DOUG
DOWD'S "AT THE CLIFF'S EDGE"
(PART I)
By Stephen Lendman/June
16, 2008
At
age 89, Doug Dowd is a wonder. He's still active,
vibrant and thankfully so. He calls himself a "radical
economist" in the best sense of the term, and for more
than 50 years through the late 1990s, he was a
distinguished interdisciplinary professor of economic
history and more at Cornell, UC Berkelely and elsewhere.
It went along with his activism, progressive thinking,
honest concern for the least advantaged, and love of
teaching young people. He's no different today, except
that he's semi-retired, living full-time in Bolonga,
Italy, nearing his 60th year teaching at nearby Modena
University, and approaching his 10th decade.
Dowd also authored
many scholarly writings, numerous
articles, and many books on
cutting-edge economic, political and
social issues. Included are
Capitalism and Its Economics, the
two-volume Broken Promises of
America, and his newest and subject
of this review, At the Cliff's Edge:
World Problems and US Power.
Doud dedicates his
book to his students in America and
Italy. "More than a few of (them)
have become dear friends." They've
thanked him for his teaching, and
this book is his "opportunity to
thank them."
He's witnessed
history longer than most others and
cites his concerns. "The world now
stands on 'a cliff's edge' " below
which he sees "four related groups
of horrors: existing and likely
wars, a fragile world economy,
pervasive and deepening corruption,
and the earth dangerously near the
'tipping point' of environmental
disaster." Add one more for good
measure - a disdainful
administration heading the world for
potential disaster, uncaring about
what it's doing, and leaving its
mess for a successor.
For Dowd, it's
ominous and disturbing. We may be at
"the last stop" of a centuries-long
voyage. It produced 15th to 18th
century colonialism and nationalism.
They, in turn, spawned capitalism
and industrialism, and then combined
"transformed colonialism into
imperialism."
Dowd wrote his book
for a purpose. He learned as a
student and teacher that what's in
it isn't taught or publicly
discussed. His classes were never
that way. It's why they were and are
still so popular, and why one of his
former students asked him to write a
needed classroom text. As a high
school social studies teacher he
found none that were "readable,
pertinent, and accessible." Dowd's
book fills the vacuum. It's broad in
scope, clearly written, easily
understood, and a wonderful primer
for students. Adults also, and it
covers 500 years to the present. In
it, he's critically unsparing in his
assessment - of the modern era and
what preceded it.
The book is panoramic
in scope. It's long and detailed,
and this review covers its
highlights in hopes readers will get
the volume for it all. Plus the
character of the man who wrote it
and now working on a new so far
unfinished book with likely more
offerings ahead. Approaching age 90,
Dowd is resilient, dedicated and
continues to write and teach. We're
all the better off for it. Read on.
In a moment of
reflection, he imagines what America
could and should be, not what it is.
Therein lies the problem. We have an
"unconscious way....of seeing
ourselves....as something special
(or) better" than others. Hardly so
about a country one observer
describes as being "a marriage of
all that's admirable with all that's
appalling" with an emphasis on the
latter now and worsening. Instead of
being virtuous, "we have evolved
toward something like its opposite."
Dowd equates the gap between "our
realities and our ideals" to "the
Grand Canyon."
And sitting in its
"dirty center....are three
unacknowledged ways of life,
attitudes, (and) values that have
been mutually supportive:
-- racism and other
forms of prejudice;
-- ....violence and
militarism; (and)
-- ....insatiable and
socially sanctioned greed for money,
things, and power."
In his forward, Dowd
gives examples but laments that
they're not taught in classrooms.
One was the Compromise of 1877
unknown to most readers. It was
after the Civil War during
Reconstruction when northern troops
occupied the South. Blacks were
nominally free, and southern whites
were furious to see them hold
office, be policemen, eat in public
places, and so forth. The so-called
Compromise ended the occupation and
"freed whites to do as they wished
to black men, women and children."
It took almost a century to end Jim
Crow laws, savage lynchings, and a
federal government committed to
stopping them.
Before it happened,
here's what the North got in return.
The right to exploit southern
resources, its mines, railroads,
factories, cheap labor, and keep
blacks de facto slaves as
sharecroppers with no schools,
voting rights, safety or any legal
recourse from the state. For them,
everything changed, yet everything
remained the same.
Another example is
notable with memories of two stolen
elections still vivid. In the 1876
(US) presidential election, Samuel
Tilden got "today's equivalent of 2
million more popular votes than
(Rutherford B.) Hayes." In all
elections, electoral college votes
are decisive. Hayes was awarded one
more than Tilden, but 20 votes were
disputed, so a congressional
committee got to decide. In secret
session, a deal was struck to make
Hayes president. In hindsight,
there's no doubt that the election
was stolen in similar fashion to the
Supreme Court giving it to George
Bush in 2000.
Marc Crispin Miller's
book then documented the encore in
2004 - electoral fraud writ large in
a process even more one-sided than
in 2000. Miller's account makes
persuasive reading. "Fooled Again:
The Real Case for Electoral Reform"
shows what we're up against and what
to look forward to going forward
unless sweeping electoral reform is
undertaken.
Part I - The
Beginnings and Growth of the Modern
World
Dowd observes how
terribly wrong things are today -
too much poverty, hunger, war,
anger, privilege and too little of
what's essential to make life
tolerable. His book explains how it
evolved - "but need not stay this
way."
He cites what he
calls the "Big Four" - colonialism
(now imperialism), capitalism,
nationalism, and industrialism.
They're "processes," not "things,"
and each "fed the others."
Colonialism began in
the late 1400s, and "explorer-heros"
like Columbus advanced it. It was
brutal, ugly, racist, and violent.
Over three centuries it spanned the
world and made way for what
followed. Thomas Hobbes described
life then as "nasty, brutish and
short." With today's scientific
advances, it should be better but
isn't. It's "worse than
ever....because of a maldistribution
of power" - too much at the top and
mass misery at the bottom and
worsening. Add the nuclear threat
and potential ecological disaster,
and you get the point.
As the world's
leading superpower and richest
nation, America bears most
responsibility - what's wrong and
how to fix it. We're not alone, but
"the USA is largely responsible for
bringing the world to the cliff's
edge."
Colonialism: The
Earliest of the Big Four
It began in the
Mediterranean region, then spread
everywhere through trade, financial
activities and more. Dominant
countries were Spain, Portugal, but
by 18th century's end the Dutch,
then overtaken by the British in the
19th century. Centralized control
became important, the national state
common, and a social system called
mercantilism emerged to serve it. It
then evolved into industrial
capitalism but in a much more
primitive form than today.
Mercantilism was
based on national economic
protection. International trade
developed, and the idea was to
maximize exports, minimize imports,
and use revenues to finance
government, wars, and greater
expansion. It, in turn, led to
capitalism, nationalism, and
industrialism and all the ills they
produce.
Colonialism
benefitted elitists who exploited
cheap labor on stolen and occupied
lands. Millions were enslaved, and
Dowd calls slavery "the worst crime
of all." It existed much earlier,
but by the 17th and 18th centuries
burgeoned with trade to the
Americas, especially the US
colonies. Rich agriculture was their
strength, and slave labor maintained
it. Africa supplied it in the many
millions.
Capitalism: The
Most Important of The Big Four
Capitalism is a
social as well as economic system,
much like slavery was. First and
foremost, capitalists are a
money-chasing "class" who've found
ways to rule the "entire social
process." Not just our work but what
we think, and that's crucial.
Witness the power of Big Media in an
age of mass communication with giant
corporations and their advertisers
benefitting. They "shape our
feelings, thoughts, and behavior as
both consumers and voters."
Dowd defines capital
and its components - the means of
production, accumulation,
technological advance, a powerless
working class, and finance to pay
for it. In the modern era, add
another element - more than ever,
government partnered with business,
and providing a legislative and
subsidized open field for profits at
the expense of working people. The
deck is stacked in a zero sum game -
business wins; people lose.
Consider the "heart,
brain and muscle of capitalism:"
-- its heart -
limitless exploitation of workers
and the land;
-- its brain -
continued economic and geographic
expansion; and
-- its muscle -
capitalist power and ability to rule
society's economic, political and
social life.
Marx described it as
the exploitation of human beings and
Mother Nature and the resulting
destruction of our humanity and
fertility of the land. It goes back
to medieval England, the feudal era,
a world of lords and serfs, the
emergent enclosure movement, and a
powerless working class today called
"wage-slaves."
With technological
advances like the steam engine and
textile machinery, industrialism
emerged in the early 19th century.
Capitalism flourished, but for
workers life was "nasty, brutish and
short." It still is for 80% of
people the way economist Paul Baran
explained it in his Political
Economy of Growth. He observed
what's just as true today: "the rich
become richer by causing the poor to
become poorer." Even worse, the poor
get blamed for their own
misfortune.
There are plenty of
them, including millions in America
- far more than official Census
Bureau numbers that deliberately
understate the problem at about
one-fifth of the population. Today,
68% of US workers earn less than the
Economic Policy Institute's living
wage estimate for a family of four -
$14 an hour or about $30,000 a year.
Even with two family wage-earners,
US poverty is likely double the
Census Bureau number - in the
richest country in the world Dowd
calls "the Unequal Society of
America."
Corporate capitalism
requires inequality - economic,
political and social. Racism is one
of its defining features. It pits
workers against each other for a
dwindling number of good jobs,
weakens them, and strengthens those
with power. It shaped today's
America, and consider a few of our
"firsts:"
-- the number of
mentally ill,
-- incarcerated,
-- without health
coverage or too little of it,
-- with inadequate
savings or none at all,
-- indebtedness,
-- homelessness,
-- ill-educated,
-- illiterate,
-- impoverished,
-- abused children,
-- waste,
-- environmental
degradation,
-- nuclear weapons
stockpile,
-- a stated intention
to use them preemptively,
-- militarism and the
multi-trillions it costs,
-- the amount of
public fraud, and
-- much more. Nowhere
else are excesses and inequalities
greater, and no country is more able
to avoid them, won't, and inflicts
so much harm on so many people
everywhere.
Nationalism: Your
Country Can Do No Wrong
"Nations and
nationalism came into existence and
strengthened as the needs for their
strength arose." It has nothing to
do with patriotism or love of
country. It's a "blood brother of
racism, militarism, hate and fear"
and belief one's country is superior
and "can do no wrong." It spawns
imperialism that, in turn, feeds
capitalism, industrialism and
nationalism. It spurs competition
between nations and is a frequent
cause of war. It's key to
understanding WWs I and II, what's
ongoing in the Middle East and
Central Asia, and what may lie ahead
as nations vie for power, resources,
markets, and cheap labor.
Industrialism:
Invention Is the Mother of Necessity
It goes beyond
nonagricultural production. It's
about large cities, a class society,
enough educated people, strong
government, technological advances,
and a modern infrastructure. Dowd
distinguishes between the (first)
industrial revolution with its steam
and simple machinery. It led to a
second technological one because of
chemistry and physics advances.
We're now in a third, it's global,
and it's based on electronics,
biotechnology, information and
plenty of high-octane finance.
Decades back, a high-school
education sufficed. Today, one or
more college degrees are vital and
in the right fields. Even then, good
jobs are disappearing - to low-wage
countries, in growing numbers, so
what's left are fewer opportunities
as the nation eats its seed corn.
That would have been
unimaginable when modern
corporations emerged around 1855.
Necessity was the reason.
Large-scale production needs capital
and more than individuals can raise.
Corporations get it (like today) by
selling shares to investors. By the
1870s, an earlier version of today's
America emerged. One author called
it the age of "Robber Barons" with
names still familiar to most. They
were predators very skilled at their
trade - monopolizing markets,
skimming millions from corruption,
speculating wildly, exploiting
workers brutishly, and getting away
with it with friendly government
help. It's no different today except
the stakes are greater and risks
unimaginable.
Earlier, mergers
became common. Before WW I, they
combined businesses producing like
things like steel and oil. By the
1920s, vertically conglomerates
emerged of the type so common today
- like a GE owning appliance, media,
finance and other dissimilar
companies.
They became
multinationals (MNCs) in the 1960s,
then transnationals (TNCs) in the
1980s operating everywhere. They're
huge, powerful and in many cases
larger in GDP equivalent than their
host countries. The buzzword is
globalization. Protests are for
global justice. Little so far is in
sight. Hopefully it will come. The
need is overwhelming, but challenges
against it are daunting:
-- hugely powerful
TNCs;
-- governments in
their pocket;
-- extremes of wealth
concentration and power increasing;
-- destructive
militarism for more; capitalism
requires it;
-- people
exploitation enhances it;
-- consumerism keeps
it profitable;
-- efficiency also as
well collateral ecological fallout.
It's horrific -
enormous waste; destructive wars;
and little relief in times of peace:
conglomerated production and
agriculture; exploited labor;
extreme wealth disparities;
commodifying everything; planned
obsolescence; productive
overcapacity; unemployment and
underemployment; racism; people as
production inputs to be used and
discarded like waste; and
deep-seated levels of corruption.
As companies grow,
things worsen in our war-addicted
economy profiting business and
government together - a mutually
destructive alliance. Their gain is
civil society's loss, and the stakes
keep getting greater. It's what Dowd
means by a world "at the cliff's
edge."
Part II - The
Global Spread, Functioning, and
Breakdown of Industrial Capitalism,
1815 - 1945 - From Imperialism to WW
I
Dowd gives a sweeping
review of 130 years through WW II's
end. Of necessity, this account is
briefer. Britain was dominant in the
19th and early 20th century through
WW I. Inevitably it was challenged
by Germany's science and educational
superiority and America's
incomparable strengths. These three
nations and other European ones
"unleashed the 19th century version
of colonialism. It was called
imperialism (and it) made
colonialism look tame." By the late
19th century, resource needs "were
raging," and competition intense to
secure them.
Consider Africa -
resource rich and "doomed to endure
one set of disasters after another."
Slavery gave way to endless civil
wars to ruthless imperial
exploitation. The Congo was typical
and most important as the
continent's greatest prize - an
abundance of ivory, cobalt, copper,
rubber, diamonds, gold, zinc,
manganese and more in a country the
size of western Europe.
Belgium's King
Leopold took it as his private
fiefdom, sucked out its riches at
the cost of millions of lives, and
the country remained a colony until
post-WW II. Popular protests won
liberation as in other African
states. Patrice Lumumba became its
first Prime Minister. He wanted
Africa freed from European
dominance, and he paid with his life
for his efforts. The continent is no
better off today. America exploits
it most. Oil and its other resources
are coveted, and no independent
leaders are tolerated.
The war in Somalia
and challenging Zimbabwe's Robert
Mugabe highlight the continent's
crisis (and nations everywhere). By
19th century's end, European powers
controlled all of it. Today America
is preeminent and intends to remain
so.
Asian history is
similar and a lot more than about
China and Japan. There's the
subcontinent, Central, and Southeast
Asia for a vitally important world
region. Add the Middle East and its
vast oil riches that were discovered
early in the last century.
The US was least
aggressive but not quiescent. In the
19th century, it took America and
half of Mexico, then added Hawaii,
Guam, the Philippines, Puerto Rico,
the Dominican Republic, Samoa,
assorted other territories, the
Canal Zone and control of Cuba with
in perpetuity Guantanamo Bay rights
so long as rent is paid or unless
both countries back out by mutual
consent. Looking back, it was mere
prelude to far greater 20th century
aims, especially post-WW II when
they extended everywhere and now
include space.
1914-1945: The
Most Disastrous Years in History
Dowd is blunt, and
who can disagree. He calls the
period between WWs I and II "the
most turbulent and disastrous in all
of recorded history." Economically
the global economy suffered. Many
countries endured depressions that
were only exceeded by the "most
severe conflicts in their history."
Britain was one, and its economic
troubles emerged in the late 19th
century. Brits created "the first
world economy." It was strongest
militarily, the envy of all Europe,
and it became a recipe for
rivalries. Who'd be able to create
an empire first and be strong enough
to keep it. It led to WW I, a flawed
peace, years of chaos, conflict and
convulsions leading to another great
war that the first one was supposed
to prevent.
Except for the Great
Depression, America was spared, and
is now the world's only superpower.
Post-WW I, the US emerged
strengthened. For its part, Britain
was effectively bankrupt. The war
took its toll as it did against the
continent's other combatants. It
turned the 1920s into years of
"serious recession, economic slack,
withdrawal from international
trade," and the rise of fascism as
an antidote to hard times. WW II was
a war to end it. Instead, it merely
slowed it, then relocated it to
America - first in "friendly" form,
but post-9/11 in increasingly new
millennium despotism. What Peter
Dale Scott calls the "deep state" -
unaccountable, lawless, below the
radar, self-serving against the
public interest and operative for
decades but near omnipotent today.
Its classic elements are mostly
evident and worrisome:
-- severe
repression;
-- de facto one-party
rule;
-- despotic laws
backing it;
-- courts supporting
it;
-- iron-fisted
militarism and "homeland security"
enforcement;
-- a permanent state
of war;
-- institutionalized
illegal spying;
-- stifling dissent;
-- stealing
elections;
-- a claimed
messianic mission;
-- outlandish racism
and targeting racial and ethnic
groups on the pretext of fighting
"terrorism;" and
-- corporatism writ
large with strong elements of
patriotism, nationalism, yet calling
it democracy.
Post-WW I, Dowd
traced its rise in Italy, Germany,
and Japan with a fundamental lesson
for today - democracy and freedom
are fragile. Given the right
circumstances, they're easily
manipulated and corrupted. Earlier
the world paid dearly. Today it
still does. The dangers are
overwhelming.
1945 - 1950: From
the Ashes Arising
WW II left most of
Europe and large parts of Asia in
ruins. America remained untouched
and triumphant. Rebuilding began but
for a purpose - to solidify US
dominance, create foreign markets
for business, and fabricate a Soviet
threat for an emergent
military-industrial complex. Enter
the Marshall Plan, IMF, World Bank,
GATT, the Cold War, NATO, and
stationing US forces everywhere in
ways unimaginable for another
country to do here.
Japan became "an
immense aircraft carrier (and US)
naval base...." West Germany was
much the same on the continent. The
Depression was over, the great war
won, America was triumphant, so on
to the next great quest - advancing
"capitalist development: monopoly
capitalism and the Cold War."
The Wars in Korea
and Vietnam
Liberation helped
neither country at a time of Cold
War strategy. Things got worse and
then some - division; horrific wars;
and millions killed, wounded,
displaced and immiserated. Wounds
are still healing, South Korea still
occupied, the North isolated,
tensions still high, and Vietnam is
chemically contaminated and a US
offshore sweatshop.
Dowd reviews the
histories and concludes: "To those
who cheer our 'victory' in the Cold
War, our fist-shaking against the
'axis of evil,' and our 'mission
accomplished' in Iraq, here is a
request - Dear Uncle Sam: Spare us
your victories." They reveal deceit,
betrayal and conquest for world
dominance.
More on Dowd's
book follows in Part II. Watch for
it soon on this web site.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9302
© Copyright 2008, Stephen Lendman, All Rights Reserved
mp3 of Radio Show here:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8363

Global
Research Associate Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and
can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Stephen Lendman is the author of the recently published
book
The
Iraq Quagmire: The Price of Imperial Arrogance By Stephen Lendman and J.J. Asongu.
Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to The Global Research New Hour on
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