Heterodox Approaches Will Provide Answers to the Multiple Cascading Crises of Our Future

Yves here. KLG, drawing on the ideas of Elinor Ostrom, argues that the thinking that got us into our current mess, particularly but not solely climate climate change and environmental degradation, is inherently ill-suited to come up with remedies.

While heterodox ideas and experiments are our only hope, in my usual devil’s advocate manner, I believe the nature of the problem is more severe than Ostrom (and KLG, inspired by her) believes. What we are up against is not just neoliberalism. It is a highly complex society, with most occupying very specialized roles, combined with capitalism, which requires a large majority of people to sell their labor to survive. Oh, and worse, sell that labor in a competitive market. That generally means that trying to do things differently as a current or prospective employee is likely to result in not having a paycheck.

Individuals are typically subject to multiple sets of responsibilities, and they often conflict. The number of conflicts tends to increase as societies become more complex, starting with family/tribal, local communities, national, global. Humans have seldom been good at working out how to manage competing levels of responsibility. The tensions and contradictions get greater as societies become more complex. As the great philosopher, Jamie Lannister, said:

So many vows…they make you swear and swear. Defend the king. Obey the king. Keep his secrets. Do his bidding. Your life for his. But obey your father. Love your sister. Protect the innocent. Defend the weak. Respect the gods. Obey the laws. It’s too much. No matter what you do, you’re forsaking one vow or the other.

Nearly everyone will put family/tribal first. In a capitalist system, that means taking steps that might threaten your job or worst make you permanently unemployable are anathema. So living in a “good” suburb so as to provide for a decent level of education for your kids implies all sorts of other things, like owning a car or two for a working spouse so as to commute, take said kids to various events and play dates (or even pick them up from school), and provision for the family, are perceived necessities that lock most people into participating in high energy consuming lifestyles. It is hard to see how many, even if they wanted to, can shift away from that.

In other words, we do need new thinking and approaches. But “heterodox” may be too polite to signal the radicalism needed.

By KLG, who has held research and academic positions in three US medical schools since 1995 and is currently Professor of Biochemistry and Associate Dean. He has performed and directed research on protein structure, function, and evolution; cell adhesion and motility; the mechanism of viral fusion proteins; and assembly of the vertebrate heart. He has served on national review panels of both public and private funding agencies, and his research and that of his students has been funded by the American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, and National Institutes of Health

Heterodox, from the OED: Not in accordance with established doctrines or opinions, or those generally recognized as right or “orthodox.”  The past two centuries of orthodoxy have led us to our current pass, where at least half the people may be poor in the so-called Global North and more than half are poor in much of the Global South, our environment is severely damaged, and climate catastrophe is no longer beyond the horizon.  Something else will be required to retrieve the situation as best we can.  Received “wisdom” will not be the answer.

But the orthodox, thoroughly neoliberal interlocutor will ask, “Can your solutions really work?” [1]  My reply is usually, “It is scarcely imaginable they will do worse.”  And besides, the world is heterogeneous, i.e., composed of diverse elements or constituents; consisting of parts of different kinds (OED).  Our world is granular and polymorphic in all things biological, physical, social, cultural, and political.  But orthodox politics and economics have little room for diversity, much less place.  Under the current Neoliberal Dispensation one place is necessarily the same as another even though all places are distinct.  This is at the root of our present difficulties.  If we (all of us) are to survive, we must learn the importance of place, and in the words of Wendell Berry and Christopher Alexander we must solve for place and for pattern.

This can be done from the ground up, but only if the straitjacket of Neoliberalism is dissolved.  We have the heterodox leaders who can lead the way.  Previously in this series we discussed the environmental economist Herman Daly (1938-2022) who was viewed as unacceptably heterodox when he placed the “economy” firmly within the ecosphere, which will not support semi-infinite growth of anything material.  A justifiably infamous economist, then at the World Bank, responded to Daly’s true but heterodox thesis with “That is not the way to look at it!”  This vignette is recounted in Beyond Growth (1996), which is still in print and as current now as it was 28 years ago.

Another heterodox problem solver is Elinor Ostrom (1933-2012) who was awarded the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel in 2009 for her “analysis of economic governance, especially the commons.”  Elinor Ostrom is the first, and after the recent Nobel announcements, still the only woman to win this prize. [2]  If we are to survive and possibly thrive in the coming world, Elinor Ostrom has much to teach us.  What follows is not a list of what must be done.  These remain unknown.  But how we should proceed is clear if we are serious.

Elinor Ostrom is an excellent place to start.  She began her work on the commons in opposition to the well-known essay by Garrett Hardin that appeared in Science in 1968: The Tragedy of the Commons (pdf).  This tragedy was inevitable for Hardin, who later wrote another famous essay entitled Lifeboat Ethics: The Case Against Helping the Poor (pdf) that has been published in several collections since.  Hardin was not incorrect in his view that population growth could exceed the carrying capacity of the ecosphere, but his approach was tiresomely conventional, cramped, and misanthropic in the extreme.  It foreshadowed the Neoliberal Dispensation which began in earnest not long after his famous essay during the single Presidential term of Jimmy Carter.

Hardin’s work was not sui generis.  He was apparently quite the traditional “conservative” by the standards of his day, including his assent to the utter nonsense that was The Bell Curve later in his career.  His perspective dovetails with two other influential documents produced just after The Tragedy of the Commons.  The first is the article from the New York Times Magazine on 13 September 1970 by Milton Friedman: A Friedman doctrine‐- The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits.  This virtual throwaway became the prime justification for the marketization of virtually everything in the name of corporate profit, very narrowly defined.  This “Friedman Doctrine” remains current because Milton Friedman was extraordinarily influential both inside and outside his academic home as a member of the Chicago School (14 “Nobel” laureates and counting).  He also wrote a regular column in Newsweek from 1966 through 1984, when Time and Newsweek were the two essential American newsweeklies with circulation in the millions.

The second document is the Powell Memorandum (23 August 1971) entitled Attack on American Free Enterprise System (pdf, 23 August 1971), written for the United States Chamber of Commerce by Lewis Powell, then a Virginia corporate lawyer for Big Tobacco and later an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.  There is nothing surprising in Powell’s reaction to the 1960s, nor the utility of his eponymous memo in autochthonous emergence of conservative reaction in think tanks, including Cato Institute, Heritage Foundation, American Legislative Exchange Council, and Manhattan Institute.  Each is dedicated to preserving the “American Way of Life.”  Hardin, Friedman, Powell, and their friends have had far-reaching influence that continues.

Elinor Ostrom responded.  What made her heterodox – the radical with conservative tendencies to the extent that she appreciated the Public Choice Theory [3] of James Buchanan – was that she always called herself a political economist instead of an economist.  Indeed, there is no economics without politics, something often left unappreciated by the profession, especially in how it is taught to undergraduates in the business schools of our colleges and universities.  It was possible to major in Economics in the College of Arts and Sciences in my day, but I never came across that person.  Ostrom’s  research across many different problems showed that the collapse of the commons was not due to human cupidity or some innate flaw in human nature.

On the other hand, trust is the key to a thriving commons of any kind – pasture, woodland, water, fisheries, air, and extending the concept, healthy food, healthy social and political organization, and healthcare.  Trust has often been problematic for many at the margins of society, but today trust is almost completely lacking for “bad and sufficient reason” among the many, who are inevitably commoners.  In direct conflict with Hardin, Ostrom also found, along with others [4], that “enclosing the commons” by whatever mechanism, has often been a common antecedent of their failure.  It is not an accident that enclosure in England was a natural, classical Lockean action to make land productive as a capital asset rather than remain a sustainable resource for commoners.  The line is not straight from enclosure to Neoliberalism, but the thread is there, as cultural attributes such as equality, grassroots democracy, and peaceful cooperation were subsumed by the market that operated at an increasing remove from commoners.

To return to the commons for commoners, the solutions to our multiple cascading crises must be found using a polycentric approach that requires citizens to act at every level from the individual to the community and through the regions and countries in which our local communities are embedded. The solution to these problems must also be polycentric.  Ostrom did not neglect institutions while concentrating on the commons.  In a diverse and granular world, no one solution (e.g., The Market) will solve every problem.  Rather local society and overarching institutions that mediate different processes are essential.  Anthropogenic global warming cannot be solved by individuals, but Roger Scruton was not wrong in his view that small local solutions are the place to begin.  From Ostrom’s “Beyond Markets and States: Polycentric Governance of Complex Economic Systems,” American Economic Review 100, 3: 641-672  Quoted in Derek Wall, p. 58:

The most important lesson…is that humans have a more complex motivational structure and more complex social dilemmas than posited in earlier rational-choice theory. [5] Designing institutions to force…entirely self-interested individuals to achieve better outcomes has been a major goal of (public policy) for much of the past half century.  Extensive empirical research leads me to argue that instead, a core goal of public policy should be to facilitate the development of institutions that bring out the best in humans.  We need to ask diverse polycentric institutions help or hinder the innovativeness, learning, adapting, trustworthiness, levels of cooperation of participants , and the achievement of more effective, equitable, and sustainable outcomes at multiple scales.

Yes, and none of these desired outcomes are possible under the Neoliberal Dispensation.  A sustainable commons for the commoners (the 90%, at least) requires Deep Democracy, which was another primary problem addressed by Ostrom.  Deep Democracy requires that people shape their lives rather than electing a small minority to legislate their lives for them.  Deep Democracy has no connection to the Our Democracy™ of today’s Professional Managerial Class (PMC), but it will be essential if we are to learn to thrive again in local communities, i.e., where we live, breathe, and eat.  In a democratic, humane society, this can be done.  Conventional politics has now answer.  It is only a Manichean fight for status between advocates of suspect notions of good and evil that politics has become over the past fifty years, especially in the Uniparty of the United State.  How do we get there? The floor is open to all.

What is clear throughout the work of Elinor Ostrom is that “what we need is at hand.”  I first came across this expression in the work of Harland Hubbard, artist and homesteader at Payne Hollow on the Ohio River in Kentucky.  We cannot all live like Anna and Harlan Hubbard, nor should we.  But we can live as Anna and Harlan as independent, free, thoughtful, humane beings who are at one with a world of multiple integrated commons for commoners.  We cannot do this without trust, and as Derek Wall puts it very well:The commons fail, ultimately because distrust leads to a lack of cooperation.  Without trust and cooperation, we are doomed.  Elinor Ostrom “did not believe that human beings were either basically cooperative or inevitably selfish…She was instead interested in how trust and cooperation could be nurtured to overcome the commons dilemma and similar problems.

Trust is local at its origin and expands outward, from where it should be reciprocated by institutions. [6]  Reciprocity is now severed from both directions.  Once again the floor is open for discussion followed by good work.

What may be most important in the work that Elinor Ostrom left us is that she did what every good scientist, artist, writer, and clinician does.  She identified problems and searched for solutions.  This is the scientific method, such as it has been best described by the philosopher of science Nancy Cartwright and her collaborators: What works to produce useful knowledge is more important than what is true according to theory. [7]  Elinor Ostrom worked in her Ostrom Workshop, which continues to extend her vision.  A Workshop is the perfect mechanism for producing useful knowledge.  A workshop allows for transdisciplinary approaches to polycentric problems. [8]  This best work also requires the Deep Democracy contributed by non-disciplinary contributions from citizens.  One major thread through the work of Elinor Ostrom is that academics on every field do not have the only answers, as noted by Derek Wall (p. 88):

(Ostrom’s) approach was to suggest that the people who participate in a commons are just as likely, probably more so, to have good ideas about solving this problem that outside experts.  Garrett Hardin argued that the commoners would fail to maintain the commons and an outside power would need to be brought in.  The outside power would be equipped with expertise that the commoners lack.  This is a straightforward elitist view of knowledge production…Ordinary people…lack knowledge (while) academics (who) make up an intellectual elite and government officials can use the expertise of academics to implement solutions.

Regarding the intellectual elite, not hardly, as they say in these parts.  All of us – scientist, academic, bureaucrat, and citizen alike – operate from The Way of Ignorance, which can only be dispelled in a vibrant workshop that includes many voices and perspectives and is thoroughly integrated into the living world.

One criticism from the Left (neglecting what the Left really is) has been that Elinor Ostrom cannot be placed there.  While this is true in a broader sense, it is intelligible only to those who have not been paying attention.  Neither Left nor Right, and certainly not the Center, has an exclusive grasp on the truth of anything.  The world, especially as we approach the Inconvenient Apocalypse brought on by our effective unreason, is too large for one truth, from wherever it comes.

Heterodox analyses of our problems are not new.  Nearly one hundred years ago members of another workshop [9] understood where we were headed.  They were conservatives opposed when not ignored by the Chapel Hill Liberals associated with Howard Odum and most of the rest of the intellectuals of their day – the incipient PMC.  The conservatives could write the following though, and their perspicacity endures:

Industrialism is the economic organization of American society.  It means the decision of society to invest its economic resources in the applied sciences.  But the word science has a certain sanctitude.  It is out of order to quarrel with science in the abstract, or even the applied sciences when their applications are made subject to criticism and intelligence.  The capitalization of the applied sciences has now become extravagant and uncritical…(and has)…enslaved our human energies to a degree now clearly felt to be burdensome.  The apologists…take refuge in saying that they are devoted simply to science!  They are really devoted to the applied sciences and to practical production.  Therefore it is necessary to employ a certain skepticism even at the expense of the Cult of Science, and to say, It is an Americanism, which looks innocent and disinterested, but really is not either.

The amenities of life also suffer under the curse of a strictly-business or industrial civilization.  They consist of such practices as manners, conversation, hospitality, sympathy, family life, romantic love – in the social exchanges which reveal and develop sensibility in human affairs.  If religion and the arts are founded on right relations of man-to-nature, these are founded on right relations of man-to-man.

In conclusion, this much is clear: If a community, or a section, or a race, or an age, is groaning under industrialism, and well aware that it is an evil dispensation, it must find a way to throw it off.  To think that this cannot be done is pusillanimous.  And if the whole community, section, race, or age thinks it cannot be done, then it has simply lost its political genius and doomed itself to impotence.

Add oblivion to impotence.  Thus wrote the soldier, poet, philosopher, literary critic, and teacher John Crowe Ransomin the “Introduction: Statement of Principles” to I’ll Take My Stand: The South and the Agrarian Tradition (1930).  Alter the English usage at the margin to please modern ears and change a few terms (e.g., industrialism to Neoliberalism) and the diagnosis is as valid today as it was in 1930.

The world will get smaller whether we want it too, or not, and soon.  Unless we – all of us, including the billionaires with their fever dreams of bolt holes in New Zealand – relearn the arts and sciences of managing our various commons for commoners, the future will be grim in every way that makes life humane.  The heterodox among us will necessarily lead the way, one commons, one community, and one region at a time.  Elinor Ostrom, Herman Daly, Wendell Berry, Christopher Lasch, and even the Nashville Agrarians of one hundred years ago, have much to teach us if we are willing to learn.  Our current PMC in its unthinking certitude, not so much.

Notes

[1]  To repeat myself: Neoliberalism holds that “The ‘Market’ is the measure of all things, even those that cannot be measured.”  This is a simple but useful working definition.  Undoing the Demos by Wendy Brown is the best single analysis of Neoliberalism I have read.

[2]  I have been reading individual works of Elinor Ostrom for years, but the outline of what follows is based in large part on Elinor Ostrom: Rules for Radicals: Cooperative Alternatives Beyond Markets and States (2017) by Derek Wall, which I found serendipitously in a sale email from Pluto Press.  This is a highly recommended and readable account of Ostrom’s work for the most part.  But Wall might disagree with himself now on the benign utility of the Internet and the long-term future of Uber.

[3]  Public Choice Theory, according to Tyler Cowan and Alexander Tabarrok of George Mason University – the font of academic libertarianism, goes back to the wit and wisdom of John C. Calhoun of Fort Hill.  The internal logic leading to formal justification of a system has no relationship to the effect(s), good or ill, the system has on the world.

[4]  For example: R. Netting, Balancing on an Alp, Cambridge, 1981, where Netting found documentation of management of the mountain commons dating back 800 years to 1224.

[5]  Or, Homo economicus does not exist except in modern economic theory and the works of Ayn Rand.

[6]  As Wendell Berry has noted of his humane world that is Port William, in the local economy and culture someone can be trusted to be unreliable.  This is important knowledge lost in our larger, mostly inhumane economy and often relearned only at great expense.

[7]  This remains largely unrecognized by the “economic sciences” and several others.  For an outstanding rant about the state of modern physics, see the inimitable and indispensable Sabine Hossenfelder here.  Parallels between modern physics and modern economics are unmistakable.  Ditto for much of Biomedicine.  For how biomedical science has become Biomedicine, mostly due to neoliberalization that was made possible by the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980, there are several previous contributions to this series.  A definitive treatment by Philip Morowski is reviewed here.

[8]  I have been fortunate.  The laboratories I have worked in have been workshops with scientists, technicians, and students bringing complementary expertise to interrelated questions that addressed important problems.  One of those led to a discovery that revolutionized cell biology, quite by accident, while we were studying how certain sea creatures are nearly 100% efficient at transferring energy in the form of blue light from one protein to another protein that emits green light (from blue to green is energetically downhill).

[9]  The professional Southerners (e.g., neo-Confederates and their ill-tempered ilk) who use the Agrarians as a prop to support their anachronistic and illegitimate views are as inevitable as fleas on a farm dog or a barn cat during a Southern summer.  They are to be ignored, steadfastly.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

33 comments

  1. diptherio

    You’ve got Elinor’s last name incorrectly spelled a couple times in the intro. It’s “Ostrom,” not “Olstrom”.

    Reply
  2. Carolinian

    I’ll just make my usual assertion that “human nature” is indeed a thing and therein lies the problem–particularly if we fail to accept the reality of this. We are inherently competitive but also inherently social and all of above the discussion is about how these often conflicting drives are arranged. The ideologies that were so dominant in the last century even made this conflict explicit. Capitalism says that competition is all important whereas socialism says that cooperation is the only thing that matters. Some of us would contend that both ideologies failed by not acknowledging the arguments of the other. Indeed one of the biggest problems with the notion that “ideas” run the world is that ideas tend to turn into dogma and therefore involve no thought at all. And so those highly educated Democrats can be as dogmatic and wrongheaded as the supposedly troglodyte Repubs.

    So perhaps we do indeed need a more scientific approach to our increasingly drastic social problems and therefore need to start treating our various ideologies and dogmas as the hypotheses that they in fact are. The essential thing is to keep an open mind even as the political part of our political economy is zealously trying to censor open mindedness out of existence. This woudl be Orwellian future won’t work and somebody should tell them.

    Reply
  3. aj

    Two quotes come to mind.

    The #1 Rule of Holes: If, at any time, you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.

    “That which cannot continue forever will eventually stop.” – Herbert Stein

    Reply
    1. Jams O'Donnell

      Yes. The die was cast for planetary extinction when James Watt made the steam engine a feasible working proposition, and it was taken up by numbers of mine owners, operating in a developing capitalist system. The Chinese seem to have handled revolutionary inventions much better – they were limited in scope by the ruling classes lack of interest in mass production. (This is of course a very sweeping generalisation of the causes for Chinese moderation).

      Reply
  4. Matthew G. Saroff

    If you have a problem, the conventional wisdom is always wrong, because if the conventional wisdom were right, then the problem would already have been solved.

    Reply
    1. Steve H.

      Dan Brooks: When something unexpected occurs, the consensus always turns out to have been wrong. Compromise based on prevailing consensus is the worst option.

      Reply
  5. Chris Cosmos

    I think this approach helps us in thinking about our collective problems but is, in a way, the cart before the horse. The main problem we face today is a lack of trust and a lack of community. We need to feel connected to others and pursue common purposes but, from a cultural point of view, this is increasingly difficult. Each of us pursuing our interests leads us to cultural depravity and chaos. Chaos can lead to authoritarianism/totalitarianism pretty quickly. Because of materialism (not capitalism as such) we are unable to create a convivial society. Materialism leads, exactly, to the problems we now face.

    The way out is to pursue a sense of purpose and meaning besides the radical materialism we are currently pursuing. Once we change our focus, the heterodox ideas have soil to grow in. Just imposing this or that “solution” through the use of various sorts of force as in legislation, executive action and so forth is not going to work in creating trust. In the same way as the BRICS countreis are pursuing a multi-polar world, we need to pursue a multi-polar set of communities that have things in common. This is why identity politics has become so prevalent–we want to be part of a group–I just don’t like the groups we have selected because, in large part, they are groups imposed by the oligarchy which tries everything it can to destroy even the possibility of ordinary workers gaining agency.

    Cultural change must come first.

    Reply
    1. elissa3

      Excellent analysis. I am trying to make it a habit before buying anything other than food to silently ask myself, “what will buying this do for myself and/or my family to make our lives more fulfilled?”. If one considers the utility/pleasure of a thing for an extended period of time, most of the stuff we acquire is not only useless, but potentially harmful, if not to us directly, but the planet. With the exception of art and the most basic necessities of life, if humans begin to acknowledge that the primal motivation of the producer is very simply to make money, perhaps fewer useless things will be bought. Sounds a touch woo-woo, I know, but hyper-conscious consumption could become a positive part of a healthier culture.

      Not a fan of RFK, Jr, (most especially for his ideas about Palestine), but should Trump get in I would hope that Kennedy be given authority to MAHA by transforming relevant institutions within the federal government. And a primary goal of such changes would be to influence patterns of consumption.

      Reply
  6. yenlin

    The heterodox solutions for sure: but could that ever be enough, when much of the contemporary social imaginary is so thoroughly ordered by the neoliberal paradigms?

    Apart from the growing number of intentional communities and other projects of building sociability outside the neoliberal paradigm, I’ve recently heard about School of Social Autonomy (Srećko Horvat), that was founded after the realisation that various large protest movements in 2000s and 2010s in Europe and the States didn’t really change anything. Of course, a school that promises to bridge the divide between the ivory tower and the “commons” is great and might function like a “workshop”, but even with its educational premise its hard to imagine such pockets of resistance and community building could sufficiently reshape the way most people imagine their social lives… The question really is how to shift on a large enough scale the social imaginary from seeing (natural, civil, economic) disaster as misfortune and a return to the (ab)normal neoliberal paradigm as the solution, to recognising that the cause of misfortunes is the neoliberal paradigm itself…

    Reply
  7. Grumpy Engineer

    Ergh. I’m having a hard time parsing KLG’s article well enough to understand what’s really being proposed here, but this particular comment really rankles:

    But the orthodox, thoroughly neoliberal interlocutor will ask, “Can your solutions really work?” [1] My reply is usually, “It is scarcely imaginable they will do worse.”

    We should always ask whether or not proposed solutions will really work. And we must, because it’s very easy to do worse. Much, much easier to do than KLG apparently understands.

    Indeed, in the engineering world, we ask this question of each other all the time. Early in my career, I proposed replacing one of the most expensive components in our system with something that cost only 10% as much. But one of my colleagues (a Canadian “orthodox, thoroughly neoliberal interlocutor”) was skeptical and challenged me. He couldn’t explain why, but the prospect of a 90% cost reduction was tickling his “too good to be true” sensors. So we rigged up a physical experiment, and my “heterodox idea” literally burst into flames. It was an utter failure. I went back to the drawing board and studied the physics harder, and I eventually figured out why the expensive original solution was actually necessary.

    And we’ve seen stuff like this in the outside world. “Defund the police” was a bad idea that permitted more crime. Drug legalization in Oregon increased overdose deaths, and they recently rescinded that failed experiment. China blacked out major portions of a province to meet energy efficiency rules, but they soon abandoned the effort as excessively disruptive. Same thing for their failed experiment on banning coal.

    And I’ve seen other proposed “solutions” that would have left people stranded on the side of the road, without fuel. Or freezing to death in the dark, without heat. Those were thankfully blocked before they became reality.

    Newly proposed solutions must be rigorously evaluated. If we don’t, unrecognized trade-offs might come back to bite us in the tush hard. I don’t dispute that today’s “status quo” is practically begging for bold new ideas, but these new ideas must actually work!

    Reply
    1. LY

      Better question is “works for who?”. “Defund the police” was to demilitarize and deescalate, but instead law enforcement stopped working for ordinary people. The same people in opposition have no problem with defunding financial, labor, safety or environmental regulators, or advocating for self regulation for certain entities.

      A car dependent society is a solution that we can hardly do worse, and we have counter examples from the past and in contemporary communities, but here we are. The same can be said of neoliberalism or austerity.

      Reply
      1. juno mas

        Yes, is there a crazier, angered, selfish, arrogant, dangerous culture that needs battle group policing than the US?

        Reply
  8. AG

    However the atomization of society is not inherent to the species.
    It is enforced upon us.
    And it starts in elementary school and basic outlines of economic thinking taught in form of projects that claim to be unideological and for “kids”.
    Terms like “solidarity”, like “unions”, like “strike” are made sound odd or better are not even introduced.
    The result is the assumption “the market” is a law of nature. And that that Nobel Prize is therefore rewarding a form of math: Beyond dispute.

    Reply
  9. spud

    what carter and reagan did was reversible. we did it twice on our history, Lincoln reversed what the free trader andrew jackson type did with the civil war, FDR and smoot hawley reversed what the free trader woodrew wilson did.

    but what bill clinton and barack obama did, is not reversible under out current form of governance.

    that ship sailed in 2008.

    forget trying to change things at the national level, can’t be done as of right now. but fight to keep the local level at least half way civil.

    we are now a police state, the youth of america understands this well. that must be fought at the local level.

    the east and the global south will drive out the neoliberals, the bill clinton tony blair types and their davos crowd allies.

    Reply
  10. Steve H.

    Howard W. Odum’s son, Howard T. Odum, was an ecologist who wrote:

    >> The maximum power principle can be stated: During self-organization, system designs develop and prevail that maximize power intake, energy transformation, and those uses that reinforce production and efficiency.
    >> Self-organization selects network connections that feed back transformed energy to increase inflow of resources or to use them more efficiently.

    In his framework, these are the primary motivations. The ways are complex. As Lambert quoted about VP Harris: “She is exceptionally skilled at getting other people emotionally invested in her success”

    > small local solutions are the place to begin

    This is the view taken by Christopher Alexander, Ostrom, Taleb, John Robb, Dan Brooks, and others. But Turchin says local communities are susceptible to attack from professional warriors and larger armies. Ostrom’s work on institutions could be critical to bridge the gap.

    Christopher Alexander: here’s a pdf of A Pattern Language.

    Reply
  11. John Merryman

    What if there is some simple, basic factor going to the root of many of our problems?
    We are linear, goal oriented creatures in a cyclical, circular, reciprocal, feedback generated reality. It’s like we haven’t really come to terms with the world being round, not flat.
    That most basic point is that as mobile organisms, this sentient interface our body has with its situation functions as a sequence of perceptions, in order to navigate, so our sense of time is the present going past to future, but the evident reality is that activity and the resulting change turns future to past. Tomorrow becomes yesterday, because the earth turns.
    There is no dimension of time, because the past is consumed by the present, to inform and drive it. Causality and conservation of energy. Cause becomes effect.
    The present goes past to future, because the patterns generated go future to past. Energy drives the wave, the fluctuations rise and fall. No tiny strings necessary.
    Given that culture and civilization emerge from narrative and history, that linear flow of time is foundational to our world. Especially academia, as it is the study and building on what came before.
    These earlier beliefs, assumptions, theories are based on smaller knowledge bases, but gain authority with age, so can usually only be patched, not refuted.
    Think religion as basically the childhood memories of culture. Which might be foundational, but should be taken with a few grains of salt.
    I could go in various directions with this, but find that not too many people care to think too far outside the box.

    Reply
  12. Jeremy Grimm

    The world rides a Haywain to Hell with Neoliberalism pushing, pulling, and steering the ride. Privatizing the Commons was a midwife to the birth of Capitalism. Neoliberalism commandeered classical Capitalism. The government, police, communications, the very livelihood of the Populace is tightly held in Neoliberal hands. Analysis and fond reminiscences of the once upon a time Commons will not wrest power from the Elites intent upon keeping us bound for the ride in their Haywain. Before any heterodox ideas and experiments can be attempted, Neoliberalism must be cast down and the very structure of Society, Civilization, and Empire must be torn asunder and refashioned. I doubt that can or will happen through revolt. It will happen as we ride through the Gates of Hell into the crucible of the coming Collapse. I struggle to envision what might come out of that crucible.

    Reply
  13. dave -- just dave

    I think it is clear that we need not just political change, but cultural change. As Rilke [translated by Stephen Mitchell] said in “Archaic Torso of Apollo”: You must change your life.

    KLG cites Wendy Brown in his first note. Here are some passages from a conversation with her about reparative democracy:

    https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/the-violent-exhaustion-of-liberal-democracy

    My thinking about reparative democracy emerges from the twin crises of democracy and ecology imperiling all planetary life today, however unevenly. It aims to bring democracy into direct engagement with the deep and lasting damages of colonial capitalist modernity, an epoch built on fossil fuels, unsustainable practices of production and consumption, extreme geopolitical inequalities, and wretched forms of destruction and exploitation for both human and nonhuman life. Such direct engagement with long histories and their effects on all possible futures isn’t part of the temporal orientation and practices of liberal democracies or democratic subjects. It requires some serious transformations of both, which we will want to talk about. But for now, the big points are these: if we are to sustain the commitment to collective self-rule promised by democracy, we must reorient it for this engagement and transformation. Conversely, if we are to have ecologically viable and just futures, democracy must be remade for reparative purposes.

    She doesn’t mean “reparations”.

    That is, it is not about recuperating extant democracy as if it was once fine and only now is broken. Nor is it primarily concerned with reparations to peoples and places brutalized or exploited under past regimes. Rather, my argument is that the democratic ethos and practices we require today must be relentlessly and radically reparative in relation to past and present damaging modes of life, especially over the past two centuries.

    She makes clear that the root of it all it is not just neoliberalism, it is not just capitalism, not just imperialism and colonialism, not just racism and sexism, but it is anthropocentrism and thinking and feeling of human life as apart from nature instead of as a part of nature.

    Reply
  14. farmboy

    doing my part on 5000ac, led the move to no-till to save topsoil in the 80’s, pushed for more local marketing and identitiy preserved in the 2000’s, went 100% organic in the mid 2010’s. looking at my birthplace landscape for over 70 years I’m despaired all is lost, yes i can do this successfully, but it’s about to end, i can’t do it anymore, gonna sell, the next farmer will go back to application chemistry. i’m considering getting Fish&Wildlife agency to buy my ground or maybe the Nature conservancy, but still finding someone to keep on the trajectory is hopeless. Don’t talk to me about permaculture, or community models, it will take millions to step into this operation.i still provide nearly all the labor from tractor driver to mechanic, marketing, weed pulling and i’m gassed. covid nearly killed me pacemaker, defibrillator installed, so i isolate happily. steeped in blue marble and energy medicine, hudson and kelton

    Reply
    1. amfortas the hippie

      aye. i’m 55 and worse for wear.
      and currently 5 out of 20 acres.
      but Eldest the other night over beers by the campfire said that he once hated the very idea of this place, and living this way…but now( mere 2 years later) and he said he sees the value in it…and finally gets what ive been on about and trying to do for his whole life.
      maybe a yar ago…also over beer and fire…he said “i need to know what you know”, which surprised me. now, after this most recent revelation, i think that may have been the turning point…all he had to do was show interest, and away i went with explanations and armwaving vision…and how this fits into that, and nutrients flow thusly, and so on endlessly.
      his new girlfriend(seems rather serious, to me)…ttaking the part of the armwaving vision tour that includes the still unfinished Big Greenhouse…stops me and asks,”how in the hell do you know all this?”
      answer: been in organic ag/permaculture/dirt to plate to dirt since i was 5 yo…but mom has forgotten all about all that,lol.
      and thats the rub: you gotta pass on the accumulated knowledge and skills, somehow…and to someone who has been raised to want and value them.
      with the myriad temptations, piped into ones hand and mind, 24/7, i reckon that is the challenge.

      Reply
      1. Jeremy Grimm

        I envy you that your eldest discovered the importance of what you have been doing and planning to do. I have little or none of your knowledge to share with my children but so far they both have rejected my concerns about the future and deprecated both my forebodings and visions of a way forward. Your eldest wants to know what you know. With the knowledge you impart please also encourage that he teach and pass on what he learns from you and learns from his life. Please emphasize again and again the importance of preserving and sharing the library you have collected. I am far behind you in my efforts to build a future for my children and whoever else I might influence and learn from whomever whose learning I might absorb. Your comments inspire me to do more, though my amble laziness and inertia weigh me more heavily than I should allow.

        Reply
        1. amfortas the hippie

          he had to step up at 4 yo, when brother was born, and my hip went dead.
          and step up, he did.
          he stepped up again when She died.
          big time.
          i couldnt be prouder.

          we talk about it a lot.
          (maybe that i actually talk to my kids is the difference?….never once did babytalk, etc….)

          Reply
    2. flora

      Bravo, farmboy!
      You might add The Isaac Walton League to your list of possible purchasers. They do very good work. They might be in touch with people already in your area who are on the same good earth project.

      https://www.iwla.org/

      Reply
      1. flora

        adding, and I know you’ve already considered this, and it’s rude of me to backseat drive etc,

        Farmers in the area who want to raise crops as you do could be interested in renting your crop land, or cattle raisers growing organic grass fed beefs might be interested in renting out parts of your pastured acreage. They take care of the land as you would, you collect rental income and pay the property tax and insurance. The land, which they aren’t making more of (old joke) increases in value and is still owned by you. OK, I’ll stop. / ;)

        Reply
        1. farmboy

          zero, nada, zip interest from local or extra locals or even further, offered a kind of mentorship to capable next generation to no avail. I will check the Isaac Walton league, thank you very much

          Reply
  15. Frank

    Looking ahead, is neoliberalism and its nefarious policies and consequences really relevant? Already today over 50% of the world has moved away from that model. A percentage that will rise rapidly not only because the rest of the world will not adopt it but because our part of the world will abandon it to adopt a neo-nationalist model of which we can see the first evidence. We can be confident that this will lead to less inequality but for the rest? It does not seem to be the case. China’s per capita energy consumption is still largely lower than that of the G7, India’s largely lower than China’s, etc… So this article seems to me to be a pleasant exercise on the little and as usual incapable of going beyond the narrow confines of our countries and the dissolving influence they exert.

    Reply
    1. Jeremy Grimm

      I am curious what 50% of the world has cast aside Neoliberalism. I am also curious what you mean by neo-nationalism and why you believe the u.s. is dropping Neoliberalism and adopting neo-nationalism in its place. I do not see indications of these developments in my tea leaves.

      “China’s per capita energy consumption is still largely lower than that of the G7,” — what does this have to do with the rest of your comment? What is a “pleasant exercise on the little”?

      Reply
  16. flora

    Thanks for this post. If I could change one thing in the PMC thinking for the past 70 years, (yes, it’s been going on that long), its the fetish of consolidation of almost everything accompanied by centralized control;
    Consolidate k-12 schools into larger and larger (and farther removed from local interests) school systems, consolidate medical care into larger and larger systems, consolidate farms into bigger and bigger agribiz companies, etc. Break that up. This is monopoly playing out across the board because ‘efficiency’ and profits for a few. The PMC thinks it’s a good thing. Lots of PMC jobs created to manage all that centralization. / my 2 cents.

    Reply
  17. ChrisRUEcon

    I somehow missed this. Thanks for posting! And thanks for writing KLG! I will read thoroughly and hopefully respond soon.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *