[iDC] What is Left? / What Does a Distributed Politics Look Like?
Abe Burmeister
abe at abstractdynamics.org
Thu Sep 20 01:26:55 UTC 2007
Hi Stephen,
Thanks for the lengthy and informative reply. Focusing upon the
atomism of the right is indeed a fruitful endeavor, but where things
get really interesting is not at the atomic level, nor at the
"whole", but somewhere in between. The philosophy of the does indeed
focus on atomism, and is import to their success, but their most
important unit of action is not atomic at all, but instead
*corporate*. Now when we start speaking about corporations and
incorporation it's very important make it clear that we are not just
talking about the 20-21st century for-profit corporation, but instead
a much larger class of institutions, that at the present just happens
to be dominated by one particular for-profit form. The corporation in
itself is neither a leftist nor right wing institution, but something
whose political ramifications are decided at least in part by the
rules and laws governing the actual act of incorporation. Most non-
profit organizations, from Greenpeace and Oxfam to the National Rifle
Association and RAND are also incorporated and while many try and
hide it are in fact corporations. Labor unions as well are often
incorporated and perhaps more pertinently to the audience on this
mailing list the second oldest form of corporation in the world
(after monasteries) is the university.
Now if one looks at the history of corporations (of which
surprisingly little has been written) something rather remarkable
happens around the 1830's in America. Until that point corporations
could be created only by very specific acts of governments. Each
corporation was granted very specific rights that were associated
with very specific areas and limitations. A corporation might for
instance be created with the explicit goal of creating a bridge over
the River Charles, for which they were granted the right to sell
bonds to raise funds and right to charge a toll on the bridge for a
limited period of time. There are few examples of corporations being
granted absurd powers, the British East India Company being the most
glaring, but even that psuedo-state was subject to periodic reviews
of and alterations to it's charter. What began to happen in the US in
the 1830's though is that states began to offer abstract articles of
incorporation that allowed nearly any group of people with access to
a lawyer to create corporations without any legislative oversight at
all, and with sole explicit purpose being the generation of profits
for the owners. It took some time for this early abstract corporation
form to evolve into the large for-profit corporations that so
dominate the economic landscape today, a process that occurred
largely in conjunction with the spread of railroads and the
evolutions of the organizations that run them.
One of the interesting things about the abstract for-profit
corporation is that it's rise coincides directly with the time in
which the old conservative structures of land based aristocracy began
to disintegrate. While Europe was busy eliminating, or at least
weakening the land based hierarchies, America was busy creating a new
highly codified hierarchical structures that were completely divorced
from the ground. One of the more curious things about this rapid
evolution of the for-profit corporate form is that it occurred behind
the backs of the classical economic theories that were evolving at
the same time. From Adam Smith through Marx and on till Alfred
Marshall economic theory focused upon individual entrepreneurs,
industrialists who remained in individual control of the factories
and business they built. That is to say economic theory on both the
left and right evolved through to critical forms without ever taking
into account a newly powerful form of organization that sits directly
in between the atomism of the individual and the massive whole of
"society."
What is interesting to me when I ask "what is left" is the
possibility that the "left" might in fact be able to find and or
create new forms of incorporation which allow for them to address the
large swarm of for-profit corporations out there on a level that is
neither atomistic nor in need of the whole to cooperate. There of
course are already a few forms in existence, unions, universities,
nonprofit corporations, coops and open source networks all function
on this level to various extents. But so far none of those forms has
ever proven to be able to scale up the levels in which for-profit
corporations are now operating. There is no promise for an answer
there of course, but well, I'm tired of waiting for the "whole" to
wake up and solve it's problems, and what the level of incorporation
offers is action without the whole, and that in itself offers hope.
cheers,
Abe
On Sep 18, 2007, at 11:36 AM, Stephen Downes wrote:
> Well OK.
>
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