What passes for leftist politics these days
It seems I must take a brief break from my ongoing series of posts excerpted from my thesis in order to address a phenomenon that’s been grabbing a lot of headlines lately. Â What is more, it involves a series of actions that has been glamorously branded (as so much other inconsequential activism has in recent years) as “resistance.” Â The thing I’m referring to, of course, is the continuing occupation of Wall Street by a number of misguided and exhibitionistic protesters.
Now the obvious issue they’re upset about is the egregious inequality existing in contemporary neoliberal society. Â The problem isn’t the statistics they cite or anything like that. Â They’re impossible to deny: the disparity of wealth between the uppermost echelons of society and the rest is approaching an all-time high. Â What is so disappointing about this most recent display of ineffectual “consciousness-raising” is rather the way that it perpetuates practices that have almost become perennial in post-New Left protest culture. Â All the self-righteous antics of ostentatious pacifism and passive resistance that have become so obnoxiously enshrined in the popular imagination since Gandhi and Civil Rights are trotted out. Â As per the usual, the protesters are celebrated for their heroism in standing up against the police. Â If one of them gets arrested, it’s all the better, because then they get to wear that fact like a badge of honor, a sign of their selfless dedication to the cause.
Don’t get me wrong. Â This isn’t intended as some sort of perverse apology for state oppression. Â Of course there are many instances of police brutality and excess. Â But that doesn’t somehow retroactively justify the harebrained theatrics of the protesters. Â Their whole hackneyed routine has been reduced to spectacle; it receives some media coverage, but does nothing to actually bring about real social change. Â Media coverage and publicity are all these stunts aim at. Â But the public swiftly gets bored (if not annoyed) with all the pointless hullabaloo. Â Audiences have become so desensitized to these meaningless shows of activist do-gooding that they are all soon forgotten.
Readers of my blog will know that I am a consistent critic of global capitalism. Â My approach is thoroughly Marxist, and my analysis reflects that orientation. Â Inequality is endemic to the capitalist system, and is hardly accidental. Â Thoughtless activism does nothing to change the plight of the impoverished masses, however. Â Neither does the reformism that these protesters usually fall back on, when pressed about their politics. Â Conditions are presently unripe for the overcoming of the capitalist social formation. Â Even if they were, such pornographic displays of protest occupations would hardly spark revolution.
AN ADDENDUM
Apparently the childish anti-capitalism on display on Wall Street has already drifted into a perverse form of anti-semitism.  Though I am usually loath to repost anything from the Huffington Post, whose lukewarm “progressivist” prattle tends to bore me to death, I was astonished to come across this article by Nathalie Rothschild.  In it, she links to a blatantly anti-semitic web article indicting her as a “Journalist and Jew.” Of course, influenced I am by Moishe Postone’s reading of Marx and theory of capitalism, I am in the final analysis unsurprised by the misrecognition of capitalism’s abstract, global domination as domination by the cosmopolitan Jewish financier.  Still, that these carnivalesque demonstrations have so swiftly turned produced anti-semitic sentiments should indict these protests even further.