When Change Is Not Enough: The Seven Steps To Revolution
By Sara Robinson
February 20th, 2008 - 6:01pm ET
"Those who make peaceful evolution impossible make violent revolution
inevitable."
— John F. Kennedy
There's one thing for sure: 2008 isn't anything like politics as usual.
The corporate media (with their unerring eye for the obvious point) is
fixated on the narrative that, for the first time ever, Americans will
likely end this year with either a woman or a black man headed for the White
House. Bloggers are telling stories from the front lines of primaries and
caucuses that look like something from the early 60s —
people lining up before dawn to vote in Manoa, Hawaii yesterday;
a
thousand black college students in Prairie View, Texas marching 10 miles
to cast their early votes in the face of a county that tried to
disenfranchise them. In recent months, we've also been gobstopped by the
sheer passion of the insurgent campaigns of both Barack Obama and Ron Paul,
both of whom brought millions of new voters into the conversation — and with
them, a sharp critique of the status quo and a new energy that's agitating
toward deep structural change.
There's something implacable, earnest, and righteously angry in the air. And
it raises all kinds of questions for burned-out Boomers and jaded Gen Xers
who've been ground down to the stump by the mostly losing battles of the
past 30 years. Can it be — at long last — that Americans have, simply, had
enough? Are we, finally, stepping out to take back our government — and with
it, control of our own future? Is this simply a shifting political season —
the kind we get every 20 to 30 years — or is there something deeper going on
here? Do we dare to raise our hopes that this time, we're going to finally
win a few? Just how ready is this country for big, serious, forward-looking
change?
Recently, I came across a pocket of sociological research that suggested a
tantalizing answer to these questions — and also that America may be far
more ready for far more change than anyone really believes is possible at
this moment. In fact, according to some sociologists, we've already lined up
all the preconditions that have historically set the stage for full-fledged
violent revolution.
It turns out that the energy of this moment is not about Hillary or Ron or
Barack. It's about who we are, and where we are, and what happens to
people's minds when they're left hanging just a little too far past the
moment when they're ready for transformative change.
Way back in 1962, Caltech sociologist James C. Davies published an article
in the American Sociological Review that summarized the conditions that
determine how and when modern political revolutions occur. Intriguingly,
Davies cited another scholar, Crane Brinton, who laid out seven "tentative
uniformities" that he argued were the common precursors that set the stage
for the Puritan, American, French, and Russian revolutions. As I read
Davies' argument, it struck me that the same seven stars Brinton named are
now precisely lined up at midheaven over America in 2008. Taken together,
it's a convergence that creates the perfect social, economic, and political
conditions for the biggest revolution since the shot heard 'round the world.
And even more interestingly: in every case, we got here as a direct result
of either intended or unintended consequences of the conservatives' war
against liberal government, and their attempt to take over our democracy and
replace it with a one-party plutocracy. It turns out that, historically,
liberal nations make very poor grounds for revolution — but deeply
conservative ones very reliably create the conditions that eventually make
violent overthrow necessary. And our own Republicans, it turns out, have
done a hell of a job.
Here are the seven criteria, along with the reasons why we're fulfilling
each of them now, and how conservative policies conspired to put us on the
road to possible revolution.
1. Soaring, Then Crashing
Davies notes that revolutions don't happen in traditional societies that are
stable and static — where people have their place, things are as they've
always been, and nobody expects any of that to change. Rather, modern
revolutions — particularly the progressive-minded ones in which people
emerge from the fray with greater rights and equality — happen in
economically advancing societies, always at the point where a long period of
rising living standards and high, hopeful expectations comes to a crashing
end, leaving the citizens in an ugly and disgruntled mood. As Davies put it:
"Revolutions are most likely to occur when a prolonged period of objective
economic and social development is followed by a short period of sharp
reversal. The all-important effect on the minds of people in a particular
society is to produce, during the former period, an expectation of continued
ability to satisfy needs — which continue to rise — and, during the latter,
a mental state of anxiety and frustration when manifest reality breaks away
from anticipated reality....
"Political stability and instability are ultimately dependent on a state of
mind, a mood, in society...it is the dissatisfied state of mind rather than
the tangible provision of 'adequate' or 'inadequate' supplies of food,
equality, or liberty which produces the revolution."
The American middle class was built on New Deal investments in education,
housing, infrastructure, and health care, which produced a very "prolonged
period of objective economic and social development." People were
optimistic; generations of growing prosperity raised their expectations that
their children would do even better. That era instilled in Americans exactly
the kind of hopeful belief in their own agency that primes them to become
likely revolutionaries in an era of decline.
And now, thanks to 28 years of conservative misrule, we are now at the point
where "manifest reality breaks away from anticipated reality;" and the
breach is creating political turbulence. The average American has seen his
or her standard of living contract by fits and starts since about 1972. This
fall-off that was relieved somewhat by the transition to two-earner
households and the economic sunshine of the Clinton years — but then
accelerated with the dot-com crash, followed by seven years of Bush's overt
hostility toward the lower 98 percent of Americans who aren't part of his
base. Working-class America is reeling from the mass exodus of manufacturing
jobs and the scourge of predatory lending; middle-class America is being
hollowed out by health-care bankruptcies, higher college costs, and a tax
load far heavier than that of the richest 2 percent. These people expected
to do better than their parents. Now, they're screwed every direction they
turn.
In the face of this reversal, Davies tells us, it's not at all surprising
that the national mood is turning ominous, from one end of the political
spectrum to the other. However, he warns us: this may not be just a passing
political storm. In other times and places, this kind of quick decline in a
prosperous nation has been a reliable sign of a full-on revolution brewing
just ahead.
2. They Call It A Class War
Marx called this one true, says Davies. Progressive modern democracies run
on mutual trust between classes and a shared vision of the common good that
binds widely disparate groups together. Now, we're also about to re-learn
the historical lesson that liberals like flat hierarchies, racial and
religious tolerance, and easy class mobility not because we're soft-headed
and soft-hearted — but because, unlike short-sighted conservatives, we
understand that tight social cohesion is our most reliable and powerful
bulwark against the kinds of revolutions that bring down great economies,
nations and cultures.
In all the historical examples Davies and Brinton cite, the stage for
revolution was set when the upper classes broke faith with society's other
groups, and began to openly prey on them in ways that threatened their very
future. Not surprisingly, the other groups soon united, took up arms, and
rebelled.
And here we are again: Conservative policies have opened the wealth gap to
Depression levels; put workers at the total mercy of their employers; and
deprived the working and middle classes of access to education, home
ownership, health care, capital, legal redress, and their expectations of a
better future for their kids. You can only get away with blaming this on
gays and Mexicans for so long before people get wise to the game. And as the
primaries are making clear: Americans are getting wise.
Our current plutocratic nobility may soon face the same stark choice its
English, French, and Russian predecessors did. They can keep their heads and
take proactive steps to close the gap between themselves and the common folk
(choosing evolution over revolution, as JFK counsels above). Or they can
keep insisting stubbornly on their elite prerogatives, until that gap widens
to the point where the revolution comes — and they will lose their heads
entirely.
Right now, all we're asking of our modern-day corporate courtiers is that
they accept a tax cut repeal on people making over $200K a year, raise the
minimum wage, give us decent health care and the right to unionize, and call
a halt to their ridiculous "death tax" boondoggle. In retrospect, their
historic forebears might have counseled them to take this deal: their
headless ghosts bear testimony to the idea that's it's better to give in and
lose a little skin early than dig in and lose your whole hide later on.
3. Deserted Intellectuals
Mere unrest among the working and middle classes, all by itself, isn't
enough. Revolutions require leaders — and those always come from the
professional and intellectual classes. In most times and places, these
groups (which also include military officers) usually enjoy comfortable ties
to the upper classes, and access to a certain level of power. But if those
connections become frayed and weak, and the disaffected intellectuals make
common cause with the lower classes, revolution becomes almost inevitable.
Davies notes that, compared to both the upper and lower classes, the members
of America's upper-middle class were relatively untouched by Great
Depression. Because of this, their allegiances to the existing social
structure largely remained intact; and he argues that their continued
engagement was probably the main factor that allowed America to avert an
all-out revolution in the 1930s.
But 2008 is a different story. Both the Boomers (now in their late 40s to
early 60s) and Generation X (now in their late 20s to late 40s) were raised
in an economically advancing nation that was rich with opportunity and
expectation. We spent our childhoods in what were then still the world's
best schools; and A students of every class worked hard to position
ourselves for what we (and our parents and teachers) expected would be very
successful adult careers. We had every reason to believe that, no matter
where we started, important leadership roles awaited us in education,
government, the media, business, research, and other institutions.
And yet, when we finally graduated and went to work, we found those
institutions being sold out from under us to a newly-emerging group of
social and economic conservatives who didn't share our broad vision of
common decency and the common good (which we'd inherited from the GI and
Silent adults who raised us and taught us); and who were often so corrupted
or so sociopathic that the working environments they created were simply
unendurable. If wealth, prestige, and power came at the price of our
principles, we often chose instead to take lower-paying work, live small,
and stay true to ourselves.
For too many of us, these thwarted expectations have been the driving arc of
our adult lives. But we've never lost the sense that it was a choice that
the America we grew up in would never have asked us to make. In Davies'
terms, we are "deserted intellectuals" — a class that is always at extremely
high risk for fomenting revolution whenever it appears in history.
Davies says that revolutions catalyze when these deserted intellectuals make
common cause with the lower classes. And much of the energy of this election
is coming right out of that emerging alliance. The same drive toward
corporatization that savaged our dreams also hammered at other class wedges
throughout American society, creating conditions that savaged the middle
class and ground the working class toward something resembling serfdom.
Between our galvanizing frustration with George Bush, our shared fury at the
war, and the new connections forged by bloggers and organizers, that
alliance has now congealed into the determinedly change-minded movements
we're seeing this election cycle.
4. Incompetent Government
As this blog has long argued, conservatives invariably govern badly because
they don't really believe that government should exist at all — except,
perhaps, as a way to funnel the peoples' tax money into the pockets of party
insiders. This conflicted (if not outright hostile) attitude toward
government can't possibly lead to any outcome other than bad management, bad
policy, and eventually such horrendously bad social and economic outcomes
that people are forced into the streets to hold their leaders to account.
It turns out there's never been a modern revolution that didn't start
against a backdrop of atrocious government malfeasance in the face of
precipitously declining fortunes. From George III's onerous taxes to Marie
Antoinette's "Let them eat cake," revolutions begin when stubborn
aristocrats heap fuel on the fire by blithely disregarding the falling
fortunes of their once-prosperous citizens. And America is getting
dangerously close to that point now. Between our corporate-owned Congress
and the spectacularly bad judgment of Bush's executive branch, there's never
been a government in American history more inept, corrupt, and criminally
negligent than this one — or more shockingly out of touch with what the
average American is going through. Just ask anyone from New Orleans — or
anyone who has a relative in the military.
Liberal democracy avoids this by building in a fail-safe: if the bastards
ignore us, we can always vote them out. But if we've learned anything over
the last eight years, it's that our votes don't always count — especially
not when conservatives are doing the counting. If this year's election
further confirms the growing conviction that change via the ballot box is
futile, we may find a large and disgruntled group of Americans looking to
restore government accountability by more direct means.
5. Gutless Wonders in the Ruling Class
Revolution becomes necessary when the ruling classes fail in their duty to
lead. Most of the major modern political revolutions occurred at moments
when the world was changing rapidly — and the country's leaders dealt with
it by dropping back into denial and clinging defiantly to the old,
profitable, and familiar status quo. New technologies, new ideas, and new
economic opportunities were emerging; and there came a time when ignoring
them was no longer an option. When the leaders failed to step forward boldly
to lead their people through the looming and necessary transformations, the
people rebelled.
We're hard up against some huge transformative changes now. Global warming
and overwhelming pollution are forcing us to reconsider the way we occupy
the world, altering our relationship to food, water, air, soil, energy, and
each other. The transition off carbon-based fuels and away from
non-recyclable goods is going to re-structure our entire economy. Computers
are still creating social and business transformations; biotech and nanotech
will only accelerate that. More and more people in the industrialized world
are feeling a spiritual void, and coming to believe that moving away from
consumerism and toward community may be an important step in recovering that
nameless thing they've lost.
And, in the teeth of this restless drift toward inevitable change, America
has been governed by a bunch of conservative dinosaurs who can't even bring
themselves to acknowledge that the 20th century is over. (Some of them, in
fact, are still trying to turn back the Enlightenment.) Liberal governments
manage this kind of shift by training and subsidizing scientists and
planners, funding research, and setting policies that help their nations
navigate these transitions with some grace. Conservative ones — being
conservative — will reflexively try to deny that change is occurring at all,
and then brutally suppress anyone with evidence to the contrary.
Which is why, every time our current crop of so-called leaders open their
mouths to propose a policy or Explain It All To Us, it's embarrassingly
obvious that they don't have the vision, the intelligence, or the courage to
face the future that everyone can clearly see bearing down on us, whether
we're ready or not. Their persistent cluelessness infuriates us — and
terrifies us. It's all too clear that these people are a waste of our tax
money: they will never take us where we need to go. Much of the energy we're
seeing in this year's election is due to the fact that a majority of
Americans have figured out that our government is leaving us hung out here,
completely on our own, to manage huge and inevitable changes with no support
or guidance whatsoever.
Historically, this same seething fury at incompetent, unimaginative,
cowardly leaders — and the dawning realization that our survival depends on
seizing the lead for ourselves — has been the spark that's ignited many a
violent uprising.
6. Fiscal Irresponsibility
As we've seen, revolutions follow in the wake of national economic
reversals. Almost always, these reversals occur when inept and corrupt
governments mismanage the national economy to the point of indebtedness,
bankruptcy, and currency collapse.
There's a growing consensus on both the left and right that America is now
heading into the biggest financial contraction since the Great Depression.
And it's one that liberal critics have seen coming for years, as
conservatives systematically dismantled the economic foundations of the
entire country. Good-paying jobs went offshore. Domestic investments in
infrastructure and education were diverted to the war machine. Government
oversight of banks and securities was blinded. Vast sections of the economy
were sold off to the Saudis for oil, or to the Chinese for cheap consumer
goods and money to finance tax cuts for the wealthy.
This is no way to run an economy, unless you're a borrow-and-spend
conservative determined to starve the government beast to the point where
you can, as Grover Norquist proposed, drag it into the bathtub and drown it
entirely. The current recession is the bill come due for 28 years of
Republican financial malfeasance. It's also another way in which
conservatives themselves have unwittingly set up the historical
preconditions for revolution.
7. Inept and Inconsistent Use of Force
The final criterion for revolution is this: The government no longer
exercises force in a way that people find fair or consistent. And this can
happen in all kinds of ways.
Domestically, there's uneven sentencing, where some people get the maximum
and others get cut loose without penalty — and neither outcome has any
connection to the actual circumstances of the crime (though it often
correlates all too closely with race, class, and the ability to afford a
good lawyer). Unchecked police brutality (tasers, for example) that hardens
public perception against the constabulary. Unwarranted police surveillance
and legal harassment of law-abiding citizens going about their business.
Different kinds of law enforcement for different neighborhoods. The use of
government force to silence critics. And let's not forget the
unconstitutional restriction of free speech and free assembly rights.
Abroad, there's the misuse of military force, which forces the country to
pour its blood and treasure into misadventures that offer no clear advantage
for the nation. These misadventures not only reduce the country's
international prestige and contribute to economic declines; they often
create a class of displaced soldiers who return home with both the skills
and the motivation to turn political unrest into a full-fledged shooting
war.
This kind of capricious, irrational ineptitude in deploying government force
leads to public contempt for the power of the state, and leads the governed
to withdraw their consent. And, eventually, it also raises people's
determination to stand together to oppose state power. That growing
solidarity and fearlessness — along with the resigned knowledge that
equal-opportunity goons will brutalize loyalists and rebels alike, so you
might as well be a dead lion rather than a live lamb — is the final factor
that catalyzes ordinary citizens into ready and willing revolutionaries.
* * *
"A revolutionary state of mind requires the continued, even habitual but
dynamic expectation of greater opportunity to satisfy basic needs...but the
necessary additional ingredient is a persistent, unrelenting threat to the
satisfaction of those needs: not a threat which actually returns people to a
state of sheer survival but which put them in the mental state where they
believe they will not be able to satisfy one or more basic needs....The
crucial factor is the vague or specific fear that ground gained over a long
period of time will be quickly lost... [This fear] generates when the
existing government suppresses or is blamed for suppressing such
opportunity."
When Davies wrote that paragraph in 1962, he probably couldn't have imagined
how closely it would describe America in 2008. Thirty years of Republican
corporatist government have failed us in ways that are not just inept or
corrupt, but also have brought us to the same dangerous brink where so many
other empires have erupted into violent revolution. The ground we have
gained steadily over the course of the entire 20th Century is eroding under
our feet. Movement conservatism has destroyed our economic base, declared
open war on the middle and working classes, thwarted the aspirations of the
intellectual and professional elites, dismantled the basic processes and
functions of democracy, failed to prepare us for the future, overseen the
collapse of our economy, and misused police and military force so
inconsistently that Americans are losing respect for government.
It's not always the case that revolution inevitably emerges wherever these
seven conditions occur together, just as not everybody infected with a virus
gets sick. But over the past 350 years, almost every major revolution in a
modern industrialized country has been preceded by this pattern of seven
preconditions. It's fair to say that all those who get sick start out by
being exposed to this virus.
Hillary Clinton is failing because this is a revolutionary moment — and she,
regrettably, has the misfortune to be too closely identified with the
mounting failures of the past that we're now seeking to move beyond. On the
other hand, Ron Paul's otherwise inexplicable success has been built on his
pointed and very specific critique of the kinds of government leadership
failures I've described.
And Barack Obama is walking away with the moment because he talks of "hope"
— which, as Davies makes clear, is the very first thing any would-be
revolutionary needs. And then he talks of "change," which many of his
followers are clearly hearing as a soft word for "revolution." And then he
describes — not in too much detail — a different future, and what it means
to be a transformative president, and in doing so answers our deep
frustration at 30 years of leaders who faced the looming future by turning
their heads instead of facing it.
Will he deliver on this promise of change? That remains to be seen. But the
success of his presidency, if there is to be one, will likely be measured on
how well his policies confront and deal with these seven criteria for
revolution. If those preconditions are all still in place in 2012, the fury
will have had another four years to rise. And at that point, if history
rhymes, mere talk of hope and change will no longer be enough.