theatlantic | The arrangement of positions along the left-right axis—progressive to
reactionary, or conservative to liberal, communist to fascist,
socialist to capitalist, or Democrat to Republican—is conceptually
confused, ideologically tendentious, and historically contingent. And
any position anywhere along it is infested by contradictions.
Transcending partisanship is going to require what seems beyond the capacities of either side: thinking about the left-right spectrum rather than from it.
The terminology arose in revolutionary France in 1789, where it
referred to the seating of royalists and anti-royalists in the Assembly.
It is plausible to think of the concept (if not the vocabulary) as
emerging in pre-revolutionary figures such as Rousseau and Burke. The Oxford English Dictionary’s first citation of “left” and “right” used in the political sense in English is in Thomas Carlyle's French Revolution in
1837, but the idea only crystallized fully with the emergence and under
the aegis of Marxism, in the middle of the 19th century. It was not
fully current in English-speaking countries until early in the 20th.
Before that, and outside of the West, there have been many
intellectual structures for defining and arranging political positions.
To take one example, the radical and egalitarian reform movements of the
early and mid-19th century in the U.S.—such as abolitionism, feminism,
and pacifism—were by and large evangelical Christian, and were radically
individualist and anti-statist. I have in mind such figures as Lucretia
Mott, Henry David Thoreau,
and William Lloyd Garrison, who articulated perfectly coherent
positions that cannot possibly be characterized as on the left or the
right.
The most common way that the left-right spectrum is conceived—and the
basic way it is characterized in the Pew survey—is as state against
capital.* Democrats insist that government makes many positive
contributions to our lives, while Republicans argue that it is a barrier
to the prosperity created by free markets. On the outer ends we might
pit Chairman Mao against Ayn Rand in a cage match of state communism
against laissez-faire capitalism.
The basic set of distinctions on both sides rests on the idea
that state and corporation, or political and economic power, can be
pulled apart and set against each other. This is, I propose, obviously
false, because hierarchies tend to coincide. Let's
call that PHC, or Principle of Hierarchical Coincidence. A corollary of
PHC is that resources flow toward political power, and political power
flows toward resources; or, the power of state and of capital typically
appear in conjunction and are mutually reinforcing.
I'd say it's obvious that PHC is true, and that everyone knows it to
be true. A white-supremacist polity in which black people were wealthier
than white people, for example, would be extremely surprising. It would
be no less surprising if regulatory capture were not pervasive. You
could keep trying to institute reforms to pull economic and political
power apart, but this would be counter-productive, because when you beef
up the state to control capital, you only succeed in making capital
more monolithic, more concentrated, and more able to exercise a wider
variety of powers. (Consider the relation of Goldman Sachs to the
Treasury Department over the last several decades, or Halliburton and
the Pentagon, or various communications and Internet concerns and NSA.
The distinction between "public" and "private" is rather abstract in
relation to the on-the-ground overlap.)
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