Chris Hedges is a unique commentator on the challenges we face. His honesty is exceptional, his writing outstanding, and his perspective insistent.
His two most recent books, Death of the Liberal Class and Empire of Illusion painfully brought into focus the deep-rooted problems in our society and the failings of American liberals and progressives that Hedges says we must acknowledge. Death of the Liberal Class easily made its way onto my list of the top 10 books in 2010 .
Wikipedia tells me the following about Hedges, a fellow Vermonter:
- He is an American journalist, author, and war correspondent, who spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent and reported from more than fifty countries in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans
- He has worked for The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, the Dallas Morning News, and the New York Times , where he was a foreign correspondent for fifteen years.
- He was, in 2002, part of the team of New York Times reporters who were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for the paper’s coverage of global terrorism.
- He was dismissed from the Times in 2005 for expressing a point of view that the paper judged inconsistent with the “objective” perspective required of journalists.
- He is the best-selling author of 2002’s War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction.
- He is currently a senior fellow at The Nation Institute in New York City and the F. Ross Johnson-Connaught Distinguished Visitor in American Studies at the Centre for the Study of the United States at the University of Toronto. He has taught at Columbia University, New York University and Princeton University.
- He writes a weekly column on Mondays for Truthdig.
That’s a pretty incredible resumé, but what’s really impressive is his writing:
“In a traditional democracy, the liberal class functions as a safety valve. It makes piecemeal and incremental reform possible. It offers hope for change and proposes gradual steps toward greater equality. It endows the state and the mechanisms of power with virtue. It also serves as an attack dog that discredits radical social movements, making the liberal class a useful component within the power elite.”
“The inability of the liberal class to acknowledge that corporations have wrested power from the hands of citizens, that the Constitution and its guarantees of personal liberty have become irrelevant, and that the phrase consent of the governed is meaningless, has left it speaking and acting in ways that no longer correspond to reality. It has lent its voice to hollow acts of political theater, and the pretense that democratic debate and choice continue to exist.”
I am pretty sure I’m a member of the liberal class. I am more comfortable than most and have access to some influence. I am able to travel and have sent three children to private school. I read my wife’s copy of The New Yorker. Most of my friends, the organizations I belong and donate to, the papers I read, the movies I watch, the Democratic Party I support, and the arts I see and listen to are all to a greater or lesser extent part of the liberal class, too.
While my Dad was a Republican, my Mom was not. She was an actress, a bohemian, a free spirit, and a solid member of the liberal class. Chris Hedges grabs the liberalism she taught me by the throat. He challenges everything about it I have always thought was good. And he challenges much if not most about myself that I thought was good.
“Years spent in seminary or rabbinical schools, years devoted to the study of ethics, justice, and morality, prove useless when it comes time to stand up to corporate forces that usurp religious and moral language for financial and political gain.”
“The liberal class refuses to recognize the obvious because it does not want to lose its comfortable and often well-paid perch. Churches and universities—in elite schools such as Princeton, professors can earn $180,000 a year—enjoy tax-exempt status as long as they refrain from overt political critiques. Labor leaders make lavish salaries and are considered junior partners within corporate capitalism as long as they do not speak in the language of class struggle. Politicians, like generals, are loyal to the demands of the corporate state in power and retire to become millionaires as lobbyists or corporate managers. Artists who use their talents to foster the myths and illusions that bombard our society live comfortably in the Hollywood Hills.” — From Death of the Liberal Class
Hedges has harsh words for us. Words we’d rather not hear and ideas we’d rather not contemplate. He paints a picture of a society whose creation we’d rather not admit we have helped orchestrate. Few are as willing as Hedges to take us to task, but how much more evidence do we need that the path we have taken has failed to create a just and equitable society?
In Tunis and Cairo — not to mention London and Paris — people take to the streets to protest the erosion of a civil society. But what happens In America when elected officials vote for a tax policy that ensures the wealthiest 1 percent, who already control 90 percent of the country’s wealth, get even more? What happens when the Supreme Court lets businesses open up their corporate treasuries and pour them into electoral politics to drown out the voices of individual voters and destroy civil society?
Nothing but a deafening silence.
I’m surprised that this post and the post right after it about Wisconsin, and their battle over collective bargaining, are separate . I’d love to see some analysis of what Chris Hedges’ words mean in relation to the labor struggles that are going on across the country at this very moment.
I know about Chris Hedges, from Truthdig. But what I am moved by is the immense consciousness of Jeffrey, and his resonant words.
I wrote the Hedges post a few weeks ago though it wasn’t posted till very recently, well before the events in Wisconsin. I think Hedges would be surprised that labor groups and their supporters have turned out in such force in a movement that keeps on growing by the day. From my perspective these events in the US and now across the globe challenge some of Hedges (and mine as well at times) gloomy outlook on the possibilities that lie ahead. I’m thrilled by these new developments and hope to find ways to support them from Vermont.
Great and timely conversation, I hope Jeffrey will continue it, not necessarily related to Hedges’ book. I have not read it and I will not, due to his religious approach to morality and his “illiberal” critique of atheism and the Enlightenment. The title is by itself an exaggeration, either for commercial reasons or for personal reasons, in the sense that the author has a pessimistic view of the world, easily justified by experiencing too much human tragedy as a war correspondent, and possibly based on his religion.
First, nobody is dead until it is literally dead, I reject the “liberal” use of death to describe a social or political state, for which language offers more appropriate and less terminal words. I would describe the liberal class in the US with one or more of the following: blasé, corrupt, egotistical, too comfortable, too materialistic, not cosmopolitan enough, not highly cultured, confused. The latter relates to the lack of understanding of liberalism itself, I am very pleased to see the distinction made by Jeffrey between liberals and progressives.
I find it very encouraging that the liberal class, the youth and some of the working class have elected a liberal president. Hedges’ critique of President Obama as corrupt by corporations and not serving the good of all American people is completely wrong and adds to the indifference of the liberal class, by enforcing the idea that all is lost and nothing can be done to reverse negative trends and revive our great traits, which I believe are liberal. I also believe that we need to restore our social solidarity, we are just experiencing a great example of it in Wisconsin.
Chris Hedges continues to report the facts of so many matters. Hard to refute. His book, “The World As It Is,” has a subtitle that reads, “Dispatches On The Myth of Human Progress.” Should be required reading in all schools. It’s time we drop the fear of reprisal if we state what we believe. I see it every day. People don’t like “to inflame” others by sharing their political truths. I have found the only way not to be strident and polemic is by NOT resorting to any slurs on any political figures. I love just giving people the factual information and keep repeating information until conclusions seem unavoidable. (Well, of course, not to every one. But to enough people to reach a turning point.) Read Chris Hedges, and the wonderful people he quotes like Sheldon S. Wolin. We all need to keep informed so that we can refute the the rants of the extreme Right, which just about always attacks with vitriol and little substance. That’s not to say that those in power such as a President should shy away from the bully pulpit. Some one has to be the lightening rod to address what’s happening in this country. Sooner or later the times will create the person in power who is sure enough, strong enough in his/her beliefs to cut to the chase and stand up for all that people like Chris Hedges report about.