A Polanyian Critique of Liberal Freedom
If we snap out of our liberal realist trance we’ll see liberal freedom for what it is: anti-political & anti-democratic.
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If we snap out of our liberal realist trance we’ll see liberal freedom for what it is: anti-political & anti-democratic.
Continue readingThe COVID-19 pandemic places the values of freedom and life into conflict. The spell of capitalist realism keeps us from exploring practical resolutions.
Continue readingIn the customer-centric era we’ve become a bunch of Karens. Unfortunately, Karen’s customer-centric politics is absolutely devastating for democracy.
Continue readingAmerican politics is a multi-billion dollar industry. Let’s examine how the election industry works to cut the electorate out of the political process.
Continue readingGoldilocks trespasses in the bears’ cottage. She eats their food, breaks a chair, and sleeps in one of their beds. The bears come home and find her, and Goldilocks runs off. The story doesn’t go anywhere, just like liberal centrist politics.
Continue readingThe agonistic democracy Rodney King, therefore, would instead be heard to utter an alternative lament, something like “Can we all just NOT get along?”
Continue readingPolitical liberalism finds fascism abhorrent but neoliberalism is a fascist generator. Welcome to progressive neoliberalism: not the anti-fascism you’re looking for.
Continue readingIt has also been a significant feature of neoliberal hegemony that the liberal wing of the dominant class has also been systematically misled–not about its subordination, but rather about its class dominance.
Continue readingWhere Kant writes that the only thing that is good without qualification is a good will, the GMC Sierra 1500 and its marketing department do not agree.
Continue readingAs a new report warning of the threat of global warming is released, I’m beginning to grow skeptical that Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand is going to save us from climate change-induced mass extinction.
Continue readingThe neoliberal left champions progressive positions on social and cultural issues, but only in a manner that treats criticism of existing economic arrangements like the third rail of politics. Viewed in this light the neoliberal left begins to look less like ‘the left’ and more like the market logic of neoliberal capitalism itself. I want to suggest that this is exactly how we ought to view it.
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