything, I would argue the opposite,
link |
01:29:08.480
that it is such a contradiction to parts of our nature, not other parts, that it can never quite
link |
01:29:18.560
make it. There's always going to be the people who don't go along with it, people you're talking
link |
01:29:24.480
about, who do quit along the way, or maybe a few of them actually make it to the top by god knows
link |
01:29:32.240
what hook or what crook that they did it. But most of them go—and you know why? Because their
link |
01:29:39.280
humanity is contradicted by what it is they're being asked to do. I mean, the corporate sector
link |
01:29:48.560
this year—just to give you an idea—CEOs are jacking up their wage package. They're already
link |
01:29:58.160
out of whack. I mean, the average CEO pay is now three, three hundred times what the average worker
link |
01:30:04.480
pay is. But they're jacking it up even more. Why? Because that's what's happening in their universe.
link |
01:30:09.600
That's what—they're all doing it, and they have to do—each one of them justifies that,
link |
01:30:13.920
I have to do that, otherwise I'd lose my guy to the next one. Which, of course, is true,
link |
01:30:18.320
but is no comfort for the mass of people who aren't CEOs, for whom this argument isn't very
link |
01:30:22.960
exciting. So they're doing that at a time when the American people can't cope. They've just gone
link |
01:30:32.000
through the COVID disaster. They've gone through the second worst economic crash of capitalism
link |
01:30:38.320
in our history. After two years of this one, two punch, they got an inflation, a third punch,
link |
01:30:46.160
and we are now predicting rising interest rates and a recession at the end of the year
link |
01:30:50.640
or early next year. You can't do this to a working class. When this was done to the
link |
01:30:55.760
German working class in the 1920s, Hitler was the result. You keep doing that in this country,
link |
01:31:02.160
we're already watching it, you're going to get that too. You're already getting bits and pieces.
link |
01:31:07.360
You can't keep doing it. So there's a quiet suffering amidst the working class that's growing.
link |
01:31:11.920
Horror. Taking out on—
link |
01:31:12.880
That can turn to anger. Some little 18 year old kid who has to go
link |
01:31:16.560
three hours in his car and blow away people in a supermarket. Huh? What? And it happens
link |
01:31:24.320
every day in this country. Every day.
link |
01:31:26.080
So that anger rises up in those little ways now and then bigger and bigger potentially.
link |
01:31:33.040
By the way, there's one more thing on the rationality. And this goes to Elon Musk.
link |
01:31:40.320
If you're interested, 49,000 people were killed in automobile accidents this last year. The number
link |
01:31:47.440
was just released yesterday. 49,000. Automobiles are the single largest pollutant in the country.
link |
01:31:54.320
They use up an enormous amount of energy. They use up enormous amount of resources.
link |
01:32:01.120
There is a way to make transportation much more rational. And we've known it for decades. It's
link |
01:32:07.840
called mass transportation. It's a really beautifully maintained, crystal clear, clean,
link |
01:32:15.680
frequent system of buses, trains, street trolleys, vans. It could easily be done in this society.
link |
01:32:25.520
In fact, I once did a project that I estimated cost $30 billion. That's less than we're sending
link |
01:32:31.680
to Ukraine to do this, to reconfigure it.
link |
01:32:35.280
A public transit system where?
link |
01:32:37.600
Everywhere in this country. All the major metropolitan. This country's overwhelmingly
link |
01:32:41.440
metropolitan area.
link |
01:32:42.480
Well, it clearly has to be more than 30 billion, but...
link |
01:32:46.000
Well, it was a few years ago.
link |
01:32:47.520
Sure. But you're saying it's a little bit more than 30 billion.
link |
01:32:50.960
But I'm using a lot of this. Right. It's not crazy stuff.
link |
01:32:57.680
It's a reasonable number.
link |
01:32:58.960
Right. Right.
link |
01:32:59.440
Hey, listen, but there's a...
link |
01:33:01.360
Let me just finish the point.
link |
01:33:02.560
Sure. Yes.
link |
01:33:03.360
Okay. So I'm trying to be rational here. If we have a climate crisis, which everyone tells me we do,
link |
01:33:13.200
if it's got a lot to do with fossil fuels, which everybody tells me it has to do, and with the use
link |
01:33:18.640
of the fossil fuel, particularly for the automobile, then the solution to the problem would be mass
link |
01:33:24.400
transit. We're doing nothing to make that happen. Nothing.
link |
01:33:29.680
Well, you could argue that autonomous vehicles is a kind of public transit because it's going to be
link |
01:33:37.360
reusable vehicles. It will end, in theory, car ownership. So you just have a more kind of
link |
01:33:44.400
distributed public transit system.
link |
01:33:45.680
If it happens, but you know that that's a side effect. His major goal and the major goal of the
link |
01:33:51.520
other companies that are busy squeezing to get his share of the pie smaller, so they have some,
link |
01:33:58.400
Ford, General Motors, Toyota, all of them are making electric cars now. So what they've done is
link |
01:34:04.080
they've replaced the individual car with fossil fuel with another individual car.
link |
01:34:09.840
Yeah.
link |
01:34:10.320
That's fucking nuts. What are you doing?
link |
01:34:12.880
Well, that's one of the things they're doing, but automation is also another one. But on the Elon
link |
01:34:17.600
side, there's also a hilarious thing named Boring Company, which is working on tunnels, which is
link |
01:34:24.000
actually expanding the flexibility you might have to start playing with ideas of public transit,
link |
01:34:31.600
I think. Listen, I'm now partially living in Austin, Texas, that I don't know if they know
link |
01:34:37.920
what a public transit system is, period.
link |
01:34:40.000
Yes.
link |
01:34:40.480
There's F150 pickup trucks.
link |
01:34:41.520
Most American cities are.
link |
01:34:43.200
Yeah.
link |
01:34:43.920
Well, this is an interesting, so.
link |
01:34:47.440
The older, by the way, footnote, the older this city, the more likely it has public transportation.
link |
01:34:54.160
So you're saying.
link |
01:34:54.800
Boston is the best example.
link |
01:34:56.240
Yes.
link |
01:34:56.880
Have you been, well, you.
link |
01:34:58.160
Yeah, yeah, of course. Yeah, I have a place in Boston.
link |
01:35:00.320
Boston with the street railway, Boston is your case study of how to do this,
link |
01:35:05.040
because they've been doing it all along. New York's pretty good, too.
link |
01:35:07.840
There's a tradeoff. Yeah, New York, I would say, is better than Boston because
link |
01:35:11.280
so there's, you know, their technology also helps you out to do the public transit better.
link |
01:35:18.400
It's almost like Boston is a little too old, but yes, I get your point.
link |
01:35:21.760
But there is a, the Ford F150 pickup truck symbolizes something about America,
link |
01:35:29.600
and there is a practical nature to the fact that in order to do public transit,
link |
01:35:35.680
in order to do some of these things that you're talking about with the working class,
link |
01:35:42.320
there has to be a central planning component, or there has to be a centralized component.
link |
01:35:48.000
And America is very much based on the idea of, at least in recent times,
link |
01:35:55.200
I would say from the founding, of individualism, of respecting individual freedom.
link |
01:35:59.840
Are you worried that in order to bring some of these ideas of Marxism to life,
link |
01:36:07.440
you would trample on individual freedoms?
link |
01:36:10.080
No.
link |
01:36:11.760
Can you respect both?
link |
01:36:13.360
Sure. For me, Marxism is a way to enhance the individual freedom of the mass of people
link |
01:36:20.560
who have had that freedom eroded under the capitalist. That's a motive for my Marxism.
link |
01:36:26.880
It was for Marx too. He loved the French Revolution. He loved the liberté, égalité, fraternité,
link |
01:36:34.800
the great three, and then democracy, the American contribution, if you like.
link |
01:36:39.520
He believed in all of that. His critique of capitalism was, it promised it,
link |
01:36:44.880
and then never delivered it. And the reason you have to go beyond it is because
link |
01:36:49.280
it didn't deliver what it had promised. So for me, it is the fulfillment of agenda.
link |
01:36:59.440
But again, I'm a Hegelian Marxist, if you want. Individualism, for me, is not the way it's set
link |
01:37:08.960
up in this society, some sort of antithesis to the government. I think an immense con has been
link |
01:37:18.160
pulled on the American people. And the con works like this. You know what's bad and what's dangerous
link |
01:37:24.880
and threatens you? It's the government. The government's going to come in and tell you
link |
01:37:29.200
what to do. The government's going to run your life. The government's the problem.
link |
01:37:33.600
There really is no other way to explain the following in American politics.
link |
01:37:39.040
Large numbers of people lose their homes in a downturn, like the so called Great
link |
01:37:44.000
Recession of 2008. Who do they blame? The government. Large numbers of people go unemployed,
link |
01:37:51.600
and what is the media all about? The government. If I were a capitalist, I'd love this. I kick the
link |
01:37:58.720
workers by throwing them out of their home, and they don't get angry at me. They get angry at the
link |
01:38:03.840
government. I fire large numbers of people. I have no responsibility for what happens to them as a
link |
01:38:09.200
result of having no job and no income. And they get angry at the senator. I'm laughing all the way
link |
01:38:16.080
to the bank. This is a genius stroke. In theory. But if you look at government, because you said
link |
01:38:23.520
accountability in the capitalist system has no accountability. There's some pushback I give on
link |
01:38:27.840
the accountability. I think there is some accountability we can discuss in a Hegelian way.
link |
01:38:32.240
Who there's more accountability for. I would say that in theory, government is perfectly
link |
01:38:40.320
accountable. That's the whole point of a democratic system is you vote people in. In practice,
link |
01:38:46.400
there's a giant growing bureaucracy that is accountable only on the surface. There's two
link |
01:38:52.560
parties that seem to be the same. Media somehow integrated into making the same two parties that
link |
01:39:03.120
are just wearing different colored shirts to seem like they're very opposed and are arguing and
link |
01:39:09.360
bitterly arguing and calling each other's nasty names and all those kinds of things. But that's
link |
01:39:16.240
government. So who exactly is worse here? Government or companies? Well, why are we asking
link |
01:39:24.400
that question? These are twins. Look, what you were able to say about Republicans and Democrats
link |
01:39:31.600
just now, with which I agree. I would say the same thing about corporations and the government.
link |
01:39:36.480
This is the same people. Literally. Let's go to Churchill. Which one is worse? Let's go to
link |
01:39:42.480
Churchill. Democracy is the worst form of government except all the other ones or whatever.
link |
01:39:47.920
So this kind of same idea. Which one exactly is worse? Because to me, it seems like...
link |
01:39:52.960
Which one between what and what?
link |
01:39:54.640
Government and industry and companies. It's because government is plagued by...
link |
01:40:03.520
I would call it corruption because the corruption of bureaucratic paperwork.
link |
01:40:10.000
But they're not accountable. There doesn't seem to be a serious accountability.
link |
01:40:15.600
Again, we're not living on the same planet. The greatest practitioners of central planning
link |
01:40:23.360
are corporations. Elon has an operation like General Motors, Ford, IBM, or any of the other
link |
01:40:32.400
megacorps. They have to plan. They buy up companies because they don't want to deal
link |
01:40:40.080
in the market. They don't want the insecurity, the uncertainty of having to buy their inputs
link |
01:40:46.880
or sell their outputs to somebody they don't control. They want the professor to teach the
link |
01:40:53.120
genius of a market. They hate the market. And when they grow to be big, they keep buying
link |
01:40:59.680
whoever they were dealing with before so they could better control them, which requires them
link |
01:41:04.400
then to plan the production and distribution of goods inside rather than buying them in the market.
link |
01:41:12.960
The model of the government is it's a private corporation. I have spent my life...
link |
01:41:18.960
I'll give you an example. In American universities, big ones, famous ones, not just as a student but as
link |
01:41:25.280
a professor. I've been half a dozen schools. I teach now at the new school here. It's another one,
link |
01:41:29.920
right? They all model themselves after businesses. They model their... You can attack the bureaucracy
link |
01:41:37.760
of universities. Good reason. It's a mess. But they're proudly modeling themselves
link |
01:41:45.520
on organizing their bureaucracy in a businesslike manner. So you're looking at a difference which
link |
01:41:53.760
isn't there. The government and the private sector are partners, and both of them wouldn't have it
link |
01:42:00.880
any other way. The corporations want that from the government, and the government now knows that to
link |
01:42:07.440
please the corporations is the number one objective they have because that's how they keep their jobs
link |
01:42:14.000
and keep their system going. And so for all practical purposes, this is the same people.
link |
01:42:20.480
But there's important differences that I don't know if they're fundamental or just a consequence
link |
01:42:27.840
of history. But if you have government, they're accountable in a different way than companies.
link |
01:42:32.800
Companies are accountable by... Especially if you have a consumer, they're accountable by sort of
link |
01:42:38.960
the consumer spending or not spending their money on whatever the heck the company is selling.
link |
01:42:43.120
Right. The government is accountable by votes. And it seems like
link |
01:42:51.200
government, unlike companies, for most of company's history, is always too big to fail, meaning
link |
01:42:58.480
it can always just print money. It can always save itself. And that creates a bureaucracy.
link |
01:43:06.000
You rarely pay the cost of having made bad decisions if you're in government. You
link |
01:43:12.480
distribute the blame, and it's very unclear who's responsible for bad decisions. So bad decisions
link |
01:43:19.200
in government accumulate. So you become more and more and more inefficient and more and more poor
link |
01:43:25.920
in your decision making in terms of, you said, public transit. Should we build a public transit
link |
01:43:30.320
system in this city or not? That's a difficult decision. That's an interesting decision. I would
link |
01:43:36.320
say it's very often a very good decision. But whoever makes that decision should be accountable
link |
01:43:42.560
for a good or bad decision. And it seems like companies are more accountable. They pay...
link |
01:43:49.200
They feel the pain of having made a bad decision more because it can go bankrupt. There's much more
link |
01:43:57.200
day to day pressure to make good engineering decisions. Government doesn't seem to be under
link |
01:44:03.680
the same level of pressure. Do you disagree with that? I disagree with that. Everything in my
link |
01:44:10.160
history pushes me. You may be living... I may be living in a different planet or taking a different
link |
01:44:20.320
sort of drug. I won't mention the name, but I personally had a lot to do with a very large
link |
01:44:27.840
company here in the United States, here in the New York area. And it involved two brothers and
link |
01:44:37.760
a family who built it up into a huge corporation. One of the brothers was kind of the dynamo
link |
01:44:48.560
of the family. And he was more responsible than anybody else building it up.
link |
01:44:52.640
But he took care of his brothers. He had a nice feeling about his brothers. So, the one brother
link |
01:44:56.960
who could not, you know, without help tie his shoes, became a vice president. Got an enormous
link |
01:45:05.440
salary. Got a beautiful office in a skyscraper, not that many blocks from where I'm sitting right
link |
01:45:12.560
now. And that was the way that family handled that company. And all of his relatives that were
link |
01:45:23.120
somewhere in this company doing a variety of whatever, because... And my experience with this,
link |
01:45:32.080
and because I went to the schools, I told you, all my experiences with that group of people,
link |
01:45:37.920
corporate experiences, full of those stories. You know, they made mistake after mistake,
link |
01:45:44.480
which they would tell you didn't undermine. They were always able to blame somebody else,
link |
01:45:52.560
something else that scraped them through. And had they not been able to, they would have been
link |
01:45:58.240
replaced by another person who did the same thing for as long as they could. And they knew it. They
link |
01:46:05.280
would talk about it at family events. That's how I know. I understand that you want the outside
link |
01:46:13.280
world to look at it this way, but it's not my experience.
link |
01:46:17.280
But again, that kind of thing, at the risk of saying human nature again, I wonder what
link |
01:46:25.120
kind of system allows for that more versus less. This is the question of, I would call that, let's
link |
01:46:36.480
put that under the umbrella term of corruption. Which system allows for more corruption?
link |
01:46:42.240
But remember that the way I defined the different system is not more or less government.
link |
01:46:46.320
It's more or less allowing a democratic workplace, reconfiguring it. What happens when everybody
link |
01:46:55.280
has a vote? When you have to explain what the strategies are, what the alternatives are to a
link |
01:47:01.760
larger number of people than a board of directors or major shareholders or whoever it is that most
link |
01:47:08.240
companies are responsible to. And now you've got a whole different universe. It's not a small group
link |
01:47:13.840
that can't be hidden the way it's normally hidden, most of it, and on and on and on.
link |
01:47:20.080
Worker coops is what this is called in many parts of the world. So it's not that I'm advocating
link |
01:47:25.200
something that's never been seen before, not at all. The Marxism I understand is to pick from
link |
01:47:32.400
historical precedents the things that we think will work better. And I think if all the people
link |
01:47:40.560
in enterprise, just to drive the point home, democratically decided they would never give
link |
01:47:46.160
two or three individuals 100 million dollars while everybody else can't send their kid to
link |
01:47:50.880
college. I mean they can do that. So just to return, just to address this point about the
link |
01:47:59.280
particular implementation of Marxism that was the early days in the Soviet Union. Why did
link |
01:48:05.440
Stalinism, for example, lead to so much bloodshed, do you think, and human suffering? Is there any
link |
01:48:12.240
elements within the ideas of Marxism that catalyzed the kind of government, the kind of system that
link |
01:48:23.280
led to that bloodshed? I don't think so. I think there were many things that led to the bloodshed
link |
01:48:29.600
and to all that Stalin's regimes did. And I spent 10 years of my life with another economist writing
link |
01:48:41.040
a book about that to try to explain from a Marxist position the rise and fall of the Soviet Union.
link |
01:48:50.640
You might want to take a look at it sometime. I'm going to say a few things now, but all of
link |
01:48:56.160
those things are spelled out in great detail with loads of empirical evidence, etc. in that work.
link |
01:49:06.240
Let me start with playing a little bit with Hegel.
link |
01:49:12.400
The biggest impact that Marxism had on the Soviet Union was really not so much what the Soviet Union
link |
01:49:21.360
did, but what the rest of the world did. You had a really interesting move, and I'll give you a
link |
01:49:29.200
parallel from today. The move was that the old Russian regime collapsed. World War I, it fell
link |
01:49:40.240
apart. The Tsar and all of that, it couldn't survive. It had already been in trouble. There
link |
01:49:46.800
was a revolution in 1905. There was the loss of the war to Japan. If you know Russian history,
link |
01:49:53.520
which I assume you do, you'll know that there was a lot leading up to the collapse in 1917.
link |
01:50:02.880
In some ways, it was fortuitous that the political group, very small, that could seize
link |
01:50:09.840
the opportunity of that collapse, happened to be Marxists. Earlier on with Kerensky,
link |
01:50:17.440
the first government that tried, it wasn't people all that impressed by Marxism. It was people more
link |
01:50:23.920
skeptical and would not have been called Marxist, probably, by history. They tried. They couldn't.
link |
01:50:31.920
Lenin and his associates were able to take over from them later in that same year.
link |
01:50:36.960
The rest of the world, though, was horrified. The rest of the world saw Marxism having taken
link |
01:50:45.760
this immense leap from being a political party, a movement, critical of capitalism, yes,
link |
01:50:54.480
but still not challenging the power. Now it had the power, and in a big country. And they freaked
link |
01:51:01.840
out. If you know American history, the leadership of this country went completely berserk. I mean,
link |
01:51:10.400
we had a repression of the left, the likes of which we had not seen before. The 20s were a time
link |
01:51:17.600
of Palmer raids in Boston, the Sacco Vanzetti trials, I mean, really grim hostility. And you
link |
01:51:27.760
had the four countries agreeing to invade the Soviet Union to try to crush the revolution.
link |
01:51:33.280
The US, Britain, France, and Japan all attacked 10,000 American troops. So what you had right away
link |
01:51:41.520
was a notion in the West that this was unthinkable. There was a great professor at Princeton,
link |
01:51:51.040
Meier, I forget his first name, who wrote this wonderful book about all American foreign policy
link |
01:51:58.960
since 1917 has been obsessed with Russia. Even now, this fight with Ukraine is half about Russia,
link |
01:52:08.480
as if Russia still was the Soviet Union, as if people haven't figured out. That was a big
link |
01:52:14.400
change back in 1989 and 90. Yeltsin and Putin are not what you had before, or at least they're not
link |
01:52:23.680
Lenin. They may not be so different from some of the other, but in any case. So you had one factor
link |
01:52:31.600
was the utter isolation, the utter condemnation, the global. I mean, Rosa Luxemburg, I assume you
link |
01:52:41.920
know, Rosa Luxemburg is hunted down in the streets of Berlin. She's a critic of Lenin's, by the way,
link |
01:52:48.480
but she's a leftist, hunted down and hacked into bits, killed. So you're attributing some
link |
01:52:56.960
of the bloodshed to the fact that basically the rest of the world turned away.
link |
01:53:02.160
Turned against. Turned against. So you turn against is the better word.
link |
01:53:05.840
I mean, not in order of importance, but it's a very important part of the psychology of being,
link |
01:53:13.520
you know, it's what you would call paranoid if there weren't quite as much evidence that indeed
link |
01:53:19.760
there was a lot to be afraid of at that time. Nobody had ever done it. Look, you could see the
link |
01:53:24.560
effects of it by Stalin inventing the idea, which had no support at first, that you could have
link |
01:53:31.600
socialism in one country. That was thought to be ridiculous, that socialism was internationalism.
link |
01:53:38.640
Marx was against capitalism everywhere. It was, you know, workers of the world unite,
link |
01:53:45.040
not workers of Russia unite. He had to go through a procedure of kind of coming to terms
link |
01:53:54.640
with the fact that the revolution he had in Russia, which was tried in Berlin,
link |
01:54:00.080
was tried in Munich, was tried in Budapest, was tried in Seattle here. They all failed.
link |
01:54:06.320
They all failed, and he's left. So the French would say, tout ça, right? All alone. That's one.
link |
01:54:15.760
The second thing is economic isolation. Russia's a poor country, and it needed what it got before
link |
01:54:23.840
the war, which were heavy investments from the French and the Germans particularly, but others
link |
01:54:28.400
too. Now this was all cut off, and you can see the replay with the sanctions program. We're going to
link |
01:54:36.480
do it again. We're going to do it again. We have to do it. The world is different, and the sanctions
link |
01:54:41.440
don't work, but they're going to trial, because it's the history. But that culture today is
link |
01:54:49.280
completely different. Russia's a different place today, but Russia has China, and that changes
link |
01:54:54.720
everything. And they don't get that here yet, but they will. Yeah, there's a very complicated
link |
01:55:00.080
dynamic with China, even with India. Yep. Or Turkey, Brazil. Sorry to say, human nature may
link |
01:55:08.880
change at a slower pace. Yes, that has occurred to me as well. I get that point. So is there,
link |
01:55:16.400
can you steel man the case, or consider the case, that there's something about the implementation
link |
01:55:22.400
of Marxism, maybe because of the idealistic nature of focusing on the working class and
link |
01:55:29.040
workers unite, that naturally leads to a formation of a dictatorial force, a dictator that says,
link |
01:55:38.160
let us temporarily give power to this person to manage some of the details of how to run the
link |
01:55:46.960
democracy, of giving voice to the workers so that they get to choose. And then that naturally
link |
01:55:54.080
leads to a dictator, and there's naturally, in human nature, power and absolute power,
link |
01:56:00.000
as the old adage goes, corrupts absolutely. Is it possible that whenever you focus on Marxist ideals,
link |
01:56:07.520
you're going to end up with a dictator, and often, when you give too much power to anyone human,
link |
01:56:13.440
a small number of people, you're going to get into a huge amount of trouble? You've
link |
01:56:18.320
putched things together there that I would... That's what... I think if you give...
link |
01:56:22.960
Putched is a good word. Yeah. It's German.
link |
01:56:29.440
Remember, I told you, my mother was born in Germany. And then your dad is French.
link |
01:56:34.160
Yeah, but he was born in Metz, if you know European. It's a city on the border of France
link |
01:56:39.600
and Germany. If you come from Alsatians, Alsass in German.
link |
01:56:45.520
So they're German speaking, French speaking?
link |
01:56:46.880
Yeah, they're both. It's bilingual because it's been back and forth so many times
link |
01:56:52.560
in medieval days already that it... Literally, you go from one store to another,
link |
01:56:56.960
the proprietor here is French and the proprietor there is German,
link |
01:57:00.640
but they all speak both languages because... You don't speak either of them?
link |
01:57:06.320
I speak Russian.
link |
01:57:07.280
Russian, but not German or French? Ukrainian, no. It took French for four years
link |
01:57:12.400
in high school, but I've forgotten all of it. I remember the romance and the spirit
link |
01:57:16.880
of the language, but not the details. I'm sure I can remember.
link |
01:57:20.480
If you allocate power unequally, undemocratically, and you do it for a very long period of time,
link |
01:57:30.160
and you do it on many levels of ideology, it is not surprising that it sticks and it stays.
link |
01:57:40.000
And you can make a political revolution or even an economic revolution and you will discover
link |
01:57:45.600
it has a life of its own and it's going to take a long time before people don't.
link |
01:57:51.680
If you have a religious tradition, Christianity, that prides itself on its monotheism
link |
01:57:59.520
and that it doesn't want to have anything to do with the old Greek mythologies when there was
link |
01:58:04.000
Zeus and Diana and all the others, and they were very humanlike, but instead we have one
link |
01:58:10.240
who is the absolute beginning. What are you doing? You're teaching people
link |
01:58:17.600
an authority line that comes from the individual. If you have a sequence of kings,
link |
01:58:23.360
if in your feudal manner the lord sits called the landlord and he has unspeakable power
link |
01:58:30.080
over everything that goes on, and you do this for thousands of years,
link |
01:58:35.200
you can make a Russian revolution in 1917. But if you imagine you've gotten away from all that
link |
01:58:42.240
people assume without ever thinking about it, you're going to have trouble. Stalin is figured
link |
01:58:49.760
here as the originator of his situation. He wasn't. He never had that power. He may have thought that,
link |
01:58:58.080
but I don't. He's the product. Look, the Cuban people made Fidel, who really wasn't that kind
link |
01:59:05.680
of guy. You know, he's a baseball playing lawyer. That's what he was. But they made him into Tala.
link |
01:59:12.240
So you're the product of history. No, no, no. It was the systems, feudalism, the nature,
link |
01:59:20.880
it was the structures and institutions that cultivated in people a mentality that has its
link |
01:59:27.840
own rhythm and doesn't follow the calendar of a political revolution.
link |
01:59:33.280
That's the fundamental question. Is there something about communism
link |
01:59:36.240
that creates a mentality that enables somebody like Stalin or Mao?
link |
01:59:44.320
No, I think it's the social issues and problems the society has that make them then go to what
link |
01:59:51.120
they find familiar, to what seems to make sense, and he's the guy. Look, let me give you an example
link |
01:59:56.640
from American history. The Republican Party has traditionally in this country been the party of
link |
02:00:02.880
private enterprise and minimum government. In comes Trump, runs for office in 2016,
link |
02:00:10.480
is elected. What does he do? He commences the most massive tax increase and the most
link |
02:00:19.120
massive government intervention in the worlds of economics that we've had for decades. Nobody says
link |
02:00:26.880
anything. The Republicans cave and the Democrats largely too. They cave. He can throw a tariff on
link |
02:00:38.320
anything. He gets up in front of the American people and he says the Chinese will pay the tariff.
link |
02:00:44.480
That's not what a tariff is. It's not how a tariff works. He would flunk a freshman course
link |
02:00:50.320
in economics, which everybody knows, everybody who teaches these courses. No, it doesn't matter. He's
link |
02:00:57.120
still calling the shots. What is going on here is that a society has come to a point where it can't
link |
02:01:04.400
solve its problems and it begins what? To tap into older forms and all of the laissez faire
link |
02:01:14.960
and all of the individualism. And suddenly the Republican Party is gung ho. And now they're
link |
02:01:22.560
going to make abortion illegal. The government is telling you what you can do with your uterus.
link |
02:01:29.600
What? What? The government is being given more and more and more and more power. They're hoping
link |
02:01:36.800
what? Do they like the government? No. They're desperate. This is not a pro government
link |
02:01:43.200
and it wasn't in Russia either. They were in a desperate fix and so, and he took advantage.
link |
02:01:52.320
So to which degree would you say Marx's ideas led to the creation of the
link |
02:02:03.840
National Socialism Party of German workers, hence the Nazi Party, the fascist party in the 30s
link |
02:02:11.280
and the 40s at the head of whom was Hitler, which I just recently learned he was
link |
02:02:18.720
employee number seven of the party or whatever, the seventh person to have joined the party
link |
02:02:23.680
and have created one of the most consequential and powerful political parties in the history
link |
02:02:30.080
of the 20th century. What degree did Marx's ideas, Marxism ideas have to play? It is the National
link |
02:02:38.000
Socialist Party of German workers. Right. Workers. National Socialist Deutsche Arbeiter Partei,
link |
02:02:50.080
German Worker Party. Worker Party. National Socialist German Worker Party. So. Well here's
link |
02:02:56.560
the history. Did he care about the workers or did he just use the workers as a populist message?
link |
02:03:03.280
The only thing that Marxism did for Mr. Hitler was provide him with his stepping stone to power,
link |
02:03:10.960
but had nothing, no other, he didn't know anything about it, didn't care anything about it,
link |
02:03:14.560
nor did the people around him. Here's the story of what happened there,
link |
02:03:18.640
which I know largely through my own family and plus my own history, the work that I did.
link |
02:03:25.360
The most successful socialist party in Europe was the German Party. It started around 1870,
link |
02:03:32.000
Marx was still alive. Some of his own family were leaders, Fernand Lassalle and others, his daughters.
link |
02:03:40.960
By the end of the century, it was the second most important party in Germany.
link |
02:03:45.280
Nobody understood it. It was almost as big a shock to the Europeans as was the Russian Revolution
link |
02:03:53.840
in 1917. Here was a political party that was now in every German city, in every German town,
link |
02:04:00.800
powerful and enjoying its rise up. My family is involved in this, I really do know the story.
link |
02:04:11.040
It meant that starting around 1906, 1907, 1908, if you wanted to have any kind of presence
link |
02:04:23.360
in the German working class, you had to use the word socialist. You had to, otherwise they wouldn't
link |
02:04:29.360
pay attention. The other parties called themselves Catholic. Germany is divided, the upper two,
link |
02:04:36.560
the northern two thirds is Protestant, the southern third is Catholic. Munich and Bavaria
link |
02:04:42.000
is Catholic and every other part of Germany basically is Protestant. You could be in the
link |
02:04:47.600
Catholic Party, that was the south, or you could be in various conservative, Prussian and other.
link |
02:04:54.400
But if you wanted to have a presence in the working class, which was growing, in Germany
link |
02:04:59.920
a very powerful capitalist country, expanding like crazy at this time. Germany was the major
link |
02:05:06.640
competitor to Britain for the empire. The United States was coming up too, but it was Germany and
link |
02:05:12.640
US taking over from Britain's empire. So the German working class was it. So anybody who wanted
link |
02:05:21.280
to approach the working class in whatever way had to come to terms and be friendly to socialism.
link |
02:05:31.200
Other parties did this too, just like Hitler. They put the word socialist in their party,
link |
02:05:37.680
but they wanted to make it clear that they weren't anything to do with the Soviet Union
link |
02:05:43.600
or anything to do with Marxism. So they put the word national. Nazi is the first four letters
link |
02:05:49.920
of national, national in German, and the ZI is how you spell national in the German.
link |
02:05:56.480
National socialism, but definitely not communists.
link |
02:05:58.880
That's right. They killed communists. They fought communists in the street.
link |
02:06:03.520
They had pitched battles. They literally threatened each other's existence and their
link |
02:06:09.200
lives. And the first people that he arrested and put in jail were not Jews and gypsies and all the
link |
02:06:15.360
other people he eventually killed. It was communists. They were the number one, and
link |
02:06:20.160
socialists right behind him. Why? Because up until he takes power, January of 1933,
link |
02:06:26.560
that's when Hitler takes power, the last elections, two of them in 1932,
link |
02:06:32.400
the socialists and communists, they vote together, 50% of the vote in Germany.
link |
02:06:36.720
So he appealed to the German manufacturers, the German capitalists, and he said,
link |
02:06:43.760
the communists and socialists are going to win. And you're just the capitalists. You have too
link |
02:06:50.720
few people. You need a mass base, and I'm the only one that can do that.
link |
02:06:56.080
And it was just a populist message that he used.
link |
02:06:59.520
That's right. But it was explicitly done as a deal. The ruling group said to Hindenburg,
link |
02:07:07.360
the old Prussian man who was in charge of the German government at the time,
link |
02:07:11.920
you have to invite Hitler to form a new government. Otherwise, he would never have
link |
02:07:16.480
done it. He had called Hitler nasty names before. The Prussian aristocracy looked down on Hitler
link |
02:07:22.480
as a little funny man with a mustache who was Austrian, wasn't even German. For them,
link |
02:07:28.720
that mattered. So he comes in as the enemy, the smasher of socialism and communism,
link |
02:07:37.200
which he immediately does. Only people who don't know or care about the history
link |
02:07:44.240
pick up on the word. It's like there are people here in the United States who like to say,
link |
02:07:53.680
we are not a democracy, we are a republic, which is like saying, I'm not a banana, I'm a fruit.
link |
02:08:00.800
You have to explain to these people, a banana is a kind of fruit. So you have to explain to people,
link |
02:08:07.440
yes, we're a republic, but we have a commitment to democracy as a way to govern the republic,
link |
02:08:14.000
because to say you're a republic doesn't imply what kind of government you have. You have to
link |
02:08:18.080
go through that with people so they kind of get it.
link |
02:08:20.160
And certain words have power beyond their actual meaning. They're used in communication,
link |
02:08:26.560
whether it's negative, like racist, or positive, like freedom of speech.
link |
02:08:31.920
RL. Or Democrat, with a D.
link |
02:08:33.760
RG. Yeah, and then you use that to mean something.
link |
02:08:36.240
RL. Who knows?
link |
02:08:37.120
RG. Or negative, stop Donnie, stop being a socialist, or whatever that means that's not
link |
02:08:44.400
even used in any kind of philosophical or economic sense. So let's fast forward to today.
link |
02:08:50.080
RL. Right.
link |
02:08:50.560
RG. You mentioned Bernie Sanders.
link |
02:08:52.000
RL. Right.
link |
02:08:52.400
RG. There's another popular figure that represents some ideas of maybe let's call it democratic
link |
02:08:59.040
socialism, and maybe let's try to start to sneak up on a definition of what that could
link |
02:09:03.600
possibly mean, but AOC, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, she's from these parts.
link |
02:09:10.240
RL. Yes, Queens.
link |
02:09:11.120
RG. So maybe if you can comment on Bernie Sanders or AOC, are they open to some ideas in Marxism?
link |
02:09:21.600
Are they representing those ideas well in both the economic and the political sense?
link |
02:09:26.560
RL. Okay.
link |
02:09:28.640
RG. Where do I begin?
link |
02:09:31.440
RL. Yeah, the socialist movement predates Marx, was always larger than Marx, and has
link |
02:09:39.840
gone on to develop separately after Marx's death. So...
link |
02:09:44.320
RG. Can we pause on that actually? Is there a nice way to delineate, draw a line between
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Marxism and socialism? Or if Marxism is kind of a part of socialism, can you speak to like,
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maybe try to define once again what Marxism is and what socialism is?
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RL. Right. Marxism is a systematic analysis heavily focused on economics, and as I said
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earlier, devoted to mostly a critique of capitalism, and that's its strength, how it does that,
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how it poses the questions, how it analyzes the way capitalism works. That is really the
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forte of the Marxist tradition. Socialism is a bigger, broader tent within which Marxism
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02:10:44.800
figures. It's there so that people who aren't Marxists are nonetheless aware of Marxism,
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like it more or less, study it more or less. But it's a broader notion that I like to use
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this sentence to describe. It's a broad idea that we can do better than capitalism, that really
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there are all kinds of things about capitalism that are not what we as modern citizens of the
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world think are adequate, that we are in a tradition that goes back to all the people who
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thought they could do better than slavery, and all the people who thought they could do better
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than feudalism. We've made progress. Feudalism was a progress over slavery. Capitalism was a
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progress over both of them. And progress hasn't stopped. And we are the people who, in a variety
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of ways, want the progress to go further and are not held back by believing that capitalism is
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somehow the best beyond which we cannot go or even think. We find that to be, in the worst sense of
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the word, a reactionary way of thinking. And we're that large community. Many of us are not interested
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in economics all that much. We don't think that's the focal area. We are socialists, for example,
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02:12:16.080
because we want to do something to deal with climate change. We think the world is about to
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kill itself physically, and we want to take steps with other people to stop that, to fix that, etc.,
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etc. So that's, for me, a kind of difference. It's a little difficult to say because there's no
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other figure like Marx that has an equal impact, an equal place within the broad socialist
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tradition. And the only tradition that comes close might be the anarchist tradition. But that's very
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specialized, and that's a whole other kind of conversation. And whatever you say, the influence
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of the great anarchist thinkers—Kropotkin, Bakunin, Sorel, and others—still doesn't
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amount to the impact that Marx and Marxism have had so far. That could change, but I mean, up to
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this point, that's the—I think that's a way of understanding the relationship.
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02:13:28.880
Yeah, that's an interesting thing that some of the ideas within anarchism—and of course,
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it's one of the more varied disciplines because there's such, maybe by definition, such variety
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in their thinkers—but they kind of stand for a dismantling of a power center, and that,
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if not equates, tends to rhyme with some of the ideas of socialism.
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02:13:56.880
Absolutely.
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There's a whole train of thought in socialist ideas and in Marxist ideas
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that uses the phrase, quote, the withering away of the state. That's a quotation from Lenin.
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People should understand that's a quotation from Lenin. And it was made by Lenin. In other words,
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Lenin was saying, that's a good thing. That's something we stand for. We want to create the
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conditions under which there is a—because you remember the communists, or whatever,
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they weren't called that at first in Russia before the revolution. They were just socialists.
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They were hunted down and persecuted by the government left and right. They had no love
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for the government. The government was their literal, everyday enemy. And being critical
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of government didn't just mean this particular government, but of the whole—being a Marxist,
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you always ask the questions of the social constitution of whatever it is you're struggling
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02:15:03.040
against. So there was this interest, why is the state so important? Especially because if you
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understand feudalism, particularly early feudalism, it didn't have powerful states.
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One of Lenin's greatest books is called The Economic History of Russia, and it goes back
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02:15:20.800
centuries. It's a huge book, three or four inches thick, and I'm one of the few people who've read
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it. And he's very good about the absence of a strong central government in many parts of
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feudalism, including inside Russia, but also in other parts of Europe. The development of a powerful
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central state comes towards the end of feudalism as it is desperate to hold on, which ought to be
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suggestive that maybe the turn to powerful governments here in the United States or in Europe
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and Europe is maybe also because this system is exhausted and can't go on and has to marshal every
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last bit of power it can, not to be lost in history. It would be interesting to see what
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the Soviet Union would look like if Lenin never died. A lot of people have asked that question
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over the years, a lot of people. There's Stalin sliding in in the middle of the night,
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erasing the withering away of the state part. So just to return briefly back to AOC and Bernie
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Sanders, what are your thoughts about these modern political figures that represent some of these
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ideas, and they sometimes refer to those ideas as democratic socialism? The crucial thing about
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Bernie and about AOC, and this is particularly true about Bernie, because AOC is much younger
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and Bernie's an older man. Bernie, being roughly my age, has been around formatively as a student,
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as an activist, and then coming up through the ranks in Burlington, Vermont as a mayor and all
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the rest. He lived through what, for lack of a better term, I would call Cold War America.
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And the taboo in Cold War America, running from around 1945, 6 to the present, I mean,
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really never stopped, was a Manichean worldview. The United States is good, it defines democracy,
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and the Soviet Union is awful, it defines whatever the opposite of democracy should be called.
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02:17:35.920
Good here, evil there. It was taken so far that even among the ranks of academic individuals,
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it was impossible to have a conversation. I mean, I can't tell, just make it very personal,
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the number of times I would raise my hand in my classes at Harvard or Stanford or Yale,
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and I would ask a question that had something to do with Marxism,
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because I was studying it on my own. There were no courses to teach this to me,
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except by people who trashed it, other than that, and I didn't want that.
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So I would ask a question, and I would see in the faces of my teachers, both those I didn't
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much care for and those who were good teachers that I liked, fear. It was just fear. They didn't
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want to go there. They didn't want to answer my question. And after a while, I got to know some
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of them, and I found out why. Because you don't know how the rest of the class is going to
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understand this. Either they would have to say, I don't know, which would be the honest truth for
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02:18:47.680
many of them, but a professor does not want to say in a classroom, I don't know, that's just
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02:18:52.400
not cool. Or they'd have to, if they knew, they'd have to say something that indicated they didn't
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know really much, and they weren't going to do that. Or they would know something, and maybe
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02:19:05.360
that would be because they were interested. They did not want the rest of the students to begin to
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02:19:12.160
say, oh, you know, Professor Smith, you know, he's interested. This is not good for your career. You
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don't know how this is going to play out. Who's going to say what to whom? And I could see in
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02:19:25.520
their faces what I later learned, because they told me, come to my office hours. We're in the
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02:19:31.680
office. We can talk about it. But that's how bad it was. Is it not still? Pretty much. In my field,
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02:19:40.800
the great so called debate, I mean, I find it boring, but the great debate for my colleagues
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is between what's called neoclassical economics and Keynesian economics. Neoclassical, the
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02:19:52.640
government should stay out of the economy. Let's say fair or liberalism. And the Keynesian saying,
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02:19:58.800
no, you crazy neoclassical, if you do that, you'll have Great Depressions, and the system will
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collapse. You need the government to come in to solve the problems, to fix the weaknesses. And
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02:20:10.880
they hate each other, and they throw each other out of their jobs. One of the very few things that
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02:20:15.600
they can do together that they agree on is keeping people like me out. That they can find common
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02:20:22.800
ground to do. So I had to learn it all on my own. Why am I telling you this? Because this taboo means
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02:20:34.000
that all of the complicated developments within Marxism and within socialism of the post World
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02:20:43.280
War II period, the vast bulk of all of that is unknown, not just to the average American person,
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02:20:52.480
but to the average American academic, to the average American who thinks of himself or herself
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02:20:58.160
as an intellectual. I mean, I have had to spend ridiculous amounts of my time explaining Soviet
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02:21:05.680
history. They have no idea. Or saying there's this man Lukács, a Hungarian Marxist, he really had
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02:21:13.440
interest in, or to explain that Gramsci was not a great literary critic. He was head of the
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02:21:20.800
Communist Party of Italy for most of his adult life. What does that mean? You like Gramsci as a
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literary critic, but they didn't even know. They don't even know. It's been erased. It's
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a little bit like stories I've heard about Trotsky and his influence kind of erased in the Soviet
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Union because he obviously fell out of favor. And so somehow all of his writings, many of which are
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very interesting and complicated, anyway. So what you're going to have in this country is a slow
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awakening of socialism from a long hibernation called the Cold War. I never expected, to be very
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02:22:04.800
honest with you, that I would live to see it. I knew it would come, because these things always do,
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but I didn't expect to see it. So I have been surprised, as have a lot of us, that when it
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starts to happen, it happens fast. So you see Bernie as an early sign of the awakening from
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02:22:26.960
the Cold War to accept the idea of socialism. Bernie was always a socialist. We all knew.
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02:22:32.720
And everybody who paid attention, he denied it. But 2016, he makes a decision, momentous,
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to run for president. He's just a senator from Vermont. Vermont is one of the smallest
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02:22:46.320
states in the Union. People who live in Vermont love to tell you that there are more cows than
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02:22:51.280
people in Vermont, et cetera, et cetera. So here from this little state, this elderly gentleman
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02:22:57.920
with a New York City accent runs for office and says, I'm a socialist. And when they attack him,
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02:23:03.760
he doesn't run away. I'm a socialist. I'm a socialist. Now, he had been. It wasn't a secret
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02:23:09.920
that suddenly got out. But the great question—and I don't mind telling you, because I went to the
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right schools. I know a lot of people. You know, Janet Yellen was my classmate at Yale,
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02:23:21.680
and stuff like that. So I was speaking with a high official of the Democratic Party,
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02:23:26.960
and I said, well, what do you think about Bernie entering the race?
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02:23:31.280
Makes no difference. He doesn't get 1% of the vote. Right? He was wrong. They had no idea
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02:23:37.600
what was coming. But the truth is, I didn't either. It wasn't just that he didn't get it.
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02:23:42.960
I thought his 1% was probably right. So we were both wrong.
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02:23:46.960
Yeah, change can happen fast. Do you think AOC might be president one day?
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02:23:51.120
Yeah. Possible. Possible. But two things. Number one, it's fast. Number two,
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02:24:02.800
it's going to go in the following direction, I would guess. You begin with the most moderate,
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02:24:12.240
calm, nonconfrontational socialism you can imagine.
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02:24:18.160
So not AOC or Bernie.
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02:24:19.680
No, no. They are not confrontational, in my judgment.
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02:24:23.280
In terms of the ideas of socialism. I mean, they're both very feisty.
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02:24:26.960
They're feisty personally, but not ideologically.
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02:24:33.280
Bernie is also, in honest moments, and they both really are pretty honest folks,
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02:24:40.560
at least in my experience. In honest moments, Bernie will tell you that what he advocates
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02:24:47.840
as democratic socialism is pretty much what FDR was in the 1930s. It was a kind of popular
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02:24:56.480
government, tax the rich a lot more than you do now to provide a lot more support for the
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02:25:02.960
working class than you do now. That's not a fundamental change. That's what he means
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02:25:08.880
by socialism. When he talks about it and he's asked for examples, he mentions Denmark a lot.
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02:25:15.680
Okay, that's consistent. That's the softest kind of socialism, and that's where we're going to
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02:25:23.600
start in a country coming out of hibernation. Pretty soon, it's already happening, there'll
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02:25:29.200
be people who need and want to go further in the direction of socialism than Bernie and AOC are
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02:25:35.520
comfortable with. You can already see the shoots of it now. AOC voted, together with most of the
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02:25:43.360
others, to support the money for Ukraine. Okay, a lot of people in the socialist movement do not
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02:25:49.760
support that. I don't know exactly how that's going to work out, but that should give people
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02:25:56.880
an idea. There are disagreements, and they're going to fester, and they're going to grow.
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02:26:03.040
So people in the socialist sphere don't support money from the United States in the large amounts
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02:26:08.800
that it is being sent to Ukraine. Is it because it's fundamentally the military, industrial
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02:26:13.920
complex is a capitalist institution kind of thing? No, there are some people for whom that's the
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02:26:19.840
issue. Then there are people for whom it's guns and butter, and why are we over there when we have
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02:26:28.000
such needs at home that are being neglected? And then there are people who, well, go back to what
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02:26:34.320
we talked about at the beginning, who are more like Lenin and Debs. This is a fight between
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02:26:41.600
Western capitalism and Russian oligarchs and wannabe oligarchs in Ukraine, and what are we
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02:26:48.800
doing here? We have to insist that these forces sit down at the bargaining table and negotiate
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02:26:55.680
a settlement, don't kill large numbers of Ukraine. I mean, everybody's willing to fight to the last
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02:27:00.400
Ukrainian is a little strange here. What are you doing? You're supposed to be in favor of peace,
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02:27:06.240
you know, and for the United States, which just finished invading and occupying Afghanistan and
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02:27:11.840
Iraq, to be against another country invading. I mean, who in the world is going to take this
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02:27:16.480
seriously? This is crazy. You know, I invade, it's good, and you invade, it's terrible. What?
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02:27:23.920
You know, what are you doing? Why are you doing that? What's going on here? All of these
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02:27:30.160
questions are being active—by the way, not just by socialists, by lots of other people too—inside
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02:27:35.680
the Democratic Party and also inside the Republican Party. You watch that Tucker Carlson or people
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02:27:42.080
like that, they are against the stuff in Ukraine. They don't want the money spent there, they don't
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02:27:47.920
want the weapons sent there, they don't like the whole policy, and Trump wobble.
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02:27:53.600
So Mr. Biden's policy has got all kinds of critics on the left and the right,
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02:27:58.720
and every day that this thing lasts, these criticisms get bigger. Anyway, the point is that
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02:28:05.440
AOC and Bernie should be, I think, evaluated as the early shoots after a long winter of Cold War
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02:28:18.160
isolation from the whole—you know, when I explain to people the contribution made, for example,
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02:28:25.760
to modern Marxism—I'll give you an example—by the French philosopher Louis Althusser. I don't
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02:28:32.080
know if the name means anything to you. Okay. He was the rector of the École Normale
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02:28:38.720
Supérieure in Paris. That's the equivalent. Imagine in this country if there were a university
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02:28:45.680
that combined Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and MIT. It would be the university. Well, the École Normale
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02:28:53.600
in France, in Paris, is the—he was a tenured professor who became the rector. The rector is
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02:29:00.800
like the president of the university, an active member of the French Communist Party most of his
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02:29:06.160
adult life. That was possible in France during the Cold War. That was unthinkable in this country.
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02:29:12.240
You could not in a million years, right? So Althusser, as a philosopher, tried to bring
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02:29:21.200
a version of postmodernism into Marxism, with enormous impact all over the world, where he
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02:29:29.760
traveled—not just in Europe, all over, right? So if you want to look him up, I'll spell it out for
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02:29:35.680
you. Sure. A.L.T.H.U.S.S.E.R. Louis. The Louis is spelled L.O.U.I.S. Louis Althusser. Look him up.
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02:29:46.880
You'll see tons of stuff. By the way, MIT Press is a major publisher, if I remember, of his works
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02:29:53.200
in English. By the way, the textbook I wrote in economics, in case you're ever interested,
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02:29:59.600
was also published by the MIT Press. And the title? Contending Economic Theories.
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02:30:05.440
Neoclassical, Keynesian, and Marxian. That's at MIT. Marxian. Yeah, that's right. And by the way,
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02:30:12.320
when we think—I don't know if there's an interesting distinction between Marxian economics
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02:30:18.160
and Marxist—I suppose Marxism is the umbrella of everything that's— I only use it because
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02:30:26.480
Marxist I use as a noun. A person is a Marxist. Marxian I use as an adjective to qualify. But
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02:30:35.200
I don't mean some great difference. There's a last point I would like to make about
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02:30:39.760
AOC and Bernie that's also general. I'm a historian, too, and I know that the transition
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02:30:49.440
out of feudalism in Europe to capitalism was a transition that took centuries and that occurred
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02:30:56.320
in fits and starts. So, for example, a feudal manor would start to disintegrate. Serfs would
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02:31:02.800
run away. They'd run into a town. How would they live in the town? They had no land anymore because
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02:31:09.040
they had run away from the feudal manor. A deal was struck without the people involved in the deal
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02:31:15.440
understanding what they were doing. A merchant would say to one of these serfs, I'm in the
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02:31:22.720
business of buying and then reselling stuff and living off the difference, but, you know,
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02:31:27.280
I could make more money if I produce some of this stuff myself rather than buy it from somebody
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02:31:33.120
else. So I'm going to make you a deal. I'm going to give you money once a week. I'll give you
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02:31:38.400
money, what we would later call a wage, and you come here and under my supervision you make this
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02:31:43.600
crap that I'm going to then sell and this all works out. In other words, there were efforts,
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02:31:51.520
unconscious, not self aware, to go out of feudalism to a new system.
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02:31:59.040
Some of them lasted a few days and then fell apart. Some of them lasted weeks or months or
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02:32:04.960
years, but it took a long time before the conditions were ready for a kind of a general
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02:32:14.960
switch and once that was done it grew on itself and became the global capitalist system we have
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02:32:21.760
today. That's the only model we have. So for me that's what I see when I look at socialism.
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02:32:28.800
I see the Paris Commune was an event, an attempt. It lasted a few weeks. I see Russia, that was an
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02:32:38.080
attempt, lasted 70 years. Then I see, and you know, fill in the blank, I see these are all early
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02:32:44.480
experiments. These are all you learn things to do, learn things never to do again. The good, the bad,
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02:32:52.960
what do you build on? How do you learn? And that's what the socialist and Marxist tradition
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02:32:58.640
when it's serious, that's what it does. So in your ideas sort of capitalism was a significant
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02:33:04.800
improvement over the feudalism and we are coming to an age and over slavery and we're coming to
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02:33:12.320
an age where capitalism will die out and make, it's not that capitalism is somehow fundamentally
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02:33:18.720
broken. It's better than the things that came before but there's going to be things yet better
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02:33:24.400
and they will be grounded in the ideas of Marxism and socialism. Is there just to linger briefly on
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02:33:32.640
the way Marxism is used as a term on Twitter. There's something called, I'm sorry if I'm using
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02:33:41.600
the terms incorrectly, but cultural Marxism. Criticisms of universities being infiltrated
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02:33:51.120
by cultural Marxists. I'm not exactly sure. I don't pay close enough attention, but it's woke.
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02:34:00.560
There's a kind of woke ideology that I'm not exactly sure. What is the fundamental text?
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02:34:09.360
Who's the Karl Marx of wokeness? All I do know is that there's certain characteristics
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02:34:16.960
of woke ideology, which is hard lines are drawn between the good guys and the bad guys.
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02:34:28.160
And basically everyone is a bad guy except the people that are very loudly nonstop saying that
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02:34:35.120
they're the good guy. And that applies for racism, for sexism, for gender politics,
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02:34:47.200
identity politics, all that kind of stuff. Is there any parallels between Marxian economics
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02:34:54.960
and Marxist ideology and whatever is being called Marxism on Twitter?
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02:35:00.160
WOLFF No, not much. One of the consequences
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02:35:05.440
of the taboo after World War II is that Marxism, like socialism and communism, become swear words.
link |
02:35:13.120
It's like calling somebody, well, I won't use bad language, but using a four letter word to describe
link |
02:35:20.480
somebody. So instead of calling them this or that, you call them a Marxist. In many circles,
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02:35:26.720
this is even worse than whatever other adjective you might have used, but it doesn't have a
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02:35:32.880
particular meaning that I can assess. The closest you get is your little list. It is somebody who is
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02:35:41.680
concerned about race and sex and sexual orientation, gender and all of those things,
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02:35:50.640
and wants there to be transgendered bathrooms. And I don't like any of these people, so I slap
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02:35:59.360
the word Marxism or the phrase cultural Marxism, because it isn't Marxism about getting more money
link |
02:36:07.120
or controlling the industry or all those things that dimly we know Marxists somehow are concerned
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about. So this is odd, since they don't know much about Marxism. I've always been interested
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in culture. I mean, Lukacs, the man I mentioned to you before, Gramsci, that's what they're famous
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for, the analysis of what Marxism particularly has to say about culture. Gramsci writes at great
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length about the Catholic Church, about theater and painting in Italy and on and on. I mean,
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this is just ignorance talking. They don't know anything about that. They wouldn't know what the
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names are. It's a label that summarizes, kind of a shorthand, I'm against all of this. I don't
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want to be told that there's ugly racism in this country, and it always has been, or sexism, or
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phobia against gay people, whatever it is that's agitating them. Marxism or socialism,
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I mean, it's just like socialism is the post office. It is a mentality. Well, but I don't
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blame them. I mean, it's childish. It's mean spirited. But it comes out of the fact no one
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ever sat them down and said, you know, here is this tradition. It's got these kinds of things
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that people kind of share and these big differences. Look, an intelligent society,
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which this country is, could have and should have done that. It was fear and a kind of terror that
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made them behave in the way they did, and we're now seeing it. Having said that, there is such a
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thing as cultural Marxism. What that is is simply those Marxists who devoted themselves to analyzing
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how it is that a particular culture is, on the one hand, shaped by capitalism and, on the other hand,
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it becomes a condition for capitalism to survive and grow. In other words, how do we analyze the
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interaction between the class struggle on the job and attitude towards sexuality, or movements in
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music, or whatever else culture. And there are Georg Lukács, this Hungarian, great name in there,
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the greatest of all the names, Antonio Gramsci. And a modern name, just died a couple years ago,
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a British intellectual named Stuart Hall, H A L L. If I were teaching, which I have done,
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a course in cultural Marxism, those would be three major blocks on the syllabus. I would give you
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articles and books to read of their stuff, because it has been so seminal in provoking many, many
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others. So there is something to be said and understood about the kind of culture that
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capitalism creates and the kind of culture that enables capitalism. Yes, and Marxists are
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particularly those who like to look at that interaction. In other words, they are interested
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in how capitalism shapes culture and how culture shapes capitalism. There is another name, I
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forgot. Stuart Hall is British, Gramsci is Italian, Lukács is Hungarian. The German is Walter Benjamin,
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B E N J A M I N. He was a member of the Frankfurt School, which is a huge school of Marxism that
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developed in Frankfurt, Germany, and that has a lot of people, many of whom were interested in
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cultural questions. It was a bit of a reaction against the narrow Marxism that was so focused on
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economics and politics. There were people who said, you're leaving out very important parts
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of modern society that are shaping the economy as much as they are shaped by it. And it was that
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impetus to open Marxism to be more inclusive in what it deemed to be important to understand
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that this cult, and they call themselves cultural Marxists, but they had a completely different
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meaning from this. This is just, you know, just bad mouthing, that's all.
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LW Let me ask a more personal question. So for most of the 20th century, no not most,
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but a large many decades in the United States as a consequence of the Cold War and before,
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being a Marxist is one of the worst things you could be. Have you had dark periods in your own
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life where you've gone to some dark places in your mind where it was difficult, like self doubt,
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difficult to know, like what the hell am I doing? When you're surrounded by colleagues and people,
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you said prestigious universities, both personal interest of career, but also as a human being,
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when everybody, you know, kind of looks at you funny because you're studying this thing. Did
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that ever get you real low?
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RL No. I know people who had exactly what you said. I mean, your question's perfectly reasonable.
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If I were you, I'd be asking me that question too.
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LW And what's wrong with you?
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RL Nothing wrong with the question. And here's the honest truth. I don't know how anomalous I am. I
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really don't. But the truth is, no. I have, if my wife was sitting here, she'd tell you what she
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tells me, which is I have been tremendously lucky in my life, which is true. But then again,
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luck never is the only explanation for things. That's part of it. What can I say? I didn't choose
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the time of my birth. I didn't choose the communities in which I grew up or the schools I
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attended or anything else.
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RL No, but the fact that there was no courses or extensive courses on Marxian economics.
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RL But you know, again, I'm Hegel. On the one hand, I was denied good instruction.
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On the other hand, I had to go out and learn it on my own. And the motivation when you do that is
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very different. I'm not the student who sits there with my notebook, taking notes of what the great
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professor says and reading the text and getting ready for the exam. I don't have an exam. I'm
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doing something slightly risque, you know, kind of romantically different and oppositional. I was
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able to find always one or two professors that I could talk to outside of the classroom situation,
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other students who felt enough similar to me that we could get together and read these books and
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talk about them. I had a number of really fortuitous people who were kind to me and gave me
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of their time and their effort to teach me along the way. And I've had the benefit that because I
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went to all these fancy schools, I do know a lot of people who are in high places in this culture.
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And when I have been put in difficult positions, I often wave my pedicure at them and say,
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I often wave my pedigree and it works like garlic with the devil. They back away. They back away.
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Because Americans are very deferential to that kind of academic prestige.
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But there's a personal psychological thing that seems that you have never been shaken by this. You
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have just naturally somebody who just has perseverance.
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WOLFF Well, I would put it, I understand what you're saying, but I would put it a little
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differently. I think capitalism struck me early on in my life as not that great a system and nothing
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has happened to change my mind. In other words, the development just kept giving me more and more
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evidence. And I must say over the last 10 years, what's really changed? The last 10 years. I mean,
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I can't describe to you how big that change is. And that may be more important than anything else
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we've discussed. Up until 10 years ago, I would do a public event, an interview on television or
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a radio thing or give a talk at some conference or something. Once every two or three months,
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I'd be invited and I would do it, like academics often do. I now do two to three to four
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interviews every day. So, there's a hunger. How is there hunger? And I want to be honest with you.
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02:45:09.680
WOLFF As I say at the end of some of my talks, I allow there to be a kind of a pregnant pause
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from the podium that I lean into the microphone and I say, with as much smile as I can get,
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I'm having the time of my life. And that's the truth. That's the truth. I never expected, look,
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I'm used to teaching a classroom, a seminar for graduate students with eight or nine or 10
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students or a regular undergraduate class with 30 or an occasional introductory course
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with a few hundred. I've done all of those things many times. But an audience, you know,
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that I can count in the hundreds of thousands on YouTube and all of that, no, that's new.
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02:45:58.080
LESTER Is there advice you can give, given your bold and nonstandard career and life, advice you
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can give to high school students, college students about how to have a career like that, or maybe
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how to have a career or a life they can be proud of? WOLFF Yeah. First of all, my advice is go for
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it. The conditions for doing that now are infinitely better than they were when I had to do it.
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And I could do it and I'm happy I did it. Becoming a teacher is one of those decisions I made
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that I've never regretted. And I've never regretted being a critic of this society,
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ever. I find it edifying. I find it, I mean, the gratitude people express to me for helping them
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see kind of what's going on is unbelievably encouraging. I mean, what can I tell you?
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LESTER So that fills you, that fills you with joy. Pointing out that the Emperor has no clothes
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fills you. That's a life not just important. WOLFF And you know why? It's because most of the people
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who say something like that to me are people who, if they had the vocabulary, and some of them do,
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would say, you know, I thought I was seeing through that outfit that I was wearing. I thought
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it and they did. And all they needed was a little extra this information or that factoid or this
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logic. And they have that. And I remember having that too. When I had a teacher who made something
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clear that had been murky, I always felt gratitude. And now I get that gratitude a good bit.
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And yes, it is enormously gratifying. And I'm not sure I could get it any other way.
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I have learned and I'm walking proof that being a critic of society and doing it systematically
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and sharing it with other people makes for a very good life. A very good life.
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LESTER Speaking of which, however, one other aspect of human nature is that life comes to an end.
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Do you think about your death? Are you afraid of it?
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WOLFF Afraid of it? No. Think about it? Yes. Yes. I'm not afraid. I've always thought,
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you know, death is hard for the people that are left when you're dead. It's not going to bother
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you very much. So I worry more about my wife. I'm very attached to my wife. I might mention to you,
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I got married when I was 23 years old. That's my wife to this day. So I'm lucky because if you get
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married to anybody in age 23, it's either luck or it isn't. LESTER What role has love played
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in your life? WOLFF Enormous.
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Because I came from a family, you know, if your family is political refugees, which mine were,
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who had to interrupt their lives, moved to another continent, learn another language,
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find another life, income and job. The disruption goes real deep for any refugee. So my mother and
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father were both refugees. They met as refugees. So I had to, in a way, make it up to them. I had
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to be, I was the first child of their younger sister, but the first child. And, you know,
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there's a lot of psychological pressure on you if you're in that situation. Nobody means you harm,
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but you've got to do what they couldn't, what was shut off to them in a way they want you to do.
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It's the closest they're going to get to what they had hoped. And my parents were both university
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students. My father was a lawyer. My mother had to leave the university to run for her life.
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So I had to perform. You know, I went to high school here in the United States. I had to get
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all A's. I had to be on the football team. I had to play the violin in the orchestra. I had to
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do all these because everything had to be achieved. So I'm an achievement crazy person that
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way. But that's functional in this dysfunctional society. But on top of that, that's an achievement
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within the game of this particular society. But then love seems to be a thing that's greater
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than that game. Is that something that made you a better person? Oh, God, yes. How is it
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made you a better Marxian and a better human? Everything. Because my wife, by profession,
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is a psychotherapist. Excellent. I love it. And I needed it. And so I married it. I didn't know
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what I was doing at the time, but I think as I look back on it, that was more than a little what
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was going on. And she has tutored me all my life about a whole range of aspects of life that my
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family never talked about, never dealt with, never at least explicitly engaged in any of that.
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02:51:42.480
Because it was all about survival. The immigrant challenge is survival. Survive. And you're so busy
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that you tell yourself you can't do that. Of course you can. And there are other reasons
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why you're not going to look at those problems. But the survival is so urgent that you can fool
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yourself this way. And my parents did that. One last question. What's the meaning of life,
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Richard Wolff? Why are we here? I will quote you, Mr. Marx. Let's go. Life is struggle. And for me,
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I have found that to be true. That the struggle, whether it is to build a relationship with your
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child, I have two children, whether it's to build one with your spouse, whether it's to understand
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a complicated argument and simplify it so that you can share the pleasure of understanding this
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relationship to a student or to an audience. It's a struggle to do all those things. But that
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network of struggles, that makes life interesting, intriguing, and satisfying.
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And meaningful.
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02:53:04.000
Very meaningful.
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And that latter thing, I got to say, you do masterfully. You're one of the great communicators
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and educators out there today. And it's a huge honor that you would sit with me for so many hours.
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Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
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This is awesome. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Richard Wolff.
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To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
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02:53:24.240
And now, let me leave you with some words from Karl Marx.
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The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways. The point, however, is to change it.
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Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.