Breaking Through Power: It's Easier Than We Think
By Ralph Nader
When I was a student at Princeton University I learned from
my anthropology studies that the concentration of power in the hands of the few
is common to all cultures, societies, nations, tribes, cities, towns, and
villages. Even where the thirst for self-governance and democracy is strong (as
was the case in New England towns before the American Revolution against King
George III) wealthy Tories were there too. In Central and Western Massachusetts,
the farmers used the term “the River Gods” to describe the rich merchants using
the Connecticut River as a profitable trading route. These days, most people
protesting for economic justice use the term “the One Percent” to describe the
ultra-small group of people who wield enormous influence over our society
today.
There is something about the differences in skill,
determination, lineage, avarice, and pure luck that stratifies most people from
the rulers who dominate them. In the political realm, the few become dominant
because they hoard wealth and are driven to exercise power over others. When a
small group of people rules a society the political system is considered an
oligarchy; when only money and wealth determine how a society is controlled, the
political system is a plutocracy.
From the standpoint of a democratic society, both oligarchy
and plutocracy are inherently unjust and corrupt.
Of course there are variations in the degrees of
authoritarianism and cruelty that each system exercises over the communities it
relies upon for workers and wealth. Scholars have resorted to using phrases
like “benign dictatorships” or “wise rulers” or “paternalistic hierarchies—” to
describe lighter touches by those few who impose their rule over the many. Thomas
Paine simply called them tyrannies. People, families, and communities can only
take so much abuse before they rise up to resist. The job of the rulers is
always to find that line and provide the lowest level of pay, security,
housing, consumer protection, healthcare, and political access for society so
that they can extract and hoard the greatest amount of wealth, power, and
immunity from justice for themselves. In many ways, the majority of Americans
live in a democracy of minimums, while the privileged few enjoy a plutocracy of
maximums.
In a plutocracy, commercialism dominates far beyond the
realm of economics and business; everything is for sale, and money is power.
But in an authentic democracy, there must be commercial-free zones where the
power of human rights, citizenship, community, equality, and justice are free
from the corrupting influence of money. Our elections and our governments
should be such commercial-free zones; our environment, air, and water should
never fall under the control of corporations or private owners. Children should
not be programmed by a huckstering economy where their vulnerable consciousness
becomes the target of relentless corporate marketing and advertising.
American history demonstrates that whenever commerce
dominates all aspects of national life, a host of ills and atrocities have not
just festered and spread, but become normal—enslavement, land grabs, war,
ethnic cleansing, serfdom, child labor, abusive working conditions, corrupt
political systems, environmental contamination, and immunity from the law for
the privileged few. History also shows that whenever there have been periods
when enough of the country organizes and resists, we see movements of people
and communities breaking through power. Progress is made. Rights are won.
Education and literacy increase. Oppression is diminished. It was in this
manner that people of conscience abolished the living nightmare imposed by the
laws and whips of white enslavers. The nation moved closer to promises of
“Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness” expressed in the Declaration of
Independence. We won more control over our work, our food, our land, our air,
and our water. Women secured the right to vote. Civil rights were elevated and
enforced. Public schools, improved environments, workplace collective
bargaining, and consumer protections did not spontaneously evolve; they were
won by people demanding them and breaking through power.
These moments of great progress are expressed in terms of
new legislation, regulations, and judicial decisions that directly benefit the
life, liberties, and pursuit of happiness of most Americans. From the abolition
of slavery to the introduction of seat belts, great social gains have been
achieved when people mobilize, organize, and resist the power of the few. The
problem is that these liberating periods of humanitarian and civilizational
progress are of shorter duration than the relentless commercial counterforces
that discourage and disrupt social movements and their networks of support. Some
commentators have used the bizarre term “justice fatigue” to describe the
pullback that often occurs when communities of resistance are faced with
increased surveillance, infiltration, harassment, and arrest. A more accurate
term is repression.
Concentrated power in the hands of the few really should
matter to you. It matters to you if you are denied fulltime gainful employment
or paid poverty wages and there are no unions to defend your interests. It
matters to you if you’re denied affordable health care. It matters to you if
you’re gouged by the drug industry and your medication is outrageously
expensive. It matters to you if it takes a long time to get to and from work
due to lack of good public transit or packed highways. It matters to you if you
and your children live in impoverished areas and have to breathe dirtier air
and drink polluted water and live in housing that is neglected by your
landlord. It matters to you if your children are receiving a substandard
education in understaffed schools where they are being taught to obey rather
than to question, think and imagine, especially in regards to the nature of
power.
If you’re a little better off, it matters to you when your
home is unfairly threatened with foreclosure. It matters to you when the nation
is economically destabilized due to Wall Street’s crimes, and your retirement
account evaporates overnight. It matters to you if you can’t pay off your large
student loans, or if you can’t get out from under crushing credit-card debt or
enormous medical bills due to being under-insured. It matters to you if you are
constantly worried about the security of your job, or the costly care of your
children and elderly parents.
“We live in a
beautiful country,” writes historian Howard Zinn. “But people who have no
respect for human life, freedom, or justice have taken it over. It is now up to
all of us to take it back.” To better
assess what it specifically takes to do just that, it is important to
understand how the people profiting from plutocratic forces strategically and
regularly dominate old and new circumstances with powerful controlling
processes.
Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, lawyer, and author. His
latest book is The Seventeen Solutions: Bold Ideas for Our American Future.
Other recent books include, The Seventeen Traditions: Lessons from an American
Childhood, Getting Steamed to Overcome Corporatism: Build It Together to Win,
and "Only The Super-Rich Can Save Us" (a novel).
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