Norman Finkelstein at
Palestinian Human Rights Week
University of Windsor
Wednesday, March 7th
Norman Finkelstein spoke to a standing room only crowd at the Ambassador Auditorium last night. He was a deceptively powerful speaker whose quiet intelligence shone more and more intensely as his argument developed. My aim here is not to give a complete report on its content, but rather to expand upon certain of its core principles in ways that I feel might be relevant for the Canadian left. These reflections might usefully be read in light of the questions I posed in my December 8th, 2011 post, “Open Questions.”
Finkelstein has recently turned his attention to the Indian struggle for independence, and in particular the political thought of Mahatma Ghandi, for ideas that can help bring about a just resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Finkelstein claims to have learned from Ghandi that the fundamental assumption of orthodox Leninism- that political passivity or conservatism springs from ignorance that only the vanguard party can overcome– is materially false. People are not ignorant of the structural problems that beset their worlds. No, people are not stupid, according to Ghandi, they are lazy. The problem of politics is thus not education and enlightenment, but overcoming inertia. The way to overcome inertia, argued Finkelstein, is to present the political public with a coherent agenda for immediately realizable solutions to a fundamental problem.
He proceeded to support this claim with what I regarded as an effective thought experiment. He asked the crowd to consider two movements that shared a critique of capitalism, articulated this critique in identical manifestos, but presented the public with different practical demands with regard to the specific problem of the suffering of homeless people in cold climates. The first manifesto concludes by asking people to donate spare coats to the homeless; the second manifesto asks the same people to donate a spare room. The second manifesto, Finkelstein argued, is the more moral, but the first the more political.
If people were willing to deeply reflect upon their duties to their fellow human beings, and they had a surplus room, they would feel obligated to offer that room to the homeless. The problem is, people do not fully reflect upon their duties to their fellow human beings, and even if they did, most are psychologically incapable of fulfilling this duty if it means giving up something that, while surplus, is also of essential importance: their privacy, their space. If we try to base politics on moral demands that most people are incapable of living, then we will be moral, but we will also not solve the problems that stimulate our moral consciousness.
The first manifesto makes demands that are less than a fully human morality would require, but it would also most likely generate a wide response. The problem of homelessness would not be solved, but the problem of the homeless freezing would be. The program of the first manifesto will not solve every injustice caused by capitalism, but it does mobilise people to effectively meet others’ real unmet needs for warm clothing. The point is not that a politics of charity is preferable to structural changes. The point, rather, is that serious political commitment must be commitment to action, action, to be succesful requires broad social movements, and broad social movements can be activated only around goals that people believe are achievable in a given social, political, economic, and cultural context. Adherents of the second manifesto could rightly object that the movement does less than is required to solve every structural injustice. The problem, however, is that this critique is academic, made from a position of political isolation, and thus incapable of bringing about the change it demands. It fails to provide people with either rooms or coats. It will leave the pressing material need unmet and the structural causes of need-deprivation unchanged, because it asks of people more than they are capable of giving. It will fail to build a political public, and it will remain an impassioned, but pratically useless , critique.
The first manifesto builds a political movement, argued Finkelstein, the second creates a cult. While his use of ‘cult’ might sound like an invidious slur against the far left, that is not how I interpreted it. I did not sense that he was being dismissive of radicality in politics, or implying that people who insist on a morally pure politics are dupes or brainwashed. Rather, I think that he meant by ‘cult’ a self-selecting group of people capable of great discipline and sacrifice, but who are incapable of reaching and motivating a broad social movement, because most people are not willing to impose that degree of discipline upon themselves. So the question he posed was: do you want to belong to a political movement that can make an immediate difference, or do you want to belong to a cult that has abstract plans for perfect solutions, but lacks– and will always lack– the power to bring them to effect?
I have belonged to a cult, in the non-pejorative sense explained above. I learned a great deal from truly thoughtful, caring, engaged people. I participated in a number of struggles, but never in a fully committed way, because these particular struggles were always for us instruments of building our own movement. But we never managed to grow, and, as I now think back on that time with Finkelstein’s argument in mind, I can see clearly why we did not. Most people wanted to belong to a political movement that could make a difference, not master the abstract intricacies of Marxist theory. I did master those intricacies, and today I am a full professor of philosophy who struggles constantly to motivate myself to act, because I am capable of providing elaborate theoretical critiques of any partial movement, so well did I learn my lessons.
Overcoming this inertia, not in my own case exclusively, but across the broad spectrum of Canadian citizens who are concerned about the environment, an economy that can provide meaningful jobs, a society that makes a place for its young to contribute, that has transcended the utter spiritual vacuity of capitalist consumerism, demands that a new left arise that is capable of figuirng out what the political public is willing to do right now to advance these demands. There are different movements addressing different aspects of each of these problems, and many left-wing intellectual like myself have tried to supply moral, political, and theoretical unity to them. But where is the practical program that links the abstract and the concrete in winning mass struggles?
I wish it were otherwise but I think it is clear that Finkelstein is correct. Most people with something to sacrifice are not willing– unless circumstances have become comprehensively catastrophic– to sacrifice it all for the sake of political activity. There are a few people who are capable of giving everything– all their intellectual and emotional energy, their time, their resources,– to the fight for the morally best world. But most are not, at least not right now. Yet, people are cold, and the problem is how to get them warm right now. A new left needs to begin with modest goals. Modest goals do not require the new left to be a creature of existing parties, which have no goals beyond power, or to take on board any illusions about the possibility of a just and democratic capitalism. Modesty means asking not “what is to be done?’ absolutely, but ‘what can be done?’ right now.
In a brilliant essay, one of the best on Marx that I have read, Andrew Collier argued that Marx is more kin to the traditions of British conservatism (think Edmund Burke, not Margaret Thatcher) than to British liberalism. He means that for Marx political values are not fauna of disembodied reason calculating private advantage, but flora of the soil of long traditions. Transformational politics can only succeed if it anchors itself in these traditions: “What he shares with conservatisim is his belief that starting from where we are rather than an idea of where we want to go, and asking what can be done, not for the good of people in general, but for the good of these people, with these tradions, these needs, these skills, these resources.” (Andrew Collier, “Marx and Conservatism,” Marx and Contemporary Philosophy, 2009, pp. 99-100) The real structure of Marx’s politics was thus not utopian, as both liberals and conservatives often accuse those politics of being, but, as I have argued elsewhere, ‘organic’– an on-going living development rooted in existing plateaus of achievement and oriented by realizable goals that demonstrably build up and out from solidly that which exists right now. If a new left is to be built, it has to start from an honest accounting, not only of where we are, but where we can realistically go as a first step.