re: “planned, centralized society”

2007-08-08

Richard Moore

Friends,

Below, Bill Blum raises some important questions, which I endeavor to 
respond to in a useful way. But first a few miscellaneous items...

First, our archiving software is temporarily malfunctioning. It is 
accessible, and is complete up until recently, but recent posts have 
not yet been archived. You can find the more recent postings on 
Google:
     http://groups.google.com/group/cyberjournal
     http://groups.google.com/group/newslog

Second, if you are using Google's gmail, I want to warn you about 
their spam filtering. They are very good about catching most spam, 
but they frequently classify good mail as spam as well. I've seen 
some of my long-time correspondents relegated to spam, even when 
earlier messages from them came through OK. So I recommend checking 
your spam folder regularly. (My incoming mail always routes through 
gmail, to get the benefit of their filtering).

Finally, as regards my West Coast visit in October, I've only heard 
from a few of you. I'll be travelling up and down the coast sometime 
during the visit, so if you'd like me to stop by, please let me know. 
I'm open to simply visiting on a personal basis, giving talks to 
groups, or whatever.  Also, on Sep 2, I'll be at the LAX airport from 
10am to 4pm, so if anyone lives near there we could have lunch and a 
chat.

ciao,
rkm

--------------------------------------------------------
From: •••@••.•••
Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2007 21:57:51 EDT
Subject: Re: dialog:11-21 July
To: •••@••.•••

            rkm> Sorry, but I cannot go along with the notion of a
             planned, centralized society.

Is it the terminology that bothers you?  Because Americans were 
raised to be dedicated anti-communists and anti-socialists, and to 
equate a planned society with the worst excesses of Stalinism?  Okay, 
forget the scary labels, let's describe it as people sitting down and 
thinking of what serious societal problems may present themselves, 
and what solutions may be available to solve those problems, and what 
institutions and forces in the society have the best access, 
experience, and assets to offer those solutions.  So, the idea is to 
prepare these institutions and forces to deal with the problems in a 
highly organized manner.  All this is usually called "planning" and 
if the organization stems from the government it can be called 
"centralized".  The alternative to the above is called either anarchy 
or free enterprise.

Bill Blum

-------

Hi Bill,

No, it's not the terminology. You bring up real differences in our 
perspectives.

Let's start with what we seem to agree on. I very much like this statement:
        "...people sitting down and thinking of what serious
         societal problems may present themselves, and what solutions
         may be available to solve those problems, and what
         institutions and forces in the society have the best access,
         experience, and assets to offer those solutions"

Planning, and by the people themselves: I couldn't agree more. 
Indeed, this is the central ideal of my book. I devote a whole 
chapter to exploring how people can most effectively sit down, 
identify problems, and find wise solutions to those problems.

But what context do we imagine this happening in? Is it today's 
society, reformed in some way? Or are we comparing our visions of a 
transformed society?

As regards reforming our current societies -- with political parties, 
elections, and centralized governments -- my thesis is that our 
shared vision of  'planning by the people' cannot be achieved in this 
context. This is basically what  my Chapter 1 is about. Two centuries 
of activist movements, in our various 'democracies', have failed to 
overcome rule by elites. I argue that the systemic nature of our 
political systems result in elite rule, and that this intention was 
behind the design of those systems. If we want to overcome elite 
rule, we need to think in terms of a decentralized society, a society 
where essential sovereignty is moved down to the local level. I'd be 
happy to debate these points with you if you like.

So my disagreement is not about planning, its about centralization. 
Not just centralized governments, but centralized institutions of all 
kinds, private or public. Centralization means hierarchy, and power 
within hierarchies is inevitably usurped by self-interested cliques.

The question then becomes whether or not a decentralized society is 
possible, whether it can be stable and viable, and whether it can be 
achieved. I believe the answer is 'yes' to these questions, and 
several of my chapters delve into these questions.

rkm

-- 

--------------------------------------------------------
Posting archives: http://cyberjournal.org/show_archives/
Escaping the Matrix website: http://escapingthematrix.org/
cyberjournal website: http://cyberjournal.org

Community Democracy Framework:
http://cyberjournal.org/DemocracyFramework.html

Moderator: •••@••.•••  (comments welcome)

Share: