The Presidential Election of 1972
   James Herod
July-November 1972
    1. Restoring Faith in Democracy 
      What is the significance of the victory of McGovern at the Democratic  convention? The McGovern movement and campaign represents a strong resurgence  of liberalism, or as I would prefer to say, the restoration of the whole bag  of liberal myths. The McGovern-Nixon fight is the same struggle in the  electoral arena that the battle between the Administration and the New  York Times over the Pentagon papers represented in the courts. It is a  struggle between the liberal and conservative wings, the left and right wings  of the ruling class, for control of the government. The election is merely the  continuation of this battle, which has been going on for some time now, and of  which the Pentagon Papers battle was just one episode.
     McGovern is a living incarnation of the liberal illusion. He thinks the  problem is to return to the great ideals that have always  inspired this country. In other words he thinks the present crisis has been  caused because the United States has abandoned or drifted away from its  original nature or constitution. Just as the war in Vietnam was seen as a  ``mistake,'' so also the domestic problems are because of corruption, or deceit  in high places. For McGovern, the problem does not lie with the system itself,  but only with those who presently occupy the leadership positions in the  system. (What a convenient belief for politicians to hold, whose careers are  precisely to put themselves in those positions of power to replace those there  now. Naturally, the attempt must be made to discredit the incumbent leadership  but not the system itself. That would pull the rug out from under the  politicians themselves.) Hence the call to ``Come Home America.'' Come home to  the ideals that nourished us from the very beginning.
     I find this very disheartening. After all the struggles of the sixties, after  all the confrontations, which should have taught people that this liberal  analysis, that these liberal solutions are myths, mere pipe dreams, here we  see the whole monstrous myth reemerge in a renewed and refurbished form  ready to go again. The capacity of liberalism to constantly regenerate itself  is truly amazing. Every generation we get a new version, another  neo-liberalism.
     McGovern's liberalism is an attempt to reestablish bourgeois democracy in its  classic form. He wants to turn back the clock against monopoly,  bureaucratization, and the internationalization of the economy. He seeks to  restore power to Congress, and government to the people.
     But there are some interesting shifts in this liberal outlook. That's why it  is a neo-liberalism. What Rawls, Reich, and Galbraith have done for theory,  McGovern is now doing for politics. Perhaps the most striking shift is his  backing away from Pax Americana. McGovern's pledge that never again will the  young blood of this country be sent to ``prop up a corrupt military  dictatorship abroad'' is a remarkable statement coming from a possible U.S.  President. Throughout the twentieth century the U.S. has attempted to make  the world ``safe for democracy.'' Now liberals are saying that the United  States won't prop up any more military dictatorships. This is clearly an  impossible pledge. (But I suppose McGovern could bring a lot of pressure to  bear on `Free World Allies' to adopt a form of representative democracy or  else. Greece? Brazil? South Africa? Spain? Saudi Arabia? Indonesia? Pakistan?  Ethiopia?) So this is going to be interesting to watch. Obviously, with the  backing of people like Kennedy, you know it doesn't mean that the United  States is abandoning its empire. It can't do that. So McGovern must think  that he can preserve the empire in better ways, ways that don't cause so much  unrest at home.
     What makes McGovern so ridiculous is that his liberalism is so obviously  incompatible with the realities of bourgeois society. Nixon's views are much  closer to the realities of the power and economics of the U.S. ruling class.  Nixon's views, in a sense, are less mythological and illusory than McGovern's  are. For that very reason however Nixon's politics (quasi-fascism) is a less  secure form of ruling class rule. Liberalism is further from the reality and  hence a stronger, more secure form of bourgeois hegemony. It is not based on  raw power but on faith. It is based on faith in democracy. People obey because  they believe in the system, in the President and the government, not because  they are forced to obey with brute power. Liberals are right that the best way  to protect the present social order and preserve bourgeois hegemony is to  ``restore faith in democracy.'' That's what McGovern is trying to do, aided of  course by the entire liberal wing of the establishment.
     Can they do it? I suppose they can. Incorporate all the dissident groups  (women, blacks, chicanos, gays, youth), and establish `participatory  democracy', or at least the illusion of it (or rather, the bourgeois version  of it, i.e., quotas for the various categories of people). And then once the  whole thing is well established and well oiled it can deteriorate once again  in the face of neo- or quasi-fascism so that the whole liberal myth can then  once again be reestablished and renewed vis-à-vis this quasi-fascism. The real  left is nowhere to be seen.
     If McGovern wins there are real gains to be had for the working class, even  though there is simultaneously a decreased chance that the radical perspective  will gain ground. A national health insurance would be a real gain for the  working class. Tax reform and the redistribution of wealth, however slight,  would be a real gain. Better mass transit, better control of pollution, safer  cars, and so forth, all these would be real gains. McGovern will come to power  in order to institute the U.S. version of the bourgeois welfare state –  guaranteed income, health insurance, public sponsored television, publicly  subsidized mass transportation, closer regulation of big business. So now we  have to live through this long process of discrediting the welfare state, a  process that England and the European capitalist democracies are just now  emerging from. Marx said once that it was within the form of bourgeois  democracy that the class struggle would have to be fought out to its  conclusion (as opposed to the dictatorial form of capitalism). Any attempt to  establish proletarian democracy within the context of fascism (i.e., within the  dictatorial form of bourgeois rule) would inevitably be confused with the task  of reestablishing bourgeois democracy. It is only by preserving bourgeois  democracy, by joining forces with liberals against fascism, and then by  directly attacking bourgeois democracy as a sham, that proletarian democracy  will ever come to the fore. It is only in contrast to bourgeois democracy and  not bourgeois dictatorship that proletarian democracy can make itself  perceived, heard, seen, felt, understood. That is, the left has to demonstrate  that bourgeois democracy is not democracy at all but only a sophisticated form  of class rule.
     What is the relationship between the McGovern forces and the movement? The  McGovern phenomenon is an establishment rerun of the movement of the sixties  (the liberal wing of it). It is a tamed and tailored version, stripped of any  radical ideas, any remotely socialist ideas. Otherwise it has taken over,  lock, stock and barrel, the old radical movement – peace signs, lettuce  boycotts, Newsreel style movies, the same categories (youth, blacks, chicanos, indians, gays, women), the anti-war position, and the demand for open  government. McGovern picked up the movement and turned it into a powerful  device for getting himself nominated and for refurbishing the liberal  worldview, which was getting very tarnished and worn and had lost much of its  credibility. 
   The McGovern phenomenon represents the complete cooptation of the  radical movement. It proves both how very resilient the establishment is and  how thoroughly liberal large sections of the `radical' movement always were.  The liberal wing of the movement, by far its largest wing, together with  reformist groups like SWP (who were responsible for getting McGovern speaking  engagements at many of the anti-war rallies) simply moved into the Democratic  Party and took it over, nominated George McGovern, and will now try to take  the Presidency. If they win, it will prove that it was easier to stop the war  from inside the system than outside it (or at least this particular war).  McGovern would never have won the nomination however if it hadn't been for  the disruption of the society by the movement during the late sixties. His  whole campaign is based on ``healing the wounds of a divided nation.'' It is  precisely the liberal fear that the war is ``dividing the nation'' that is the  main motive force behind his campaign. His solution is to `'restore faith in  democracy.'' (It is not established yet of course that he will, or can, end  the war.) 
   The McGovern victory is the radical movement's defeat. It is the  victory, the predominance, of liberal interpretations, not radical  interpretations, of the problems which face us, all the way from the war  itself, to pollution, to poverty, to health care, crime, drugs, inflation,  unemployment, and ecology. Right across the board the McGovern platform is  thoroughly liberal. A year or so ago we were fighting these very ideas inside  the radical movement. We were fighting for the predominance of the radical  wing over the liberal wing of the movement. Now the movement is dead. Radicals  are inactive. Liberals have flocked in droves into the system to try to get  what they want there, because what they want can be achieved from within it.  What do they want? Greater participation for women and blacks. An end to the  war. Tax reform. These things can be done by the system itself and are not  incompatible with it. Even the socialists never mentioned socialism at any of  their mass rallies to protest the war. 
   So the McGovern success proves how  thoroughly liberal the movement really was all along, most of it anyway. Even  now, at the 1972 Democratic Convention, the radicals who are supposedly  outside the system at Miami are thoroughly liberal. That's why there are there  in Miami. They seek to petition, to put pressure on the rulers, not take power  away from them. This is the irony of it all. The system has contained both  groups, both those on the inside of the convention hall and those on the  outside. A real radical voice is nowhere to be heard. But this will pass. The  radical consciousness will emerge again, because the liberal view is so  riddled with contradictions and inconsistencies that it can't hold up for very  long. It will crumble and have to be reestablished all over again. Meanwhile  radical perspectives will gain ground.
     What is the class nature of the McGovern phenomenon? I come back once again  to the suspicion that liberalism is primarily a petty bourgeois outlook.  McGovern is the son of a minister. The movement was also largely petty  bourgeois. That's why McGovern and the movement meshed so well and so easily.  The petty bourgeoisie struggles for conglomerate busting, tax relief, aid to  small businesses, greater participation in government, greater power to  Congress, greater power to local and state agencies as opposed to the federal  government, and so forth. And these are some of the planks of McGovern's  platform. But it is not a totally clear picture because McGovern in many ways  will strengthen and expand the role of the federal government. So McGovern's  platform is a mixture of big bourgeois and little bourgeois demands, with a  few sops to the working class. The whole thing is done in the name of the  people of course. Some of it will undoubtedly benefit the working class.  Actually, it is hard to see liberalism in strictly class terms because  liberalism includes as principles many of the more universalistic demands that  would be included in any working class program, but the content is very  different of course. Equality, for example, to the liberal means equality of  opportunity, whereas to the radical it means equal power and wealth.
     It is sad indeed to think that just three years ago, on November 15,  1969, we were struggling to interject a radical perspective into the  massive anti-war rally at the Washington Memorial in D.C. with our pamphlet Vietnam is a Stake not a Mistake. And now, three years later,  our failure is really crushing. The liberal theory that `Vietnam is a Mistake'  has prevailed with overwhelming weight. Where are the forces to articulate,  advance, and propagandize the radical interpretation of the war?
     We must keep foremost in our minds at all times that McGovern's is a petty  bourgeois (even bourgeois) reform movement, not a radical one. There's not a  radical thread to it. We have to remember this constantly. His movement has  nothing to do with a working class movement, which would look very different.  If anything, the McGovern phenomenon is a ruling class movement designed to  prevent a genuine working class movement from ever getting off the ground.  This is McGovern's real significance. He has derailed radicalization for more  years to come.
     Here are some more miscellaneous points.
     * The McGovern people are having to say some pretty radical things  – the need for meaningful work; technology can't solve everything;  people don't exist for the economy, but the economy for the people; end  divisions among the people; oppose big business, big government, big labor.
     * One interesting thing is that they have been forced to adopt  virtually the entire fringe of the socialist program. It sounds socialist in  many ways, except in the key area of the economy. In the  economic area they call only for a return to small scale private enterprise  and for the breakup of big corporations. There is thus this peculiar twist to  the standard welfare program being combined with a petty bourgeois, small  scale capitalist emphasis. It is weird. This could only happen in the U.S.  They have dropped the standard mixed-economy liberal view. But since a  genuinely socialist view of the means of production is so absolutely  unimaginable for them – it's not a matter of its being excluded; it is  simply not even conceived or imagined, not on the horizon – and since  nationalization is so thoroughly discredited, they have to fall back on  private enterprise, purged of course of monopoly.
     * Now the liberals get another chance. Neo-liberalism. So now we  will have to ride this one out. How will a radical interpretation of the  society ever break through this kind of thing? How will this capacity of  liberalism to renew itself ever be broken and defeated. The left is better off  with liberalism, than with quasi-fascism, but it is simultaneously worse off,  thoroughly out foxed, thoroughly derailed.
     * The extent of the liberalism of the movement, and the stress on  categories (women, blacks, youth) comes out now in the way the categories have  been taken over by the Democratic Party. What the movement was calling for,  for these various categories of minorities to be admitted into the system, was  thoroughly liberal, as is now being proved at the convention because that's  what they are doing, and then they are using this move to claim that now we  have an open society, and have restored faith in democracy. Now we have a  people's party, they say. Now, is the category idea an advance or a set back  for the possibility of working class solidarity? Ethnicity had just about died  out (and this is its rebirth?). Perhaps the country had become too homogenous  for ruling class comfort. The old ethnic divisions had vanished. Is this then  a way of reintroducing divisions? There is no doubt of course about the  integrative function, through upward mobility, of incorporating all these  groups into the system. This is the classic American way – integrate  dissident groups into the mainstream. But maybe this is needed. Get all these  ascribed categories into the system, so there can be no discrimination on the  basis of sex, age, race, or ethnicity. This would make the hierarchy itself  the main cleavage. This in turn might make it possible to focus on the basic  categories, on the real categories, on wage-labor and capital. What will they  come up with after all the women and blacks are inside the system?
     * `Representation' is coming to mean having a black, a woman, and a chicano, which is really a queer change in the idea. It is a shift away from  idea of equal power for every citizen. The whole idea of `citizen' is now  being compromised by the notion of quotas for these various categories. It's  really incredibly superficial.
     * If any one had any doubt about what happened to the movement it is  now clear. It joined the Democratic Party and nominated George McGovern for  President. The McGovern nomination and the Democratic Convention are   indications of just how liberal the movement really was. It is also an  indication of how thoroughly the establishment co-opted the movement. This  didn't have to happen of course. But the movement presented a great  opportunity for a politician to come along and take the thing over, or at  least many of its elements, and build a campaign around it. It was so eerie  watching that convention: an establishment (respectable) rerun, appropriately  tamed and purged of even the weak socialist elements that had cropped up here  and there in the real movement (not to speak of complete repudiation of,  through total silence on, or even explicit denunciation of, the radical  elements of the movement); the lettuce boycott; anti-war sentiments; protest  films; Kennedy; the stress on minorities; opposition to secrecy; the stress on  honesty, life, fair-play, the American dream, idealism, anti-corporatism; a  `people's party'. They didn't actually say `Power to the People', but they  came close to it. (July, 1972)
2. On the Republican Convention 
      They now shake their fists like radicals, and I saw a youth give the  militants' handshake to Nixon. It's a favorite tactic. Take all the symbols and  gestures of your opponents and turn them into their opposites. Change fist  shaking from a symbol of protest to a symbol of approval. Nixon has done the  same thing with McGovern's theme, Come Home America.
     It seems next to impossible that McGovern could win. Most people have hated  the anti-war movement much more than they have hated the war. Nixon is  identified with Peace even though he is the President of War, with Justice  even though he has practiced Oppression. The cold war ideology and the  quasi-fascist ideology on the domestic front is simply too deeply entrenched.  It is too difficult to explain to people how everything is really its  opposite, that the Vietnamese are fighting to preserve the right of national  self-determination not the U.S., that the forces of peace which Nixon praises  are really the forces of the police state, and that the criminal elements he  opposes are really the forces of freedom, the real patriots. It's incredible.  Both sides claim to be defending democracy and freedom and say that the other  will bring disaster to the country. They have the same goals, but represent  different realities, while making the same claims.
     McGovern's critique of Nixon's position breaks down, as does the whole  liberal argument. It is, as Agnew accurately put it, ``inconsistent and  illusory.'' The only coherent critique of Nixon is the Marxian one. So  McGovern is constantly getting himself boxed in, like being unable to reply  when accused of adopting the communist position on settling the war, by giving  them everything they want. And of course he can't really deliver economically.  He can't have his welfare state because capitalism can't deliver it. All of  his promises, and then his weak, and somehow out-of-place reliance on the free  enterprise system. The only things I like about him are his anti-war stance,  his claim that he will not support any more dictators abroad (which he can't  deliver on either), the possibility that he might get us income security and  a national health insurance, and the remote possibility that he might improve  the workingman's share of national income. These are okay, and that's already  a lot.
     Why won't he win? (What ideas are too strong for him to overcome?)
* the belief that you shouldn't get anything unless you work for  it (i.e., the anti-welfare sentiment is too strong)
* the belief that the U.S. is defending freedom and democracy  abroad
* the belief that communism is the enemy
* national chauvinism is too strong (U.S.A. first; national  unity)
* hostility to high taxes and the belief that this comes from big  government (and not from capitalism)
* hatred of big government and the belief that McGovern stands for it  (which he probably does)
* the national security mania (the support for defense  expenditures)
* the hatred of protest, the stress on unity and love (McGovern is  identified as a protest candidate)
* Americans don't want democracy. It is too turbulent. It is too much  work. It involves arguments and disagreements and long meetings. What they  want is an efficient ruler
* the belief (accepted by liberals) that Nixon's China and Russia  trips were great achievements and steps toward peace
* the belief that demonstrators are criminal elements
* the inability of most Americans to distinguish between appearance  and reality. It seems more and more that people enthusiastically endorse and  prefer the appearance of things. They thrive on the artificial. (What is the  class basis of this?) They prefer the image to the reality. They judge  something by its package rather than by its contents.
      It seems to me that McGovern faces a hopeless task. He faces the same  obstacles that the anti-war movement did and does, and since his critique is  essentially a moralistic one he is speaking from a very weak position. Nixon  continues to ride the ``America is Great'' national obsession, to make the  world safe for democracy.
     McGovern is rightly taking a beating on the quote issue. What this whole  episode shows is the disaster of not basing the struggle on class. The quota  business in McGovern's campaign is a direct result of the anti-class bias  in the movement, and the refusal to come around to a class analysis. Now we  are reaping the results of this, in a most unexpected way, inside the system  in the Presidential race, in the form of the focus on the quota system, and  the attacks that focus is provoking. (I took issue with the category business  already in my account of the split at the LG.)
     In general, the tone of the republican convention was neo-fascist).
* extreme patriotism and national chauvinism
* love it or leave it
* draft resisters stay where you are, in jail (i.e.,  anti-amnesty)
* great stress on control and manipulation
* police state mentality; law and order
* rejection of dissent; focus on harmony and unity
* outright praise of the free enterprise system
* stress on individualism
* the belief that people who are poor are lazy; individual woes are  self-inflicted
* to protest, to dissent is criminal
* great stress on show, the act, performance (theatrical), like a  huge TV program
      But is this really fascist? Wasn't it like this during the Second World War  under Roosevelt, with the hatred of Germans and Japanese, the call for super  patriotism, the institution of police state security?
     How should we characterize these two outlooks? Is it sufficient to say  conservative and liberal? Aren't they both the same ultimately? Aren't they  both petty bourgeois? What is the difference between them? Both are ruling  class, that's for sure. McGovern supports capitalism too, even though he wants  to tax the fat cats. McGovern's position on this is inconsistent of course. He  claims to speak on behalf of the people and to favor the workingman, and he  speaks in derogatory terms about the rich, but yet he praises the free  enterprise system, and claims not to be anti-business. So what is the crucial  difference, other than that Nixon's view is more realistic? (But it is also  shrouded in thicker ideology, e.g., that the U.S. is seeking to preserve peace  and freedom, and is defending the right of self-determination abroad.)  Compared with Nixon, McGovern's liberalism is honesty itself. McGovern's  consciousness is somehow less false than Nixon's. He is at least willing to  admit that supporting corrupt military dictators abroad has nothing to do with  protecting the right of self-determination. But McGovern can't attack Nixon  on this idea of self-determination without getting himself into an impossible  situation that he can't get out of as a liberal. Once you admit that the U.S.  is supporting dictators abroad and not defending democracy and freedom then  you have opened the door to a radical perspective.
     If Nixon wins, then it is clear as never before that we live in a country  with a quasi-fascist majority. They believe the image and do not perceive the  reality behind it. By the time they do perceive the reality of the police  state behind Nixon's words it will be too late. By then the laws will have  been changed, the courts will have been packed, the police state will have  been erected, and it will be impossible to resist. If Nixon is reelected that  is the direction the country will go in. Liberals will be weakened even  further. Liberalism is primarily the world outlook of professors and the  educated petty bourgeoisie. Nixon's brand of fascism is the only coherent  ruling class philosophy for the twentieth century. He endorses all the same  ideals as do the liberals but then acts differently. Nixon's position is  outright hypocrisy, based on deception, manipulation, dishonesty, and  brainwashing. McGovern's attempt to be honest and yet still support capitalism  is futile. He will not be able to deliver and will hang himself on all kinds  of contradictions. Nixon's policy is one of calculated mendacity. Even if  unconscious it is still calculated and deliberate, based on the absolutely  depraved capitalist morality whereby it is felt to be honorable  to murder, imprison, oppress, and rob, and then claim to be defending freedom  and democracy, a feat which is possible because these people see things so  completely from the bourgeois perspective. They identify so closely with the  capitalist system, as the only good and just and workable system, that they do  feel that they are preserving freedom and democracy, their own bourgeois  freedom.
     An analysis of who votes for Nixon in this election will give us a clear  picture of those elements in the society most resistant to radicalization.  The voting will clearly identify the fascist-oriented sectors of the  population. We would do well to study the election returns very carefully.
     Could it be that liberalism, such as it is in the U.S., is on the wane and  that it will never become a widespread ideology? (What was the ideology of the  democratic majority under Roosevelt?) If this is true, if Nixon's brand of  neo-fascism is the majority view, what does this mean for the left? I have  so far felt that McGovern's brand of ruling class ideology should be the focus  of attack for the left because the fight against Nixon would be compromised  and confused by liberal participation, that is, by the McGovernites, who are  simply trying to get the country back to bourgeois democracy and away from  fascism. I guess I still believe this. But if the fascists are in the  majority, what then? Is it possible to go directly from fascism to socialism.  Surely it is if you know what you are doing.
     Nixon's outlook is false but internally consistent. McGovern's is partially  honest but internally inconsistent and contradictory. Nixon says one thing  consistently and just as consistently does another. McGovern speaks and acts  inconsistently.
     The Republican convention was a sham. But the Democratic convention was every  bit as much a sham, perhaps even more so because the democrats were more  intensely sincere about instituting freedom and justice while keeping  capitalism. Their enthusiasm for reform was more convincing. Yet their  capacity to make the system more just is no greater than that of the  Republicans, because both are committed to capitalism. (Democrats might do a  little more, I guess, e.g., more equal distribution of income, national health  insurance, less interference abroad). (August, 1972)
3. Significance of the Election 
   The standard analysis of McGovern's failure (e.g., Tom Wicker's in the New York Times Magazine on the Sunday preceding the election)  completely ignores what is perhaps the most important point – that most  people in this country are conservative in outlook and tend to  see the world pretty much in the same terms that Nixon does. Most liberals tend  to fall into the trap (in seeking to explain the McGovern defeat) of either  (a) pointing out all the mistakes McGovern made, implying that if he had  followed a different course he would have won, or (b) complaining that the  Nixon forces were very clever in manipulating public opinion, so that the U.S.  public was duped, thus implying that if only the news hadn't been so biased  the public would have seen the truth of the liberal position and would have  agreed with and voted for McGovern.
     These are very superficial arguments. It seems to me that most people did  understand and vote the issues. Neither candidate was a personality, and thus  the election reflected real differences in world outlook to a very large  degree, certainly more so than would have been the case if Ted Kennedy had run  on the liberal ticket. What the `he flubbed it' and the `they were duped'  theories ignore is nothing less than the prevailing ideology of the majority  of the American people. Thus rather than seeking to explore the social  origins and structural roots of this ideology, these journalistic accounts  stop at moralistic outrages against manipulation and complaints against  McGovern's mistakes.
     There can be no doubt that people have been duped. But this is no temporary  or superficial mis-education that could have been reversed with simply a more  honest news reporting. Rather this `being duped' is more in the nature of a  false consciousness. That is, it is tantamount to a world outlook that is of  long standing duration and which has solid roots in the social structure of  the country. This is what needs to be analyzed. The real question is: what are  the mechanisms through which this false mentality is brought into being,  maintained, and perpetually renewed. Not the least of these mechanisms is the  electoral process itself. Add to that the school system, upward mobility, the  separation of powers, the U.S. constitution, ruling class control of mass  media, and so forth, and you begin to get at it a little bit. (I wrote  recently about the mechanisms for the perpetuation of the petty bourgeois  mentality, which is also relevant here.)
     It goes without saying that there is never any mention of class in these  analyses, even though class is obviously a key factor. Ninety percent of top  businessmen, it is reported, voted for Nixon. The petty bourgeoisie probably  supported Nixon only slightly less overwhelmingly. But this doesn't tell us  much. That capitalists support Nixon is not too surprising. That is not a  question of false consciousness at all, but a question of supporting clear  interests. But most of the 80 million people who voted (61% for Nixon)  were not bourgeois or petty bourgeois, but were proletarian. The important  question is why proletarians voted for Nixon.
     I am getting into trouble here. McGovern's liberalism is no less petty  bourgeois than Nixon's conservatism, although it is less viable as a ruling  class ideology, but it is still petty bourgeois (or bourgeois?). What is the  difference? What is the difference between Nixon's petty bourgeois mentality  and McGovern's petty bourgeois mentality? Maybe the proletariat  did vote its interests, given the alternatives. Maybe, given the  system, Nixon's policies are better for the average person than McGovern's.  That is, his policies make capitalism work better, make it deliver the goods  as far as possible. Nixon is willing to pay the price of maintaining the  system – genocide, corruption, dishonesty, degradation, imperialism,  war. McGovern's views of the system are, as Agnew correctly put it,  ``inconsistent, contradictory, and illusory.'' Maybe everyone saw it this way.  Most people would have picked Nixon even if they had had a genuine alternative  (i.e., a left alternative).
     Why do working class people share Nixon's world outlook? Aside from all the  big factors mentioned earlier, one additional factor looms larger and larger  for me, one that has been missed even in radical discussions – suburbia.  (See my other essay mentioned above for a more detailed discussion.) Who voted  for McGovern? The university crowd, i.e., university liberals and their  student protégés (witness Massachusetts). Who  else? (Very shaky information here.) Apparently two groups mainly : (1) low  income and (2) blacks. Low income people tend to live still mostly in urban  centers, not suburbia. What about blacks? Where do they live? Mostly in urban  downtown ghettoes. So maybe its not so much race as it is the urban/suburban  factor. Did suburban blacks vote for Nixon or McGovern?
     The demise of the Rooseveltian coalition parallels the decay of the city  center and the rise of the vast suburban pattern with shopping centers and  individual private homes. There are a host of ways that suburbia functions to  reinforce the petty bourgeois outlook. Each family has a piece of land and a  house (i.e., they are property owners, even if it is only consumable property,  not productive). They have gardens and yards to work. They have a car. They  have tools and workshops in the garages and basements. (I can't explain how  all of these things work here; I did that elsewhere anyway.)
     What does all this portend? Perhaps it points to the at least temporary  consolidation of a proto-fascist, petty bourgeois mentality (there are  pressures to split it up too, but in the direction of radicalism, not  liberalism). Nixon's policies represent the same return to ``ruling class  sanity'' (sanity in terms of preserving their system) that Robin Blackburn  claims Heath represented in Britain, a return to the cold war ideology, the  hard line, and to the much more blatant playing out of capitalist power  politics. In other words, in today's world, the ruling classes of capitalist  nations can no longer afford the luxury of the liberal myths, which are  ``inconsistent, naive, and illusory.''
     The Nixon landslide shows just what a minority view liberalism really is. It  is true that liberalism is the ideology of the Eastern Seaboard  Establishment (but only of a small part of it, namely (a) a few rich families,  like the Kennedys, (b) formerly, but not now, rich Jewish families in New York  City, plus (c) the university crowd, including its spill over into the liberal  mass media based in Manhattan.
     This raises interesting questions for the left. I have always tacitly assumed  that if people are liberal they are closer to radicalization than if they were  conservative, and that there is a progression, moving usually from conservatism to liberalism to radicalism. Maybe this is incorrect. I hope it  is. It has to be. If the vast majority are Nixonian then the left must be able  to win them over directly from that position. The left certainly is not going  to take them through liberalism on purpose. That would be asinine, and in fact impossible since radicals don't believe liberalism and hence could not present it convincingly, besides it being  pointless to do so. This makes it clearer than ever before that radicalism is  the only answer to Nixon's petty bourgeois proto-fascist conservatism.  Liberalism is as much an enemy of the Left as conservatism is, perhaps more  so, because it is such a muddled, contradictory, unintelligible outlook that it  thoroughly confuses everything. Moreover, liberals mess up the left something  terrible. Half the people who think they are radicals are in fact liberals (at  least in terms of theoretical understanding and practice). To the extent that  liberals succeed the left is prevented from presenting the real alternatives,  i.e., the proletarian alternative to the petty bourgeois mentality. The  liberal version of petty bourgeois ideology must be fought as strongly as the  conservative version. The lesson of the Nixon landslide has been to reveal  what a minority position liberalism really is. A battle against it is  therefore secondary to the battle against the conservative, Nixonian version  of false consciousness. Two different sets of intellectual weapons are needed  for these two different fights.
     The trouble begins with creeping fascism and the withering away of `bourgeois  freedoms'. This hurts the left and pushes it into an alliance with liberals in  the fight against fascism. I have never seen a good analysis of how such an  alliance could work without the left losing both fights in the  process, losing both the fight against liberalism and the fight against  fascism.
     Stanley pointed out that the majority of Americans are authoritarian and want  someone tough. This jives with my belief also, that people don't want  democracy. They want an efficient ruler. They want to live their own private  lives undisturbed, want to leave politics to others, want to let others manage  the system, as long as the managers make it work. This whole idea about  authoritarianism actually fits in very well with my petty bourgeois hypothesis  (and suburbia). Authoritarianism is petty bourgeois not proletarian,  especially in this instance, where what is wanted is an efficient manager,  i.e., a good businessman, a strong, competent boss. This is the petty  bourgeois ideal. Stanley insisted though that in the next election people may  vote liberal. I disagreed. I feel people are conservative. But  this raises the important question of what is the difference between Nixon  and McGovern. What is distinctive about liberalism, since both outlooks are  bourgeois/petty bourgeois? Try to figure this out.  (November, 1972)