In recent years, there’s been a small genre of left-of-center journalism that, following President Obama’s lead, endeavors to prove that things on Planet Earth are not just going well, but have, in fact, never been better. This is an inherently subjective claim, of course; it requires that one buy into the idea of human progress,
for one thing. But no matter how it was framed, there’s at least one
celebrated leftist activist, author and journalist who’d disagree: Chris
Hedges.
In fact, in his latest book, “Wages of Rebellion: The Moral Imperative of Revolt,”
Hedges argues that the world is currently at a crisis point the likes
of which we’ve never really seen. There are similarities between our
time and the era of the 1848 revolutions throughout Europe — or the
French Revolutionary era that preceded them — he says. But in many ways,
climate change least among them, the stakes this time are much higher.
According to Hedges, a revolution is coming; we just don’t yet know
when, where, how — or on whose behalf.
Recently, Salon
spoke over the phone with Hedges to discuss his book, why he thinks our
world is in for some massive disruptions, and why we need
revolutionaries now more than ever. A transcript of our conversation
which has been edited for clarity and length can be found below.
Do you think we are in a revolutionary era now? Or is it more something on the horizon?
It’s with us already, but with this caveat: it is what Gramsci
calls interregnum, this period where the ideas that buttress the old
ruling elite no longer hold sway, but we haven’t articulated something
to take its place.
That’s what that essay I quote by
Alexander Berkman, “The Invisible Revolution,” talks about. He likens it
to a pot that’s beginning to boil. So it’s already taking place,
although it’s subterranean. And the facade of power — both the physical
facade of power and the ideological facade of power — appears to remain
intact. But it has less and less credibility.
There are
all sorts of neutral indicators that show that. Low voter turnout, the
fact that Congress has an approval rating of 7 percent, that polls
continually reflect a kind of pessimism about where we are going, that
many of the major systems that have been set in place — especially in
terms of internal security — have no popularity at all.
All
of these are indicators that something is seriously wrong, that the
government is no longer responding to the most basic concerns, needs,
and rights of the citizenry. That is [true for the] left and right. But
what’s going to take it’s place, that has not been articulated. Yes, we
are in a revolutionary moment; but maybe it’s a better way to describe
it as a revolutionary process.
Is there a revolutionary consciousness building in America?
Well,
it is definitely building. But until there is an ideological framework
that large numbers of people embrace to challenge the old ideological
framework, nothing is going to happen. Some things can happen; you can
have sporadic uprisings as you had in Ferguson or you had in Baltimore.
But until they are infused with that kind of political vision, they are
reactive, in essence.
So you have, every 28 hours, a
person of color, usually a poor person of color, being killed with
lethal force — and, of course, in most of these cases they are unarmed.
So people march in the streets and people protest; and yet the killings
don’t stop. Even when they are captured on video. I mean we have videos
of people being murdered by the police and the police walk away. This is
symptomatic of a state that is ossified and can no longer respond
rationally to what is happening to the citizenry, because it exclusively
serves the interest of corporate power.
We have, to quote John Ralston Saul,
“undergone a corporate coup d’état in slow motion” and it’s over. The
normal mechanisms by which we carry out incremental and piecemeal reform
through liberal institutions no longer function. They have been seized
by corporate power — including the press. That sets the stage for
inevitable blowback, because these corporations have no internal
constraints, and now they have no external constraints. So they will
exploit, because, as Marx understood, that’s their nature, until
exhaustion or collapse.
What do you think is the most likely way that the people will respond to living in these conditions?
That
is the big unknown. When it will come is unknown. What is it that will
trigger it is unknown. You could go back and look at past uprisings,
some of which I covered — I covered all the revolutions in Eastern
Europe; I covered the two Palestinian uprisings; I covered the street
demonstrations that eventually brought down Slobodan Milosevic — and
it’s usually something banal.
As a reporter, you know
that it’s there; but you never know what will ignite it. So you have
Lenin, six weeks before the revolution, in exile in Switzerland, getting
up and saying, We who are old will never live to see the revolution.
Even the purported leaders of the opposition never know when it’s
coming. Nor do they know what will trigger it.
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