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Poll: Conservatives Pushing America Into Revolution?

Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 06:54:33 AM PDT

Sara Robinson posted an excellent on Campaign for America’s Future a few days ago, outlining the seven preconditions for violent revolution discussed by Caltech sociologist James C. Davies in a 1962 article in the American Sociological Review. Davies’s work was largely based on the seven "tentative uniformities" identified by another scholar, Crane Brinton, who had studied and correlated the origins of the Puritan, American, French, and Russian revolutions.

"...it struck me," Robinson writes,  "that the same seven stars Brinton named are now precisely lined up at midheaven over America in 2008."

Bloggers are telling stories from the front lines of primaries and caucuses that look like something from the early 60s — people lining up before dawn to vote in Manoa, Hawaii yesterday;  a thousand black college students in Prairie View, Texas marching 10 miles to cast their early votes in the face of a county that tried to disenfranchise them. In recent months, we've also been gobstopped by the sheer passion of the insurgent campaigns of both Barack Obama and Ron Paul, both of whom brought millions of new voters into the conversation — and with them, a sharp critique of the status quo and a new energy that's agitating toward deep structural change.

There's something implacable, earnest, and righteously angry in the air. And it raises all kinds of questions for burned-out Boomers and jaded Gen Xers who've been ground down to the stump by the mostly losing battles of the past 30 years. Can it be — at long last — that Americans have, simply, had enough?

I believe Robinson is so desperately aching for radical change in America, that she sees more hope than really exists. But this can only be a subjective judgment, and the past four decades of seeing my own hopes and aspirations crushed have left me seriously doubting that much is possible in the U.S. But the argument Robinson presents is by no means weak. And, she is a great wordsmith, who delights in taking conservatives behind the proverbial woodshed for a good metaphorical thrashing. So, I pass along these excerpts, the seven preconditions for a Second American Revolution:


1. Soaring, Then Crashing
Davies notes that revolutions don't happen in traditional societies that are stable and static — where people have their place, things are as they've always been, and nobody expects any of that to change. Rather, modern revolutions — particularly the progressive-minded ones in which people emerge from the fray with greater rights and equality — happen in economically advancing societies, always at the point where a long period of rising living standards and high, hopeful expectations comes to a crashing end, leaving the citizens in an ugly and disgruntled mood.

SNIP

2. They Call It A Class War
. . . Progressive modern democracies run on mutual trust between classes and a shared vision of the common good that binds widely disparate groups together. Now, we're also about to re-learn the historical lesson that liberals like flat hierarchies, racial and religious tolerance, and easy class mobility not because we're soft-headed and soft-hearted — but because, unlike short-sighted conservatives, we understand that tight social cohesion is our most reliable and powerful bulwark against the kinds of revolutions that bring down great economies, nations and cultures.

In all the historical examples Davies and Brinton cite, the stage for revolution was set when the upper classes broke faith with society's other groups, and began to openly prey on them in ways that threatened their very future.

SNIP

3. Deserted Intellectuals
Mere unrest among the working and middle classes, all by itself, isn't enough. Revolutions require leaders — and those always come from the professional and intellectual classes. In most times and places, these groups (which also include military officers) usually enjoy comfortable ties to the upper classes, and access to a certain level of power. But if those connections become frayed and weak, and the disaffected intellectuals make common cause with the lower classes, revolution becomes almost inevitable.

SNIP

And yet, when we finally graduated and went to work, we found those institutions being sold out from under us to a newly-emerging group of social and economic conservatives who didn't share our broad vision of common decency and the common good (which we'd inherited from the GI and Silent adults who raised us and taught us); and who were often so corrupted or so sociopathic that the working environments they created were simply unendurable. If wealth, prestige, and power came at the price of our principles, we often chose instead to take lower-paying work, live small, and stay true to ourselves.

SNIP

4. Incompetent Government
As this blog has long argued, conservatives invariably govern badly because they don't really believe that government should exist at all — except, perhaps, as a way to funnel the peoples' tax money into the pockets of party insiders. This conflicted (if not outright hostile) attitude toward government can't possibly lead to any outcome other than bad management, bad policy, and eventually such horrendously bad social and economic outcomes that people are forced into the streets to hold their leaders to account.

SNIP

5. Gutless Wonders in the Ruling Class
Revolution becomes necessary when the ruling classes fail in their duty to lead. Most of the major modern political revolutions occurred at moments when the world was changing rapidly — and the country's leaders dealt with it by dropping back into denial and clinging defiantly to the old, profitable, and familiar status quo. New technologies, new ideas, and new economic opportunities were emerging; and there came a time when ignoring them was no longer an option. When the leaders failed to step forward boldly to lead their people through the looming and necessary transformations, the people rebelled.

We're hard up against some huge transformative changes now. Global warming and overwhelming pollution are forcing us to reconsider the way we occupy the world, altering our relationship to food, water, air, soil, energy, and each other. The transition off carbon-based fuels and away from non-recyclable goods is going to re-structure our entire economy.

[Conservatives] will reflexively try to deny that change is occurring at all, and then brutally suppress anyone with evidence to the contrary.

Which is why, every time our current crop of so-called leaders open their mouths to propose a policy or Explain It All To Us, it's embarrassingly obvious that they don't have the vision, the intelligence, or the courage to face the future that everyone can clearly see bearing down on us, whether we're ready or not. Their persistent cluelessness infuriates us — and terrifies us. It's all too clear that these people are a waste of our tax money: they will never take us where we need to go.

SNIP

6. Fiscal Irresponsibility
As we've seen, revolutions follow in the wake of national economic reversals. Almost always, these reversals occur when inept and corrupt governments mismanage the national economy to the point of indebtedness, bankruptcy, and currency collapse.

SNIP

7. Inept and Inconsistent Use of Force
The final criterion for revolution is this: The government no longer exercises force in a way that people find fair or consistent. And this can happen in all kinds of ways.

Domestically, there's uneven sentencing, where some people get the maximum and others get cut loose without penalty — and neither outcome has any connection to the actual circumstances of the crime (though it often correlates all too closely with race, class, and the ability to afford a good lawyer). Unchecked police brutality (tasers, for example) that hardens public perception against the constabulary. Unwarranted police surveillance and legal harassment of law-abiding citizens going about their business. Different kinds of law enforcement for different neighborhoods. The use of government force to silence critics. And let's not forget the unconstitutional restriction of free speech and free assembly rights.

Abroad, there's the misuse of military force, which forces the country to pour its blood and treasure into misadventures that offer no clear advantage for the nation. These misadventures not only reduce the country's international prestige and contribute to economic declines; they often create a class of displaced soldiers who return home with both the skills and the motivation to turn political unrest into a full-fledged shooting war.

As I read through Robinson, and lifted out the excerpts I wanted to bring to a wider audience, I thought more and more of what I have been writing recently – that the financial crises are going to force the next President to make basic, historical choices between saving Wall Street, or saving the country. I had supported John Edwards, and now I dispiritedly favor Obama over Clinton. I have looked carefully at their economic advisers, and do not like what I see with either one. But Robinson sees something in Obama that I have thus far failed to see:

And Barack Obama is walking away with the moment because he talks of "hope" — which, as Davies makes clear, is the very first thing any would-be revolutionary needs. And then he talks of "change," which many of his followers are clearly hearing as a soft word for "revolution."

Perhaps I am more desperate for change than even Robinson is. Perhaps I simply cannot bring myself to believe that someone from an Ivy League law school – and editor of the Harvard Law Review, no less – will actually implement real change. Perhaps I had simply been spoiled for Robinson’s article by reading, a few days ago, Juan Santos’ brilliant and deeply disturbing essay:

It should be more than clear by now that Barack Obama will not save us. But neither is the point to expose the man as an individual, or even as a hypocrite, betrayer or oppressor. The point is to see him in context, within the limits of the system, the matrix, the cultural and political environment in which he arose and in which he operates. It’s not that Barack Obama, per se, is worthless, it’s that none of the dreams in us that he speaks to so deeply in us can be fulfilled under the system of oppression he is an expression of and that his candidacy concentrates in visible form.

Is America really ready for revolution in 2008. I don’t think so. But another four years without some drastic changes in national direction . . . And in the end, Robinson does not disappoint. She writes in two sentences what I’ve been fumbling three weeks to express.

When Change Is Not Enough: The Seven Steps To Revolution, by Sara Robinson

Poll

Revolution in America?

11%11 votes
31%30 votes
13%13 votes
6%6 votes
10%10 votes
25%24 votes

| 94 votes | Vote | Results

Tags: Sara Robinson, society, conservatism, culture, politics, government, revolution (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 16 comments

  •  Nice Diary!!! (5+ / 0-)

    You made some interesting points.

    If it doesn't pick up traction, play with the title a bit.  It gives the impression of being radical..

    Nice and thoughtful...

  •  I read about this. (4+ / 0-)

    I posted it on my discussion forum, too.  Thanks for posting about Robinson's excellent analysis here.  The biggest mistake ruling elites make when abusing power is to limit the options of the people.  When you limit people's options, you limit the choices they're able to make.  Right now, we've been given a choice: keep trying to reform the corrupt system, or rise up in revolution.  The former option is becoming increasingly unrealistic and futile, which leaves only the latter.  I think we're one breaking point away from another bloody revolution.

  •  Roll back the Bush coup or fires will start (6+ / 0-)

    We will simply have to have an end to the intrusive spying.

    There must be accountability of the excess and crimes of this administration. The Iran-Contra players all sneaked right back into power and pulled the same crimes.

    It isn't acceptable to proceed with Blackwater and Halliburton, intact.
    We will need some reparations.  The accounts of the crooks have to be brough back from the Caymans, or where ever.  That money belongs back in our treasury.

    If the criminals are going to walk away, we really should start breaking their toys and setting fires to their offices.  No amnesty for them, or they have gotten away with it.

    "I can't be part of a famous hippie commune. I have a career to think about" - Candy Crowley, 1973

    by MadCityRag on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 07:18:30 AM PDT

    •  The temperature is rising. (5+ / 0-)

      That article, and this diary are right about one thing.  The people are very, very angry in this country.  It's been rising slowly and imperceptibly since Bush took office, but now people are starting to recognize how angry people are.

      Think of it like heat.  At about 451 degrees Fahrenheit, paper catches fire (at least according to Ray Bradbury) and other items catch fire at similar temperatures.

      Are we close to 451 degrees?  I suspect so.  It's hard to tell, though I'm seeing little puffs of smoke here and there as the country smolders.  One thing I suspect is that if things don't change, if Bush and his cronies continue to drive this country into the ground, the temperature will continue to rise, and eventually it'll reach flashpoint, and there things will get really ugly really quickly, while people wonder what the hell set them off.

      Waster of electrons, unlawful enemy combatant.

      by meldroc on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 07:33:15 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Thought provoking. Thanks. n/t (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Bronx59
  •  revolution will be inevitable (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Neon Vincent

    but it won't be brought by Obama, or Clinton.  They in fact will put the revolution off by mollifying the "masses" and giving the appearance of change.  Hope can substitute for a while, but the real revolution is just beginning.

    Sometime within the next four years, though, something big will happen, likely earth changes, and then all bets are off for any ordered government.

    sign the petition at http://www.impeachbush.org

    by DrKate on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 07:36:35 AM PDT

  •  Your right, Obama won't bring the change... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    NBBooks, Neon Vincent

    we will.  What's great about Obama is his willingness to tell us that "we are the change we seek."  As has been said many times around these parts, FDR didnt' run on the New Deal, but public sntiment forced him into it.  I have the feeling that the same thing will happen with a President Obama.  He's letting a genie out of a bottle that even he won't be able to put back in.

    An agnostic not because I don't know if there's a God, but because I don't care.

    by filmgeek83 on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 07:47:30 AM PDT

    •  It's our government, and our nation. (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Neon Vincent

      I still believe that. It's just a matter of re-recognizing the fact of it, and voting the bastards out. Changing the paradigm, AND the zeitgeist. Obama is proceeding splendidly, despite everything. He just needs time in the spotlight, to point out and undermine all the hypocracy, and follow all the logical steps. First things first. Get the Nom. Lead your party. Fire up the electorate. Raise some hell. Make the change.

      Obama is entirely correct. We are the spear. He is just the tip of the spear. He will fly as far as we can carry him. Trust me, one million contributors gets everyones full attention. Five, ten, twenty million would say even more. Don't stop now. This is just beginning.

  •  Doubtful of Revolution (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    NBBooks, Dude1701, Neon Vincent

    Materialistically, American society has a diverse heirarchy, with multiple levels of high, middle, and low. These various subclasses are all in competition with one another to obtain the "American Dream" as good old Alger Hiss wrote it.
    This assures that the middle classes favor the upper classes as allies and role-model over the working poor. The role of education in all of this must also be mentioned.
    The economy is bad and getting worse, but I still see a lot of bling in America. A lot of plastic ostentation. As long as we can buy things like Xboxes and plasma TVs, I think revolution is a shot in the dark.
    The military, of course, is the elephant in the room: it has sworn to protect the constitution from all enemies both foreign and domestic.
    Rarely has there been a revolution that either a) did not have the help of at least some of the military, or b) occur at a time when the military was extremely weak or mostly abroad (I realize that this is the current case, but in modern warfare this fact is mitigated by air transport and rapid deployment. The 82nd Airborne, for example, can be anywhere in the world within 72 hours).
    Any uprising that were to occur in the U.S. would be so small and disorganized that it would be immediately crushed by the powers that be.
    However, there is certainly a political revolution going on in the U.S.: the progressive revolution of values.

    "Superstition, idolatry, and hypocrisy have ample wages, but truth goes begging." - Luther

    by Cartoon Messiah on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 07:48:51 AM PDT

  •  It depends on what you mean by revolution (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    NBBooks, Bronx59, Neon Vincent

    I don't see significant numbers of Americans roused to take to the streets, battle the police and army, and occupy Congress and the White House. Americans are too risk-averse and self-absorbed.

    But I do see growing numbers withdrawing their allegiance to the system in the sense of ceasing to believe its claims. They will continue to comply with the law to the minimum necessary to keep out of jail, but they can no longer be bothered to lift a hand to assist the system when it faces a real crisis. I think we're already reaching that point, in fact. We still comply, but we no longer believe.

    It will be interesting to see what effect this withdrawal of credence and allegiance will have. Over the shorter term it may appear to free the oligarchy to pursue its agendum even more aggressively, since demands for holding it accountable will drop off. But I'd like to think that a delegitimated oligarchy won't be able to sustain itself in power indefinitely, especially if there's an external shock in the form of military defeat, financial crisis, and complete geopolitical isolation.

    I think we're now experiencing our own "period zastoia," our Brezhnev years of stagnation and mass disillusionment. Hopefully we're approaching our 1989-1991, the bloodless collapse of the discredited system.  

    •  That all depends on how comfortable we are. (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Dude1701, Neon Vincent

      Most of us are still at least theoretically living a halfway decent middle class lifestyle.  We have homes, we have big screen TVs, we can get food, clean water, toys, etc. at a whim, for the most part.

      But as the article mentions in "Soaring, then crashing" that is changing for a lot of people.  Foreclosures are going through the stratosphere, leaving a not insignificant number of people on the street or couch surfing.  Jobs are continuing to leave the country, and millions who once had nice professional well-paying secure jobs are now finding themselves wearing paper hats and saying "Would you like fries with that?"  Health care used to be taken for granted, now for 46 million of us, it's completely out of reach, and for those who are lucky to have health insurance, SiCKO shows how many of them are getting screwed by those who are supposed to be there when bad things happen.  Gas prices are up, food's more expensive, and people are running out of credit to get those flat screen TVs.

      You'll know when people are truly ready to go postal en masse and start hanging our leaders upside down from meathooks when they have that fresh memory of the lifestyle they once had, but now they have nothing to lose, because they have literally nothing.

      Waster of electrons, unlawful enemy combatant.

      by meldroc on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 09:12:00 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  One thing to keep an eye on (8+ / 0-)

    The entire country has been slowly manipulated toward a situation where martial law could be declared at any time, and the existing precedents would favor a fascist dicatorship. We are not going to be there in one, two, or four years. We're there right now.

    In May they're going to start the push for RealID to become the law of the land. They've already done away with the unreasonableness of search and seizure, the warrantless wiretapping issue is still going to be a hard fight, they hold and torture people without charge or due process, and state governors no longer have control of the National Guard. We're definitely being set up for a revolution in this country.

    Most of the wealthy in the know have already started moving their assets overseas - and they themselves will quickly follow when things start really hitting the fan.

    Anyone who fails to see the historical parallels between Blackwater & the Nazi SS, or the DHS & the Gestapo, needs a serious reality check.

    by Randgrithr on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 08:07:37 AM PDT

  •  Robinson forgot a generation. (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    terabytes

    There's something implacable, earnest, and righteously angry in the air. And it raises all kinds of questions for burned-out Boomers and jaded Gen Xers who've been ground down to the stump by the mostly losing battles of the past 30 years. Can it be — at long last — that Americans have, simply, had enough?

    And yet, when we finally graduated and went to work, we found those institutions being sold out from under us to a newly-emerging group of social and economic conservatives who didn't share our broad vision of common decency and the common good (which we'd inherited from the GI and Silent adults who raised us and taught us); and who were often so corrupted or so sociopathic that the working environments they created were simply unendurable.

    There is another generation involved--the Millennials.  The Prairie View A&M students marching down the freeway to vote aren't Xers, they're Millennials.  The young people who are flocking to Obama's campaign and actually voting in numbers not seen since people 18-20 were given the vote are Millennials.  Even the shadowier youth movements, such as the young people who identify as "Anonymous" and are protesting Scientology, are also Millennials.  Without a civic-minded, collectivist generation who actually are doing the marching and organizing, any revolution, even a peaceful one, would never get off the ground.

    "Iraq: the bravest 1% fighting for the richest 1%." ~ An Unknown Kossack.

    by Neon Vincent on Sat Feb 23, 2008 at 12:43:09 PM PDT

  •  She's not alone in her thinking... (0+ / 0-)

    the elites have obviously been thinking along the same lines with the construction of internment camps, the Patriot Act, the Military Commissions Act, InfraGard, etc. The government patronage of all the private armies like Blackwater, DynCorp, Triple Canopy, etc., is also likely a hedge against the US military and local police forces becoming "unreliable" if orders are given to start kidnapping and killing lots of American citizens.

    The signs point to those in charge anticipating that things will get much worse, and that they may get bad enough to cause a significant portion of the population to turn off their TVs and start acting up. So they have been laying the groundwork for a militarized police response to the expected disorder, with the apparent expectation that it will not be so widespread or coordinated as to require more than maybe a couple of hundred thousand people to be locked up.

    Real revolutions (as opposed to the CIA staged "revolutions" in former Soviet bloc countries) almost never happen without massive bloodshed. And they very often end up putting authoritarian gangster types in power by the time they've run their course. So we really don't want to see things get to that point in this country if there's any other way to outsmart the people in charge. I wonder sometimes if there is a way to creatively wage psychological warfare against the elites instead of always being on the receiving end of their psychological warfare against us.

    If you have ever read the Eric Frank Russell science fiction book Wasp you may recall the types of tactics the lone spy in that book used to disrupt and demoralize the authorities in the nation he infiltrated. That is fiction and the hero gets away with many things that would be highly unlikely for an ordinary person, but perhaps some of the ideas could be transformed into more peaceable and less dramatic types of actions.

    Let's face it, no one in power is really all that afraid of the American people any more. We're the world class sheep of populaces, and we've been getting sheared with nary a complaint by the plutocrats and authoritarians since the late 1970s at least. The demonstrations and protests are ignored because they've become predictable and are effectively neutralized by not being given media coverage. Unions don't have enough members to cause real disruption across the board by striking. So it's not like the 1960s or the 1930s, when reforms got enacted because there was enough fear among those in charge to justify concessions to pacify the mob.

    Now it's assumed that any major dissent will be easily dealt with by disappearing the activists and the rowdies (and maybe a good random selection of total innocents) and that this and the presence of privatized storm troopers on the streets will be enough to make the rest of the sheeple cower down in fear and  obey whatever orders they're given. Thanks to 9/11 the psychological groundwork has been laid for this—but maybe enough people have become cynical about it by now (witness 9iu11iani's campaign going down in flames) that some of the passivity is wearing off. In which case the biggest worry may be that another 9/11 type event that "no one could have foreseen" will somehow occur with even greater loss of life to reinforce the original message.

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