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	<title>Void Manufacturing &#187; Obama</title>
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		<title>Void Manufacturing &#187; Obama</title>
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		<title>Mike Davis on Obama&#8217;s future economic challenges</title>
		<link>http://voidmanufacturing.wordpress.com/2008/11/21/mike-davis-on-obamas-future-economic-challenges/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2008 20:33:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>voidmanufacturing</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Americans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The City]]></category>

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Why Obama&#8217;s Futurama Can Wait
Schools and Hospitals Should Come First in Any Stimulus Package
By Mike Davis
 
America&#8217;s &#8220;Futurama&#8221; is defunct. The famous walk-through diorama of a car-and-suburb world, imagineered by Norman Bel Geddes for General Motors at the 1939 New York World&#8217;s Fair, has weathered into a dreary emblem of our national backwardness. While GM bleeds [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=voidmanufacturing.wordpress.com&blog=4051308&post=727&subd=voidmanufacturing&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://voidmanufacturing.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/anish-kapoor31.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-730" title="anish-kapoor31" src="http://voidmanufacturing.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/anish-kapoor31.jpg?w=490&#038;h=440" alt="anish-kapoor31" width="490" height="440" /></a></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><strong>Why Obama&#8217;s Futurama Can Wait</strong></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><strong>Schools and Hospitals Should Come First in Any Stimulus Package</strong></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>By Mike Davis</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>America&#8217;s &#8220;Futurama&#8221; is defunct. The famous walk-through diorama of a car-and-suburb world, imagineered by Norman Bel Geddes for General Motors at the 1939 New York World&#8217;s Fair, has weathered into a dreary emblem of our national backwardness. While GM bleeds to death on a Detroit street corner, the steel-and-concrete Interstate landscape built in the 1950s and 1960s is rapidly decaying into this century&#8217;s equivalent of Victorian rubble.<span id="more-727"></span><br />
</span>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>As we wait in potholed gridlock for the next highway bridge to collapse, the French, the Japanese, and now the Spanish blissfully speed by us on their sci-fi trains. Within the next year or two, Spain&#8217;s high-speed rail network will become the world&#8217;s largest, with plans to cap construction in 2020 at an incredible 6,000 miles of fast track. Meanwhile China has launched its first 200 mile-per-hour prototype, and Saudi Arabia and Argentina are proceeding with the construction of their own state-of-the-art systems. Of the larger rich, industrial countries, only the United States has yet to build a single mile of what constitutes the new global standard of transportation.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>From day one, Barack Obama campaigned to redress this infrastructure deficit through an ambitious program of public investment: &#8220;For our economy, our safety, and our workers, we have to rebuild America.&#8221; Originally he proposed to finance this spending by ending the war in Iraq. Although his present commitments to a larger military and an expanded war in Afghanistan seem to foreclose any reconversion of the Pentagon budget, he continues to emphasize the urgency of an Apollo-style program to modernize highways, ports, rail transit, and power grids.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Public works, he also promises, can put the public back to work. His &#8220;Economic Rescue Plan for the Middle Class&#8221; vows to &#8220;create 5 million new, high-wage jobs by investing in the renewable sources of energy that will eliminate the oil we currently import from the Middle East in 10 years, and we&#8217;ll create 2 million jobs by rebuilding our crumbling roads, schools, and bridges.&#8221;</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span> </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Of course, Bill Clinton entered the White House with a similarly ambitious plan to rebuild the derelict national infrastructure, but it was abandoned after Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin convinced the new president that deficit reduction was the true national priority. This time around, a much more powerful and desperate coalition of interests is aligned to support the Keynesian shock-and-awe of major public works.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><strong> </strong></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><strong>Rolling Out the Dozers</strong></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Since the Paulson bailout plan has become so much expensive spit in the wind, and with bond spreads now premised on the possibility of double-digit unemployment over the next 18 months, massive new federal spending has become a matter of sheer economic survival. As innumerable influentials &#8212; from </span><span><em>New York Times</em></span><span> columnist David Brooks to House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi &#8212; have argued, a crash program of infrastructure repair and construction, likely to include some investment in the new power grids required to bring more solar and wind energy online, is the &#8220;win-win&#8221; approach that will garner the quickest bipartisan support.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1931859426/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20"></a></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>It has also been portrayed as the only lifeboat in the water for the ordinary steerage passengers in our sinking economy. The emergent Washington consensus seems to be that those five million green jobs can actually come later (after we save GM&#8217;s shareholders), but that infrastructure spending &#8212; if resolutely pushed through the lame-duck Congress or adopted in Obama&#8217;s first 100 days &#8212; can begin to pump money into the crucial construction and manufacturing sectors of the economy before the end of next winter.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Unlike Comrade Bush&#8217;s &#8220;socialist&#8221; efforts to save Wall Street, a public-works strategy for national recovery has had broad ideological respectability from the days of Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln to those of Franklin D. Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy. If Democrats can brag about the proud heritage of the Works Progress Administration and the Public Works Administration from the era of the Great Depression (ah, those magnificent post offices and parkways), there are still a few Republicans who remember the Golden Age of interstate highway construction that commenced in the 1950s with President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Indeed since the national shame of Hurricane Katrina, Americans have become outspokenly nostalgic about competent federal governments and magnificent public achievements.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>If one accepts the reasonable principle of supporting the new president whenever he makes policy from the left or addresses basic social needs, shouldn&#8217;t progressives be cheering the White House as it rolls out the dozers, Cats, and big cranes? Aren&#8217;t high-speed mass transit and clean energy the kind of noble priorities that best reconcile big-bang stimulus with long-term public value?</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>The answer is: no, not at this stage of our national emergency. I&#8217;m not an infrastructure-crisis denialist, but first things first. We are now at a crash site, and our priority should be to save the victims, not change the tires or repair the fender, much less build a new car. In the triage situation that now confronts the president-elect, keeping local schools and hospitals open should be the first concern, rebuilding bridges and expanding ports would come next, and rescuing bank shareholders at the very end of the line.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Inexorably, the budgets of schools, cities, and states are sinking into insolvency on a scale comparable to the early 1930s. The public-sector fiscal crisis &#8212; a vicious chain reaction of falling property values, incomes, and sales &#8212; has been magnified by the unexpectedly large exposure of local governments and transit agencies to the Wall Street meltdown via complex capital lease-back arrangements. Meanwhile on the demand side, the need for public services explodes as even prudent burghers face foreclosure, not to speak of the loss of pensions and medical coverage. Although the public mega-deficits of California and New York may dominate headlines, the essence of the crisis &#8212; from the suburbs of Anchorage to the neighborhoods of West Philly &#8212; is its potential universality.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Certainly, in such a rich country, wind farms and schools should never become a Sophie&#8217;s choice, but the criminal negligence of Congress over the past months should alert us to the likelihood that such a choice will be made &#8212; with disastrous results for both human services and economic recovery.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><strong>Saving Schools and Hospitals</strong></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Congress naturally loves infrastructure because it rewards manufacturers, shippers, and contractors who give large campaign contributions, and because construction sites can be handsomely bill-boarded with the names of proud sponsors. Powerful business lobbies like the National Industrial Transportation League and the Coalition for America&#8217;s Gateways and Trade Corridors stand ready to grease the wheels of their political allies. In addition, if the past century of congressional pork-barrel methods is any precedent, infrastructural spending typically resists coherent national planning or larger cost-benefit analyses.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Yet saving (and expanding) core public employment is, hands-down, the best Keynesian stimulus around. Federal investment in education and healthcare gets incomparably more bang for the buck, if jobs are the principal criterion, than expenditures on transportation equipment or road repair.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>For example, $50 million in federal aid during the Clinton administration allowed Michigan schools to hire nearly 1,300 new teachers. It is also the current operating budget of a Tennessee school district made up of eight elementary schools, three middle schools, and two high schools.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>On the other hand, $50 million on the order book of a niche public transit manufacturer generates only 200 jobs (plus, of course, capital costs and profits). Road construction and bridge repair, also very capital intensive, produce about the same modest, direct employment effect.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>One of the most likely targets for a Congressional stimulus plan is light-rail construction. Street-car systems are enormously popular with local governments, redevelopment agencies, and middle-class commuters, but generally they operate less efficiently (per dollar per passenger) than bus systems, and at least 40% of the capital investment leaks overseas to German streetcar builders and Korean steel companies.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Personally, I would love to commute via a sleek Euro-style bullet train from my home in San Diego to my job in Riverside, 100 grueling freeway miles away, but I&#8217;ll take gridlock if the cost of rationing federal expenditure is tolerating the closure of my kids&#8217; school or increasing the wait in the local emergency room from two to ten hours.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Obama, unlike his predecessor, has a bold vision, shared with his powerful supporters in high-tech industries, of catching up with the Spanish and Japanese, while redeeming America as the synonym for modernity. Lots of new infrastructure will, however, become so many bridges to nowhere (especially for our children) unless he and Congress first save human-needs budgets and public-sector jobs.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>A good start for progressive agitation on Obama&#8217;s left flank would be to demand that his health-care reform and aid-to-education proposals be brought front and center as preferential vehicles for immediate macro-economic stimulus. Democrats should not forget that the most brilliant and enduring accomplishment of the Kennedy-Johnson era was Head Start, not the Apollo Program.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>If, after saving kindergartens and county hospitals, we someday hope to ride the fast train, then we need to rebuild the antiwar movement on broader foundations. The president-elect&#8217;s original proposal for funding domestic social investment through downsizing the empire offers a brilliant starting point for basing economic growth on an economic bill of rights (as advocated by Franklin Roosevelt in 1944) instead of imperial over-reach and Pharaonic levels of military waste.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span><em>Mike Davis is the author of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1931859426/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20"><span>In Praise of Barbarians: Essays Against Empire</span></a> (Haymarket Books, 2008) and <a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/davis"><span>Buda&#8217;s Wagon: A Brief History of the Car Bomb</span></a> (Verso, 2007). He is currently working on a book about cities, poverty, and global change.</em></span></p>
<p><!--EndFragment--></p>
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		<title>Simon Critchley on Obama</title>
		<link>http://voidmanufacturing.wordpress.com/2008/11/19/simon-critchley-on-obama/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2008 23:59:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>voidmanufacturing</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Anarchy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama]]></category>

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Obama’s victory marks a symbolically powerful moment in American history, defined as it is by the stain of slavery and the fact of racism. It will have hugely beneficial consequences for how the United States is seen throughout the world. His victory was also strategically brilliant and his campaign transformed those disillusioned with and disenfranchised [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=voidmanufacturing.wordpress.com&blog=4051308&post=721&subd=voidmanufacturing&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p class="xsmall serifed"><a href="http://voidmanufacturing.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/in_the_blackout.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-723" title="in_the_blackout" src="http://voidmanufacturing.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/in_the_blackout.jpg?w=497&#038;h=500" alt="in_the_blackout" width="497" height="500" /></a></p>
<p class="xsmall serifed"><span class="dropcaps-3">O</span>bama’s victory marks a symbolically powerful moment in American history, defined as it is by the stain of slavery and the fact of racism. It will have hugely beneficial consequences for how the United States is seen throughout the world. His victory was also strategically brilliant and his campaign transformed those disillusioned with and disenfranchised by the Bush administration into a highly motivated and organized popular force. But I dispute that Obama’s victory is about change in any significant sense.<span id="more-721"></span></p>
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<div class="column span-11 prepend-3">
<p>Obama’s politics is governed by an anti-political fantasy. It is the call to find common ground, the put aside our differences and achieve union. Obama’s politics is governed by a longing for unity, for community, for communion and the common good. The remedy to the widespread disillusion with Bush’s partisan politics is a reaffirmation of the founding act of the United States, the hope of the more perfect union expressed in the opening sentence of the <span class="caps">US</span>Constitution. It is a powerful <em>moral</em> strategy whose appeal to the common good attempts to draw a veil over the agonism and power relations constitutive of political life. The great lie of moralism in politics is that it attempts to deny the fact of power by concealing it under an anti-political veneer. At the same time, moralism engages in the most brutal and bruising political activity. But the reality of this activity is always disavowed along with any and all forms of partisanship. Moralistic politics is essentially hypocritical.</p>
<p>Yet, what is most hypocritical, of course, is the talk of change. What are the elements of Obama’s strategy? Let me identify three. Firstly, we have a depoliticized moral discourse of the common good, backed up by a soft and inoffensive version of historically black Christianity. Obama inhabits the<em>rhetorical</em> space of prophetic, black Christianity, while adopting none of its critical radicalism, none of the audacity that one can find in the sermons of Pastor Jeremiah Wright.</p>
<p>Second, Obama’s strategy is about a shift or recalibration of the governmental, symbolic order of American society. As can be seen from a reading of the opening chapters of <em>The Audacity of Hope</em>, Obama is promising a return to liberal constitutionalism against the Schmittian or, more properly, Straussian extension of executive power that marked the Bush administration. All vapid talk of renewing the American dream is simply a return to the priority of the Constitution and the unimpeachable sagacity of the Founding Fathers. Henceforth, all political decisions have to be derived from legal norms whose basis for legitimacy derives from the Constitution. Obama’s genius is to have infused a very traditional, liberal constitutionalism with the elements of a civil profession of faith, and here what is essential is the implicit religiosity of the rhetorical force of Obama’s discourse.</p>
<p>Third, Obama’s strategy is about the normalization of capitalism, which in the short to medium term means the stabilization of financial capitalism given the grotesque deregulated irresponsibility and greed that have operated in these sectors in recent decades. As is clear from <em>The Audacity of Hope</em>, Obama’s moralistic refusal of conflict in the political realm somehow goes hand in hand with his faith in free market competition. Although the free-market system might be flawed, he insists, the capitalist economy is constantly open to change and ‘liberal democracies offer people around the world their best chance at a better life’. It is completely unclear to me how Obama’s views on the economy might truly begin to deal with the disgusting fact of poverty in a genuinely redistributive way.</p>
<p>So, Obama’s strategy is very clear. There is to be no change at the level of the state and capital. We must maintain and defend the state in its classical, liberal constitutional form and use the governmental mechanisms of the state to stabilize the current disorder of finance-based capitalism. Change alone consists in a <em>moral-symbolic</em> shift or recalibration that allows citizens to overcome their despair at the hands of Bush and reaffirm their civil faith in the <span class="caps">US</span> governmental system. To be clear, this is not nothing and I am delighted that my liberal friends are so ecstatic. However, not being such a good liberal myself, Obama’s victory begs the question as to what a leftist strategy might be in such circumstances.</p>
<p>What are the possible consequences of Obama’s victory? I think there are at least two possibilities that circle in a perhaps melancholy dialectic. One possibility – which is highly unlikely, but at least conceivable – is that the change of regime will lead to local and diverse forms of popular politicization which perhaps might place in question the current socio-economic doxa. On this view, emboldened by Obama’s victory, various groups might accelerate their political activity around issues such as immigrant rights, union representation or corporate greed. What Obama’s victory might unleash is a sequence of progressive radicalizations inside the <span class="caps">US</span> and perhaps outside as well that would act as a serious irritant to the usual business of the state or the usual state of business.</p>
<p>The second possibility is the reverse, namely that the popular force that has been mobilized around Obama’s presidential campaign simply <em>exhausts</em> itself in its governmental victory. On this view, once Obama has been elected, citizens can switch off politically and sit back and watch how well his administration does. Politics becomes reduced to a spectacle of media and governmental representation. Furthermore, this possibility is undoubtedly the one favoured by the Obama campaign itself, which explains the somber, slightly disappointed tone to Obama’s speech on the night of his victory: ‘The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year or even in one term’. On this view, the rhetoric of change (‘Together we can change the country and change the world’) was simply what it took to get people mobilized. Once the victory is secure, there must be no further mobilizations at the popular level. All must henceforth be mediated through the apparatus of government. Politics as the experience of a people suddenly present to itself and aware of its awesome power has to die at the precise moment when a representative government is elected.</p>
<p>This is perhaps the tragedy concealed in the events of the late evening of November 4th: as I walked to the subway at about 10 p.m. a vast United States flag was being unfurled in Union Square; there were spontaneous parties in the streets of my part of Brooklyn, and many others can testify to much more exotic, collective experiences. This was a moment when people, no longer cowed by the power of the state and held in check by the police, suddenly become aware of their power and the power of their activity, which is nothing less than the activity of liberty. At such a moment, no force can stop them and a demonstration or street party erupts into being. This is collective joy. There is the <em>potential</em> for a political moment here, but it is a potential whose actualization is denied by the very representative process which is being celebrated. At the moment when people become aware of their power through the activity of the vote, they are simultaneously rendered powerless by the representative process. Liberty slips from the hands of those who have suddenly become aware of its power. In the face of such human fireworks, it is not surprising that Obama cancelled the firework display planned to accompany his victory speech. The message is clear: ‘The victory is yours. But when you’ve finished celebrating, dancing and crying, return to your homes and be quiet. Thanks to you, the business of government is ours and we will take it from here. We’ll let you know how it goes. <span class="caps">P.S.</span> Please don’t take popular sovereignty too literally’.</p>
<p>I’d like to borrow an idea from the philosopher Alain Badiou. In his terms, a political event is what gives existence to a collectivity under the general norm of equality. Crucially, on this definition, politics does not consist in remaining within and buttressing the power of the state. On the contrary, it consists in taking a distance from the state. Now, such a distance does not exist, as the state, particularly the soft democratic state that merges with civil society, saturates more and more areas of social life. Distance, then, is something that has to be <em>created</em>. Moreover, it has to be created within what I call the interstices of the state. Politics, then, is the creation of interstitial distance through acts whereby collectives take shape. The question of scale is vital here. A collective can be something as vast and rhizomatic as the anti-globalization movement a few years back or as small as 5, 10 or 20 people deciding in concert on a program of action. The Paris Commune, lest we forget, began with an act of refusal by a handful of citizens.</p>
<p>Whatever is left of the left after Obama should be committed to the creation of local experiments with politics, the formation of collectivities that exist apart from and which can exert a pressure upon the state. True politics does not exhaust itself in the play of representation and spectacle characteristic of liberal democracy. It is about the emergence out of invisibility of collectivities in the interstices of the state and at the limits of capital. There was perhaps a moment on the evening of November 4th when the potential for such emergence threatened to happen. It might happen still.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr />
<p class="txtGrey">Simon Critchley is Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at the New School for Social Research in New York City. He has authored over a dozen philosophy books including the celebrated Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance, in which he argues for an ethically committed political anarchism.</p>
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		<title>Zizek on the Obama Victory</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Nov 2008 18:35:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>voidmanufacturing</dc:creator>
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Why Cynics Are Wrong
The sublime shock of Obama’s victory
By SLAVOJ ZIZEK

Obama&#8217;s victory is a sign in which the long past of slavery and the struggle for its abolition reverberates.

Days before the election, Noam Chomsky told progressives that they should vote for Obama, but without illusions. I fully share Chomsky’s doubts about the real consequences of Obama’s [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=voidmanufacturing.wordpress.com&blog=4051308&post=715&subd=voidmanufacturing&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<h1>Why Cynics Are Wrong</h1>
<h2>The sublime shock of Obama’s victory</h2>
<h3>By <a href="http://www.inthesetimes.com/community/profile/70">SLAVOJ ZIZEK</a></h3>
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<blockquote><p>Obama&#8217;s victory is a sign in which the long past of slavery and the struggle for its abolition reverberates.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Days before the election, Noam Chomsky told progressives that they should vote for Obama, but without illusions. I fully share Chomsky’s doubts about the real consequences of Obama’s victory: From a pragmatic-realistic perspective, it is quite possible that Obama will just do some minor face-lifting improvements, turning out to be “Bush with a human face.” He will pursue the same basic politics in a more attractive mode and thus effectively even strengthen U.S. hegemony, which has been severely damaged by the catastrophe of the Bush years.<span id="more-715"></span></p>
<p>There is nonetheless something deeply wrong with this reaction — a key dimension is missing in it. It is because of this dimension that Obama’s victory is not just another shift in the eternal parliamentary struggles for majority with all their pragmatic calculations and manipulations. It is a sign of something more. This is why a good, American friend of mine, a hardened Leftist with no illusions, cried for hours when the news came of Obama’s victory. Whatever our doubts, fears and compromises, in that moment of enthusiasm, each of us was free and participating in the universal freedom of humanity.</p>
<p>What kind of sign am I talking about? In his last published book <em>The Contest of Faculties</em>(1798), the great German Idealist philosopher Immanuel Kant addressed a simple but difficult question: Is there true progress in history? (He meant ethical progress in freedom, not just material development.) He conceded that actual history is confused and allows for no clear proof: Think how the 20th century brought unprecedented democracy and welfare, but also the Holocaust and gulag.</p>
<p>Nonetheless, Kant concluded that, although progress cannot be proven, we can discern signs that indicate progress is possible. Kant interpreted the French Revolution as a sign that pointed toward the possibility of freedom: The hitherto unthinkable happened, a whole people fearlessly asserted their freedom and equality. For Kant, even more important than the — often bloody — reality of what went on in the streets of Paris was the enthusiasm that those events engendered in sympathetic observers all around Europe:</p>
<blockquote><p>The recent Revolution of a people which is rich in spirit, may well either fail or succeed, accumulate misery and atrocity, it nevertheless arouses in the heart of all spectators (who are not themselves caught up in it) a taking of sides according to desires which borders on enthusiasm and which, since its very expression was not without danger, can only have been caused by a moral disposition within the human race.</p></blockquote>
<p>One should note here that the French Revolution generated enthusiasm not only in Europe, but also in faraway places like Haiti, where it triggered another world-historical event: The first revolt of Black slaves, who fought for full participation in the emancipatory project of the French Revolution. Arguably the most sublime moment of the French Revolution occurred when the delegation from Haiti, led by Toussaint l’Ouverture, visited Paris and was enthusiastically received at the Popular Assembly as equals among equals.</p>
<p>Obama’s victory belongs to this line; it is a sign of history in the triple Kantian sense of<em>signum rememorativum, demonstrativum, prognosticum</em>. That is, it is a sign in which the memory of the long past of slavery and the struggle for its abolition reverberates; an event which <em>now</em> demonstrates a change; a hope for <em>future</em> achievements. No wonder that Hegel, the last great German Idealist, shared Kant’s enthusiasm in his description of the impact of the French Revolution:</p>
<blockquote><p>This was accordingly a glorious mental dawn. All thinking beings shared in the jubilation of this epoch. Emotions of a lofty character stirred men’s minds at that time; a spiritual enthusiasm thrilled through the world, as if the reconciliation between the divine and the secular was now first accomplished.</p></blockquote>
<p>Did Obama’s victory not give birth to the same universal enthusiasm all around the world, with people dancing on the streets from Chicago to Berlin to Rio de Janeiro? All the skepticism displayed behind closed doors even by many worried progressives (what if, in the privacy of the voting booth, publicly disavowed racism reemerges?) was proven wrong.</p>
<p>There is one thing about Henry Kissinger, the ultimate cynical <em>Realpolitiker</em>, that strikes the eye of all observers: How utterly wrong most of his predictions were. To take only one example, when news reached the West about the 1991 anti-Gorbachev military coup, he immediately accepted the new regime (which ignominiously collapsed three days later) as a fact. In short, when socialist regimes were already a living dead, Kissinger was counting on a long-term pact with them.</p>
<p>The position of the cynic is that he alone holds some piece of terrible, unvarnished wisdom. The paradigmatic cynic tells you privately, in a confidential low-key voice: “But don’t you get it that it is all really about (money/power/sex), that all high principles and values are just empty phrases which count for nothing?” What the cynics don’t see is their own naivety, the naivety of their cynical wisdom that ignores the power of illusions.</p>
<p>The reason Obama’s victory generated such enthusiasm is not only the fact that, against all odds, it really happened, but that the <em>possibility</em> of such a thing to happen was demonstrated. The same goes for all great historical ruptures. Recall the fall of the Berlin Wall: Although we all knew about the rotten inefficiency of the Communist regimes, we somehow did not “really believe” that they will disintegrate. Like Kissinger, we were all too much victims of cynical pragmatism.</p>
<p>This attitude is best encapsulated by the French expression “<em>je sais bien, mais quand meme</em>” (I know very well that it can happen, but nonetheless… I cannot really accept that it can happen). This is why, although Obama’s victory was clearly predictable at least for the last two weeks before the election, his actual victory was still experienced as a shock. In some sense, the unthinkable did happen, something that we really didn’t believe <em>could</em> happen. (Note that there is also a tragic version of the unthinkable really taking place: holocaust, gulag… how can one really accept that something like that could happen?)</p>
<p>The true battle begins now, <em>after</em> the victory: The battle for what this victory will effectively mean, especially within the context of two other much more ominous signs of history: 9/11 and the financial meltdown. Nothing was decided by Obama’s victory, but his victory widens our freedom and thereby the scope of our decisions. But regardless of whether we succeed or fail, Obama’s victory will remain a sign of hope in our otherwise dark times, a sign that the last word does not belong to “realist” cynics, be they from the Left or the Right.</p>
<div class="moreby"><strong>Slavoj Žižek</strong>, a philosopher and psychoanalyst, is a senior researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities, in Essen, Germany. He is the author of, among many other books, <em>The Fragile Absolute </em>and <em>Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism?</em></div>
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