The view from Zacheta

The view from Zacheta
Włodzimierz Pawlak - Poles form the national flag
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Philosophy. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Philosophy. Mostra tutti i post

giovedì 6 novembre 2008

Goodbye NEOCONs!

Big thanks to Michael Sandel for writing this and to Thomas L. Friedman for reporting it in the New York Times - by far the greatest newspaper of all times... God Bless America!

“Taking office at a time of crisis doesn’t guarantee greatness, but it can be an occasion for it,” argued the Harvard University political philosopher Michael Sandel. “That was certainly the case with Lincoln, F.D.R. and Truman.” Part of F.D.R.’s greatness, though, “was that he gradually wove a new governing political philosophy — the New Deal — out of the rubble and political disarray of the economic depression he inherited.” Obama will need to do the same, but these things take time.

“F.D.R. did not run on the New Deal in 1932,” said Sandel. “He ran on balancing the budget. Like Obama, he did not take office with a clearly articulated governing philosophy. He arrived with a confident, activist spirit and experimented. Not until 1936 did we have a presidential campaign about the New Deal. What Obama’s equivalent will be, even he doesn’t know. It will emerge as he grapples with the economy, energy and America’s role in the world. These challenges are so great that he will only succeed if he is able to articulate a new politics of the common good”.

“… In this election, the American public rejected these narrow notions of the common good. Most people now accept that unfettered markets don’t serve the public good. Markets generate abundance, but they can also breed excessive insecurity and risk. Even before the financial meltdown, we’ve seen a massive shift of risk from corporations to the individual. Obama will have to reinvent government as an instrument of the common good — to regulate markets, to protect citizens against the risks of unemployment and ill health, to invest in energy independence.”

You can read the full NYT article by Thomas L. Friedman here.

mercoledì 8 ottobre 2008

Fellow citizen Zygmunt Bauman writes for "La Repubblica" on the philosophical roots of the current financial crisis (only Italian Language)

"... L'odierna stretta creditizia non è risultato del fallimento delle banche. Al contrario, è il frutto del tutto prevedibile, anche se nel complesso inatteso, del loro straordinario successo: successo nel trasformare una enorme maggioranza di uomini e donne, vecchi e giovani, in una genìa di debitori. Perenni debitori, perché si è fatto sì che lo status di debitore si auto-perpetui e si continuino a offrire nuovi debiti come unico modo realistico per salvarsi da quelli già contratti. Entrare in questa condizione, ultimamente, è diventato facile quanto mai prima nella storia dell'uomo: uscirne non è mai stato così difficile. ...".

Zygmunt Bauman on
La Repubblica (08/10/2008)
You can read the full article here (Italian Language).