But the appearance of bottom-up protest politics is always a bit of a false narrative. It would be one thing if the students were polled and a majority said they wanted the name changed, or some other process was used. At least the university could say that it was making decisions based on some objective democratic process, and wasn’t just being pushed around. But this is not what happened. No polls were taken. There was no authoritative process. The school said no for a few months, then caved. If the school were actually confident in its position to resist, it could have easily pushed back on the protests.I admit that on some level I don't understand why America's elites have lost confidence. Yes, America has lots of problems, I disagree with its elites on lots of things, and I think they've made a lot of mistake. But isn't that true of every era? There's a whole lot that America does right, and a whole lot that it could still set right with sustained effort. And plenty of other places and times have seen elites who did worse.
Maybe the problem is that America's elites know that they aren't really in charge. I mean, yes, they control so many institutions, but they no longer control the government. That may seem laughable on one level, with the Supreme Court being packed with Yale grads and plenty of Ivy Leaguers, rich people, etc. in Congress. Not to mention the Ivy Leaguers packing the top of executive agencies and Congressional staff positions, i.e. the people who REALLY run the government and always have in every country ever.
On another level, consider the most intractable problem in American government: The deficit. You simply cannot have tax rates that are acceptable to Americans AND have the massive military that we have (and all the commitments that come with it) AND do something substantial about healthcare. You can do any two of those, but not all three. This isn't a matter of political ideology but rather arithmetic. Nonetheless, it is impossible to raise taxes, impossible to cut the military, and impossible to do anything about healthcare that might threaten the bottom lines of entrenched interests. There are too many different players with too much at stake. And they can get the masses to vote with them.
OK, maybe all of those defense contractor executives and healthcare executives and upper-income taxpayers are elites, but (1) there are so many of them that the word "elite" gets stretched to something broader than "Top Ivy Grads", (2) they aren't the forward-thinking elites who know that some things can't go on forever (i.e. the sorts of people who are smart enough to rise to the top at Yale), and (3) these things wouldn't be politically impossible if the elites couldn't win elections while adhering to these stances, and lose elections by substantially straying from them. The people who benefit from these unsustainable contradictions have a critical mass of, well, the masses on their side. Something has slipped loose and is no longer under the control of smart old guys from New England. It's not democracy, but it's also not an elite that's coherent enough to act together and accept short-term pain with the assurance that they know the other guys and can keep them from cheating.
Dashan seems to know this. She says (emphasis added):
Western elites are not comfortable with their place in society and the responsibilities that come with it, and realize that there are deep structural problems with the old systems of coordination. But lacking the capacity for an orderly restructuring, or even a diagnosis of problems and needs, we dive deeper into a chaotic ideological mode of coordination that sweeps away the old structures.
When you live with this mindset, what you end up with is not an establishment where a woke upper class rallies and advocates for the rights of minorities, the poor, and underprivileged groups. What you have is a blind and self-righteous upper class that becomes structurally unable to take coordinated responsibility. You get stuck in an ideological mode of coordination, where no one can speak the truth to correct collective mistakes and overreaches without losing position.
This ideology is promulgated and advertised by universities, but it doesn’t start or stop at universities. All the fundraisers. All the corporate events. The Oscars. Let’s take down the Man. They say this in front of their PowerPoints. They clink champagne glasses. Let’s take down the Man! But there is no real spirit of revolution in these words. It is all in the language they understand—polite and clean, because it isn’t really real. It is a performative spectacle about their own morale and guilt.I've written before about comfortable, well-dressed people sitting in conference rooms and nodding enthusiastically while people about them discuss TRANSFORMATION AND DISRUPTION!!! It's not just about the federal budget. In education the problem is the unsustainability of expanding access while preserving some modicum of excellence. But denying access is simply not an option. So everyone tries to look for too-good-to-be-true solutions, or at least tries to look like they're looking for them, so that they can look like they are the side of righteousness. Because there's no politically feasible way to get off this train. So they're all eating this shit up like it's pita chips and humus from Trader Joe's.
And then a reality TV star with a Twitter account and more loyalty to Moscow than Main Street wins the Presidency and half the country freaks out while the other half jumps on the bandwagon. Because our elites don't know what to do. Yeah, he's a rich guy (sort of) and a businessman, but just about all of the business elite would have preferred a more competent rich guy to sign their tax cuts and appoint people who will deregulate. And the old-school elites, who could think long-term, would have preferred somebody with a bit more discipline.
The elites lack confidence because nobody is in charge, or at least nobody can coordinate the people who are collectively in charge. God help us, we're sort of a democracy.
1 comment:
This was a really interesting article. Thanks for linking to it.
I think the loss of confidence by the Harvard-Yale elite in their own standards is a real thing and explains a lot. I've long thought this. I think the decline of religion and of belief in objective and universal values has something to do with this.
Back in the Gilded Age following the Civil War, many people who considered themselves an elite by reason of education and family background were pushed aside by corporate plutocrats and political bosses. The old elite leveraged their moral authority to bring about the era of Progressive reform.
My impression of the campus rebels (which may be unfair, because I have no first-hand experience of this world) is that few, if any, of them constitute a threat to the corporate plutocrats and political bosses of today. They are tolerated because they fight symbolic battles against largely imaginary enemies, and because the adults have no internal standards they are willing to fight for.
You use the word "democracy." As I see it, the contradiction of the United States is that we are culturally a democracy and politically and economically an oligarchy.
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