The Port Huron statement was issued by the Students for a Democratic Society during their national convention meeting in Port Huron, Michigan, June 11-15, 1962. This manifesto laid down the group's principles.
INTRODUCTION: AGENDA FOR A GENERATION
We are people of this generation, bred in at least modest comfort,
housed now in universities, looking uncomfortably to the world we
inherit.
When we were kids the United States was the wealthiest and strongest
country in the world: the only one with the atom bomb, the least
scarred by modern war, an initiator of the United Nations that we
thought would distribute Western influence throughout the world.
Freedom and equality for each individual, government of, by, and for the
people -- these American values we found good, principles by which we
could live as men. Many of us began maturing in complacency.
As we grew, however, our comfort was penetrated by events too troubling
to dismiss. First, the permeating and victimizing fact of human
degradation, symbolized by the Southern struggle against racial bigotry,
compelled most of us from silence to activism. Second, the enclosing
fact of the Cold War, symbolized by the presence of the Bomb, brought
awareness that we ourselves, and our friends, and millions of abstract
"others" we knew more directly because of our common peril, might die at
any time. We might deliberately ignore, or avoid, or fail to feel all
other human problems, but not these two, for these were too immediate
and crushing in their impact, too challenging in the demand that we as
individuals take the responsibility for encounter and resolution.
While these and other problems either directly oppressed us or rankled
our consciences and became our own subjective concerns, we began to see
complicated and disturbing paradoxes in our surrounding America. The
declaration "all men are created equal . . . rang hollow before the
facts of Negro life in the South and the big cities of the North. The
proclaimed peaceful intentions of the United States contradicted its
economic and military investments in the Cold War status quo.
We witnessed, and continue to witness, other paradoxes. With nuclear
energy whole cities can easily be powered, yet the dominant nationstates
seem more likely to unleash destruction greater than that
incurred in all wars of human history. Although our own technology is
destroying old and creating new forms of social organization, men still
tolerate meaningless work and idleness. While two-thirds of mankind
suffers undernourishment, our own upper classes revel amidst superfluous
abundance. Although world population is expected to double in forty
years, the nations still tolerate anarchy as a major principle of
international conduct and uncontrolled exploitation governs the sapping
of the earth's physical resources. Although mankind desperately needs
revolutionary leadership, America rests in national stalemate, its goals
ambiguous and tradition-bound instead of informed and clear, its
democratic system apathetic and manipulated rather than "of, by, and for
the people."
Not only did tarnish appear on our image of American virtue, not only
did disillusion occur when the hypocrisy of American ideals was
discovered, but we began to sense that what we had originally seen as
the American Golden Age was actually the decline of an era. The
worldwide outbreak of revolution against colonialism and imperialism,
the entrenchment of totalitarian states, the menace of war,
overpopulation, international disorder, supertechnology -- these trends
were testing the tenacity of our own commitment to democracy and freedom
and our abilities to visualize their application to a world in upheaval.
Our work is guided by the sense that we may be the last generation in
the experiment with living. But we are a minority -- the vast majority
of our people regard the temporary equilibriums of our society and world
as eternally-functional parts. In this is perhaps the outstanding
paradox: we ourselves are imbued with urgency, yet the message of our
society is that there is no viable alternative to the present. Beneath
the reassuring tones of the politicians, beneath the common opinion that
America will "muddle through", beneath the stagnation of those who have
closed their minds to the future, is the pervading feeling that there
simply are no alternatives, that our times have witnessed the exhaustion
not only of Utopias, but of any new departures as well. Feeling the
press of complexity upon the emptiness of life, people are fearful of
the thought that at any moment things might thrust out of control. They
fear change itself, since change might smash whatever invisible
framework seems to hold back chaos for them now. For most Americans,
all crusades are suspect, threatening. The fact that each individual
sees apathy in his fellows perpetuates the common reluctance to organize
for change. The dominant institutions are complex enough to blunt the
minds of their potential critics, and entrenched enough to swiftly
dissipate or entirely repel the energies of protest and reform, thus
limiting human expectancies. Then, too, we are a materially improved
society, and by our own improvements we seem to have weakened the case
for further change.
Some would have us believe that Americans feel contentment amidst
prosperity -- but might it not better be called a glaze above deeply felt
anxieties about their role in the new world? And if these
anxieties produce a developed indifference to human affairs, do they not
as well produce a yearning to believe there is an alternative to the
present, that something can be done to change circumstances in the
school, the workplaces, the bureaucracies, the government? It is to
this latter yearning, at once the spark and engine of change, that we
direct our present appeal. The search for truly democratic alternatives
to the present, and a commitment to social experimentation with them, is
a worthy and fulfilling human enterprise, one which moves us and, we
hope, others today. On such a basis do we offer this document of our
convictions and analysis: as an effort in understanding and changing
the conditions of humanity in the late twentieth century, an effort
rooted in the ancient, still unfulfilled conception of man attaining
determining influence over his circumstances of life.
Values
Making values explicit -- an initial task in establishing alternatives -
- is an activity that has been devalued and corrupted. The conventional
moral terms of the age, the politician moralities -- "free world",
"people's democracies" -- reflect realities poorly, if at all, and seem
to function more as ruling myths than as descriptive principles. But
neither has our experience in the universities brought as moral
enlightenment. Our professors and administrators sacrifice controversy
to public relations; their curriculums change more slowly than the
living events of the world; their skills and silence are purchased by
investors in the arms race; passion is called unscholastic. The
questions we might want raised -- what is really important? can we live
in a different and better way? if we wanted to change society, how
would we do it? -- are not thought to be questions of a "fruitful,
empirical nature", and thus are brushed aside.
Unlike youth in other countries we are used to moral leadership being
exercised and moral dimensions being clarified by our elders. But
today, for us, not even the liberal and socialist preachments of the
past seem adequate to the forms of the present. Consider the old
slogans; Capitalism Cannot Reform Itself, United Front Against Fascism,
General Strike, All Out on May Day. Or, more recently, No Cooperation
with Commies and Fellow Travellers, Ideologies Are Exhausted,
Bipartisanship, No Utopias. These are incomplete, and there are few new
prophets. It has been said that our liberal and socialist predecessors
were plagued by vision without program, while our own generation is
plagued by program without vision. All around us there is astute grasp
of method, technique -- the committee, the ad hoc group, the lobbyist,
that hard and soft sell, the make, the projected image -- but, if
pressed critically, such expertise is incompetent to explain its
implicit ideals. It is highly fashionable to identify oneself by old
categories, or by naming a respected political figure, or by explaining
"how we would vote" on various issues.
Theoretic chaos has replaced the idealistic thinking of old -- and,
unable to reconstitute theoretic order, men have condemned idealism
itself. Doubt has replaced hopefulness -- and men act out a defeatism
that is labeled realistic. The decline of utopia and hope is in fact
one of the defining features of social life today. The reasons are
various: the dreams of the older left were perverted by Stalinism and
never recreated; the congressional stalemate makes men narrow their view
of the possible; the specialization of human activity leaves little room
for sweeping thought; the horrors of the twentieth century, symbolized
in the gas-ovens and concentration camps and atom bombs, have blasted
hopefulness. To be idealistic is to be considered apocalyptic, deluded.
To have no serious aspirations, on the contrary, is to be "toughminded".
In suggesting social goals and values, therefore, we are aware of
entering a sphere of some disrepute. Perhaps matured by the past, we
have no sure formulas, no closed theories -- but that does not mean
values are beyond discussion and tentative determination. A first task
of any social movement is to convenience people that the search for
orienting theories and the creation of human values is complex but
worthwhile. We are aware that to avoid platitudes we must analyze the
concrete conditions of social order. But to direct such an analysis we
must use the guideposts of basic principles. Our own social values
involve conceptions of human beings, human relationships, and social
systems.
We regard men as infinitely precious and possessed of unfulfilled
capacities for reason, freedom, and love. In affirming these principles
we are aware of countering perhaps the dominant conceptions of man in
the twentieth century: that he is a thing to be manipulated, and that
he is inherently incapable of directing his own affairs. We oppose the
depersonalization that reduces human beings to the status of things --
if anything, the brutalities of the twentieth century teach that means
and ends are intimately related, that vague appeals to "posterity"
cannot justify the mutilations of the present. We oppose, too, the
doctrine of human incompetence because it rests essentially on the
modern fact that men have been "competently" manipulated into
incompetence -- we see little reason why men cannot meet with increasing
skill the complexities and responsibilities of their situation, if
society is organized not for minority, but for majority, participation
in decision-making.
Men have unrealized potential for self-cultivation, self-direction,
self-understanding, and creativity. It is this potential that we regard
as crucial and to which we appeal, not to the human potentiality for
violence, unreason, and submission to authority. The goal of man and
society should be human independence: a concern not with image of
popularity but with finding a meaning in life that is personally
authentic: a quality of mind not compulsively driven by a sense of
powerlessness, nor one which unthinkingly adopts status values, nor one
which represses all threats to its habits, but one which has full,
spontaneous access to present and past experiences, one which easily
unites the fragmented parts of personal history, one which openly faces
problems which are troubling and unresolved: one with an intuitive
awareness of possibilities, an active sense of curiosity, an ability and
willingness to learn.
This kind of independence does not mean egoistic individualism -- the
object is not to have one's way so much as it is to have a way that is
one's own. Nor do we deify man -- we merely have faith in his
potential.
Human relationships should involve fraternity and honesty. Human
interdependence is contemporary fact; human brotherhood must be willed
however, as a condition of future survival and as the most appropriate
form of social relations. Personal links between man and man are
needed, especially to go beyond the partial and fragmentary bonds of
function that bind men only as worker to worker, employer to employee,
teacher to student, American to Russian.
Loneliness, estrangement, isolation describe the vast distance between
man and man today. These dominant tendencies cannot be overcome by
better personnel management, nor by improved gadgets, but only when a
love of man overcomes the idolatrous worship of things by man.
As the individualism we affirm is not egoism, the selflessness we affirm
is not self-elimination. On the contrary, we believe in generosity of a
kind that imprints one's unique individual qualities in the relation to
other men, and to all human activity. Further, to dislike isolation is
not to favor the abolition of privacy; the latter differs from isolation
in that it occurs or is abolished according to individual will.
Finally, we would replace power and personal uniqueness rooted in
possession, privilege, or circumstance by power and uniqueness rooted in
love, reflectiveness, reason, and creativity.
As a social system we seek the establishment of a democracy of
individual participation, governed by two central aims: that the
individual share in those social decisions determining the quality and
direction of his life; that society be organized to encourage
independence in men and provide the media for their common
participation.
In a participatory democracy, the political life would be based in
several root principles:
- that decision-making of basic social consequence be carried on by
public groupings;
- that politics be seen positively, as the art of collectively
creating an acceptable pattern of social relations;
- that politics has the function of bringing people out of isolation
and into community, thus being a necessary, though not sufficient, means
of finding meaning in personal life;
- that the political order should serve to clarify problems in a way
instrumental to their solution; it should provide outlets for the
expression of personal grievance and aspiration; opposing views should
be organized so as to illuminate choices and facilities the attainment
of goals; channels should be commonly available to related men to
knowledge and to power so that private problems -- from bad recreation
facilities to personal alienation -- are formulated as general issues.
The economic sphere would have as its basis the principles:
- that work should involve incentives worthier than money or survival.
It should be educative, not stultifying; creative, not mechanical; selfdirect,
not manipulated, encouraging independence; a respect for others,
a sense of dignity and a willingness to accept social responsibility,
since it is this experience that has crucial influence on habits,
perceptions and individual ethics;
- that the economic experience is so personally decisive that the
individual must share in its full determination;
- that the economy itself is of such social importance that its major
resources and means of production should be open to democratic
participation and subject to democratic social regulation.
Like the political and economic ones, major social institutions --
cultural, education, rehabilitative, and others -- should be generally
organized with the well-being and dignity of man as the essential
measure of success.
In social change or interchange, we find violence to be abhorrent
because it requires generally the transformation of the target, be it a
human being or a community of people, into a depersonalized object of
hate. It is imperative that the means of violence be abolished and the
institutions -- local, national, international -- that encourage
nonviolence as a condition of conflict be developed.
These are our central values, in skeletal form. It remains vital to
understand their denial or attainment in the context of the modern
world.
The Students
In the last few years, thousands of American students demonstrated that
they at least felt the urgency of the times. They moved actively and
directly against racial injustices, the threat of war, violations of
individual rights of conscience and, less frequently, against economic
manipulation. They succeeded in restoring a small measure of
controversy to the campuses after the stillness of the McCarthy period.
They succeeded, too, in gaining some concessions from the people and
institutions they opposed, especially in the fight against racial
bigotry.
The significance of these scattered movements lies not in their success
or failure in gaining objectives -- at least not yet. Nor does the
significance lie in the intellectual "competence" or "maturity" of the
students involved -- as some pedantic elders allege. The significance
is in the fact the students are breaking the crust of apathy and
overcoming the inner alienation that remain the defining characteristics
of American college life.
If student movements for change are rarities still on the campus scene,
what is commonplace there? The real campus, the familiar campus, is a
place of private people, engaged in their notorious "inner emigration."
It is a place of commitment to business-as-usual, getting ahead, playing
it cool. It is a place of mass affirmation of the Twist, but mass
reluctance toward the controversial public stance. Rules are accepted
as "inevitable", bureaucracy as "just circumstances", irrelevance as
"scholarship", selflessness as "martyrdom", politics as "just another
way to make people, and an unprofitable one, too."
Almost no students value activity as a citizen. Passive in public, they
are hardly more idealistic in arranging their private lives: Gallup
concludes they will settle for "low success, and won't risk high
failure." There is not much willingness to take risks (not even in
business), no setting of dangerous goals, no real conception of personal
identity except one manufactured in the image of others, no real urge
for personal fulfillment except to be almost as successful as the very
successful people. Attention is being paid to social status (the
quality of shirt collars, meeting people, getting wives or husbands,
making solid contacts for later on); much too, is paid to academic
status (grades, honors, the med school rat-race). But neglected
generally is real intellectual status, the personal cultivation of the
mind.
"Students don't even give a damn about the apathy," one has said.
Apathy toward apathy begets a privately-constructed universe, a place of
systematic study schedules, two nights each week for beer, a girl or
two, and early marriage; a framework infused with personality, warmth,
and under control, no matter how unsatisfying otherwise.
Under these conditions university life loses all relevance to some.
Four hundred thousand of our classmates leave college every year.
But apathy is not simply an attitude; it is a product of social
institutions, and of the structure and organization of higher education
itself. The extracurricular life is ordered according to in loco
parentis theory, which ratifies the Administration as the moral guardian
of the young. The accompanying "let's pretend" theory of student
extracurricular affairs validates student government as a training
center for those who want to spend their lives in political pretense,
and discourages initiative from more articulate, honest, and sensitive
students. The bounds and style of controversy are delimited before
controversy begins. The university "prepares" the student for
"citizenship" through perpetual rehearsals and, usually, through
emasculation of what creative spirit there is in the individual.
The academic life contains reinforcing counterparts to the way in which
extracurricular life is organized. The academic world is founded in a
teacher-student relation analogous to the parent-child relation which
characterizes in loco parentis. Further, academia includes a radical
separation of student from the material of study. That which is
studied, the social reality, is "objectified" to sterility, dividing the
student from life -- just as he is restrained in active involvement by
the deans controlling student government. The specialization of
function and knowledge, admittedly necessary to our complex
technological and social structure, has produced and exaggerated
compartmentalization of study and understanding. This has contributed
to: an overly parochial view, by faculty, of the role of its research
and scholarship; a discontinuous and truncated understanding, by
students, of the surrounding social order; a loss of personal
attachment, by nearly all, to the worth of study as a humanistic
enterprise.
There is, finally, the cumbersome academic bureaucracy extending
throughout the academic as well as extracurricular structures,
contributing to the sense of outer complexity and inner powerlessness
that transforms so many students from honest searching to ratification
of convention and, worse, to a numbness of present and future
catastrophes. The size and financing systems of the university enhance
the permanent trusteeship of the administrative bureaucracy, their power
leading to a shift to the value standards of business and administrative
mentality within the university. Huge foundations and other private
financial interests shape under-financed colleges and universities, not
only making them more commercial, but less disposed to diagnose society
critically, less open to dissent. Many social and physical scientists,
neglecting the liberating heritage of higher learning, develop "human
relations" or "morale-producing" techniques for the corporate economy,
while others exercise their intellectual skills to accelerate the arms
race.
Tragically, the university could serve as a significant source of social
criticism and an initiator of new modes and molders of attitudes. But
the actual intellectual effect of the college experience is hardly
distinguishable from that of any other communications channel -- say, a
television set -- passing on the stock truths of the day. Students
leave college somewhat more "tolerant" than when they arrived, but
basically unchallenged in their values and political orientations. With
administrators ordering the institutions, and faculty the curriculum,
the student learns by his isolation to accept elite rule within the
university, which prepares him to accept later forms of minority
control. The real function of the educational system -- as opposed to
its more rhetorical function of "searching for truth" -- is to impart
the key information and styles that will help the student get by,
modestly but comfortably, in the big society beyond.
The Society Beyond
Look beyond the campus, to America itself. That student life is more
intellectual, and perhaps more comfortable, does not obscure the fact
that the fundamental qualities of life on the campus reflect the habits
of society at large. The fraternity president is seen at the junior
manager levels; the sorority queen has gone to Grosse Pointe: the
serious poet burns for a place, any place, or work; the once-serious and
never serious poets work at the advertising agencies. The desperation
of people threatened by forces about which they know little and of which
they can say less; the cheerful emptiness of people "giving up" all hope
of changing things; the faceless ones polled by Gallup who listed
"international affairs" fourteenth on their list of "problems" but who
also expected thermonuclear war in the next few years: in these and
other forms, Americans are in withdrawal from public life, from any
collective effort at directing their own affairs.
Some regard this national doldrums as a sign of healthy approval of the
established order -- but is it approval by consent or manipulated
acquiescence? Others declare that the people are withdrawn because
compelling issues are fast disappearing -- perhaps there are fewer
breadlines in America, but is Jim Crow gone, is there enough work and
work more fulfilling, is world war a diminishing threat, and what of the
revolutionary new peoples? Still others think the national quietude is
a necessary consequence of the need for elites to resolve complex and
specialized problems of modern industrial society -- but, then, why
should business elites help decide foreign policy, and who controls the
elites anyway, and are they solving mankind's problems? Others,
finally, shrug knowingly and announce that full democracy never worked
anywhere in the past -- but why lump qualitatively different
civilizations together, and how can a social order work well if its best
thinkers are skeptics, and is man really doomed forever to the
domination of today?
There are no convincing apologies for the contemporary malaise. While
the world tumbles toward the final war, while men in other nations are
trying desperately to alter events, while the very future qua future is
uncertain -- America is without community, impulse, without the inner
momentum necessary for an age when societies cannot successfully
perpetuate themselves by their military weapons, when democracy must be
viable because of its quality of life, not its quantity of rockets.
The apathy here is, first subjective -- the felt powerlessness of
ordinary people, the resignation before the enormity of events. But
subjective apathy is encouraged by the objective American situation --
the actual structural separation of people from power, from relevant
knowledge, from pinnacles of decision-making. Just as the university
influences the student way of life, so do major social institutions
create the circumstances in which the isolated citizen will try
hopelessly to understand his world and himself.
The very isolation of the individual -- from power and community and
ability to aspire -- means the rise of a democracy without publics.
With the great mass of people structurally remote and psychologically
hesitant with respect to democratic institutions, those institutions
themselves attenuate and become, in the fashion of the vicious circle,
progressively less accessible to those few who aspire to serious
participation in social affairs. The vital democratic connection
between community and leadership, between the mass and the several
elites, has been so wrenched and perverted that disastrous policies go
unchallenged time and again.
Politics without Publics
The American political system is not the democratic model of which its
glorifiers speak. In actuality it frustrates democracy by confusing the
individual citizen, paralyzing policy discussion, and consolidating the
irresponsible power of military and business interests.
A crucial feature of the political apparatus in America is that greater
differences are harbored within each major party than the differences
existing between them. Instead of two parties presenting distinctive
and significant differences of approach, what dominates the system if a
natural interlocking of Democrats from Southern states with the more
conservative elements of the Republican party. This arrangement of
forces is blessed by the seniority system of Congress which guarantees
congressional committee domination by conservatives -- ten of 17
committees in the Senate and 13 of 21 in House of Representatives are
chaired currently by Dixiecrats.
The party overlap, however, is not the only structural antagonist of
democracy in politics. First, the localized nature of the party system
does not encourage discussion of national and international issues:
thus problems are not raised by and for people, and political
representatives usually are unfettered from any responsibilities to the
general public except those regarding parochial matters. Second, whole
constituencies are divested of the full political power they might have:
many Negroes in the South are prevented from voting, migrant workers are
disenfranchised by various residence requirements, some urban and
suburban dwellers are victimized by gerrymandering, and poor people are
too often without the power to obtain political representation. Third,
the focus of political attention is significantly distorted by the
enormous lobby force, composed predominantly of business interests,
spending hundreds of millions each year in an attempt to conform facts
about productivity, agriculture, defense, and social services, to the
wants of private economic groupings.
What emerges from the party contradictions and insulation of privatelyheld
power is the organized political stalemate: calcification
dominates flexibility as the principle of parliamentary organization,
frustration is the expectancy of legislators intending liberal reform,
and Congress becomes less and less central to national decision-making,
especially in the area of foreign policy. In this context, confusion
and blurring is built into the formulation of issues, long-range
priorities are not discussed in the rational manner needed for policymaking,
the politics of personality and "image" become a more important
mechanism than the construction of issues in a way that affords each
voter a challenging and real option. The American voter is buffeted
from all directions by pseudo-problems, by the structurally-initiated
sense that nothing political is subject to human mastery. Worried by
his mundane problems which never get solved, but constrained by the
common belief that politics is an agonizingly slow accommodation of
views, he quits all pretense of bothering.
A most alarming fact is that few, if any, politicians are calling for
changes in these conditions. Only a handful even are calling on the
President to "live up to" platform pledges; no one is demanding
structural changes, such as the shuttling of Southern Democrats out of
the Democratic Party. Rather than protesting the state of politics,
most politicians are reinforcing and aggravating that state. While in
practice they rig public opinion to suit their own interests, in word
and ritual they enshrine "the sovereign public" and call for more and
more letters. Their speeches and campaign actions are banal, based on a
degrading conception of what people want to hear. They respond not to
dialogue, but to pressure: and knowing this, the ordinary citizen sees
even greater inclination to shun the political sphere. The politicians
is usually a trumpeter to "citizenship" and "service to the nation", but
since he is unwilling to seriously rearrange power relationships, his
trumpetings only increase apathy by creating no outlets. Much of the
time the call to "service" is justified not in idealistic terms, but in
the crasser terms of "defending the free world from communism" -- thus
making future idealistic impulses harder to justify in anything but Cold
War terms.
In such a setting of status quo politics, where most if not all
government activity is rationalized in Cold War anti-communist terms, it
is somewhat natural that discontented, super-patriotic groups would
emerge through political channels and explain their ultra-conservatism
as the best means of Victory over Communism. They have become a
politically influential force within the Republican Party, at a national
level through Senator Goldwater, and at a local level through their
important social and economic roles. Their political views are defined
generally as the opposite of the supposed views of communists: complete
individual freedom in the economic sphere, non-participation by the
government in the machinery of production. But actually "anticommunism"
becomes an umbrella by which to protest liberalism,
internationalism, welfarism, the active civil rights and labor
movements. It is to the disgrace of the United States that such a
movement should become a prominent kind of public participation in the
modern world -- but, ironically, it is somewhat to the interests of the
United States that such a movement should be a public constituency
pointed toward realignment of the political parties, demanding a
conservative Republican Party in the South and an exclusion of the
"leftist" elements of the national GOP.
The Economy
American capitalism today advertises itself as the Welfare State. Many
of us comfortably expect pensions, medical care, unemployment
compensation, and other social services in our lifetimes. Even with
one-fourth of our productive capacity unused, the majority of Americans
are living in relative comfort -- although their nagging incentive to
"keep up" makes them continually dissatisfied with their possessions.
In many places, unrestrained bosses, uncontrolled machines, and
sweatshop conditions have been reformed or abolished and suffering
tremendously relieved. But in spite of the benign yet obscuring effects
of the New Deal reforms and the reassuring phrases of government
economists and politicians, the paradoxes and myths of the economy are
sufficient to irritate our complacency and reveal to us some essential
causes of the American malaise.
We live amidst a national celebration of economic prosperity while
poverty and deprivation remain an unbreakable way of life for millions
in the "affluent society", including many of our own generation. We
hear glib reference to the "welfare state", "free enterprise", and
"shareholder's democracy" while military defense is the main item of
"public" spending and obvious oligopoly and other forms of minority rule
defy real individual initiative or popular control. Work, too, is often
unfulfilling and victimizing, accepted as a channel to status or plenty,
if not a way to pay the bills, rarely as a means of understanding and
controlling self and events. In work and leisure the individual is
regulated as part of the system, a consuming unit, bombarded by hardsell
soft-sell, lies and semi-true appeals and his basest drives. He is
always told what he is supposed to enjoy while being told, too, that he
is a "free" man because of "free enterprise."
The Remote Control Economy. We are subject to a remote control economy,
which excludes the mass of individual "units" -- the people -- from
basic decisions affecting the nature and organization of work, rewards,
and opportunities. The modern concentration of wealth is fantastic.
The wealthiest one percent of Americans own more than 80 percent of all
personal shares of stock. From World War II until the mid-Fifties, the
50 biggest corporations increased their manufacturing production from 17
to 23 percent of the national total, and the share of the largest 200
companies rose from 30 to 37 percent. To regard the various decisions
of these elites as purely economic is short-sighted: their decisions
affect in a momentous way the entire fabric of social life in America.
Foreign investments influence political policies in under-developed
areas -- and our efforts to build a "profitable" capitalist world blind
our foreign policy to mankind's needs and destiny. The drive for sales
spurs phenomenal advertising efforts; the ethical drug industry, for
instance, spent more than $750 million on promotions in 1960, nearly for
times the amount available to all American medical schools for their
educational programs. The arts, too, are organized substantially
according to their commercial appeal aesthetic values are subordinated
to exchange values, and writers swiftly learn to consider the commercial
market as much as the humanistic marketplace of ideas. The tendency to
over-production, to gluts of surplus commodities, encourages "market
research" techniques to deliberately create pseudo-needs in consumers --
we learn to buy "smart" things, regardless of their utility -- and
introduces wasteful "planned obsolescence" as a permanent feature of
business strategy. While real social needs accumulate as rapidly as
profits, it becomes evident that Money, instead of dignity of character,
remains a pivotal American value and Profitability, instead of social
use, a pivotal standard in determining priorities of resource
allocation.
Within existing arrangements, the American business community cannot be
said to encourage a democratic process nationally. Economic minorities
not responsible to a public in any democratic fashion make decisions of
a more profound importance than even those made by Congress. Such a
claim is usually dismissed by respectful and knowing citations of the
ways in which government asserts itself as keeper of the public interest
at times of business irresponsibility. But the real, as opposed to the
mythical, range of government "control" of the economy includes only:
- some limited "regulatory" powers -- which usually just ratify
industry policies or serve as palliatives at the margins of significant
business activity;
- a fiscal policy build upon defense expenditures as pump-priming
"public works" -- without a significant emphasis on "peaceful public
works" to meet social priorities and alleviate personal hardships;
- limited fiscal and monetary weapons which are rigid and have only
minor effects, and are greatly limited by corporate veto: tax cuts and
reforms; interest rate control (used generally to tug on investment by
hurting the little investor most); tariffs which protect noncompetitive
industries with political power and which keep less-favored nations out
of the large trade mainstream, as the removal of barriers reciprocally
with the Common Market may do disastrously to emerging countries outside
of Europe; wage arbitration, the use of government coercion in the name
of "public interest" to hide the tensions between workers and business
production controllers; price controls, which further maintains the
status quo of big ownership and flushes out little investors for the
sake of "stability";
- very limited "poverty-solving" which is designed for the organized
working class but not the shut-out, poverty-stricken migrants, farm
workers, the indigent unaware of medical care or the lower-middle class
person riddled with medical bills, the "unhireables" of minority groups
or workers over 45 years of age, etc.
- regional development programs -- such as the Area Redevelopment Act
- which have been only "trickle down" welfare programs without broad
authority for regional planning and development and public works
spending. The federal highway program has been more significant than
the "depressed areas" program in meeting the needs of people, but is
generally too remote and does not reach the vicious circle of poverty
itself.
In short, the theory of government "countervailing" business neglects
the extent to which government influence is marginal to the basic
production decisions, the basic decision-making environment of society,
the basic structure or distribution and allocation which is still
determined by major corporations with power and wealth concentrated
among the few. A conscious conspiracy -- as in the case of pricerigging
in the electrical industry -- is by no means generally or
continuously operative but power undeniably does rest in comparative
insulation from the public and its political representatives.
The Military-Industrial Complex. The most spectacular and important
creation of the authoritarian and oligopolistic structure of economic
decision-making in America is the institution called "the militaryindustrial
complex" by former President Eisenhower, the powerful
congruence of interest and structure among military and business elites
which affects so much of our development and destiny. Not only is ours
the first generation to live with the possibility of world-wide
cataclysm -- it is the first to experience the actual social preparation
for cataclysm, the general militarization of American society. In 1948
Congress established Universal Military Training, the first peacetime
conscription. The military became a permanent institution. Four years
earlier, General Motor's Charles E. Wilson had heralded the creation of
what he called the "permanent war economy," the continuous use of
military spending as a solution to economic problems unsolved before the
post-war boom, most notably the problem of the seventeen million jobless
after eight years of the New Deal. This has left a "hidden crisis" in
the allocation of resources by the American economy.
Since our childhood these two trends -- the rise of the military and the
installation of a defense-based economy -- have grown fantastically.
The Department of Defense, ironically the world's largest single
organization, is worth $160 billion, owns 32 million acres of America
and employs half the 7.5 million persons directly dependent on the
military for subsistence, has an $11 billion payroll which is larger
than the net annual income of all American corporations. Defense
spending in the Eisenhower era totaled $350 billions and President
Kennedy entered office pledged to go even beyond the present defense
allocation of sixty cents from every public dollar spent. Except for a
war-induced boom immediately after "our side" bombed Hiroshima, American
economic prosperity has coincided with a growing dependence on military
outlay -- from 1941 to 1959 America's Gross National Product of $5.25
trillion included $700 billion in goods and services purchased for the
defense effort, about one-seventh of the accumulated GNP. This pattern
has included the steady concentration of military spending among a few
corporations. In 1961, 86 percent of Defense Department contracts were
awarded without competition. The ordnance industry of 100,000 people is
completely engaged in military work; in the aircraft industry, 94
percent of 750,000 workers are linked to the war economy; shipbuilding,
radio and communications equipment industries commit forty percent of
their work to defense; iron and steel, petroleum, metal-stamping and
machine shop products, motors and generators, tools and hardware,
copper, aluminum and machine tools industries all devote at least 10
percent of their work to the same cause.
The intermingling of Big Military and Big Industry is evidenced in the
1,400 former officers working for the 100 corporations who received
nearly all the $21 billion spent in procurement by the Defense
Department in 1961. The overlap is most poignantly clear in the case of
General Dynamics, the company which received the best 1961 contracts,
employed the most retired officers (187), and is directed by a former
Secretary of the Army. A Fortune magazine profile of General Dynamics
said: "The unique group of men who run Dynamics are only incidentally
in rivalry with other U.S. manufacturers, with many of whom they
actually act in concert. Their chief competitor is the USSR. The core
of General Dynamics corporate philosophy is the conviction that national
defense is a more or less permanent business." Little has changed since
Wilson's proud declaration of the Permanent War Economy back in the 1944
days when the top 200 corporations possessed 80 percent of all active
prime war-supply contracts.
Military Industrial Politics. The military and its supporting business
foundation have found numerous forms of political expression, and we
have heard their din endlessly. There has not been a major
Congressional split on the issue of continued defense spending spirals
in our lifetime. The triangular relation of the business, military and
political arenas cannot be better expressed than in Dixiecrat Carl
Vinson's remarks as his House Armed Services Committee reported out a
military construction bill of $808 million throughout the 50 states, for
1960-61: "There is something in this bill for everyone," he announced.
President Kennedy had earlier acknowledged the valuable anti-recession
features of the bill.
Imagine, on the other hand, $808 million suggested as an anti-recession
measure, but being poured into programs of social welfare: the
impossibility of receiving support for such a measure identifies a
crucial feature of defense spending: it is beneficial to private
enterprise, while welfare spending is not. Defense spending does not
"compete" with the private sector; it contains a natural obsolescence;
its "confidential" nature permits easier boondoggling; the tax burdens
to which it leads can be shunted from corporation to consumer as a "cost
of production." Welfare spending, however, involves the government in
competition with private corporations and contractors; it conflicts with
immediate interests of private pressure groups; it leads to taxes on
business. Think of the opposition of private power companies to current
proposals for river and valley development, or the hostility of the real
estate lobby to urban renewal; or the attitude of the American Medical
Association to a paltry medical care bill; or of all business lobbyists
to foreign aid; these are the pressures leading to the schizophrenic
public-military, private-civilian economy of our epoch. The
politicians, of course, take the line of least resistance and thickest
support: warfare, instead of welfare, is easiest to stand up for:
after all, the Free World is at stake (and our constituency's
investments, too).
Automation, Abundance, and Challenge. But while the economy remains
relatively static in its setting of priorities and allocation of
resources, new conditions are emerging with enormous implications: the
revolution of automation, and the replacement of scarcity by the
potential of material abundance.
Automation, the process of machines replacing men in performing sensory,
motoric and complex logical tasks, is transforming society in ways that
are scarcely comprehensible. By 1959, industrial production regained
its 1957 "pre-recession" level -- but with 750,000 fewer workers
required. In the Fifties as a whole, national production enlarged by 43
percent but the number of factory employees remained stationary, seventenths
of one percent higher than in 1947. Automation is destroying
whole categories of work -- impersonal thinkers have efficiently labeled
this "structural unemployment" -- in blue-collar, service, and even
middle management occupations. In addition it is eliminating employment
opportunities for a youth force that numbers one million more than it
did in 1950, and rendering work far more difficult both to find and do
for people in the forties and up. The consequences of this economic
drama, strengthened by the force of post-war recessions, are momentous:
five million becomes an acceptable unemployment tabulation, and misery,
uprootedness and anxiety become the lot of increasing numbers of
Americans.
But while automation is creating social dislocation of a stunning kind,
it paradoxically is imparting the opportunity for men the world around
to rise in dignity from their knees. The dominant optimistic economic
fact of this epoch is that fewer hands are needed now in actual
production, although more goods and services are a real potentiality.
The world could be fed, poverty abolished, the great public needs could
be met, the brutish world of Darwinian scarcity could be brushed away,
all men could have more time to pursue their leisure, drudgery in work
could be cut to a minimum, education could become more of a continuing
process for all people, both public and personal needs could be met
rationally. But only in a system with selfish production motives and
elitist control, a system which is less welfare than war-based,
undemocratic rather than "stockholder participative" as "sold to us",
does the potentiality for abundance become a curse and a cruel irony:
- Automation brings unemployment instead of mere leisure for all and
greater achievement of needs for all people in the world -- a crisis
instead of economic utopia. Instead of being introduced into a social
system in a planned and equitable way, automation is initiated according
to its profitability. American Telephone and Telegraph holds back
modern telephone equipment, invented with public research funds, until
present equipment is financially unprofitable. Colleges develop
teaching machines, mass-class techniques, and TV education to replace
teachers: not to proliferate knowledge or to assist the qualified
professors now, but to "cut costs in education and make the academic
community more efficient and less wasteful." Technology, which could be
a blessing to society, becomes more and more a sinister threat to
humanistic and rational enterprise.
- Hard-core poverty exists just beyond the neon lights of affluence,
and the "have-nots" may be driven still further from opportunity as the
high-technology society demands better education to get into the
production mainstream and more capital investment to get into
"business". Poverty is shameful in that it herds people by race,
region, and previous condition of infortune into "uneconomic classes" in
the so-called free society -- the marginal worker is made more insecure
by automation and high education requirements, heavier competition for
jobs, maintaining low wages or a high level of unemployment. People in
the rut of poverty are strikingly unable to overcome the collection of
forces working against them: poor health, bad neighborhoods, miserable
schools, inadequate "welfare" services, unemployment and
underemployment, weak politician and union organization.
- Surplus and potential plenty are waste domestically and producers
suffer impoverishment because the real needs of the world and of our
society are not reflected in the market. Our huge bins of decomposing
grain are classic American examples, as is the steel industry which, in
the summer of 1962, is producing at 53 percent of capacity.
The Stance of Labor. Amidst all this, what of organized labor, the
historic institutional representative of the exploited, the presumed
"countervailing power" against the excesses of Big Business? The
contemporary social assault on the labor movement is of crisis
proportions. To the average American, "big labor" is a growing cancer
equal in impact to Big Business -- nothing could be more distorted, even
granting a sizable union bureaucracy. But in addition to public
exaggerations, the labor crisis can be measured in several ways. First,
the high expectations of the newborn AFL-CIO of 30 million members by
1965 are suffering a reverse unimaginable five years ago. The demise of
the dream of "organizing the unorganized" is dramatically reflected in
the AFL-CIO decision, just two years after its creation, to slash its
organizing staff in half. From 15 million members when the AFL and the
CIO merged, the total has slipped to 13.5 million. During the post-war
generation, union membership nationally has increased by four million --
but the total number of workers has jumped by 13 million. Today only 40
percent of all non-agricultural workers are protected by any form or
organization. Second, organizing conditions are going to worsen. Where
labor now is strongest -- in industries -- automation is leading to an
attrition of available work. As the number of jobs dwindles, so does
labor's power of bargaining, since management can handle a strike in an
automated plant more easily than the older mass-operated ones.
More important perhaps, the American economy has changed radically in
the last decade, as suddenly the number of workers producing goods
became fewer than the number in "nonproductive" areas -- government,
trade, finance, services, utilities, transportation. Since World War II
"white collar" and "service" jobs have grown twice as fast as have,
"blue collar" production jobs. Labor has almost no organization in the
expanding occupational areas of the new economy, but almost all of its
entrenched strength in contracting areas. As big government hires more,
as business seeks more office workers and skilled technicians, and as
growing commercial America demands new hotels, service stations and the
like, the conditions will become graver still. Further, there is
continuing hostility to labor by the Southern states and their
industrial interests -- meaning " runaway plants, cheap labor
threatening the organized trade union movement, and opposition from
Dixiecrats to favorable labor legislation in Congress. Finally, there
is indication that Big Business, for the sake of public relations if
nothing more, has acknowledged labor's "right" to exist, but has
deliberately tried to contain labor at its present strength, preventing
strong unions from helping weaker ones or from spreading or unorganized
sectors of the economy. Business is aided in its efforts by
proliferation of "right-to-work" laws at state levels (especially in
areas where labor is without organizing strength to begin with), and
anti-labor legislation in Congress.
In the midst of these besetting crises, labor itself faces its own
problems of vision and program. Historically, there can be no doubt as
to its worth in American politics -- what progress there has been in
meeting human needs in this century rests greatly with the labor
movement. And to a considerable extent the social democracy for which
labor has fought externally is reflected in its own essentially
democratic character: representing millions of people, no millions of
dollars; demanding their welfare, not eternal profit. Today labor
remains the most liberal "mainstream" institution -- but often its
liberalism represents vestigial commitments self-interestedness,
unradicalism. In some measure labor has succumbed to
institutionalization, its social idealism waning under the tendencies of
bureaucracy, materialism, business ethics. The successes of the last
generation perhaps have braked, rather than accelerated labor's zeal for
change. Even the House of Labor has bay windows: not only is this true
of the labor elites, but as well of some of the rank-and-file. Many of
the latter are indifferent unionists, uninterested in meetings,
alienated from the complexities of the labor-management negotiating
apparatus, lulled to comfort by the accessibility of luxury and the
opportunity of long-term contracts. "Union democracy" is not simply
inhibited by labor leader elitism, but by the unrelated problem of rank-and-file apathy to the tradition of unionism. The crisis of labor is
reflected in the coexistence within the unions of militant Negro
discontents and discriminatory locals, sweeping critics of the obscuring
"public interest" marginal tinkering of government and willing
handmaidens of conservative political leadership, austere sacrificers
and business-like operators, visionaries and anachronisms -- tensions
between extremes that keep alive the possibilities for a more militant
unionism. Too, there are seeds of rebirth in the "organizational
crisis" itself: the technologically unemployed, the unorganized white
collar men and women, the migrants and farm workers, the unprotected
Negroes, the poor, all of whom are isolated now from the power structure
of the economy, but who are the potential base for a broader and more
forceful unionism.
Horizon. In summary: a more reformed, more human capitalism,
functioning at three-fourths capacity while one-third of America and
two-thirds of the world goes needy, domination of politics and the
economy by fantastically rich elites, accommodation and limited
effectiveness by the labor movement, hard-core poverty and unemployment,
automation confirming the dark ascension of machine over man instead of
shared abundance, technological change being introduced into the economy
by the criteria of profitability -- this has been our inheritance.
However inadequate, it has instilled quiescence in liberal hearts --
partly reflecting the extent to which misery has been over-come but also
the eclipse of social ideals. Though many of us are "affluent",
poverty, waste, elitism, manipulation are too manifest to go unnoticed,
too clearly unnecessary to go accepted. To change the Cold War status
quo and other social evils, concern with the challenges to the American
economic machine must expand. Now, as a truly better social state
becomes visible, a new poverty impends: a poverty of vision, and a
poverty of political action to make that vision reality. Without new
vision, the failure to achieve our potentialities will spell the
inability of our society to endure in a world of obvious, crying needs
and rapid change.
THE INDIVIDUAL IN THE WARFARE STATE
Business and politics, when significantly militarized, affect the whole
living condition of each American citizen. Worker and family depend on
the Cold War for life. Half of all research and development is
concentrated on military ends. The press mimics conventional cold war
opinion in its editorials. In less than a full generation, most
Americans accept the military-industrial structure as "the way things
are." War is still pictured as one more kind of diplomacy, perhaps a
gloriously satisfying kind. Our saturation and atomic bombings of
Germany and Japan are little more than memories of past "policy
necessities" that preceded the wonderful economic boom of 1946. The
facts that our once-revolutionary 20,000 ton Hiroshima Bomb is now paled
by 50 megaton weapons, that our lifetime has included the creation of
intercontinental ballistic missiles, that "greater" weapons are to
follow, that weapons refinement is more rapid than the development of
weapons of defense, that soon a dozen or more nations will have the
Bomb, that one simple miscalculation could incinerate mankind: these
orienting facts are but remotely felt. A shell of moral callous
separates the citizen from sensitivity of the common peril: this is the
result of a lifetime saturation with horror. After all, some ask, where
could we begin, even if we wanted to? After all, others declare, we can
only assume things are in the best of hands. A coed at the University
of Kentucky says, "we regard peace and war as fairy tales." And a child
has asked in helplessness, perhaps for us all, "Daddy, why is there a
cold war?"
Past senselessness permits present brutality; present brutality is
prelude to future deeds of still greater inhumanity; that is the moral
history of the twentieth century, from the First World War to the
present. A half-century of accelerating destruction has flattened out
the individual's ability to make moral distinction, it has made people
understandably give up, it has forced private worry and public silence.
To a decisive extent, the means of defense, the military technology
itself, determines the political and social character of the state being
defended -- that is, defense mechanism themselves in the nuclear age
alter the character of the system that creates them for protection. So
it has been with American, as her democratic institutions and habits
have shriveled in almost direct proportion to the growth of her
armaments. Decisions about military strategy, including the monstrous
decision to go to war, are more and more the property of the military
and the industrial arms race machine, with the politicians assuming a
ratifying role instead of a determining one. This is increasingly a
fact not just because of the installation of the permanent military, but
because of constant revolutions in military technology. The new
technologies allegedly require military expertise, scientific
comprehension, and the mantle of secrecy. As Congress relies more and
more on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the existing chasm between people and
decision-makers becomes irreconcilably wide, and more alienating in its
effects.
A necessary part of the military effort is propaganda: to "sell" the
need for congressional appropriations, to conceal various business
scandals, and to convince the American people that the arms race is
important enough to sacrifice civil liberties and social welfare. So
confusion prevails about the national needs, while the three major
services and the industrial allies jockey for power -- the Air Force
tending to support bombers and missilery, the Navy, Polaris and
carriers, the Army, conventional ground forces and invulnerable nuclear
arsenals, and all three feigning unity and support of the policy of
weapons and agglomeration called the "mix". Strategies are advocated on
the basis of power and profit, usually more so than on the basis of
national military needs. In the meantime, Congressional investigating
committees -- most notably the House Un-American Activities Committee
and the Senate Judiciary Committee -- attempt to curb the little dissent
that finds its way into off-beat magazines. A huge militant anticommunist
brigade throws in its support, patriotically willing to do
anything to achieve "total victory" in the Cold War; the government
advocates peaceful confrontation with international Communism, then
utterly pillories and outlaws the tiny American Communist Party.
University professors withdraw prudently from public issues; the very
style of social science writing becomes more qualified. Needs in
housing, education, minority rights, health care, land redevelopment,
hourly wages, all are subordinated -- though a political tear is shed
gratuitously -- to the primary objective of the "military and economic
strength of the Free World."
Continued at
The Port Huron Statement, part two